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Albany Semi-Weekly News.
It
THE ALBANY NEWS-
BY CAREY W. STYLES.
Libex’ta^ et 1STatale Solum.
•5 Per Annum
«■
X
VOL. 3
ALBANY, GEORGIA. APRIL 20. I860.
NO. 32.
the usual moOt.-t
Inserted at SI5 per annum,or
fTper quarter. Announcing Candidal os $•’».
'obituary and Marriago Notice.", not to ex-
aM d l square, free.
Trenaleni advertisements must bo paid ro
advance, or no go. Legal advertisements will
be charged to the officer authorizing them, to
_u om a reason able per cent will be allowed
hr the iteuritjr. Established merchants in
IIHVi Maaon. Atlanta hnd Savannah, will
keeled on when the Editor needs money,
# * ■ ‘ness liberality will always
la will bo duo on preaen-
tfXftBlHYv <M., A1MUL 2<>, 1HCJ*.
Tke i’ubau Movement.
From ti privuto lottei ruovivotl in
Ibta city yciOuritay, wo lunrii Unit simv
kbo 2din»tH»t lour cxpudilioiw Imvo
loft tho Florida oo.l't f>r Cub:i. Tilt*
"Foam” look oul about onu Immlml
and fifty moil timin' Oul. Thornton,
th»“Bortio” about llio kiiiiu immbir
unOrOaideiu Broughton, mid iinoth-
ilikLlixty-firo men niiilei'
Captain Jacobin. All of the.se partiea
aro under the command of .Major
Hamilton, who, however, did not sail
on tho “Foam,’ 1 bin health not ju-rniit*
lag, aa ho haa not yet recovered from
Ihe injuries received from a railroad
accident some weeks sinee. Major
Hamilton has gono to Now Orleans
to attend to mutters connected with
the Caban movement, and will do the
eanae far inoro good in sending for.
ward men and miiteriiil than lie could
bar* done by going in person in Ids
present condition of health. The no..
counts from the revolutionists are sat-
Ufzctory and encouraging. Arms
■ad munitions are arriving qtiitoircn-
ly.deapite the vigorous blockade mailt
tamed. Wo are nsliameil to be forced
~ " thaV.Amrrlcausjoin witli the
Idlu Cbmpleting the hlookade
and acting as spies upon the move,
(cents ol tho patriots, espeeially those
who go from tho Uniicd Siatcii in ns
cut i n the cause ot Cuban frrcdoin.
:..The reporu that th« revolutionist
ara destroying the sugar plantations,
MA are pronounced false. The facts
IreUiirfhe plantalious in that Rodion
BOW tho tlieatro of hostilities, l.elong
almost without exenpuoji, to Cubans
trim have espoused the eiri' *• of liber-
re/ Among oilier fai ls mentioned is
last the “Sophie" has been most sue
easeful in running tin blockade, anil it,
baa been slated, Savannah is to any
extent interested in the shipments
which have been made, they may look
for a large re liirn. l’owder lmiiglit.it
tbe Stales at nineteen emits in curron
ey hits been sold readily for seventy
cents in gold. The sales o f condemn ■
«d store* mid munitions of war made
front tinio to lime by the United
States Government have been well at.
tended, and old guns, equipments, etc,
"Biff-Bean better investments than ll.«
flafctei- [Knv. Advertiser.
Morgantio marriages are quite com-
■on among tho royal families on the
obntfne'nt' of Europe. The word inor-
gxjltic is said to lie deriyeil tVom the
OdDKtf ifidk^isan, to curtail ' or limit,
fcbdii used to indicate a lower sort ol
matrimonial union, which as a civil
Mgageincnt is completely binding, but
fiwato confer on the wife the title or
ine of her husband, and on Urn
in the right of succession. This
jttion is necessary, to under-
tho iuteiligeiieo from St l’erters-
Virge, that thu newly married wife of
JmptfcWfcf Luimhlcnbiirgc, thallepli-
tlio Czar, Alexnndei II, had ro-
J (or lierself and her descendants
ths (/tie of Oouutoss ol lloaalmrnalU—
(Co conferring this title sets
Eg by the organic law ol the
tho Duke’s title cannot pass
children, nor can tho title ol
I bn borne by his wile. It adds,
„. that tho marriage look place
with Tho full consent ot the Czar.—
This, it is asserted, is the lirst instnnoe
*«jf ths formal sanction ol a morgana"
iMjaarriage in ltussia, mill it is eon-
jeoturod that the imncrial recognition
wiU be (gMi to similar marriages that
*• “1qtoforo taken-place. Tims,
lukhesaMary, the mother
;a oTLouobtonburg, who was
daughter of the Czar Nieli-
Oiaa, after tbe death of her first Inis-
band married morganatioally Count
^Mgarj' Strugnoff. This latter mar-
Kage, il*is asserted, will now lie recog-
| m
’“'‘Law FaxiuHTs ntosi Oot.uunns to
York :—The Columbus Sts
e understand an agent of tbe Al
tai Golf railroad lias been in the
'«rnt days, making arrange-
’ [The Iranaportalion of cotton
rente. Wo liavo no infor-
.. Mining the obarges, except
Ctt much lower than tiro
U«Uali.ine. There are 11,000 bales
rW-htTlolumbns, and uorhaps 1,500
t to »rrive„which will liavo to bo
UttMt', Tk» cheapest lino
fb freight. Tile present
tos'hijgli.
