Newspaper Page Text
T UK S l N.
ii nt i ku. n*m coivri. ua.i
HmlhomTi). NrplonilMr 3. IW|>.
BENSON & McGILL, Editors.
A. 0. McCURRY, Associate Editor.
. —p— 7
VOLUME IV.
With thin number Tiik Hautwjxi,Sun
tutors upon its fourth volume. In the fu
ture, an in the punt, wo will use our litmOat
endeavors to build up the interests of Hart
County. We have always given our sup
port to every measure that in our opinion
was calculated to develop the resources of
our county and improve its intelligence
and morals. Very likely we have made
some mistakes ; but they were mistakes
honestly made. And we think the estab
lishment of Till-: (Sun has been of some
advantage to the county. We have had
some w ho ought to have been our warmest
supporters to sneer at our humble efforts,
but in the main wo have had the best peo
ple of the county to cheer us by their en
couragement, and by w hat is better —their
patronage. Wc hope to improve in the
future. We think the future prospects of
the county are indeed bright and auspi
cious, and it will not lie the fault of Till:
•Sun if she does not become the peer of
any in the State. All wc ask is the sup
port that wc shall deserve, and we enter
into the labors of the fourth year with a
renewed determination to make The Sun
a welcome and indispensable visitor to
every household in tiie good county of
Hart.
HON. A. 0. McCURRY.
Owing to sickness, Mr. McCurry had to
leave his post in the General Assembly the
latter part of the past week and is now
confined to his room with fever. This will
account for the absence of our weekly let
ter nnd the summary of the doings of the
Legislature, which was one of the most in
teresting features of the paper. -Mr. Mc
-t'urry has been a close, industrious and
able member, and we are glad that liis
constituents appreciate him as such, and
they will he sorry to hear of his untimely
illness. We hope, however, he will soon
regain his wonted health and be able to
fill his position in the councils of the State.
Gen. Grant is taking his case In Japan
—Japanese, so to speak.
We shall never vote to put a man in
office to vindicate his character. Let every
man take care of his own character.
It is thought in Atlanta by the knowing
ones, that J. W. Nelms, principal keeper
of the penitentiary will he impeached.
Sunday's Constitution was indeed a
grand paper—the best ever issued from
that office. That number at least should
be tiled in every Georgian’s home.
Tiie Legislature will do wise if it enters
into no more impeachments than is abso
lutely necessary. He sure you have a case
—then go ahead. Impeachments are the
costliest articles we know of.
The Central Georgia Weekly thinks the
next Governor will from xituaio tin.
Well, we don't care a straw what part of
the State he hails from, so he has the true
■grit about him. Hut we want a firm man
—one who will not need re-election to vin
dicate his character. Governors should
•have nickel-plated characters, that would
mot corrode.
Exciting times over in Anderson to
day. The people vote as to whether they
will be taxed to build the Savannah Valley
railroad. We believe they will vote for
the measure, and that the railroad will he
built. It will open up a rich cotton grow
ing section, and will be of immense advan
tage to Augusta and possibly to Anderson ;
hut some of the leading men in Anderson
think it will cause that town to lose more
trade than it will gain. This may be true,
hut the country will he greatly developed
and bcnctittcd by the railroad, and that is
the main thing.
A writer in the llaptist Hanner thinks
it all wrong to learn little children to pray,
and says : •• When you teach a child to say
“Our Father, who art in Heaven,’ you
teach him to express relations which do
not exist; for they are ‘children of wrath,
even as others.’ ” What would all the
decent, religious mothers of the world
think if they were prohibited from teach
ing their little babes “ Now, 1 lav me down
to sleep?” The writer gives Elder .1. It.
Graves as good authority on the subject.
We think Graves, Urowiilow, lleecher and
Hob Ingcrsoll have done the cause of re
ligion more harm than any four men in
the United States. “Remember thy Cre
ator in the days of thy youth ” —“ Sutler
little children to come unto Me, and forbid
them not." Who is the man that dares to
set himself up against these divine injunc
tions with egotistic and blasphemous
.sophistry ?
Condensed Milk from the Press.
The yellow fever is unabated in Memphis.
Gen. Longstrcet has a fourteen pound
turnip.
Anew Haptist church is talked of in
Wnrrenton.
