Daily journal and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1867-1869, December 18, 1868, Image 1

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BY J. W. BURKE & CO. MU JDliiiL & MESSENGER. . W. BURKE & CO., Proprietors. OFFICE—No. 60 SECOND ST.. MACON. GA. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. 'AII.Y oue M0nth...... SIOO do three Months. 260 do six Months.... 500 do one Year 10 00 ■ ——. —»./-» ■. Gkoroia. 'JotrRNAi. A Mkssknqkr is published ,-cry \V rdnesday. Three dollars per annum. S. ROSE, the former proprietor and editor, re tains connected with the seyeral departments ot Lie Journal, and Mkssknqkr. RIDING TOGETHER. BY WILLIAM MORRIS. [The following strange and beautiful line* oon dh some exquisite toushes of pathos, and there re those who will painfully understand the moan >K : J For many, many days together, The wind blew steady from the East; VFor many dayg hot grew the weather, fc ~«jout the time of our Lady's Feast, the / many cfctys we rode together, . Yet metAitlrneither friend nor foe ; clearer grew the weather, Steadily did the East wind blow. We saw the trees in the hot, bright weather, Clear cut, with shadows very black, As freely we rode on together, With helms unlaced and bridles slack. And-often as we rode together, We, looking down the green bank’d stream, Saw flowers in the sunny weather, And saw the bubble-making bream. And in the night lay down together, And huug above our heads the rood, Or watch’d night-long in the dewy weather, The while the moou did watch the wood. Our spears stood bright and thick together, Straight out the banners stream’d behind, As we galloped on in the sunny weather With faces turned toward* the wind. Down sank our three-score spears together, As thick we saw the pagans ride; * His eager face to the clear, fresh weather Shone out that last time by my side. Up the sweep of the bridge we dash’d together — It rocked to the crash of the meeting spears; Down rain’d the buds of the dear spring weather The elm tree flowers fell like tears. There, as we rolled and writhed together, I threw my arms aDOve my head, For close by my side in the lovely weather, I saw him reel and fall back dead. I and the slayer met together, He waited the death-stroke there in his place, With thoughts of death in the lovely weather, Gapingly mazed at my maddened face. Madly I fought, as we fought together; In Vain.; the little Christian band The pagans drown’d, as in stormy weather The river drowns lew-lying land. They bound my blood- stained hands together; They bound his corpse to nod by my side; Then on we rode in the bright March weather, With clash of cymbals did we ride. We nde no more, no more together— My prison bars are thick and strong ; I take no heed of any weather; The sweet saints grant 1 live not long. MERCANTILE AGENCIES. Where they Get their Delicate Information. [From the New York Post. | Each country merchant or shop-keeper who, with a capital of live thousand dol lars and au unlimited quantity of energy, does a bdaftrastf of ah un-dr ed thousand a year, finds it necessary to buy more goods thau he can pay for immediately in cash, and comes to New York offering to Stew art, Clafliu, or to anybody who will trust him, his notes or three, six or eighteen months for the silks an J calicoes, he needs. It is, therefore, indispensable that his characterforindustryaud integrity, should be unimpeachable; and to the office of record goes the city merchant for informa tion concerning the country gentleman who asks credit. Here he is told that Peter Smith, of Yuba Dam, New Hamp shire, is thirty-five years of age, married, and has two children ; has been engaged in the trade seven years, and is believed to be honest; has a working capital of $5,- 000, owns a homestead worth $1,200, and has “great expectations” that his wife’s uncle Billy, who is old and paralytic, will soon visit bis ancestors, leaving to Peter’s wife the nice little sum ofslo,ooo in United States bonds. Smith’s credit