Newspaper Page Text
Vol
«Sc S0 3ST,
c;) irOaS AND PROPRIETORS.
,. r; _ '5 i»er iiinuat. in itlvance.
.... ,v —P. iiquart of tenlines, each
V >y K t > n:\Mts and oherafurall
ntv-ti\ e jier cmt.off.
juts <»ei J
j t:u.\L, ADVKKTISIJCH.
s (jitat;oiit-s'urletterfoi ad-
, ltiU n : * J J®
“V;„ tl er s «l‘ dism’n froiiidm’n 5 Ou
A.-*.»V. ic ] itersofdism’nofgiird’n
\m for leave tu sell Laud
;,)ebi-rs and Creditors
• ihd.p‘ r square of ten Unei
'‘ 1 i -s inal, pas - sq-, ten davs
-Each levy of ten lines, or tss..
' " ... s;1 j es of ten hues nr Irsn
* Cf, .'.Vs »ales, par sq. (2 morths)
; l ' i •'•'Poree'i 'dire of mortgage anc oth-
" .'Vathly’s. per square
l^rav*totU‘as,thirty days - -
'i • . » S ot' U >>>cct, Kcsolutions »y Societies,
lr ” '... ,.< ee img six it net,to be charged
.transient advert's 111 -
Orhnnry
S,:li
II
A
A
A
V
:i r>o
ft oo
:t oo
5 oo
1 50
2 50
5 00
ft 00
J 00
' 00
l.ilc
■Mtte 4i
N* olive!
• reu iv 1
> olives
|0= l ' SJ
a ,( of O'
Diijlied 1
'■Utiuii.i
.id, by Administrators,Execa-
urdians, arc required by law, to be held
r ' t Tii • day in the month, between the
!ac ‘ ir ’. .; a ,j l3 forenoon and three in the af-
■ ' . i »<jo,n i-h"!i.se in theeouuty in which
tjroooriv is situated.
• •! ■. sales must be given in a public
'' l ivs nrevious to the day of sale.
. . [ iC sale of personal property uiust be
.n ;iinar 10 Jays previous to sale day.
, j . ,-ors old creditors of an estate
• published todays.
;i i application will be made to the
tiil for leave to sell laud, must be
■ 0i j,»vj months.
br letters of Administration, Guar*
uust be published 30 lays—fordis-
* T ’ mV , „ Vd.niftistration, monthly six months ;
‘ j . nissio i trout guardianship, 40 days.
, ' t .jreclosure of Mortgages must be
Vidmd -i u:!,Ul for lour months-i** testablish-
, )Si) ertj-rlki ftttlspuccoj thrcfniouchs-
’ 1 ' » iliu Miles irotn ifixecutovs or Autuuns-
S“«i«» S h» beon given 1* tU. <ie-
ffi ‘ ' ifu.: s..ace of three months. Charge,
,., .,,ar'c of tea lines for eachinsertton.
% ‘,,,uous will always be continued accord
‘ . ii. regal requirements,uuless otu
jtdise ordered. i
j tUiiN 1) UKOTHEK8.
44 Third Street, Alacon, Gceigia.
M aimfaoturers
OF
U J tl i c.s i 11 *i r a s s s > Collar* 4 & 6.
ATSD
jolssa'cjCtid zietail Dealers
IN
Saddlery,IS^rdware, Bools &c
Harness,Skirting, Lace, Sole, Upper, -iiehiug,
Piteut ami Enameled leather, Enameled Ciotlis,
.'all and Lieiug Shins.
Our Saddles, ilaraess Ate., Are ot our own Man-
Had are ; aud we reter to those who have used
iur wort, cuinwruiag its merits.
To Maaufacturers, we would say : Our stock
if Leather aud other Goods in our line, is
huge, and «re aim to please in T’rtue as well as
Juaiitv. # . , ,
A’e otter a great variety of Whips, from which
it«mo»t trsudious cannot fail to matte tt sense*
Sou. As also, Horse aud Saddle Blankets, Hug
er >1 its, Ac.
V ■ rfsasi
i;; '>'^1
US
MILLED GE V XL
JOHN HABIG,
GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JAJ
SAVANNAH, HA.,
WHOLESALE &. RETAIL DEALER IN
Fine Fandies^
FRENCH CONFECTIONERY,
ChocohiJes, Fruits, Nuts, Stjru L . and
Cordials.—Foreign and Domestic
Toys and Fancy Goods.— Tin
and Mechanical Toys, Chi
na and Wax Dolls
and Doll Heads.
