Newspaper Page Text
i.
iaa MOHKOB
13“ James A. King has lost two bay
mare Moles, sixteenhauds high. They were
atolen from i»U plantation teg miles - below
Newton, oh the 27tK inst. He is offering a
reward of twtiily-five dollars lor ^bc recov
ery of said Moles, or one hundred ^dollars
for the thief, with evidence to convict, bee
his ddvcrtiseinmt.
C3?“ We understand that our city author
ities have received orders from Headquar
ters, to arrest and take up all freodmen liv
ing in idleness in the city bounds. We no
tice that our worthy Marshals are fully dis
charging their duty in this “ laudable uiiiler-
talung.” Look out, ye freedmen, and
chose whom ye will serve for the ensuing
year.
New Dkt Goods Store.—Win. Hu h &
Co.,ot the Wholesale House of Atlanta,
have established a braueb business in'this
city, at the building oh Washington Street,
formerly occupied by S. Polfus. They, have
a full supply of diT goods, clothing, boots
and shoes, fancy notions^ ifcc.,. «fcc.. All of
which they propose to sell to our citizens on
as reasonable terms as any other house in
the .city. Rea l their advertisement in
another column.
rvr« SOUTH A WX>
OOCTK1KE ■
it is amusing to tho people of the South
n read the account of their viewc some
times given by the sage reporters of the
Northern press. At a time when the trade
of politics has at most coated, when the pco-
,1c are endeavoring to adjust themselves to
•lfeir nc# relation*, and torsive something
of property ami honor for themselves and
their children oiiW the universal wreck,
:hev are represented by these observing
tnvellors as wholly engrossed in conspira-
i-ies-and diplomatic intrigues against the
public order. The merchant in his counting
house, the planter in ills fields, the minister
iu his pulpit, the matron in her parlor, the
easital acquaintance.in the cars, drifting no
one knows where o- ".-hither—everybody is
caballing, and invoki ig France, England,
and Mexico, Tom, Diels; ami II»rry, to inter
vene and re-establish the Confederacy.
An explorer who represents the Cincinna
ti Commercial, lias been diligently investi
gating the condition of affairs in our State;
especially in the upper counties, and lias dis-
SHOHT PATENT SERMON.'
covered a plot there of the most dangerous gon—so you goes long carousing and steal
ALBANY. AND BRUNSWICK ROAD.
We desire to call the especial attention
of our citizens to the above important en
terprise. Forthc past four years this work
has been .comparatively abandoned, lint at
present, there are no formidable obstacles in
the wav. We may, with propriety, allude
to the importance of the work, particularly
•when it involves the interests, both of the
merchants anil planters, throughout tins
Section of the State. There is no subj
present, in a commercial' point of view, that
is of deeper interest to onr merchants and
planters than this contemplated route, an
in this conviction we will make a few figures
which we think will approximate, very near
ly, toa correct calculation. In I860, Albany
received about thirty-five thousand hales ot
cotton. Should this road he built,-she would
probably receive, annually, fifty thousa .
Now let us see whit would he-the expeiis-
of the shipment of this cotton over the Cen
tral Road, as compared witli the route pro
posed. The distance from Albany to Savan
nah, via. Macon, is 300 miles. Tin- distance
from Albany to Brunswick, direct, is 124
miles. The advantage in distance, to Bruns
wick, is 175 miles. The freight on a h.il
of cotton in I860, weighing 500 pounds, from
Albany to Savannah, was, say, three dull tr
end twenty-five cents. The freight oa the
cane, from Albany to Brunswick, direct,
would be, say, one dollar an.l fifty cents, o
less than half by the upper route. The a 1
vantage then, in favor of the Bran wi k
Road, would he one dollar and seventv-ii
cents on each hale of cotton. Now, sli u
this direct route be built, Albany Would re
ceive within herself, fifty thousand b.il
while Americus, Cuthbdrt, Knfiiula, F-
Gaines, and other points, would add fifty
thousand.more, making a total of one lm *-
dred thousand bales that would be shipped
from Albany over this direct route to llru
wick, and would he a saving of one hundred
and seventy-five thousand dollars to our
planters oa a single crop. Then kid to till
the up freights on-groceries, dry goods, hard
ware, Ac., one hundred and seventy-tivy
thousand dollars, more, saved to our mi r
chants and planters every year. Isnotthi
bettor saved than lost? Then include as .i
profit to tho Road, the amouat received from
passengers and extra freight, one hundred
and fifty thousand more, making the grh . d
total of halfa million dollars yearly. The
who can say that the stock would not lie
emfe and profitable investment ?