fxbove was written we
tp te New York is
mnda. By the On'
Major M. H. Ilelaiey's Lecture
(be Afrleaa Race.
Front tho A'. O. Crescent, of the 10th.)
This negro delivered his lecture, en
titled “The ProgreBB ol Civilization
and the Origin ot Races and Color,”
at tho National Hall, Poydras street,
last uvuuing before an audience . com
posed, alnioat exclusively of negroes,
rtbd not the most intelligent of negroes
at that, with the exception of some
twenty-five or thirty persons, who
lroin their educational advantages',
could have understood the mnjor’s ar
gument and theory ot tho origin and
graiideur of the colored race iu the
ancient days when tho city of Thebes
vyas built.
lie commenced his lccturo by a so-
vere reprimand to tbe colorod raco in
general lor their being ashamed ot
Uivif color, and by thu general weak*
ness of the defence of tho mulatto,
quadroon and octaroou, as to their
having colored blood in their veins ;
and the main object of this lecture was
to induce a pride ot raco amoug the
colored people; and before he got
through he would compel any of the
first families of Virginia, the haughty
South Caroliuiau and the supercilious
Louitdnuiuu to acknowledge th« dig
nity of the negro, apd the quadroons
and the octoroons be proud of their
colored blood; bill tho colored race
must be true to themselves, and not
live by haugiug on to tho skills of tho
while people ; that his object was to
diffuse Knowledge among tiiosu of his
own race, to make them equal to the
requirements of the age and progress
of civilization among other races ot
men, with a speciality of tracing their
origin from the descendants of Noah.
lie disputed the Campollioutheory,
which is that the man first created by
Goil was black, when the Almighty,
not being satisfied with his work,
created another, who was yellow or
red ; this not pleasing him much
more than tho first, he created a third
man, who was white, with * all tho
characteristios of tho Caucasian race ;
hut claimed the hrst man < .catoil
(Adam) was, ns his name signiiled,
red or yellow*. This brought him to
the point, who wore the prosonr pro-
gcuit^r.i ol tho present races ? Tho
sons of Noah, and they woroShem,
Ham and Jap hot. With the descend
ants ot Ham ho would deal mostly,
whoso four sons nettled in various
parts of Eastern Asia and Africa.—
lie contended that civilization was
propagated by throo agencies—emi
gration, revolution and conquest;
that Nimrod, the mighty conqueror
who founded the Assyrian empire,
wasgriindson ot Ham, and, therefore
a negro ; that with his conquests he
carried civilization into Asia; that
Sosostres, the groat Egyptian king,
Who founded the city of Thebes, on
the banks ol the Nile, with his 1,200,-
ooo men, carried a still higher order
of civilization into tho same country,
and \v1io set up two pillars on the
banks of tho Indus, with this inscrip
tion upou them : “Scsostrcs, the King
of Kings, has conquered the world to
the line of these pillars,” was another
negro, that the Egyptians who held
^tho children of Israel so long in bond*,
ago were negroes, and an the highest
encomium heaped upon Moses is that
lie was learned In all the wisdom of
the Egyptians ; that the Jews hor
rowen their religion from them, to
gether with tlicurlfiwH, for instance
.Juthlira giving lawn to Hosts, which
w^ru reduced to statutes and written in
the Rook of J udges; that the building
of the temple was not completed until
visited by the negro princess, who
supplied it with treasure, and entered
thu Holy of Holies through her wis
dom, where none but tho two grand
masters were permitted to enter; that
Christ the Saviour of tho world, was
warned to go among the negroes for
safety, until they who sought his life
were tlead. After tho mission ot his
ministry and his condemnation to
death upou tho cross us the typo of
s4lytftiofi,, which was to have been
borne upon Cavalry, the plau of sal
vation would have been defeated, but
for the negroes who boro tho cross
instead of Christ.
