Newspaper Page Text
jtocat department.
Thm-M iay Jnly 7, 1S70.
The Joufneu having the largest eircu
latiou is the official paper of the c< unty.
« ASII !
Again we rail attentimi to the fact
that wo are botf> uiiable and unwilling
Urn orwlit aytum. Ail that
we oomuime, ink, family sup¬
plies, laid workmen’s wages require the
cash—and hence we must Work on the
same basis or not at all.
‘ Hflkiimi) Hcuppkhnono Wink, for
Medicinal purposes, at
S.'C. 8HIVRRS.
• ♦ •
Patent (41 ass Preserve Jars at $1 j er
dozen ; Jelly Tumblers 60 cents per
dozen. Porcelain linod Preserving Ket¬
tles, Cheap ; Brass Preserving Kettles,
Lumps, plosivu Chimneys, Kerosene Wicks, and non-ex
Oil ; and all sorts of
Crockery aud Glass-ware, at Very Low
Prieet. “Call on STEDMAN.”
Melons.—W e heart! of a watermelon
being in town on Monday, yesterday
was the first time we had seen one this
season. A colored individual had the
oue we- saw yesterday. It probably
, weighed , , » ten . _____, pounds, and . ottered J
was at
the .very low price of 75 cents, they
will soon lie plentiful, when we hope
to he uble to enjoy an occasional slice.
Owing to the extreme irregularities i
of the weather, our inking apparatus 1
become so deranged as to produce a
very ugly impression on paper this week
—-But we hope 1 to be able to reconstruct
. . .
H in time lor our next.
Hain.—O n Sunday last'our town was
the sceuu of a terrific tli.nider storm, du
ring Which .uvcrul ............ perhaps l 5 <
or■ iiiori: 4 trees were struck , , hy the
Ughtuing, though we have heard of no
damage bring done, except by the
washing rain.
. Another heavy rain fell on Tuesday.
At the lihte ol this writing (Wednesday
Boo ) the ,ky J above is clear and beauti
i »I«1 , t the . prospect ol . o lino growing .
„ gootl. lioll, corn a ini coll, o.
ihouvh bile, looks well. God grant us
sood seasons (hrmt^iout the summer,
^r Wr arc n tlumuged il not ruined peo
llt!, I. in this section.
• -
| iiiAi Dinni.u.-—O ur associate, in his
sketch ol what he saw, heard
enjoyed during the.day nt the Cul
vetfon Ifist 11 u te failed to nay anything
about the sumptuous dinner voluntarily
nrcnuretl K- . . by trie . lathes , ol ... the vltnntv. .
11 3
We too, spent tin* day and > evening at
tl.j Institute, witnessed all the exumi
uatioiis, aud fidt gratified at the extra
ordinary progress made by the pupils
in the brief period of a few months.
Aud . , more than .. ever convinced .
we are
uf tbc great utility of tb« - converaa
tionul" mode of teaching, which is a
distinguishing characteristic peculiar to
this Institute, and its principals. The
Exhibitum at night ir was so largely titr*
r™?* w«wuWaooowl i liuwall w !S'r oulty
^ 6fi‘thn #fago: * * *
tSuffme to say that in our bumble
opinion the Culvurton Institute deserves
to be» aud is destined soon to become
one of the most popular Hehools of its
clues in Middle Georgiu.
We wore unable to hear all of the
speech of Col. Harris, at noon, or the
address of Mr. Piorce, at night, but
we heard enough of each to vouch for
tW uptness and good effect of them
Vhe July number of that excellent
p 0 i*# 0 dical for the juvenile masses,
BtivWa Weekly, J W Burke & Co.,
Macon, is on our table. We do not
Anew of any paper far young people
that can compare with it. The stories
written by Southern authors of reputa¬
tion, are alwaysiutrrefting ami morally
instructive. Every weekly number it>
Qiliil with choice and well executed en
gi livings, and every depart incut of the
ptiper displays ability, close and careful
attention aud s perl, ct know ledge of
what a paper for boys and girls ought
to be. Price only tw o dollar.', a year.
twiUhk.N lUbCURia.K —TMssterlmu
old sheet has recently been leased' to
Menus. Wooten A Roberts, l»oJ« practi¬
cal printers. Mr. Wooten has ioug
been in the office as tin employe**, and
Mr. Roberts s Anown rn this vicinity
us formerly an eu ployetiin the Journal
ofUeo. We wish the ne\* eoneei n great
success. ,
ITU.VIM.