Build this Road, and y6u connect Albany
with Montgomery, by tho Montgomery and
Enfknla Road, and thence direct to Vicks
burg, on tho Mississippi, making nn “air
Mae” from Brunswick, throughout the who
route. Then who can contemplate the great
commercial advantages to be derived by
trade and travel over this important, and
may say, almost indispensable railroad com-
manioation? Indeed, I may say, that the
largest portion of the travel that now pass
over onr Northern rente*, wonM take th
shortest, most direct and most accessible 1!
from New York to our Western Markets.
■ The foregoing calculation in figures, may
ttot correspond precisely with Railroad
' freight tables, bat we believe that they will
in the tnain, he found very nearly correct.—
Wc wolild respectfully invite information on
tho subject from those who are best vers d
In such matters. In glancing over our files
) for 1859, wc are reminded of a meeting of
ear citizens, who then appointed Provision
*1 -Board, \Hioseduty it was to farther the
A'ljcctS oftliis contemplated and much need
proportions, ns it ramifies through “ the
lately insurrectionary States.” He calls the
attention of the North to the sudden interest
of onr editor* in the assertion of the Monroe
Doctrine as a most suspicions circumstance.
It is not that we care forthc* Government of
the United States, that we desire the vindi
cation of its honor, hut we tire .looking for
the advent of French legions. We-are ear
BT A FKEEDMAN. * *
BnEOBENMy tefcaiiftn dese. weeds.:
Depart, ye cusses into everlasting fire,
prepared for the Devil and his angels.”
Now, my bredren, you are all one, dat am
to say, you are all. alike. ’Fore you was
free, you had good boraet^you wore con
tented and happy—you’re old mjNsa take
good care oh you—he treat you well in sick
ness and in health. He raise your chiHcns,
pay do Doctors’ hills, and clothes and feeds
vou, and give yon piece .of ground, to tend
for yourselves, den you had- notin' to care
for, you were all happy, • But soon yon hear
you were all free, den you turn fool and
leave old massa, and wander off. Yon soon
gits into bad company—yon goes to steal
ing, and one vice brings on anoder until you
gits into trouble. Now dis am .de conse
quence ob.de text. Bimcby old massa come
long and say, “ Jacob; ain’t you gwiuo to
come hack; if you come hack I treat you
well. But Jacob say, “No, massa, 1’zc
free now.” Now dis am not do prodigal
BRIEF AND BRIGHT ITEMS.
, negroes of Atlanta, Georgia,
haveor-
The q „ . „ ■
ganized a benevolent society.
Tho first and greatest thing in rhetoric is
to have something to.say.
As colleges get mid, it is but natural that
they should lose their faculties.
Quebec is much afflicted wish small-pox,
egrlet fever, and measles. • i
The slaughter of wild-cats in Connecticut
s said to be terrific. . - • f *
An African traveler describes the sand
storms as only examples of an air-apparent.
THE MEXICAN PEOPLE ON THE
EMPIRE.
The New York- Times’ correspondence,
writes cleverly of what ho saw on.the .road
from Puebla to Mexico. We quote a portion
of ’ hi* letter referring to . th? temper and
wishes of tho Mexican people, of whom we
are so anxious on this side of the Rio Grande
to rid of their tyranny 1 The letter hears
date the 2nd instant:
We were constantly stopped and asked if
the Empress were coming. Streamers made
ofliandkerchicfs of all sorts of colors were
depending from strings stretched across the
* . T-V _ tUzl 1,.<»« l, n ,l
TO"
counts,
.The Best” is the a 1 " 1 ”*™ 1 ? "i"!Lif I dians, no w anil thenplaying’ to weary the
new weekly soon to be started u» N. zorw. t j mc awa _ while waiting for their Majesties.
