Newspaper Page Text
lta petition of AUoe Meson
formally mrM to ihelatoamata'Bue
nos, tor parariatinii to otangstarnameto
Alias Meem,wnsgMkte4 by Jufige Ames
ta ltoMMONtt it Boston on Mon-
** . , ^ . ,
I* to (totod tint the Hew Yeifc tot eom-
pantos kn resolved to kniM the
prioe to Mb that of last y has, o« ac-
oountof theahostaaesof (bo supply ml
tiMtoMWMd eotaat raving B tart vrfn-
tat. Should thia bo the ease, Southern
dttot with too factorise wUlbs fortunate.
Wo ora giod to loon from the Courier -
Journal that General Mm 0. Bnokto-
ridge k olovly recovering (toot, bit teoent
attaok of
ao kM bom atatad. A geeUeeam from
IM*!
kOTO
-- ■*»!.
of tbflto won, yat a pen
picture of aorae of titeta will
g to like general reader. In
of rtutebea it (* 'only tight
that I AonM begin eloao at homo ood
md to do 00 It io my pleasure
to opook flat of onr immediate Bepre-
Qooo Im fob Otrbb-bitbbo. —Tb«
Bootoo Advertiser boo dieoovescd that
May, botegapot bbbm for Mary, ought
to bar* an “r” la H, and that Angaat
may ba apdt “Orgnat," tboa reducing tha
cumber of prescribed months for bivalves
to too, Jona and July.
It ooBldnot kora raqairad a grant daal
bon of lngaBolty to work aad *V Into
June md July alao. Wo bopa that aoma
fallow aqnal to tbo laak will yat ba foaad.
•rata toaal aliattom la Indiana have
ttar to tbo Raw York
WorU says: "The Jeimtal, Mr. Mor-
too’a organ, ooBaadaa thia (Marion) oaan-
ty aad tha Mka to tha Demoenqy thia
fall, A rafy moderate aatlmata will giro
tha Daaooraey tha State by IS,000, tha
LagUatua la both braaohaa by
majoriUaa, tha aaxt Smatonhip, and
aight It not nine of tbo 1 Congressional
districts, notwlthatandlng tha gerryman
dering kf Which the Badtaali have man
aged hitherto to ataal md kaap aavaral
eaate to which they ware not entitled."
Ml AtUCVUVBAL CCiaMH,
We do not And much of Import are,
that waa not notioed by telegraph, in tha
dad day'a proaaedlaga of the National
Agricultural Ooograte at Atlanta. Dele-
galea ware in attendmee from Alabaan,
Miaalaaippt, North end South Carolina, Vto
ginla, Tmnaaaee, IUinale, Arkansas, Oaor.
gia. Tha Saeratary reported that Heoor-
tupoidiMi ihowid t vidMpiwid islmit
in tb# Nitioul A—o ok it Ion, and ftpitflMd
a daeira for a National Aaaoeiatioa of
farmaia whiab abalt be distinguished from
tha Oamge in that it ahali ba aa open md
not a Boor el organisation. Bia
showed tha Oongreea to ba in debt about
$800, for which proriaion baa to ba made.
Tha Oongreea baa peaaad reaelntieae
pledging aid to tha people of tha orer-
dowed ragtooa of the MMaaippI rirar.
eewT -
Thera la oaidmtly a “oomar,” with ex
tensive ramifications, in thia important
prodnot, md onlaaa it ia broken aoon wa
fear that onr cotton plantera will find that
they are paying too dearly for their whia-
tleia baying oornto make eotton on.