is, there fore, pronounced to be “good,” and Mr. Merchant lets him have a thousand dol lars worth of calico, tape and spool-cotton, to be paid for at the end of six or nine months. Or, it may be that Mr. Smith is not known to have any moiaey, except that which his wife holds in her own name; that he is extravagant aud immoral, and so, of course, may not be recommended as a buyer on time. Smith is therefore po litely bowed out ©f the warehouse, to seek credit where the secrets of the “record” are not known. But in what way is information con cerning traders in distant places obtained, and how do we know that the Office of Record or Mercantile Agency contains a true aud trustworthy register of the char acters and property of our country cous ins? There are two ways of compiling the register—a thorough one, such as that adopted by Broadway & Cos. and Done Brown; aud another, much used by the inferior offices of Ketcbum & Cheatham and Killhim & Sprat. In each village or h&mlet, however small, there are, of eourse, a blacksmith, a liquor-dealer, and au attorney, and these are the men who furnish the material for compiling the records of second or third-class offices.— The attorney is appointed correspondent, receiving as wages Harper’s Magazine or the Hedger, with the promise of any legal business which may arise, and gives his opinion, with a medley of the gossip ob tained at the Btnithery aud tavern. This statement of facts is sent to New York, and on it depends the reputation of the shop-keeper and the amount of credit that he may command. But the better class of agencies are conducted by their proprietors •with liberality, and aim at comfortable ness, intelligent clerks being employed and paid handsomely. Instead of depending on the letters of “shysters,” the superintendents send edu cated men of skill to every village, aud to each of even the most retired cross-roads ; and application is generally at first made to store-keepers personally, who seldom refuse to give accounts of themselves, which are afterward veryifledor modified by bank presidents, county clerks, men of known wealth, etc. By this means a re cord Is made up us accurately as it is hu manly possible to make anything. To conduct a first class agency properly, a large number of clerks are necessary; reporters, canvassers, recorders, copyists, readers, etc., being numbered by scores aud hundreds, whose salaries range from twelve to sixty dollars a week, according to proficiency ; while the picayune imita tors ordinarily pay five to eight dollars to their penmen, or a little more to those who write from 8 A. m. till 11 p. m., aud do not too often fall asleep over their work. Sub scribers to these agencies pay from seven ty-five to three hundred dollars a year, according to the number of “inquiries” each may make. Prominent merchants, as C'lafliu or Btewart, may have private “agencies” of their own, where lists of their customers, with biographical sketch es, are kept, with black-hooks containing the names of bogus firms, of those who are likely to go up in a balloon, and of young men of promise who never pay. CURIOUS MANUFACTURES. [From the Philadelphia United States Gazette.] Pliny was certainly a trump. The more we read him tht more vehemently we as sent to the assertion of Solomon, that there is “nothing new under the sun.” We re viewed, the other day, a work by this grand old gentleman upon the cultivation of asparagus, aud the horticultural mag nates of to-day will confess, thatsix stalks of that esculent weighing sixteen ounces iu the aggregate, are entitled to serious consideiatiou at every fair on the part of the committee on premiums. Some people differ from our frieud Pliny as to the original of felt cloth. They claim that another grand old gentleman, St. Clement, placed a bunch of carded wool inside Ills sandals to protect his feet from friction, when starting upon a long and weary pilgrimage. The Westons and other nedestriaus of to-day do that lor money which the saints of