The Atlanta evening capitol. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-1???, July 16, 1886, Image 2

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(Every Evening except flnndey.) ( JBBCRIITIOX—By Mall, in cents a week; 35 cents a lonth ; 11.00 tor three months; 14.00 a year. ■BUVEKKI: anywhere In the City hy Carrier for 4; c iita per week, payable to rhe Carrier reasonable advertising roles and affidavit or clrculft lon cheerfully furnished upon application. . ammunlcatlons on vital public questions solicited. i Adlrese, THE KVKSIHG CAPITOL, 48 8. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga. , Trlepbone No. 445. Clan. 8. Atwood, I. w . 1 Pres’t. k Bos. Mang’r. Editorial Mang’r. , entered at Atlanta I". O. as eecond class matter. r ...... j Go and hear Mynatt to-night. Let e.verv voter be present at the Court House to-night to hear Col. Mynatt. Tin: Court House will be full to-night ' with people anxious to hear that distin- , guishetl speaker, Col. Mynatt, as well as ; Gov. Smith and Col. Reub Arnold. , Chicago is still wrestling with the cable , tunnel business. Big jobs are being fixed up on the city, but so far the city council < have refused all offers of boodle, and have i thwarted the schemers. Talking with A. J. Miller, the big fur- i niture man of Savannah and Atlanta, who ' is here on a visit, about business in Sa- 1 vannah, we learned that business is as J depressed in Savannah as it is here and . elsewhere over the country. Mr. Miller ( stated positively that from his experience j and observation, business in Atlanta was , fully up to the average. i - i Al’ditok Brown, of iowa, has just been ( acquitted of thirty articles of impeachment 1 that had been presented against him, i chief of which may bo said to have been 1 interferring with the treachery of his par- ' ty officials. But though the prosecution < labored diligently and employed able ( counsel, he was acquitted by the State ) Senate by a vote of 35 to 15. He is said ( to be an honest, fearless official. < i UPRIGHT, THUE, HIINF.ST. , How much can be said of Col. I’. L. i Mynatt, the candidate for nomination for 1 Congress. He has lived hereformany, many years 1 and there is naught that can be said against him, and had there been it would ( have been raked up and warmed over by , the friends of his opponent. ( When he was in the halls of State leg- i islation as a representative and as a dele- < gate to the constitutional convention his ' voice was frequently raised towards cor- 1 reeling and perfecting any measures, and as a worker he has the reputation of be- t ing indefatigable. , If he would display such earnestness as , a State legislator much more could be ex- , pected of him in the halls of national leg islation. Men of his stamp are needed there to lift their voices in behalf of bills which would relieve and assist our merchants, and who would throw their influence on the side of justice and equity in labor in terests. , Colonel Mynatt’s record has proven that he would do this, and the people know that they can trust him. COLONEL MYNATT TO-NIGHT. Colonel Myiatt will to-night define his position on the absorbing questions of the day. Go and hear him, that you may pass judgment more understandingly. Colonel Mynatt will show that he is solid on bills affecting commercial circles, a friend to the laboring people and a pure, earnest man and deep thinker. Governor Smith will have some impor tant things to say, and Colonel Arnold will throw in a little timely spice to liven up the occasion. BWOKN TO SECRECY. We wonder what the earnest supporters of Col. Hammond would think if we were to tell them that we were on the inside track of that meeting last night at Colonel Hammond’s office? But there in nothing in it that necessity compels us to give away. We will offer one word though that it will take a dozen such meetings to devise a scheme which will undo the work of Mon day night,unprecedented as it was for mere political rope pulling and convention packing. CAPITOL SALMAGUNDI. Gtoeox W AsnixiiTOS—well, Tblngebob, i» the of the baby prince of Siam. Da. GtoiOE U Millem, of the Omaha Herald, ia mak ing Utica, N. Y.. hie temporary headquarters. Tin New Yark Grant monument fund is 1121,000, a little aver one-tenth of the turn