OonaidariBg the eitnatton wtthont my
oonaaetion with eotton, there ia not a
tar amt to be found who will contend that
ha cannot prodtably rater oorn at leaa
thm gl.SS par bnahal. But lhara are
hnndrada of plan tarn who my that they
eaa make nothing ralatog eotton at lie.
par pound. Tha dread ia tha look of a
ready markM for tha anroi md yat wa am
there ia no lack of a ready market for tha
Western men; md where ia the planter
who doee not prefer tbo Southern oora to
tha Weaternf
Tha Chattanooga Timu of the ISth
laat. qnotea com “atid” at 80 canto on
tha wharf md 9S oanta in depot, and aaya
“the enpply k light md holdare not rax-
iona to aell at quotations. ” Similar re-
porta come to ua from other large oorn
markka, md wa know that the enpply
now in the South ia abort.
Bat then are ooaeideratloaa whioh an-
oentage na to hope that thia "corner” in
aotffdannot tukg be aaetotutned. It is
lata in the aeaeon to get up each a "cor
ner." The raeagea of the waevll will
aoon commence, and the aoft corn of the
Waet ia fact destroyed by them. Thm
tha demand from the South muat aoon
alack up for a time. Some of our plan-
tare are already feeding immature oata
and rye, and it Will not be a great while
before their oorn orope of tHa year (how
ever inadequate) will begin to be ripe
aoongh to feed on. Whan they reaoh
thia stage they em scrape npfeed enough
from the plantation to laat until the new
eropoftheWeateomaain. Sown
that those who er*"oornering” oorn juat
now ere playing* wary haaardoua game.
It would be ouch aafar to cell all. that
they em at the prevailing high Vdpeu,
and tower if need be, and Jet the old
ataekoC their hen da before it taoomes a
."drug" ia tha
—Tha Gaines
alia tea
awpeontri-
n the Benerier Oeprtwf tWlta*noenty
m Wednesday. The Htaaid aayb Ohia-
qm loofefld immrkinirtT vji nmm-
reatlyia goodhealth. 7 There was dlffiul.’
ty in getting a jury—many ware ehal-
leaned or had disqualified thamekvaa
and the Jnry ae made up eouakta entire
ly of ooentrymaa. We de not aee any
thing new in the * - -
tkk now. mm n. nannm.
I never mat Mr. Harris before, end I
am eaiteded he ia not partonally aa well
known to many of hie oonetituenta aa ha
ahould be. Mr. Rarria had no intimation
of the trip of tb#
era toWaahington, bnt ha waa notemaxad
or dumbfounded at tha eppeertnoe of this
tmpraaaive body; on the oontragy, ha at
owee took ua by the band, aad teaming
out miarion, ha threw himaelf heart end
aonl into the projeot, md worked during
our- atay, aa I doubt not he baa done
knee, and will continue to do for
the enterprise ao aaamtlal to
Columbus end the dwellers by the Chatta
hoochee. Mr. Harria looks muoh younger
thm he really is. He might pees easily
for thirty-dee or forty i yet he to now ia
hia forty seventh year. He was bora Feb-
retry ad, Idas, at Sparta, Georgia, re
moving from there with hie father to
Meriwether county when only dve yaara
Mr. Harris for fokp-one years has
resided in thia oonnty, where he is known
fankneee men as one of the moat
ifnl and intelligefit planter*. Bnt
gem aa a farmer forms but a small
part of bis siaim to raeognitioe md re-
Ha is a mambar of the Methodist
aObriatian in preeept and prac
tice, md one whose principles are so well
eetabliahed that they are but strength
ened in Washington, aa the storm atrength-
enatbe pint. Mr. Harris ia not a “showy ”
mm t there ia no dash or brilliant non
sense about him. He ia eonrteorif,' wall
ednoatad, and a model of that rare arti-
eis—common seme. Since he entered
Congress, ba has never miaaed scroll-call,
never neglected to vote' qn 4 measnre,
and never permitted a letter to go ue
answered thirty-six honre. Said Gen.
tamer, of Mississippi, to me, “I tall you
there le not a stronger or purer man in
this house, md your people should feel
proud of him. But you Will dud bis beet
praise in the mouths of the Bepublioam,
the beat because the most disinterested.’’