English papers say the flying-palace, in We found the streets of Mexico also orna-
A l.,3,lin »is the sensation scene on which mented. Bnt the sovereigns have not yet
made their appearance. I wonder if those
c, poor peasants are still waiting, and if the
Nineteen little hoys, skating on the »t. I h a „<ls are still playing oil tlie road. Ishould
Lawrence, were earned away on a cake o1 not bonder if they were, for here people have
-mil with iliflicultv. rescued from drown-1 ^ patient wily of endurance that is almost
incredible. Would it not he as well, how
'VE HAVE JUST ftp
' AND Uoty
ing, ami keeps in trouble, and dis am de
consequence of de tex. Biuu-hy you begin*
to reflect-—you nay l’il gohacVfp 60 massa,
so straight way yoii go, and when yon gits
dar, you say, “ Well, old massa, I cum, I
gwiue to stay will you now.” Bntoidmas-
sasay, “No, I,done wid you. I done got
notlicr. I no want you. When you was
wid me you wouldn’t stay, and when I went
Miss Thompson, “Down East,”-savsthat ever, for the Emperor and Empress to see
’ * - f “- —ay cohsidcr that their snbjccts he properly informed and)
every unmarried lady of fifty may i
that she has passed the Cape of Good Hope. „ot be made to waste so much time merely
..re- . ,1-m-inrl I for a sight of their persons. Iliad forgotten
Mechanical labor is.in I tha*rime is nothing here, and n*ty add that j
alveston Tex^s. Carpenters w ct iiomfivt ftg j 0 as t j ine is not money in Mexico, as
to-six dollar* per day, and more are wanted. fce „ c i se , Mexic o cannot progress, in 1
There has been a thaw in tho iee at Cron- civilization. Expensive triumphal arches
stadt; hut in tlie south of Russia the cold is have been erected in the streets here, and
intense. At Odessaa man was lately frozen considerable money must have been wasted,
to death in tlie streets. | yfould it not be as well to spend that same
OFFER FOR SALEI
3.000 yards English 6-4
30 balsa Macon Sb« lit|
SO •• Osnaburp,
2.000 yards EngtUb S,r w
100 pounds Lint, Tkm^
, S08 “
ger to swarm to the standard of the welcome j f or you, you wouldu’t come, so now you can
invader, whom we would ; 1 ally furnish with - depart. 1 no want you. So dis am de con-
recruits, information anil supplies. j sequence of the tex. Den you depart, 7ou
In fact, as the sapient correspondent goes j teels bad—you gits into frolakiu, and steal-
on to sav': j ing, and do all manner of sinful tilings.—
“A foreign war is the dream of tho South. Do officers takes you and puts you in de
Her people.vainly hope and believe that,! j )r ; son> an d puts do halls and chains on yon,
with a foreign army and . navy at their j #n( j begins to suffer. You never heard
hacks, supplied ivilh forelgn fi.nds. and wlU,j #f forc yo „ Sl!t froc> f0
vinplovcrrto distribute that paper ill Spring-. . . , - .
field. Three of these bovs arc now cashiers He stopped, and wc had a good opportunity
of hanks in or near Springfield” ofseeing him. Ho looks better, fatter and
. . . happier than lie did'four months ago. lhe
“Jeanme,” said a Gaineroman to his e , ( : o ‘ rl wa8 composed of about twenty-five
“ - Hemp „
HicliHf,
“ s * k Cud,
“ Tarred 1,^
1,600 gr. gross Bone >
ill'* possibility offunlier foreign complica
tions, success will perch on the broken stan-
tiard of the sunny clime, and that the dead
Confederacy of the past would become a liv
ing reality of the present. This motive lies
it "the bottom of tlie persistent anxiety of the
Soul hern people to vindicate the majesty of
.he Monroe doctrine.”
Now we may he exposing our own igno
rance in the premises, yet candor compels us
•o say that this fine spun and artificially ad-
steil theory is quite a novelty to us—nay,
avow onr conviction that it is made whol-
ont of imported cloth. Sensible people
the South do not care a button for the
anroc Doctrine, except in so far as it as-
rts the rights of the various organized
tales of this ehatineut to live under govern-
-nts of tlie own selection. Thisis the only
itnl pri l.-ipk- in that doctrine—a principle,
'is- assertion of which was net hel l to he
.uspieioufoiith.it m -marable day when it
a n.- >e!.u:Vte.l i i the Declaration of Indc-
■i.-l«i'*c— a principle justly dear to a free
vi’ebee - ise it is the very foundation of
p-ahlii-anisTa. There is no personal liber.
