Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • Page 259

Location:
Atlanta, Georgia
Issue Date:
Page:
259
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

itJptU) if ItUH finrslt DirlBi 6 THE SOLD HBGERS I Built Up City i HajflA MBIT TO WHir AN0ER8QV8 GRAVE the Liit af il.tii&.h T.a W. P. Price About Him. HmekflUavHk, July flnjsils)) bat Car what It haa which lands a pathos to howling wOderoeas to a mountain val and by Ctttki a bailgrgund. It became ttetontious of to.

Mm up to the highest ft Mil as well aa retail places of bus! Mas. as soon the fabric fell. Ukt aaUfl toy house, and today acarcely team than half a doeea houses raaam. with a faw af the original whlto hhabttanta. who talk wonderingly of the Haw and legally haown aw "Aurarie." It waa with disgust that Senator John C.

Calhoun learned that the town near Mb fold mine had been vulgarly called "Muck JebjvOle." He aternly refused to allow the postofflee to be known by that name, The knowledge that gold exists within I limits of the Cherokee nation brought the edvisabUity of a removal of the Indians to a land where they would be secure. In the two years preceding 1S30 hundreds of white adventurers pushed their way across the line and began prospecting the hillsides and creek bottoms. of IMS had prepared the way iot ue removal 01 the Cherokees. This tract of land comprised all the territory bow represented in the twenty three counties of Bartow, Catoosa, Cherokee, Cobb, Dade. Dawson.

Fannin. Floyd. Forsvth. Oii Gordon, Hi rattan, Lumpkin, Milton, 17, ysauamsy jflntnns, root. Towns, Walker and Whitfield.

In the these districts into forty acre lots. This gom Has, me other districts a divided into ISO acre lota, known as 1 of lots, which were put up by ry tn MUledgeville, to take part in all whlto males of legal age, as well Indians, intruders bad taken a strong hold to the forbidden domain for the purpose at the (old that was known to exist. The state government sought Is protest the country from intrusions, arkteh attempt Is remembered chiefly be cause of the engagement at Laathers's ford, not a stogie life was lost Never theism General Sanford wrote such a meg a take a I on It, in verse, the first line of W. A. Sanford fit a mighty About hall a mile from this point a man touted Dobbs set up a grocery, where the gamers could get rancid cheese and the reds could fill up on firewater.

The fed ganttory of its contraband Inhabitants. One at tkatr test acts was to destroy the hah ttetton of Dobbs, together with several oth SW of like character, from whtoh time the spot has been known as "Burnt Stand." An sactont lookmg cabin stands now upon Itse spot, end the surrounding country looks est nUltoxy suc when the removal of the Indians took Wsjost nnd the territory was thrown open settlement An Old Inhabitant Talks. W. Odom, an old farmer of eev gsgy fonr, by, was an actor to 1 be hard," said ha, "to describe of people The fact is that the fend been turned out of the ter. I of the earth covered with first house put up was by Sto 1 by dosens they went up all Ids of three weeks there were Nad houses, and men slept road, or by finds on the along Mill creek, Davis's 1 Pigeon Boost could be I the golden particles.

To ibsfimisiuii of the place, the was established, rouowea oy were always lively Mr. Odom. "The around would walk it and denoait with ly midnight kept up, the ending the tli hot mm awoke thorn to etbthar a railroad station, Mr. Odom describee the 'The miner, had to resort to aU of expedients. Often whom the others had confldJnce to go home on a visit He would be loaded down with orb belonging to his comrades, but seldom betraying their trust.

There nese the city, a Dorian bank people to such an I i trip to New York they would entrust him with weir entire stock or gold to dispose of. For several years he performed has duty faithfully, but his price was reached when the bank entrusted him with ttkOH worth of zneteL To this various parties added about less when Mr. Bowen departed he had no thought of evil, but when ho reached New York city, and in Scotland, and the sight of so onay will make Auld Maggie glad. Take my property ana ao the nest you can wua it and may Ood bless you The bank had to close Its doots. for the dram it was too treat, and hundreds of others Beggared.

"It may amuse you to know that one of day most noted issue scrip as woo as the banks. He' did a rushing boatneea with the smaller sold penners. and seriously interfered with the nuns, i he Bomst bank people secretly height up most of 'Free Jim's' serin, and ratted him suddenly one day, hoping to break him. 'Free Jim' was astounded, but crt una tely was able to meet the demand. Then he laid low for a season, buying up the scrip of the Belfast bank.