G*n. tanner's good opinion of any man
is aoaaething worth working for, bnt his
views were corroborated by one of the
ad ablest Republicans in the
"Tea,” be aeid, io mtwer to our
inquiry, "I consider yonr man Harria
ana of the moat upright mm I ever met.
He toe gentleman in hia manners, and
haano fata or exoitement about him. He
doea hia work wall, and, what oan’t be
arid of aU of ua, he does it intelligently
and from motive# purely unselfish.”
Mr. Harris is a man about six fast high;
sparely but well built, with quiet, regular
faaturas, aat in a fram* of long brown
hair and beard. He uses apectaoles, no
doubt on aoconnt of age, bnt be looks so
young that their nse gives him the air of
a German professor of abstruse theology,
non. biobabd a. whitbly.
One of the drat Congressmen we met
wae Major Whitely, of Bainbridge, and
Representative of the Second Congres
sional Distriot. I have heard a great deal
about this gentleman, principally from
hia polUiol opponents, md I very foolish
ly permitted myself to think him a vary
diffmmt mm from what he tarn ad ont to
be on does inspection. Major Whitely is
a slander mm, about dve feat sixinobea
high, tat very wiry looking. Hia faee ia
prepoaaaaatng and smooth, excepting hia
light colored moneteohe, whioh gives him
a youthful appearance. He looks like a
Saxon, but ia by birth an Irishman
Born, in 1880, his father emigrated to
Georgia when young Whtteley was only
six yaara old, ao that to hear the
Major talk you would set him down
am' emphatically a' Southern
Self-ednouted, he deserves all the more
credit for hia mooses. Ha wap admitted
to the bar in I860; but on tha breaking
out of the war he threw hia fortunes with
thorn of hia State, and served bravely
during the whole struggle, surrendering
aa a dald offioer at the close of the war.
Major Whitely saw that the cause qf the
Nation as against the State waa forever
settled by the arbitrament of the sword,
md refusing to dwell on the issues of the
past, he adopted, believing it best for
hienelf md tor all, every Isaac decided
against him by battle, Ha has continued
undisehlngiy to support the admin latr*.
Uonand though many of his oonatitn.
ants may thiak he ia wrong, not ono of
thou em, wittant a great injustice, think
him truckling or diahoneat, while all moat
acknowledge hia ability.
The Commission is under many oblige,
tiooa to Major Whitely, not only tor the
interest manifested while we were
Washington, but tor the labor previously
expended in trying to get an appropria
tion for tha Chattahoochee.
, I intended “writing up” about a dozen
Congressmen md Senators in thia letter ;
tat the task ia too difficult, and ao tar
It km bom too pteaamt to desire to get
through with it aoon. Ano.
—Mr. Georg# W. Macro, of Marion
hia a snip ha M
Senate to Ms. Orr'aapfqah .inkling Free-
idea t Daria. We aappeee that ikteaat-
tlas tbat>ahk,
it aaoka of vary State
to# two mah tom to
t tobriag tha war
wtthont Mr. Sta-
tt;aadW
would have been nothing strange sere-
markable if he had remained them Ovta
after tottios Mr. Staphemthatta
ed to leave. At
ieritknl time, when the ktuatlop. wm,
Changing or important movemanta devel
oping almost hourly, a mm oeenpying
Mr. HUl’a position and rkaUons, Omkd
harffiy be expaetad to know peek
day whore he wonid be tha nest.
The main question which oonoema the
country lawhether ttaruwm an hand a
plot—a counter revolution—egainat tha
Confadezaoy, md Mr. Btapta™ Evolved
in it; md whether this ihtrigta unfavor.'*
ably effected an effort' '
to a oloaa morel
to the South than that whioh wo had to
aeaapt)
Mr. Blmdfctd fully agreaa with Mr.
Hill in every tort Mrtad In hia eommnni-
oatiou, aa publiatad, which oeourrad at
Mr. Stephana’ room. H* raoollaeta that
ha learned from Mr. Hill of the appoiht-
mant of MecsN. Stephma, Heater and
Campbell aedommiakonere, md that they
left Richmond within twenty-four honre
after Mr. HiU informed him of their ap.
pointmmt ae Oommteatoaaca; tbrt Mr.
