Daily Columbus enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1858-1873, June 06, 1865, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

extra. riSjggSmu <-A„ svnn B. *—■ Wi djtin request the |Mfwr« nr the f ^ s hb*rinir citie* and town- t«» rwuras *r «cb.-<» '•*'> "* ” l rUl« £l?r#M Company »t pre-eut. We have iiuil* t» Coluinbu* yet, nor even a tofice here, buv wv ore auie tint the m curtenu. and ecntlemanlj »Kent« of L Eipf r<« t'orap»i>y »iH •■»k« cb,r K e of ucb*D*t p«|ior« that may be band'd to u*. We vent to reaumetbe rwular publication of our paper at the ^rjirtt possible moment, and d»»«ir« to rrt*i?e exchange* »t one#. Hn. HcirtfLKK, the |»o!it>« agent of the yobi*® and Girard Knilrc.nd, request# ut ^ that h" will leave nil letter* en- ■urtedto him from points on hi* road, !orj* r * >r< at P-*Me'i linol:- Tiiitt—In our city qr« <*ee but little <o»m amorg the merchant#. The ah- •eaftaf * currency i* the chief reason of \Mir ieerti y it.v. '*ur people are in warn i me»J erticle# of food, n< well a# cloth- iff, bet have currency to purcba«r, f r# jj if the market were h# well " up plied »i it wa* in old time*. (»ur country friends te brinfr in their vegetable*, chick- »a«, eggs. butter, etc. They may dispose of theca to good advantage by bartering, if set for money. Trad# in New Orleans ntid other cities ^#*1 b very dull. Good* of all hinds are abundant, and #o ic money, but pure tin- afire do not preaent them-el v»«>. Cotton is quoted in New Orlean- at 60 cents, but '.roopinf; sugar, inoell.v of foreigu pro duction, very dull nt Ilf* to 13$ cents.— (rood# are reporlml cheaper in Mobile vhanin New Orleans, owing to the heavy •locks carried there situ e the capture of ♦hot city. Gold bears « premium of 26 to?^ per cent., and silver Id tn IV Star- ; Bj brought 141 The following order* are publ • hod ofli- rlallf in tlui M aeon Telegraph of lhe 4th nitent r III A D(#l. A KT Alt* L’VM’, Macon, tin., June "d, 18*;'*. » larder*. \. CVlUens are hereby cautioned against buying hate, coat s or any articles of Uni ted State# clothing, or any kind of prop erty whatever from Federal soldier#. L i# considered an attempt to dofruud the Government, aad will b»j prosecuted vc* ordinrly. II. The wearing of rebel or citi/.eoi' Nothing by Federal soldier# in this city, 4 positively prohibited, utid the Fiovo*-t Guardi are inetructed to arrest all oflend- | era. • III. Fa«t riding of Government horses having become quite common in the eity at all hours, night and day, to the ennov* «nce of those on duty here, and to the l>rg)udice of good order, the guard* are instructed to arrest all guilty of such. IV. It i« hereby ordered that on and after Saturday,the lOtli instant, no person will be allowed to wear any stars, bare, traps, stripes, cords, tassels, buttons, or #nj insignia of rank, position or office in | the late rebel army; and all persons wring such after that date, will be eon* • dered as still hostile to the Government. •#d will be treated accordingly. By command of Col. J. G. Vail. W. IC. Dotlv, Adj’t. Fiou the North.—The Atlanta In- | tslligsaoer gather.* the following from the I Tbattanooga Gar.ette, of the IX)tli ult.: Kirby b rnith has surrendered,but troops | will be sent to Texas sral Hunter, Commissioner of the | Treedmen's Bureau, ha* issued an order hat disloyal owners of plantation# culti vated by freed men will not be allowed to I •lispeeeof their plantations, at least until | the crops be gathered The Herald 1 # Washington correspond* ►nteajs Gen. Weitzel, with the twenty - I tilth corps, embarks to-day, the 20th ult., | tvr Texas. Gen. Giles A. Smith will have • ittMDaad of a division of uolored troops. TbeTribune'e special say# Stanton will r *igo after the impending military trials, •nd will be sent to Berlin. It format ion irom Richmond -my- ihat |<*#n. Lee hac been arrested. Oeld 1364. Cotton 48. ■ Utt'T. Gis. Richard Taylor.