• u-nrtli the name that is not guaranteed
IV the liberty'of the State. When undcr-
tuo.1 in this sense, the Monroe Doctrine has
!.-orates everywhere at tile South, hut
Southern lawyers arc -reaping abundant j where every one imagines lie knows where
' • • 1 ' ’ irsevering President is,'that I am yet
dis am de consequence of do tex, which says,-
“depart, ye cusses.” Den you try* to
pray, hut your heart ain?» in de .tight plac<?.
Yon pray wid one hand and steal wid de
totlier, and dc Lord won’t jisteil to you, so
you finds yourself forsaken..' ; Your old mas-
sa won’t have you iu dis wbrid, and de Lord
won’t have you in de totlier. Den do tex
come* in and says, “ Depart, ye cusses into
Hasting fire, prepared for the Debit and
liis angels.” Now, my hredren, you arc all
blind leaders of de blind,” and yon sec dat
all dis mn de consequence of de tex. Now
what am deyankccs; dey say do want you
free, and dey givinc to give you land and
houses, and stock, and ail dat sort of thing,
pecuniary harvests by thcircliargcs ill draw- the persevering 1
ing up petitions iu behalf of Soutliprn appli- to find the first man who knows, or attempts
cants for pardon. One attorney, of South I to guess, or wishes to know. I am still to
Carolina, has forwarded upward ofoiiejmeetthefirstmanwhoadvocatestheresto-
tlunfsand petitions to the Attorney-General’* ration of the qldstatc ofthings. Every.one
office, for each of which he received tho fee I is doubtful, and full of fear ns to the stabili-
of twenty-five dollars. I ty'of the present system. These poor Mcxi-
SrSiJSIfSrS.
200 reams Note, Cij,
* Taper.
lin Express says there are at tho oisposral of rouf; i ly that „ aro rat her amazed to see'
inon- , . • c i tl* nflute «.<•
the government in Ireland, about ten t..o«-, ^ is - ' ow forward . The c fVorls of.
sand men, of all arms-compns.ng twelve Govcrnm S CIlt To try to do justice to all,'
hundred and sixty artillery, wit aI1(1 to , (ush the eoimt^- ahead, is so new, so,
Armstrong guns; twenty-two hundred and a wa of proceeding, that tlicyj
eighty cavalry, and nearfy seven thousand “ a ^, 1 l anl , y that it can Fast. As to
in?antry-which can be augmented, tl|em ;, ita iL movements, battles ami yicto-
essary, by the Royal Engineers and military ^ hang N g and quartering, and the where- J
traln ' ahouts of the Republic of Mexico, the people;
Omnibuses os tiie Misstssirri Rivke.— 0 f New York know all about it. Theyj
The diftcrcnt railroad companies at St. Louis know al*o vvlicn the Emperor is packing.—,
i have commenced running their huge four- They kuuw also how much he takes with
hat don’t you blieve’uin. Dey are ilecci * horse omnibuses, loaded with passengers, him. They also know when the French are i
■' ‘ ' ' ' ' ' * across the ice-bridge. The event is inter- going away. But here all these great events
citing as one which does not occur once in arc hi a midst ol darkness, and nobody know s
many years. There is no doubt that, if iron anything about them,
tracks' were laid, the steam locomotives —«
could cross with equal safety. 83” Tlie flower of youth and beauty’s 1
For Palestine.—A Maine paper states pride mingle with statesmen and diploma-'
were not conv
rear. it vv
hey ever learned.
fill; dey steal your liat and your shoes, and
your money, quicker dan you can wink, and
den if you look cross-eyed, dey will knock
you down and stomp you. Derc heart am a
rock, and derc'mouth am a flame of fire.—
Dey don’t care no more for you dan dey do
fur dc Dehil. Dey are dc angels oh de De-
bil, and derc hind am de “everlasting fire,”
as spoken of iu de tex. So hab notin to do
wid ’am, hut turn from your wickedness and
be like de Prodigal son, and dc Lord will
-rtedtoitlast week or jhlcssyou. If y*n don’t, you will suffer de
tlie lirtt political lesson - consequence ob dc tex. Amen.