Pike ettunty bus been visited by a
severe hail-storm.
VV A Hufi'is the President of the
Boat Club, of Macon.
Funners _ . Newton vr .
in county are
votieg their attention to the hay crop,
The guard house lot at Macon is fill
ed with &>g# in #an* owners* >
Suvtftiiiah” shipped 140 mocking-birds
to New York recently.
The will of the laty
ford, of Savannah, will ’require *" $7,500
worth ofstantps. * -*
All the iiriftouurs coi.fimid in True..
ebuoty jail, iuo.pt one eharged wit,
rtnmfeiyi-iicnpeil on Monday ukd.t •„ '
August a Elder, loth amendment’ • ,
t u
ol smy-five summers, was married on
the streets ol Newnan.
Nat Teagle, of Meriwether county,
reapetl fcb bushels of wheat from tw’o
aud a half acres, and on one select acie
42 bushels*
Asian, evidence of the boqefits of
printer’s ink the Dawson Journal cites
the fact tiiat the editors were out oi
eggs and spring chickens. Now they
are wholesale dealers.
Ben Butler, 15th amendment, has
sentenced by Judge Gibsou, of
to *“ ur y!‘ ar ** kibor for Grant,
Alexander & Co.. tor outraging a* color¬
ed child.
Barlow, who was sentenced to
b(: h , inRe d on the 1 st oi July, has been
respited by the.Governor until the t£ 8 th
July. The alleged grounds for the
Tespite is that the prisoner is not pre
pared to meet Ins God*
J rtUies Fitzpatrick denies that he has
been bribed to stave off an election in
chased-or Macon, and bribed, says that he influenced cannot be^iur
h conv.fctidni nor iglii, against
' 8 of 1 on any cousid
erotion, here or elsewhere.
W. E. Jackson has been re-elected
President of the Augusta Factory, and
Masai’s. Edwartl K 0 1 ho mns, J. B. Cum
" ;.
i lie report . of the year shows gross
earnings $l75,;lso 22 ; expenses 817,
U< 0 48; net earnings, 8127.773 73;
surplus profits, 8233,295 33.
ft is rumored in Savuunah that Dr.
appointed post-master in
1 • ‘^ • v • t • -t *
Mac<m interred only sixteefi .whites
and eight blacks during Ocnfctury. the month of
1{o8C llul
A m: „, j„ county is feeding Ins
cow on juniper berrieq to get her to
give gin an I milk.
A man in Savannah was lined for al
lowing u iho dangerous dog to go unmuz
zfeti on street and bite a policcumn.
Judge J. II. Jones, of Early measuring county, 114
has un e^r of green.corn
inches, »nd Weighing I'd ounttes, grown
'his year.
i weniy-olo oases of small-pox have
I»et n reported 1 in Walton county—elev- J
lire convalescent, , eight still confined ,. .
i n
f 0 their rooms, and ten have died,
The gentleman who mysteriously dis
appeared from Savannah, several days
»gu, has mysteriously U/ourtcen returned. of Now,
'* gi» years age, who
sold milk at the Bluff, has mysteriously J J
.. j
' r,,‘ oJure Rowtee, who liven near
Ribortun, sowed six busiiels of wheat
last (all ou old laud, without any ina
nure, from which he threshed 197 husli
/■. .
Ortiir.IvyA- , r\i<->*owYofettod«ab*t
three .quarters of « mile from Kingston,
near Bill Arp’s residence, in a beauti¬
ful grove, ami by a fine spring.
There are now about eight hundred
hands employed by the contractors of
the Bruitswiok and Albany Railroad.—r
Every effort is being made to largely
increase the force, with a view* of readi¬
ng the cotton belt of Georgia by
xt
Jehu W. Hart, of Monroe county,
was thrown from a wagon in Macon on
Saturday, and the wagon wheels ran
over hia left arm, which hud been ampu¬
tated belq w thort Ibowa and broke it be
tvveeu tlȣ
Last week, Miss Mary Teel, an ex¬
port and industrious weaver, who at¬
tends five looipa at Eagle* and Phoanix
Factory, No. 2, Columbus, wove from
tineq-to seven bolts of c oth per day.
which she earned upwards of fourteeu
dollars. Under the old hand-loom pro
tass, if a woman could weave as many
yards, she was held up as a pattern ot
industry.