When he had a sufficient amount, be appeared be fore the cashier and demanded Instant redemption. Thw bank waa taken Short, THE CHEROKEH COUNTRY. Sonth Carolina stop I and had to close its doors. 'Free Jim' Bed out of his of another stabs. ana interfered in the died in Dahlonega a rich man.

Within sevea years from the time of Its rise In Itn NuckollssvUle had loot its greatness and become what you see It today." From another old citizen was learned a crlons story of the newspapers of Nuck olls vtlle. The first was known as "The Miners' Recorder and Spy in the West." The second. The Whig, was afterward removed to Athens. It is of the first how that the story was told me by an old o. It was edited by George W.

Pas chal, a young man of brilliant parts, who buried. He was as ambitious brilliant and having a legal mind, finally devoted himself to that profession. He married a squaw, by whom he had at least child, who grew up to be a beautiful and attractive young woman. For some reason, in after life, Paschal abandoned his wife, and disappeared. He afterward turned up in Texas, where he became chief Justice of the state, and became the author work entitled, "An Annotated History of the Constitution of the United States." Once while going down the Mississippi ver the steamer blew uo and Judjre Pas chal was frightfully injured.

His wife heard of it and immediately went to his a Mew Orleans hospital, where she nursed him back to health: They then parted without bavins; said a word of the past, ana never met ecau. daughter, however, who bad been carefully raised by rer father, became a woman of striking character. She always resentea any reference to ner lathers early life, snd once put the celebrated wuusm nenry spares, in a corn for having written of it She developed i eatncai ambition, and essayed the char she i THE OOITSTITUTIQjr; "It surprised me so to think that I no tually had a gold deposit under my hand that I could not apeak right away. Win yon take C0.000 for it?" they continued, a ssness had re turned to me, and feeling that CftOOO in the hand was natter tana fnoym mu iriffM I said ess. Thev at once counted out ti.OOO to me and within thirty days gave me the balance." A walk up and down the big road which was ones the main street of aa active city.

told a wonderful story of decay. On either THE PIGEON ROOST BANK BUILDING. side arose the mighty as of old with gold, hot gone, the rights are nut the houses themselves have disappeared, save a few. which stand, aged and tottertnt, to toll the story of where Georgia's greet mining city once was. The Pigeon Roost bank building, looking like an ordinary one room negro cabin, is noticeable only for the stout lock on the door of so frail a structure.

"On, it was a prettier pmce then than now," said Mrs. Wood, the only lady living who was here during the "flush." "It had a little veranda and some steps lead ing up to it" At the Grave ol Watt Anuersoa. Fo one that ever knew him could pus through Nuckollsville without visiting the grave of gallant Whtt Anderson. The village cemetery rests upon the rown of a hill which overlooks the sur rounding country. There I was shown the ve of Whit as be was fondly ante.

Resting beside him is the body ef his mother, and without mark, save the stones which outline the graves. Tne sprout of a young hickory tree is shooting upward from the heart of the lion willed man who Ilea buried there. No man ever bore love to another as did Hon. W. P.

Price toward Whit Anderson. They pursued different paths to life, hot tne rugged honesty of Anderson appealed to the recognition of Colonel who never tires when talking of his friend. His conversation on the subject is not only interesting and reminiscent, but it develops an unknown chapter in the reconstruction history of Georgia which will be welcomed by the readers of The Constitution. "The name of Captain Whitfield Ander son," said Colonel Price, 'Is indissolubly connected with the history of Nuckollsville, ana not cnuciciesvuie, as many write because the piece was named after a very worthy resident of the place, whose name aide in upper Georgia. The early method of fighting indulged in by miners and travelers, and induced the spelling of it as 'The town itself always harmonised.

In the days of whigery it was whig by a urge majority. On the revival of the democratic party, after the war, it was democratic except a vote or two. The first internal revenue collector appeared in that quiet town a few months after the surrender. He un dertook to exercise the uses of stamps required to be put on notes, checks, deeds. The boys, one of whom was a brother of Captain Whit Anderson, insisted that if it was oh internal then the stamps had to be token Internally or inwardly, and unless the crowd saw him swallow some of them, the people of that town would never, never, use one of The revenue officer was then made to put about IS worth of the stamps into a glass of whisky and compelled to swsllow the whole lot In fear of his life the 'excise msxT made his way to Dahlonega and recited the facta to me.