—This 14Mlinffuiehed eon of LouiliUft arrived in ■out city yesterday, by the Mobile boat, in ■' ompeny with Gen. Cuobv, commanding ■the military division of West Mississippi. Its# is in excellent health, aud though en- I* 1 aged in important nggiHUlleu, which |u«»lelar*e domands upon Li- time, has ■already beeh welcomed borne4>y many of ■hi* personal frieude and fellow-citi cenA.- wjurviviog tho fortune* of war, may his i 1 e and those of the various room her# of tVtf l 011 * preserved in our midst, bed their erknowledged groat talonte de- Pet»dto the' heel iutere»t« of their native putt Louisiana [iV Cj '2£rh CONFISCATION AND PUJTtflR- MENT. The con h scat ion of the Savannah oo'.- con is made the toil fur a leading odlto- rinl in the New York World, In which i; discourse# a# follow# upon conllaration and punishment: Against the pun isbmen t of treason in its more conspicuous etimplee, we mat e no remonstrance. Wicked rnen, gifte*t with a capacity for leadership* ahoatet no; be encouraged, by a mistaken lenity or spurious magnanimity, to thin a that, the only personal rink they incur In • ettin/r on foot a rebellion is the mere failure m their undertaking; a penalty which is in curred by every man of besinevs who miscalculates the sucreoa of hie enter prises. If a man commits one homicide, we do not deem it magnanimity, but weakness if the ministers of the law scru ple to punish I im. Whera homicide# Iuve been perpetrated by wholesale, where the whole land has been drenched in blood, we are entirely of President Johnson's opinion, that the authors of all this carnage, misery and ruin, should not go unwbipt of justice. But we are equally clear that severity should bo lim ited to those conapicuou# traitors who were the prime movers of the rebellion. Hemp and confiscation for them ; clem ency, pardon and conciliation for their Jupes ; this is the policy which can reoon- cile magnanimity with iustice, and the reviving prosperity of the country with its tutu re security. If this policy be adopted, the aggregate amount of confiscation cannot be large. UonfLcation is not a subject that ought to be considered in connection with the rev enues of the Government, except in that larger view which sees the true sources of public wealth in the wide diffusion of private prosperity. A stateedtan who looks to public revenue does net aim to scoop up the rain water in standing pools, but to open, all over the land, ever running fountains of perennial wealth. It the South is to be a community of tax-peyera, it must first become a community of pro ducers. But bow shall m»u produce with- out capital to bfiiln with' Why should they plant cJops if we do not allow them to reap the harvest? No cure for sedition is so speedy and certain as private pros perity ; but il a groat people, who are already impoverished by the sacrifices and Ioreed coulribulione they have made to the rebellion, ere atrip|>ed of the little that remains by the misdirected severity of the conquerors, those who expect tranquilitr will find only turbulence. But even if all the property iu the South iHunged to Iho fvui'hern holders, and tlier* w**re no legsl claim* upon it by Northern citizens, U would still be bad policy (though nbt so gre*# an injustice) to make a whole.-ale conllucatioa. The multitude# in the Nuith who have been dujted or coerced into the rebellion, might to ho treated with a wise leuity. They tjavc found secession to be a bitter evil; they ought now to find thet getting beck into the Uniou is a great ble^ing. Lei tried and convicted traitors be veiled with all the rigor the Government may deem expedient ; but tbe mess of the people have been merely participante in a war. and are entitled o the treatment accorded hy the laws of war, which do not justily the confiscation of private properly or land. To punish a man who baa been torn from hit family and conscripted into the rebel artuy, with the confiscation oi hie property, is equally contrary to justice and to good policy. Being intrinsically unjust, it would arm the conaciuca and the sense of right ot that whole section against the Government, at a time when it should be our aiui to foster a spirit of cheerful loyalty. • Tub Neueo Stampbde.