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(Every Evening except Sunday.)
SUBSCRIPTION—By Mall, 10 cents a week; 35 cents
•* nonth ; 11.00 for three mouths; 14.00 a year.
DELIVERED anywhere in the City by Carrier for (i
• itte per week, payable to the Carrier
Maaonable advertising rates and affidavit or circula
tor! cheerfully furnished upon application.
Jommunicatione on vital public questions solicited.
Address, THE EVENING CAPITOL,
48 8. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Telephone No. 446.
Dial. 8. Atwood, I. W. Ave kt,
Pres’t. A Bus. Mang’r. Editorial Mang’r.
Entered at Atlanta P. O. as second-class matter.
Col. Aveky is in Athena.
Every Democrat who lives in this coun
ty can vote to-morrow.
Pryor L. Mynatt is a man of the peo
ple, for the people and with the people.
Croaking about dull times will never
make brighter ones. Hard work will do
the business.
Atlanta merchants and people will not
support a paper that is continually trying
to cry the city down.
No registration is necessary to be able
to cast your vote to-morrow. Every Dem
ocrat of the county can vote.
Colonel Mynatt’k ticket has no one on
it but working men and merchants. The
ringsters were purposely left off.
Busnehh men coming to the city from
other cities affirm positively that business
is not depressed as much in Atlanta as in
other cities.
That big ring that the tricksters tried
to fix up Monday night a week ago will
trip up the tricksters themselves if they
are not cautious.
Col. Mynatt is not an autocrat anil a
stiff-necked monopolist, who never recog
nizes any one save the wealthy—except
when he is a candidate.
Gladstone’s present defeat might prop
erly be called a “grand victory.’’ Glad
stone will now shine brighter in the firm
ament of English Heroes.
Colonel Mynatt will never “pair’’
with some voter whenever labor or corpo
ration bills are before Congress. He will
be on hand to cast his vote for the right.
The workingman should leave his work
long enough to-morrow to cast a vote for
Pryor L Mynatt, the man who will guard
his interests before the National Congress.
It is the most nonsensical of twaddle to
affirm that Atlanta business is depressed,
all on account of prohibition, when there
is not a city in the United States that is
not suffering from depression.
Thb antis as a whole will vote almost
solidly for Colonel Hammond, who is rec
ognized to be their candidate. Colonel
Mynatt took no active part in that contest,
but voted according to his convictions.
Pkhhonai.lv, Col. Mynatt’s opponents
have found nothing to say against him.
This is something rare in a candidacy.
The people appreciate his standing, and
recognize that Col. Mynatt being there
fore, above reproach, morally, they can
safely extend to him their suffmges, and
place him, with his large brain, progress
iveness and fearlessness, in the National
Congress to legislate for them.
Ik Conductor McLendon thinks that
bulldozing will force The Capitol to do
what it cannot truthfully do he is mista
ken in his calculations. Conductor Mc-
Lendon was very happy and smiling when
the writer was saying kind things of him,
but men tometimes get very officious
after being honored and petted, and in
their desire to rule they forget themselves
as it were.
PROUHFAMVE MEN WANTED.
Carlton’s defeat of Reese in the eighth
is exactly what The Capitol predicted.
It was not due to great brain that ena
bled us to make the prophesy, but be
cause we had talked with many men from
that district, who gave us the situation.
The people have gotten tired of keeping
in Washington whose only good
quality perhaps is that they do no harm.
These are stirring, progressive, important
times, and the country does not want or
demand simply safe men, safe because
they never do anything either harmful or
beneficial, but its demands are for men of
, nerve, pluck, brain and progressiveness,
who will actively advocate bills for the
benefit of the people.
Labor interests are at stake, monopo
lists are trying to get their grip on the
country, centralization of power is the
scheme of the day, and the people are
awake to the demands of the hour.
In tins, Fulton county, the voters will
assert themselves to-morrow.