John Peter Grown, Esq., of Anderson
county, S. C., died last week.
J. 11. Lewis, editor of Greensboro Her
ald, died of consumption on the 2Sth ult.
A big water spout occurred in Anderson
county, 8. C., last week and a number of
mill darns were swept away.
All efforts to find the murderer of the
Defoors, near Alauta. have been in vain.
The tragedy is clothed in mystery.
Mr. “ Pock ” McCay was thrown from
a wagon in Franklin county last week and
killed, lie leaves a wife and three chil
dren.
Win. V. Findley, of Peer Creek. Miss.,
has a stalk of cotton four feet and ,‘l inches
in height, and has on it 357 bolls and
squares.
Ihe Atlanta Pispatch will commence
the publication of a semi-weekly paper
about the 15th inst. A good idea. The
Pispatch is a first-class journal.
lion. Jacob C. Clement, member from
the 15th district, died in Atlanta last week.
He is the fourth member of the present
General Assembly that have died.
Gainesville Eagle : We want every
county in the district to hold a primary
election, and send a duly authorized dele
gation with no one man proxies, and “thim
ble rigging ” and “ skulkduggery ” about
it, and we want the delegates thus chosen
to come to a convention, and nominate a
candidate, nnd when so nominated by a
proper convention composed of properly
elected and authorized delegates we shall
support him against the Independents, the
world, Hie flesh and the devil.
Augusta News : A few days ago a great
racket was heard in the livery stable of G.
W. Kccher, Lancaster, which, upon inves
tigation, was found to he caused ny a horse
Intlongiug toi the Adams Express Company,
lying (mwn With one of* its hind feet wedg
ed in its mouth. It required the utmost
strength of several strong inen, to pry the
horse's mouth open wide enough to get his
foot out, and before they succeeded in do
ing it two of the horse's teeth were knock
ed out. The poor brute would soon have
strangled to death had he not boon prompt
ly relieved, and it was nearly half an hour
after he was relieved before he could rise
to his feet. It is supposed that the horse
threw his foot forward to strike at the flies,
and at the same time threw his head back
wards, biting at them, thus opening his
mouth and “ putting his foot in it.” The
entire hoof was in the horse's mouth, the
teeth being sunk into the flesh above the
hoof utmost, if not altogether to the bone.
The teeth that were loosened by tbe acci
dent were replaced and driven back into
their sockets, but whether they will stay
there is not known. The horse is a valua
ble one, recently purchased by the Ex
press Company for $250.
New Orleans, August .‘to.—General
J. It. Hood died at four o’clock this morn
ing. 11 is believed that his daughter Lydia
will not recover. Edith is also very sick.
General Hood had hopes of recovery to
the last, nnd perceiving slight favorable
symptoms be said to Hr. Remiss : “Wc
may vet dislodge the enemy.” Asa meas
ure of precaution none of the military as
sociations to which General Hood belonged
were invited to the funeral, lie was burled
this afternoon. General Hood leaves 11
children, the eldest but ten years old and
youngest twins, three weeks old. His
physical condition had been bad for some
time past, caused, it is alleged, by anxiety
rising from financial reverses and tbe ter
sible blow lie received in tbe death of his
wife. The General leaves a manuscript of
tlio history of the w ar. which lie intended
to have published this fall.
Warrenton Clipper : Mr. G. F. Rhodes,
of Hancock, lias two acros of ground from
which he realized fully 140 bushels of oats,
and then planted it in cotton the 10th o(
.June, and the prospect'of realizing a bale
or two of cotton is very flattering. He has
proved by experiment that it does not al
ways take thirty days for a cotton square
to make a bloom. It depends upon the
land, the time of year, the seasons, the
cultivation and the ago of the cotton. He
produced a bloom in twenty-five days since
first of August, and believes under differ
ent circumstances they can he produced in
twenty days.
Elhkrton, Ga., August 30.—The first
bale of cotton raised in this section was
shipped to-day to New York, by Mr. .1. 11.
Jones, via. the Elbcrton Air-Line and the
Atlanta and Charlotte Air-Line railroads.
The cotton was raised on Mr. Jones’ fine
plantation, on the F.road river. The pros
pects are favorable for a good crop of cot
ton m this section, all of which will be
sent to market over the new and popular
Elbcrton Air-Line railroad.