—A gentle- mau from Monroe county who has en joyed opportunities of making observa tions, estimates to us that fully one half of the able bodied male negroes in that section have deserted and are now absent from their homes. Numbers have re turned after an experience abroad as treedmeu, which they are frank to admit was not very satisfactory. Tbe planters are getting along pretty well, being bus ily engaged in tending their grain crops. These, as they have no other* in tbe grouud, they will succeed in taking rare of with the force remaining under their control.—Macon Tcl. % 4th Gxk. Cobb.—This gentleman is again at his home in Georgia. The Atlanta Journal says: “Moon after his arrival at Nashville, Gen. Cobb was informed by tbe Provost Marshal of that city, that by a telegraphic dispatch from President Johnson, he was directed to release him on bis parole, and allow him to return to Georgia and report to General Wilson. This ws# news as unsEpeoted as gratifying to the General. We are pleased to know thst he was treated with great respect and kindnees by every Federal officer with whom he came in contact from tbe t’me nt hie arrest to bis return." Disposition or Geserals,—dis patch irom Washington to the S. Y. Herald says Gen. Ualieck takes command of the Pacific Mtale#; Gen. Bbermao the Military Division of the Mississippi, com prising Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee sod probably Louisiana ; Meade, the Carol; • Tiaa and perhaps other Southern States. Gen.'Wsrren bae resigned his commission a* Major General ol Volunteer 6 . Gen. Logan has received orders to transfer the army of Tennessee to Louisville. - - — tii.v, Pillow.—This officer rest bed bis home al Columbia, Teno., last week. Tbe Gazette says that, like many of the core wealthiest officers in tbe Coufwderate ser vice, he was without money to travel with dis daughter and ihtir two children and tour servaiiU were with him. • JT.TY D\YIS AND THF4 AMSASSi- NATION’—LETTER F ttOM \ tlEEKL COLONF k r«n» M itlii igu*« c»Tr*-?pot. bent of Jim Ciuciariati Os U.\ in hi* **•<•. *,mt of lh»- pro* tHdinge of the N 6 «H-*in»tion . trial ln-t Monday, *av. Mor(.;ha:. '•rJiriarj* intarMtw> w excited by the production ,.f tho Imt* r oi i»jh rebel Lieut, -ibi.n. wh.ob ., t- found among i;i« archive of **■.. War !».*. pertinent, eurreodnM r.y J..hnr oo. i ue proposition «•! i’i* wtiter to i id i !-• coun try of ith d*%,ilien enomlet, meat* Jng Mr. 4>;n«dn and ui* t ntnret, by aese* sinsting was fhown to have been e/it* triained by Jeff* rsori Dari*, ahd he had • Greeted h.s privata Secretary to refer the matter to the rebel Secretary of War .5or his consultation. hen the reading of the letter was oonrtuden. w audible murmur of horror ws# heard trom nil pail* t»f the room, ami . -po.uaily among tun Ladie.-, who mads such exclnrhatlon* a- ‘HHi. tb«- monitor!" ‘*Oh, horrinle!" u Smimc! ahsmef' Thin was the first diree: t»*»ti- moay yet produced in the case -diowiug that Davis at any time nnterthiued the idea ifl* *ta'*inaling the Pre-i.lent and the head# of Department*, and it« impor tance wa# enhanced by iho fnct that the reference by J>av> tv hi# .Secretary of War ws# dated in December l*»i, a! which time it pax been clearly proven that. Booth and some of hi* original (’on- l’ederate* were acluadv engaged in plov- tiny the murder of Air. I.itaoin. Ttoa introduction of tiic iettor estab lishes the fact beyond any doubt, if it l.*- good for no other pi;rpo**.that DsrL as* not only capable of nnterluining the pro posal for a****inaltng our President, nm wa# willing to treat with cold blooded vil lains for it# accomplishment. The link in the chain of evidence that directly con nects Booth and the prisoner? in til agree ment with Davis to murder Lincoln and Mr. Seward,has not beon^produced in the trial, but may yet be ofiered before tlm Government closes its testimony. * ALSTON’S LETTER IN FULL White Sulphur Spmnun Va. 7b Awr Exttllmcy t/ir Prtsidmt of tin' Confederate Stotra . De*r Sir. I have been thinking for tome time that I would make ibis com- munication to you, but have boea deterred from doing so on sccouni of ill health. 