China Vases and Ornameir
RUBBER GOODS,
Accordeous and oilier Musical It
menls, Cuilerv, Pocket-Boo
Work-Boxes, Dressing Cases
Fancy Baskets, Willow-
Ware, Fire-Works,
\>C. , a lk/C., Ik-Cy.
A line TnliVs Arctic Soiia Fomi
with finest Fruit Syraps.
Cl?’ Orders from the Country pri
(TtfcnJm to and solicited. Our m
FAIR DEALING and GOOD G
(Corner of Broughton & Whitaker Streets,
J
April 20. ISO!
SAVANNAH, GA,
i 10 tf
n
%
,0
-£L. u I
\m :
i jNv
p% I'ji.i" -gm
ijWr*! ■ .i #
Vv:;, Sm
m
tti . JL
THJE
Ss IUSUA ORGAN CO.
WINNERS Of THE
PARIS EXPOSITION MEDAL.
Who have uniformly been awarded
HIGHEST HONORS
At. Industrial Exhibitions
IN THIS COUNTRY,-
So that their work is the acknowledge*! stnndnnl
of excellence in its department, respectfully an
nounce that, with extended and perfected facili
ties, and by the exclusive use ot recent improve
ments, they are now producing y t l.torc pcrject
Organs than ever before, in great variety a.» lo
style aud price, adapted to .il public and private
uses; lor Drawing. Rooms; Libraries, Mnsie
Rooms, Concert Hans,Lodges. Churches.bebooL.
&.c , in plain and elegant cases, all ot which they
are enabled by their unequalled facilities tor man
ufacture to so'ii at prices of iuierior work.
The recent improvements iu taese Organs have
so increased their usefulness and popularity that
they are unquestionably the mo»f. desirable in
struments obtainable for family use, as we l as
Churches. Schools, &c„ while the prices at which
they can be afforded i$50 to SLUOd) adapt, then,
to the means and requirements of all classes.
They are equally adapted to secular and sacred
music, are elegant as furniture, occupy little space,
are not liable to get out of order, (not requiting
tunin'^ once where a pianoforte is tuned twenty
times) are very durable, and easy to learn to play
UP TheM. & 1L Organ Co. arc noxv selling FOUR
OCTAVE ORGANS for $58 each; H\h OC
TAVE ORGANS, FIVE STOPS, mill two sets
0 f VIBRATORS for $t25, and other styles at
proportionate rates. . _
*\,r testimony to the superiority of their Organs,
the Mason & Hamlin >irgau Co respectfully re-
to the musical profession generally ; a miqon-
tv of the most prominent musicians t” U' e eojin-
t fv w fth many of eminence in Europe, havmg
giVeu public testimony that the Mason & Hamhti
?)rp**Liis excel nil others. . n ...
\ circular containing this testimony in fud wib
Kan t free to any one desiring it, also a descrip
tive circular, containing full particulars respect-
L.rr these iuslrun.tm^ with correct drawings;ol
tbf different styles and the lowest prices, which
are fixed aud invariable. Ad'Iress
THE MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN lAJ■,
m$Z**v.**’*-*< T‘
November 3b, lc(W
rm
IMmm
-iiajjii
’Sr'*' 1 '
'mg#
«ii 1 * 11
if «Btl
aiapBB
( Iar Patent Adjustable Plough Back hand,
tomniends itself to th.i Planter, by its being
ptej to large or small animals, and obviating
. ie "eeosaity of .noving it to the loins,when shal-
u M>l° u ?liing is desired.
Webuy Hides, Furs, Wax," Wool, Moss and
fallow.
Sfiptember 28, l‘-C9 39 oin
Frost, ,-BleboIs s5z> Oo.,
•tolesale .A Retail Manufacturers of &. Dealers in
P'XIiST CLASS
I^mrniture
OF EVERY VARIETY.
BOWERY, near Canal St., A- T
*i.V
G O '2dL I* ~ST m
RICHMOND, VA.
J3T Persons desiring to insure their lives wil
call upon K.M.ORME.Jr Ag’t.
Milledgeville, May 19, ieG8 20
Low [Prices.
