The Georgia grange. (Atlanta, Ga.) 18??-1882, November 01, 1873, Page 8, Image 8
8 the Subscription and Advertising Kates. The Georgia Grange, representing and advocat ing the interests of the Patrons of Husbandry in this State, already numbering a membership of ten thou sand, and rapidly increasing from day to day, presents to everv class of our citizens, both in Georgia and else where.’one of the most efficient and valuable advertis ing mediums in the land. It will circulate in every county in the State, and will doubtless come under the eyes o’s a hundred thousand persons. All interested should not fail to take notice of this fact. Our advertising rates are as follows : Space 1 wk.'2 wks. 8 wks. 4 wks. Bm. Gm 1 year 1 sq.. $2 00 83 30 $1 20 $6 10 sl2 60 s2l 60 $36 00 2 sq.. 860 540 7 20, 870 21 60 36 0 ’ 60 00 3 sq.. 510 780 l“20| 12 30 30 00 50 00 80 00 4 sq.. 660 960 18 20 1 5 '>o 88 40 64 80 100 00 5 sq.. 780 12 00 15 60 ,20 50 46 SO 79 20 120 CO 6 sq. 925 13 75 18 60l 22 80 65 20 93 60 137 50 FIFTY INSERTIONS A YEAR. Eight lines make one square. Large cuts and heavy lettering double price. All transient advertisements must be paid in ad vance; regular advertisers quarterly. Terms of Subscription. One Year $3 00 To Grangers 82 50 To Clubs of ten and upwards $2 00 Address letters and communications to GEORGIA GRANGE PUBLISHING COHPAH, P. O. Drawer 24, ATLANTA, GA. The Industrial Expositions.—The re ports of the openings of the various industrial fairs throughout the country indicate the strong favor with which this graphic system of dem onstrating the material progress of the nation is regarded by the people. From all accounts, the number and variety of the productions displayed has never been exceeded during any previous year; nor does it appear that any single fair has, from the hour of its commence ment, failed to attract throngs of visitors. The merchandise imports at New York since January Ist, are $308,207,676, against $334- 678,074 last year, and $286,428,097 in 1871. The total exports of produce since January Ist, are $208,673,287, against $161,786,682 last year, and $168,030,055 in 1871. The total ex ports of specie since January Ist, are $40,851,- 151, against $57,973,861 last year, and $60,- 218,509 in 1871. Wise men mingle with their cares, as a help either to forget or overcome them; but to re sort to intoxication for the ease of one’s mind is to cure melancholy by madness. ■OSKmI !! Sf IS j !8 F i Bftftflltti t ttttwijWt i tMiMMr i— .- ■—..'„ ■ . «->y J REPUBLIC BLOCK, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. REPUBLIC LIFE INSURANCE CO. CAPITAL STOCK FIVE MILLIONS. Central Office, Chicago, Illinois. JOHN V. FARWELL, I’rcs’t. ATLANTA (GEORGIA) BRANCH. OFFICERS : E. E. Rawson, L. P. Grant, J. I*. Logan, M.D., PRESIDENT. VICE-PRES’T. * MEDICAL SUPERVISOR. AUGUSTA (GEORGIA) BRANCH. OFFICERS. George T. Jackson, James T. Bothwell, G. E. Ratcliffe, President. Vice-President. Sec' y and Manager. A HOME COMPANY EVERYWHERE. Moncv taken from Premiums in Georgia invested in Georgia. “So much insurance for so much money.” Reliable Agents wanted. Address, \V ILLI AM GOODNOW, Southern Manager, novi Republic Block, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. (■old DllM. Spare moments are the gold dust of time. ' Os all the portions of our life, spare mo- j ments are the most fruitful in good or evil. Genius, after all, ain’t anything more than elegant kommon sense. Side by side ov plain truth stands common sense —two of the greatest warriors time ha 8 ever produced. Passionate persons are like men who stand on their heads; they see all things the wrong way. The three things most difficult are : To keep [ a secret, to forget an injury, and to make good use of leisure. Then.' cannot be a pleasant smile on the liP 8 of the hopeless. The blow that crushes the life will shatter the smile. Examine yourself. Do it impartially; do it faithfully; do it often. Sit down by yourself, and shutting out all thoughts on other subjects, review your own life for the last day—for the last week. Recall both your acts and your words, for both to others and to yourself your words are often as serious realities as your ac tions. Webster said: “If we work upon marble it will perish ; if upon brass, time will efface it; if we rear temples they will crumble into dust; but if we work upon our immortal minds—it we imbue them with principles, with the jusf fear of God and love of our fellow men—we engrave on these tablets something which will brighten through all eternity.” Better to pay the street organ-grinder two cents for music, if you must have it, than owe for a grand piano. 