Crawfordville Democrat : Last Thurs
day Doyle Steward, colored, who ir on
gaged in blasting a well for Mr. Addie
Chapman, living about two miles from
town, after making a blast was overcome
by the sulphureous smoke or gas, and call
ed to be drawn out. Just as he reached
the top lie became so much affected that
he lost his hold and fell to the bottom of
the well, 42 feet, and was instantly dashed
to death.
Athens, August 30, 0 p. m.—Mr. 11.
L. Stuart, donor to the State of Dr Craw
ford Long’s portrait, arrived here last night
and became the special guest of Mrs Craw
ford Long. He was found in bed this
morning speechless and with his right side
completely paralyzed. At this late hour,
8 p. m., lie is not expected to survive the
night. His relatives have been telegraph
ed for.
A nine year old girl fell from the almost
perpendicular side of Stone Mountain on
the 23th ult. Fortunately her fall was ar
rested by a projecting ledge, and she was
rescued by a young man let down to her
by means of a rope. It was a narrow es
cape from a thousand feet fall.
Toccoa News : Three car loads of iron
for the Hartwell Railroad passed down the
other evening. The engine has been
bought, and we expect to soon hear the
whistle blow on the narrow-gauge. Here
is our Bair.
Alex. Rrice, the notorious white rene
gade who instigated the negroes to murder
young llunnicutt in Oconee county, S. C.,
some years ago, was shot and killed by
unknown partios last week. Politics hail
nothing to do with the affair.
Carroll County Times : A gentleman,
near Villa llica. has a guinea hen that lays
Hat eggs. The flat sides of the eggs are
white, but other parts have their natural
color.
“ Castle Thunder,” the famous old pris
on in which both Yankees and Confederates
were confined during the war in Richmond,
Ya., was destroyed by lire on the 2Gth ult.
Who She Was.
Wii.i.iamston, 8. C., August 25, 1870.
Editors Hartwell Sun : Having seen
in the Abbeville Medium of August 20th,
clipped from your paper, an article rela
tive to one Mrs. Freeman, 1 will give you
some particulars concerning her. About
seven months ago. this woman and her pre
tended husband /who is a full-blooded Af
rican) came to this place. She. no doubt
having become disgusted with the African
stink, took a tramp in your State to relieve
herself from such an unequal union, for
awhile at least. Hut after absenting her
self from her African paramour for a
mouth or more, he became very uneasy,
as she told him she would only be gone a
week or ten days. He, therefore, took a
tramp in quest of his Caucasian Delilah.
While he was thus engaged, she returned
home by another route, and was there five
or six days before he came back, during
which time she had things all her own way,
and suceeded in captivating another gentle
man of African extraction. When Free-
man returned “the fat was in the tire,”
and periodical fighting between them for
three days was the result, during which
time the crockery was all broken ; and
strange to say, not as usual in such cases
by masculine bauds, but by this buxom
female Caucassian, who looks as if she
might have been born under the tiery dog
star of August. Hy the way of a com
promise, the parties have removed to An
derson C. 11.
The lightning-rod agency and the killing
of the Abbeville man was all a hoax.
Silent Observer.
SUGAR CURED, OR NOT SUGAR
CURED ; HUT IS THE QUESTION.
KdiU>rt ChronUle Sf Von.il itufionl id:
Gain ksvi i.yt, Ga., A ugust 25.-— Being
acquainted with yi/fli long established rule
of giving every one an opportunity to be
heard through your columns. I desire to
trespnss on them sufficiently to state a
few facts, which I deyui but simple jiuttpe
to myself.
Being a witness a w'cek or two since be
fore a certnin famous investigating commit
! tee, 1 stated some facta, which have been
i made tbe basis ofniimerous gratuitous and
i uncalled for lliogs and labored attempts at
1 wit by divers and sundry genial gentlemen,
who imagine that their three-legged tripods
are the seven hills of Home, and that from
them they rule the world. While it is not.
perhaps, iny business to enlighten thonim
] compoops, who care as little lor truth as
1 they do for grammar or decency ; still, in
justice to myself, I will state succinctly
the facts w hich have made the occasion to
! do me rank injustice.