old did purely as acts of piety. Alter St. Clement completed, bis journey the mass of loose wool, placed by him up on the solos of his sandals, came out of them matted into a cloth. This was the first “felt” ever- produced, providing the Clementine theory stands like a washtub, upon the merits of its own bottom. The stet is that wool possesses an adaptability for working that can be imparted to no vegetable production. Under a microscope everv filament of wool or fur shows barbs along the length* and each of them has a larger and a small end. They literal ly fit into each other, and a felt cloth that can thus he made.from animal fur or hair that, from the vegetable kingdom, can never be produced. The microscope tells the whole story, and a microscope is some thing that the head of every family, if he has not already purchased one, should immediately secure. By the poiiteuesa of a pair of scientific, aud yet practical business gentlemen, we were yesterday shown these remarkable serrations upon a siugle hair. The finest wool shows under a powerful glass the ap pearance of a continuous vegetable growth wi.h numerous sprouts, all pointing to ward the smaller end. As many as twenty four.huudred of them have been counted under thill glass, in a single inch of Merino wool. Felt cloth is made by pressing together this wool or fur until ifcbecomes a compact mass. Patent after patent for its produc tion has been taken out. The “New York Seamless Clothing Company ” was one of the first and most successful to avail themselves of the advantages of a material of which garments could be made iu one entire piece. Felt has peculiar properties. Under ordinary circumstan ces it is for a long time water-proof; if does not wrinkle ; while to the eye it pre sents the appearance of the very finest Melton. Having neither warp nor woof, its surface is entirely even. From it are made every article of wearing apparel, leggings, piaho and table covers, cloaks, hats, slippers, mittens and other things, all of remarkable strength and durability. Bo rapid is the process of manufacture, that in tweuty-four hours after a sheep is sheared, his wool may be converted into a garment ready for wear. If this is not enough to make a sheep feel proud and fall back upon his dignity and his fleece, the question now comes in, what is? In Lawrence, Massachusetts, they make felt carpets that excite envy in the bosom of Brussels, while as to its value as a jacket for a defective boiler, the old city ice boat will answer all questions propounded to it. What Philadelphia has reason to be proud of is this : that a wide-awake firm of manufacturers at Germantown have purchased aud reuovated an abandoned factory, are giving employment to two hundred and thirty people, mostly fe tfrulvio) (iw!l nro mat.iiiij. fmm fait cloth the grand duchess skirt, table and piano cov J cloaks and various other articles of apparel, by a process of which the patent bjelongs to Philadelphia, and which is to a large extent revolutionizing the art of embossing upon . this particular fabric. The felt cloth is made in New England, Its production is oue of the few things iu which Yankee land has distanced us. But we sell back to them the skirts and other articles thus wonderfully beautified by the work of our operatives in German town. The art consists in embossing upon the plain feltgarment most beautiful patterns in raised work, but so filled in with the materials as to be part and parcel of it. Heat and tremendous pressure are the only agents employed. The art gives to the petticoat a wonder ful degree of beauty. Our grandmothers would have stared at the iunovation, but though there may be nothing new under the sun, there is a great deal that is very strauge. Our Quaker friends are alike down upon embroidery and semiquavers. They look upon indulgence in either as a waste of time. Philadelphia can now sup ply the world with innumerable articles of felt, all radiant as a flower garden into which needle never entered, and