The Fairburn sentinel. (Fairburn, Ga.) 1871-1872, July 21, 1871, Image 1

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H4T E S OF SI hS t RU* 110 X . Oae copy of the piper one year, $ 2 no Three copies of the paper one year,. ... a 00 Fire copie- of the paper one. year, « 00 Ten copie* of the paper one year, In 00 In variably in Ad vanee. fSir Comaiunication* solicited from all sxv tioos, but in no instance will they he inserted without the name of the. writer accompany them. JBlr- Address all cominunicaiious to SAM‘L J. JOHNSTON. RAILROAD DittBCTORY. ATLANTA X WfciT I’OINT B. B. Change of Schedule. DAT PASSENGER TP. A IN*—l'utr«D. Leave Atlanta ...7:10 am arrives at Fairborn B:J6 a m Arrive at West Point 11:40 a.« pay passenger train —inward. Leave West Point 12:06 r u ■ arrive at Fairburn 4:16 P M Arrive at Atlanta 6:16 r si StCIIT riIEICHT AND PASSF-NOER TRAIN. l eave Atlnnta 3:00 p M Arrive at West Paint 10:1 > r M Leave West point 3:00 A M Arrive at Atlanta 10:uT a m L. P. GRANT, Superintendent. MACON 1 WESTERN RAILROAD. ON and after Sunday, Feb. 26th, 1871. the folloKiup schedule for Passenger Trains will b« observed on this Road : BAY r.issr-.OFIt TRAINS PAII.T, (Sonday.t eieepshd ) Leave Macon at 7.20 a m Arrive at Atlan'a at. 2:23 p u L-'nvc Atlanta at - • ■ .C OO a a Arrive at Mace- at 11:30 a m Nauru I»tit; oa:rt i itAi.4B (Daily.) Leave Macon at 6* :6 P M Arrive at Atlunia at 10:16 p m Leave Atlanta at.. 3:28 r \i rrive at Macon at ILOS f m t Trains arriving at Macon iI:3J a. tn. and 10;li p m . make clo'e connections for Savan niih and all points in Florida. The 10:16 p, m. train connects at Atlanta iar Eastern and Western cities. Train* on the S. G. & N. A. R. R., connect at Grifli i with the dowu day passenger train ut Macon A Western Railroad, and run as lol lows : Leave Griffin 1:60 p M Arrive at Ncwnan 3 4-’ p m Leave Newnan .7.00 a m Arrive at Grißiu ‘3:4* * m 11. W. BRONSON, M. T. W. A. FULLER, O. T. A. WESTERN A ATLANTIC RAILROAD. ON and after Sunday, February l*, 1871, the Passenger train* will run on the Western and Western Atlantia Railroad ns lollow* ; XIOtTT PAFSEVOEIt TFAIN. Leave Atlanta 10.16 P m Arrived et Kingston 4:14 a m Arrive at Dalton 3:20 A M Arrive at Chattanooga 5:40 a m Leave Chattanooga 9:00 r M rrive at Dalton 11:11 pm rrive at Kingston 1:51 a M Arrive at Atlanta. 5:17 a m DAY I’ASSENOER TRAIN. Leave Atlanta 8:15 a m Arrive at Kingston 11:45 am Arrive at Dalton 2:13 p m Arrive at Chattanooga 4:26 r M Leave Chattanooga 5:50 am! Arrive at Dalton 8:10 a m Arrive at Kingston K:3O a m rrive at Atlau:a 8:00 I’ M E. B. WALKER, M. T. | GEORGIA RAILROAD. ON and after Sunday'January 2'2nd 1871, the passenger trains will run as follows : DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. (Daily, Sunday Excepted.) I.cave Augusta 8:00 a m Leave Atlanta ,7:10 am Arrive at Augusta 5:40 p M Arrive at Atlanta 6:35 r M MOHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusia 8:20 p M Leave Atlunta 10:00 P M Arrive at Augusta 7:30 a m Arrive at Atlanta 6:40 a m ACCOMMODATION TRAIN. Leave Atlanta 5:30 P M Leave Stone Mountain 6:30 a m Arriva at Stone Mountain 7:UO p m Both day and nigiit passenger trains will make close connections at Augmta and Atlanta with passenger train* ot couni cling roads. Passengers from Atlanta, Athens Washington and stations of the Georgia Rail road, by taking the down day passenger train will make close connection, at Camik. with Macon passenger train, and reach Macon the same day. at 7:40 p. m. i alace Sleeping Cars ou all night trains. S. K JOHNSTON, Superintendent. BUSINESS CABDS. BRICK 11Y TIIE Ml EEION. WHEN you want Crick call on Cook & Dav:s, one hall mile west of Fairburn, Ga., and you can gel them for the greenbacks. Don’t tail to give these gentlemen a call when you want brick. apl3*tf ATTORNEY AT LAW * K C. M OBLEY, Ats « r lie y at L a \v , Fairiu’rn, Georgia apll-12ni THOMAS tt LATHAM, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW FAIRBURN, GEORGIA, IyITILIk practice if» Superior Courts of V V the counties of Campbell, Coweta Doug )*ra, Fayette, Fulton and other counties by special c ntmet— in the Supreme Court of the State and the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Georgia, held at Atlanta. apl3-12m SOMETHING *\EW ! NO Stencil Cutter should be without Dot* ton's Stencil arid Key Check outfit, fie' member that at the Stencil bu.