Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • 2

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DAILY AMERICAN NASHVILLE 'WEDNESDAY APRIL 21 1878 WS'-jrth TERMS OF TJTS AMERICAN faiicnial ffanhx flstisnsl jankf COL HOUSE OS TEXAS PACIFIC Wo publish below a letter from Hon John II iii-o acknowledging the receipt of the resolution: passed bv the City Council and Amusements ill FISHER The Champion Long Distance Pedestrian- will start on his- GREAT WALK of iu position Ti tci-sMf Mr Tilde in dielining to interview in resjiect to Heqatpr Conkling said that ltd was a jirivate unn oecnjieibyartntjo'ty his jirivate tjlsines wh ich Rad'1 bein neglected for mm that is when he began the reform movement in 1871 and that lie would not lie United States Senator or Governor It (hat he re-jiects too of tbe 300000 voters ho voted for him for the Presidency the Unittsl Mutes to Aar any act incohijiatiblcwhh -The fheAry that' he was validly and rightfully elected The rumor that he had joined a committee of city politician Vw acq wired wvi-lnteresl iu the Wrll newspaperor form oil an connection with journalism is a canard 1 JIrs James Hendricks sister-in-law of ex-Giiv Tho'mL'X Hendricks diM suddenly at BhelbvMille night shout 7 of ajioplexy DA TT EDITION by matt postage paid ma mbty in uh iwwr oe year lofhi ir months JAree moriths month $1U) TllE DA th EDITION delivered by can'ier In the citri $1200 per annum for six month yi UU ftrr three mumths for one month fJtU for one week 25 rents TSIE DAILY EDITION from the business tjlrrn $1000 per nnnum and f-rr xiuortrr period prp-portion excefUfnr erne month chtrh unit be luU or for a week which mil be 25 cent SEMI- WEEK I EDITION Unted on Wednetday and Hatuntay by mad portage paitl per annum $430 for Mix months 210 for Litre months 1 06 id the business office the tame less postage WEEKLY EDITION issued on Ihursttavs per annum postage paid 200 for six months 100 for three months ho cents EJTPIRA TIONS at the printed address on the paper the lUte thereon shouts the 'late to which you have oat fiend money for renewal a week or two before the ft me expires To iraure a continual am of the pijcr suiiserifters must iAerve this rule a pajtert trill le invariably discontinued at the expiration of the time to which they are pout SATES OF Terms furnished for I Dust ness VartU in reguior culverUing columns 1 apitlrancnor one length of dote Marriage and Fanerabtfi'olicc of ordinary length 100 ifm 01 0 than one tnch they will be charged 1 1 Jer inch Jlales for cecuU positions given on ajijdsculion COMMUNiCATIOKS mxud be accompanied by he true name ami addreee of the writer in order to receive attention ADVA SCK PA YMKFTH for subscriptions ie a rule that cannot be deviated from ADDDFSS all communication to Tun Ahbricam 4 Church street Tenn es i I 1 Adveriisement this column charge i (m cents per ports are brightening and from tllifl distant a Vt 04- 1 b' 1 -J I Htandpomt we can see a very decided improvement and we know that it has had his most earnest attention: Hot SK ov I KPRKv VTATt BW WaSHUIOTO April 20 lhTfl Mt Dear Sir: Vour esteemed fivor of the Kith inet came dulv to lmml en- All who indebted to Ih Bracking to cull at Mompi ill tk (V ami 1 tie up by the iirt of Jun next tugi ap24 3w 1 To buy lot in Jwrth Ldgelield on monthly payment A RUJ Mil FAK-BAR WEAKLKV p22t WANTED For IsTs a comfortable bil ic hon of 5 or 6 room in West Nashville or Ud'etieM: xiedOHsion wanted barely this office giviug lotaiiou Parties owning Singer machine to bring them to the office 112 liurrh at and get necessary repair f-ro of charge cull aud enquire THK SINGER () ap2it iu id WANTED Tobuv i rf rg in souMi at not over on immlhlv pa ARRINGTON FA UUAH A WEAK LEV aj To buy a farm of 50 to 1m a r- well Tf improved not to caat over oah ARRINGTON FARRAR A WEAKLEV 2t "llTANTEIf Hoarder In a pleasant leullhful ff of the city convenient to the stntt ear Address HOME American office h14A24 By a practical book-kisqort a set of ff books ki-ep at night Addie tills ap20 Three gonl milk cows with voung calvm UURUY O'LONNER ACO ap21 eod 1 'll1 FOR SALE auction millinery and faiuy good Jr thi afternoon at li rale espc fully for ladies Seata will le provided TEALLY Jk FOU gsxl will fitlnrcB etc of City Bakery now doing a g'xxi Imsiijew oerthe counter Will be sold cheap for ca-h or good negotiabb pajer PatiBfactorv reason given Apply at the oakery or ad dnma MtGOUGll Agent hattunoo-ga ap24 3t HALE At a great bargain the homestead place of the late Andrew Mori ison 1 nuKs from 8AUAH MORRISON' Smith me city High Apply to FR HALE 1000000 plants We have all the lejt varieties of Sweet Potato Cabbage Tomato Cilery and other foi sale Orders promjitlv filled HURLEY A SON Broad street or 17'J Lniversity atreet apU tf FOR HE XT IjOR RENT 2-story brick houe nine rooms No 186 McCravia sheet ienns reasonable Apply toW II CHICKLRINGi Ap2i St No 18 Public Square -Two omfoit iblo 10 nos on fust lloor cus large yard and healthy place Addiess Amoikau office apl4A24 RENT- convenient to the street Jailn wctirt WEDNESDAY APItIL 31 1878 Edwin Booth play the in Pittburg the other night because the gas company shut of! the gas He might have taken a revenge on the gas company by playing it in the dark THE JOHNSON MON CM ENT Crwpondence of the Brooklyn Eagle i Ckfeseville Eat Tennessee April 10 little mountain town is of inttr-testtO thi traveler associated with tlie name of Andrew JiSinsoji and its jieople are ever ready to extend a welcome hand to tho-e who are drawn thither by a desire to bee the home of the village tailor aud the grave of the seventeenth President of the United States His library after his return to Greeneville in 1808 was separate from the houie and was a large lofty room filled with his papers and law-books Here sjient a large portion of his time and particularly would he lie found poring over some work or engaged in writing long after everybody in town was asleep The library as the home is closed now and there is none of his name living in Greeneville The children three in number are separated Mrs Stover and Andrew Johnson living in Carter county and Mrs Patterson the eldest daughter is some twelve miles away residing on her farm She has supervision over the papers and books of her father and is the care-taker of all the interests of the family so far as they relate to tho fame and name of the ex-President Her husband Hon David Patterson member of Congress during Mr Administration is a successful fanner and his only son Andrew Johnson again is verv like him in his preference for farm life The daughter now a young lady is at school North and the four constitute the household with which Mr Johnson fqient much of liis time the last years of his life The other daughter Mrs Stover has a son also named