upou which paint or pencil never was applied. The invention is but of a few months’ standing. It struck our reporter as com ing under the head of curious manufac turer, and so it does. It gives light and elegant employment to at least two hun dred young women of Germautowu. The factory operations are conducted with all the dignity and decorum of a young ladies’ seminary. Like some new discovery in beliography or photographing, the art is at present meeting with great favor. At the leading cities of the Union some people now hear of Germantown, Philadelphia, who for the first time understand that it is not in Germany. There are a great many things about Philadelphia that Bos ton and New York only learn when they can’t help it. One of these things is that Philadelphia has taught the world how to produce in any desired colors, upon a ground of gray, au artistic baao relievo representing any design that may be de sired. TRUTH KTRANHBR THAN FICTION. The wonders of the magnetic telegraph were evidently foreshadowed naany cen turies ago in the following singular fable: Strader gives an account of a chimerical correspondence between two friends, by the help of a certain loadstone, which had such virtues in it that if it touched two several needles, when one of the needles so touched begau to move, the other, though at ever so great a distance, moved at the same time, and iu the same manner. He tells us that the two friends, being each of them possessed of one of these needles, made a kind of dial plate, inscribing it with the four and twenty letters, in the same manner as the hours of the day are marked upon the ordinary dial plate. They then fixed one of the needles on each of these plates in such a manner that it could move round without impediment, so as to touch anv of the four and twenty let ters. Upon their separating from one an other into distant countries, they agreed to withdraw themselves punctually into their closets at a certain hour of the day, and to con verse with one another by means of this, their invention. Accordingly, when they were some hundred miles asun der, each of 'hem shut himseli up in his eloset at the time appointed, and immedi ately cast his eye upon his dial plate If he had a mind to write anything to his friend, he directed his needle to every let ter that formed the words which he had occasion for, making a little pause at the end of every word or sentence, to avoid confusion. The friend, In the meanwhile, saw his own sympathetic needle moving of itself to every letter which that of his correspoud nt poluted at. By this means they talked together across a whole conti nent, and conveyed their thoughts to one another in an instant over cities or moun tains, seas or deserts.— World. THIRD STOCK OK • * Fall and ,Winter Goods. if- ■ Planters and Country Merchants .^4O ARE invited to lnspeot our Third Stock of the Season. It will be found quite an extensive one, will be sold at very moderate figures, and consists, In part, as follows: > Dry"tods. Dress Goode and Prints. Domestics,bleached and unbleached, Stripes, Plaids and Ticks, Heavy Cassimeres and Jeans, Kerseys, Llnseys and Tweeds, Macon and other Sheetings and Shirtings, Osnaburgs, heavy and of all the approved makes, Heavy Blankets, Hosiery to suit everybody, Notions of all sorts, etc. Clothing. Our supply of heavy and substantial CLOTH ING and UNDERWEAR will he found most am ple to meet all demands. Boots, Shoes, and Hats. Os these articles our stock Is very heavy, anu In point of prices we cannot be excelled. Groceries, etc. In this line, oar stock on hand will De found tc consist of: Sugars, Coffees and Teas, Flour of all qualities, In barrel amt sacks, Tobacco, of various brands, Liquors, In barrels and cases, Allspice, Ginger and Pepper, Shot, Powder and Caps, » Hardware, Iron and Steel, Bagging, Ties and Twine, And many other articles too numerous, to meac tion, but which we always keep In stoi "e. We think we can make it to the ntei rest of ou friends to call