Thu lecturer then gave his views
upon the origin of color, giving tho
physiological construction of tho skin
which contains the matter of color.—
In the substance termed rctemucosum
is the coloring matter, said he : this
structure which is cellular or honey
comb-like, in the pure white race is
nearly empty, or containing a perfect"
ly transparent substance, the rctemu>.
cosuiu itself being colorless. Iu tho
yellow races the coloring matter in
these cells is-red, slightly modified by
the economy of tho system. In tho
blaok races tho coloring matter ia the
samu without any modification, being
intensified bv concentration, becoming
a pigmet, which is simply concrete or
concentrated rouge, so that the coloi
of the blackest Alrican, and that of
the rosy tints on the cheeks of the
most, delicate white, or Caucasian,
lady are identically tho same in sub"
stance, that in the white beKg but
rouge in small quantities, mixed with
colorless matter, while that in the
African is compact by concentration.
As a final to his lectnre, the lecturer
again urged upon - his hearers to be
true to themselves, thfit they need not
bo ashamed of their originators, for no
race on the face of tho earth had anch
a liiatury as theirs. ....
It was certainly a remarkable lec
lure to come from each a man.
Labor for the Soatli.
MERCER & SMITH,
• if ■■■j. i wi«» an
saSr^TX’MejSi
Ig Boot and Shoo
LD A BBO’S.
[W© copy the following speculations
from Forney's Philadelphia Press ot _ AT th El li
the 24th instant.]
One of the problems of the age, and
one that will tendor more to its vecu-
perntiou, in the solving, than anything
else, is how to introduce labor in the
»South. It is an understood proposi..
lion that supply is limited by demand,
but in this ease th® principle seems re
versed, and the demand remains mi
sapplied. It is a singular fact to regis.
ter, in relation to tho Southern States,
that while there has been a demand
thero for a half a century for unskilled
labor, aud capital has backed that de
mand, yet it has never been supplied ;
and as a consequence, notwithstanding
tho cultivation of cotton and sugar is
tho most profitable of any staple cul
ture, only a small lithe of wlmt could
and onght to bo done i.i accomplish
ed.
In a condition of slavery this void
could easily be understood. The white
labor could not, and would not bo al
lowed to enter into competition witli
the black, and ol tflo black there was
not a sufficiency. This made the cost
of labor always high, aud if the cotton
States had not held a monopoly of their
production they could not have illord
ed the cost of their labor; or, in other
words, had they been • Mi.- 1 to outer
into competition with th * North in the
production of the same .mu le—say
corn, for instance—they would have
become instantly bankrupt. This may
seem a singular theory when put for
ward in behalf of freo against slave
labor, but it is easily demonstrated.
To do this, we will lako the year 1800,
and count the cost of the negro laboivi
ns lie then stood to the planter. A
til'sl-elass field hand could not be
bought then for less than tl too, it’the
planter expected to gel sueli a work
man as the Northerner could go into
the labor market and choose at all
times The interest on thin money
was ten per cent., for at no less rut<
could money ever be procured, even
on mortgago of the most valuable
•stales, iu the South. This would be
$140, This man must be clothed, and
not less than $20 per annum would do
it. IIo must be insured for t wo.thirds
of Ids value*. $20 more. There are
doctors'bills, small items, i*.* ikage,
loss, etc., which we are safe ia putting
down at $10 per annum. Iu this we
make no calculation for food ; lor the
risk tho planter takes on $4CU,0T, one-
third ot his value, nor yet on the lael
that there was never yet got. as iiiueli
labor, by twenty per eenl., from slave
as from free.
Now, let us see, at this same time
what the Northern Farmer could do
He could find daily, provided he was
any where near the cities, good thews
aud sinews, ottering at. his door, for the
sum often dollars per month and keep.
He, therefore, paid for his limn only
the sum of $120 per annum; took iio
risks on him, and got twenty per cent
more labor lor his money.