A Recruit from the Grave.
that a colony of fifty families* principally I tists in tine genial warmth of social inter-
from that State, is to embark l'or Palestine course in Wa
'ashington society this winter to,
in July next. They propose Jo settle at | an extent never ‘before witnessed—says a
Jaffa, the ancient Ji,, _ ‘ ’ *
have been purchased, aiiil they will 'carry . , . _ ...
out with them Yankee implements, with a ^ er fii? ro . twent y colored Bapti.t
view to resuscitate the great and long slum-1 Churches m Illinois, and lo pastors to them,
boring resources of that once splendid land.
Whether this il.nt.iiio should he enforc-
, - . ,, 1 The war has lirodiiccd inanv strange sto-
el by tke power of arms, os a cfiostion con- ^ but few ,; nsu , ar thaI , the j- (>1!ow .
crr?nng winch venous opinions will be en- one? related by CoL Ellis, late of tlie
tertainrd. There ir ay be some who wonhl First Missouri Cavalry, in a St. Louis paper:
welcome the contingency of a foreign war, A few day. after a\icrcely contested bat-
m.- r .i . ,1..
with a coucili itory policy at home. In the an d' came up to a spot where the rebel dead
contest of one'if the Great Powers it would were buried. In one place the hair of a
The Turkish Government has placed the |
telegraphs in Turkey under the control of j
the po*t*otfice.
The Belgian Government is about to pur
chase the Grand Central Railway of that
country.
Tlie liest dressed woman in Paris is said
to he Madame Mettcriiich, tho Austrian
Ambassadress,
\ Prussian countess has gone crazy, in
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
PUBLIC LAWS,
ORDINANCES, &o.
WILL be ready for delivery to subscribers within
five days from the adjournment of the Legislature.
Pamphlet containing, -
1 t. The new Constitution, and public ordinances
so l by the late Convention.
Kreedmen*« Code” as
10,000 pounds HcalockC^pr^
10,000 •* “ 8d,
6,000 *• • Glae,“ i-
10,000 **• . . Grind Slonei,
300 dozen Padlocks,
1.000 Powder Canister*
200 Assorted Paint Br«i* I
100 die llclret,-
60 brace »..d Biifj,
20 Broad Axes,
60 Felling **
26 Hand *•
200 natekez, arson fj,
100 Foot Adjci,
3.000 Cbissel?, assortti,
200 Shoe and Saddler Euid
200 ^rawiog'Caifes,
20 Front,
50 Hand Hammers,
079 Planes, assorted,
373 Hand Saws—fall u
s and Spin I
may be pasted i
dolla s. or three co- 1
pics for five dollars. Copies sent by mail. postage
- „ 0 prelitniinu ies.
kind of h„sinc*s, involve a terrible dentine- » Iho Ci.nclinal Archbishop of-Cliambcry I TU. «l«m. ,iU n.«„r of much iu-
tion of pliant life, and would either multi- of ley it j, Sco, there a dead rtb rcathu.g haJ| issuc< j ;l p ;lstor al letter against Frecma- lcrc ** to J w cUsJ ? 3 ; . l<rs , on8 during the work am
----- i-» nut tor Mnniethinif; let s.sec wliat lie wantN. . * . - - i'- I- requested to send their orders accompanied by thei •
60 dozen Shovels a
3,000 gross Screws, aisortd, I
299 pounds Finishing S»2>. |
127 •* Clout
3,000 papers Tscla Ircati
-75 pounds SpaaiiU Srova, |
75 « TurkejAatol
liiy the piiMiehnnlen* now so crushing, or g onc^a ^o otFo^oo in par- f 3"^: «
.jlae involve i ^vi ;r.il baakraptes. It would mogt rec klessiicss,. the cavalrymen took hold tIcalar * ,bnl we lun y know what number of copies it m
59 %
most recklessness,, the cavalry
effectually banish the returning reign of civ- 0 f the man’s hand, and hauled the body out
i justice and reinttate Mr. Stanton with his- of the grave, the loose dirt faUing back’ into
martial law instead. It would give hew the shallow hole. Soon aftef the man be-
, , • . gan to stir and manifest signs of life, to the
pleas and new currency to that Fanaticism f lltcr aston i s bment and hofrors of the rcser-
which is now feeling tho trench int edge of rtctioilists. The man was taken by* his res-
reason—a weapon mightier than the sword, cuers to their tent, and was rubbed down,
and is retreating however slowly and sul* washed off, and in a few days became as
h.„ly toward it* nativt* ab«,U-*. However “S™* 1^1 'V'™ ^
A Crime to Beo.—A man, in London,
has just been sent to prison, for seven days,
by the Marlliorough-strcet magistrate, For
begging of the Prince of Wales.