Here you have the two candidates:
Hon. Pryor L. Mynatt, a man among
men, who has nerve and progressiveness
as well as brain and sound judgment, a
man who has ever been found ready to
raise his voice on the side of the people.
Hon. N. J. Hammond, who has repre
sented this district eight years, and a man
whose character morally and as a gentle
man also is unimpeachable, but what has
he done for his people ? We repeat the
question, what has he done for his peo
ple ? True, he may have been a safe man
in many respects, because he has done
nothing of great harm, but that is not
what the people want.
The people of the fifth have taken W.
EL. H. Carlton, whoee record shows him
not only to be a safe man, but a man of
progressiveness and of modern ideas, and
to morrow this district, as far as Fulton
county goes, will vote for Pryor L. My
natt, who is also not only a safe man, but
a man who is alive to the needs of modern
times.
Two years in Congress and he will have
made a record—a record on the side of
the people and the pressing, urgent needs
of the South.
A change is desired, and packed con
ventions, such as the unprecedented, un
fair one of Monday night, and the un
called-for slur of “Oh, Mynatt, he hasn’t
the ghost of a chance,” all in the interest
of Colonel Hammond and done for eflect
only, will do nothing towards staying the
swelling tide that is sweeping the county
and district in the interest of Colonel My
natt.
THE COUNTRY DISTRICTS.
Personal information from many of the
outlying districts shows that they will rise
up en masse, to-morrow, and condemn
the square cut at them last Monday night,
the manifest partiality to the city pre
cincts, and the unprecedented unfair
meeting of that night to them, inasmuch
as it was purposely called by Hammond
men, and committee, chairman and all,
at night when they could not possibly be
present to have a voice in the proceedings,
by casting a solid vote for Col. P. L. My
natt, who could never act with any un
fairness whatever to the country people
or the working men.
The country yeomanry of Fulton are
honest, sturdy gentlemen of brain and
judgment, and they do not care to be
longer totally ignored in the arranging of
Fulton county affairs.
And they are eminently right.
Any meeting called to arrange for a se
lection of the date for voting for a Con
gressman should be attended by the coun
try people. It should be called at noon
when they can get to it, or else, if at night,
the date of the primary should be put off
until all the districts have had a chance
to listen to the candidates and judge ior
themselves, as well as the city precincts.
The very short time given by the packed,
oi “ cut and dried,” Hammond conven
tion, last Monday, shout out the outlying
districts from seeing or hearing the candi
dates, and practically said to them, You
vote for our candidate, Col. Hammond,
just because we say you must.
If we are not mistaken, Col. Hammond
never did take much interest in the coun
try people’s votes, anyhow. Two years
ago he spent little or no time with them
except in one or two districts, if our mem
ory serves us right, and as a consequence
the able candidate, Captain Jackson, who
was barely beaten by only two hundred
votes in the whole county by a contempt
ible charge against his character, did re
ceive a very handsome and nearly unani
mous vote in all of the outlying districts.
Their vote this year, with the immense
working man’s and large business man’s
vote of the city, will count, and they can
feel that they have had a hand in electing
a man of their own choice andnne in sym
pathy with their needs.
Let every voter leave his plow and his
field, for a short time at least, and if pos
sible for the whole day, to cast his own
and secure as many others as possible for
a man who is not a monopolist, an auto
crat or a corporation lawyer.
Os course men who will resort to such
trickery as that of Monday night will not
hesitate to marshal their forces and send
their strikers to each district to flatter and
deceive to get votes for their candidate,
Col. Hammond, but this will be useless,
because the country people have judg
ment and discrimination, and they will
not miss this, their golden opportunity,
to put their seal of condemnation on trick
ery, unfairness, monopoly and centraliza
tion
DID NOT HUBST THE BUBBLE SO
FAST.
“Yes, we determined to prick that bub
ble of Colonel Mynatt’s,” said one of the
earnest Hammond supporters at the Ful
ton county ? Hammond meeting Monday
night—“hence applied our quickest
plasters to the chairman and Democratic
committee to get them to call a meeting
whose real purpose should be hid in the
notice and rushed around and brought in
a big majority of Hammond people to or
der an early primary so as to frighten
Colonel Mynatt off."