We suggest to Kimball. proprie
tor of the Atlanta New Bra, the pro
Drifty ol offering a approaching p'fndum for fair, an
honest radical nt I*'"
rpi KPusntiou with Washington several weflde- county
an enr ol corn
veloned grains of wheat fjf;i growing fi upon
r ' tljr, *
The legislature will convene acfldurn iu At
lauta to-morrow, pursuant to
incut.
AUGUSTA MARKET.
— *-- July* 8, P. M.
Ot —The M»aik«'t opened quiet
at 17 3 4c. and closed dull al 17 l- 2 c.
THK HAMOliK WKI’KI.Y JOURNAL
Something is dawning New Under rh>: Sun. —A
nevv upon the life ol
woi^n- Hitherto she Jigs been called
upon |,! to suffer the ills of maukihd and
M - own besides. The frequent and
distressing irregularities peculiar to her
have long been to her toe ‘ direful
spring of woes'unnumbered.’ In the
mansion of the rich and in the hovel of
po,vf rtyajjik^*, y*f worqan 1 ms been the con
unknown patient victim of a thou sand
to man—and these with
? U M df |PJh soul, Lord, how long!’
™ e nor hath she cried,
* d*» ,; o>v u^.hour ol her redemption is
J JX |°'tv' '! til"! * U f' r B™btor-.Wo- ,!° '“. ore * fol ',?? r -
I' ,!,l \ *?, W, "> #n re *
8 P tctat ’ 10 n HrnggistS throughout the
laud, at SI.50 per bottle. In another
column of this newspaper will be found
some the Female intererting particulars concerning
Regulator and other infor¬
mation highly important to women, ui
Alabama Claims. —We are mfortued
that the inost pei tdjjfcont and unyielding
of the private citizens vVhb have claims
vs the British Government are Dr. J.
C. Ayer & Co., of Lowell, Mass*, the
manufacturers of medicines. They will
consent to nothing l ( . ss than that their
demand tor medicines destioyed by the
British pirates shall be paid in gold and
‘in dollars to the last cenr. They are
emboldened* by the itict that the de¬
struction of their goods by the English
in China and elsewhere (for where are
not that troublesome nation trampling
paid upon somebody full, ?) have hitherto been
in and they now say that they
shall he. They however propose this
Co-,. promise: Give us Canada aud we
will call it even, because we can then
send our remedies there without duty.
Washington News. - ’it
THE SYLVAN HILL
MINERAL SPRING HOTEL,
-------HANCOCK COUNTY, GA.
Is NOW OPEN T O THE PUBLIC*
The proprietor of this excellent wa¬
tering place having expended a large
amount of time, labor and .money in
improving the premises, is now pre¬
pared to accommodate* the Healfch
Stfeking public with every needful COIll
fort, together with the free and constant
use ot this all-healing water, pr mises
to spare neither time, trouble, or money
m his efforts to truly popular icsort for
the sick, white it confidently believed
that the water contains medicinal pro¬
perties unsurpassed by any spring in
the country.___
Read the foflowing oerti+ITeate. srgrn-rrj
oylwo This popular physicians:
?L fhy will certify tiiat we are familiar
“Sylvan w character-Olathe Mineral water of the
Hill Spring,*’ and have
been for several years, during which
period we have known of the cure of
many cases, in which other remedies
i.ui proved ineffectual.
As practitioners of medicine, w-e do
earn sfly rrcommend a trial of this
water in almost all chronic diseases.—
We oelievethis water contains salts.
sulphur, potash, and i ron W*r lltiVin.bt i» «»**• «A pul
poiicet proportions. anulysis, but feel confident
it to stiict of
that it contains curative properties uontaius all
the highest order. That it
thoso very impottant ingrudiouts which
enter into the co position of treatment
.wbiob will.ci.irc most of as,
vkffLjia kettte Jis#;'ascsVlach
which lmd baffled rr
0 „tiueut physicians) medical profession, ahd
the skill of the
w hich was quickly healed by the con¬
stant use of this water, internally and
externally, Alter a few weeks,use ot
it, Mr. G. W.Smith, the patient alluded
to, was entirely cured, leaving nothing
more than a very small scar, though the
cancel at oue time reached the size of a
sauctM*.