HiU left Bieheacnd for Georgia meetly
after
Mr. Smith goes mere folly into a state-
moot of facta hearing upon this contro
versy. Wa therefore copy hia tetter;
During tha latter part ofDeoembar,
1861, and early in January, 1868, after tha
destruction of Atlanta md dlaperkon of
(he Legislature by Sherman, a feeUng of
nneasinaaa prevailed In Richmond wtth
regard to tha ooere# Gov. Brown night
punne. It was feared .that ha would call
the Legislature together, and, In tta thm
discontented state of the public mind,
aomeaotion might ba reeommendad by
him, or taken te the Qanatrt Assembly,
looking to separate State action.. Thia, at
—It is reported that tags nnml
ahaep are dytag in Oolqmitt oonnty,
to the severe weather knee they
i taatimony ao far re-
nnmhanof
•wing
they ware
to Ootambaa or Seneva. He estimates
the eeat of the engine and lie train of
wagons at $6,000, md thinks that it mul#
ran tha reads.
either forpeamerwar would.herein
cured a speedy oonquaat of, all. About
this time Ireemvadtha latter from Hon
letter attraethdn gMd datil of ettentkin.
The information it contained waa as
tounding, but it was each aa might have
been expected from the demoralization at
i. Indeed, this atate of tba puMte
mind waa w.eU known ip Rlohmond. Aa
far baok aa Bvptembar 14,‘ "1864, three
diatinguiahad citiaens of Bibb oonnty, to
wit: Meaars. Isaac Seott, J. B. Boss, md
J. H. R. Washington, addressed letters to
Messrs. 'Stephana md Johnson on this
subject, and closed with these memorable
wolds:
‘We know what, we aay—the people
which
Georgia are tired of SET war,
sorely depopulating onr
misery md ruin upon <
sorely depopulating oar ooqntry, bringing
whol# continent.
Uaaavaa asare af W. ■> >itea t (8, Imi is,
" taWrtte W-) batoriah, '
. . Akaraeyetlaaw.
a Oku avw WtlMah A Bmato.
Ataaenap aai-flkkdhrklaw.
Ho wm hreagtahle wf
. I to Mi'
— withom* mm
gg&ertararffgsar
indspandamo, 1 'not beeawaa ■ wo 'Ware
wfwilf, tat baemaa wa ,wure teaaA.’ Wa
tare imo oanquaasd by superior fetes,
gjfrJGjHMfcki-lE&fl W -
itsrmac
AMireiy " r '"‘
FresUess la ateteaae
Masonlo llotioe.
a nMtmtB naarnto .or hop*
‘*areian m.m.mooxi, x«eaM»r
t-
Oka* Hfc <r
Wlll^nMie* la
Grandast Turti* Lqnch and
Soup of tlio SsMon
nmt b» mm**»«#*» aoooi
W t*-al|ht,(raw• tela,
FRKK.
Tania Soap aad Mask reppUsd Io tualUaa.
m*j 16—It
'Mttt&CktapGgfinCi
T. H. CAUDLE, Solo Agent for thin
aeetlon. Oflaa at W< J. Chaffin’s
Book Store, 82 Broad Street.,
iU, aa* aapaoialir tha ladiM of Moico
> ire|ioolM& lariM
I W coll aad tssai
rj
tw araeiaiaaa tt oar work,
raprodaco thoaa la tha aaaat haaalifal aad llfc-
lih* auaaar.
Ho matin how old aad Mod yonr Pletnrwaro,
wo ooa flow thaw la aaaalSfirt aadiBpsriak-
Oja farm—Iadlaa Iah, wator Oolors, Paatol or
SW tat!(factloa gaareataod la ovary caa*.
Oateathaa, May lath, ikd. ;
Reduction of Freights.