But the bubble, though pricked so ve
hemently, did not burst all at once as ex
pected. Truth is this sharp bubble prick
er, who has had some experience before
and consequently ought to know how, did
not realize the strength of Colonel My
natt’s candidacy.
He probably was not aware that Ala
bama street, the Wall street of Atlanta,
was almost solid for Colonel Mynatt. That
the laboring element, the most powerful
body in any country, was nearly a unit
for Colonel Mynatt; that the country yeo
manry were for fairness, representation
and Colonel Mynatt; that all of the pro
hibitionists were for Colonel Mynatt, and
that a large “floating” vote remembered
Colonel Hammond’s promise of two years
ago, that if they would “only please elect
him once more at that time that he would
not ‘jump out of his boots’ the next time
a convention was packed on him in At
lanta.”
It is reported that Col. N. J. Hammond,
our present Congressman, may have the
Solicitor-Generalship of the United States
offered to him. He would fill that office
ably and satisfactorily.
The long shoremen of New Orleans are
having some trouble about loading and
shipping lumber. The long shoremen of
the city are divided into districts, and the
THE EVENING CAPITOL: ATLANTA. GA. MONDAY, JULY 19. 'BB6
district called Gretna complain that men
are hired in their district from other dis
tricts and they are preventing them from
work. Verily the labor interests of the
country are in a state of dissatisfaction
and something modifying will have to be
done.
John Roach, the great ship builder, is
dying at his home on Long Island.
Both of Atlanta’s Sunday papers lean
heavily on the side of anti-prohibition.
The various labor interests of the coun
try demand that menjbe sent to the halls
of legislation who will guard their inter
ests carefully.
Athens is having a gala time.
Her commencement exercises, -always
brilliant, are unusually fascinating this
year.
Large numbers of society leaders are
there and the hospitalities of the city are
as usual extended in fullness to every
visitor.
Athens homes are proverbially hospita
ble.
CAPITOL CRAYONS.
Smallpox in a malignant form is raging in
lowa. „
A Twa-Third* Vote.
General Gordon now baa 236 votes, and Bacon
78. This gives the General more than a two
thirds vote of the convention.
J. J. Griffin, the smiling A. G. P. A. of the
East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia, sect out
good crowds yesterday to Austell, 50c round
trip, Hiram 75c, Indian Springs SI.OO, and sev
eral others. This line is up with the times on
Sunday excursions, and Griflin catches on to
some things that are ahead of time.
Hal Morrison, Atlanta’s popular young ar
tist, leaves to-day for the mountains of North
Carolina to spend the summer.
He will busy himself taking sketches, studies
and gems of mountain scenery for his next win
ter’s studio work. His charming little wife and
beautiful baby will accompany him.
Mrs. Baylor Stewart, the distinguished
instructress of the Washington Seminary, re
cently had an urgent call accompanied with a
large salary offer to teach in a neighboring
State, but Mrs. Stewart declined the offer much
to the satisfaction of many Atlantians and will
open her seminary here in the fall as promised.
She is a skilful teacher, a polished,accomplished
lady and a delightful social companion, and we
are glad she can not be induced to leave us.
Cal. Mynatt’* Court House Speech-
Why Not Published.
Many people have asked why Col. Mynatt’s
speech has not been published.
No one regrets that it has not more than Tbs
Capitol, because it was so clear and explicit
upon the issues of the canvass and one of the
ablest that has ever been delivered in Fulton
county.
We asked Col. Mynatt about the matter and
he said that he had not thought of having it
done until some of his friends came to him
about the matter the next day when it was of
course too late.
Off for Blew York.
W. H. Brenner leaves this city to-day ftr
New York city, where he-will engage in electric
engineering.
Mr. Brenner is a Georgia boy, and while get
ting his education, spent three years in the test
ing rooms of T. A. Edison.