A company has been organized in Spain
for the purpose of laying a submarine tele-
iraph cable bet ween Cuba and the United
States.
1 c necessary
. may
publish. (
C. J. WELLBORN, !
W. II. HUNT.
MilleJgeville. G%., Jan. 31. 18*50. I
.. - . , , . , he was stunned hv the passage of a shell,
b.ttcrly our people may complain ot the lm- which kuotkcd hi , n senseless. He was piek-
miliations to which they are exposed, and ed U p among the dead and buried like the
of the jealous hostility which they are still rest. Notm scratch was found on hi* body,
regarded, they have no desire that the flames He said that he had joined the rebel army
of a new war should break forth before the a ,“. J Ncdc-rals long and well, but as
. . , ,, , , tins was Ins second appearance on earth, he
ashes of tlie old are chilled. | would now join the-Fcderals and fight for
So for as Mexico is concerned, we do not, them. He accordingly enlisted in tho First
hesitate to express our conviction that the j Missouri, did a great deal of tough rnarcb-
Monroe-doctrine wnuld.be perverted if ap. > n ff an ‘l hsrd.fightmjp. aiid last^ fcieptember
Messrs. Cassell & Co., London, are about W m 7? I r*l i
to start a new weekly paper, “The Work-
ing Man: A Weekly Record of Social and |
Industrial Progress.”
Tlie Emperor of the French, whohnsbeen Wholesale Hanna of Atlanta,
declared to >0 the greatest “journalist” of *
the day, has taken tivo shares hi the new TTAV
paper which is to lie started wjtli a capital 1« *<
of ono hundred thousand francs, in ten ‘ UCC °P
share*.
• die 1 to such a case. Mexico is not- entitled
to tfie naniqof an organized State. It has
h ten for half a century a eluos. It has had
no politics bnt the wars of eoiitcndiug fac
tion*. Tt lias had no law hut the sword.—
•Let the Indian President and the Austrian
E:np*. ror—the one usurping power now that
his constitutional term is eiiiltsl, tlie. other
ed enterprise. Pcrbap- some of that corn- m lint iining order, by the bayonets of
tntttec$an enlighten Us and our citizens on
the subject. It ftdno tothc cojnmmi'ty that
they shonld be heard from. : Wer gaid this
nutter of the highest common Ui jinpor.
* ace, and allude to it for the . purpose 'ey
bowing our merchants and planters how
greatly they aro imposed on by the ; r scn
elronitons routes, and how easily they my-
be relieved of their burthens liy a little en
ergy nod enterprise. If by this project the
merchant is greatly hcncfitted, and the far
mer can add to Vis income* cent more per
pound p» his/rntton, then enroly tho subject
is worthy of wr most favorable cor.sidura
bfoa.
Fiwi'ee'—fight out their own quarrel. W
will have none of it! Of the tivo, we pre
fer Maximilian, who lias extended a wcl
come hand to onr gallant exiles.
Irff** A little boy on his deatli-hod w:i
urging his father to repentance, ami fearing
helriiini'leno impression, said, “Father,
l am going to htraven ; what shall I tell
was mustered out ofservicc and paid off at
Ueutou Barracks.
ESP* A telegram says that a Major. Gra
ham has just arrived at Brownsville from
tlie Mexican capital, who gives intelligence
that Maximilian has recently unreservedly
expressed himself ready to make his exit
from Mexico whenever iho -United States
shall demand it.
Why will respectable newspapers admit
to their columns, such unmitigated false
hood as is evidently contained in tho above
paragraph ?
85f~ A woman in Harrisbnrd died frofn
fright at being told in a joke that her hus
band had been accidentally killed.
