Newspaper Page Text
■ft*
Hffklp Jntrlligntrer.
plblTbukd daily and weekly by
JARED IRWIN WHITAKER,
Proprietor.
TKRIflN OF IUMCaiPTI9!«.
Dsily, per month fl 00
Daily, twelve montha, 1000
Weekly, alx months '... 2 00
Weekly,one year !!.!!"!!!!”!”!”””!! 300
— •
RATES OF LEGAL AD YEBTISING.
Sheriff* - Sales, per levy of ten lines, or leas $2 50
Sheriff s Mortgage fl. / a . Sale* per square 5 00
Tax Collector* nale*. per fiqti£re 5 00
Citations for Letters of Administration . . . . 300
Citations for Letters of Guardianship 800
Letters of Application for Dismission from Adminis
tration 4 5(,
Letters of Application for Dismission from Guar
dianship 3 00
Application for leave to Sell Land " 6 (Si
Notices to Debtors and Creditors . ’ 3 00
Salute of Landj Ac., per squre
Sales of Periahabie Property, 10 days, per square.. 1 50
Kstray Notices., 30 days, 3 00
Foreclosure of Mortgage, per square, each time....1 00
Kales of land. Ac., by administrators, executor* or
Guardians, are required by law to be held on the first
Tuesday in the month, between the hours of 10 in the
forenoon and 3 in the afternoon, at the court house in the
county in which the property is situated.
Nonces of these sales must be given in a public gazette
40 (lays previous to the day of sale.
Notices for the sale of personal property must be given
in like manner. 10 days previous to sale day.
Notices to the debtors and creditors of an estate muet
be published 40 days'
Notice that application will be made totheConrt of Or
dinary for leave to sell land, Ac., must be published for
two months.
Citations for letters of administration, guardianship.
Ac., must be published 30 days ; for dismission from ad
ministration, monthly 6 months; for dismission from
guardianship, 40 days.
Rules for foreclosure of mortgage must be published
monthly for 4 months ; for establishing lost paperB, for
the full space of 3 months; for compelling titleB from
executors or administrators, where bond has been given
by the deceased, the full space of 3 months.
Tit* Impeachment question.
BLANK*.
We keep the following Blanks on band, at tbie office,
at $2 per quire. Large blanks, one on a sheet; small
blanks, two on a sheet.
Land Deeds, Administrator's or Exeeu
Marriags License, tor's Deed,
Letters of Administration, Warrant of Appraisement,
Letters of Guardiauship on Letters of Guardianship,
Property, Letters of Administration de
Administrator’s Bond, bonis non, Will Annexed,
Bond for Titles, Temporary Letters,
Administrator's Bond, Will Letters Testamentary,
Annexed, • letters Administration
Temporary Administrator’s bonis non,
Bond, Natural Guardian's Bond.
Guardian's Bond.
The New York Democracy
The New York Repress is trying to wake up
tiie Democracy of that great controlling city and
State to the importance of its duty. It seems
that they are not doing anything—their duty to
the country or to society. There is no spirit
coming out of them - they are voiceless—dead—
when convulsions are threatening, which they
can avert. It says: “We are now, in the Uni
ted States, in greater peril of convulsions than
we were before the civil war of 1800—which,
an everybody will recollect, almost everybody
deemed au impossibility. The currency of the
•country, now, is drunk, and the trade is in a
-<tati; of intoxication. The delirium tremens is
passing over, and sobriety is coming. But this
iis a mere money matter, like tariff or revenue,
and therefore, of comparatively, but little account.
W hat, however, is most serious, and alarmingly
«olemu, is the programme to oust an existing
branch of the government, the Executive, and
to force in a Senator from some State in its
place—for, if this succeeds now, without convul
sion, it deprives the government of all sanction,
and leaves all Executives at the mercy of a party
in Congress. This programme, as alarming as if
the Queen of Eugland should be thus forcibly
changed, or, ax if a revolution was taking place
in a dynasty, thus unsettling all future stability
of government, is to be followed up by the emascu
l.uion of the Supreme Court of the United States,
ilic very anchor and rudder of the government
—Lite High Court of Appeals, which, next to
God, alone can settle human opinions and human
passions here on earth. All parties, heretofore,
all dynasties, have respected this great tribunal.
Even such great men as Je&crson and Jackson
yielded to it, when Presidents. But, now, we
9ee in such bills as Boutwell’a and Williams’,
acts to cripple, if not to destroy this, the greatest
of all human tribunals—the only bar, under our
Constitution, between conflicting opinions and a
.resort to arms.”
Wkst Virginia.—A resolution was intro-
duced into the Legislature of West Virginia a
few days ago asking Congress to pass a law for
bidding the "manufacture, sale, circulation aud
exhibition of the pictures of General Robert E.
Jxie, Colonel Thomas J. Jackson (deceased) and
all other military and civil officers of the late
pretended Government of w.hicli Jeflerson Davis
was chief; and that Andrew Johnson, the ‘my
policy" dictator, be, and is hereby requested not
to have any more of his pictures taken, aud that
ho be further requested to take measures to secure
and destroy all such pictures as above referred
to.”
The mighty ruind who conceived this happy
thought to preserve loyalty and provide against
another rebellion, belongs to a legislator who is
called Boreman. A very appropriate name, by
the way. Thistles are the natural food of asses,
and that plant is said to be largely cultivated in
Boreman’s district.
Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston.—Speaking
of Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, the New Or
leans Bulletin justly remarks:
Gc'u Johnston is classed, in Southern estima
tion, w ith Stonewall Jackson, Bee, Bartow aud
Polk, bm" he has a claim which even those he-
vtoes had not. The Southern people had done
•him a momentary and unconscious injustice.—
They had held him respousible for a disaster to
nlieir cause, and like Washington, when maligned
iliy Conway, did not defend liimself because his
vindication might have betrayed his country.—
All remember the storm of surprise and discon
tent because Johnston did not relieve Fort Don-
elson or defend Nashville. None knew by his
disclosures that the Southern cause was aud had
been untenable in that quarter. He bore the
obloquy with the courage of a soldier aud the
resignation of a martyr. His death vindicated
at once his own character and the public injus
tice. ,
The United States Senate.—The Wash
ington Republican takes particular pains to dis
avow, for t lie President, any purpose of armed
tesistance to Congress. The threat having been
imputed to him. is seized upon to “fire the
Nonhem heart," and gain strength to lit* im
peachment movement. The same paper says :
A very large lobby Is at present assembled
in tliis city to defeat the confirmation by the
Senate of geuUeiueu who have been appointed
to diilerent prominent offices. Some rich ex-
plosiona will take place before several ot the
Senate committees when the plottings of some
of the riugs are uuveiied. It is astonishing to
hear the loftbv members tell how they propose
lo dele.it A, li aud C ior this, that aud the other
office. Some ot them actually own Senators—
so they say. We shall see—what we shall see.
J1 sr as Usual.—At Fall River, Massachusetts,
Saturday evening, Bridget Peudergrast, a girl
nineteen years of age, was holding a kerosine
lamp, when a current orair blew the flames down
the chimney aud an explosion followed. Her
clothes were set on tire and she was severely
burnt before the dames could be extinguished.
Gkx'd Suggestion.—In view of the estraor-
dtmary expenditures required to keep the Indian
tribes in wildection,and the cost per head ot de
stroying those who will not maintain friendly re
lations with the whites, the Galveston Bulletin
recommends, as a matter ol economy, the board
ing and lodging of the entire race at first-class
hotels. _
Memphis A Charleston Railroad.—The
following are the receipts and expenditures of
ENGLISH VIEW OF THE SUBJECT—A REVOLU
TION IN PROGRESS!
The proposition introduced in the House of
Representatives a short time since fr> impeach
the President, excited as much, if not more, as
tonishment among the leading minds of Europe,
as at home, where we have learned not to be
astonished at anything the radical party might
undertake to do. It has also created an intense
degree of alarm in foreign financial circles, and
if the monstrous measure is persevered in, there
is abundant evidence to believe that the credit
of the government is ruined abroad, and its se
curities in that market will become so deprecia
ted as to render tbeir immediate transmission
to this countiy.