He has superintended the erection of numer
ous electrical plants, both north and south. He
has represented the Edison Company in this
city about a year.
During his residence here he has made many
friends. He is a valued and active member of
the flourishing order of Knights of Pythias, and
has taken a considerable interest in some local
social clubs, among which can be prominently
mentioned the Ylo Club. He was one of its
founders. He gave it its name and was a hard
working officer. That club has passed resolu
tions of love and esteem and good wishes for
him, which will be suitably engrossed and sent
to him.
Tax Capitol offers to Mr. Brenner its most
hearty good wishes, and feels that be deserves
them.
He deserves to succeed. He will succeed, be
cause any young man who puts his hand on the
plow, determined to plough his way through and
reach the top or die, will, with studiousness, in
dustry and pluck, such as he possesses, win suc
cess of the first degree.
Tax workingmen understand fully Col. Ham
mond’s silence on Saturday night on the great
labor questions of the day. He did wisely to
say nothing, under the circumstances, because
labor is well organized, but they will show their
opinion of his silence by voting for Mynatt to
morrow.
Mr. Hammond makes no satisfactory ex
planation why he voted against the Reagan bill.
He dodged the issue very adroitly in that, the
same as every other important question he
touches upon.
A Well Know** Physician.
Elberton, Ga., June 16th, 1886.
. The Swift Specific Co. —Gentlemen:
During the year 1876 1 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'ebieum,
fluid extract of poke root, and various
other preparations, including a patent
potash preparation. I was also treated
tor several years bv 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
was so much improved that I was able to
walk about and attend to my business
once more. I consider your Swift Specific
the beet tonic and alterative made, and I
do not hesitate to prescribe it in all cases
requiring a reliable blood purifier.
Very truly vours,
H. C. Edmonds, M. D.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free.
The Swift Specific Co.,
I Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga,
JAMES A. ANDERSON & CO,
■ _ JaZmul
Fill
-Ba/ :.uWJ
r & S
A CHANCE FOR ALL.
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
—OF—
Cassimere and Worsted Suits
—FOR—
Men,Boys'&Children
AT COST.
We have too many Boys’ and
Children Suits and we are de
termined to sell them.
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 & Go.,
41 WHITEHALL ST.
Gate City Ice Company,
ATLANTA, GA.
Ice Vault and Office, corner of Wall and Pryor sUeets
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
Ice made from pure well water. Factory at the oid
Union stock yard.
Made I”
DRY AIR REFRIGERATORS.
MADE TO ORDER ANY SIZE.
MONCRIEF BROS. * W. R. JESTER,
90 8. Broad and 25 E. Huntxb.
harrylynaK
RAILROAD TICKET BROKER AND STEAMSHI
AGENT,
30 Wall Street,
Just opposite entrance Union Depot. Member Amei
an Ticket Brokers’ Association.
a. j- anderson,
WATCH-MAKER AND JEWELER,
£l2 Marietta Street, Atlanta, Ga*
Watches Clocks and Jewelry repaired at Short
Notice, and satisfaction guaranteed.
W, L. BRYAN,
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
82 Dkcatvr St., - - - ATLANTA, GA.
Watches, Clo< ks and Jewelry Repaired
at Short Notice and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Repairing of Music Boxes, Brass Instruments aad
Student Lamps a specialty. 12 years in business in At
lanta.
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.
Free Trader Notice.
Notice is hereby given that thirty days after date I
will become a public or free trader by and with the
consent of my husband. Bebtha Mexko.
Atlanta, June 28th, 1886.
I hereby give notice that I consent to my wife, Bertha
Menko, becoming a public or free trader.
Julius Menko.
Atlanta. June 28th, 1.836.
je2B-oaw-sw-mon
Cancers ru ” oßs
n.ll UUll U, ULCERS
CI'KEU without the knife or loss of blood. Vastlj
.uperior to all other methods. Hundreds of cases ccred
descriptive pamphlet sent free. Address
DR. E. H. GREENE,
’1 1-2 Peachtree St.,
Atlanta. Ga
Metropolitan 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
arents for the only burglar-proof srave vaults in the
United States. TAYLOR. WYLIE & BLILEY,
Frank X. Bliley, Manager.