We are unwilling to. submit, to dishonor,
but wa atiU balieva our ffiflbultias em b«
settled on bonorabte tartan. Att tkat is
neoaaaaiy to this result ia (or such phtri-
otie ktiaans as yowaelyaf to
lead; tha people
Will you not rendi
yonr suffering country in thia boot of tar
peril?"
Soon after this a majority of the Geor
gia delegation met Mr/ Stephana at hia
room. You were with ua. Tha objaet
of our visit waa to eenildm the state of
affaire in Georgia, rad to provide a rem
edy. Among other anggeettons it waa
thought If Mr. Btophene WoUU "Write
letter to Governor Brown be
prevailed on not to oell the
together. We spent some time with him.
Mr. Stephens spoke freely during the en
tire evening. The auspenaton of tha
privilege of the habeas corpus. '
1a era, impressments, General Pri
Point Generals, the true mods
dueling tha war, tha naoeaalty for en
rolling onr arma-beariog pepnlaticn in
three grand reliefs, one to ba kept In tta
deld, the other two at hoate, had sash re
lief to serve one year md be disbanded:
the propriety if not tbo nisaarity of
changiog the oondtet of arms to ooa of
ideas, generally claimed his attention.
Mr. Htephena thought something might
be done towards a, peaceful solution of
our difficulties by Oongreaa; tiMt ha had
promised Mr. Atkina this much, and bad
prepared aoue resolutions to this effect,
which he produced and read. ' Hia pirn
was to appoint commissioners to proceed
to Washington, gat an eraabtSM—the
fighting to oaaae—then a settlement
could t>e effected on eartein great prin-
plea envolvad by the American revolu
tion. I do not pretend to quote his Itn-
gosge, I only give the imprssUm made
on me.
Mr. Stephens yielded to onr wishes,and
said he would write to Gov. Brown to in
dues Mm not to oall the Legislators to
gether. Hia proposed plan to open nego.
tiatlons was generally approved. I do
*0t remember any opposition, although
some may have done ao.
I do not remember in detail all that
took place. All the information we had
from Georgia was furnished that evening.
We (ell) concurred if a rmrewiiaaion waa
raised, that Mr. Stephans should be one.
It was understood that if snob an effort
for peace failed, thm the only alternative
left na waa to fight it ont.
A short time after this Mr. Ore intro,
dnoed some resolutions in tha House on
the plan of Mr. Stephens, md, as it was
understood, prepared by him. A day waa
fixed for the consideration. The Com
missioners named in these resolutions ware
Messrs. Stephans, Hunts# tad Barney.
At least this la my recollection.
Soon after tide Mr. Blair arrived, and
learning that a meeting of the members
of Congress waa to be held at tha Ex
change Hotel that evening, I attended,
md round forty or fifty persons. It waa
' nu 5SZS$ t t2*S&i
Ths Wsstsrn SL of Ala.,
Has thia day wad* a redsotteujef FIVl(S) esata
pat to#’ poraSs from preseat ratva aa Mrs aa#
other groia IToa poiata hayoad Ijtoattontry—to
stood aotil farthar notlos. '
To aaoaro this radaotloa IMfht mast cent
BY OI*lLIKA BRANCH
of Wasters Ball Bead.
This Rednotloa appHee to all fiaia raaairad over
Waa tarn Boll Bead at CMtartaa to-day (ThandayJ
It wilt ooainlastly aaha tha.vataa an grata
septa par loo panada teas than any BUI of Ladlog
doted prior to today, (tad Sir whioh tho (tola has
not been yat raoaivad) latrtattes oa grain.!
R. A. BACON,
Agent Western B. Brer Slataau.
May 10-dtl.
Prominent Incidents
nr tbs
History of Columbus
From iU Pint Settlement in 1827, to the
Wilton Raid, in 1806, eynpilfl ly Jobk
H. Kabtim.
Thf undersigned propotet to pullith, ip
volume </ 150 or store pnget,« work under
the above title, covering tie. period from the
selection qf the locality fora “ trading town,’’
in 1827, to tb* capture and partial destruction
qf the dig by ib* Wilton Raid, in 1805.