for his grandfather and two daughters one of whom married the private secretary of Mr Johnson This gentleman Mr Maloney is living in Greeneville and is the representative of the family here Andrew Johnson only son had a newspaper here for a time and at one time took part in politics to some extent but he exhibited little desire for public life and latterly has given up all interest in it He is quite young however and may come into public notice in the future When Mr Johnson died three years ago liis proiierty was estimated to be worth $75- 000 to 150000 but the estate did not realize this amount because of the hard times It was equally divided among the three children after a sum was set apart for the purchase of a monument and added to what they possessed previously has left them all in entirely comfortable circumstances Mrs Andrew Johnson who was for so many long years an invalid outlived her husband ana died in the house of her daughter Mrs Patterson Bhe was buried beside her husband in the romantic burying ground he selected for himself Very soon this graveyard will lie the scene of a touching ceremony Over the grave of their illustrious father and revered mother the children have erected A COLOSSAL MONUMENT and a time has been set for a public ceremony which shall be in accordance with the deserts of the dead The monument standing in the center of the picturesqe spot selected many years ago by Mr Johnson can be seen for twenty miles all around The monument the design of which was selected out of many offered and made in Philadelphia wqh ordered by the three children of Mr Johnson and paid for by them It stands twenty-six feet in lieight and towers high above the surrounding foliage Its broad base is of granite with a plinth die The base is nine feet six inches square at the ground Granite piers rest on each of the graves lying side by side over which is sprung A GRANITE ARCH and upon this the monument rests leaving an opening tinder the arch in which the graves are visible The arch and base are four feet six inches high to the bottom of the marble plinth The plinth is four feet six inches square and three feet sir inches high and at either side stand pilasters supporting funeral urns each three feet three inches high The die is three feet six inches square at the base and three feet two inches high and-upon the front is carved a scroll representing tho Constitution of the United States and an ojien hook with a hand resting upon it representing the taking of the oath 01 office The shaft is thirteen feet high and two feet ten inches square at the base tapering to the apex over which hangs an American flag in graceful folds and surmounting the whole is an eagle with outstretched wings THE INSCRIPTION on the monument is simple containing with the addition of the name and age anil death of Mrs Johnson the following: Johnson Seventeenth President A Born Dec 20 1808 Died July 31 Faith in the People Nmver A pleasant fact in connection with the above inscription is that the motto was the suggestion of lion Thomas Kinsella Many months ago when tlte matter was submitted to his judgment he said that the chief characteristic of Mr Johnson was his abiding faith in the jieople and his conviction that they would approve his efforts He gave this line as embodying this sentiment which the daughters accepted and it stands to-day and will for all time on the tomb of loyal and loving son The unvailing will occur TUESDAY THE TWENTY-EIGIITII OF MAY and every preparation is being made to have it an imposing affair The Masonic fraternity of which he was for a larger part of his life a member will take part in the ceremonies as they did in the burial and the Knights Templar will march in the procession from Greeneville The family in selecting the speakers have been guided by a desire to have the service of a heartfelt rather than a formal nature and they have therefore invited speakers who will have the warm incentive of friendship as well as admiration for the dead to inspire them Col George Jones of Tennessee and Mrs Laura Holloway of Brooklyn are the speakers invited to make addresses The occasion will be one of great interest to the jieople of East Tennessee and no doubt it will be a grand affair Necond only to the sad occasion which drew them together three years ago aud its day and was not out of place in its day We have no regrets to express concerning the dnv of pistlil and hair trigger When men with th grand qualities of Old Hickory the noble philosophy of the great Calhoun and the calm tatemaui-hip of Henry Clay could engage in the practice of duelling we may lie sure that it was something in place lielong-ing to the day and it ieeuliar forms of progressive development just as knight errantry as a necessary thing in its day It was simply a special ami neecsiary pha-e of the times have no acknowledgments to make on the subject to the Peck-niffi an Puritans and no regrets tor its former existence If a comparison were desirable Mr own State furnished the fiiwt prominent example of scientific gunning for a human being and killed Alexander as one of the questions in the popular catechism of some years ago along with killed and killed Cock The tame code of minor warfare had its place iu England and ran its course England has long ago replaced it with tho reign of law and the duel is unknown and the pistol a thing no gentleman will handle or carry We have not yet reached that point but we are progressing towards it The pistol had its day and its place It has passed away as an arbiter of disputes among gentlemen and still lingers only as a sometimes defence against ruffianism It was a neces-ary agent in its day It would be as out of place and as unsuited to our present conditions as the knight errantry of medieval times It happens to suit the radical leaders however to u-e this cry of the revival of the old pistol practice aud the substitution of the hair trigger and the physical encounter for argument In the absence of arguments and issues with the fading of tho sanguineous stain of the bloody shirt it is necessary to fire the Xorth and no falsehood seems 1 letter suited for the purpose than that the Southern members are about to bruise and maim or kill the representatives of the Xorthern districts Nothing so galls men as to feel that they are subjected to the dominion of bullying or physical force There is absolutely no ground for it In bad manners Northern members show a superior aptness Deeds of actual violence have not occurred and Mr whispered suspicion puts him in a very ridiculous light as one starting at shadows and conjuring up ghostly terrors which have no foundation In tho light of Mr declaration that his armory includes no pistols he will wiih he had never breathed a word on the subject