No. 26 W. Alabama street, next door to the Constitu
tion. Ruildimr. Telephone 719.
ESTABLISHED 1860.
A. ERGENZINGER,
■unicmn or
-Awning., Mosquito Net.,
Tents, and Bedding.
CPHOLSTERING DoSK IN ALL ITS
BRANCHES.)
Strictly first -class work at low prices sot
cash. 12 E. HUNTER STREET.
P. J. FALLON,
Mason and Buildei
Brick and Frame Buildings Erected
Sewers and Drain Pipes Laid.
AU Work Promptly Attended to.
left rt 8 Bart Alabun ar STM WM*i
CHARLES C. THORN,
118 Whitehall Street.
Until the expiration of mj license (September 23. 1886,) I will sell tty
Stock of Family Wines and Liquors at extremely lo w prices and advise those
wishing to supply themselves with PURE and UNADULTERATED
GOODS, to give me a call. I have in Stock only old and pure Goods.
Will sell only first-class brands, of w.bich the following ate a few:
Genuine Old Baker Rye. Old Imperial Cabinet
Rye. Gibson’s Old Cabinet. Paul Jones XXXX
Monongahala. Gibson’s Rip Van Winkle Rye.
Old Schuylkill Pure Malt Whisky. Old Standard
Rye. Pure Copper Distilled Cherokee County
Corn Whisky. Imported Cognac Brandy and
Imported Portland Sherry Wines. Kentucky
Pure Rye Whisky, Worth $125, for 75 cents.
Will sell by the quart or gallon. Cool Beer by ths quart. Bottled Beer on
Ice. Orders sent from a distance will receive prompt attention. Be sure and
give me a call before buying. I will give 4 cts apiece for full Quart Flint
Bottles.
CHAS. C. THORN, 118 Whitehall.
5,000 lbs. TURNIP SEED.
Now is the time to plant Fall Crop of
Ruta Baga, Spinach, Beet, Cabbage, Carrot, Parsnip, Cauliflower, Peas, Let
tuce, etc. Fine Stock now ready. Next month be ready for Pansy Seed; also
for Clover, Grass, Barley, Rye, Oats, Wheat, Fertilizers, etc.
MARK W. JOHNSON & CO.,
61 & 63 Peachtree Street.
P. 8. Merchants, send for Wholesale Price List Turnip Seed.
M. W. J. & CO.
- Cream Freezers-Prices Riflicei to Close Oil.
2 quart Freezers; 3 quart Freezers ; Fowler’s latest improved 1 Requires no
4 quart Freezers; 6 quart Freezers. key I Only $2.00 each. Sent anywhere
FLY FANS I FLY FANS! in the State on receipt of Price.
W. J, WOOD, The Stonier, 87 Whitehall st., Atlanta, Ga.
MONEY DOUBLY SAVED
As prohibition will save meny people many dollars, so 1 will save many dollars to all who desire to save, by
buying your grot eries of me. Read my pricesand call: Meal, 15c; Side meat, Dove Haims, 12c; Best
Lard, 9c; new Mackerel, kit. 50c; Eggs, 12%c; Best Butter, 20c; Best Rice, 7c; Good Rice, sc; Starch, sc; Soda.
sc; Giits, 2c; Best Green Coffee, Be*t Parched Coffee, 15c; Lady Peas, quart, sc; White Beans, quart, sc;
One Spoon Powder, lb. 20c; Snuff, per lb, 65c; Can Peaches, 12%c; Salt, per lb, fc; Candy, 10c Best N. 0. Syrup,
40c; Honey. 12>£c; 1 sell Patent Flour at 75c; Geod Flour, 70c; Good Flour, 65c; Hay, best, 90c; Bran, 90c.