Before the report and evidence taken by
the Wild Land Committee had been pub
; lished, a certain newspaper in Atlanta, to
wit, the “Sunday Phonograph,” made nu
merous violent und uncalled for attacks
! upon Hon. W. L. Goldsmith, Oomptrollcr-
General. At his request I had a conversa
tion with Mr. VV. T. Christopher, the edi
tor, nnd endeavored to show liiin that his
course—that of endeavoring to prejudice
the public mind against a man in advance
of trial—was unworthy of a public journ
alist and unjust to Mr. Goldsmith. He
nsisted that it was not, and said lie intend
ed to keep it up. 1 then asked him if he
was going to make any mouey at it. 11c
said no. 1 then asked him if he could
make some by keeping silent and doing (lie
man xtmple justice., if he would do so.
He said he would. Acting on this, I got
the money from Goldsmith and took it to
him. He then said he had considered the
matter, and could not afford to keep silent,
but bo would not do Mr. Goldsmith any
injustice.
These are the facts of the famous “ Pho
nograph transaction,” upon which T have
been charged with “bribery” and “cor
ruption,” attempts "to suppress public
opinion,” and the other dozen shapes into
which the fertile imagination of impecu
nious scribblers have seen fit to twist it.
1 have done nothing of which 1 am asham
ed. 1 asked nothing of Mr. Christopher
except to pursue the same course as the
Chronicle, the Savannah News, the Macon
Telegraph, and indeed every journal in the
State which lias any dignity or reputation.
In eight years of journalistic life 1 have
never endeavored to prejudice the blackest
negro or the deepest dyed criminal in ad
vance of a legal investigation of his guilt
or innocence, and I hold that no journalist
who understands the first principles of the
mission of the press or has any sense of
justice will do so.
The Atlanta Constitution, that able and
consistent daily, saw tit to append to an
article about my testimony the statement
that Mr. Goldsmith denied in toto nil that
I had said, and charged that I had bor
rowed money from him which I had never
repaid. It may he of some interest to this
able daily and the numerous littlo journal
istic strikers who sneeze every time it takes
snufl' to know that I have in my posses
sion a letter from Mr. Goldsmith, in which
he says that he never said anything of the
kind anil never authorized any uch publi
cation. Thus it is that this which has been
also the occasion of many would be funny
paragraphs, has been shown to have been
forged by tlie sa;ne fertile brain that gave
such a sensational coloring to my testi
mony, to feed the prurient taste to which
that able journal especially caters.
lam no champion of Mr. Goldsmith. I
express no opinion as to his guilt or inno
cence. It is not my province to pass upon
that, but I desire to say that any man who
says, intimates or insinuates that I ever
received one cent of YV. L. Goldsmith’s
money for my own use, or for any other
purpose than as above stated, or that 1 was
moved in what I did by any other than
motives of common justice, that 1 ever at
tempted to “ suppress public opinion,” or
“ buy ” anybody’s influence, or bribe any
individual, states what is unqualifiedly
false and a lie upon its face.
We shall see whether the Constitution
will he so ready to give this to its readers,
under flashy double leaded headlines, and
whether the able manipulators of the gray
goose quill, who have been making so
merry over the matter, will be as ready to
do justice as they have been to build witty
paragraphs without foundation in fact.
Respectfully, 11. YV. J. Ham.
In reply to the above card the Atlanta
Constitution says :
•• YYc publish in another column 11. W.
J. Ham’s card sent by him to the Augusta
Chronicle and Constitutionalist. There
are in the Georgia penitentiary about 1,200
convicts, and it is a fact that among them
cannot he found a man who will say that
he was justly incarcerated—that someone
swore a lie against him. YY T e have some
men in Georgia who ought to be in the
penitentiary, who, when the sligiitest evi
dence of their criminal conduct is publish
ed. meet the publication with the state
ment that the facts published are sensa
tional and untrue.