The London limes, of the 10th of January,
has an article on the subject which ought to excite
attention, as being the views of one occupying
a stand point from which a calm and unpreju
diced survey may be taken. We copy such por
tions of the article as we can find space for to
day. The Times says:
“ Lei Revolution rei bien.” The dispatches
which pour in upon us through the Atlantic tel
egraph show that the well-known phrase of 1702
may lie applied in all its meaning to the course
of events in America. A revolution is in progress
there. The House of Representatives has taken
the first step toward the removal of the Presi
dent from office. Mr. Johnson stands in the way
of the Republican party. He is the “ Monsieur
Veto” of the Union,and he must be got rid of.
He has been guilty of the crime of loruiing au
opinion for himself, and that opinion does not
conform to the sentiments of the majority of
Congress. Whether the opinion was right or
wrong, just or unjust, it is not for us to inquire.
Tiie important points are: that it was an inde
pendent opinion; that Mr. Johnson thought he
was a President, witli well-defined duties and re
sponsibilities, instead of a constitutional king,
bound to accept and follow the advice of minis
ters possessing the confidence of a legislative
assembly; that the independent opinion formed
in the pursuit, as he thus conceived, of his duty
conflicts with that of Congress ; and that a pop
ular assembly will not brook the existence of a
permanent obstacle to its will. Accordingly,
Mr. Jobnson is to be impeached. The House of
Representatives lias ordered a committee to re
port on the offenses of the President, and the
Radical party are determined, we are assured, to
press on the impeachment, of which this is the
first step to its “ bitter end.”
The members of the House have returned to
Washington, after their short Christmas recess,
more bent than ever on establishing their own
supremacy. The impeachment of the President
is not, indeed, an event to be ranked in the same
category with the trial ot a king; even when
consummated, the appropriate punishment of the
offender is simply deposition from office and dis
qualification for future employment; yet it is so
foreign to what was once the temper of Ameri
can citizens, that any step toward it betokens a
profound change in their character. We are
driven to tlmconclusion that the revolution is
bearing fruit. It is true that Mr. Johnson is not
hedged round by the divinity which made loyal
ty to. a Stuart or a Bourbon, the creed and pas
sions of multitudes, but it may be boldly asserted
that a successful impeachment of the President
is impossible without a wrench of that Constitu
tion which the Americans were wont to idolize
as divine. Those who have initiated the im
peachment must be resolved to carry it through
no matter how flimsy the charges preferred
against the President, or what constitutional dif
ficulties may stand in the way of their purpose
What sudden provocation has hurried the House
of Representatives to a step, which, a few weeks
since would have been considered impossible?—
The telegram from our correspondent, perhaps,
supplies the answer. The President has vetoed
the negro suffrage bill for the District of Colum
bia, aud we are warranted in looking upon this
act as the exciting cause ot the impeachment.—
lu one point of view, this explanation, if sound,
may appear to detract lrom our estimate of the
importance of the step taken by the House of
Representatives. Tiie House is, to say the least,
a somewhat eccentric body. It thanked Com
modore Wilkes in hot haste for au act immedi
ately afterward pronounced illegal by Mr. Lin
coln and his Cabinet. It adopted without dis
cussion, the amendment, or rather the repeal, ot
the neutrality laws promoted by General Banks,
which has since been quietly shelved in the Sen
ate. In the week before Christmas it was se
duced into passing a ludicrous resolution, sol
emnly commending the “ tone of the national
Tftc State of FlorlftM.
The following proclamation appear# in the
Florida papers. It will be seen the little Land
of Flowers, with great magnanimity, grants
pardon and amnesty to all who, during the late
war, violated the peace and dignity of the State.
Here is an example by Little Florida which Big
United States might follow with honor and
profit)
Executive Department, 1
January 28, 1967. )
Whereas, The General Assembly of the State
of Florida, at its recent session, passed a joint
resolution, which was approved by the Governor
of said State, on December lltb, 1866, in the
words follow ing, to-wit:
“ Re it resole ed by the Senate and House of Re
presentatives of the State of Florida, in General
Assembly convene i, That his Excellency, the Gov
ernor ot the State of Florida, be, and he is hereby
authorized and req uested to grant a general am
nesty and pardon un to sill persons who may have
committed any crime ** or misdemeanors against
the peace and dignity State,‘during the
late war waged agaiust .'h e United btates.
And whereas, It is 1 he duty and desire of
every good and loyal citi. T ' cn to suppress and
destroy everything calculate n1 to keep alive the
strife and animosity eugendei ^d by the late; un
happy conflict, and to cultivat “ aa< * chensb, to
the tidiest extent, the sentiments’ °* *°Y e > friend
ship and lratemity which ought 1 0 animate the
hearts of all citizens of the United t towards
eacli other, without regard to past
Now, therefore, I, David S. Walker, Governor
of the State of Florida, do hereby, in co.
with the authority and request of the re. 'gWP'OH
aforesaid, grant a general amnesty'and p
to all persons coming within the purview of **0
resolution. And all officers of this State, and
others whom it may concern, will take due no
tice hereof, and act accordingly.
Given under my hand and the great seal of
the State of'Florida, at the capitol, in the
[l.s.] city of Tallahassee, oa the 23d day of Jan
uary, A. D. 1867.
David S. Walker,
Governor of the State of Florida.
Attest—B. F. Allen, Secretary of State.
BY TELEGRAPH.
SXW YORE ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES.
Mexican Bonds.
Washington, Jan. 27.—A circular from the
Mexican legation says that sporioas Mexican
bonds, issued nnder the auspices ol the pretend
ed land and mining contract, have been offered
at low rates. Hard words have been used to
wards Daniel Woodhouse. The circular adds
that the only valid bonds on Mexico are signed
by Terentes and Ignacio MarizacaL
Fires In Baltimore — Tiie Ice—The Harbor
Opened.
Baltimore, Jan. 26.—The revenue steamer
Moses Wood was burned to the water’a edge to
day'.
The Paiapsco chemical works also burned.—
Loss $60,000.
The harbor is opened to-day, and a htrge fleet
will come up to the city' to-morrow, and a num
ber of ice-bound vessels depart.
Xlte Funeral Rites of Gen. Johnston.
New Orleans, Jan. 27.—The French cor
vette, Reseandon, is below awaiting a cable dis
patch for Maximilian.
The following is the answer to an appeal from
General Griffin’s order, made by the Mayor of
(Galveston .-
n £ir—I respectfully decline to grant your re
quest 1 liave tGO much regard for the many
ATLANTA WHOLESALE KA*KX<T.
Tuxsdat, Jan. 29.—Below we give the prices now rat
ing in this market.
»tm —S W. Collins—# dozen *32 00 @ 24 00
Teneyck’s and Blodgett's, V dozen.. 19 00 @ 20 00
Bacon.—Shoulders, ft *> 14*@ 15
Plain Western Hams, # ® @
Canvass Hams, # ® *1 ©
Clear Bibbed Sides, jib 15*@
Clear Sides, ft I) 18 ©
Bagging.—Gunny, by the bale, fl yd.. 35 @
Buittav^Goshen, fl® 40 @
Country,....; 30 ©
Western.
Beeswax.—®
Black Pepper.—ft ®
35
35 ©
39 &
1 33 @
voice towards the Republic of Mexico.” Knowing
all this, it may be said that the instruction to the
Impeachment Committee is a mere splenetic re
solution. The President, in perfect consistency
witli his former acts, vetoed the suffrage bill, and
the House boiled over. It had reached the term
of its patience. Mr. Johnson’s veto was an idle
form, but it was au act of opposition to the ma
jority, and au impeachment immediately follow
ed. But, in truth, the comparatively triflin
matter which has been made the occasion of the
impeachment, the feebleness of the indictment
agaiust the President, and the obstacles present
ea by the Constitution to the success of the im
peachment only Lighten our sense of the revolu
tionary character of the impeachment itself. If
the law and the Constitution are to be observed,
what ground is there upon which reasonable
men can rely that the impeachment may prove
successful ?