originally contem plated. King Lcnwiu, of Bavaria, used to drink white wine aad champagne flavored with fresh violets. He often epent ISO a day for the flowers. Now wa’an going to have a detective atory from ’way back. Inspector Byrnea, of New York, is going to ißt 20 years of bis past life into a book. lIcNKT W attkksox is fretting and scolding over the character of the American diplomatic service. He says “it is either an hospital for decayed gentleman or a nuraery tor ysang fops.” a leadeh. Up Alma*a hill the Ensign went, A bey I but terribly intent; Hit .boa Id be torvtnoet of the Sere, Tboerb he and it were shot to rage. He looked round only once, to And The men a moment lagged fehind. “Bring back the color, to them 1“ cried The Colonel. But the lad replied. “Mo! lead yoa up the men who lag And bring them forward to the Hag 1” So tar ahead our Kaalgn leads The laggards tell a. he wvedea- He could not stay the fight to say Oar victory lies the onward way! “Bring bar k the cok>r» to the rear. For those w ho fight the battle there ”’ No! no! far forward be stand, fast. First with the colors, te the last. So cry of laggards will be heed; A leader's duty is to lead. —Gerald in Loudon Sova. PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE. “My body with my charge lay down, Ami cea.e at once to work and live.*’ —Chaki-k. Wksi.kt. Deab Evening Capitol : This i« a very sad day to me, the day of Mr. Bayne's burial, and my heart inclines me to write to you, even though the utterance be broken and fragmentary. I know bow you ap preciated bis genius. I know, too, how you loved him for those qualities, which stand far above the most splendid endowments, and from which the endowments themselves borrowed their finest lustre. A genuine poet he was; rare in manifold aspects among the elect singers of the age; and yet his.genius was so luminously set forth in his private worth that we cannot help feeling amid the heavy shadows of his grave I hat his personal manhood is the most precious of the memories he has bequeathed to our hearts. Recalling some of the memorable hours I was privileged to spend with him I find this the most vivid of all surviving impressions, that my admiration for his fine gifts was never con tent to rest within itself, but instinctively sought an alliance with my attachment to the man. I never thought of him as a poet, but as a Poet-Man, and along with this as a Poet- Friend and Poet-Patriot, and yet more as Poet- Companion of the Household, Hearth and Social Seclusions in their serenest charms. A most companionable soul he was; the society instinct strong within him, and a most diffusive element permeating all his faculties and infusing the joy of their warm outgoings into your heart; the freest man from self-regarding emotions wham I have known. In all his closer friend ships he blended himself with others, nor did I ever detect in him any of that secret homage to self, which so often seeks to disguise latent van ity and selfishness under the guise of compli menting you. Not often is genius an attract ing power. In itself it is an insulator. Its sense of superiority is apt to steal out through the crevices of conventional manners and prove a subtle repellent influence. None of this in sensible vitiation of fellowship appeared in Mr. Hayne; and I have thought, at times, that his genialneis was an occult atmosphere, finer than the air of our daily breathing, which enveloped hie genius. Inspiring as his poetry was in the higher order of tuggestiveaess, I doubt not that this secret nexus between the man’s deep human ness was felt, if not logically understood, by the majority of bis readers. Herein lay the quality that gave him as a poet so firm, and, as we may believe, so permanent a grasp on the critical minds of our whole country and of lu rope. He interpreted the .South to the world; he interpreted her to herself. A popular poet with the masses —such a poet, for instance, as Burns, Thomson, Campbell—ho was not, nor could he have been. A singer for the multitude is not a fact predicates of him. Certain styles of art, ns Sir John Reynolds showed long ago, exclude ex-necessitate, other styles, and hence must maintain the individual idiosyncracy by tend cious speciality. If Shakspeare, despite of uni versality, maintained