This is as the case stood then, and it
is little altered now. The black man
has too lately undergone this great
change to understand and realize it iu
the aggregate. He is like a newly-
fledged merchant with a stack of goods
on his hands which have suddenly ris
en in Taluo-lntoxioalc.1 with In* sup.. „. F , <HK Wa „„ ( .„.
posed wealth, and not feeling over-mix.
ions to.sell becauso Ills necessities do
not compel. The black man has been
brought up iu a rigid school ot econo- •
my, and can live on little. He has'
known whrt it was to work when lie!
did not want to. Is there anything
alrnnge, therefore, iu the fact that lie 1
should not want to work unless hoi
touts that necespity demands it V
Tho Southern laborer is at this mo- •
tnenl much better able to stand out
for high price for his labor than the;
Northern farm-bund. This fact should j WARREN it KKM1*, 1 Voprietors.
teach the white laborer that there must
Albany, April fitli, 1860
OLID ST-A-HSTID,
Still keep on hand «•
A FULL STOCK OT
GROCERIES.
l'l.ANTATIt >N
Family Supplies,
DRYGOODS
BOOTS AND SHOES,
Hi ON AND ST K ICI.
IIAlimVAHI’ & (TTI.KItY,
ORNADURMH, HTUtlM'.ll IIOOI'H \ YARNS.
Tli.y tmvp in *i.ir<> h l.i.r* l..l ..f
BACON,
CI.KAlt A C'i.EAl! nillBED SIDES,
!ltliiuuu:n:i, ham.;, RI..1
l'AM I l.Y MEATS-
CORN AND PROVISIONS,
Rl'UAIt, CilfFEK, : VI.T,
nuj .v.'rvtlitug p|.» n-uiilly r..un I in lli.it
General & ('mnjilele Slock
Tlio'.r old fiieiuh hikI nislumorn. mul l In*
public generally, ure admired ilial ili.-v n
iinner lo well at ihe LOWEST LIVI Ml
I’ltKMJK, uni linn ihey keep tin* IIKM'
HOODS ihey cn’n hint.
fojy* They rennerlfully invite iiiKpcclion.
and defy compel it inn
Albany, April 2d, I Still Um c .|.
•I. W. Kkmv
TOWNS’ HOTEL,
• •
11 IIO At) ST HURT,
ALBANY^ GEORGIA.
LA.W cards.
D. H, POPE, -
ATTOHUEY AT LAW
■ALRANY, HA.
Will giro prompt attention to any hnalnvM
entrusted lo him, iu alt the Court* ol Dough-
—lynnd surrounding counties.
Jh * *“ ’■* *
jiiu. I, 1869 ly
a. J. WKU1IIT. |„ I\ I*. WAKRKN
WRIGHT 8l WARREN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
ALBANY, CIA.
W ll.l. practice in the seven 1 Courts id
I.uw’iuul Equity in Inin Nhdo and the
I'ircait CourtB ot the United Slates lor the
Stale of Georgia.
AImo attention given lo (*OMMI83ION iu
IIANKKUPTUY.
Albany, .Ian. 1,1869. ly
Hli'll AMI> K. III NFS .,
...lilt’ll\«l> IIOIIIIS.
HINES & HOBBS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
AL1IANV, HA.
Will practice iu DOHUIIKItTY and the
mu rounding t’oiiiiHes, iu ihe Miiprem* (’ouvls
of the 3iati\ and Ihe United Hlalc* Uin’iiit .
Court nl Smaimth : and will attend lo busi
ness in Houlh Weill tieurgia gcuei'ally, l*\
special agreement. •
niarcliRO—ly
BB
Commission Merchants.
Y. II. MI ST T.ll. JOIINSTOM. H. C. UtOKITT.
RllSt, .loblist Oil &, Co.
Cottou Faotoro,
WAIHMI011.SK AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS.
OoiiHiKumonlH Solicit oil.
-tio:)-,
<»!<’ K I < 1 K
Discount and Deposite.
Oolteriioii* attended to and remittance
I’ltO.MUTLV .M ADI!
AMIAM, GEORGIA.
dune f.lh, 1S6K. tv
V.U.Uvmt. T. II. JhIISNTON. ll.ilLorKKr,
RUST. JOHNSTON & I.OCKJJT,
THE PROBLEM 80LVED1
1 L» ’if I* ..
Dnterprise the Means and
S access the Result!