-iness money ie easily made Address 3. Z. DUTTON, Box 351, Ailmia Stencil works, Atlanta, r;a. msW 12m OSCAR A.CANTKELJITaTcO BEALfTRS IN* Dry Goods, Groceries, Ac., (in their new store, one door east of postoffice.) FAIRBURN, GEORGIA. aSr* Call on them and get good bargains. apl'J ts fa I hlii k n h iTTn sc hool. Oipt. J. G . LISTER. Prof of Mathematics. F, C. MOBLEY, Prof, of Modern and Ancient 1 inKaagps, *L ? ANN A Mat,lnf, Teacher of Music. 1 1 ’Hi first S< ssfeil oT this Fchrml llie ..r 1 187i, will i-nd the 30th nt June. ciiu.iioo . charged only from thefime of entering. Kale? j of Tuition lpwer than »ny oiher sitniiar-ela set. j Institution Tn the Stare. Numb' rof student | at present, scvpn'y-are. apii ts €\i fairburn Sentinel VOL. 1.1 Tlie Fragrant F lowers Smile o'er the I r L«it Green Graves— “Tlie graves of tlkosc that can never ille.” 'The following composition was written by young Indy of College Tom pie, Newutui, Ga. She has kindly per mitted us to give it to the public.— Ed. Sen ] The idols of the South aro broken now. We stand amid the crumbling dust of high hopes, holy resolutions. — And we weep; for the noblest of her sons have fallen. The pride of the South lie in their low green graves Look long at this picture: each ver dant mound may be distinctly seen Scattered over ail our land, the thous ands are sleeping the long sleep of death. Ah 1 cur .Confederate dead— our noble soldiers who rest forever from the clash of aims—rest peacefully in our midst, loved and honored, fur they offered np their liven on the stouny field of buttle, aid poured out, their hearts’ best blood iu defense of the truth of our glorious and Lost Cause! Dear to every Southern heart shall be their graves, And shall wo not bring flowers, “ iove’s tribute,” to adorn their low green mounds ? plant and water them with tears, that they may lift their fragrant blossoms in 6tniiing beuison over their heads, embluruutic of that true and tender love and honor which shall never die in Southern land, and wish each returning spring lime, shill reverentially lay ttpou the hal lowed spot a wreath of immortelles. — Shall uol our “Anniversary for decorat ing the graven of the Confederate dead” become a time-honored custom ? Shull we not •• Go to their steeping bowers. Deck their low couch of clay With earliest spring's soft breathing (lowers? And when they lade away, Think of the amaranthine wreath, The eailnuds never dim, Think ot the Laurels nnd the Bay, The Hera’s evergreen ?’’ It iu indeed a holy ritual. Simple seems the act; great and true should be the thoughts which prompt it, be dewed with our hearts’ best affections and tender reverence, remembering that j we stand amid the graves of our mar tyred heroes. Gome, then, bring the most beautiful of thy flowers and lay them over the heads of those whose sole ephitapb is that touching word, ‘ Unknown." We pause sadly here, and as we think of the cold form resting beneath the damp sod, the sentiment of those beautiful lines cornea to us— “ Carve on the wooden slab o’er bis head, •Somebody’s Dulling’ lies sleeping here— God knows best; ho was somebody’s love. Somebody's heart enshrined him there, Somebody wafttd his name above Night and Mora on the wings of prayer.” Twine, then, thy garland for seme* | body’s darling. The weary aching | Heart is w'uteliing for him who comes !no more. And lias ho died in vain ? ; Ah, nu! “The brave die never; they i do but change their country’s arms, for more, their country ’s heart.” True and nol le sentiment. Our loving South hath lain her finger on it, and taken it i in her firm white hand, and with each | returning spring, bears aloft the living | words, then stoops, and “strews the ! sod with the tai iiest flowers, and makes to them an offering of the plenty Na ture gives.” The echoing sound of spring’s last footsteps have scarcely died away, and from far and near we hear of holy rites offered up to our dead. Offered else where, not here. This year’s green grows undisturbed in Nevcnan's conse crated ground. No reverent footsteps j have bowed the tall weeds growing ! there. No noble living words, listened : to with dewy eyes and quicker bound ' ing heart. Aias, none! The ministra tions td 