W HITE DINNER SETS, NEW LIMOGE
Shapes, 157 pieces, $25. Smaller s.ze sets
proportionately low in prices. ^ ^
WHITE TOILET SETS, J'l pieces, $3 20.
WHITE TEA SETS, 44 pieces, f>4 00.
GOOD WATER-GOBLETS, per dozen, SI 50.
GOOD WINE-GLASSES, per dozen, $1 00.
All other goods in our line cqtiaGy tow <Sopd*
packed for the country, or forwarded by Express,
O. O.D.
WASHINGTON HADLETS,
Middle Cooper Institute Blotk,
Third and Fourth Aves., between 7fh and 6th Sts.,
NEW YORK.
—a A for Illustrated PlK.togr.ph and Cata-
„f e "imoire Dinner, Tea and Toilet Sets,
42 3pi
logue of Etnrog©
aiafTod free.
October 19,18(59
t; \V. WHITE,
fUtadnetj-al-N-imi,
wit t v nrii' VILLE, GA.,
idjoicing counties
arnwti^Lm.jti i
A PROCUp'PICX.
•3-eorgia,-
Uy RUFUS B. BULLOCOGiirtrnor of said Siate.
To the People of Georgia:
The recent renewal of ac-tii hostilities against the
person aud property of coifed citizens and white
Republicans by the organic j band.-, of secret ns-
sasrins in certain pbrtions eft the Slate, seems to
indicate a concert of actionland a purpose ou tin-
part of said organizations to persist iu defy iug the
civil law.
It therefore behooves the good people of this
State to see to it that the commonwealth be not
forth r injured and defamed l»v the acts of per
sons who, it is believed, are wholly withoutiuter-
ed; in, or regard far, the welfare of the State.
I- is the duty of every county, town, or muni
cipal corporate authority to ensure perfect protec.-'
ti-n for life aud pioperty to every resident within
thejr borders; ami, whereas, la many cases, tin-
local officials fail lo exercise efficient means to se
cure tin's result, the good dozens within -such
limits—those having a material interest at stake,
or the best iuterestof the Stale at heart—should
see to it that prompt measured are at once taken
under the civil law to arrest and bring to punish
ment the members of these organizations of se-
lap.
^Mwtlmmii,
THE TERROR OF THE WEST.
A» Anllifiilic Letter from the Oulitiw Hi I tier-
bra nil.
The Outbreak nj the Rebellion—The Hor
rid Murder oj the Htlderbrand Family
—A Brother's Revenge—On the Track
of the Union* Army—Murder and Ra
pine— Two Bushels of Radical Bullets
Wasted.
/diets, piloted 'dv Jim Craig, a very .Him a-.ul u e |-. /“M ■ ' <•
meddlesome „,y. moier.ook „ ),«, d.,. «<
—^ Don't r,.n ~ . a IT J*
To the Editor of the St. Louis Times :
Snt :—As “fair play” is one of tlie
jewels of American character, and as
it is considered right and proper to
give even die “devil his due,” 1 hope
y'on will not refuse lo give lo the pub
lic, through vour widely read paper,
Sarn. HiLlerhi-arwI’a mvii statement of
eginning ol the
te end that fair
s whether there
me killed. ,
Mu self defence l turned loose on
them and made nviny r of those who
sought mv lde bile die dust- I often
met them in the woods. They all
knew me and would offer to assist me.
They would make an appointment to
bring me previsions u> my biding pla
ces, ami then would pilot soldiers there
to try to have me captured. I always
killed that kind of(nen. 1 have captur
ed many Union soldiers, but I never
treated them unkindly unless it was
one who had brutally treated Southern
prisoners, and 1 knew it.
Clothes torn from His Body by Bullets.
I have had hundreds of hair-breadth
escapes for my life; but l know there
is a merciful God dial knows and does
all tilings light—an all-poweiful hand
has protected me. I have twenty times
been suddenly waked, and fltd from
my bed, when a shower of Yankee
isons and strong j ^ a j| g wou | ( | nddle the hed 1 had sprang
out of. 1 have had my clothes torn
from my body by Yankee bullets, but
two only ever drew blood from me.
I wish to say ihai 1 saw a Republi
can <.l June last, which contains some
charges against me that are not true.
It speaks of manv cruellies commit
ted by H.lderbraud in Callaway conn
esperate deed
i Brother Frank.