FORESTER & GREENWOOD
Have d*mon*lrated the wisdom of
LOW PRICES AND QUICK SALES,
mnl are determined to do luisiuesn
an that line.
They now have in Store, nud are constantly
receiving,
K|»r«’lul Neln-llouslor Ihla Nlnrket
Uonalaling of
Hoavy Plantation Supplies
—and—
FAMILY GROCERIES
TI,,,
Would eBpeeiatly call attention to
lheir Block of
BAOONI
Ulcar Sides, Ulear Ribbed Aides, .Mboulders
and IIhiiih.
Or. John £. MoMillan,
--OFFIUK IN—
Chook’a Building,. Up Stalrt,
.V. if /)...•» to It*i < \ Hohh'n Oitire.
•iely Street, two door?
r /.. It*,,
Reiihlence, 8«
east of Judge Viihiui'b
iuareli22— ly
Dr. Henj. I\l. Uromwoll
Office as lieri’tofoie, over Welebs’ Drug
Wore, Albany, tla. Residence next door lo
Dr. Ilihiuan'H. in (lie house I'nriurily occupied
by Mr. I. II. Mliuw.
Ian 6—ly
DR. W. A. LOVF,
-O !■’ |.' | (1 K -
IN
GII.IIEItT A 11110'S. imilG STORK.
UHOAD 8THKKT, Albany, (In.
fell. 21, 1868
Any calls left at the Drug Wore of Hits
•mil and Dali will receive prompt atlentinii
Dr. 13. h. Connally,
iMtir, nuj Htpi|itn^ mom ovor tVololi'i. Drii*
flloro, Alli.ny, On. OHioo I'ornifrly ocriqic 1
t.y Or. Atoxmt.t. r, I hr UcnlM.
.Ian. 5—ly *
be nil eligible fielil open for liirn, nml
Inilitco jtfiii lo gmnp it. The il'iy li;if
f jono by when tho while meebame or IIIII E (' T
aborcr lit llic South was fienpiscii alike
by bin own color anil tbe black, am)
llio time baa conic when be can not
only obtain enhanced wages, but re
r.pcct. The South wants him, aud Ilia
coming in a question to them ol life ami
death. *
Looking at Ibis matter iu this tho
roughly practical light, we cannot help
wondering that there is not sumo coa
lition between llio employers at. tbe
Soutli and those ot this city, New
York, and Boston, who are interested
in giving the new and unskilled labor
arriving from Europe llio best diree
tiin. The West is having her fair
chance, and can bitvo it, even though
n largo percentage ol emigration was
diverteil from her, and we do not
know that a more patriotic or practi
cal move conld be made at the present
tnnethsn for the mayors oftlwNorth
ern cities to open communications
with tboss ol the Southern, .nd see it
some syatepi could not bo organized to
give the South wbat she wants and
what wo have a superabundance of.
A Onions C.tcrtATio*—Mr. Rsfsa, Iks
.xp.rt.necd Watch M.k.r at L. £. W.teh 4
Co’. Book sad J.wtlry Store, says tlk bal
sam wks.1 la a oyttador wstek trevtlssboat
2488) miles ia oat year.
Sensidi-b.—The Cincinnati Gazette
(Radical) is opposed to ai;y more teat
oaths. It says : “Experience haa prov
ed thatswearing will not make rebels
loyal or save a country, it was sop
posed that by tradition thn American
people were opposed to test oaths,
hilt in the excitement of war we have
pushed the oath to Iho extremity. We
snepeet that the whole result may be
summed op in this : that our exits
oaths excluded only the honoruhle
men among the rebels, and admitted
the wont, who look the oath and ’re
mained jest as they were before.
Boots, Shorn. Bit. ond Cops,
At ZACHABLA3.
HI PO II TATI ON.
.10,000 DOLLARS’ WORTH
or
CHINA, CROCKERY AND
GLASSWAR,
AT
UO nud 6'J iTInlherry Si. f Itlucou
MERCHANT!! «nJ DEALERS will find they
can Have money Ly purchaxing in Macon.
B. A. WISE,
80 anil 82 Mnlherry Slrevt.
■ 19* Order* tilled and price lint forwarded
on application.
Mar 6, if
J.W-HOWARD,
* Proprietor,
Livery Stable Attached.
Euftula, Alabama,
Fvh. Glk, fi m.