* * * * *
The impeachment must>be conducted by the
House ot Representatives before the Senate, sit
ting as judges under the Presidency of the Chief
Justice of Lite Supreme Court of the Union, and
the Constitution prescribes that no person shall
be convicted without the concurrence of two-
thirds of the members present, sworn to give a
true verdict upon the evidence before them. The
eveuts of this session, grave as they have been,
will not allow us to believe that two-thirds of the
Senate will concur in a condemnation of the
President upon the charges brought against him ;
but a constitutional difficulty is in these days a
matter of small concern in the States. If the
majority' of Congress cannot legally compass
their ends, they will do so by the expression of
their own will. In the face of the Constitution,
Mr. Wended Phillips has constantly urged that
the President should before trial be prohibited
from exercising any of his official functions, on
the ground that an accused person should not
continue to act as President of tiie United States";
and the spirit which dictated this bold advice
will not scruple at acting upon a sentence, even
though it should be supported by less than the
prescribed two-thirds of the Senate. Let a ma
jority', however small, condemn Mr. Johnson, the
dominant party will enforce the condemnation,
and their supremacy' will be established without
opposition or possibility of rivalry.
The Union is thus visibly passing through a
revolution, and a revolution, perhaps more than
any other, remarkable for the speed of its pro
gress. It is barely a month since Congress met,
aud ten days out of the month have been spent
iu the recess j yet this brief time has been suffi
cient to develop a profound change iu the
American nation. During the elections, and up
to the begiuniug of December, nothing appeared
more chimerical than an attempt to impeach the
Piesideut. No respectable orgau ot opiuion, no
person iu any position of responsibility, advo
cated it; and the Republican leaders deprecated
any suggestion of such a proceeding as a slander
ous aspersion upon the moderation aud sagacity
of their party. But Congress met and tested
its strength, and flushed with a sense of power,
hurries on lrom one position to another, until
at last it lioldly declares that uo obstacle shall
be permitted to thwart the complete execution
of its will. What was pronounced impossible
ha* become a tact, and arguments reprobated
with indignation are accepted and acted upon.
What is a clause of the Constitution that it
should bar the way of the representatives of the
people? A majority some eighty years since
pretended to enact laws limiting the power of
tiie majority' of to day. Can any pretense, it is
asked, be more vain or idle? And the sophism
passes current, as sophisms will which justify
the excesses of those to whom they are addressed.
But the popularity of such reasoning makes the
impeachment of the President remarkable as
evidence of the length to which revolution has
gone, and a him of what may' come after. The
fate of Mr. Johnson is a trifle compared with
the safeguards ot all personal liberty and uni
versal freedom, which are thus subjected to the
unchecked caprice of a fluctuating majority.
Tennessee.—Browulow’s Militia bill has
passed the State Senate by a vote of 39 to 23.
The Nashville Union de Dispatch says of its
passage in that body;
During the debate, a Radical member disclosed
the object of the measure in one brief and bra-
Letter from Henry Ward Beecher to Gov,
Brownlow. .
We publish the following letter as a curiosity in
its way—of all that is social, religious, and politi
cal :
Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 1866.
Governor Broumlow :
My Dear Sir ; I have just been talking with
a friend returned from Tennessee, and have
learned a little more in detail than I knew before
of your present state, and what you propose to
do. Pray do not think me meddling with your
business, when 1 express my anxiety for your sue
cess in the thorough and permanent enfranchise
ment of the negro, for Tennessee is, in some
sense, a representative of the new nation. What
the whole people, above all things need just now
is that one Southern State should, of its own
will, and by the vote of its own people, come up
fully on to the platform of equal rights and citi
zenship for all men. Then there will be a model
to work by ; —other States will have courage to
believe that such things can be done. Suffrage
for the whole people I deem a natural right.
should urge it as a matter of justice. Should you
secure it, it will raise the conscience of the whole
nation many degrees higher than it is.
But, in your case, it is also a matter of political
safety. If some fear that such a measure will
kill them, so I am sure the want of it will kill
.them. To die for a principle is to make sure of
a resurrection; while political death without, and
even against a principle, is death perpetual and
resurrectionless.
Should Tennessee remain firm and work out
this great truth and duty of universal suffrage
(not forfeited by crime) 1 shall regard it as the
turn of the night. The day-star will have
risen, and light will grow stronger and darkness
weaker every moment thereafter.
I hope that God will be gracious to you and
reinvigorate your frame. He has made your life
precious to those who wish well to the country,
Into the struggle of the next campaign you will
carry not only the fate of Tennessee, but of the
whole South, and so of the nation. May God go
with you and bless you and bring you out victo
rious ; then if you wish to depart we will rejoice
with j*ou in the inheritance of that rest which
remaineth for the people of God. I am, dear sir,
very respectfully yours. H." W- BEECHgit.
brave uae
t who died to preserve our gov
ernment to au tborize an y Confederate demon
stration over tW remains of tdf one who at-
(Stgned.)
temptsd to destroy it.
P. H. Sheridan,
Majore General ft S. A.”
Black Pepper.—# *
Corn.—While, Western, new
Yellow or mixed, ft bushel c®
Heal, ft bushel ©
Oats _ ©
Cheese.—Hamburg, # ® 20 ©
NewYorkState.... 18 ©
English Dairy @
Craciers.—¥ »... „ J 8 ®.
00
22
16
17
37
45
35
40
8S
40
1 40
1 35
1 40
1 00
22
20
20
.. —. 88 00 @150 00
edium 50 00 @ 75 00
Common 20 00 @4000
Cheroots 14 00 @ 15 00
Cigars.—Imported, fl 1,000
media
■.—Fancy, assorted, ft *.
i Candy, ft ®
Candles.—Adamantine, ft ®
40 @
C siu£cindy7*s:^y.7..T.. g f
21 &
Stearine. ft ® @
Coffee.—Java, # ® « @
Rio, 9® 26 &
Factory Geods.—Cotton Thread 2 50 @
Gsnahurgs
. Brown Shirtings, .ft yard 18 @
Brown Sheetings, ft yard 20 @
!9 yanL 50 @
white, W yarn *» ®
Flour.—Fancy, fi jbl., white wheat.. ™
Extra Family, ft bbL If 00
Extra, ft bbl 00
Superfine, ft bbl 12 60
Olase.—8 by 10, ft box
10 byl2, « box
12 by 16, y box 8 50
Gunpowder.—* keg. Rifle “
Dupont’s, blasting ft keg
Hay.—Kentucky Timothy, ft ®...
Herrings.—Smoked, ft box
45
33
25
60
25
28
45
30
2 60
2S
19
22
60
1 50
1 00
@ 18 00
@ 17 CO
@ 15 00
@ 13 00
0 00
9 45
@ 9 75
9 60 @ 10 50
7 00 @ 7 50
@ 2X
1 00 @ 1 60
Hides—Drv « ® 12*® 14
HcSsT—Winsted Hoe Co., ft doz 19 60 @ 14 50
9 00 @ 30 00
8 @ 12*
15 @ 16X
Remains at
A Horrible Suggestion.
The New York Evening Post has the following
suggestion in regard to the frequency of fires and
the terrible losses thereby to the innocent compa
nies and to the people :
We have heard a story of an honest German
in this city, who, in his simplicity, acknowledged,
when question as to the origin of the fire which
destroyed his bakery, “Me and Hans split up the
kindling wood and made a big pile in the cellar,
and then set it on fire, so as to bum down the
bakery and get the money for which it was in
sured, to pay the note which is due to-morrow.”
A gentleman long connected with the fire insu
rance business, said to us the other day, “I can
take the register of losses, of any fire insurance
company long enough established, and tell you,
‘by the increase of losses, the years in which busi
ness was dull or deranged in the country.” This
is a startling suggestion, but managers of fire in
surance companies will support it by proof if
needed. We have been told by several gentle
men of long experience in this business that
whenever there is any special derangement or
stagnation in trade, when largely accumulated
stocks of goods await tardy purchasers, when a
falling market threatens loss to the grasping spec
ulator or bold adventurer, or when the manufac
turer cannot turn out his wares at a profit, then
are fires frequent, particularly in stores and ware
houses filled with goods for which there is no im
mediate demand, and in mills and manufactories
where the expenses of running cannot be met by
profits ou the sales.