YVe did not ask Mr. Goldsmith to “au
thorize ” our publication. YY'e published
the evidence just as it was delivered before
the committee. YY'c have never made any
comment upon it, hut as we are now called
upon to do so in reviewing the card pub
lished by Mr. Ham, who seems evidently
to be mad because we did publish the
truth, we will sa_v that we may have some
“ nincompoops” on the State press in Geor
gia who pay little attention to grammar,
but we do not believe there is a man
1 among them who would undertake the job
[he did. There is certainly not one who,
* *■
if he did, would try and make fifteen dol
lars out of the twenty-five entrusted to
him. and after meeting with a rebuff go
back to the man who gave him the money
and tell him that he would still try and see
what he could do, and go home with the
money in his pocket honing that the article
when it appeared would give no offense,
and finally when it did appear leave the
fact ns to whether the money had been re
turned a debatable question.
We published what we did about this
transaction on the 15th inst., and we have
heard of no complaint from any source un
til this communication from Ham. The
committee say that it is substantially the
testimony as taken before them. We have
applied for an exact copy of an evidence,
and as soon as we can get it will give it to
our readers, and they can judge how much
sensation and how much truth there is in it.
In it l’ONsihle
That a remedy made of such common,
simple plants as Hops, Buchu. Mandrake.
Dandelion, Ac., make so many and such
marvelous and wonderful cures as Hop
Hitters do? It must be. for when old and
young, rich and poor. Pastor and Doctor,
Lawyer and Editor, all testify to having
been cured by them, we must’believe and
doubt no longer. Sec other column.
Corrupt ion Among the Press.
4*fl< thorj * Echo.
As a member of the fraternity wo bow
owr head with! shame apd humiliation as
wSreadj that the hydra ; headed monster,
Bribery, lias mvaneu the sanctity of the
Fourth Estate. The Press is looked upon
to expose fraud and preserve the purity of
our land and government, and when their
(dlniuns arp bargained and sold likoacom
inon cnattle, then indeed may the people
tremble for the future of their country.
As soon as it is prpven that a member of
this honorable brotherhood is so far lost
to decency and pride as to sell the political
influence' of his paper, he should be
spurned and ostracised by bis comrades as
they would any other unclean reptile that
had invaded their ranks. Let the Press of
Georgia for one instant countenance or en
courage such prostitution of their noble
calling, and their influence with the people
vanishes like mist before the sun of day.
Editors, unlike poets, are not born but
made. Tbe purest and most renowned
Editors in our country gradually climbed
the ladder of fame from the bottom round,
commencing at the office of “devil” and
passing through the trying ordeal of com
positor on a daily paper. Trained to the
business thus, they hold its honor dearer
than oven life itself. We have yet to hear
of such a man bringing disgrace upon the
profession. They would as soon think of
prostituting their own family. Glance
over the record of those papers at which
the finger of suspicion points, and you
will find them controlled by aliens to the
business—men who do not know a box in
the case, and who only embarked in the
business through mercenary motives.
These interlopers have no identity with the
calling, and hence care not one iota about
sustaining its purity and dignity.
On Our .Must Distant Frontiers,
As in our busiest and most populous cities
of the seaboard and interior, Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters is pre-eminently popular.
Wherever civilization plants its foot on this
continent, thither the great tonic soon finds
its way. Nor is this surprising, for it is
the medicine of all others best adapted to
the wants of the Western emigrant, be he
miner or agriculturist. It is an incompar
able remedy for the diseases to which he is
most subject, and which are liable to be
brought on by a change of climate, hard
ship, exposure, unaccustomed air and diet,
and miasmatic atmosphere and water.
Among these are disorders of the stomach
and bowels, rheumatic ailments, and ma
larious fevers, for all of which Ilostetter's
Bitters is a certain specific. A course of
the Bitters before departing for the new
field of labor, or on arriving, will have the
effect of preventing the evils for which it
is such a signal remedy.
HEALTH aiIfIitsPLEASURES
on
DISEASE WITH ITS AGONIES:
CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM.
HOLLOWAYS PILLS
Nervous Disorders.
What is more fearful than a breaking down of the
dervoiM system ! To be excitable or nervous in a
small degree is most distressing, for where can a
remedy be found I There is one :—drink but little
wine, beer, or spirits, or far better, none; take no
cottec—weak tea being preferable,- get all the fresh
air you can; take three or four Pius every night;
eat plenty of solids, avoiding the use of slops; audit'
these golden rules are followed, you will Ik* happy in
mind and strong in body, and forget yon have any
nerves.
Mothers and Daughters.