, 1 was leading
rvmg to provide
est though hum-
condition ofaf-
[issouri, I had
;eep out of the
rt in the war.
Frank Hilder-
ile Guards un-
Jn Frank’s re-
£ ffo w Gnzd)J Bmrs
I am in as fi Ue
I ever was.
hetfled, and l am gnod"(or
of life if mv foes all„ w
peace; and if’ they t \ 0 noi) ' l " lve 11
as I ever was. vi' 1 ' 18 ’ dn< ^ good health
. - i - ' i - ^’°und Is entire!v
m. ny years
2 t‘> live ii
on them be
-the Consequence
Let spies -and informers m ^
safe distance from me. I do ni l .v ^|. 'j
can be easily trailed; bin stui j t \
safest for any person that lias a desim
to ^lunt up Hilderbrand, to let that
alone. .Remember the greenhorn that
started out lo hunt Grijizly bet,-.
in
California.
lust, iticreare euuugu men a
men to fall by the force oj i
stances, or the depravity • of i
sin, without educating any to il.
well enough to pull our ox or
ot ibe |»it, but we do not want
pits for them to fall info.
From the New Albany (Iud.) Comnu
INDIANA DIVORCES.
Hop} Suits arc gotten Up and Su
^ arious and infernally meant;
In order that those who know aiv, Dubterluges often resorted to by
and my family may know that tlje wri- Mm " ,r> k ~'
ter of this is “Sam” Hilderbrand, and
not a ficiitiousjicfson, I will here give
the names of mv wife and children.
My wili^ Margaret ; children, Henry,
Rebecca, Mary Elizabeth, Nancy
Katharine, Margaret Ann, George
Washinlon.
Yours, Sam Hilderbrand
•THE CRIME OF FLIRTATION.
The Deadliest Foe of Married Life—
Woman's Shortest Road to Perdition.
So long as flirtation is confined to
the unmarried, it can do no harm until
ii ceases to be a flirtation and becomes
tv, which are utterly untrue. I never j intrigue ; but when it enters the career
stead Exemptions
ausiuesB bfiloi'eyl>-'
propel atten
-M.
v
when, on .or about the 51st day i-i Uctoo.i . no
was tied to a tree an.: brutally whipped, tbe out
rage having been connniited by a body of vlis-
guised men for no ether reason, as is alleged,
than that Hardeman was charged with being a
Radical. ,
And bf the person or persons engaged m tne
—his head was
mangled and cut to pieces in such a
shocking manner, that the most barba
rous savage would have blushed to
have been guilty of the deed. His
mineral
was iti Callaway county in my life, ll
also charges me with cruelty to a little
boy. That is also false. I never harm
ed a woman or child in my life. 1
md family, he j warred only with men who had made
10b headed by j war on me. i was also accused of ta-
McElvaue’s or- j king stock of Jim McLane tolhea-
Aer his «oyt U re j mount of §600. The neighbors all
mashed, his body - w.„ nv Jim-McLane always lived
from n&..j
outragicommitted upen tlia.person ot jion. Ab, i !jotl v was tlicn thrown into a mine
I lK.k fifty (Ml <Imp. aud left to rm.
A Sister Dies of a Broken Heart.
The next outrage committed on toy
kindred and family was the murder of
mv brother George Washington, and a
loca edf in the town of GreaneFboro’, in i’m: comity j Canadian named Eustache Landuskv,
wlio was engaged to he married to my
sister Mary. These last murders were
...ty iff L I .
ot Oct^ier last,, was taken from Li* bad at night
and crjlfy beateu, the outrage haying been cm
mi’t-JIy a body of twenty-^ve or thirty disguised
nicu in reason, as is uilcged, 'hat he, Ihesnid
Go,'by Aittid Atlanta and requested ot tho milita
ry aatUriiieaprotection for Hie freedmen : : ;cnoDl,
located in the town of GrceneFOoro’, in tin; county
oflireeue. .. .
Aid of the person or jpersons engaged m the
demedatiou upon the office of the As-essor ot ln-
terml Revenue for tho Uuited States Government
iu tin town of Washington, county ot w iikes, on
or about the night of the Hfth liastnnt, when, as
is alhged, tho office was broken «qi--;ii, aml nooks,
•j met-, scattered and destroy ed, and notices
left warning the Assessor to leave the D,strict.