To use his own words: It was the awfulest dram a man ever took, and the stamps are still sticking to my inaldes from the end of my tongue to the pit of my He was advised to push on to some other locality where the 'workings' of the new government would not require such literal interpretation. The advice was taxen and he was hardly well out of Dahlonega before a committee from Nuckollsville arrived, inquiring for the fellow. "It was to a town like this that Whit Anderson grew to manhood. His father, Reuben Anderson, brought him from Sooth Car olina when a boy. It was in the fall of 1840 that I saw him, soon after my return from Mexico, where he had earned a name for bravery.

An official envelope to the records in tne war omce at Washington shows: 'Mustered into service August OH; mus A MOUNTAIN TEAM. Bbo happened to tared out, July It, JJSV He haS death deal IW awrupe witn Kev. Henry lng weapons of all aor her reading of "Mama and selections Uncle of introduction to friends in London. It was ins soe came to meet Thomas O'Con or Power, the Irish home rale leader, and ecame his wife, to which capacity she ikes an active part in affairs over there. Uncle Jimmy Wood, a numerous old man of eighty four, who was NuckollsvUle's leading merchant during flush times, atiU lives with his wife in the same old house.

He meets strangers cordially and as he looks up and down the empty streets, he talks amusingly of the days that are gone. "I miss tow Saturday night fights." said he, "for it used to be lively enough to wake up a dying man. I have never tot out of the range I now live in, because I would miss seeing some one who might pass through Nuckollsville. Over there to your left you will see what is left of the Pigeon Roost bank. It is now used aa a blacksmith My, my, the boys did like to be sociable on Saturday night You know they old not have pistols then, and they fought with their fusts.

The killed, only except Bill Ugon, whose head was not bard enough to resist the force ot Brown's shovel. Two men who went to Augusta once brought back two knives that might have been used to kill a bull they were eq big. But the other miners turned on them and made them break the knives up. They did not propose to tot any one man have such an advantage of them. 1 used to take gold dust and nuggets In pay tor.

goods end gave eight silver dimes for a dollar. I used to haye the dimes sent to me in coffee sacks, mixed In with my regular toad of coffee which I would get from Augusta. did that so aa to avoid suspicion along the I have bought thousands of dollars worth of gold at eight i liver dimes to the dollar. The pea would sooner have the silver then the he Mtsa a sharp keen blade beneath a shining bar. reL This pistol he bad used but recently "For some supposed or actual affront at the manager, ticket agent or doorkeeper, he undertook with the aid of his younger mothers, to whip out the whole company, wnlch was large one.

The doorkeeper Whit persons under the canvas, adly used up man. The cir cus men fought him with trace chains, whlffletrees and every other conceivable weapon lying around a circus tent. If I admired thia. brave man for his war record, to my youthful mind at that time, he appeared still greater aa a hero in the wild fight with fifty circus people He became my ideal of a soldier and warrior. Years after, when I met him during the tote war, both of us soldiers, I still admired him for his dauntless courage.

On both stanch Baptists, and to IMS were memoers Ol that church in Dahlonega, tut the son did net seem to have imbibed the religion of these bumble Christian people. He was. however, a firm believer in the rights ot man; that the humblest "Ti that lived had rights which should be accorded to him even at the cost ot human life. This way of him at times, wrangle about technical righto to friended the friendless "A disposition Ilka that waa almost aura If eot the love ef those with the poor, every one who came close enough to him to quiring proper respect for those to authority, and persons entitled to respect from ate or position in the church. bachelor, but for the fair sex be ever held them to high esteem.

were almost Cheaterfleldtoa. Towards the "As stated, he waa popular with the colored people. He would accord them every proper, as well aa legal, tight, but the mo ke became a lion in their amy. An XaeMsmt ef the Beeei Fasted. It was at this point that Colonel Fries touched upon a subject which will be of Historic interest.

Decease It reveaia an important chapter In the iiusnlim fton history of the state "The reconstruction period." resumed Col nected with the sheriffs office of Fulton county ss deputy. I member of the house to what waa known as Bullock's leg islature. The two political parties had been about equally dtolded the senate republi can and the house democratic but after the return of the colored members, who the minority In both houses. It sooi came evident that a race collision wi evitable. unless the greatest forbearance crate.