6888611 6W6&M* Food for Southern Thought. We copy the following from the liepublic, published by Mr. Goodnow, Southern Man ager : • The South is magnificently rich in all the re sources which are convertible into wealth. It is, nevertheless, poor in the means to effect that con version. The North is poor in natural resources, but rich in the possession of capital. Northern capital forms the basis of many large Southern en terprises, and for the use of it we pay enormous interest. Northern money has helped build our railroads, rear our cities, develop our minerals, and, to some extent, our farms. This is all right. We are glad that it is so, and hope to see it so continue, and much more abundantly. Both sections profit by this course of things. The North is paid well— some think exorbitantly—for the use of its money ; and we profit by the using. We need have all the money that can be had ; we have use for every dol lar of it. Our millions of untouched acres need money to become productive farms. Our inexhaust ible mineral beds need money for their conversion into wealth. Our abundance of raw materials needs money for its manufacturing into marketable wares. Our religious, charitable, educational, and art insti tutions need money to make them more greatly be neficent. Our possibilities are grand beyond con ception. We need money to make them facts, therefore, our manifest policy is to encourage, in every practicable way, the influx of capital. Let us welcome, heartily, the incoming of every North ern or other capitalist, who comes to use his capita] here, or sends it to be used here. Just as truly is it our manifest policy to discourage, in every practi cable way, the efflux of capital, to refuse patronage to such Northern enterprises as are conducted at the North, and draw their profits from the South to en rich the North, when those enterprises might be conducted here to our profit. Life insurance is a profitable business. It is, by the construction of modern society, an indispensa ble business. It can as well be done by the South for the South, its capital be invested, here, its profits employed here, as it can be done for us by the North, and its capital and profits be retained there. And yet, this great and constantly-increasing busi ness is now mainly done for us at the North. This is a statement which should startle our readers; it should startle them into incredulity. It is, never theless, true. Nearly five millions of dollars, the life-blood of our industry and trade, are drawn from us yearly. What do these millions represent of lost possibili ties? How many virgin acres put under cultiva tion? How many looms and spindles set in mo tion? HoW many workshops established? How much coal mined? How much iron smelted? How many churches and schoolhouses built? How many mortgages cancelled? Take the thirty millions which six years of such ruinous practice lias ab stracted from us, and what could we do with them? We could change the face of this magnificent do main. We could settle up and make productive half a million acres of now unoccupied land. We could put in operation one hundred woollen and cotton factories. We could set the fires blazing in a hundred blast furnaces. We could light the forges and set hammers clanking in a hundred rolling mills. Wecould build a thousand miles of railroad,creating and passing through a hundred villages and towns, and connecting with a market a thousand farms. We could free a thousand miles of river from ob structions, ami make them available for our com merce. We could erect a hundred churches and a thousand schoolhouses, and have enough left to en gage in many useful and needed enterprises. These estimates may seem to be extravagant, but we believe that they will be found, u]>on careful calculation, to be within, rather than without, the reasonable range of what might be done with the money which in six years we have sent North to pay for that which might as well have been fur nished at home. The above comparisons apply more fully to the Western than the Southern States. To stop the constant flow of money from the West to the East, for life insurance, the most solid business men of Chicago organizeti the Rkpvblic Life Insurance Company, on the popular plan of creating a home company wherever a branch should l>e organized, securing the influence of the best men, and making loans where they procure business. Thus, the prac tical question for Western and Southern men to settle is, “ Will they repeat in the future this folly of the past?” Or will they, by patronizing West ern and Southern institutions, at least equallv reli able and equally safe with the best in the North, keep at home, for the development of Western and Southern industries, the aggregation of Western and Southern wealth, the cultivation of Western and Southern mind and heart, the millions won by Western and Southern toil? The Republic Life Insurance Company, pre senting. as the vouchers of its financial soundness, the official certificates of the New York and Illinois insurance departments, and a paid-up capital of one million dollars; owning, in fee simple, one of the most magnificent fire-proof buildings in Chicago, with the land upon which it stands; numliering among its stockholders the foremost merchants, bankers, inanufaetunrs, railroad and professional men in Chicago. St. Louis. Baltimore, New York. Philadelphia. Atlanta, Augusta. Nashville. Boston, San Francis<o, and of one hundred other branches in places of business influence: and having as its managers those whose ability, experience, and in tegrity are guarantees of wise. safe, and honest busim>ss conduct—confidently appeals to the citi zens of this great section for its rightful share of patronage. We Lead the Van! Prai|l<lii| Hotline. ATLANTA, GEORGIA. JAS. P. HARRISON & CO-, Proprietors. The largest and most complete Book and Job Printing House in this section, end at which every style of Book, Mercantile, Legal and Railroad Printing is executed. In excellency of werk, prompt ness and cheapness, the Franklin simply defy competition. fe * HI !