An I of the person or person* engaged the
asgaif-t un -n the house of the Hon. Lu Larues,
color,d, Republican Rcpresentaiive from the
couu y of Hancock, when, as is alleged, a body ot
masked u:en at or about tho hour ot 1 o clock on
then.-'ht of the lOlh instant, surrounded his.resi-
denc. atld by threats of persona! violence rorced
him t j leave the county. .
Aii-1 of the person c-r persons, woo, a. or n.ai
thehmr ol Id o’clock on the mjrut of the L»tli
ias mouth,
anylhmg to Be i:
him.
Sum come home.
After the excitement about the war,
and iis troubles seemed to. die out, aud
men seemed to heal over past sores, in
the spring of 1S8S. 1 came back to tot.
Francois county anti talked lo many
ot the good people ol the county con-
of matrimony it is a deadlier foe than
the plague. It is to the woman I ad
dress myself, because she has the most
power and can do the most harm. She'you
enters the family circle as a friend; is
received with heartfelt words of wel
come bv the wife and mother; with
caress r s by the'children. She stands
within the sacred threshold of home—
red never had j the home she is about lo devastate—
or from and they sup. only the angel, not the
[•demon, disguised beneath. She is a
j p her ><heri guest; the wife is busy with
her house o.i U j children ; has but in-
- '““-ent health; iooL $ p. t | e and carev
w orn, >>t baby is cros&, all( | Bridg-
et cannot uo ;my'pj ic ft u „{ iJi|i( j
is young-looking aud luiu. ai| e .
advent of a baby every year (n >C $ uwt
impair his constitution. The tyuest
ceriiing the propriety ot returning to, . , a ,
=- 1 1 - - of all! i* - 3 > ' !e * nves music, fehe sings
perpetrated by men in Union uniform,
and who were soldiers of the Federal
armv. Two weeks after those trage
dies, my sister Mary died of trouble
and a broken heart.
A Little Brother Murdered.
Two weeks later these men came to
my old home. All I spoke to
patties said, “Sam, come home. ’
I came back in good laiih. 1 moved
to my mother’s old place and lived
iheie six months. I then moved to
Hillsboro’ and stayed there until last
fail. Finding it bard to make a living
there, 1 moved on the Mississippi river,
near Rush Tower, and chopped wood
all last winter. I then moved back lo
instant, fired tea or twelve gunshots iut» a esmp i -,i,, poor, dear, broken-hearted toother
uf Colored laBoren., o« the £ e c * t J“ f seeing the house burning, sent/nv lit-
A Bl ,, 05 w»u,uU..,d. ,v* | Uenry lQ hfa ,- t kss
d asked for the family Bi
ble as a relic to be kept wheuall else
my mother’s house and loaded several i , . u pr .i
• • , , i m..it the ihree Rivers, on ine cam neim
wagons with her property, drove oil all
our cattle and set fire to her house, the
best stone dwelling in the settletfsenL
con & Brjuswic**. is* Y* | , , ^ .
fair, whe*'3by one mail was killed iiud auotkcr sg i 11 i' brother
verefv w-unded. . ■ I wretches and asked for the
And of the pardon, or por.'ons, who, ou LI u»s-
di-v night of Court neek, October t.-nn, about
midiigut, said to be a body ot sixty u-.on in pi- , vvas gone
iron,[him the kpys of the jail and released Iron. , her horror and affonv
tlic-jli' one James
law.liiwaitiug his trial for th
Taylir, a respcctahL; citizen
Give! nr.def my haud'kad t.._
SlJ,', at t!»o Capitol, ill the eu-y ot Atlanta, this
2.nh day of Novoinber, iu the year our Lord
one thousand eight hundred and sixty-hiue, and
of the independence of the United htates the
ninety-fourth ' ,,
‘ RUFUS B. BULLOCK, Governor.
piace, to raise a crop,
There I lived
and worked until the 4th ol June last,
when 1 was waylaid mid shot by Jim
McLane, or Walter Evans, and two
others, that I or my friends may yei
call to account.