ou ■■■■■■* J. B. ROSS & SON, Wholesale Dealers in Dry, Goods, Groceries, etc.. Corner Second aud Cherry Streets, novSl-6m Macon, Georgia. __ qYiTsT Sperm on., I.ard OU, Coal Oil, Linseed Oil, Whale Oil, Tanners’ Oil, FOR SALE AT fBBSFL Mr • JB pr^ Wy t fjm • IBHH J. H. ZEILIN & CO.'S DRUG STORE. ALSO, Medicines, Paints, Window Glass, Putty, Snaff Garden Seeds, Dye Stuffs, Toilet Koaps, Brushes, Combs, Pure Wines and Liquors, for medical use, Perfumery, Hair Oils, Lily White, Cologne, Hair Restorers, ete., etc. PHYSICIANS Supplied with Medicines ot the very purest kind, Instruments, Saddle Bags, Pocket Cases, Trusses, Bandages, etc. PRESCRIPTIONS Accurately compounded, by a scientific Druggist of 25 years’ experience. Merchants, Druggists, Housekeepers, and the Publlo generally, will find supplies suited to most of their wants, at the Old Wooden Drug Store, Pure, Good, Cheap for Cash. Proprietors Simmons’ Liver Regulator. dclO-ct JUST ARRIVED: CAR LOAD OF THAT SPLENDID Family Flour, “ SILVER LAKE,” 1 Car Load "Falls City ” Flour, 1 Car Load “ City Mills” Family Flour",, For sale very low, by doll-ot GK O.’ T. ROGERS A SON*. ALMANACS FOR 1869. \ : • V V. _ I GEORG J A ALMANACS, 03ST TH B GRIBR PLAN 1 The BjNDEJ aiuoned abkjwow ready to mi orders for the above Almanac*. Price, per Hlr nru Groo*...»v» *••••$'1 Per Oromi for or more ■) Per Gross to , t urovn or more 3 •>* Parties * ordering ten gross or more can get air Imprint a a ,j fan pag „ Q f advertising without* extra oha rg*. A lew r fact lulverthi uents will be taken. For terms, a' i«treN» _ . J. W. BURKE A (X)., noytd-0r Macon, Ba-,* MACON. GaTFRIDAY. DECEMBER 18. 1868. LIFE INSURANCE OOM P A N NEW YORK, OFFICE No. 61) LIBERTY ST. ~ • '■»%***** ••, t % STATEMENT JULY 13, 1868. assets- United States Stocks Cwa rket /* lu sv;Vi;V' > lOT 1 OT , nnn no Bonds and Mortgages (City of Nevrjork)... 97,000 00 Brooklyn City Bonds (market Virginia State Bond- (market value* 14,700 00 , - sas Office Furniture......... ts Deferred semi-annual quarterly. Premiums... 72,166 M Premiums in course of Collection 60 664 64 Intwest,.acerUod, not due ■ 4.640 67 OthelN4sseis - V 1” Total $468,822 87 LIABILITIES: Amount required to reinsure out standing risks—Homan’s Table Unpaid Losses, not due 16,000 —$258,200 00 Surplus over and above all Liabilities .$210,422 87 Ratio of Assets to Liabilities, 181}£*o 100. Number of Policies in f0rce...,,,,,'. Insuring •• !••••"• * 7,92 ?’f10 Policies issued since January Ist, 1868 1,108 Insuring 52,713,250 THE UNIVERBAL Offers the following original and popular plan of In , Ist. Th* Riturn Premium Plan : Upon which poli cies are issued at rates less thpn those charged by Mutual Companies, the return of all premiums paid, in addition to the amount insured. 2d. Tn* Reduction of Premium Plan: By which poli cies are issued at rates less than those charged by Mutual Companies, guaranteeing a reauetion of 50 per eent. of the premium after the third annual payment. OFFICERS: WILLIAM WALKER I president HENRY J. FURBER . Vice President JOHN H. BEWLEY ....Secretary CHARLES E. PEASE Assistant Secretary D PARKS FACKLER Consulting Actuary EDWARD W. LAMBERT, M. h Medical Examiner ALEXANDER A GREEN Solicitors pa_Agents Wanted throughout the South. Address w gJf^ C KLEFORD, Manager Southern Department, Atlanta, Geergia. J. W. BURKE, Agent for Macon and southwestern Georgia. ocG-Gm All Right! WOOLFOLK, WALKER & CO., Having put thetk iron, eh re-proof WAREHOUSE, corner of Poplar aud Sec ond streets, known as the Harr s & Ross Ware house. in complete repaiLwould say to the Cot ton planters of Middleanfrtjkmthwestern Georgia that they are both anxious aud willing to receive their favors, pledging their best efforts arid Indi vidual attention to the furtherance of the inter est of patrons. Keeping thoroughly posted in commercial news, wekhow that we can get you the highest market price for your Cotton. Planters’orders for Supplies filled advantage ously and promptly. oct4-3md*w. Crawford County Sheriff’s Sales. ritHE SHERIFF’S SALES OF CRAWFORD 1 County will hereafter be published In the . Journal, and Macon. Ga,/! his No- T® JUST COMING IN, 30 Hhds Clear Rib BACON SIDES. 