The republicans became mors more aggressive in their demands, an colored members were sullen and often in solent The republican members of the committee on education of the house first demanded that the two races should be taught in the same schools. I wis a member of that committee and so sure were the of social equality would be Inaugurated one declined to attend tl That one finally succeeded In that not only separated the races, but was eoual to all its nrovisiona to any system since that time inaugurated in Georgia. The unpopularity.however.' of the lftt lalatnre that enacted it prevented its acceptance and use by the people. of all questions con fronted the democrats, and that was the scheme' of the ultra repub licans to the legislature. The attemfpt waa srnicn passea tne terms of the mem ben and officers for a period of two years beyond the time fixed by the constitution.

It could pass tne house ir an tne repunncans would vote for It The scheme was revolu was boldly and persistently urged by the extreme republicans and radicals. The question was liable to bo sprung any time, but a majority put it on zrom W. F. PRICE, a dav. either on account of the oppo sition of a few leading republicans like Amos T.

Akerman, H. P. Farrow and N. L. Angler, or because they began to tear hone you will allow me a this point" said the colonel, "to pay a passing tribute to a worthy colored man, who played a very important part to this trying period of our state's history.

A former slave ot Major Alex M. Wallace, of Atiana, whom I had taught to spell and read when we were both very small boys in Dahlonega, and who now kept a boarding stq 'aiaqmem paaojoo joj esnoq life in keeping me posted as to the intentions of the members, as they would talk these matters over after their return from the midnight caucus. This waa Important to me, aa the chairman of the democratic caucus, for it enabled me always to cure the return of absent members in far anv crisis. So unarrine waa tMs formation that some my democratic friends Jokingly insisted that I musV have been admitted as a visiting friend into the republican caucus. This incident of those perilous times has never been printed before, but when certain very distinguished lut nr tneir easiness was to save i I have said that Oliver Wallace, a private cittoen of Atlanta, did manv ef those valiant aenUemen, that time feared to be seen about the i tel.

if their business waa to save the state. I know not if Oliver is yet living, bat this much is due to one who to prevent a war ot i of the radicals. He waa not a republican, but voted with the demo crats, yet he was not known aa a pou af anv sort. He had often urged thi end men to beware of the steps that they wen about taking aad that it oouii reault fii bloodshed and harm to their "This trusted man informed me at a late hour on Tuesday night Id of August so the memorandum reads, that it had been decided that night to caucus to bring the resolutions' to a rote next day. This gave opportunity to tele the decisive vote was pot off until the llth ot August itn.

The Calais Coasee. much has been told In order to in troduce an incident connected therewith which brings Captain Whit Anderson again to the front. I mat him early on morning of the Id of August, and told him scheme would certainly pass ana. There waa a slteht hope of this. Atkins, of Oglethorpe county (white), had promised to vote with the democrats, and Stone (colored), from Jefferson county, bad said that be did not think be was elected tor ant two.

yean, ana many and friends at home wan already running far hla seat This sentiment waa applauded by the democrats, who, through Mr. Alton Arsrien neteJr United States to Rheims, determined to compliment Stone with a fine gold watch and chain. It was believed that tb certainty of this contri bution would enable the colored brother to remain true to his convictions until the vote was token, at which time he would get the prise. When I told Captain An derson what was coming, his face assumed a look of sternness, a took of fierceness such as I had seen upon the faces of men as they were' shout to eater Into battle. "If the veto la carried agatoet us, my men wfll he then, and the work of killing will begin in the house.

I shall be to the bouse gallery with armed men. and rem your seat you can see what a fearful crisis was saoroach mt. I Instated that nothing of the sort that even if it was car first day, we might be rytat the question to the supreme court. to him that had no right to embrace a hundred tonaaanrl white men in Georgia, myself among the number, who belonged to the military organisation which wee allied with the klan in sympathy, wtth remembered that the two organisations wer thy between teafc faVmilltary AS FBI lawlessness. The Helen' seamed to be especially adapted to keep the negroes well that very all I out their natural inclination to ream Idly over the country.

My reasoning prevailed with Captain Anderson, and, although be and his men might be there when the vote was taken, no violence should occur. His I wanted, but I was satisfied I hazardous line had been adewted by the Wieatry which, if pot Into haps, anarchy for a time. Occasionally, while the vote was being taken. I would took up into the gallery and see the sullen countenances of old confederates, and endeavor by a smile at their veteran leader, to. assure him that we might yet' have it ear way.

The suspense waa terrible during the roll call. Sometimes the ayes were ahead, then the forced by six moderate republicans and ten tea. by a majority introduced looking to the impeachment of the members named, bat wen finally with drawn or tabled. Yean afterwards asked Fiupatrick, of Macon, a noted radical member, why tit Impeachment of these men did nit proceed. His characteristic re aa, oecause you could prove that we licans had paid them fellows more for volea than you dcmojrt.ts One so called democrat voted wftb again appeared to the caucus af the party, and he soon disappeared from public r.