1 now offer you my services, end if you will fevor me in my designs 1 will pro ceed ss soon as my health will permit to rid uiy country of some ol her dcadlio-t arieuue* by striking at the very heart's blood of those who seek to enchain her in hlavery. 1 consider nothing dishofiorablu haviug sui h a leadency. All l esk of you i# tv lavur me hy granting the necen- aary papers, etc., to travel on while in ihn jurisdioliou ol this Government. 1 am perUctly lamilier with the Nqrth. sud feel court dent I can execute anything L undertake. 1 have jn»t returned now from within their liae 1 *. 1 aui a lieuten ant iu Gen. Duke’# comuiaud. L wa^ on the raid last June iu Kentucky, under Gen. John ii. Morgan, i and all of my cuuituaud, except two or tluue commis sioned officers, were taken prisoners, hut finding a go-nl opportunity .while being taken tv prison, I made tny emip* from them io the garb of a citi/.on. « 1 atleuipled to pass out through thn uiouutaius, but filling that impossible uarrowiy eecsped two or three time* being rolaken —directed my course north and went through Canada. By the assistance «*1 Col.^J. H. lloicomb, 1 succeeded in making my way through the blockade, and having taken the yellow fever at Ber muda, I have been rendered until for ser vice since my arrival. I wa« roired in Alabama, and educated iu its University. Both the Secretary of War and hi# ut»fiis- tant, Judge Campbell, are personally ac quainted with my father, William J. A1 •ton, of the Filth Congressional District of Alabama, be having served in the time of tbe old Congress, is '46, ’60, and ’61.— If I do anything for you, I shall expect your full confidence in return. If you give this, I can render you aud tuy coun try very important service. Let mo hear from you soon. I am anxious to be doing something, and Laving oo command at present—all or ueai ly all being in garri son—I desire that you favor me in thi# iu a fchori time. 1 -hmild like to have a per sonal interview with you, in order to per fect arrangements before starting. I am, very respectfully, Your obedient servant. (Signed) J. W. Alston, Add re m me at tbe Bpring*, in the hos pital. On thefeboro ietter were the following indorsements Brief of letter, without signature, respectfully referred by ihedi- reciioo ot the Fretidenl to tho lion. Sec retary of War. Burton N. Harrison. Frivate Sccrelar.j. Recoivrd November 29, IfitH. Record book, A. O. O., Decem ber 8, 1864. 8d— A. G., for attention. By order of J. A. Campbell, A. S. W, DI'XKahoi or Tp.(*.>Fa. — it is intended to discuergfiall tbe t oou#* W'lo have lesa than three month- to serve, and to retain those who have a longer term. About on»-baU of the Handiug army will con sist of colored troop#. These men will be mainly employed on garrison duty at Sa vannah, Charlettou, Mobile, end other ..onboard cities. Bo says the New Orlenn Times of the 26th ult. w« »«» Goivo Home.—The CoDstitutiouali«t says that seveml hundred negroes have reported at the Freedman’s Bureau, iu Augusta, within tbe past day or two, for the purpose of being forwarded to their homes on the coast, where thev design returning to tke employ of their former mwetara.^ LETTER FROM JaMF.S il, At A SO V To the Jjiitor •/ the J, n. to . I,liter Sir: Tim. will yet th« mvHnrv yni attcndiii^tfi. «•- ■..•.inminn of Ahr.'- Ukiii Uni-oln, Htr l'ru<itinii oi ll,o Uoiwd an.l il...(tom ! .lo* (nation of •Mr. .soward, hi. .so, rotary of Statu. 1 de- siro only to rruel at on oh tho calumnious a8»»nionii.i ladw.n U. Stanton, tho Sem- • !,r : ‘ U » 1M 1 ? tu ‘ r u ' '<r. Adams, priuii-d in the L mdort journal.- of thi- Mion.'Tig, j,a t these acts were •'planned and #01 on tool hy rebel , un*l-*r pretence of Hvenirmir tho South «ud aiiiin* thn rubul Mins, and of which he say* there " V d r". 0 ', ' Mr - Stanton's Htt'r i.datnd on the loth April, and slates that Mr. Lincoln iva« avaulnated in ihn tiiuulru at half-iiasi ton t,„ jinnrious nlolil, and died at twenty niinuto*. p:ol seven on the niorniitK <'l ina day Ilia- ho wrote. 