50 Barrels Prime, Prime Mess and MESS PORK, 60 Tierces New Leaf LARD, 2Car Loads New Bulk MEATS, 15 Ten-Gallon Kegs PICKLES, WHISKEY, WHIBKEY, WHISKEY. decT-Ct SEYMOUR, TINSLEY & CO. Feed, Sale, and Livery Stable, BY SIMS & KIRK MAN, j WASHINGTON ST., ALBANY, GA. WE ARE PREPARED TO FURNISH SUPE RIOR Inducements to Drovers and persons ] having Horses to stable. Our terms are rnode -1 rate. Our motto, Live and Id Live. ( Horses and Buggies, with careful Drivers, to ' hire at all times. _ iloll-tt SIMS & kIRKMAN. Liverpool and London and Globe INSURANCE _COMPANY. CAPITAL OVER SEVENTEEN MILLION HOLLARS ; GOLD. j, gur Ootton, Dwellings, etc., et THE undersigned having been appointed agent of the above uamed popular Company, is pre- Dare and to Issue Policies ou as favorable terms as l Tp V-ly° ther ageaCteß In LC? PLANT, Agent. ’ SELECT COTTON SEED. Sparta. Ga.. October Ist. 1868. T HAV F> ENGAGED A YOUNG MAN TO SHIP I Uoito n Seed and cor respond. <»cn that subject, lam the Sparta Dlokson-lmvo never offered a bushel oU Cotton Seed lor sa'o until tnls day. Those wli o still wish to patronlzo David Dickson of Oxford, can do so. ... . * I have t ho Dickson Select Cotton Seed that I have select ed twice, which I offer at Two Dollars Der bushel. I have the same seed selected each rear lor th.t last three years, which I offer for rive Dollars P er bushel, or five bushels forTwen v Dollars and eltvered at the depot. Write your name and’PO St Office plainly; also your depot. ihe money per mail. Take a certificate from the Postm aster. If the money Is lost, 1 will S, . ben the certificate is sent, send the Heed,» DAVID DICKSON, novo-tjanls Sparta. Hancock County, Ga. important to shippers TO AND FROM NEW YORK. rxtmr UNDERSIGNED, AGENTS OF NEW T*YORK LINES OF fiTEAMSHIPS, reHpeot fallv inform Shippers-that arrangements nave been made by which they can insure sh pments to ok Vkom Nf.w York, on open policies, at their respective offices, at one- iiai.f pkk cknt. insurancewill he Indorsee on hill of lading, and premiums may be paid or collected with the freight. ITI7NXRR A gaMMKLL. Agents Murray’s Line of Steamships. ,T, W. ANDKHWON’H HOMS & CO., Agents Empire Line Hteamslups. WILDER A FULLERTON, Agents nv2B-lm Atlantia «oa«. Mall Steamship 00. PATENT METALLIC CASES A!fl» FULL GLASS CASKETS, oUI'KKIOII TO ALL OTHER INVENTIONS. A a-nortinent kept oonatantly on hand. nertor OotHo* of Rosewood. Mahogany, Walnut, Cedar Ud Imitation, in all at,lea aSfjflWa WOOD , ooSR-flm Next to Lanier Houae, Maoon, Oa. SPRINGER’S ‘’HEADQUARTERS,” Cor. Cotton Av. and Second St., Macon, Ca. JUST OPENED, THE BEST ASSORTMENT OF CLOAKS, SACQUES, AND—— SHAWLS IN MACON, AT TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. DISCOUNT FROM FORMER PRICES. NUBIAS, HOODS, and SONTACS, At less than Cost of Manufacture. BREAKFAST SHAWLS, 36x36 And 40x40 inches. Best in the Market. The KID-CLOVE and BREAKFAST CORSET, Very Fine. NEW BLANKETS, at Much Less Prices Than Early in the Season. Y©u are respeatftHly Invited to exams this stock, the most complete yet received. do-11-tf^ S- T. (’OLKfIAY’S MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF . FALL AND WINTER GOODS IS NOW READY! ANY ONE WHO HAS NOT GIVEN US CALL, WILL BE astonished AT TUP MAGNITUDE AND VARIETY" OF THIS STOCK. We are fully prepared for any rush that may be made, either by the Wholesale or Retail trade, as our house is filed from top to bottom. THE! JOBBING OP GOODS BEING A NEW FEATURE IN OUR BUSINESS. WE CALL THE ESPCIAL ATTENTION OF WHOLESALE BUYERS. In returning thanks to our large circle of friends and customers for their libera patronage, we beg to assure them that we expect to continue our business as we begun it—upon a FAIR AND SQUARE BASIS, And do not intend or expect to be undersold; and by treating customers well, we xpect, not only