Revenue Seizures.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has
decided that a revenue inspector has uo author!
ty to make seizures of property for a violation of
laws, or indeed for any other reason, At this
time, when the hand of the Government tax col
lector is upon every business and income, it is
well to understand the limit of the authority of
the revenue officer. The following is the deci-
Trkasubt Department,
Office Internal Revenue,
Washington, D. C., Dec. 20, 1866.
Sir—In reply to your question of the 13lh in
stant, “Under the existing revenue laws have I,
or have I not, the right to make a seizure ?” I
have to say that the Revenue Inspector is not au
thorized under the law to make seizures in any
case, save that of a peddler, as stated on page 27,
section 56, ot the Internal Revenue law. Very
respectfully, Thomas Harland,
Deputy' Commissioner.
To A. Homeland, Esq., Revenue Inspector,
Louisville, Kentucky.
Southern Railroads.—A table, which is
published, shows that the Southern railroads
owe the United States Government $6,570,000 for
rolling stock aud material sold to them after
the close of the war. The Boston Advertiser
says :
It will be observed that at the date of this re
port, July 1, 1866, but five of the forty-seven
companies therein named had paid their indebt
edness. On that day there fell due the sum of
$875,000, ol which its has been ascertained from
other sources, but a very small percentage was
paid. Over $1,000,000 fell due ou the first of the
present mouth, of which also, but a small
amount was paid. The aggregate due from
the various companies is about the same now
as it was last July, the payments by a few of
them barely covering the interest falling due
front others.
The Order of Things.—Redpath is out in
the Anti-Slavery Standard tor three things which
he calls Progress and Improvement They are,
1st. The abolition of the United States Su
preme Court, which is pressed by many Radicals.
2d. The abolition of the United States Senate.
3d. The abolition of the United States Amy.
The New York Express says: All this is but
a fresh reminder of the French revolution. It
begun with Mirabeau, advanced to the Giron
dists, and ended with Robespierre. A wise peo
ple would see in the teachings of history, exam
ples to avoid, as well as to follow.
_ tal sentence. He said “there had not been blood
thiiTroaiT for the month of December. 1866: FOr |
passengers, $166,182 73; lreights, $64,155 07;
mails, $1,700; express, $6,200; other sources,
$662. Total, $178,848 79. Expenses, $82,753 19.
Net revenue, $96,096 60.
Influence of the Press.—A leading New
York clergyman, iu a recent sermon, declared
bat - oue leading paper of that city had a great-
ter power and more influence oa the doctrines
aud opinions of the people of this country than
all the pulpits in it.”
We hope the clergyman did not mean the
Deraid.
itimuius ot" such passions, argument is fruitless,
and comment upon the pioceedlng unnecessary.
Should it become the law, the history' of its
execution will be a disgrace to the civilization
of the age, and will furnish tales of horror at
which humanity will weep. Claverhouse apd
his troopers will have come again. Into every
neighborhood will be sent an armed body to
enforce as law every license that may suggest
itself in the name of “loyalty.” Amid such
arms, law will not be silent simply—it will be
dead.
Solid Men of Cincinnati.—In a list of Cin
cinnati “solid men,” in the Times of that city, the
estate of N. Locgworth heads the list at $12,000,-
000, then follows two at $3,000,000, nine at $2,-
000,000, nine at $1,500,000, thijrty-seven at $1,-
000,000, and forty-nine at $500,000. Jacob Stra
der’s estate is put at $1,000,000; Miles Green
wood is marked $1,500,000: W. S. G roes beck,
$1,000,000; estate of Mr. Potter, of the Commer
cial, $500,000. etc.
Settled at Last.—A Richmond (Virginia)
court decided lately that the wife’s apparel be
longs to the husband. Under such a decision,
Arrival of Gem. Johnston’s
Houston, Texas.
Houston, Texas, Jan. 26.—The remains of
General Albert Sidney Johnston have arrived,
and all the buildings are draped in mourning.—
Thousands met the body at the depot, when it
was escorted to the Female Academy, where it
will remain in state until Monday, and be taken
to Austin for interment. The special ladies’
train from Galveston, carrying the remains, in
returning, ran off the track, and a number of la
dies severely injured.
Cruelty Punished.
Albany, N. Y., Jan. 27.—The Rev. Joel Lind
sey, for whipping a child to death, was convict
ed of murder in the second degree.
The Crosby Opera House.
Chicago, Jan. 27.—Mr. Crosby purchased the
Opera House from W. H. Lee, who wen-it, for
$200,000,
Indians on the War Path.
St. Josephs, Mo., Jan. 27.—Advices from the
plains say that a large body of Indians is moving
Southward. Old fighters say that this means
war.
From St. Louis
St. Louis, Jan. 27.—Six men were drowned at
St Charles, on Friday, in attempting to cross on
the ice.
The Indian delegation has arrived, and will
leave for Washington to-morrow.
From New Orleans.
New Orleans, Jan. 27.—Bishop Wilmer
officiated at Governor Allen’s funeral. The Le
gislature meets to-morrow.
Disaster to a Schooner.
Fortress Monroe, Jan. 28.—The schooner
S. C. Benton, from Boston for Richmond, arrived
at Norfolk, being driyen ashore by the ice. A
part ol feer cargo was thrown oyerboard.
• BY THE ATLANTIC CABLE.
Kuropean News.
Pesth, Jau. 26,—A full ministry has been
framed in Hungary,
Berlin, Jan. 26.—The South German States
have proposed a military union with the North
German States.
St. Petersburg, Jan. 27.—Advices from
Behrings Strates state that the American portion
of the Russian-American telegraph is completed.
The Straits have been surveyed for the purpose
of finding a place for a submarine cable. The
Russian portion of this great enterprise is ex
pected to be finished in the coming autumn.
Constantinople, Jan. 28.— A United States
man-of-war has left the Bosphorus to take the
Cretan fugitives on board, to transport them to
Greece.
Berne, Jan. 28.—The Government of Austria
has made overtures to the Federal authorities,
with a view of consumating negotiation of a
commercial character between the two countries.
London, Jan. 28.—Two clipper ships, Louis
Walsh and Charlotte White, which sailed from
Callao, on the race to Europe, reached Gibraltar,
having made the voyage in 104 days. The
Louis Walsh won the race by only 25 minutes.
COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE.
BY TELEGRAPH.
New York Market.
New York, Jan. 28.—Cotton very firm and
more active. Sales 1,500 bales. Middling up
lands 38£ to 34. Flour dull and five to ten cents
lower. State, $9 50 to $12; Ohio, $1175 to
$13 80; Western $9 50 to $13; Southern, $1175
to $16 50. Wheat dull. Pork heavy—New
Mess, $20 25; old, $19 50. Lard heavy. Whisky
nominal. Rice quiet—^Carolina, 10J to 10|.—
Sugar steady—Muscovado, 10f to 10); Havana,
101- Other groceries steady.
Cincinnati Market.
Cincinnati, Jan. 28.—The flour and wheat
demand is light. Coro firmer, a3 regards shelled,
and prices higher. Shelled, 62 to 63. Oats
firmer at 51 to 52. Rice and Barley unchanged.
Cotton firm but quiet. Middling 31 cents.—
Whisky dull, and prices nominal. Hogs dull at
$7 40 to $7 75. Provisions unc hanged and firm
Demand light Groceries unchanged and steady.
New Orleans Market.
New Orleans, Jan. 28.—Cotton firmer. Sales
6,850 bales. Low Middling, 304 ; Middling, 31
cents.
Wilmington Market.
Wilmington, Jan. 28.—Cotton dull. Mid
dlings, 30 cents.
Mobile Market.
Mobile, Jan. 28.—Sales of Cotton 1,700 bales,
closing firm. Middlings 31 cents.
Angzsu Market.
Augusta, Jan. 28.—Cotton sales 310 bales, and
advanced ) cent. Middlings 30) cents.