1 adduce this to show how unlikely it is | n the hurried oxciiaro.nt, and the neoMaarr occupation' attending such event., that any nui the wildest theoriaa would prevail in ra*ard to the can.a of tha event or the ohjoci. oi tho perpofrators. Sir. Stanton adopts that which ha deemed would bn tbu moat useful before the public oi hi* country. Should the "evidence” to which ho reler# to support hi* calumny ever *<m- the light, it will be scanned with the ex perience derived in regard to othorevi delict-, unariupuloiisly fahricauvl in ♦ami* qufiTtar, during tho present war, for hn«c political effect. Ji i# tha efudo.-t con- cHpiton, loo, that the murder of Abraham Lincoln ws- planned and executed f,, r Hu* purpose w f ‘‘aiding the reb**l chihi ; ' but l can woll understand itist ii m MV itHve material influence in aiding the »au*o of that overwhelming party in tho United States, of which Mr. Stanton i*« the typo, and Andrew Johnson, who suc ceeds as President, with Butler of the no torious prefix, are tho exponent* and lend- cr»—a party in wbo*e path iho Into Presi dent and his Secretary were acknowledged obstacles in their projected scheme* of plunder and rapine, to follow their do minion over the Southern Status. For tho rest, 1 iearu from a well-in formed source in London lhai "Wilkes. Booth,” who i* accused ol th»- deed, i- a son of the celebrated KnglBh tu tor of Hint name; wn# of bit# father's prole-*ion, which he pursued principally in ih. .Northern Stato#, and w«* gonorull.y mi- duratood ms inheriting those traits signifi cant o('hit flit hor* 4 namn, Junius Brulu- Booth, by whom he wn« named .loin, Wilkes, oiler the gieat English rmboai an original »ud mental traiuitig little likely to engender the slightest aympathy with the great tiau#© nlThe con.mi valivn South. As tn the crlnifi committed, nonu will view it witli more abhorrouco tluui the people of iho South, but liiay will know, as will equally nil well balanced mind*, that if i» Iho necessary ollVpring ol those aeone of bloodshed and uiurder in every form of unhridlod )ioen*e, which have aignaliy.ed Hie invasion off 1m .South Uy Northern artide-, unr«biikt*d certainly, and therefore itiRCIgaled by thoir leader- aud those over them. Pardon thn length of this not**. 1 da* airsul only instantly to repel the alrociou » alumnioe iu tne letter ot' Mr. Stanton. Very respectfully, you re, J. M. Mason, -M Upper Seymour *t., PoVtnmn Souarr London, April 27, lh*45. Toe London Times, editorially refer ring to tho letter, rejoices to ^ce Ma«on repudiate the efrime, and xaya if the Southern Stato# thenisolve#do not utterly and even more emphatically renounce it and iu authors, they will forfeit all the sympathy which remains ae the solace of their mUfortuues, and drive the whole British people into 6trong and rapid ad* bo-ion to the Federal cause. n kwh Items' The Tribune’s special says thn letters of coiidoleuce from the Empress Eugenie to Mr*. Lincoln, although some time uiuce received by thn French Minister, have been detained by him—an evidence of ill fueling on Ids part. \Xo understand, any# tbe Augusta Con- etitulioualist, that the agents of tbe Gov ernment in Au|(ueta contemplate the im mediate establishment of two or three schools, for the purpose of educating the black cbildron. Between two and throe hundred papers are issued to negroes every day in Loui#- ville, allowing them to leave the city and State, for the purpose of obtaining em ployment elsewhere. A soup bouse has been established in Richmond, under tbe management of the U. S. Christian commission, aud is dis pensing an excellent article of soup to the poor of the city. A terrible ttalo of impoverishment is represented as existing in Virginia among the people, and,unfortunately the farmers generally are without implements or aoed necessary to produce crop# the coming season. Alabama ha* been divided into threo Internal Revenuo Di'itrlcU, but no ap pointments have yet been made of asses*- or# aad collectors. U was believed at the North on the dOth ult., th*t Gen. Breckenridge had succeed ed in reaching Texu*. A Washington dispatch of the -’^Olh