Northern men may as well make up their minds that Southern men their equals in propose hereafter to meet them not with pistols and bludgeons hut with brains and secure a triumph of right and justice by the force and might of intellect The Southern member ho resorts to vituperation or bad temper or pistols will he regarded as confessing a bankruptcy of intellect and somebody will be sent capable of using brains as the potent weapon in the armory the legislator A FKItlLOlS MOVEMENT If England withdraws from the Sea of Marmora idie yields a great advantage which she may never regain It is true that at Ilcsika Bay her fleet would be near enough to reach Constantinople at a warning hut that is not the question She leaves tho field to Russia within three march of Constantinople with a clear way and the opportunity for alliance with Turkey She withdraws her fleet behind formidable works which mount the heaviest Krupp guiw with thoroughly trained gunners commanding the narrow pass of the Dardanelles which is contracted just before it opens into the Sea of Marmora to a width of one-eighth of a mile a narrow tortuous channel of 18 miles lined with forts bristling with cannon Already past that obstruction England will pause before she incurs the peril of passing it again even with her great iron-clad fleet The chances of a Turko-Russian alliance are too great involving a Turkish defense against English entrance Turkey is now interested in maintaining the power she has left and preserving the semblance of Empire England has decided that Turkey is not the obstacle she must oppose to Russian aggression By clinging to Turkey with obstinate conservatism she has already lost ground and Turkey can least of all count on English support She has to accept destruction of her European power and from Russia she may best count upon the maintenance of Moslem authority at Constantinople so lo as she is friendly It will be the most natural and Moslem-like thing in the world for Turkey to fall into the arms of Russia It iS not likely in the face of this probability that England will place her fleet where it might lie debarred from entrance to the Sea of Marmora and access to Constantinople long enough at least to allow Russia to enter and occupy 1 THE ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION AT COLIMBPS Columbim Sunday Enquirer The attempt last night to assassinate Col Salisbury proprietor of this paper at Seale Ala has excited a degree of indignation rarely ever witnessed in Columbus The commission was the most dastardly and outrageous that ever was reported Public indignation is intense The shooting was done under the shadow of the courts of justice with its officers in number in the small village It makes the heart sick that bullies and rowdies should commit their dastardly deeds within almost the portals of our courts Russell county owes itself the duty of seeing that all concerned in this shameful horrible crime should be speedily punished 4- Lourtli National Hank i OF XASirviLLE TENN Capital Stclc $500000 107 JAR WHITWORTH TIIOS PLAT TA NTTY TmLM A K4L4A NOLL SAMUEL WATKiNS EVANS HUNKY HALT HUGH HO LULAS 1 iAMES wniTWORTH President (LAKH Lit k(w Pivantont THOM AS PLXTI Cast iter p21 lj (froftssiosahtu DR JH WEBBER DENTIST Office Corner Church aud Cherry Streets 9(9vpif £HuoviUey Drug Store FFIUi JIOURB 8 a to 12 inJ auj 1 ui to pm 1 i taplTfiex DR FALK 1 L-' Vffi-ii-loqxs 20 North Vine Street afl! Clinic for Catarrh Throat Lungs and all Chronic Diseases pPFlCH 9 1 l4 A- iit 'knJ fmih ti3p iu uih20 ly CAMPBELL President HARRY HARRISON Attorney TOE SOOTHER! PATEST CO (Chartered under the law of Tenoczsse) NASHVILLE TENN VIEW OF THE IMMFNSFXY LARGE IN- croase in the nuuilT of inventions In the South this company hnsAecti orgaaizad and is prepared to transact pmuinllj and on reasonable terms all business connected with Patents Trade Marks and Copyrights Leters Patent to Inventors Trade Marks and Copyrights obtuiued Models snd drawings furnished Patents in foreign countries secured bulls for infringements of patent and trade marks conducted and defences of suits on patents and trade marks attended to Briefs made and furnished to attorneys in patent and trade mark cases Patent or Interests in patents purchased and sold and contracts made as to Territory and Royalty Claimed by patentees Contracts for the manufacture of machines and si tides patented secured and all information connect'd with patent trade marks and copyrights furnished terms made with attorneys and agents throughout the country Address SOtTIIERN PATENT (OMPANT No 60 Xortti Cherry St K(uhvilIeTenn Burns Lj President First National Bank Col E- Cole President A St Louis Kail wav John Kirkmtm Esq President Third National ftaok Dr William Morrow President National Bank Hon Jamca Whitworth President Fourth National Bank Hon Cooper Chancellor etc Hon Baxter Circuit Judge etc Jal8 eodAwtf flour 0rain and Commission WHITE OATS 5000 bushels extra heavy re-fanned White Oats just received Send in your orders RHEA SON 32 South Market oc23 tf Commission HUNGARIAN SEED FOR SALE 1000 bushels at lowest market price or tt rxiLn No 117 and 119 South Market St ap21 lw Nashville Tenn Jan dAw ly sgw choicest in the world Import-I 1 1 Jk prices Largest Company in Amer- fwffica staple article pleases Trade continually increasing Agent wanted best inducements waste send for Circular to ROBERT WELLS Pret of the Original American Tea Co 43 Veeey at Yt bo 1287 fe20 dAwSm iJublic Jotice'l IN BAWK RTPT4'YIn the District Court of the United States for the Middle District rtf Tffineee matter of A Francisco of Nashville This is to give notice that on the 10th day of April 1878 a warrant in bankruptcy was issued against theestate of the aforesaid who has been adjudged a bankapt mpon bis own petition that tho payment oi any debts and the delivery of any property to said bankrupt to him or for fiis use and the transfer of any property by him are forbidden by law that meeting of the creditors of said bankrupt to prove their debt and choose one or more assignees of his estate will be held at ft Court of Baukruptcv to bef holden at Nashville in said district on the 6th day of May A 1878 at 2 mt at the office of John Lawrence No 54 Cherry street one of the Registers In Bankruptcy of said court EDWARD 6 WHEAT ap23 2t Marshal IN BlNKRTPTCY-ln the District Court of the United Btstes for the Middle District ot Ten In the matter of Andrew of Franklin Is to give notice that on the 18th dy ofoAprG 1878 ft warrant in bankruptcy was Issued against the estate of the aforesaid whd has been adjudged a bankrupt unon his own petition that the payment of any aebts and the of any property belonging to said bankrupt to him or for his use and the transfer of any property by him are forbidden