8 ©
10
30 ©
40
50 ©
75
05 00. ©
85 00
a
45
800 ©
15 00
4 00 ©
5 00
6 50 ©
7 00
8 50 ©
4 00
* no ©
8 00
4 50
8 50 in.
• on
@
8
6 00
4 00
2 75
Hoop teirti.—F doz.
Lard.—5*^bwreto and keg*
Le*d.-3 *.....
* *a£her.—Sole,"B ®
Upp. Skins y doz.
Harness, * jt, -’*dy A f gaUoa..
Liquors.—French Bra. "‘ n
Domestic Brandy, fi gan^
Holland Gin, fi gallon
Domestic Gin, F gallon.’
Jamaica Rum, ^ gallon.......
New England Rum, fi gallon.
Com Whisky, fl gallon " S 50
Bourbon Whisky, f gallon 2 75
Robinson County, w gallon..' " am
Rectified Whiskp.. 7.."..." i."""
B £? nd ?> gallon. 8 50 & 5 00
8 80 @ 5 00
—v Darrel 3 50 (a 4 50
LtunbMLj-Jfl 1,000 feet, green 90 oo
Laths.—* LOGO, sawed
KackereL-ftkit 300
w *.l, bar «j 29 00
Hails.—4d to 20<L #6o
3d f) keg
Pickles.—Gallon jars, ip doz. ’.
Hah gallon tars, 9 doz
Quarts, « doz
Pints, fl doz
Prints—» yard 15 a
Pea Nuts.—9 bushel ioo <a
Bye. $ bushel 00 <a
Baisins.—Whole boxes, 25 ®s . 5 00 Ch
Quarters, ®s
Rice, -f a> 13 &
Rope.—Greenleaf, and other standard
brands, machine made, f) ® 16 <a
Hand made, ft ® 16 K
Shot.—# bag g
Steel.—# » is q.
Spool Thread.—# dozen, Coate's.. 1.
Amory’s # dozen
Silk finish, # dozen 85
Salt.—Liverpool, # sack ' 3 6Q
Smoking Tobacco.—# ® 25 a
Soap—Bar, Atlanta Manulactory, # ». 10 S
» *
Sardines.—X boxes, # case... j
Sugar.—Brown, # ® 13
Clarified, A
B, # ®
c, # ®
Loaf and Crashed, # ®
Granulated.
8yrup.—Cane, # gallon 1 00
Sorghum, # gallon 60
New Orleans, new crop, # gallon
Tallow.—#®... 12'
Teas.—Black, # ® 1 95
Green, W® j go
Young Hyson, # ® 1 50
Tobacco.—Common, #® »
Medium, # ® 75
Prime,#®. 1 25
Twine—Kentucky Bagging, # tt
ewetabjes.—Potatoes, Dish,# barrel 5 00
Sweet Potatoes, # bushel, - 75
Onions, # barrel
CLAIM AGENCY
ATI/AHTA, geokgia.
T HE undersigned having been for many years success
fully engaged iu the prosecution of Claims against
the General Government, respectfully renews the tender
of his professional services to his patrons, and others
having claims due them— ...
For Bounties, or Additional Bounties due Soldiers, or
their Widows, Orphans, Fattier, Mother, or Brothers
and Sisters, who have been engaged in tho military ser
vice of the U. S. War of 1861. '
For Pay, or A* rears of Pay, and other allowances due
Officers a'nd Soldiers, or their Heirs.
For Pensions to the Widows ofOflicers and Soldiers, and
to the Minor Children in certain cases; of such Officers
aud Soldiers who have died in the TJ. S. service, or of
contracted disease or wounds received in said service.
For Renewal of Pensions, and Half-Pay to the \\ idows
or Minor Children ot Officers and Soldiers who have been
kilted in battle, or died of wounds received, or disease
contracted in the military service of the U. S. in the va
rious wars since 1790. .
For Invalid Pensions, and Increase of Invalid Pensions
in certain cases.
For Three Months Pay due Commissioned Officers under
the rank of Brigadier General, War of 1661, who were in
the U. S. service on 3d March, lSfios
For Restoration of Pensioners in certain cases of Inva
lids, Widows, and Minor Children, Dropped from the
Pension Roll under Act of February 4, 1S62.
For Horses Killed or Lost iu the military service of
the United States.
Claims arising under the Revenue Laws, such as Seiz
ures aud Enormous Fines, to be prosecuted before the
Treasury Department.
Claims against the Commissary and. Quartermaster
General Department for Supplies furnished the U. S. Ar
my. Special attention will be giveu to the prosecutions
of Claims for the Ralance due Mail Contractors, .Post
masters, and Census-Takers of 1S60.
Claims for Bounty Land.
Having a thorough and practical knowledge of me Pen
sion and other laws, and of Departmental Rules, Regula
tions, and Decisions, aud many years experience, is ena
bled to give satisfaction. Terms and references satisfac
tory.
Address P. O. No. 17, Atlanta, Ga.
Office of J. J. Findlv and Olin Wellborn, up-stairs,
over the store of L. H. Hi
GIFTS
New M Prize Association.
590 BROADWAY, N. Y.
janI6—w3m
lope & Co., Whitehall street.
II. H. WALKER.
JOSHUA HILL,
(OF GEORGIA,)
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
WASHIFGTOy, D. C.
P RACTICES in the Supreme Court ot the United
States, the Court of Claims, and the Courts ol the
District of Columbia.
Claims and Department Business receive prompt atten
tion. ,
Office and Residence—No. 2041 Street, between.l»tn
and 18th Streets West. janlO—d&w3m
. REWARD.
I CJ TOLEN lrom the subscriber, on the night
I of the 25th of December last, at the resi-
' -ice of L. W. Spear, on Flat Shoal Road,
-> a half miles southeast of Atlanta,
1M
27 09 ® 80 00
4 00
& 3 50
O 27 00
© 10 00
10 00
10 00
7 60
6 00
3 25
23
2 00
00
6 00
3 25
2 00
14
17
16
3 50
30
1 25
85
1 10
8 75
1 25
12
16
12*
25 00
15
18
17
&
iio*
70
100
12*
1 50
2 50
2 00
60
1 00
1 50
©
12 ©
5 50
1 25
5 00
50
75
8 00
5 00
Vanilih.—#gallon. 550
Wrapping Paper.—# ream 195
FINANCIAL.
Exchange on H«w York.—Buying «t * discount;
selling at par. .
Gold.—Baying at 35 cents; selling at 38 cents.
Silver.—Buying at 30 cents; selling at 85 cents.
Gold Bullion.—Buying at $1.95 per pennyweight.
Gold Dust.—Buying at $1.15©$1.20 per pennyweight.
GEORGIA,
Buying. Buying.
Georgia R. R. & B. Co.. 97 Central R. R. Bank 97
Marine Bank of Ga 98 Bank of Middle Georgia 88
Rank nf Fnitnn ^ Bank of Athens 40
Bank of Augusta 35
Union Bank of Augusta 5
Augusta Savings Bank. 16
Timber Cutters’ Bank.
Bank of Savannah
Bank of the State 8
Bank of Commerce .... 7
Mechanics’ Bank 4
Bank of Fulton 35
Bank of Empire State.. 25
Augusta Ins. A B. Co... 6
City Bank of Augusta.. 30
Manufac’rs B’k orMacon 20
Northwestern Bank....
Merchants’ A Planters’. 10
Planters' Bank 14
Bank of Oqluuibus 12
Alaraxa.
Bank of Mobile 96
Eastern Bank of Ala 40
Bank of Selma 25
Commercial Bank 12
Bank of Montgomery... 80
Central Bank 12
Northern Bank 50
Sonthera Bank 95
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Union Bank 50 People’s Bank
GEOHGIA, Fayette Cofstt.
J OHN S. HOLLIDAY, guardian of Mary Thompson,
having applied to the Court of Ordinary of said coun
ty fpr a discharge from his guardianship of the said ward's
person and property—
These are therefore to give notice to all persons con
cerned. to file tbeir Objections in my office, in terms ol
-he law, if any they have, why said applicant should not
receive letters of dismission as prayed for. Given
under my band and official signature. January 21,1867.