If there is one thing more than another for which
these Pills are so famous, it is their purifying prop
erties, especially their power of cleansing the blood
from all impurities, and removing dangerous and
suspended secretions. Universally adopted as the
one grand remedy for female complaints, they never
fail, never weaken the system, and always bring
about what is required.
Sick Headaches and Want of Appetite.
These feelings which so sadden us, most frequent
ly arise from annoyances or trouble, from obstructed
perspiration, or fivm eating and drinking what
is unfit for us, thus disordering the liver and
Stomach These organs uinst he regulated it you
wish to bo well. The Pills, if taken according to the
printed instructions, will quickly restore a healthy
action to both liver and stomach, whence follow, as a
natural consequence, a good appetite and a clear
head. In the East and West Indies scarcely any
other medicine is ever used for these disorders.
How to be Strong.
Never let the bowels be either confined or unduly
acted upon. It may appear singular that Holloway's
Pills should he recommended for a run upon the
bowels, many persons supposing that they would in
civa.se relaxation. This is a great mistake, however :
for these Pills will immediately correct the liver and
stop every kind of lxnvcl complaint. In warm cli
mates thousands of lives have been saved by the use
of this medicine, which iu all cases gives tone and
vigor to the whole organic system, however deranged
—health and strength following as a matter of course.
The appetite, too, is wonderfully increased by the
use of these Pills, combined in the use of solid in
preference to fluid diet. Animal food is better than
oroths and stews. By removing acrid, fernientod, or
other impure humors from the liver, stomach, or
blood, the cause of dy sen try, diarrhoea, ami other
bowel complaints is expelled. The result is, that the
disturbance is arrested, and the action of the bowels
becomes regular. Nothing will stop the relaxation of
the bowels so quickly as this due correcting medi
cine.
Disorders of the Kidneys.
In all diseases affecting these organs, whether they
secrete too much or too little water: or whether they
be afflicted with stone or gravel, or with aches and
pains settled in the loins over the regions of the kid
neys. these Pills should be taken according to the
printed directions, and the Ointment should be well
rubbed into the small of the back at bedtime. This
treatment will give almost immediate relief when all
means have failed.
For Stomachs out of Order.
No medicine will so effectually improve t lie tone of
the stomach as these Pills: they remove all acidity,
occasioned either by intemperance or improper diet.
They reach the liver and reduce it to a healthy ac
tion ; they are wonderfully ethcacious in cases of
spasm—in fact they never tail in curing all disorders
of the liver and stomach.
Holloway'* Pill* are the Best known remedy in the
World for the following diseases :
Ague, Consumption, Inflammation,
Sore Throat, Asthma, Debility,
Jaundice, Stone and Gravel, Dropsy,
llilious comparts,Liver Complaints, Secondary
Dysentery, Blotches on the Symptoms,
Erysipelas, Skiu, Lumbago,
Tie-douloureanx, Fevers of all kinds, Piles,
Tumors, Bowel complaints. Rheumatism,
Ulcers, Fits, Retention of
Worms all kinds, ('olios, Urine,
Gout, Headache, Constipation of
Scrofula or Indigestion, theßqwels.
King's Evil, Weakness from any cause.
(’AI'TION ! None are genuine unless the signa
ture of J. IT AY POCK, as agent for the United States,
surrounds each box of Pills and Ointment. A hand
some reward will be given to any party or parties
counterfeiting the medicines or vending tbe same
knowing them to be spurious.
%* Sold at the Manufactory of Professor Hollo
way Al Cos.. New Vm k. and by all respectable Drug
gists and Dealers in Medicine 'throughout the civil
ized world, in boxes at 25 cents, 62 cents, and $1
each.
J There is considerable saving in takiug the
larger sizes.
N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients in
every disorder are affixed to each Im>x. ID4
L. J. GARTRELL,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ATLANTA, ISA.,
I>RACTICES in the United States Circuit and
District Courts at Atlanta, aud the Supreme
and Superior Courts of the State. ley
TO MAKE MONEY
Pleasantly and fast, agents should address
FINLEY. HARVEY & CO., Atlanta, Ga
mm GIN BEADY FOR BUSINESS.
. We Gin for the 20th.
***
° f h E?e‘ry ‘fTlllw get"' at oar Gln. PrOptnew amt dUpatcU Wour motto.
We Gin for the 20th.