by law that a meeting of tlr creditors of said bankrupt to prove their debts anc choose one or more assignees of his estate will beheld at a Court of Bankruptcy to be holden at Nashville in iu said district on the 7th day of May A 2878 at 2 at the office of John Lawrence No 54 North Cherry street one of the Registers in Bank ruptcy of said Court EDWARD 8 WAEAT ap23 2t i JJ Marshal INSOLVENT NOTICE TTAVING SUGGESTED THE INSOLVENCY OF XX the estate of Mr Btones in the County Court of Davkhwnt'eminty Tens creditors of said estate are hereby notified io file their claims against said eelftte with the Clerk of the County Court of Davidson county Tenn on or before the 25th day of July 1878 properly proved or thev will be barred ap21 4t JO Executor BROAD STREET BRIDGE CO A MEETING OF THE STOCKHOLDERS WILL be held at the office of the Company ou Friday the 26th instant for the election of President Directors and Treasurer to serve for the ensuing twelve months npl6 td A RIJTLFR 5 1 SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY to win iurtune Fifth Grand Distribution 1878 at New Orleans TUESDAY MAY 14 State Lottery Company This inaUtution regularly incorporated by the Legislature ol the State for educational and charitable purposes in 1868 with a capital of 81000010 to which it has since added a reserve fund of $130000 Its Grand Single Nuiutier Distribution will take place monthly on the second Tue-dny It never scales nor postpones Look at the following distribution CAPITAL PRIZE 08000 100000 TICKETS AT TWO DOLLARS EACH: HALF TICKETS ONE DOLLAR 1 1ST OP PRIZES 1 CAPITAL PRIZE roootj 10000 8000 i i D'XIXX) TEH 'i XASHVIUE CM or Trau at Oraoal BuUag aad CHt Partiealur Attatioa to Collection i in WH LIAM MOKROW EUMUN1I COLH NAT'LBAXIEIVJK tioliFKEY FOUO JOHN WILLIAMS THOMAS FITK JOHN LUMSDEN 8 UKMOVILLK JOHN GORDON NATHANIEL BAXTER Pret ly WILLIAMS CmJiU First National Rank OF HA8irmEE DtdgimU jjejxxnlory CU' tfniud CAPITAL v- $230000 DIRECTORS 'rA Dr ft PNG1' Tr-M-etThasklt BUTINS COOLEY- 1 WM SM MAIONS LI INN WM SCRUGGS I i BURNS President ST EGER Vice PreaMeat 1y COOLEY Cashier steamships OUT DIRECT IRE TO FELICE GENERAL TRANSATLANTIC C0 Between New York snd Havre Pier 42 Rt foot Morton street VILLE DE FARIS Cspt Santelli Wednesday May 1 4:30 SAINT LAURANT Cspt Lschesnec Wednesday Miy 8 10 a LABRADOR Uspt Sanglier Wednesday May 15 4 ru PRICE OF PASSAGE IN GOLD (including wine): TO HAVRE First Cabin 100: Second Cabin Third Cabin $85 TO HAVRE First Cabin 100 Second Cabin $65 Steerage $26 including wine bedding and utensils iOUIS DE BEBIAN Agent 65 Broadway mhl 8m M3mifarturers ESTABLISHED 1SS7 TA If you would Paint your House with the Best Purchase only the PHffiXIX miAND PURE WHITE LEAD Manufactured by ECKSTEIN HILLS A CO Cincinnati Who Make Perfectly Pare Lead Oaly SOLD BY DEALERS GENERALLY LE1CKHARD? Agent lor Manufacturers Nashville Tenn fel2 dAw eow tillmy26 TIIVIE IS MONEY SHORTEST LINE EAST! AND PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RR Only One Night Out NASIIVILIaKTO BALTIMORE WAhHIKOTOK PHILADELPHIA AND NEW YORK Quick Time From Cincinnati 23 HOURS TO PnnADEIPHIA 23 BALTIMORE 24 WASHINGTON 26 NEW YORK This Line is the Shortest and Quickest to All Eastern Cities Remember tbe Pan-Handle Ronte Means Cheapnua Comfort Safety 4fc Speed All Saturday Traina run through to New York with out detention Pullman' Palace Drawing-room and Bleeping can On all through traina For THROUGH TICKETS apply at Maxwell Houi and and Depot Ticket Offices SIDNEY JONES and Agent 8 Paaa Agent Columbus Cincinnati nolO tf Special Hiseasef Prescription Free EOR the speedr cure of Seminal Weakness lost Maahood sad 11 disorder brought on by indi cretion or exoess Any drugguiba the ingTediente Addrew Dr JAQTlEff A CO 180 West Btxth Cincinnati sepldAwly DR ESSENCE OF LIFE Restores manhood and the vigor of youth to the moat shattered constitution in four weeks FAILURE IMPOSSIBLE This life-restoring remedy should be taken by all about to marry or who have becoma weakened from excess or any other cause Bucceasin every case is os certain as that water quenches thiret $3 per case Sole Agent JL JACOUFS University Place New York Dragglsts sappiied Jyl4 dAwljr Madison Dispensary OBI Bo Clark 8t Ciitoafa fil im twn-O tm OU IRUIL Alt CHROVTC eafpW ooreiw prlveto SKXLAI DLBIUTY Jrimoi HNkKS umrrKci hioiriiasot TtiK Vita nmderin lAMNIiG IK pervnaDBtIy eurod PaiopblA (W) A to eewiw roeuur ffla KARRIAwS 11P OK ftkMJAl PlTMOIfMiT a work AU largo parrs fM MTKATkK amttataii mmwS Hut vu nerer before published ini for 66 ou la a poeorrS envelope COV6CLTATIOAS free- and COXFIOKATUI 4Swb Uoant a to ftoadajra sa acSO dAw ly NO CURE-NO FEE! Ul 1ST test wbituruw trret Ctilaaro for the core of ail Private Chronic and Speetal Llal H'mkara Ncrvowa Jfebfltty tod Loot IMouheed (aroaivDily rored lr Oi a graduate of the Reform hook art umn Mewory hao the irgvt praeOcoia the United 8tatm LA I req'Urtiig treatment with Dome and board ra) nr wr4e Kow-y vonwHlroro tor patients Bend Fifty Cent for A It I to 1 1 la I pagyt Muatraied JM AkRU'D 1A li Ffr and geaUr-nen seed Fifty Cents for bamnie of Kublviritaode ondOmikar tfluitwritul Information fry esprae Cocwui lotto km aed AoiiaOto at ini tie dAwly A PHYSIOLOGICAL View of Uarriage I a Guide to WediScJc and rnhdviiCial Tratud uu the iufu-e of ikterrfaffe end th cauoeafivot unfit me erm rtf Reproduction and Dlseooeo of Women A hook for private rotma ate reading AA) page ones lets FrtivM fofcDICAL ADVISFB! lsall deorder ot a Private Knire anrng hvm ffelf Abuoe Exeeosoe or Secret Dioenaea with lim bosk hie re of cure 234 liw ct A CLINICAL ECTURE on the ahore dlanatn- end (hose or the Throat a Lunn CUrrtBupturt tea Opium Habitir JO rt Ltfhrr bk nt of wree er SOittatmng MX! ps tv-ant (fti)r II lor 5 rta AddreM bii TTS bd if Si bu bt Louis Met Jy214Awlf EE iBU 37 Cosit fee LCuTSViLLE) KY A regMiarto Mb-siM end lrartHr qoaftftetf phsstuuui wad ths 5 aaest eo-eaaafuL as th pc wtU Crr 11 formsef Pit CHHOWIO EAibS fcperroft ton-lie ana Impotenoy- ai tlte remit of w4f-atso ia yoatfr arruat eau-asaa lw ma iGrer veare or outer cudu aod rodivMDg auweef the to lewiee effect: Norvowanes beatinal oU'tos (night ecu to xu by dreams) It of Meht f)i leture WreoH-T pbo- a A veria a d- vhu ef KetbwU CcQfjjiloB of 14-ms of Ac rvaderto Riirnng-' inijreir nr arhsurv ae thwr'Wfcbly and penuaw wu SYPHILIS uri tv' Gonorrhea GLUT Orokiut Imu kuguui Fit ir-w private dr-e ruret It it thi aj pats eHalalWwfic toiwruu rLv Jurr- and trenttug tbna-wnda atm ally foyirv skiii tstcine htoOiof pia to mr eai-8 TTu-4 ta Tiat tj- (or si'NtVtDe ho Mat pmeoenr Ottu ulJ I eire4 here Cures Gnaranteed in 'all Cases Vndr taken -11 bv Krr trm uS lcrtt4 CLarjfo rwioDa atd corrtedHtdcK'o iarKUf luul PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of