Thus a fearful crisis was pawed und elections took place quietly in Deeem 1870, when the state again named into the of the democracy. A Little Sly Humor. Colonel Price, turning toe subject, saldt "Another incident connected with the ame legislature will shew the poet humor give matters a tiarmjasa turn. beloved Nuckollsville. In IMs, befo.

the memoen wan restored to their scats, epublicana wen given the use of, the of the house for a nubile meetinx. There wen two or mon factions in the republican party, and each tne meeting. The nasss waa awrui. Democrats woo took aeugnt Jn the city police were also orders not to interfere unless to cases of violence. The meeting waa the town talk any.

coioaei O. G. Bnarks. of Macon. who bad been seated to the stead of Bishop H.

M. Turner, an excluded colored mem lalktot to a delighted group of in the lobby the next moraine. Captain Anderson, chief ot police, waa a i a disgrace to modern civillsa dBded by saying time durtet my twenty years' with Macon aa Its mayor and without resulting to the Lrttopnnts. "This wse, of course, I at A time, often spoke of Atlanta derisively. Captain Anderson, to whom the remark waa chiefly addressed, merely replied aa was major of Nuckollsville for nearly years, myself, and to all that time ch there wlth the captain walked off.

Colonel Sparks turned to me and inquired Is located "After this when Anderson was a deputy THE GRAVE OF WHTT ANDERSON, walk a little. His Bated waa aa changeful as a kaleidoscope. He talked of friends we both knew, and eorrowfully of those who had bravely fallen to battle. Then he would apeak tenderly of hia matter, and of the democratic party aa the hope of the country. His mother was always first the democratic party came next.

He would give me nia mean or prison rasrtpirne, as he knew I was a member of the prison congress. He talked of and the tough characters they often had to deal with In Jail: what men could be managed by kindness and these who required rough discipline. he said, 'here an some mementos I am keeping, by which to remember some and he brought out from under his pillow a number of pieces of rone which had been used at the hanging of condemned criminals; some he had witnessed, others he bad net He wmphmed this part of hla conversation try showing me apiece of the rope intended far the execution of Milt which did not come off. as Maione. 'had committed eutoiae previous to the of execution, oeeaat tnat i took no interest whatever toese he said he weald try and walk oat into Mrs.

Wise's flower teroen. aapsiansw ma nil, atd be heart ton kind to me In sfc to return far It I wwm asm esaj esjgejMr Whtowier. atttat tsasMt ot Mas toedawv. "He woesmr Bj jaws tor his to toe in the gentlest ma.jer. asm some times am turbulent feelings quid he subdivided by toe men at bar name.

The towing incident hi lated to show the gnat derson. had over th5 atrange nature of this strange man. in that place. The act wse waned to pro hibit the sale of wtiaky to the attot district cased the watchful eye of Captain Ander towtot aad found he had to send when for bis wfauky. The next time he saw mq to Atlanta he iiieaesaun himself to no softer languare about the matter.

1 should have been consulted began dared to pass such a law! Frohlbitioa da tor Dahlonega. and soma other text Nuckollsville should always be left free to have I assured him that the mtemperately. Ha asked me some or the signers, gave ana a of brother Dave. He scouted tan idea of his bother's name aa worth anything to such a. esse.

He dseasndwl other names. I added several old friends of his. who wen hard drinkers, but wen when they signed the petition, "Then," said Whit "if they wen sober, they wen not to their right minds, and they should not be considered." "He wanted move names, which I gave him, and lowering my voice I gave him the name of his mother. Susannah Anderson. "Tears came at onoe into the eyes of this strong man, who putting hla arms around my shoulders said: 'Whatever my mother does is right We will any nothing more about the matter I wea at hla Brother's die.

The message oame too for me to look upon his face again to life. Mon than twelve yean ago, it was, in December, 1S81, they burled him among) the trees on this steep, high hill an. It Is no leaser with him the Nuckollsville of old, "Aurana, tne ooiaen." A Successful Hoax. In The San Francisco Call of Sunday, April 8th, the following paragraph ap uait city. The length, wen token via San Franc! sixty feet to length, and have a school of about one hundred followers, furnished that Paper with a firs class fish atory.