EDWARD CONNOR, Ordinary.
Jan30—40d Printer’s fee $3
Startling.—A fine dispatch from Paris, per
Atlantic Cable, states that the Empress Eugenie ' the wife has clearly the same tight to wear the
is growing older.
I pantaloons as the p$(ticoats-
GEOBG1A, Hxsbt County.
T being represented to the Court of Ordinary of said
county that the estates of Thomas Dickey, James E.
Berry, and John Calvin, late of said county, deceased,
aie unrepresented, and no one having applied lor letters
of administration on said estates—
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singu
lar, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and
appear at my office, within the time prescribed by law
to show cause, if any they have, why letters should not be
granted to the Clerk of the Superior Court, or some other
fit and proper person. Given nnder my band and official
signature, Janaary 25,1867.
Q, R. NOLAN. Ordinary.
Ian89—80d Printer's fee $3
GEORGIA, Henry County.
L EVI H. TURNER, administrator on the estate of Jo-
siah Harkness, Sr., having made application to this
court for leave to sell a 4o-ucre lot of land belonging to
■aid intestate. <uncultivated. 1 lying in the county of Cobb,
•t private sale, for purpose of distribution—
All persons concerned are notified to file their objec
tions. if any they bare, within two months from the first
publication of this notice, else leave will be granted for
the sale of said lot. January 27,1867.
Q. R. NOLAN, Ordinary.
jan9J—2m Printer's fee $6
iHlisraiier FftiwT
People’s Bank 33
Bank of Newberry 35
Bank of Hamburg 17
Southwestern R.R.Bank 33
Farmers’ & Exchange.. 3
Bank of Camden 40
Bank of 8. C 9
State Bank 6
Commercial Bank.... . 16
NORTH CAROLINA.
Bank of Cape Fear 221 All other N.C. from 80 to
Bank of Wilmington... 15 85 per cent, discount.
Bank of the State 301
Bnt little doing.in Tennessee and Virginia Bank Bille
Bank of Chester ... 15
Bank of the State (old). 14
Bank of Charleston }7
Exchange Bank 10
l$erchanta’ (Cheraw)... 15
Bank of Georgetown... 14
Planters’ Bank 10
Planters’ & Mechanics*. 17
E330BS oy Youtr.—A gentleman who suffered for
years from Nervous Debility, Premature Decay, and all
the effects of youthful indiscretion, will, for the sake Of
suffering humanity, send free to all who need it, the re
ceipt and directions for making the simple remedy by
which he was cured. Snfferers wishing to profit by the
advertiser’s experience, can dd bo by addressing in-per
fect confidence JOHN B. OGDEN,
nov28—w3m.No. 42 Cedar St., New York.
AGENTS WANTED FOR
THE LIPE, LETTERS, SPEECHES, <£C.,
HON. ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS
BY HENRY CLEVELAND, ESQ.,
Late Editor of the Angosta (Ga.) Constitutionalist.
Send for circulars and tee our terms, and a full deacrip-
tion of the work.. Address
NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.,
jan23—lltdalmw*Box 342, Atlanta, Ga.
GEORGIA, Henry County.
E LIJAH MORRIS, administrator on the estate of Is-
t rael Prickett, late of said county, deceased, having
applied to me for letters of dismission from said admin
istration—
These are therefore to cite and admonish all persons
concerned, to be and appear at my office, within the time
prescribed by law, apd show cause. If any they can, why
said letters should not be granted to the applicant. Given
under my hand, and official signature, January 25,1867.
Q. R. NOLAN. Ordinary.
jan29—lam6m Printer’s fee $4.50
GEORGIA, Henry County.
W M. C. LEE, administrator oh the estate of Joseph
Metts, late of said county, deceased, having ap.
plied to me for letters of dismission from said adminis
tration—
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why said
administrator should not be discharged from his admin
istration and receive letters of dismission as prayed for.
Given nnder my hand and official signature, January
25, 1867. Q. K. NOLAN, Ordinary.
Printus' ■ fan ftj rj
jan29—lam6m
Printer s fee $4.50
GEORGIA, Henry County.
B ENJAMIN CAGLE applies to me for letters of ad
ministration on the estates of W. W. Cagle, David
Cagle, and Thotnau J. Robinson, all deceased, late of said
county—
This is to cite all and singular, the creditors and next
of kin of said deceased, to be and appear at my office,
within the time prescribed by law, apd show cause, if
any they can, why letters of administration should not
be granted said applicant. Given under my hand and
official signature, Jannary L, 1867.
Q. R. NOLAN, Ordinary.
jan29—30d Printer’s fee $3
GEORGIA, Henry Counny.
J ULIA COOK applies to me in proper form for letters
of administration cum tutamento annexe on the es
tate of Samuel Cook, late of said county, deceased—
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singu
lar, the kindred and creditors of said deceased to be rad
appear at my office, within the time prescribed by law.
and show cause, if any they have, why letters should not
be granted the applicant. Given trader my band and
official signature, January 1,1867.
Q. R. NOLAN, Ordinary.
Jan29—30d Printer’s fee $3.
SPECIAL BAILIFF’S SAAB.
W ILL be sold before the court house door in the city
of Atlanta, Fulton county, Ga., between the law
ful hours of sale, on the first Tuesday In M«wt next, *ii»
following property, to-wit:
One house and lot. and all other buildings thereunto at
tached fronting on Line street, adjoining a lot recently
owned by W. G. Forsyth on the north, and the lot now
occupied by Wm. Ketcbam on the west, and an aller on
the east. Levied on as the property of C. D. Jackson, to
satisfy two fl. fat. issued from the County Court or Ful
ton, one In favor of Hsrdcastle, Garnett A Co., and the
other in lavor of Samuel A. Miller, both ea. A. J. Haral
son & Co. Property pointed ont hv plaintiff’s sttomeys.
Also, tne interest of Henry P. ivy in one large two-
story wooden house, and all other appurtenances there
unto belonging, situated on the corner of Prior and
Wheat streets, and an alley, containing half an acre, more
or less. Levied on by two fl. fat., both issued from the
Count; Court or Fulton in favor ot A. P. Bell tt. Hcnrv
P. Ivy. Property pointed out by plaintiff. January 29,
18)7. jo. S. SMITH. Special Bailiff.
jao30—td Printer’s fee $2A0 per levy.
orrel Horae, about seven years old; white
' —d; one white hind leg ; mane trim-
Clt.
two anu ,, ,
one chestnut. fore
spot in his foi eu,.
med ; scar on breast anu .
- The above reward will be pu.
Horae to.L. IV*. Spear, at above nan.,
scriber, in Jasper County, near Gladesviiie
jan!9—ltdaw* JNO. A.
for the delivery of said
~“<i place, or the eub-
1.00K AT THIS !
rvcral l
EACH.
25 Rosewood Piano# worth $200 to 600
30 Rosewood Melodeons worth 100 to 200
100 Sewing Machine# worth 50 to 125
200 Music Boxes worth 15 to 150
500 Gold Watches worth 60 to 250
1,000 Silver Watches worth 20 to 60
1,000 Silver Tea Sets worth 25 to 150
Together with a large assortment of
NEW & ELEGANT JEWELRY,
TALCED AT
# 5 O O , O O O .
WILL US DISTRIBUTED AS FOLLOWS i
T HE name and value of each article of our goods are
marked on Tickets, placed in SEALED ENVEL
OPES, and well mixed. On receipt of 25 cents, an envel
ope containing snch Ticket will be drawn without choice
and delivered at our office, or sent by rntyil to any address.
The purchaser, after seeing what article it draws and its
value—which may bo from Ose to Five Huniihed Dol
lars—can then, on payment of One Dollar, receive the
article named, or nmy "exchange it for any other article
marked on our circular at the same value. Every Ticket
dtaws au article worth One Dollar, or more.
e?"NO BLANKS. B4
Our patrons can depend on prompt returns. The Articles
drawn will be immediately sent by Express or return
mail, or delivered at our Qflice.