VH paftif to Iy oddnra rcr1y owo (ljr cL4 te rvS'i bf OrL Ad-S-em Oaks frasi 0 A 0 add ii S'O't to Jiiuge A l)u ling We reiet to see that any Souths) 11 meui-! tier can at this day shelter his opposition to this great and necessary work behind what they are ph ased to call principle We yield to none in the belief that adherence to real principle is the siibliniest thing on earth When the policy of the country has been settled in favor of national improvements by the uniform course for a hundred years it is too late to call such opposition principle It lieeomes blind adherence to an idea or to cover local opjto-sitiou to that which is of the highest import nice to the cDtire Booth Every man have a railroad at his own door It is to be hoped that the press of the South will speak out Now is the time to press this ipit-tioii With the South united it cannot fail Col Home says its pros- 1 1 else tue notion 1- umu losing preamble and re'olutions of the Mayor ml City Council of Xashtille in favor of the Tcmis Pacific railroad 1 was much gratified at this action of the city authorities of Naslnille I regard the building of the Texas A Pacific railway as of groat iui-iortance to the South an as but a simple act of ill-tire to our section 1 liuve given to this great measure my be-t efforts and shall continue to do so but 1 regirt to sa that some Southern member are opposed to it nndolln rsu holly indifferent to its great iniiortnncc But its prosti ts are steadily improving ith a Cnited South in its fivor we could pa-s it beyond douiit and if it fails the death blow ill be dealt tiy the opposition and indifference of Southern tnembeis 1 rejoice to see that the )ieoplc of the South are moving in this matter Thev must give their reprvscntatives to understand that they will no longer be allowed to twist the Constitution into a rope to be tied around the neck of the South to strangle iier life Out of her The action of the Mayor and City Council is an influential blow at the right time and in the right place 1 ill have the preamble and resolution referred to the proper committee and the city authorities have my sincere thanks for their emphatic and enlightened action in this matter Tmly your fiiend Jomv Hot hr Hon A Ditivu Nashville Tenu THE liltEAT Col Thomas Scott has written a letter to citi7ens of Chicago in reply to inquiries concerning the effects of the Texas A Pacific road upon the trade of Chicago in which lie treats the question in the broad national light in which the American has presented it Some time ago in urging the people of the central Wct and Northwest to push this great work we pointed out its value to the entire country and showed that the lienefits which it promised to the South were only a part of its advantages to the country The branch roads by Kt Louis and by Cairo we showed brought Illinois Indiana Ohio and Pennsylvania in direct connection by the shortest line with the Pacific and Chicago and Toledo were by those same lines brought nearer to the Pacific by a competing line with cheaper freight and a road open all tlie year round more cheaply built mure cheaply kept in repair and more cheaply operated than the roads now in operation Col Scott takes up these points and discusses them elaborately confirming every opinion we had advanced from a general view of the situation and interests involved It is a truly national woik and we could not make a stronger argument to the hesitating Southern members Our strong argument to our Xorthcrn countrymen when they were crushing the South with reconstruction was that the prosperity of one section was that of the other that they could not destroy us without destroying themselves This view had a most wonderful confirmation The poverty of the South gave the Xorth a burden it could not bear and one section bereft of prosperity dragged the other down Now we are about to ascend and here is a proposed scheme which not only promises to our ports of the Gulf and the Atlantic great advantages and a vant commerce within- the interior South but also advantages to the AVest and Xorth-west advantages which are a benefit to them and no injury to us indeed a positive lienefit to our section AVe cannot prosper and have the West and Xorthwest endure poverty They are in too many ways to contribute to our prosperity for us to be indifferent to theirs Upon the most selfish grounds we are all indissolubly linked together and neither can prosper long at the expense of the other All may prosper in the highest and most enduring manner when all advance together It is no harm done to us or to our interests that St Ixmis Chicago Toledo or Cincinnati secure trade with Japan and China and connection with the Pacific when we have our own Atlantic and Gulf ports and all our interior connections by a short line always open and cheaply unrated with the great port of San Diego That it is a national road is its highest claim upon Congress and our highest assurance that whatever measure of prosperty it brings us will not he a mere ephemeral prosperity to pass away as soon as the ex-jicnditures made in its construction are dissipated If it were to be a mere temporary stimulus to be followed by depression as it would be if it were a mere local road or a mere sectional road it would not be worth supporting The benefits will be national and not sectional not local Its completion will not be followed by a line of deserted depots and trade stations the remaining signs of a faded prosjierity towns built up on the spur of the moment and as soon deserted No enterprise has ever offered half so much for the South or half so much for the country We are surprised to learn from Col House that there are members from the South who are indifferent and even hostile Has our statesmanship so faded that members of Congress oppose or lukewarmly support what is at once agrand sectional and a great national blessing because every community cannot have a line running through it? Can it be that men still blindly oppose this enterprise on constitutional grounds when the policy of the Government has been fixed the other way and when the greatest of Democratic leaders of the jiast were the most ardent frieuds of this project? MB CONK ALARM Mr unnecessary alarm aroused by a fearful friend lest he should be shot down by the irate Gordon was summarily disposed of ly Mr Gordon His fearful soul appears to have conjured up a terrible picture of an exaggerated Butler armed instead of cane with a brace of columbiads and flanked by friends with field pieces and flying artillery in reserve to pursue his wounded and retreating form He appeared to contemplate the awful fate of Hamilton as depicted by the poet: Burr Burr what have you done hit! behind a thistle And shooted down great Hamilton With