a world-wide adaptiveness, it was simply because he was Shakspeare; and I cannot help thinking that Emerson missed the mark when he expended such splendid abili ty in giving him so prominent a place among "Representative men." Shakspeare owed his highest fame to the non-represeutative charac ter of bis genius. “But, if Shakespeare’s hand was subdued to what it worked in, no one can charge Mr. Hayne with having dwarfed his stature, or sullied his purity by illegitimate uses of his great talents. He was a keen and discerning critic, but in no senso captious or partisan. He criticized no one as ho criticized himself. He had section ality free from sectionalism. He was a South erner, but an American Southerner. A “New South” he believed in and cherished, but not at tbo expense of the Bld South and her tradi tions. Writing for a livelihood, hia intimate friends knew what lucrative openings were at easy command, had his principles been less stern. But those principles borrowed their su preme virtue from something greater than prin ciple, for he had a soul imbedded in sen timent. The sentiment was not imaginative aud sensational. It was integrally moral and spiritual. If ever I knew a man who had a literary conscience that stood distinctively apart from literary consciousness, that man was Paul H. Hayne. Were it proper, I could demonstrate this by his correspondence with me, but I feel assured that no one needs the proof of what I have stated as to a manliness of sensibility that amounted almost to the morbid ness of casuistic scrupulosity. Heaven be praised for such an example 1 At any time the high self respect of this man, for his attitude and vocation, would by’ any, figure itself into kinship with self reve- rence. At this particular time, when the love of money is becoming the standard of nearly everything, it is inapiringly precious to know that we have had a man of such conspicuous genius in our literature still more conspicuous for his moral and spiritual manhood. Again! again! God be thanked! A man must live his poem before he writes it; so argued John Mil tou; and so lived the recluse of Copse Hili. On thia beautiful characteristic of Mr. Hayne’s nature, I dwell so emphatically, because of my conviction, that in preferring reputation to pop ularity and persistently keeping his voice in the true pitch for the select few rather than the numerical many, he acted the part of a genuine benefactor to the South, and adopted the very wisest plan, available in the conditions of our literature, to lift up the uncultured masses of our people. Admiration of gifted men is not quite the same thing as admiration for gifted ■eu. Enough, indeed, have we had of barren admiration, alas very little of reproductive ad miration. For in the latter, there is a vital sympathy and a cordial reoiproealness unknown to the former, and hence a more assimilative and edu cational influence. Looking upon Paul Hamil ton Hayne’s life and literary labors as a new era opened in our Southern literary history, and incomparably more than a mere renascence of the old South. I regard it as a most significant augury that Providence granted us the grace of so eminent a gift in the semi-chaotic state of our civilisation. During the last two decades we have needed a man to typify, in the best and broadest sense of typicaluess, the latent possi bilities, temporarily obscured beneath the surges of tears, mire and blood. High culture has nec essarily decayed. High culture has especially suffered in thia, that even our appreciation of its vast utility, to say nothing of its splendid em bellishments of civilized society has been tem porarily suspended by this terrible pressure on outward life. What does all history tell us of the resuscitations of a people's life? It tells us that in all the revivals of physical energies there is first a return of intellectual power; and it further tells us that uniformly in the re- THB EVENING CAPITOL: ATLANTA. GA., FBI t>AY, JULY 16. ?886 NATURAL STIMULATING REFRESHING FINEST Mineral Waters. Ginjrer Me. Lemiaifi. Mill Shakes. DELICIOUS FRESH HEALTHY ALL KINDS Soda Water. Apple Cider. Limeade. New Flavors. 36 Whitehall St. NUNN ALLY & R AWSON. 