W
Ini, II
Debtors Take Notico I
E ARE COMPELLED TO SUE ALL
CLAIMS on our hands on wkjek tka
vighl of action accrued prior to June
1865, according lo Ilia provision* of Iba
Act March lOili, I86'.». We will gladly niaat
all ngalnHt whom wa have claims. In theaptr-
U of compromiaa and aqiiUv, I hat snob elai«a
may ha settled or arranged; and wa pari
larfy call the attention of the debtors of Mar-
ear A daGrafffurlrd, E. - T. Jones & Jones,
Laws A Co., to our Intention respecting their
indebtedness. STROZIER ft SMITH,
Attorneys at Law.
April 16, *69-31
MKI>IC!A I * GAUDS.
BAY STREET,
Savannah? C3-n.
Lifiorul AiIvitiHVH tn:t«l«* on t*otisi|'n*
tiieittn ofi Cotton in Store, nml on
Shi|iinentH to onr I'ni-respoti-
ilcntM in Now York nml
Liverpool.
Attention given EXCLUSIVELY to
the sale of Cotion,
OF AM. (ll(AI)KS
CORN,
Jan 6—ly
Consignmentm SoHcltod.
MEAL, PEAS, POTATOES AND RICK
MnoKorel,
Ciumod Moats auil Fish.
sriiAIIS, tomiK, TEAS, Sllllip.
SALT.
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Ottuahurffs. \
Ifliwn ,'i' Htrlpod Oaotliu.
cotton vim
< liru Ing and Smoking T*barro.
And n new supply of
(Senaiae Hoahtr Rectified
I
l)r. Win. P
-AT
Ball'.
Hllunnn &
Hroail StiHH'l.
Allmny, Murch 26—luC
Joinings
Drug Store,
CARRIAGES &
WAGONS & HARNESS
I am (lie ngaiit for (lie Tomlinson Drmor.
chI Company or New 'York, tlit* Woodruff
Concord, and tin* llrnltlelioro maniifnrlurles
and ntn recfiviug per hi on in cr every week
Carriagns,
Wagons,
aud Harness-
KAasmvrAN * SFAnSS.
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
To
Miu-oni <Jn-
f/tr Planters
Promt liana nud oilier well known CHlnb
Hhiuenla, mid can till any order a( short un
lice, when denlred, ul iimiinUcliiierH prices
willi freiglil added.
L. C. Mil AW,
Agent
Albany, tla., Jan 5lli, 186t», 6 iuos.
Feed, Sale and Livery Liable,
ON A CA.MII RAHIM.
Wariifiigloii hi.,* - Allitiiiy. Un.
By Sims & Kirkinan.
Ho florae* and Doggier, to hire on Du ml ay,
except in canes of enn-rgen/’j.
PatroiiH, come lo lime,
To 1st of January 'OR.
JanH-tf
BRICK MASONRY!
FHI subHirikar I. pr.friitv.l lids sit kinds o
Brick Work & Plastering
at abort notice and on reasoahble terms: He
eolieit* a share of public patronage.
WAAC J. UHINSON
Albany, Ga., Maw 2fUb. ly
Middle and Southern Coorgia.
POR TWRNTA* YKAIIR we have nerved
you, we believe fail brolly. 4»ur HiiecpH* de
pend* upon your prosperity ; hence we hr\ye
r.enlou*ly noiiglil In piouiole your inlerenl
' advance il by every mean* in our pow 1
AHCouimlHHioii Merelianl* we ngain ten*-
deryim our nervier*, nl our old Hlaud, wliirli
ba* willmlood the llaine* of a burning Hi|iinre
Mlieretiy proving ith Hocurlly), nud where we
hope to merit the very liberal patronage nl
way* given tin.
The nnle of cotton I* onr specialty. We
Haller ournelvca none can excel u* To old
frietidawe return thank*: to new ones, try
U*. we will try to pleane you.
U*uel nreomiiiodntion* given lo eualde you
lo make a crop.
THOM. HARDEMAN, Jn.,
o. II. 8PARKS.
Jan. Ini—liuion.
BACON
AND
i* no v m ii ns ,
ON TIME I
(O)
K ARE NOW PREPARED to hell Plau-
tera their Hupptie.a on time, AT HKA-
RoSAllLPa RATES,
FOR GOOD PAP£R t
JOHNSON, CAMPBELL & CO.
mar l» 2m Mncon, Un
BOOT MAKER.