a big Vie can understand the motive of Mr Conkling and physical courage is so common and cheap a thing that we are not disposed to believe that he was at all alarmed In common with other Radical leaders Mr Conkling seeks every opportunity to revive the old cry of ruffianism IVe need not be disturbed by it or believe' that our representatives are about to disgrace the South by the revival of that which has had its place XIILES In 52 Hours hursdiiy oVlocV April 25 FIIVISII Satnrday Midnight Apr 27 Tent Located on Union st Between Cherry and JSjJmigef tUlSmiYKI) SKATS for LADIES FINE BAND OF Hi sir tin Attendance dartnx thewnlk Admlmion 15 rents p23 5t FAIR 4T THE 1 Olympic Theater Corner Union anl Summer Streets FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE ORPHANS qtHE ANNUAL FAIR FOR THE BENEFIT OF St Orphan Avlnm will bo ghen by tbe ladies of the Gtthedral Congregation at the Olympic Theater commencing Monday April 23 The ladies respectfully solicit a continuance of former enerouR favors from the Nashville public ami promise in return their utmost exertions for the poor orphans and the entertainment of their friends roblS td SPUING MEETING OF THE NasMle BM Horse Asciatioa WIII COMMENCE TUESDAY APRIL 30 1878 And Continue Five Days FIRST DAY-TUESDAY First Young America Stake No 1 for two-year oldn dash of half mile: $25 entrance Association to add 2o0 second horse to have $50 13 entries Second Race The Maxwell House Stake for maiden three-year olds who have not won prior to Jan 1 1878 dash of one mile ami a quarter: $25 entrance Col Jilson Johnson of the Maxwell House to add $3r0 aecoud horse to have $58 14 entries Third Race Association Purse $300 mile heats for all agee SECOND DAY-WEDNESDAY First Association Purse $250 dash of 2 miles for all ages Second Race Free handicap mile heats for all ages to name and close at the Stand half an hour after last race on first day Weights to 15 announced at at the Pool Stand in the Maxwell House and aoccptaru es to te made at il The Club to add $250 Third Race Association Purse $150 dash of miles for all ages THIRD DAY-THURSDAY First Race The rnmlerland Stake for three-year olds tfoals of 1875) $50 entrance $25 foiicdt Association to add $500 second horse to Iud $100 mile heats 21 entries Second Race Association Purse $250 mile heats for all ages Third Race Association Purse 100 dash of three-quarter of a mile for all age FOURTH AY First Young America Stake No 2 for two-year olds dash of three-quarters of a mile: $25 entrance Association to add $200 second horse to have $50 The winner of Young America Stake No 1 to carrv 5 lbs extra 1 1 entries Second Race Association Puise 150 dash of miles for nil ages Third Race Association Purse $100 mile heats 3 in 5 for all ages $0 to second herse ourth Agreed Stake for three-yoar old colt ami fillies dash of one mile $250 entrance Closed May 21f 1877 with throe entnea FIFTH DAY-SATURDAY First Race The Belle Meade Ftake No 1 forlhreo-year olds (foals of 1875) $25 entrance half forfeit dash of Vi miles to which Gen Harding will add $500 second herse to have $100 19 entries Second Race Sidling Purse 2n0 miles for all ages Horses entered to be sold for $1500 to carry weight forage: if to he wold for $1000 allowed 5 liis $750 7 llm $500 10 lbs: $300 13 lbs The winner to be so Id at auction lmtneuiatoly after the race and any excess over the prii-e nt which he was entered to be sold to go to the second horse Third Association Purse $200 mile heats for heAten horn $125 to the first horse $50 to the second $25 to the third horwi leaten once allowed 7 lbs twice 11 lbs three times 14 lbs CAPT JA8 FRANKLIN DARDEN apl4 td launders gjoilcr-mafors etc SOUTHERN STATES Goal iMaiUaiCoipf (LIMITED) Engineers Iron Founders and Boiler-makers Are prepared to execute orders cither for new work or repairs and have facilities unsurpassed bv any firm in the South for turning heavy work Access to the Works by river or rail at Kouiti JPIttnburvr Tenn The Foundry am Shops under the management of Mr WEBSTER late of Chattanooga de20 2tawtf storage and Commission WILLIAMS Kina CO No 86 SOUTH MARKET ST Our facilities for handling country product Grain Flour Huron Lard fir are unsurpassed Our warehouse is new rat and Are proof Al shipments hare our personal attention liberal advancements made on consignments in store Fourth National Bank and wholesale grocers and commission merchants of Nashville mhS wedtfrisun3ui function sales auction' TR0S ANDERSON CO LouIhvIIIo Ky Hold Auction Sales throughout the season in the fol- lowing order: Tuesday aud Boohs and Shoes Dry Good Notions Carpets etc i r- Clothing: Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods Hats etc Dealers will find our stocks of Boots and Shoes large and attractive being direct consignments from nianf of the leading manufacturers in New England New York Pliiialcljhia and Cincinnati embracing large lines of most desirable goods Attention la also directed to our stocks of Dry Goods Clothing Notions etc etc which are being constantly replenished by shipments from Esstern and Western jobbers mnd manufacturers Terms of sale cash apl lm TH08 ANDEKfeON CO Special notices THE FAMOUS MISSISQUOI SPRING WATER Which for half a cent it rv 1jb wrought such WONDROUS CtREh of KIDNEY DISEASES DYSPEPSIA snd CANUPR may he had of all druggists Its ourativo properim uo Almost miraculous For pamphlets containing cures atldrewi MIS-blSQUOlRPWNGb FRANKLIN CO VERMONT jaA till may 24 ileal gstate Agents IL TURNER Real Estate Agent Una removed hits sffles Prom 21 Broad street to 49 Union street Real estate sold exchanged and rented Money nefiounted en mortgage invests meow etc hours 8 to 10 a 2 to 4 (at 4i Union si) dti8 fiiue 6m American Job Emohis 48 Church street turn JL out the Lest and cheapest work msmcHQmT II The member of EJseOehl Ixh-e No ISA A are herein- imtiliol to attend meet-VAingqf the JdKC THIS (Weiuerlr) EVEN IN(r Apiil 24 at 8 o'clock prompt for work GEO II OWEN Barth Kir ELECTION NOTICE NASHVILLE COMMERCIAL IJTSUBANCE CO I Office North street Nashville Tkkj April 24 1878 A meeting of the stockholders of this company will le held at their office on Mondar the 6th day of May for the election of eleven Directors to serve for the then ensuing twelve months p24 td HICKS Grand Strawberry Festival Given by the young working Club of McKcndrce Churth on Union street next door to McC Hall Wednesday and Thursday nights Lunch from 12 to in Thursday Admission to Festival 25o Supjer 50e no charge for admission to lunch ap24 2t COUNTY COURT SALE Bowen and wife vs Klaelton BfcCao-land el al PURSUANCE of a decree of the coun ty Court of Daridson County rendered at the April term in the above cause I will ofter at public ttale at the Court-house door in Nashville at 12 ui on Saturday