The incidents will be donned mainly from its
newspapers, which will b* gfmnedfor, this
purpose with much care. R it believed that
most qf our dtisent would like to have such
and will encourage the undertaking to the
extent if the mall amount ailed for the work.
Each chapter will rental atari biographi-
sal iketchet or notion ef the principal edwene
mentioned in it, who have staaei ditch » The
volume will also embrace full information
the churches, factorise, <£e., now
We do not propose to publish this compila
tion with a view to making money, ae the
email price asked for if will slow. Rut
the same time we do not want to lose money
by its publication, and therefore we with
limit the number ef copies printed to the de
mand for the work. With Ihit object in view,
we issue this prospectus, inviting those who
desire copies of the volume to tend in their
names.
The price will be one dollar per copy for
a pamphlet bound volume, printed on paper
like the specimen sheet issued. A entail
number qf copies will abo-.be ittued on a su
perior article of paper for $1 90 pefsopy.
Payable when the work is delivered, which
will be some time nett Phil.
Taos, qiijbert.
May 12,1S74.
■tare 'tart tags tatateL
Bamr.tumu.
mzteszr
ptsetted le <Ss Stete sad Padaaal Goat
rBwwSasIWVdCeltes. ytsM
Oretteia Brprgta
Oka* MS Baaed A U'OkaSaaa. ta . ji»
Jaa.Mi Burnt
BDkllU dk kWIBT,
ltd 111 tew a Okas or*r'b.A.:nedd 0 0*.% Mata,
Bread atroat, OolawlHia, a*. , - * "
LT.MWIM,
rBAkOBT dk' MSAMHkB,
Altovaya^nS law.
rnca arm *. Mum t Oa.'a Itiaa, Bases Sr.
aovM] Ware Itoa.
m. *. Mkkkk,
Alteraay aad Caaaaalter *s lav,
CHAB. H. WMUABS,
Attorney at Imvr, Oelwaatewa, So.
••■Wirt preottreta aay Ooort.
Okas oror Atatl MaNalh'a store. [aavlt
Dootors.
ns. okuntT.
Boaidsooo aod Oko* eatasr et It. Clair aad Ogta-
thorpaata, Oka*heata—TtoSa.z,llMSM,
1 to V». u. smatdtf
am. k. m. law.
Oka* eoresr Bread aad Baadatph streate, Bams'
Baaldoaoa oa POraytf?thraaVion batow It. Clair.
»s. a, A vatnuBT,
Okcaat 0. *. MoMrii BregMare, Bread tin
rer^/t'-.Wa^:tfir* 4 “ 4
Dk. t. *S. COOK,
Oftoconr BlUa h UM-rieoa’a OoMMUaiM II—i.
iep6 fint door tp loft.
DruHERtotB.
j. i. OBirnx,
0. k. PAUIIB, Ueonaad Ayotlioaory
Ono doer ohero YlrgJote Oreoory.
49> Phyilelsns’ PnMrlpttoaa ■Odaa't
dre Wj Night boUte ten Ot door.
tOM b ftBBAI,
Two door* Mow (too. W. Brown's,
Broad Itrevt, Oolaatona, 0*.
an- Night Ball right af ■noth door. "•
A. kt. BBAHHOM,
Wan ioa, Basse Saai
aad kadoll Settler to
Telle# Articles nod Parfaorry.
Cotton FaotOrioa.
OOLOHin NAXUrMnOBlXO GO.
Maaelhotarere of
Bhoetlaga, BhlrUaga, aod Sowing a
Carta Wool aad (triads Wheat aad Cara-
Okaetnreer* WtMtahAKaM 1 *, Baadelphst.
Jalt B. H. OHIIAOB, Pratidvot.
■VnOOOBB BAIVPACTIlBIXe Ok.