to win their favor, but to secure their influence wherever they go. VVe invite the public to call and see what we have, and hope we may he able to make .a good impression upon every visitor. S. T. COLEMAN. octs-Bm. ‘ Second St., Triangular Block, Next to NationaEFaui^ NEW GOODS, AT NUMBER 48, X HAVE JUST RETURNED FROM NEW YORK, and have opened, at No. 48 Second street, a NOTIONS kept by flrst-cUM Jewelers. PLEASE CALL ANJ) EXAMINE MY STOCK. Watches, Clocks, and Jewelry Repaired at Short Notice, oer-ti A N D W AURA NTED NOTICE. TRKASURKR’a OFKtOB, ) Macon and Wkhtkkn Rail.roadCo., > Maoon, Ga., December JO, 1860. ) rpnE ANNUAL ELECTION OP PRESIDENT L and twclvo Directors, to manage the aWtlm <.r this Company tor the ensuing year, will ho hold at the offloe of the Company. In the city of Macon, on Tuesday, the fifth Urtry ’ i«fio MILO H. FREEMAN ilc'lO-I and Secretary and Treasurer. CIGARS! CIGARS E . M . LOPEZ, Manufacturer anil Wholesale Dealer lu FINE DOMESTIC AND HAVANA CIGARS, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, Ahks the attention op dealers TO his stock, among whloh he has the celebrated '““%Va MAZKPPAB, ILAPATRIAS. „ And all the best American brands. Orders solic ited, promptly filled, and satisfaction guaranteed t n a\f instances. novlD-Sm t LITTLE, SMITH & CO., 102 CHERRY STREET, MACON, GA., ESTABLISHED IS4O, ("IAIJj THE ATTENTION ol their uumeroua j customers and the publlo generally to then unrivaled stock of . , Huddles, Harness, Bridles, Whips, Trunk*, and Valises, GIN BELTING, Btiggv and Carriage Material oi all kinds, Bhoe Findings of every description. Saddlery, Huntwine, and every kind ol LEATHER, At wholesale rates for Cash. A Mil lineal each of the above articles constantly on bund. Special •“*»“«»"Ta “on hSW.T Os every atyleand quality, 61 our own manufac ture. All other a yle«. of work in our line manu factured to order, and the most earetul attention given to orders trom a distance- uugltMm Guano 1 Cuano ! 1 AAA HACKS KITTLE WELI-’B A A PKRU- J,UUU VIMS, 1,060 SACKS Wli ANN’S HAW BONK, '»“ a i ° ra.w, dec7-eod-4w 04 Second Street. VOL. LX., NO. 333. Come in out of the Jaws of Death l HESITATION and delay are nothing but an other fi>rm of suicide, when you have a rem edy at your hand to remove pain instantly. DR. MAGGIEL’S PILLS Are the true grains and essence of health, and the latest gift that Science has given to the world. From Mexico to Alaska, THE PEOPLE KNOW THEM! THE PEOPLE USE THEM! THE PEOPLE PRAISE THEM! These Pills grapple with Disease at its fountain head, and root it out of the patient’s system at once. They fortify the body against Disease in all forms of sudden attack and epidemics, and enable ail to brave the miasmatic danger of swaups and forests. One of Dr. MAGGIEL’B PILLS relieves the entire system of pains and 'aches, enlivens the spirits, and sends new blood •BOUNDING THROUGH THE VEINS. Call for these Inestimable medicines at your nearest druggist’s, and if he Is out of them, send to the proprietors offios for them. They are mailed safely all over the globe. ONE MINUTE TO SUE YOUR LIFE! Take Disease In time, and you will suffer less and be saved many days of useless misery. What One Hundred Letters a day say, from pa tients all over the habitable globe: Dr. Maggiel, your Pill has rid me of all bilious ness. No more noxious doses for me, in live or ten Pills taken at one time. One of your Pills cured me. Thanks, Doctor. My headache has lelt me. Send another box to keep in the house. After suffering torture from bilious cholic, two of your Pills cured me, and I have no returk of the malady. Our doctors treated me for chronic constipa tion, as they called It, and at last said I wasln curable. If oar Magglel’s Pills cured me. I had no appetite, Magglel’s Pills gave me a hearty one. Your Pills are marvelous. 