May 18 1878 tho following real estate belonging to the estate of John McCashuid viz: Sixty nerea of land lying and situated In the 20th Civil District of Davidson county bounded by the lands of Drake Bowers and White TERMS Cash $75: balance on six months redlt Notes with approved security required and lien retained bale free from the equity of redemption JAMES BELL Clerk Miscellaneous UNDERHILL NEWSOM CO Have now ready for sending out a large and superior grown lot of Bedding-out and Grcen-lionso Plants Boses Rhododendrons Clematises of the very choicest varieties An inspection is earnestly invited Prices low Nurseries and Nolensville Pike 2 1-2 miles from Maxwell House i6tf AUCTION AM) COMMISSION MICE SHIELDS SON CO Have removed to the Centra! btore No 76 Ouivch at opposite tho Maxwell House where they solicit consignment of all kinds of merchandise either or auction or private sale Out-door sales promptly attended to Uoircapondence invited bllTELDS F0N A CO Tr Mallofy Cha Coben Regular Auctioneers jalOeodtf filATATELS writes Pntoni For which new letter patent have Just ben taaued The public are cautioned against InMnyemenla See tiat the name of It a Patent 4 en Bide Jams RANKIN A CO Manufacturer of Mantel (irate and alt kinds of Wrought and Cast Iron Work for BuiM'njr Designs and Estimates fvrnisbett on application 187 PEARL STREET CINCINNATI oc2eodly Advertisements under this head announcUxg names of candidates for office must be paui for in cutxHtnee invariably at regular aavcrtisutg rates fot time run For Chancellor WI for Chancellor of Davidson Co Chancery Cour mliHO te I AM a candidate for Chancellor of this Division Davidson county BRIEN JR mhl te WE announce ROBT MORRIS a candidate for Judge of the Chancery Court of Davidson Co fel9 tf For Jadge of the Circuit Court I AM a candidate for the office of Judge of the Davidson County Circuit Court ti CHILDRESS fel7 tde WE are authorized to announce Col (JOOD-LKTT a a caudidate for Judge of the Davidson County Circuit Court till je 1 lor Judge of the Criminal Court npo the American: Please announce me a candidate for Judge of the Criminal Court of Davidson and Rutherford counties Election August 1878 BURRUS Murfreeslioro April 19 ap20 te announce TT KEEBLE of Rutherford co a candidate for Judge of the Criminal Court for the counties of Davidson aud Rutherford aplO tde TII08 FRAZIER is announced as a candidate for re-election to the office of Criminal Court Judge of this district Election August lb78 mu 17 tde WE are authorized to announce Gen JAMES QUARLES of Davidson county as a candidate for Judge of the Criminal Court for the district composed of the counties of Davidson and Rutherford WE are authorized to announce STUBBLEFIELD as a candidate for Judge of the Criminal Court for the district composed of the counties of Davidson and Rutherford fed eodte For Attorney General announce ANDREW CALDWELL for re election as Attorney General mh21 te WE announce CARUTHERS of Davidson Co a candidate for Attorney General xnhld te JjtOR Attorney General II BANKS Ie21 tf WE announce WM WASHINGTON of Ruth-erford as a candidate for Attorney General for this district left te WE announce TRIMBLE BROWN a candidate for Attorney General 8m For Circuit Court Clerk XAM a candidate for Circuit Court Clerk at the ensuing August election Will my friends give me a helping hand once more? ALBERT AKERS jal6 4m For County Court Clerk the People of Davidson County: I would be pleased to serve you as Clerk of the County Court for another terra I can promise no more for the future than what you have seen in the attention to business and an appreciation of my position as servant of the people JAMES BELL mh28 te FELIX CHEATHAM a candidate for Clerk of the County Court fel7 tde WE are authorized to announce CHAS EASTMAN as a candidate for County Court Clerk of Davidson County at the ensuing Auguot election WE are authorized to announce A McWHIR-TER as a candidate for County Court Clerk at the ensuing election jag te For CrlaiiiMiI Coart Clerk AMUEL IXJNEL80N is a candidate for re-election the office of Criminal Court Clerk August election 1878 mh23 te HH WILKINSON is a candidate lor the office of Criminal Court Clerk ap6 te For County Register BINKLEY is a candidate for re-election to the office of Register of Davidson county at the next August election fel6 ex sat te OBERT BRANCH is a candidate for Register IV of Davidson co Election Aug 1878 apl3 te WE are authorized to announce WM PHIPPS as a candidate for Register of Davidson county feb 2 3m For County Trastee CHRIS POWER candidate for County Trustee mh81 tde WA KNIGHT is a candidate for re-election to the office of County Trustee mh20 tf THE American: I am a candidate for Trustee of Da vidsoo county JAS PATTERSON folk te For Sberlff WE are authorized to announce PRICE as candidate for Sheriff of Davidson county at the ensuing August election Ie6 te EM WOODALL is a candidate for Sheriff of Da- vidson county Election Aug 1 1878 fel 8m For Flrat District GEORGE a DIGGONS is a candidate for Constable of the NashriUe dmnu at the August election a te That Mussulman insurrection is a Briti-h canard At most it cau only be a tempest in a teapot It is much like the expectation that the Confederates would revive the attack after the war A serious Turkish movement is an improbability Hon WimruimNE has introduced a bill in the House to repeal the () er cent tax on bank issues other than National bank notes Thus this bill will progress in the House as it goes on in the Senate The people of Tennessee are almost unanimously for the repeal of this law There is a queer sort of humor about the reply interviewer to the charge that he lias violated conlldence lie says Conkling furnished him these points to he uspd according to his di-eretion and he has used them according to his discretion Mr Conkling will be more discreet next time Thomas A Edison the inventor of the phonograph is to contribute to the May- June number of the Xorth American Review an article entitled Phonograph and Its in which he will state what has been accomplished with the wonderful iu-etrument and what may reasonably he expected of it The Pennsylvania protectionists are run mad They have lived on poisons until they know not the taste of sound food Ten thousand men ass mbled to protest against wholesome natural trade is a solemn spectacle Ten thousand jieople protesting that the stimulation of a high old drunk was absolutely necessary to their welfare would not be more absurd than this The protection laws arc as unwholesome and enerva- ting as surely followed by depression and min as the unnatural stimulation of alcohol Suffering from the effects of protection they clamor for more and denounce those who would remove the bottle of poisonous pap LAME AKGEMKMS