Maaaltesaran of
(HBBTlNaA IH1BTINM,
TAKH, BOPB, Ao.
OOLDMlUg, OA.
«. P. gWIFT, Pnattaat.
W. A.aWIPt, Baoretery A Traaiarar. oottlly.
Wotohiwffikow.
O. SGKOKBGBO,
r to b. Getowaky.
106 Bread (treat,
Oalamboa, Oa.
O. H. uguM,
Watch
»r and worreatod. J*U
Rarbor •hop*.
LOUIS WILLI’ SHAVING SALOON,
(Suceaaaor to H; Baaa*,)
Under Gaorgla Hoate lasareaoa Boildlng.
• Prompt aod polite bar bora in atteodaoca.
JaM
ED. TXBBT, korteor,
Crawford St., andor Hauktn Honre, Colamhua.
aJsSLw——sa«
Boot snd fhoowakor -
WH. METED,
lailBCA MMktO.fl.Ae
I KriA a UwtlMmi
tonda or OmkHl.ow, am i
. ;*i«;«tata iBmott.
H* ahargstar Wane.
thorn ffillrt Fata ItEkrtr
I aeBunauahn,
Oblaathaa. On. 'c.
A OAHHBL,
Oeuauson Sr., Oawaaoa, Qi.
»*• «« «tali tota l, mm, |y „
gaitaumot
w'JtgalgBBMFLu.’,
Ogare. itaahttjua^"""
'l* - I-J.aLAMbT.P^..,
Tin and Coppkrsmlttia.
WH. FEE,
Worked tans, kteeet iroe, (Daggit,
Ordsn free thread promptly utreM to.
Jfii.
FrokhMsata.
J. W. PATRICE,
BtaUa He. a and IS, Market Eawa*.
* “ ‘ af rvrey kind ud bmt .mm,
alwaja aa head.
A. T. COSH,
Freak MaeSa el All hum,
Dontltts.
Orerloreeh t Bwtlior'aatere.
w.jr.'Fkfk,
aorttl 101 BranJ 8t., Colnmbre, 6a.
Cun and Lookamltlw.
PHILIP wawa.w,
Gas aad Lonkawlth, Ora were atreM, mc(\
Janarea'soreare.Cdamhre.ai. J
WILLIAM SOMkkKB,
Gaa aad Laehitellh aad tester tiQiaaligl
terlals. Oppoatte Bagairar Odre.
Flano Tunlnff, ko.
B. W. BLAU,
Bepelwr tad Tatar of Plaaore, Orpte a
Aoaordaaaa. Ega PalaUsgalwdoar.
Grdar* vga he te ten at *• W. Perea A lore*
AMR ItON, Mfl
Croosrs.
DAN’L E. SUE,
te Bamlir Grerertas, aa Bqraa ttm
(weea Oglathnrpa * Jaokwa atreate.,
“o ohnrgv for dreyngt.I
«. H. HAMILTON,
Wkalaaalo aed Eotetll tirrew,
JaaoUoa et PitakHa, Warm 6 Ogirthorpr I
Bo chart* ter dreyago. "H
UHAMOWPBB,
PLANTEBT HOTEL,
|a Oaimaabes Bank BaUkag
tel. “ *” ‘lOtt^w' l IICIDSI, ProfP
Pxz:
Tailor*.
O. A. ROB UN IS,
Merchant Taller am Cotter.
A tell Hook j ‘
nprid
rename lauor wm
i*.«. i
To
Catting na4 making la I
a. O. MONTIB,
Tailor.
thateteatltylM. *•
doaa, at rrMon.bl.pr
Joborton'r hat rtore.
MEMET BELLHAH,
Catting, Cloamla* amd BapalHa*
■Making.
MEM Mi A. BSLUWdWSW
BOYti
LAWYKW»
W. A. Farley,
OUBSETA, OBATTAneoeam
gDBpidal attaettea glvae teaauaag
sms DOZIEB,
Attorney at L*
HAMILTON, «A.,
rearm. TsararmHV