Southern recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1820-1872, November 08, 1870, Image 1

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LI. MILLEDGE VILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 0, 1870. No. 45. H'aOl'TiiN’ & ROBERTS, ’ U Lessee Kdllari & Proprietors. ,. ss. OS.aXS Cditor u,i)i) per annmn, in A druses. -rrTisiHG—Per square ofteuliueg, each L”’ E ‘ « | i)0. Merchants and others forali :0'’ ' '„, r jj >5, twenty-five per cent.off. L BOAL ADVKRTUSINU. , , ,, T .- S —Citstionsf or letters of ad- «|»« .stead notice * * w ■ 1111 ;., t i„ntoriettersof disra’n fromadm’n 5 00 ‘ "Nation for lettersofdisin’n of guatd’n 3 50 • ’ ‘"moil tor leave to sell Land 5 00 A .to Debtors and Creditors 3 00 ,f Duid,per square of ten lines 5 00 phonal, per sq. t ten days 1 50 '.KuTi-Eich levy of tnn lines, or lets.. 2 50 "• sa ies of ten lines or less 5 00 '?'■,7,^.'tor’s sales, per sq. (2 months) 5 00 ‘U.Foreclosure of mortgage and oth- Vmonthly’s, per square 1 00 notices, thirty days 3 00 %-hatesof Respect, Resolutions by Societies, *ries,*fce.,exceeding six lines,to be charged ([rsiisient advertising. -s* tiles of Laud, by Administrators, Execu- iiuardians, are required by law,-to be held ‘ V *■ **first Tuesday in the month, between the ‘ often in the forenoon aud three in the af- ,,'n i at the Court-house in the county in which '("property is situated. Vatic* of these sales must be given in a public •ite Id days previous to the day of sale. 1 Votiee for the sale of personal property must be T-ii inlike manner 10 days previous to sale day. Yoticesto debtors and creditors of an estate m aiso be published 40 days. Ynice that application will be made to the Vrt of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must he i.hoJ for two months. r'ittisns for letters of Administration, Ouar- ' Am- ..must be published SOdays—ford.s- " ‘. jufro.n Administration, monthly six months , - 'ismission from guardianship, 40 days. . es f or foreclosure of Mortgages must bo .7,7,6,; ainihty for four months—for establish- os-papers,for the full space of three months— , spelling titles from Executors or Admit is- : “ r t ,, rj where bond has been given by the de- ‘ s»] the full space of three months. Charge, TmO per square of ten lines for each insertion. 1> plications will always be continued accord rhess. the legal requirements, unless ordered. oth CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. , superintendents officii, Atlantic & Gulf, r. R. company, Savannah, January 7, 1870. AND AFTER SUNDAY, the 9th instant \) Passenger Trains on this Koad will run as :,l!ows: NIGHT epxfsess train. Leave Savannah every day at... 4.30 P M Auiveat Jesup junction^M & B ^ 7 30 p M Ariive at Live Oa*k every day 2.20 A M Arrive at Jacksonville every day 7.1T2 A id Arrive at Tallahassee every day '-07 A Ja Arrive at Quincy every day A m Arrive at Hainbridge Mondays ex- cepted 15 A M Leave Hainbridge, Sundays excepted-930 P M Leave Quincy every day ” T? f, Tf Leave Tallahassee every day »•*> £ * Leave Jacksonville every day Y .7 Leave Live Oak every day ‘•f"' A \t LeaveJesup every day... in'-n a m Arrive at Savannah every day JU.oU A m MACON & BRUNSWICK ACCOMMODATION TRAIN. Leave Savannah, Sundays except- ed, at M Ariive at Jesups Sundays except- edat oOOlAl CHANGE OFSCHEDOLE. WO CHAWttS OF CARS BE TWBBBT SAVAN2TAH, AV OUSTA AH1) KONTttOM BR.7, ALABAMA TRANSPORTATION OFFICE, CET. R. R. } Savannah, August 14, 1868. $ /~hN AND AFTER SUNDAY, 16th inBt., Pas senger Trains on the Georgia Central R. R will run as follows : UP DAY TRAIN. LEAVE Savannah 8:00 A M M *con 5.38 p M An i?ustn 5:38 P M Milledgeville 8:58 P J] Eatonton i].oo P M Connecting with trains that leaves Augusta 8:45 A M DOWN DAY TRAIN. Macon 7:00 Savannah 5 ; ;jq p y Augusta 5:38 P M Connecting with train that leaves Augusta 8:45 A M UP NIGHT TRAIN Savannah.......... 