A young lady beiug sick of a disoi
dert d catamcma ., was directed by us to
use this water, and she was restored to
her usual health in a very short time,
is a most excellent remedy in all
offILliftihfiiry organs. We
knew of the cure of a case oT gravel iu
a single <lay. Ami we regard it as a
speciality lor female disorders of a ute¬
rine character. Ir is good for conges¬
tions, ulcers, etc., all which seem to
yield readily to its influence.
To ail these facts we cheerfully certi¬
fy, and we do most earnestly recom¬
mend its use by those afflicted with
elironic or acute diseases, eruptions on
the sAin, ami many other diseases not
herein named. It is a tonic, which wiil
give tone and strength so the sick. In
short we believe it to be equal to the
best compound of the water kind known
to ilie profession. Believing ;t contains
all the medicinal virtue here ascribed
to-it and ■ more loo, wo cheerfully re
eoiqitH ^llf MineralJwlrer. jid a liBeyrh yisp of the Sylvan
" ** A ”• y*
M D
Ample accommodations will he pro
\ ided for all who may visit the
w liether for a da\, a week, a month, or
tiC.MICU. It. "hi- W miniii SMI 111, / it rop • r.
- .
July 5, 3m P. O. Sparta, Ga.
I djrmal patter.
that eighteen medicinal hundred years ago the
value of plants was appreciat¬
ed. In the Old Testament botanical
remedies are repeatedly recommended,
but in no passage of sacred history is
man recommended to swallow calomel,
or blue pill, or any other mineral pre-
4 *aration. The sick were directed to
eat herbs to strengthen them, to plirify
them, to heal them, to restore them.—
In that day the art of making vegetable '
extracts medicines was unknovv. The herbal
were mere infusions.
It was reserved fora later age to unite
the sanitary essences of tonic, aperient
and autibilious roots, barks, and plants,
with an active stimulant. nnd thussecure
their rapid diffusion through the debili¬
tated or disordered system. The crown¬
ing triumph of this effective mode of
concentrating and applying the virtues
of medicinal vegetables was achieved in
the production of Hoate iter’s Stomach
Bitters. Never before had a perfectly
pure alcoholic stimulant been combined
with the expressed juices'of the finest
specifics ol the vegetable kingdom.—
Never yet. though eighteen years ffh^e
elapsed since its introduction, has this
great restorative been equalled. It is
taken at all seasons, in all climes, as the
most potent safeguard against epidemics
as 'a protection against all unhealthy
exhalations that produce debility or be¬
get disease; as a remedy for intermit¬
tent s.tul other malarious fevers; as an
appetizer ; as a sovereign cure for dys¬
pepsia ; as a general tonic and invigor
ant,* as a gentle, painless aperient; as
a blood depurent; as a nervine; as a
cure for bilious affections ; as a harm¬
less anodyne; and as the best defence
of health under unfavorable circum¬
stances, undue such as sedentary pursuits,
bodily or mental exertion, hard¬
ship, privation and exposure. lm
\ W I 7 ANTED-AGENTS - $75 lo $201)per month
everywhere, main ami female. to introduce the
Genuine Improved Common Sense Family SEWING
MACHINE. This machine will stile' 1 , hem, fell,
tack, qn ll, curd, hind, brnid and emborder in a most
superior manner- Price only $18, Fully warranted
f<>i five years. We wi’l pay $11100 for any machine
that will sow it stronger, m re b*'a , ’tiiul or more elas¬
tic Brant tiian ours. It makes the ‘plastic Lock
Stitch.’» Every se. ond t-t«U h can be cut aud vtiH (he
cloth cannot be pul Id apart without tearing it. We
pay agents Irom 75 to $3C.) per iimuih and expenses
ora eoniinissio i from which twice that amount can
be made AddressSECOMB & Ol), Pittsburg, Pa;
Uos*on. Mas*, or St. Louis, Mo ~ *
CAUTIO —Bowareofall agents selling machines
under the sitino name as ours, unless they can show
a certificate of agen *y signed by u- We shall not
hold ours- Ives responsible for worthless imu-hines sold
by other pari es, and shall p 'oMcule all part es either
sellinjjor rising machines under this name to the fall
extent of the iaw. unless such machines were obtain¬
ed from us or our agents. !>o not be mijio ed upon
by parii js who copy our adverti einent and circulars
^ad oiler machines at a less price. mhlO
A GENT3'-WANtEli evF ywhere to sell llif.