E. B. BENSON & CO.
I, N. k J. S. HOPKINS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
BALTIMORE, MI). _
"VJr;" ESTABLISHED 1860. VVJSST
W. H. BROWN & BRO.
IMPORTERS & WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
25 S. SHARP STREET, BALTIMORE.
Orders by mail haue prompt attention frow the jinn
personally. 16j
TITOS. M. CLARKE & CO.,
.A-tletn-ta,, G-a,.,
HARDWARE DEALERS A WHOLESALE AGENTS FOR
Kentucky Cane Mills, Oliver CUM Plows,
MACNEALE & URBANS FIRE-PROOF SAFES,
Dexter Corn Shelters and Straw Cutters.
ter Orders Solicited. 165
B. F. AVERY & SONS,
ATLANTA, - - * - - GEORGIA.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Avery Farm Wagons,
Courtland Patform Wagons,
Three-Spring Wagons,
One and Two-Horse Drays,
Pulliam Farm Wagon, Bolster Spring.
Avery’s Sulky and Gang Plow,
Avery’s 2-Horse Cultivator, ( fr imtti* in grains.)
Avery’s Improved Georgia Stock,
Avery’s Plows and Points,
fey 1 " Send for Catalogue.
154 B. F. AVERY & SONS.
E. B. BENSON & CO., Hartwell, BENSON it- CO.. Bowersville,
Agents for the above, and will sell at Factory prices.
W. G. ASHLEY,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
WHITE PINE DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, WINDOW GLASS, PUTTY
DOOR LOCKS, 111 Mi IS. BLIND HINGES, SCREWS,
And all other kinds of BUILDERS’ HARDWARE at the .very LOWEST CASn PRICES.
No. 33 South Broad street, - - ATLANTA, GA.
TWELVE LIGHT WINDOWS AND BLINDS.
1-LAIN RAIL BASII, PRIMED * GLAZED. OUTSIDE BLINDS, ROLLING SLATS? ,
- Light \\ indows Sl
Blinds
Size of Glass. Size of Window. Price Wiud'w Size of Pair. Price of Pair I 8-Light “ “
15-Light “ “
Bxlo 2- 4x3-10 $ 80 2- 4x3-111 8 95 j 18-Light
10x12 2-10x4- 6 115 2-10x4- 74 115 .. . , .
10x14 2-10x5- 2 1 35 2-10x5- 31 1 30 in stock
10x16 2-10x5x10 165 fc 2-10x5-11} 140 at . llk ® educed
10x18 2-10x6- 6 185 f 2-10x6- 71 160 prices, for strictly
10x20 2-10x7- 2 210 I 2-10x7- 3j 180 j cash>
White Pine Doors, 4-Panols, Moulded on Stiles and Rails, 0. G. Raised Panels.
ONE INCH DOORS. | 1 3-16 INCH DOORS. | 1 3-8 INCH DOORS.
Size. Price. Size. Price. Size. Price.
2_ ox - 0 $1 00 2- ox6-"0 $1 25 2- ox - G ..$1 45
2- 4x6- 4 1 05 2- 4x6- 4 1 40 2- Bx - 8 1 60
*- 6x6- 6 1 10 2- 6x6- 0 1 40 2-10x6-10 1 75
Bx - S 1 25 2- Bx - 8 1 55 2-10x6- 6 1 75
“ 10x6- 6 1 45 2-10x6- 6 1 70 3- ox - 6 1 95
~_lox6-in 1 45 2-10x6-10 1 70 2- 0 to 3-ox7-0 1 95
“ ox - 6 1 50 3- ox - 6 1 85 2- oto 3-ox7-G 2 15
3- ox - 0- 1 50 3- ox - 0 1 85 9- 0 to 3-OxS-0 2 25
t tj? J Raised Moulded 4-panel front Doors 2 10x6-10 to 3xß, Square and Circular Top Panels, from $3.50.
to $5.25. All orders promptly tilled and satisfaction guaranteed. 164
Robertson, Taylor & Cos.
(SUCCESSORS TO GEO. W. WILLIAMS A CO.)
COTTON FACTORS, WHOLESALE GROCERS
and
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
I A 3 IIAT.NI' STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C.,
Will give all business their most careful attention. Consignments solicited.