Jim McLane, McQuinn, and others
: to ue Kept vyueiiaui j to murder me, in
Not. dreaming M '» : 'ff,A,sever,,! .lays. Oo the
what car express
....... ... -..j, ' < ;4 ti , 0 f June 1 was shot through the
her horror aud agony when iffe.-e de- . , ,
the jtI one JaraSi Oxford,“white, a notorious out- | U]0 ,. g s V 10l m y Hu! e brother, no{ twelve I !i!, 8 h al in > ‘
hie irial for tUa murder of John i , , . ... , , i ,
de. tring to be rid of mairufioi
lt rs. We have heard of a cas
trai-ve of this statement thtit oc
not m.ny years ago in this CO un
widow 1„|,| j )r0 p erl y u q,\ c h sht
transfer wVij e she letnained
but whit h, act^-ding t ( , \ )ct hus
will, she could Mr q dispose of
married again whiy. jr, a stale o
erture. Well, she tUq m atry a
iime|*t-d in the course M f time s
sired to transfer the propertv li
by herjiusband. Tins, of cour
could Tit do, the provision qf fo,
band’s will inhibiting her. Il cl
a quandary. A lawyer of thia.ci
consulted. He “set things up”
wife and her husband. She went
told her husband what.advice th
yer had given her, and he thoi
“just the very tiling.” And w
think, reader, that advice
Simply this : The husband ant
were to quarrel and tight even
and this was lo lie dime in the
once of the children of the wife
were well groVn, and they were
made.to believe that the quar relit
fighftna was
The prograi
letter, and '
for a (livorci
patibility” i 1
admitted it,
it. Judge
v <»rce. Th-
die proper!'
and -due ne>
married. 1
the divorce
The Exp,
males for thi
tiiry Bouiv
estimates t
all expense
fiscal year
winch are t
parimenl,
[iroper, S-5(
§1,306,714
SIG5,4I6,7i
839,993 52!
S50,575,50
828,441,76
ment ,8252 ,U / VI,
By flip Governor: , 0 . .
David G. Cottiso, Secretary ol State.
December ”, 18(59 jfb —
Haul in your
COTTOJT
AND HAVE IT
Grinned.
at the
STEAM COTTON GIN
OX /
Jim McLane, and cooking sup-
fur.
'Id*county*. " ! years old, lb rough the bowels; and a ; Shoaling
d the groat sea! of the Heriel then put his foot on bis bead and
cut his throat. Tims were ttese at- . ^ jp
irocious deeds of blood and rruelty 1 went lo uncle V' iiii ons , wnt-re
and robbery committed on my la mired \ they attacked me six days after. i h‘ }
and family. Let any man put the; shot ail day at me there. I selected
question to his soul, whether such out- Jim McLane, whom 1 knew only hy
rages would not have aroused him to : description, and shot him from the
desperate retaliation, at a time when house. Sheriff Breckinridge and the
the law no longer had power to avenge balance of his party took good care
a man’s wrongs for him and tor the! of their scalps' alter l killed McLane.
sake of justice ! And yet, evei-’ then, [t was then three o’clock, and as I had
1 bore these accumulated outrages eaten no breakfast or dinner, I cooked
without lifting a hand to avenge my my own supper, and ale it while they
j brothers’ and sister’s blood. j kept firing at me. I was often amus-
The Die Cast—Elfe or Death. j ?d to see my old aunt Williams dodg-
1he Vie Last . j ing the balls as they cyme m through
During all tlF® 6 outrages I had re-L| ie crac [ ;s> They lired the house, and
AG(i ■ solved r.ot logo in the Soulnetn army, as j had finised my supper, 1 abandon-
■ i nor to meddle in the troubles m any e( j m y burning fortification. As I went
way. I removed from Big River to ' oul I counted thirty-five men guarding
Flat W/ods, distant twenty-five tin es, The burning bouse. I saw Geo, Dt»g-
Ihnpin/that no harm would Lnifiil. me J gellf Asa Jackson, Joe McGahan, and
‘or igy wife aid children, if I'vould get j jqqjig hoy. When the house got mo
(.y’ofthe immediate neighborhood of j ho{ )or C()m foit, I left it, and walked
>fiose who had murdered and outraged j wil [,i n s j x f ee i of some of the guard,
my family. . They seemed blind, or at least they
But to my surprise, about the mid- j 1( j nol 0 p’er to shoot me.
McIntosh Street—West of Wa/he,
Vv^itli Care &o Sp^^4*
Separate rooms for lot 01 CoUon '
OT- First C^ rs firsl Servedl -C 3
Terms'— S l >00 per hundred in the
bale, or the Seed pays the to!L
JOHN JONES.