American KNITTING 1W vCHINE, the only
practical Family Kailting Machino over invented.—
1 *mc*» $25 Will kuii 2l),0W0 sli'clies '•very miimla
Andrew AMERICAN KNIT IT VQ MACHINE
CO Boston, ill or St. Louis Mo mil 10
L’ablnet-Shop .. , . & o tt Upholstering i i i •
rpne • k-. , 1 . ■ ml<*i * nmM»g
I the public th^t he is still ea lying on the !
CABINET AND DiuioLSTFUi
-it lii:, sit |> next J. • < 1111 * J* airing, Reno*
1 >rer*»r <1 »o • «® nul " — Furniture, aud ail
n.w
c't work, at short notice
aieo |)tep ; ithd for alt sorts of C*IN repairing,
fillit.g Brushes &c
June 23 lm S t RTbMIT.
©rSinatij’o TWmmiscincuts.
GEORGIA —HAMCO K COUNTY
\\ Vy »IIHRHAH catioit ill t|»« WMlism Opi e‘ lliitwr ol rbe hn-4-fi.*jl Ort.^ury kit of ap.tfi- aaitj
(Anty, praying h« that oht iu <-ll.ilMHtt'-do of im,u« >u t«-ruib from of
i. w, 'hat i«»»y t-m is
rtu. further hdm'uisir,tlifn of the e#<ate of John V*
llury^r, Ulo . f *^iwd . oumy.dee’d.
,*l*hi m* ur*.* B eiefi'tY to cite all jhtm'Ii.-j ialofi* toil,
kiudrrd ai*d cr» > dii<«is ui show chu»o if nuy they cun
why llt» faid Willinni Huqier ahould not bs diniuiimed
Loin she taint u aut’.tii u of tlio estate of iulertuto, at
u regular lc r iu of U Couil of Ordmury to be hold ui
and for s ^id county ou the First Monday in October
next. t-ignaturo
Givrh under iny hand aud official at
ffice, tl»i“ 4th dav of Jnly IniO. LITTLE
Jy 3m THOMAS I Ordinary.
(nCOrgifl —Hancock County —
1~K)l; R IVEKKS alter dnte appiieatiou '♦ill be mude
JH to tin* boute Court and of Orbinary lot at of *aid the county vrilage for of leave Cul
to sell a or near
ycrum. Je.w occu, ird by Dr. J. Mcllulleu; 6aid
nrodertV helongiug lo tl»e estate of fames II Mid>
diebrooks, deed H. L. MIDDLE BROOKS,
andJ/tsT ulDlU EBKOOKS,
Jmiv is Ailur’ra Jiui II fttiddl, brooks.
GEORGIA- -HANCOCK COUNTY
To nil whom it may conceru :
I Ol»N R ltINlON having in prope- form ap
frf piieJ for pvrmnui m lelierS of adm nixtralion
on (hr < »ial« of YLJiena S. Bmts, late of s .id coun
ly. «“c*il, creditors and
This is to cite all ami siugnlar Ibe
next of kin of Aipheus S. Bulla ro be and appear at
my olfieo wilblti ihe lime pro eribed by law. lo
shdw chus-j, ir any they can. why permanent ad
, 0 ! lustration rlioolti noi In granted ^aid applicant, on
Wild Alpous S. Bulls* cslate
W*i .»wii.\ iiaud aid offieiil signature at oifice
• lii- itu ISdi day ol June. 187i*
VlloM.LS I LITTLE. Oidnary;
Georgia, Hancock l oiml.v
ORDINARY** OFFICE /
Sparta* Ga., June 1, 1870 (
l’i«»p"s;ils fo» the repairing of the ’ ouvi I loos,- wjl
ne recejv-d until m* iotti day of lln-prestu 'uoi Mi.
Plaus and sfusoific-tioim for ibe rrpnirs can b een
ni U ex«iiiii,ed a: ibis Office
___TUOAIV8 1. LITTLE. Lbd’y.
fluiro k counly.
, BUGGIES!
BUGGIES!
"\\T F. «i- off.iiug (i ni Bargains »o those iu want
W aii*e<e. We have
/mi'ji ai'iSHijas ©5)® 1 Bass
wh*rt» wDi *-it v^»y »ui ihe
rt.ll M.4ejunimo them «i ih« M» w*ki Homm- su
u ^ . co i n KN a WATKINS.