1871 have been offered there by the male element alone. The eternal slurs keep silent watch by those un honored graves. The soft shimmer of the moonbeams bathe those cold fore heads. The dewy morn comes with slow, loving step and weeps gently over them through her rosy fingers The sweet wild fljwers lift up their tiny chalicies limning over with tears, smiling with half-parted lips. Ami these are Newuan’s dead ; Low sleeping on the lap of earth they lie, While the, the tender mother, bends o’er each head, Clasps each cold hand and shuts each weary eye. The dead, the martyred dead ' Then each should bring with reverence flow ers fair. And Love should place them o’er each client heaa: Then tike them to the heart and keep them there. And may the fragrant flowers never cease to Bmire, or the annual wreath to be laid oyer their low greru gs iycd- FAIRBURN, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JULY 21,1871, Grand Hally of the Atlanta A Columbus Air bine Railroads According to previous arrangements j the citizens of Fayette county assem bled at the Baptist church, on the 4th j inst, for the purpose of organizing.— When, upon motion, lion. Joliu 1. Whitaker was called to the Chair, and Dr. W L. Williams requested to act as Secretary. The exercises were opened with prayer by Rev. .Tames \I. Blalock, of Carrollton. Upon motion, Col. M. M. Tidwell ex plained the object of the meeting in a pointed and forcable argument. Mr, J. C Kimball, of Atlanta, was then in troduced and addressed the citizens in a close,connected, business-like speech, calling upon the people to contribute liberally and promptly, and they wonld be very certain to have a railroad at no great distant day. The committees that were appointed at a previous meeting to take subscrip tion, wore requested to canvass the large assembly, and to get every lady and gentleman to subscribe that would. ; Their results as far as heard from are ! quite encouraging—giving some guar antee that the required amount from Fayette would soon be made. While the committee were discharging this duty, the Chairman gave the people an encouraging, energetic talk, followed by appropriate and timely remarks from the popular representative of The Fairborn Sentinel, Capt. Solomon G. Johnson. The speakers, clergy and ladies were then conducted to the table where they found a good and substantial dinner. After which they repaired to the church. And Mr. Kimball gave us another in valuable lecture upon the Railroad sub ject, requesting that that, part of the audience that had uot contributed and were favorable to the enterprise and expected yet to contribute to rise to their feet that lie might see who they were. Quite a number of gentlemen j and some ladies stood up. Upon motion, resolutions of thanks I were voted Mr. J. C. Kimball for his I valuable services rendered upon two j occasions in onr town, and a cordial I invitation extended kirn from the citi zens to return again. Also, to Cos!. M. M. Tidwell for his untiring energy and ; invaluable efforts made since the com mencement of this project to the pres- I ent time. The proceedings of this meeting were requested to be published in The Faikliuun Sentinel, Atlanta papers, the Senoia Journal, and all other papers friendly to the enterprise. Upon motion, the meeting adjourned. John I. Whitaker, Ch’n. W. L, Williams, See’y. For tliu Sentinel. The Present and Future. The present with its images of beau ty and gladness, and its uncouth forms !of life is with ns; revolving on the i measured wheels of time with its silent whirl, over the vast space of unimali m; ! filled alike with scenes of supernal love and demoniacal hate; sorrow and joy | intermingling in this living world, each i one in different spheres. The hopes of the past, now in vivid reality appear, cither crushed or enjoyed, and bright thoughts of former days are mingled | with regrets, as onward we arc drifting to the unknown future, while many, i ah! too many, are forgetful of their | teachings. The child, full of love and - vivacity, enjoys its sports and pasts 1 limeM, wishing new scenes to arise, till \ lost in fancy’s flowery paths, lie views the shadows lengthen and decline, and a syren voice ho hears, "Passing away;” and in youth, nought is seen but present bliss and care and hope, sweet