36 Whitehall St. I kindling of intellectual tastes and aspirations j the poet leads the way and heads the magnates i ! in the procession of philosophers, scientists and ■ inventors. I think, accordingly, that Mr. ] Hayne’s life history in Georgia is one of I the most inspiriting tokens of good hope and animating cheer that could have come to our commonwealth. Already the signs of his inspi ration, making steady progress among the rising \ ■ generation in our high schools and colleges, are \ ' quite apparent. Already we have caught much of his tone and accent in our thinking. By vir- ~ tue not only of our circumstances, but by rea- ■ son of our hereditary blood and ancestral tradi tions, he was one of us in a very special and in- ! j tensified oneness. No man has so fully, so pa- ( thetically, so resolutely, so profoundly, voiced : the Southern heart as this man. His poems are not merely musical and classic verses. Schol arly and finished as they are by an artistic ( standard, and replete as well with the most ■ praiseworthy features of the best schools of ( poetry, I hold these merits in abeyance when I speak of the supreme enforcement of his life ! as the solitaire of letters among us at Copse ! Hill. Chivalric in a sense that redeems the word from its commoner associations and exalts its import into a religious meaning; enriching his heirship of an illustrious name that brought the historic annals of the “four-huudred-year old Shropshire manor-house" and superadded them to the glory of South Carolina in the Col onial days and subsequently in the Revolution; a singularly patient and persistent, scholarly mind, oven to the height of heroism when hero ism had to find sole nurture in its own re sources, and tread with step never flinching or faltering a pathway, every league of which was a record of silent and pathetic suffering, this man’s memory, O, Georgians! 0, States of the South, may perchance have an adequate recog nition among us, now that Death teaches us what we have lost. A. A. L. PERSONAL. •n M. M. Mauck, paper decorator and painter. Call at Fox’s new Tea Store, 69 Peachtree street, for your teas and coffees. If yeu want any fine-fat turkeys, fine fat hens, fine fat chickens, fine fat ducks, dressed for any special occasion, go to Duffy, 75 Peachtree st. Buy Fox’s pure Standard Java, 69 Peachtee. Every egg sold in my house is guaranteed frese. This is something that the people of At lanta are in great need of. Dully, 75 Peachtree street. Peel’s restaurant and model lunches, tobacco, and line cigars. Regular dinner 25 cents. Peel’s delicious buckwheat cakes, all the go, only 10 cents. 38 South Broad st. Try Fox’s 50c Oolong Tea, 69 Pedchtree. If you want the finest coffee in town go to Duffy for it, at 75 Peachtree srreet. Dr. Catching, dentist, 36% Whitehall st. Best teas in this city for only 50c. per pound at Duffy’s, 75 Peachtree street. Fresh meats, fish and oysters.'Sign of the Red Snapper, 94 W. Peters strefet. For pure goods, you will have to make up your mind that Duffy’s, 75 Peachtree street, is the place to get them. 500 feather dusters just received; half price. John M. Miller, 31 Marietta street. My best Moyune Gun Powder Teas, only 50c per pound, former price SI.OO. Dufly,7s Peach tree street. Dr. R. H. Johnson, of Palmetto, Ga., hss bought out the stock and fixtures of Dr. W. S. Curtis, drug store. 105 West Peters. A reduction has been made in the price of shaving at the old reliable barbershop at No. 11 Marietta street. This is a first-class shop and will receive the patronage of our citizens. SSO will buy a good canopy top pony phaeton at 51 S. Broad street. i Only place in town where you can get 5 and 6 , pound hams, aud they are daisies. Dully, 75 Peachtree. Moncrief Bros., tin roofing, 90 S. Broad street. 