Letters from many persons acknowledging the receipt
of VALUABLE GIFTS from us, may be seen on file at
our office, among whom we are permitted to refer to :
John S. Holcomb, Lambertville. N. J., Gold Watch,
value $250; Mrs. S. Bennett, 252 Cumberland street,
Brooklyn, Sewing Machine, $80; Edwin Hoyt, Stamford,
Conn., Gold Lever Watch, value $2ti0; Hon. R. H. Briggs,
Washington, D. C., Diamond Pm, $176; J. C. Sutuer-
land, lot) Lexington Avenue, Piano, $350; Mrs. M. Jack-
son, 203 Nineteenth street, N. Y., Sewing Machine, $:*>;
Jos. Camp, Elmira, N. Y., Melodeon, $150; Miss L. Col
lins, Atlanta, Ga., Diamond Cluster Ring, $225; Dr.
Henry Smith, Worcester, Mass., Sewing Machine, $85;
H. Shaw, 133 Sixteenth streot. New York, Gold Watch,
$150; Edward Boynton, Nashville, Tenn.. Melodeon,
$100; James Russell, Montgomery, Ala , Gold Huntiug
Watch, $250; R. T. Smith, Providence, R. I., Silver Le
ver Watch, $60; Oscar Purdy, Madison, N.-J., Music Box,
$45; Hon. K. S. Newell, St. Pauls, Minu., Gold Watch,
$185; J. R. Sperry, Litchfield, Conn., Silver Watch, $55 ;
Wm. B. Peck, Harlem, 111., Music Box, $75; Wm. Ray
mond, Dayton, Ohio, Silver Tea Set, $125; Miss E. M.
"'Schenck, Detroit, Mich., Diamond Ear Rings, $225; P.
Beaudin. St. Charles Hotel, N. Orleans, Diamond Ring,
$170; Mr#. Martha Barnes, St. Louis, Mo., Melodeou,
$125.
pjg~A chance to obtain any of the above Articlos for
ONE DOLLAR, by purchasing a Scaled Envelope for
25 cents.
Entire Satisfaction Guaranteed to All.
e?"Six Tickets for $1,13 for $2, 33 for $5. Great in
ducements to A^nts.
All Letters should be addressed
^ J. H. RAY & CO.,
dec2(w uw8m* 599 Broadway, New York_
complete cure for Dropsies.
Location: Six miles northwest of Atlanta, and one
mile northwest of Clarke Howell’s Mills.
. dec!2—itw* 1)r. F. C. FORD
GEORGIA, Gordon County.
T WO months after date application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary of Gordon county, Ga., at the
nret regular term after the expiration of two months from
this notice, for leave to sell tho lands belonging to the es
tate of William D. VI alker, late of said county, deceased
January 24, 1867. OSBORN REEVES, Adrn’r.
jan27 60d Printer’s fee $6.
GEORGIA, Gordon County.
T WO months after date, application will be made to
the Court of Ordinary of said county, at the first
regular term after the expiration of nvo months from this
notice, for leave to sell the land belonging to the estate
ot L. D. Marclunan, late of said county, deceased. Janu-
”7 OSBORN REEVES, Adm'r.
Jan27—2m Printer’s fee $6
GEORGIA, Gordon County.
T WO months after date application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary of Gordon County, Georgia, at
the first regular term after the expiration of two months
from this notice, for leave to sell the lands belonging to
the estate of Susan Coker, late of said county, deceased.
January 24, 1867. F. M. GREEN, Adm’r.
jan27—2m Printer’s fee $6
GEORGIA, Fayette County.
TO ALL WHOM XT MAY CONCERN.
A J. VTCKERS having in proper form applied to me
• for permaneut letters of administration on the es
tate of Simeon A. Minick; late of said county, deceased—
These are therefore to cite all and singular, the kindred
and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at my
office, within the time prescribed by law, and show
cause, if any they have, why permanent administration
should not be granted to the applicant. Given uuder my
hand and official signature, January 25,1807.
EDWARD CONNOR, Ordinary.
jan27—30d Printer’s fee $3
GEORGIA, Fayette County.
TO ALL WHOM1T MAY CONCERN.
A J. VICKERS having in proper form applied to me
• for permanent letters of administration on the es
tate of James Wiley Minick, late of said county, deceas
ed—
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singu
lar, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and
appear at my office, within the time prescribed by law,
to show cause, if any they have, why such letters should
not be granted. Given under my hand and official signa
ture, January 25,1867.
EDWARD CONNOR, Ordinary.
jan27—30d Printer’s fee $3
FULTON SHERIFF’S SALE.
W ILL be sold, before the court house door in the city
of Atlanta, Fulton county, Ga., on the first Tues
day in March next, between the legal hours of sale, the
following property, to-wit:
One pile of bricks, containing thirty or thirty-five thou
sand; said bricks being ou C. W. Hunuicutt’s laud, in
ward No. 5, at a place known as King’s Brick Yard. Said
bricks levied on as the property of H. K. King, by virtue
of a distress warrant issued by A. A. Gaulding, J. P„ in
favor of W. S. Walton vs. said King. Property pointed
out by defendant.
Also, at the same time and place, a part of the contents
of the corner storeroom of the Willingham Building, in
the city of Atlanta, on the corner of Decatur and Ivy
streets, and formerly occupied by T. A. Warren & Co. as
a drug store, viz : All the shelving on the west side of
said storeroom, two counters, and two marble slabs. All
levied on as the property of T. A. Warren As Co., by vir
tue of a distress warrant issued by W. M. Butt, J. P., in
favor of Thomas II. aud B. L. Willingham vs. T. A. War
ren & Co. Property pointed out by plaintiff.
Also, at the same time and place, a part of city lot No.
135, in the 14th district of originally Henry, now Fulton
county, land lot No. 78; being the place where the de
fendant is now living, known as the Carmichael lot; also,
the lot adjoining the same, known as the Jacobs lot, both
together, fronting on Marietta street, in the city of At
lanta, 100 feet, and running back 200 feet; adjoining lands
of William Fuller on the west, by Farnsworth on the
north, aud by an alley on the east. Levied on as the pro-
>erty of Jonathan Carmichael, to satisfy a fi. fa. from
i'ulton Superior Court in favor of* Margaret A. Rust vs.
Baid J. Carmichael.
Also, at the same time and place, part of land iot No.
225, iu the 17th district of originally Henry, now Fulton
county, containing; ISO acres, more or less. Levied on as
the property of J. R. Mounce, said Muunce now living on
the premises. Levied ou by virtue of a distress warrant
issued by Judge B. D. Smith, id favor of Frank C. Taylor
vs. J. R. Mounce. Property pointed out by plaintiff’s at
torney.
Also, at the same time and place, one 10-inch slide
lathe, 5 feet bed; one 10-inch slide lathe, 12 feet bed ; one
16*-inch slide lathe, 9 feet bed; one 9Jf-inch slide lathe,
9 feet bed; one 16-iudi slide lathe, 4 feet bed ; one wood
lathe, 18 feet bed; one planer, 5 feet bed ; one boring ma
chine, five iron vises, three 10-inch damaged lathes, three
upright drill press, s, (damaged.) two gun barrel boring
lathes,one small hand lathe, (damaged.) w ith a lot of scrap
machinery^ two large planers, one turning lithe, one rip
saw, one power mortising machine, one Fay’s hand ma
chine, one sash machine, one moulding machine, one rip
saw, one surfacing machine, one boring machine, one
large lot of flasks, one lar£e lot of patterns of various
descriptions; iron tools, including everything belonging
to the various departments; one 32 horse-power enfpne,
boiler and belting. All levied on as the property of the
Gate City Foundry, Car Manufacturing and Machine
Works, by virtue of, and to satisfy a fi. fa. issued
from Fnlton Superior Court, in lavor of R. M. McPher
son A Cq. vs. Huge, Mills and Co. it N. R. Fowler, Secu
rity. Said property pointed out by defendant. January
28, 1867. W. L. HUBBARD, Dep. Sheriff.
jan29—td Printer’s fee $2.50 per levy.
Fb
MP0MW-
CEO- b
1, FRAZER
• hand ftt hid
St*?