Chickens, Fggs and Butter, Fruit Jars, Tinware, Glassware and all sorts of Spices, Pickles, Jellies, Preserve 4 at
prices so all can live. Come One, Come All. Yours, truly, I>. E. SULLIVAN, 71 Chapel st., cor. Stonewall
ODTHM B. M. Woolley, M. D.
£ lUlll Atlanta, Ga.
Reliable evidence given anc
& WHISKY re *’-' re,ice lo cured patientsanc
a uuiuai physicians.
UohH* fnra Send ,or Book 0D th '
uaDllS LUre Habits and their Cure. Free
’ listaitMi Photojrapis. '
EDWARDS# DORMAN,
S 0V 2 ' WHITEHALL ST.
(Over M. Rich & 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.
UIIIIUI
NERVOUS
DEBILITATED MEN.
Yak an allowad aftw *HaI 4«*r» th.
Baa Dr. Dy.’l drlabrarak Voltaic Belt wttk
BtaaSrt* Btupaoaoiy AppHaaan far Ika «pea«>
rafw aad pwatkkaat aan ot Utr**** ZMMk'fr, low
•C BMB, u 4 XankaoS. a>4 an ktaared trauHoe
Aka far rtaay otkar Hi HiM Camalrte raators
«a Baallk Vlgar aad Kaakoea eoaraaMad.
Baitak lalßeamd. nHrtra*** pampkla* Ik ■«■!><
And Don’t Forget It.
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FLOUR IN
THE CITY’ 18
KNOXVILLE LEADER
PATENT.
Have your grocer to send you this brand
and you will oe pleaded.
Every sack guaranteed to please or
money refunded.
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 will be promptly answered, if
addressed to Miss M. RUTHERFORD, Principal.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Architects. '
LB. Whkslkb, I . ... .
. W.H. Parkins,) Architects, Atlanta, G».
OFFICES:
Fourth floor Chamberlin & Boynton’s building, corner
Whitehall and Hunter streets.
Take elevator.
L. NORMaN, “ "
• Architect.
Rooms 68, 72 and 73
Gate City National Bank Building.
G. LIND, F. A. I. A.
Architect and Superintendent.
£ 63 Whitehall Street.
gRUCE & MORGAN, *
ARCHITECTS,
3d Floor, Healey Building.
Corner Marietta and Peachtree streets.'
w > era. ’
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,
28 Wall street, Atlanta, Ga.
J. albert; *
• ATTORNEY AT LAW,
No. 2% Marietta St., Room No. 7.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Commercial law a specialty.
I LIFFORD L. ANDERSON, ~*
1 Attorney at Law,
Room 18 Gate City Bank Building,
At lant a, Ga.
JOHN A. WIMPY,
Attorney-at-Law,
U'X s. Broad St., ATLANTA, GA.
J A. ANDERSON,
Attorney at Law.
Room 26 James Bank Block, 16# Whitehall st.
00 AND SEE ’
J. M. ARROWOOD,
Attorney at Law,
About Collecting your Accounts.
Room 34, Gate City National Bank Building.
CARROLL PAYNE, "
• Attorney at Law,
Room 4 Centennial Building.
3% Whitehall St.
yy A. WIMBISH,
Attorney at Law,
Room 16 Gate City Bank Building.
gOCHRANE A LOCHRANE, '
0. A. LOCHRANE,
ELGIN LOCHRANE.
Attorneys and Counselors at Law,
I have resumed the practice of law In copartnership
with my son, Elgin, at
Atlanta, Ga.
j no. d. Cunningham; " "•
Attorney at Law,
Rooms 19 and 20, James’ Bank Block, 6# Whitehall Bt.
Atlanta. Georgia Telephone No. 366.
POTTS & HADLEY,
HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTERS;
Hard Iwd Finishing a Specialty.
Hetcrs to H. W. Grady, I. P. Howeil .nd Juliusl
-
43 SOUTH BROAD STRKIT, ATLANTA, GA.