1 Pure Cream Cheese, fresh and nice, at Duffy’s, 1 75 Peachtree street. ' Look to yeur interest bv insuring your live f stock with Cooke A Earle, at No. 2 Kimball . House, W all street. j Granulated sugar, 15 pounds for $1.00; teas from 30c. to $1 00 per pound; coffees from 15c. ’ to 35c. per pound. A full line of chocolates, i spices, baking powders, etc. Fox’s, 69 I’eacb , tree street. I am a man that says very little, but it does , amuse me to see them other fellows blow about ’ their tine goods, low prices, and more especially r about their tine principles. Dog gone me it I r believe they have any principle after what oc a curred last week. Anyhow, cut out their price list and carry it to Duffy, and he will discount ’ them and give you five cents on the dollar off. ! I mean by that, these high-principled, high s toned grocerswill sell you 23 pounds of G sugar for SI.OO, 1 will sell it to you for 95 cents. How is this ? Yours, wn humlile merchant, 75 Peach tree street. s C. W. Fox, formerly at 25 Peachtree street, r has reopened at 69 Peachtree with a new stock . of teas and coffees. , Sennd orders for Pretxels to Bliem A Leyh, Vienna Pretzel Bakery, the largest in the B South, at 143 W. Peters’ street, Atlanta, Ga. 9 Free delivery to all parts of the city, r r CAME NEAR DYING, f t Mr. N. J. Taylor ie Taken Suddenly I nl - Yesterday evening, about 5:30, Mr. Taylor, who is working for the W. A A. road, was taken quite sick with cholera morbus. Mr. Taylor had been feeling as well as usual all day, and as # soon as the bell was rung picked up his basket and started for home; but soon after he left he began to grow sick and was compelled to sit ' down. Soon after sitting down he began to ; r vomit and was carried home in a carriage. The j doctor worked with him all night and brought j. him through all right. I Roughton’s Specific is a speedy and positive f cure for diarrhoea and dysentery. It is the bvst» C Use no other. i Carlton A Son are the cheap, cash grocers of 1 Georgia. tz The Crhsetie Tourist.” 1 We were informed this morning that a popu ' lar voung shoe salesman of a leading Whitehall ' street emporium who went on a pleasure trip to ’ Alabama last week was counting the crossties ■ home again. His friends believe that he will - be able to “ride in his glory” from East Point, , as he was a former patron of the road. They imagine now that they can see him, sunburnt, ' dustv and weary, trudging along towards home, s It is expected that he will arrive to-morrow B evening. 1 Trv enr pnees on furniture. John Neal A - Co M ? aa4 I south Broad. B ESTABLISHED 1860. a. ergeltzinger, MANUVACTVRER OF Awnings, Mosquito Nets, Tents, and Bedding. UPHOLSTERING DOSE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES-! Strictly first-class work at low prices foi cash. 12 E. HUNTER STREET. J- ANDERSON, ; WATCH-MAKER AND JEWELER, 212 Marietta Street, Atlanta, «a. Watches Clocks and Jewelry repaired at Short Notice, and satisfaction guaranteed. W, L. BRYAN, Watchmaker and Jeweler, 82 Decatub St., - - - ATLANTA, GA. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired at Short Notice and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Repairingot Music Boxes, Brass Instruments aad Student Lamps a specialty. 12 years in business in At lanta THE EFFECTS. , TIME, 12:45. ' " —1 Place: Alabama Street, Just West ot Broad. < “Colonel, what are those four gay red wagons doing there?” and the stranger pointed to four red wagons drawn up in line on the side of Ala bama, at the time and .place spoken of in the bead. “Why do you ask?” “I did not know but that it was a funeral pro cession of the Red Antis preparing for the fun eral of the dram shops.” “Why no my kind sir; those are delivery wag one for a live grocery house. Swing around this way and you can'read the man’s sign.” They did so, and upon the sides of the wag ons were “T. C. Mayson, groceries, etc., 3 and 5 Marietta.” Well, well, well; I was mistaken sure enough,” said the stranger. “I thought it might be con nected with the red badge veterans, but does Mayson use all those wagons for his little store?” “Little! well that’s heavy. His store is small, but it is crammed full of the nicest, purest, freshest, cheapest groceries, staple and fancy, that there is in the city. He has more goods in that store than anv of the big store grocers.” “You don’t say. n “Yes, but I do, though, and talk about four i wagons. He just keeps them on the trot all day , long except at this hour, when the stock is get ting dinner.” “His trade is big for a fact to keep four teams. What is the cause?” i“That question is one not easily answered briefly, but it can perhaps be summed up in the fact that he has been in the business for many years, and when he tells you anything about the quality or prices of the goods he sells the pub lic know they can rely upon it ” “And then