arbiter of our destiny; manhood’s riper days is just about to grasp the delusive phantom and it vanishes; : while old age, with silvery looks, living on iu the present, pondering over the past, and silently wondering what the ; j futuie will bring. Thus with life, all ! iu different phases enter the present, but to pass away. Indelibly written \ are our impulses, now acted, now eu- j joyed, and the inwatd prompting of our I nature should be guarded, for with all j else so soon the present will be the j past. And the future with its revealings j so mysterious is ever coming Hidden j in the time to come is the goal of all j that is of earth: that which the eye! hath not seen, or the wisdom of man i imagined is concealed iu the realms of mystery, and many bright hopes are ! darkened by disappointments, while the light shades of life in some Lave ' been half drawn. On through life rnor- , tala are filled with unrest--picturing | the future; over the stream of Death we are viewing, trusting, and hoping for ' the better land, where no anxieties | await.no bitterness or sorrow, but bliss reigns eternal: or darkness and dread with dismal visages uro forever and ever lamenting. Happy those who j receive the heavenly applaudit, “Gome IN YE BLESSED OF MY FaTIIER.” Incidents of the Sltw York Uiot. From the dispatches cent to the ! Western Associated Tier \ says the At lanta iSun, we compile the following . incidents connected with the New j York riot. In making selections we nse the Nashville Banner of the 14th. ■ A MCKENIXQ SIGHT was presented in the gutter at the northeast 'corner of Eight Avenue and Twenty fourth Streets, where there were pool3 of blood and a piece of some part of the head of Botne oue who had been mortally wounded. A largo crowd lingered looking at this until it was dark. A GHOSTLY SPECTACLE. A vast crowd filled the street in front of the entrance. The already ex hausted police, streaming with per spiration, and weak with thirst and hunger, could scarcely make for the improvised ambulances, which were of every style, pressed in for dreadful duty. Bakers’ and grocers’ wagons, omnibuses, and market wagons, were used, and came in rapid succession frightened with dead and wounded vie tims. Goufusioa naturally reigned everywhere, and the sad task of bear ing the helpless forms into the stations, if hurriedly, was tenderly performed. Many of the dead are yet UNIDENTIFIED, and the uatues of wounded in some cases, was given almost inarticulately, and of course incorrectly. The cells in the basement were crowded with arrested riots. The corridor was filled with dead, who lay in ull sorts of po sitions upon the cold hard flagstones. ONE HUNDRED KILLED. The most reliable estimates given of the number of riots killed during the day i‘ :n the vicinity of otic- hundred. Over one hundred and fifty severely wounded in the hospitals. When it is taken into consideration that only help lessly wounded and consequently ta ken to tiro hospitals are there, while those slightly wounded slipping away and hiding themselves, lest it should become known they had taken part in the riot, some approximate idea of the number wounded may bo had. Cer tainly three hundred is not too high an estimate. Os course many were killed aud wounded vviio were merely spectators and innocent of any hand iu the disturbance. In the narrow open space between the morgue on Twenty-sixth Street, on East Itiver, i and just inside the lower Bellevue Hos tal gate, ou Thirty-sixth Street there were TWENTY-SEVEN COFFINS side by side at 12 o’clock lasi night, each coffin contaiiiad a victim of the riot. Another colliin with a corpse in it was on tho floor on the outside of the morgue, and two more bodies were yet uncoflincd, laying on lie- slabs.— The morgue was purposely kept dark because, even at that late hour, there was a largo crowd outside the hospit 1 walls eagerly demanding admittance to searching for their missing friends j or relatives. A MUTINOUS REGIMENT. A majority of the (50th regiment were locked up in the armory all day. A small detachment was sent out but behaved very badly and affiliated with the rioters. As soon as this became known tho doors of the armory were locked and barred. A majority of the crowd that followed the prpeesaiou evidently had no idea that so many had been killed and wounded ut Twen ty-fourth street, or it is believed they would have stopped and demonstrated i there as the facts were developed.