P. MCDONOUGH
I NFORMS TUB CITIZENS OP ALBANY,
ami vicinity. Dial he ia now prepared lo
anufaolure ROOTS and HIlOEH in the nenl •
eat manner, and ui cheap an he poanildy can,
and live.
WOItK WARRANTED!
Aa I employ none hut the VERY BEST
WORKMEN, 1 feel necure in WAR RENTING
ALL WORK.
SHOP over (lOLINHKIH STORK.
(next door to Jerry Waller’a Building) Broad
Street, Albany, Ga.
apr i:uiiu» p. McDonough.
POPLAR LOO
The heat whinky on Ihe continent'
CREDIT
■ will be extended till next fall to iho-e deair
ing it, for
; Ci ly A.ocopt,anoo.
•I Iff, Tliry re*peelfully aoliril aeonlimiatire
; °l the litierat patronage heretofore bentowed,
and pledge uiiremlltinQ cxerllott* lo give eat-
1 iafaeiion.
Albany, Ga , March 2:1, 18611 -ly
THE
M. BAliNES
Proprietor.
Pino Strunk Albany. Georgia.
Having recent ly completed Ihh llmiae, ami
pul il iu mndilioii lor Ihe neeomiuodnlion of
gile*lH, the Proprietor pledge* hi* enrne*l en
deavor* lo give rail.si union Hi* room* are
large and well ventilated ; hi* table nball ba
eoiiHlnnlly Hiqmlied with Ihe be*l ihe market.
Hll'ordH, nnd hi* Ncrvenl* nhwll always bn
prompt, polite nml nllenlive.
I A Hack i* nlwny* at tho Depot on Ihe
1 a-rival of train*, lo convey panaengeM lo Ihe
IIoiino, and every convenience nml comfort
desirable i* gumaiileed
MERRICK BARNES,
Proprietor.
Jan 1—If
Adverti*euu‘niH forwarded to all Newspaper*,
No advance charged on Puldiaher'a priced.
All Lending Newnpapere kept on file.
Information aa Io(?onI of Advertluingfiirniaheil
All orders receive careful atlentios.
laquirieH by Mail answered promptly.
Complete Printed LIhI of Ncwnpaper* lor eala
Special Ll*i*prepnred for Ciialmnere.
Adverli*emenlH Written nml Noticed aocured
Order* from Budinerd Men eNpecinlty
40PARKR«K|Qf
The Georgia Mutual Aid
Cornpaiiy,
-18 TIIK—
UKST, CIIIUI'I'HT, AND lt|«»T
Itl.I.IAItl.i: IN Tllll
COUN'IRYl
It in far pr.f.rxbl. lo xnjr I.if, luaurauci
Company.
Ha contingent henefild connlitule really a
PAHKHIN'S HEPATIC BITIERS,
THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA*
AN» A
STOMACH AND LITER.
taxv Ui aacoHMKRpte bt thi
IfBDZOAL PA.OULTY.
HEGEMAN Ac CO,*
AQMJfTB, JfKW TOBK.
HamrfaotnredbyCJF. PANKNIIT,
Largo
stock Ladies* Shoes,
At ZACHARIAS 1
OHABLEBTON, B.O.
KPDtr Sale ly JhntggUU IWrysBwv.^B
Peb 9-ly . * .
I A Porr.—The brands of puff eigun and omo
r eigart sold at Welcha* Corner, are the benl
" ‘ ‘ r cigars for tbe money In the marktt;
The prompt payment of which, may be Im
plicitly relied on.
It guarantees Ihe full payment of all mor
tuary dues, upon Iho death of a niemberof
any claad, tu the. extent, if necessary, of scorn-
eighths of its profits, to he paid over within aix-
J/days, or eooner, lo Ihe family of the de-
iccMcd, or as mar bo directed by him or her
n will or otherwise.
Il popularizes the Manonio system of Life
luenranee, (which Is a noble charity,) but in
cheaper even than that eystem, to any person
lrt years of age and younger.
It is cmphatlcaly the l*oor Man’s FrieuO,
and chsllengea comparison with nil other
systems of Life Assurance now extant.
Coma forward, and examine its Constitu
tion, and its liberal By LAw»
OBoera
BLOUNT c: FERRELL, President.
JOHN P. MORKLAND/Sec. ft Trees.
Principal office—LaGrange Troup Co. Ue.
John e. McMillan,
Local Agent
liUfiuUt