stranger, there is another thing Atlanta has gained, her reputation with such men as him. A fine grocery store selling pure goods, a great variety of all fancy, as well as staple articles, at reasonable prices does a great deal towards building up a city. You can get at his store all table delicacies relishes and appetizing specialties, pure Jersey butter, de licious hams, breakfast bacon and Fulton mar ket boneless corned beef, fresh vegetables of all kinds; a plenty of P. P. P., Diamond Patent and all other first-class brands of flour, and almost anything you can call for.” llere the Colonel stopped, wiped the perspira tion from his heated brow, and after a moment said: “ I beg pardon, stranger, but when I get to talking about men like him, I get excited. But what are you doing in the city ? “I am prospecting.” “For business or for for a home?” “Both.” “I wish you luck. Shall be glad to assist you,” and the Colonel handed the stranger his card and bid him good day. A Well Known Physician. Elberton, Ga., June 16th, 1886. The Swift Specific Co. —Gentlemen: During the year 1876 I was attacked with articular rheumatism —the effect of expos ure to dampness and night air. I ex hausted all the remedies known to our profession, including iodide of potash in various combinations, wine of co'chicum, fluid extract of poke root, and various other preparations, including a patent potash preparation. I was also treated for several years by a number of our best physicians," but obtained no permanent relief. For nearly a year I was confined almost continuously to my bed, and could not attend to business of any kind. Being a practicing physician I was somewhat prejudiced against patent medicines, but coming in contact with traveling salesmen almost every day, who with one accord , recommended the S. S. S. to me, I finally ; concluded to try it. 1 commenced im proving while using the first bottle, and , when I had finished half a dozen bottles I 1 was so much improved that I was able to 1 walk about and attend to my business ; o/ice more. I consider your Swift Specific j the best tonic and alterative made, and I i do not hesitate to prescribe it in all cases ' requiring a reliable blood purifier. Very trulv yours, H. 0. Edmonds, M. D. .Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. All kinds of furniture very cheap. John Neal k Co., 7 and 9 South Broad. Situation aud Investment. A young man wishing to get a situation and having some money to invest can learn of one by reading our P. C. column or calling on E. M. Roberts A Co. All kinds of furniture very cheap. John Neal k Co., 7 and 9 South Broad. Jersey Butter. I am the agent for the sale of Jersey Butter from the farm Mt. Etowah, of Col. R. F. Mad dox. This butter is nicely bandied, sweet and pure, colored only from the richness of the milk. . C. K. Bczbse, 102 Peachtree st. Cheapest and Best. Lumber, laths, shingles, lime, brick, cement, ash doors and blinds. J. C. Wilson, 7 Spring j street. Use Roughton’s Specific for ail bowel trou bles, and use no other. All kinds of furniture very cheap. John Neal j A Co., 7 and 9 South Broad." FURNITURE I FURNITURE I WE ADVISE ALL THOSE WANTING FURNITURE OF ANY KIND TO GO TO JOHN NEAL & CO., Nos. 7 and 9 South Broad Street. As they keep a Full Line, which they are selling at LOWER PRICES than can be|had elsew room Sets from $17.50 up, etc. Don’t forget our address. Instantaneous Hetojraplis. EDWARDS’! DORMAN, WHITEHALL ST. (Over M. Rich A Bros.’ dry goods store.) Prices Reduced. ALL WORK WARRANTED. Children’s pictures taken in ONE SECOND. Copies of all kinds of pictures, all sizes, and colored in oil, water or crayon, at reduced prices. Family groups taken in front of your residence. Views of residences, stores, etc., a specialty. Call at the gallery, or mail us a postal, and we will show you samples of our work at your residence. Our motto—First-class pictures at cheap prices. Give us a trial. Views of Atlanta for sale. CANCERS, Cllti D wAhout the knife or loss of blood. Vastl, -uperior to all other methods. Hundreds of cases ccred Descriptive pamphlet sent free. Address J>R. E. H. GREENE, 71 I°2 Peachtree St., Atlanta. Ga Wheal’s Rheumatic Cure Positively cures all kinds of Rheumatism, Blood and Kidney Diseases. iro CURE NO PAY. Call and see us at the Chamber of Commerce Build ng. Prices, 75c. and SI.OO per bottle. WHEALS, KOERNER & CO. POTTS & HADLEY, HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTERS. Hard Wood Finishing a Specialty. Refers to H. W. Grady, E. P. Howeil and Julius L. Brown. 