||| SIWiWB-LL iSMiWMEsMHI iilllHiß —■■■eßi l iuiißi® ■| Mil VKIVMM This establishment has been thoroughly refitted and refurnished, regardless of expense, with every variety of New Book and Job Printing Material! Together with a full complement of SKILLED WORKMEN! Wedding Cards of new and elegant design, rivalling the beautiful productions of the engra ver ; Bill and Letter Heads of the most approved styles, Showbills, Posters, Programmes, Minutes, Catalogues, Books, Railroad Tickets t and everything else that can be printed. Try the Franklin. JAMES P. HARRISON & CO. BOOTS and shoes. FOR THE FALL TRADE, 1873. ► IWo. 3 COTTON AVILNITE, AIN I> «<1 TIIIKI) STREET. 2VEA.OOTST, GEORGIA. ONE OF THE BEST SELECTED STOCKS OF BOOTS and SHOES! EVER OFFERED BY US IN THIS MARKET. Ladies’, Misses’, Children’s, Gent’s, Boys’ & Youths’ Wear COMPRISING all varieties and styles, from the heavy Brogan to the most delicate Slipper, made to order and of the best material. Country merchants will find it to their advantage to examine our stock, which equally good selections can be made at prices that will compare favorably with those of the Northern cities In the Retail Department we have, at No. 3 Cotton Avenue, and 66 Third street, all the latest styles of Ladies’, Gentlemen’s and Children’s Boots, Shoes, Gaiters and Slippers, finished in the most elegant manner, and warranted durable—to all of which we would invite our friends, and the public generally, to call and examine. MIX & KIRTLAND, novi—tf IRON WAREHOUSE OF THE - Scofield l(olliiiif Mill Co., No. 28 Peachtree Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. BAR IRON OF ALL KINDS! WARRANTED EQUAL TO ANY MADE, Wholesale and Retail, at 41-4 Ct. Rates. frs?” Call and examine the Stock, and get a Price last. novi ECLIPSES ALL OTHERS! * —o — M The Great “Eclipse” i! Screw Cotton Press. ( • (PATENTED FEBRUARY 21, 1871.) ■ O MANUFACTURED SOLELY BY R. FINDLAY’S SONS, | FINDLAY IRON WORKS, MA.COIT, C3-E08.C3-IA.. o FASTER, MORE DURABLE, LIGHTER DRAFT AND CHEAPER THAN OLD WOOD SCREW EVEN. I I Packs the Bale in Twelve Rounds. I > < f o I TWO TO THREE HANDS, OR ONE LIGHT MULE, PACKS A BALE IN TWO MINUTES. Bales of Cotton Packed by this Press range from 500 to 800 pounds. o WE GUARANTEE | To make good, free of cost, (and pay expenses of transportation) any portion- of the iron work that may prove defective within four years after purchase, and warrant against break age without limit as to time. o I The “ ECLIPSE ’’ can be furnished all complete, or tjimply the Irone, as parties may desire. Presses arranged for steam or water power, when required. We have testimonials from many of the largest and best Planters in Georgia (and all the other Cotton States) using this Press, whose names are as “familiar as household words.” Planters visiting Macon are earnestly advised not to purchase a Cotton Press until they exam ine closely and thoroughly the “ ECLIPSE,” and judge for themselves. Send for Descriptive Pamphlets containing testimonials and prices. R. FINDLAY’S SONS, Findlay Iron Works, Macon, Ga. i O ~7~THE CRAIG | Patent Horse Power, For Driving Cotton Gins. Recently STRENGTHENED and IMPROVED, now PERFECT. 0 MANUFACTURED SOLELY BY R. Findlay’s Sons, Findlay Iron Works MACON, GEORGIA. The superiority of this machine over all others intended for same purpose—including both the old and “ new fashion ” Gin Gear—we guarantee, or ask no money. This Power is shipped in one piece, as it were : requires no mechanic to put it up ; sets on the ground ; is attached in no way to any portion of the house, and is independent of floor “ sagging,” etc.; can be used in any kind of house (one or two story,) or both the Power and Gin can be run on the ground, without any house ; drives a Gin from 275 to 300 revolutions per minute. FULLY WARRANTED IN EVERY RESPECT. Send for Descriptive Circular, Testimonials and Price List. N B.—Parties preferring the “old fashioned” Gin Gear, or “new fashion” ditto, with centre support, can be accommodated at very reasonable figures. R. FINDLAY’S SONS, > Findlay Iron Works, Macon, Ga. Manufacturers of Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw and Grist Mills, Water Qu Wheels, and all kinds of Machinery and Castings, etc. . ' < R. FINDLAY’S SONS, i J no»ltf Findlay Iron Works, Macon. Ga. 4® y