1 send lor another box, and keep them In the house. Dr. Maggiel has cured my headache that was chronic. I gave half of one of your Pills to my babe for cholera morbus. The dear young thing got well In a day. My nausea of a morning is now cured. Your box of Maegiel’s Halve cured me of noise In the head. I rubbed some Salve behind my ear and the noises left. Send me two boxes. I want one for a poor family. I enclose a dollar. Your price Is tweniy-flve cents, but the medicine to me Is worth a dollar. Send me five boxes of your Pills. Let me have three boxes of your Salve and Pills by return mall. Doctor, my burn lias healed by your Salve. For all Diseases of the Kidneys, Retention of Urine, etc., Magglel’s Pills are a perfect cure. One Pill will satisfy any one. FOR FEMALE DISEASES, lYsr veus Prostration, Weakness, General Lassitude, and Want of Appetite, Maggiel’s Pills will be found an effectual Remedy. Maggiel’s Pills and Salve Are almost universal in their effects, and a cure can be almost always guaranteed. EACH BOX CONTAINS TWELVE DOBLS. ONE PILL IS A DOSE. '‘Counterfeits! Buy no Magguki/s Pii.ia or Salve with a little pamphlet inside the box: They are Bof/us.' The genuine have the name ot J. HAYDOCK on box, with name of J. MAG GIEL, M. D. The genuine have the Pill sur rounded with white powder.” All orders for the United States must bead dressed to HERBERT A CO., 474}$ Broadway, New 1 ork. Dr. Maggiel’s Pills or Salve ARE 25 CENTS PER BOX. J. H. ZEILIN & CO.. dec2-Sm Druggists, Agents, Macon. PLANTERS’ WAREHOUSE, fourth street, OPPOSITE BYINGTON’B AND BROWN’S HOTELS' ADJOINING THE PASBKNOER DIPOT. ADAMS JONES & REYNOLDS rpAXE PLEASURE JN STATING THAT THEY 1 are now receiving liberally the favors ol t heir friends, for which they have our hearty thanks. Our facilities for the STORAGE AND SALE OF COTTON Are unequaled. LIBERAL ADVANCES Made on consignments to our house. nvs-d«fcw3m 3KTX MC STEAM BAKERY, 67 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, Manufacturer of all kinds ol Ship Bread and Crackers. BP“ Orders filled at Northern prices, and de livered lree on board railroads and steamboats. J. H. HU W K, nv2s-lm Pioprietor. SECOND STREET, DR F. WILHOFT’S * ANTf-PIRIODIC, OR FEVER AND AGUE TONIC WILL INVARIABLY cure all Miasmatic Fe vers viz: Chills and Fever, or Fever and Ague, Dumb Chills, Congestive Chills. or Perni cious Fever, Bilious Remitteut Fever, and t.he first stages of Typhoid Fever This Is a remedy which has been used by the authot in the above uanted diseases lor the last ten years with the happiest results Even In those obstinate cases, in which quinine, arsenic, or Prussians of iron had been used tn vain, this remedy effected a cure In two o> three days, without a relapse ever occurring. The advantages that the Autl-Perlodlc pos sesses above all remedies of this class, consist In **lst.*Th*t It Invariably breaks up the Fever, to gether with 'he liability to return on the seventh, fourteenth, and twenty-first days. 2d. That It does not occasion any of the bead ftVTnptxMud like UtOMDIOdVIMNI by Qttlllm®; AHU 'iki That il cau t>e aduiUitßkmd to «Mlarcaol the most tender age with w Agent at Outhbert, Ua.: Wholesale Ageuls. .1. J. McDonald, Druggist au it-ct GEORGIA AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSE AND HEED STORE, BROAD KTRRKT, ATLANTA, tUA., P. W. J. ECHOLS, Proprietor. • ESTABLISHED IS6T. 600 ONK ANl ' TW °- HORSK tor flswß 100 Subsoil and H lllside Plows. 10 Dozen Corn-Shelters, single and double spout. 5 Dozen Forage-Cutters, tor hand and boise 200 Bushels Clover and Grass Beeil, [power, Bickford A Huffman'- Drain Drills, Horse Powers. Mowers. Reapers, M ora, F'au Mills, Corn aud Cane Mills. Agricultural Implements, and Machines of every des -. . t»on. Lambeth's t.arden Be 0. wholeea.e sm- *«!»' VtLUt xs i • W . M luHtc\ nov2o-ty Broad Street, Atlanta, Ua- W. J. McELROY, Manufacturer of Copper and Tin Ware. ORDERS from Merchants ft>r Wholesale bills ol Tin Ware wdi meet with prompt at enttom Direct to W. J. lie ELROY, Macon, Ga„ or leave with D. Good « non, 3d Htreet, where 1 have a lot of stills, Btoves. aud TluWaretor sale, and am j prepared to make any siaed HUUs to order.