M Jfc h *J 4 ti
KEHIUMS!
====T^‘
HANCOCK JOURNAL. i
l
• 1 i
THIRD VOLTJMB. fg
•* . * - f 4 ff, A | j ( -g V. .' '* H
t
Cam men ping on the 98th «tav of April, 1870^.
r. - 2 a f
(l r (jfrjboiii) to ill
Flattered by the unprecedented success of the Hancock Journal, during the first
two years of its existence, aud believiug that a still brighter prospect lies in the
* ■ * :
.
immediate future, we have determined to offer as an inducement t
# §f atom* and ihstful 6 ift fa rath
in order to extend the circulation of this excellent Weekly, and inersase its
til
usefulness, we are making arrangements to procure a list of' Premiums, to con¬
sist of
Iff 1
PINE WATCHES AND GOLD PENS,
One of which will be seut free to each Agent and Patron, according to the fol¬
lowing plan : %
To each Agent sending five names aud $15, a splendid, large size Gold Pen,
with Ebony holder. .' '
To each Agent sending two names and $G, a small size Gold Pen and holder*
And to each Subscriber, new or old, sendiug his own ntpne and $#tn advance,
:« >^*'%*«* •...
a good Diamond Pointed Gold Pen. February 24, 1870;
—. —
a I T7
Wakrenton, Ga., April 1, 1870.
We beg to call your attention to our large Stock of r
spring anb Stammer CSooto
now opening and receiving-at our storo, and invite you to give us an early call.
These Goods were purchased recently during the great Dry Goods Panic m New
York, at prices, in most cases, BELOW THE IMPORTERS’ COST; and we
now offer them lower than they could have beeu sold at any time ,irl the past,
ten years.
O U II
^tt»» tenets §ty*ttmtnt
. . e vp ?.»• Vr K «*ntktff^!^ned hi Price, having been select
is more attractive than Jm : aud we only ask an ex
«1 with tl„. other e.tabli.l.mei,t ill thi8 part
of QUANTITY, QUALITY, PRICES, &c.
'^VVe also call special attention to our varied stock of WHITE HARDWARE, GOODS, ready¬ CUT¬
made CLOTHING, IIATS, CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES,
LERY, &c., all of which we will sell at as near specie prices as possible.
Yours respectfully, HEATH & ALLEN.
HEATH <k ALLEN
Prints, 8 to 12 1-2 cents English lot* the Bareges, best. Bleached 1(1 cents and anil upw&tgs. BrdwirOo^^^if p to 26
cents. ;
Lenoes, Mozanibiques, Popliifttt, Jacortets, Pcrcalcn, Piqucw,
IN WHITE AND COLORS.
Figured Grenadines, Japanese Silks, Organdie Muslins, Lawns,
b Black aud Faiicy Silks, White Goods in great variety.
iiasierg. (Glows, ^tia«dltw(biris,
CORSETS. HOOP SKIRTS, SHAWLS AND ARABS,
parasols, Umbrellas, ©ranks mtb tlalises.
A LVRGE ANI) EXTENSIVE STOCK OF
UKNTM’ AND L4DIES’ BOOTS AUD »MOE»
Bought of Manufacturers aud Warranted to Wear.
JSJO mobk HIGH PRICES 1
liKEENIIACKSAT PARI
T. MAHKWAIrTKRS
MABBI.E' "WOEK 8 ,
Htoad Street near lower Market, Augusta. Ol.
Keep on b ind and ready for sale, a large wleeiion,
and olso furuidies, to mder, all »ort« of
MARBLE MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES,
etc. (*tc#
work (hr the eouutry carefully boxe ' andfchip
AJi
P d
ej»t. 3d—U-
3
Uissolulioti of bopnuncrslpp
f|i [ If E COPARTNERSHIP heretofore extHtlng
b«tw<* n Rogeia and Cfmpple was Ibis day dis¬
solved by inulual ciiwei.t
The uu allied badness of th- firm will be. nettled
by cither p.vty. JOHN J. ROGERS,
June fi; 1870 lm WII 4AM CHAPPLE
BROWN’N IIOTCL.
OPPOSITE PASSENGER DEPOT.
MACON, GA.