Warerootis oix
A SPLENDID LO
fuenit;
tJEBl
CHAMBER SETS,
PARLOR SETS, .
COTTAGE FURNITURE,
ELEGANT FURNI1
WARDROBES,
BEDSTEADS,
TABLES,
CHAIRS,
MATTRASSES.
Bat Racks and Writing Desks,
Easy Chairs and Dining Tables,
Bureaus and Office Chairs,
And Everything in the Furniture Line !
oc28—d6tw3m
JAS. H. HALL.
JOS. B. BLACK.
W. W. BALDWIN
HALL, BLACK & BALDWIN,
(SUCCESSORS TO CALHOUN & ATKINSON,)
Sole Manufacturers of the Celebrated
CALHOUN Ac ATKINSON
COTTON
Maysville, - - - -
PLOW,
- - Kentucky.
FtTI/rON SHERIFF’S SALE.
W ILL be gold, on the first Tuesday in April next,
before the court house door in the city of Atlanta,
Fulton county, Georgia, within the legal hours of sale,
the following property, to-wit:
Lot of land, situated, lying and being in the city of At
lanta, county aDd State aforesaid, known in the plan of
the survey as original land lot No. 31, in the 14th district
of originally Henry, now Fulton county, and known in
the map of said city as lots 21 and Hi; each of said lots
containing half acre, more or less. Levied on by virtue
of a mortgage fl. fa. issued from Fulton Superior Court
in favor of Maurice Livingston vs. John H. Lovejoy.
Property pointed out in said Ji.fa. January 28,1867.
W. L. HUBBARD, Dep. Sheriff.
jan29—td Printer's fee $2.50
GEORGIA, Fayettk County.
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCEEN.
M ARY E. CARTER applies to me in proper form for
permanent letters of administration ou the estate
of John W. Carter, late of eaid county, deceased—
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and sin
gular, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be
and appear at my office, within the time prescribed by
law, and show cause, if any they ced, why said letters
should not be graDted. Given under my hand and offi
cial signature, January 18, 1866.
EDWARD CONNOR, Ordinary.
jan29—30d Printer’s fee $3
GEORGIA, Henry county.
A SA R. BROWN, administrator on the estate of Henry
Stokes, late of said county deceased, having mads
application to me for leave to sell, at private sa.e, an 80-
acre land warrant, No 47,211, as property of his intes
tate—
All persons concerned are notified to file their objec
tions, if any they have, within two months lrom the first
publication of this notice, else leave will be granted for
the sale of said land warrant. January 24, 1807.
Q,. K. NOLAN, Ordinary.
jan29—2m Printer’s fee $6
GEORGIA, Hjinby County.
M ARION CLEVELAND, administrator on the estate
of Mary A. Harkness, late of eaid county, deceased,
having made application to this court for leave to sell the
real state of said intestate for benefit of the heirs and
creditors—
All persons concerned are notified to file their objec
tions, if any they have, wituin two months from the first
publication of this notice, eise leave will be granted for
the sale of said real estate. January 29, 1867.
Q. R. NOLAN, Ordinary.
jan29—2m Printer's fee $6
GEORGIA, Henry County.
T YRA J. CHAFFIN, administrator on the estate of
Seaborn Chaffin, late of said county, deceased, hav
ing made application to this court for leave to sell the
real estate of said intestate for benefit of heirs and credi
tors—
All person- concerned are notified to file their objec
tions, if any they have, within two months irom the first
publication of this notice, else leate will he granted for
the sa.e of said real estate. January 24. 1M>7.
Q. II. SOLAS, Ordinary.
jan29—2m - Printer's fee $6
T HE undersigned respectfully call the attention of the
Southern Public to the fact that they are the only
persons authorized or competent to make the well known
CALHOUN & ATKINSON PLOW, as will appear from
the following authority:
Maysville, Ky., April 1,1866.
Messrs. HALL, BLACK & BALDWIN having pur
chased the entire establishment known as the CAL-
HpOUN & ATKINSON PLOW FACTORY—including all
he moulds, patterns, stock on hand, and everything per
taining to the business—the undersigned, as surviving
partner, takes pleasure in soliciting for them a continu
ance of the liberal pationage extended to the late firm.
The pa. ties comprising the new firm are competent and
responsible, and all work done by them may be relied ou
as equal to any heretofore done at this Establishment.
Mrs. JANE L. ATKINSON,
Surviving Partuer of Calhoun & Atkinson.
In order to prevent an imposition which has lately
been practised, the undersigned would caution ali mer
chants and planters that none of these Plows are genu
ine, nnlesB branded upon the beam with their name—
“Hall, Black & Baldwin, Successors to Calhoun <fc
Atkinson”—and no other parties are authorized or com
petent to make the Plow. The Plow called the "Cal
houn” is an imitation, and not the genuine Calhoun A
Atkinson Plow.
Having been appointed Agents for the Manufac
turers of the above juetly celebrated Plow, and keeping
a large supply always on hand, all orders accompanied by
cash, or city acceptance, will be promptly filled by
deed—dlmw3m McNAUGHT, ORMOND & CO.
HUSH MARTIN.
COL. YBUMOTEN YOUNG
MARTIN & YOUNG,
Grocers and Commission Merchants,
KINGSTON, TENNESSEE.
W HOLESALE and Retail Dealers in all kinds ol
Grain, Breadstuff's, and Provisions.
Respectfully solicit Orders and Consignments of Goods.
Refer, by permission, to—French, Brown & Co., Chat
tanooga, Tenn.; Jos. A. Mabry, Knoxville ; and to busi
ness men generally in East Tennessee,
decll—ltd4tw*
S. K. WHITING & CO
No. 11 North Fifth Street, St. Louis, Mo.
B EST assortment of Sheet Music and
Music Books in the West. Pianos,
Organs, and Musical Merchandise of every
description, at the lowest rates. Orders
by mail promptly attended to.
dec9—w3m
FREE TO EVERYBODY!
A LARGE 6 pp. Catalogue, teaching how to remove
Tan, Freckles, Pimples, Blotches, Moth Patches,
Sahowness, Eruptions, and all impurities of the skin.
How to force Whiskers, restore, curl, and beautify the
Hair; renew the Age, cure Drunkenness, Nervous De
bility, and other useful and valuable information. Every
bedy send for it. Address BERGER, BHUTTS A CO.,
Chemists, 285 River Street. Troy, N. Y. decl8—wlm
Agents Wanted—$100 to $250 per Month
A GENTS wanted everywhere to sell the genuine “New
Improved Common-Sense Family Sewing Ma
chine.” Price, $20. They perform perfectly, ail kinds of
family sewing, give perfect satisfaction, and are the great
est invention of the age. Every Machine warranted three
years.
For terms to Agents, address ns at Montgomery, Ala
bama, or Franklin, Ky.
S. M. TOLIVER & CO.,
Manufacturers’ General Agents for the South.
dec27—w3m
Enfeebled and Delicate Constitutions,
O F both fexes, use IIELMBOLD’S EXTRACT B
CHU. It will give brisk anil enarvetic feeling
and enable yon to sleep well ivn
S. B. McCORKDE CO.,
Produce Commission Merchants,
GREENVILLE, TENNESSEE
Strict attention paid to the Pnrchaee of
Corn, Bacon, Flour, and nil kinds or
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
t^T'Orders for Corn and Bacon solicited'from Atlanta
Anpista, and Macon. Goods careinily marked and ship-
IH:jan!2—w3m
ERORS OF YOUTH.
A GENTLEMAN who snffered for years from Nervous
Debility, Premature Decay, and all the effects of
youthful indiscretion, will, for the sake of suffering hn-
mamty, send free to all who need it, the receipt and di
rections lor making the simple remedy by which he was
cuied. Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertiser’s ex
perience, can do so by addressing, in perfect confidence
JOHN B. OGDEN,
19 91* SaO AT Our
OC24—3m w
No. 42 Cedar St., New York.
Take no more Unpleasant and Unsafe R*>p«die»
~CI0R unpleasant and dangerous diseases. Use h«t ¥
* bold s Buchu and Iutbovxd Ross Was; yn