arguments of Eastern journals in their efforts to avoid-just legislation are exceedingly absurd Those who cannot better defend a bad cause should retire from the business It is bad enough to defend a bad cause hut it is contemptible to defend it in a manner 30 lame and unfashionable The arguments on the silver bill were a mixture of arrogance dictation and pueril- It'wns the method of the once powerful tyrant who has begun to believe his power menaced and seeks to argue the case and yet will forget that he cannot dictate The East has laid down the law so long that the effort to control by argument is a curious mixture of conceit stupidity and arrogance In attempting to ward the income tax the same method is exhibited Not an argument has been presented at least we have not seen one that will stand up long enough to be knocked down The strongest point made is that it is a disguised form of communism It is exclaims one lending journal an iudireot attempt to divide the property of those who have with those who have not If a reply were needed it could be made by showing that it is no more such a I division of priqierly than any other species I of tax Certainly it is not more so than the tariff on manufactured articles which taxes i the South and West almost entirely in favor of the East This argument alone is con- elusive The South which produces the largest exjiortable commodities is actually thus taxed upon its own production Fro-tected cotton goods from the East are sold with the tax of protection added both to the South and West Is not this discrimination? That England the most conservative and property-protecting country in the world has an income tax is a complete answer to the charge that it is in any sense in theory or practice an approximation to communistic ideas or practices If it contain this poison no government and no people have ever suspected it until the brilliant idea struck the Few York journals A it I HAYES IN THE SOCTII To the editor of the St Louis Republican: Nashville Tennessee April IS 1878 Having had occasion to visit quite a large number of the cities towns and hamlets of the South particularly in Tennessee Alabama Missisftipjn and portions of Kentucky and Georgia during the past two months and during these jieregri nations having assiduously sought from all classes informa' tion as to the feeling of the jieople toward the present Administration I must bear testimony that I have not heard any material complaints but on the contrary President Hayes is very generally lauded as decidedly the best President since the surrender Although he vetoed the silver bill which the South stood almost a unit for they cheerfully forgive that small pecadillo and attribute it as an error of the head rather than the heart For his sense of justice and resolution in putting into practice in the South particularly his order withdrawing the mihtarv and permitting the intelligence of the South to direct legislation and administer the laws President Hayes has well secured the approbation and esteem of a generous and honorable jieople The people of the South want tranquillity they want to be held on the gridiron of political torture and that too by force of the Dayonet They want an opportunity to push forward and develop the material resources of the country by fostering and encouraging all branches of industries and pursuits The jieople care but little for either jxilitical jiarty only as a means for bettering their condition by encouraging commerce and developing new industries and in my opinion judging from what I have heard and seen in the South whichever jxilitical party gives the best evidence in good faith of administering the Government honestly in the interest of all the people irresjiective of class that jiarty will receive the support of the thinking and intelligent voters of the South The day has passed to cry out Ku-Klnx and that the people of the South want to pay the debt All this is sheer nonsense Since the withdrawal of the military from the South far less disorder prevails than in many sections of the North and judging from my own exjierience a man is more secure in person and property in the South now than in the North And all this is attributable to Southern jxilicy McCabe Col Forney says that there are over a thousand millions of dollars held in the private banks of England drawing not more than 1 per cent interest held simply for safety The Cincinnati Louisville re-orter claims with positiveness have discovered in that city the existeuce of a secret organization similar to the once notorious Know-Nothing party that this society has been in existence but a few weeks aud has already grown 3000 strong Various well-known persons are alleged to be at the bottom of it It is stated to differ from the Know-Nothing party only in the fact that descendants of foreigners but who are born in America are allowed to join but only a genuine American can hold office The purjxise of the organization is to elect men to all the diffe ent offices State and municipal and prevent Catholies particularly from holding office The organization is said to be now preparing a clean ticket for the August election and if successful to follow it up in the fall and winter elections fbr Congress and Mayor with tickets chosen by it These rumors have been whisjiered about of late and apjieaf to have some foundation and if the Jacts come out they will create a big sensation in this city Senator Gordon has received an invitation from the Commercial Club of Boston to visit it on the 27th of April to confer with it on matters affecting the business and national interests of the country He has concluded to accept the invitation and will be accompanied by some other Senators from the South Mrs Burnett has been dramatizing her story Lass for Mrs Raymond The novelist is said to recite poems with good effect and has a young son who inherits her capacity in this resjiect He is to be trained for the stage it is reported by Mr Joseph Jefferson Washington Territory is taking the requisite preliminary steps for admission to the Upion as a State 8000 10000 10000 10000 10000 2700 1800 900 1857 Prises amounting to 110400 Responsible corresponding agent wanted at all prominent point to whom a liberal eompenaatioo will bt paid Application for rates to clubs ahould only he made to the Home Otfioe in New Orleans Write clearly stating full address for further information or send order to A DAI PHIN 1 Ro '2 Now Orleans La Or to PRICE 47 South Loiicge street Nash villa Tenn All our Grand Extraordinary Drawlrnr are under the supervision and management of GLNS lr BEAL REGARD aud JLBAL A EARLY aplS aatwedkw4w 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 Tennessean Archive

Pages Available:
2,723,694
Years Available:
1834-2024