Milledgeville, 8e;it. 7. 18d ?) All tl_
ATT- WIEDENUAN.
In lb- New Building opposite, fc Hotel.
HAVE JUST received a
n nice Ejection of Watches.
Jewelry, Diamonds, Clacks,
I Silver & Plated Ware,Gnus,
Pistols, Cutlery, Musica. In
J u J 'Hgg Struments & WalkingCanes:
spectacles
fitted bv the use of the Optimoter. Call and ox
iyGoods. Twill show them to you wnb
'-Lure, and will warrant each article as
Hention paid to the ilLPAIK
41 tf
-vvelrv.
'49
die of May, just when tny crop was
looking well, and hope was strong that
1 would be left in peace, about sunrise
one morning my house was surround
ed by McElvane and his crew oi some
thirty or lorty men, all well armed.
I remembered the tate ot mv broth-
ers and friends, slaughtered in cold
blood like sheep after their capture,and
I knew there was no hope of mercy or
justice from such demons; no help
except in the courage and strength t/iat
God had given me.
The die with me was cast. I had
sought peace and quiet, but the,blood
hounds had trailed me. I was/at bay-
The conflict that I had fled f/qm was
forced upon tne. The alte/hiive was
life or dedth. /
Murders without Number.
1 met my pursuers fi the door. I
shot clown two of thop* jn their tracks,
made a rush for i\jP woods aud es
caped. Finding it/mpossible to live
’Vent to Arkansas,
my wife and four
men T killed in my
Mood ever shed by
len a price was set on
terrnfned lo revengq the
a! or near home
and afterward
child roil,
door was the
me. Then
mv head, I
.death of, brothers. I rode several
times fro/ Arkansas before I could get
to shor.f at McElvaoe, the infamous fired Jourtcto shoi
butcher,;who bad' murdered rriy brolh- t«u and missed -
ers and iouglil my life- 1 mepot ' ~
Krirni no oho Also if thev conld loavi
A learning to the Radicals.
I wish .to say to the Radicals in and
about Farmington to beware bow they
mistreat my wife and children, as l
hear they have had them under arrest
by order of the drunken Bowen, and I
will say to Bob Hill and Joe McGahan
to walk smoothly and not let my fami
ly suffer. They helped kill my broth
ers, but they have not yet killed me.
Jim McLane was a tool i:i the hands
of that infamous creature and coward,
Gust St. Gem, of St. Genevieve, who
will some day, no matter where he
may hide himself, have lo answer for
many crimes he planned, and was too
cowardly to execute, but got others to
do so tor him. McLane murdered
Judge Burk, of St. Genevieve, and
preacher Polk, over S3 years,ot age.
J wish to say to Gov. McClung that
l could have easily killed him while
he was in Farmington, if 1 had wanted
to do so, but I look on him as a geuile-
man, and that he is
to lies from bad men
eals.
Two bushels of lu/blcad Bullets.
I have had iw^ot^^is of Radical
bullets shot aMb, but o^Iv two* evef
drew blood. / i’ha v old Jmhpff, when he
his wife lost her voice when their first
baby came. The gu<-st is sprightlv
and entertaining. Why doesn’t Mary
try lo make herself agreeable to him in
that, way . ?
The guest looks up in his face ami
smiles, ihen sighs and suddenly bursts
into tears, “because she is alone hi the
world.” The man would be a prodi
gious fool if he were not a real villain.
He knows this woman’s whole body is
not worth his true wife’s little finger,
but he is in the power of the syren.
Thev gloss over their wickedness with
the usual clap Imp about “atfinities,”
and the papers record an elopement in
the general serio-lragic style. Ot the
broken hearted wile, shamed Hy the j ment, $39,134,764,21; .Judical
world’s pity, of the little children left j part ment, $37,990. Grand total, $d
to its charily, there is not much to say. ;-<)97.825,62,
T[je appropriations hist year v
$2Si,415,23S,61, being $49 ^52
Iv punished by remorse, if society less than the estimates for the '^ensi
would lei him alone ; ‘"but there are
I’Xienuating circumstances,” it says.