43 SOUTH BROAD STREET, ATLANTA, GA. And Don’t Forget It. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FLOUR IN THE CITY IS KNOXVILLE LEADER PATENT. Have your grocer to send you this brand and you will De pleased. Every sack guaranteed to please or money refunded. IF YOU ARE HUNTING FOR Summer Comforts, Come and See Us at The King House, STONE MOUNTAIN, GA. And we will make you comfortable at Reasonable Rates. J. T. MEADOR, Dr. E. S. BRYAN, Proprietor. Manager. ; -“The Best Made !” i DRY AIR REFRIGERATORS. MADE TO ORDER ANY SIZE. ’ MONCHIEF BROS. & W. R. JESTER, 90 S. Broad and 25 E. Huntxr. THE GATE CITY NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA GA. > UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY, ' CAPITAL * SUPLUS $300,000. ‘ ISSUES CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT PAYABL ON DEMAND WITH INTEREST. Three per cent, per annum if left’four months. Four p« cent, per annum if left six months, per cent, annum if left twelve months. W. H. PATTERSON, BOND AND Stock Broker, 24 PBYGR STREET, Atlanta * * Ga. Metropolitaa Undertakers. Metallic. Wood and Cloth-covered Caskets and Coffins . Robes of all kinds. Natural Preserved Flowers for fu neral purposes artistically designed. We are alsc ‘ acer.ts for the onlv Krglar-proof grave vaults in the 1 United States. TAYLOR, WYLIE A BLILEY, Frank X. Bliley, Manager. No. 26 W. Alabama street, next door to the Constitu : tion. Building. Telephone 719. Teas —Coffees—Teas. ’ Do not be prejudiced nor misled. ’ j Just give me ONE TRIAL. Let me give you better goods for Less Money. . Be sure and read my advertisement another column. . Chas. C. Thorn, i 118 Whitehall St. pKOFESSIOfIALi CARDS. Architects. L. Architects, Atlanta, Ga- OFFICES: Fourth floor Chamberlin 4 Boynton’s building, corner Whitehall and Hunter streets. Take elevator. __________ e Architect. Rooms 68, 72 and 73 Gate City National Bank Building. LIND, F. A. 1. A. Architect and Superintendent. 63 Whitehall Street. gRUCE & MORGAN, ARCHITECTS, 3d Floor, Healey Building. Corner Marietta and Peachtree streets. _ a%v yers. WM. A. HAYGOOD. EDMUND W. MARTIN. Haygood & martin, Lawyers, 17% Peachtree, Atlanta, Ga. Telephone 117. rpHOMAS L. BISHOP, “ attorney at law. , Room 2, Brown Block, I 28 Wall street, Atlanta, Ga. J. ALBERT, • ATTORNEY AT LAW, No. 2% Marietta St., Room No. 7., Atlanta, Ga. Commercial law a specialty. •• Cl LIFFORD L. ANDERSON, I Attorney at Law, Room 18 Gate City Bank Building, Atlanta, Ga. JOHN A. WIMPYj Attorney-at-Law, 11% S. Broad St., ATLANTA, GA. J A. ANDERSON, ~ Attorney at Law. Room 26 James Bank Block, 16% Whitehall st. {ij-0 AND SEE J. M. ARROWOOD, Attorney at Law, i About Collecting your Accounts. Room 34, Gate City National Bank Buildin g. CARROLL PAYNE, " • Attorney at Law, Room 4 Centennial Building. 3% Whitehall St. ■yy' A. WIMBISK, Attorney at Law, Room 16 Gate City Bank Building. O. A. LOCHRANE, ELGIS LOCHRANE. Attorneys and Counselors at Law, I have resumed the practice of law in copartnership with my son, Elgin, at Atlanta, Ga. 0. A. LOCHRANE. 1 JNO. D. ’ Attorney at Law, Rooms 19 and 20, James’ Bank Block, 6% Whitehall St. Atlanta, Georgia. Telephone No. 366. BIS A. ANDERSON & co. i I 1 i i fiWA f Mjß A CHANCE FOR ALL. ! OUR ENTIRE STOCK —OF— Cassimere and Worsted Suits —FOR— : Menjßoys’&Children AT COST. We have too many Boys’ and . Children Suits and we are de termined to sell them. 4 It is customary to wait until the season is over before reducing prices, but we have determined to give our customers the advantage when they need the goods. James A. Anderson & Co., 6 41 WHITEHALL ST. i i || I Reliable evidence given and 1 >4 WHISKY rei rence to cured patientsand “ \ / physicians. ‘ nahHc fn«a for my Book on the HaDilS ulire Habits and tbeir Cure. Free. e Lucy Cobb Institute. ATHENS, GEORGIA. THE exercises of this School will be resumed Wednes day. September 29th. 1886. All letters and appli cations for Catalogues wiH be promptly answered, i£ addressed to Miss M. RUTHERFORD, Principal.