— | The news rang through the city iu ad- . vance of the march of flic military, for j the people by this time seemed to for- i get the Orangemen, who were squeez- j ed into a small compass and talked | about tho fight between the mob and ! the military. The Orangemen were no completely protected by tho proclama tion of Govornor Huffman, and by the fearfulncßH of the civil any military 1 authorities, that not a man cf them | was injured Two companies of the j Ghth regiment were sent last night tu j guard tho poet-' Sice, and one to tho {NO. U custom house and ono to tho sub treasury. The treasury also had its guard doubled. A SAD A.\t> loRROWFUI. BCFNT. As one of the spectators discovered among the dead one dear to them, n loving parent, or husband, or son, the shrieks which rent the the air pierced the hearts of those other lookers on who weto more fortunate in having no one among than long row of upturned faces whose loss should mourn. Oc casionally a poor sorrowstricken wife would throw herself on thecofiin which held the remains of her dead husband and cry and moan as if her heart would break. A DX.3TR.IcrED MOTHER. i The mother ot a boy of seventeen, : who was shot a3 he was returning I from school, came lo see his dead body, j having learned from friends that lie i was ut the Morgue. It was, however, coffined, and the lid nailed down ready | for removal. The officials told her kindly that she would have to wait till it was brought home. At that she broke out into a wild complaint, and in accents broken by emotion, cxicd out; "Oh! won't you let me see my boy, who never did any harm to anybody ? Do let mo see him; let me sec him, doctor dear. Give me otic look, or what shall Ido at all ? 1 was twenty j four years in England, and this did not i happen.” Thus she went on in a sort of half crazed manner, almost driven out of her senses by the sudden blow which deprived her of her son. AT TIIE TOO.MU3. Tin’s morning the rioters were ex amined, each case separately, and where any party had committed no oveit act, and no wepon was found on him, his name was recalled, and he was discharged. In all other cases, where wepous were found on their persons, the patty was committed for examination. aow a woman and cuim> were killed. I was standing iooking at the pro cession and the crowd, and there was a great deal of czeitement. Directly I saw a woman waving her handker chief to the Orangemen and I thought siio was vory impudent or had more courage than women generally have.— Just at that moment while she was in the act of waving her handkerchief a burly ruffian stepped up to her and placing the muzzle of his pistol to her ear fired and she fell dead, lie then i turned around and deliberately cock j ing his pistol fired u bullet into a little ! girl and she fell dead. I think the little girl must have been twelve or ' thirteen years of age. THE SCENE AT BELLEVUE HOSPITAL baffles description. Some of the cases are very touching. Joseph Love, a young man twenty-one years old, was out of a situation and strolling up Eight Avenue to sec the parade, re ceived a shot in his head. Only yes terday his young wife and child left Ireland to join him here. It will be a sad tale to tell the poor woman on her arrival. Perhaps a sadder sight was the body of the young girl about sixteen years old, who had been shot through the heart. Probably that child never looked so pretty in her life as she did in death. The face was in perfect teposc, arid half a smile played around the lips as if when the death shot struck her she had been laughing at the exciting scenes arougd her. ANOTHER BOY SHOT. A Newark lad while riding on the top of an omnibus yesterday display ed an Orange hundker'chief. Ashot j from a pistol struck him utid he fell | from the stage dead. Prolific. —The Humboldt Indepen dent says: “Wo reported that Mr. D. A. Dadd’s wife had seven pairs of twins and two odd children during ten years of married life. We were wrong, j Mr. Dadd, just in our office, informs us i there arc eight pairs of twins and three j ° * odd ones, nineteen in all, ten gills and 1 nine boys in fuuitcen years and they I are all living. Profanity. —The author of the fol- ! lowing told one truth if he never tells ; another; Profanity never did any man the least good. No man is richer or hap pier or wiser for it. It commends no one to society. It is disgusting to the good; insulting to those with whom I we associate; degrading to the mind; unprofitable, needless and injurious to society. Morrissey and Ucenan attended a cnmprneet ing last week RtUH OF ADVERTIBIN6. One Square, first inoertion i 1 00 Foreach suhsoqtTent: insertion, 00 One Square aix mouths 9 00 One Square twelve eionVhs 1? 