Since the lake was first described by Colonel John C. Fremont who explored it in IMS, up to the present time, there no record that anything has ever lived in it" The letter reierrea to was aa Apru roe i hoax Invented by the editor of The Sunny South, and. preposterous as its statements Pacific coast. Thw Farmer of Trees me From The New York Evening Post A scientist has been experimeattot with specimens of various trees for the purpose of discovering which oner tne greatest iw lasA woods ware tirnoard to the ac tion of the Holts eieetrloal machine. After a revolution or two the electric spars naaaed throusrh a niece of oak.

and through poplar and willow after five, beechwood, the chestnut linden snd birch, known as the fatty trees, had more resistance than trees" like the papter. maple, elm and ash. Observations to toe trees most frequently struck by lightning agree with water Increase the danger, as well he Isolation of trees: No species Is exempt from the possibility ef being struck MB tne eiaotnc tension sumcienuy UBMOS KUXIB. A Pleaaaat For Constipation and Mato riTor Indlgeation. Sick aad Nervous Head Feverfew lis.

Debility and Kidney Diseases, take Elixir. LadtosV for natural and thorough organic from the treat juice of lemon, combined not toll any above named diseases. Fifty cents and tt bottles at Prepared only by Dr. H. Mostey, Atlanta, A Card.

1 atok found a medicine that would give suet permanent relief ai JL Griffin, Ge, day at half price. to the repeated demon rta for this new and popular book the publishers have issued a paper edition of M. Miner will peace on sate Monday morning 1.000 copiea Mall orders filled at 66 cents, postpaid. Address aU orders to John M. MlHer.

agent, to Marietta To St Augustine, Fin. From Macon, and intermediate points, up to and inclsding Valdoe ta, July Clmt only SI for the round trip; tickets good five days after date of sale. Special train service for the via the Georgia Southern and Florida railroad. The train wffl wilL leave Macon at about 11 a. Parties taking advantage of tola cheap rate will to toe celebrated rlafJftffiat Pullman accommodations will be reserved in lions win be reserved In M01HERSI MOTHERS To know that a single tkW of the Ctttkura Remedies will afford instant relief, pertnit rest sleep, and point to a speedy and economical cure of disfiguring itching, burning and' scaly humors, and not to use then without a moment delay it to fail in your duty.

Cum made is childhood are speedy, economical and permanent. wtW, Porm Dsraus EDUCATIONAL The Misses Cheyney, The Berlitz Franco, Spanish and German. Summer at reduced rates. Trial free B. COLLONGE, ED.

Directors, Washington Seminary, 46 Walton Street FuU corps of native and foreign Mast the kind of school needed in Atlanta to give our children the best opportunities for securing at home a liberal and thorough education." Send for catalogue. Mrs. W. TT Chandler. FrtocipaL buy Ima LESSONS Hunter's School for Boys.

COLLEGE PREPARATORY. TO North Broad, Atiants. FaU term will begin September 3d. Special students received August 1st University School. Peteraburg.

the thirtieth annual ara Lon of this school for bavs basins October 1st. Thorough preparation for University of Virginla7unlted States Military and Naval academies, leading Engineering jxhoole and colleges. For catalogue, address W. Gordon McCabe, Headmaster. miylB ait Virginia College for Young Ladies, ROANOKE.

VA. nts. Campus ton acres. Grand scenery in valley of Virginia, health. European and Americas FuU course.

In art and maslc Pupila from seventeen states. Wit Peebles and Miss Thompson's Da; Fifty FAOQUIRE UK Situated to Piedmont region of Virginia, aa Richmond and Danville railroad, flfty flve mites from Washington. Suwanee spring, and GEORGE G. A.M.. TDOajr mi 1 lamesMstowawaa I Mt tocs Prtoctoji about run ana beach.

1 a. say. tn tKe advance upon application. BV G. P.

A. Macon, Ga. MCNEAL desperate cn July 14 to July IE gWTHk two money Paint and Class M. M. Manek, wan paper, paints, shadaa, and mechard picture frames.

Bamples sent. Atlanta. They are Man eltoer payim 1 facturen and Deal, aUttle Burpl street. Send tor samples. tfjfS er8 in Th'D HmL fubw supplies freS UdOto Whltohal tear to frfteen ATLaSTA, OA.

thought thai Xxearslaa abates to Waahiaurtea, D. JhBIJH trem1 1 flUH 40 Jam. Agent, jf Jatymtgieugl SasaassR tay. Grwtti Batotof Prwwtf JM I..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Atlanta Constitution Archive

Pages Available:
4,101,772
Years Available:
1868-2024