says the sixty millions of dollars necessary to complete paying off thn army wa# r«*ady. Over half a million of the at>»ets of the Bank of Tennessee reached Chattanooga on Sunday pig lit last. Majof Williams, of the Uniou army, paroled about twelve hundred soldiers at Millerigeville, up to the 2Gtb ult. FOR SALE. A a “ Ui * ,ud ■731-U R. CARTER. A llOllSF, tour year : < Cuwa, with thdr calv iiluco. in UirarU. m-xi m jqn»vi-r*t SADDLE AND HAHNE88 £] wt*lxl lselixufixxt, To Swap, cld, fr.r two ffOvd Call at?;. Ml . Xilnb . JlehelT Clay. \\”K i:re now nrenarod to fu—linn thetmhHo* lion, saddle. A liberal reward wilt ha paid far the Jellra-T of the mule and thief, or foralthec toralthe/ aQmli For Sale, ^ jar* tine SnutT. .Iu ^affaleti ihltie BowlenNaiol (.'liauticUer Smokiai T. S. SPEAR iiueinaMat hi-old stand, center o' Broad and Unudolph street-. . WatcRen, Olooka and Jewelry repaired »» th* best inntiner, aud warranted. I. S. Ferepu# hav ina useftil artiole# helonglnc Jo iu«. will be suitably rewarded by returaia* thnu to toy store. ^ • une 2, f&ft.—rtf DENTISTRY. I )K. R. NOHI.K bavin, removad to kl> oM I • «umUu J.ne, baUdlat, ov.r Mr.Ruiur', J.wrlrj blur., and havlu pi-n.rvd hlta.,:r Willi ,1 nuud rluct of .old and itn foil, would ns peel ru 1 ly mdh-lt tho irntronaae of all wbp e t i-b to (aver him with a oitU. Fiwt room# on the 1 min. op Muirs. Artificial teeth M<i>|>li#d on short notice, on the he.*'to I rum known to the art. _M,y iw,.- t , K. N0>LK. CITY FOUNDRY. 'I'm; .11b.urib.ra wuuld >fw>wlfullj Infarm S- t hciv tr 1(111(1# Hint t he iiuuiiit L'niorkll* • hey have UKIHUI.T their FOI NDlt^, afa are now prupoxeu to do nny kind of' , A,-*T]\u*' <»t Hrav nr Iron: such ns 8uxar Mills ol #be meit lMPUUVKb PATTERN^ and any j’ra .*» ahiub we will WARRANT tb.d^ANDj SySi’V In k. T l l.I.r., It A IIK MILLS, GIN *h5a wnd any Mud ut mill work. V\ e will lunke auy kind of Mip'hiaery to or • lei ; Mich a- MAVV-M1LL.S, (iKJJT MILL ' and in Get mmj thing iu our hue. •a- lii councction with our buJne-*, we have '*"• PA ’ 1 II. >LI.oVw A RI: ."fob* «i*0l7:Wb ? NH ( SMLLKTS, Sl'lDliRH and I,Ills! ' ii a will .ii'li.11,r any tliln, in our tin. for ur^Ml'^ky t " 1,ll,r ’ l' r °duua, ut old PKIC!> .nerulel r " p,cl, ' ,1 0 aulioltad and promptly rORTRlt, JlclLIlIiNNY k CO.. May in. HW5.-U Coin i Daily Hack to Montgomery I ROM UNION SPHINOIS, 'IMUS uudordauad will eoramtaoa. on Mon- A day mnrnina, May 27th,.to run a Dally 1 .. .. UMOV. ,, UN Will (*UIIIH|( day mnrnina, May 27th, ti uaok trout liniou Springs to Mo o A *T!3r ,o r at the Oil Mill, onVoeite u 0 Salt, Salt. '|'l> cxi banfo lor LACON. LARD. FL0UH, A or pruduoe ol any dMoriotian. . Mavd U. M. RENPKOK k CO. szMaozj'nTxoN. 7CUN COI’ARTNKIISHIF hor.lofur. .,Ldu 1 mg, under the naiao and xlyla of Kovarvr I.awhon k Co, la thi. d.y diraolved bp mutnu cunsent. 9 Partie# huvlujr fuuds in our hands, and those owing Ur, will pleiuo cell fur settlement. .May» m ^*m',LA^Qn CAUTION. jfi A LL per.uaa art warnwl n,ain«t tradlarai J1 any nut.9 made payable to lay urdtr. er to me or hearer, aa lay porea aad paper, ware lakou Irom tbe vault iu Dr. Robert Oartai-a Drug Ktore durinu the raid. Any one havlaa rueb papera in their co.Hvloa will de see klndneaa by returom, thrin to me, or la ay ab sence te Mr. R. Carter. May 1. i«M. WM. L. WORNl’M. NOTICE. T U0S. J. STANFORD. Ne. Vi Bread St, U my duly autnuHird Ajrwit dunna my ah aeneefrum tha city, aRd fully repreeaata me and my internal. V WINTKIL uiayTi-lni Notico. L u rS.W'?r, M s ^?:s&", r ,T 4 |!: , * ui ;fe rewarded on returning the seme to our Btere. Also, any BOOKS belr.i ging to ns. The/ a of no aervioe to any one except ourselves, ai it is impossible to carry on our bnjineae witho AOBfi 4 COLLIKR, . Oolttabtn, Ami INS Uagle Drug Store. NOTICE. PIUIK C'KIjOITOKS. official and private, of the 1 let. Ueerte 11. Waddetl, Kib,t.jud,io' Rua.,11 county, Alabama, are hereby ootlfied tp Prevent tbe r olaima, lorthwlth, te tbe noder aitiaed fur aettleueut. May Itt-U .1. F. WADDELL. Wanted Immediately, A SSSSlSk'L.V rlSLV THRAbHINB *ivBSMiaffir*