00 y&r Liberal deduction will lie made fur con tract ndvertimiincnts. Enough to pay for composition will be charg’d for change or advertisement!). All articles published for the benefit of parties or individuals, al their ow n solicitation, will be charged for aB advertisements. ATLANTA BUSINESS CARDS Reward «>f Loyalty! \I.L persons desiring to institute claima against the IT. S. Government lor proper ly destroyed during the late war can have their cluims made out v.y. calling on II J. Stephens, on old Whitehall Si... Atlanta* Ur. None need apply unless they ean prove their Loyalty beyond a doubt. je23*tf • It J. Stephens. 110 WEN & SANDERS, MANUFACTURERS OF Doors,Sasli, Blinds, Mouldings,Ate Turning -and Scrolling done to Order. Plaining Mill on Forsyth street, near Macon A. Western Railroad. AcUiri'FP P. 0. Box. No. 017, Atlanta, Q* inftl2‘l2in .1. T. CAMPBELL DFXTIS 1 , 'PENDERS thanks for toriuer liberal patron -1 age arid solicits an Increase in the future. Work doue in the latest and most Unproved lyle. iW/v . .«S~ Office Ho. !>9, Wk. \ Ml street,Atlanta, over the jewelry store of Sharp <fc Floyd, malS-Gin JORDAN, HOWARD & HARiIALKOV, tobacco COMMISSION M EMC HA NTS, WHoLESAt.r DEAIEKS IN LIQVU RS, CIaA RS, <Lc , Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA, ap2l Cm ~ ATi7a~NTa STKA.MB KKWFRY. C. A. GOODYEAR'S CELL Rlt A TFD SOutliorn Ales AND DORTER. I’. 0. Box, No. 618. Oarr. W. I’. PLATT, Traveling Agent. ap2B-tt in'NNICUTT & BELLINGRATIf, DEALERS IN’ STOVES & SLATE MANTLES, TINNERS’ IREHMIHfiS, STEAM AND GAS FITTINGS, Wrought Iron Pipes, For Steam, Gas and Water Pumps, Rubber Hose. Tilt Plate,Sheet li on, Copper, Lead, and Lead Pipes, Plumbers' Brass Goods, Wash Basins, Water Closets, Ac., No. 9, Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga. pit" Also, Contracts tor Routing in the bebt style, in Tin and Sheet Iron. np'2B-l2m J . \V A U LIC R, MANUFACTURER OF TIN WAmEi BTOVF.S,TIN PLATE, M’D TISNKttS’ FINDINGS. Also, Oil. & LAMPS. Marietta Street, between Whitehall & Broad, Atlanta, Georgia- USB- Wc call the attention of the citizens of Campbell, Fayette and Douglass counties to the advertisement ot Mr. J, Warlick. Wu know him to be one of the high toned, honest and energetic business men of Alarum, tic to his house and buy your wile anew Stov and you will find him all right. Success to a such men. ap‘2l-13 THE DAILY AND WEEKLY True Gfcorglan. THESE ARE PROGRESSIVE NATIONALOEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPERS THEY ARE DEVoTF.D TO THE Best Interests of the Entire Country,, They are published in Atlanta, • -•- Georgia, At the fallowing Ratnorkubly Low Rates: Daily—l 2 mouths $6 tUi " <5 months liu “ 3 months i 5U “ 1 mouth 6d Weekly—l 2 months 200 “ fi months 1 Ul THOSE DESIROUS OF HAVING THE NEATEST AND BEST EEUIEY KEWSTIPEi. Should subscribe at once to either or both of them. We urgently recueat all interested in the welfare of Georgia, ! to send .to us short letters on the crops, and m a tiers of general interest. Address SAMUEL BARD, Publishes 1 Daily and Weekly True. Georgian, Luck -Drawer, 31 30-ts Atlanta, Ga. C II E A 1‘ R E A D lN G. THE ATLANTA NEW ERA. Club Rates. 111 order lo place the WEE K L Y N E I V Elt A within the reach of ail, the proprietor have determined to offer the followiil SPLENDIDINJGT( E>IENTS: One copy, one year $ 2 Oh Ten copies one year, $ 1.50 each 15 00 Twenty copies, oue year, $1.25 each 25 Ot! Thirty copies, one year, §I.OO each, , . .30 01/ The Weekly Era contains nearly t wenty eight columns of choice read ing matter each issue, consisting of Politics, Li|uralure, Market Reports, arid GENERAL news. Make up your Clubs at once. Postmasters arc authorized and r« quested to act as agents. Address NEW ERA OFFICE, Atlanta 09,