Jo-
*oois the reason why you won’t lorvoliim?”
The father hurst into tears, but before he
eonl l give the answer, Ills dt*ar little Bnn-
day-f cliool hoy had fali.cn asleep in Christ.
857" The Wasliiagton correspondent of
the N.. Y. Independent.says it la conceded
that Mr. Ad.-jus will be the new Secretary
of State.
-J37” A joker in the Washington Repub
lican says he would be perfectly willing to
share the fortunes-of war with tlie noble
army of contractors.
Tho tailor of tho Emperor of the French
is in a very brown study, concocting a pair
of trousers. They aro to he in perfect peep
ing with the boots, S la Sdirvarof, which are
tho fashion in Faria high lifo
& Co.,
• OF THE
the building on Washington street, fortner-
pied by 8. POLFUS. We wave opened m
large and well selected stock of
Hi?Ootds,Clothing,Boots&SliOM,
have been sold for one hundred and thirty- 7I„t n -
five thousand pounds. The Dnchcss keeps Jla.L3, X aUCy UOOuS' SC.
tho Swiss chalet and garden. | An I« we «. «hure the puhlle thst we wtlt ..11
An agent of theatrical affairs, at Vienna, I 0 , “'** *>*7 oa d >heir expeeietiooe. we*!nviie them to
. .i,„ i- ’ giw ueoe«tl,»ndMi„r»
has permission from the Anstrian Govern
ment to erect a theatre, which is to he con
structed entirely' Of iron, on the American
system. The works will begin next spring.
1 us » call, and satisfy themsei.es.
Albany, Georgia, January 1866.
STOLEN!
my plantation in Baker County, Go., ten
, ... below Nemon. an the night of 27ih Jan
itors, on their knees, begging Patti to “7’ 7° MABB MOLES, sixteen hands
it perfonnanoo for tho benefit of Italian ^ a ioll ‘F ’ m ? k \ r 5 r „ ,b ’
f reeo.ary of said Mules, and one hundred dollars
La Scossa Eloctrice, a comic Italian pa-1 TJBOM
er,publishes a caricature of uH the Italiau Ju miles below Newton, on the night .of 27th Jaq-
P c . r i.
ministers,
give _'
finance.
1®“ Gen. Joo Johnston employs about
500 of his late Confederate soldiers in tho
repair of tho Orange and Alexandria rail
road. As they became familiar with the
reco.ery of said Mules, and oou hundred dollars
for spprehsnslon of thief, with e.idenee to convict.
JAMES A. KING.
Albany, Georgia, January 31st, 1868. 7—lw
Vi^inia. ^ l0 families m 1 4 TWrty-fiT* (85) bales^f colioq. marked 3. & T..
DOUGHERTY SHERIFF’S SALE.
^*<*14 before the Court Mouse door, in
Os., on the
between the legal
2K. *y Hollos 80*
29 « Block tel ! ;
30 gollons Drnutsa
4,000 pounds l’sisia
f,000 “
50 •* Cto» ! '
JJ .. BoK
700 “ ifkio^*-
027 gallons Turp«*bt
429 pounds Rosin,
i Whzli 0?
79 gwlloas Wh»l« j
378,988 pounds ossortid ^
8,527 • CsS***
13,869 fset Lestbsr ssl uW
o l-2lo 18 IM 4 ” 1
Our stock of
BSi GOODS ® 11
is oompleto, *nd all
hare no few* •
i
to satisfy two fifas from Terrell Superior Court, May
Term, 1866: Samuel D. Irvin, Administrator of
Howard.
Levied
¥E
ASP
Expect to $$
J. R. B 0 * *
uiW
{ks«s A ▼ t 6. * . * «nn*uci u- tmu, Aammisi
Sdgre I’resiacnt Johnson was a lucky man ?bomas J. Johnston, deceased, vs. John T.
t Now Year s day. Somebody in Stam- J * a,M Hende^wa, and William 11. Turner.
ford, Connecticut, sent him a turkov which n?„?* P r ?PW/- nud pointed out by
weighed 47-pounds. tnrk,y ^ | nslniUf;, Amwney. 8.'BBOWff, Sh-fl. ^ ^
ileCrocers*