“Either his wife was too cold for a
man of his temperament, and had no j over the appropriation of last y
sympathy with him, or he was her su-! $1,759,331,60. The estimates tv
perior, aitd there was nothing in com- military service are $33,345.^7
moil between them. So, when he is ! being an excess over the apprnanti
ready to return and give up ihe situa- | of last year of $1,131,563 87. 1
lion,*she must be ready lo receive him The estimates for the naval sf
and make it all up. Yes, if sheds a ; are $24,693,277,37 being an ,AX<
good and true woman, she wfill, and | over the appropriation of lust/Yeai
let God take care oi the consequences ; $9,272,031,37. The estUwieS
but for the woman who would leave Indian affairs are $5,048>534j51, b
her home in that way, there is no re
turn from infatuation.' H r own and
every*other door is bar^#d against her,
1 W » LO V. HIX.M . c y 9 » ■ «« - ' . ’ j - —-
rhev would gladly sink into oblivion I The
forever. The man would be ultimate- i $2Sie
year. V
The estimates for the civil ler
are $25,73I,6S-5,40, being an ypc»
k on him as a gentle- # \y
is mislcil by jistenin<] finpr
inetij \vht>dire Ipfib- es
and she sinks down! down! down!
Why ■ Because there is that in the
heart of every woman that, condemns
her to death. The outraged purity of
her soul avenges itselb It is her own
hand that stouts her.
No woman can carry on a flirtation
with a married man that is not crimin
al. No married woman can flirt lniio
cently, even with a young man. It is
the first step toward unbalancing Isis
character. Through her he sees other
women and forms an estimate. The
young girl that enters the family and
wins the affections of the husband and:
father knowingly—and she cannot oio
it otherwise—has entered on ihe road
to perdition. There is a punishment
for the housebreaker, but none for the
homebreaker, who steals and mars
life’s best, treasures. Every woman
has the first best rigid to her own hus
band. He is her’s, in sickness and in
health, to love and to che rish; as exclu
sively’ us she should ire tie is lo
provide for her, lion or" her rnid love
■her. He is her pnJeolqr against all
the adverse circuiu^iaaces of fire. jVo
other-woman li/rs ai>y right lot he same
attentions and erpfearmenisy ami a wife
has a perfect right to reseat, intrqsion.
A man wMf saw another aian’d arm
arounij-'ms wife’s waist, would consid
er it d case for court, or an exercise
fpr pistol shooting. y:
Women with keener sensibilities a rid
natures, {gel H-tleeptt. ;S&cI,'
the heart. & £ CerUtiii
an excess over the aj/propiMiy^
last year of $2,145,354,63, Tiie
mates for pensions are $30490,
being an excess over the-hupropru
oi last year of § L 1,240,OOy TTeU
mates Ire - public works Are $2^J
173,55, being an excess over the aj
priation oflast year of $i9,132,1
55. The estimates for misv*ejj an
expenditures are $5,5531,26732 l
an excess over the appro/riap®
last year §1,790,676,83, T/ e
mates for postal service are > ; 3S,
22st,2I, being an excess over the ui
priation oflast year of $7,729,07
The estimates lor permanent- a !
priations are §143,219,115,’
523,361.less than the appro!
last yen&rr-Sav.. Rep. '
u+f' ' ’ mi
Appointment of the fxeeali
llie Slate Agricultural
At a meeting of the
Vh e-Presicleuts ol tby
Society tn Atlattla; on
the folloyviri^ geDtlemi
led members of the
hnveo of U-ii Society|for
For M* CongHtt:
G eiY.Ha rr t#o*i,
O., Savannah } W| ; Bfew7
as, P. T^pmasvi
ell, of l^aarenai P.
Second Cakgress,
Buchanan, of Baud
bert; G6rt. A.ll (
F J&., Newton; Jno.
tCl* jP. O., Aarlericus
Thbf. Cutrgre&siona
Meigs, of .Musoqgee ‘
J. B. t Mitchefl, Sf
of mine saya Um-wj -RT^^TlHrtgs- sh> -le rf Jus. Fannin, of
.. the Great S^it lift
c God has turnedhN
will never allow atiVte^vid mdddie
wiffi—per h'usbarRjh ,aod Jbef*- 'sewing
_tttat?hitie.' Aj fspejl’ flirtations 'attsr'smwbr.
th^of6r*-w’oman
They vvbi
%
.
'mFbrfdtg' ffimiv
O&nge.
Fourth.
..Ohear,
Cmgr
itbb.
tea,