7:20 P M Macon 6:55 A Id Augusta e:13 A M Connecting with trains that leaves Augusta 9:33 P M ' DOWN NIGHT TRAIN. Macon 6:25 P M Savannah...... Augusta Milledgeville 4:30 P M Eatonton ........2:40 P M Connecting with train that leaves Augusta A M Trains (roni Savannah and Augusta, a P M Train from Macon connect with Milledg vilie Train at Gordon daily, Sundays excepted. P M. Train from Savannah connects with thro’ mail train on South Carolina W„ilroad, and P. M. train from Savannah and Angusta with trains on South-Western aud Muscogee Railroads. WM. ROGERS, Act’g Master of Transportation. February 1,1870 5 tf 5:10 A M 9:13 A M 9:53 P M M Arrive at Brunswick daily at B-20 P Leave Macon daily at...» „ i. LeaveJesup daily’ at... «« Arrivs at Savannah daily at m.ou i ju On Sunday this Train will leave Savannah at 715 A M . connecting with Trains for Macon A Brunswick, aud connecting with trains tiom Ma cro and Brunswick will arrive at Savannah at 9.30 F M. DAY TRAIN. 7.15 A M 7.00 P M 7.50 P M 6.00 A M 2.16 P M 5.35 P M Leave Savannah, Sunday’s except- Arnve at Jesups, Sundays except- ed at. 1045 A M •Arrive at Live Oak, Sundays ex empted at *> •Arrive at Macon duly at Leave Live Oak, Sundays except ed at Leave Jesups, Sundays except ed at Arrive at Savannah .Sundays ex cepted at Passengers for Macon take 7.15 A M train Irom Savannah, leaving daily. . Passengers fur Brunswick take 2.10 P M. tiain frsra Savannah. , .... Passengers leaving Macon at. 8 30 A M connect i Jesup with Express train for Florida aud *V est- <-rn Division, and with train for Savannah, arriv- ! at 9 30 P M. _ ... Passengers from Brunswick connect at Jesup tvitli r ain fir .Savannah, arriving at 5.35 P M except S in,lays, when it arrives at 9 30 P. M at Jesup it Express Train for Savannah, arriving at <} 50 A M. t unnec: at Macon with Train for Atlanta, leav es at 9.00 P M. tOUTH GEORGIA &,FLORIDA R. R- TRAIM. L'ava Thomasville Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at A M Arrive at Pelham, Tuesdays Thursdays and Sat urdays at 9.55 A^ M L“i'e Pelham, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur day 3 at 3 45 P M Arrive at Thomasville, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays at 6.00 P M 11. S. HAINES, General Superintendent. Jannuary 1 1870 ® “ CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. South-Westers Railroad Compast^ ) Office, Macon, Ga., Jan. 13th, |8/0. \ Eufaula tiny Passenger and Mail Train. Leave Macon ® Arrive f ‘"ave Eufanla Arrive at Macon ... — - - - - - 4.50 P. M. Sight Freight § Accommodation Train. Leave Macon........ .... - .... 8:2o P M Arrive at Eufanla''".' 11:00 A 14 L? ava Eufaula 7:18 P M arrive at Macon - 9:10 A M Culimbus MaiQ Train. “rive Macon 7:25 A M T rr] ve at Columbus..... 1-22 A M , * Te Columbus 12:25 P M Arrive at Macon 6:05 P M % Volumhus'tiighyFrcigfit SfAc'om'n Train Leave Macon ....... 7:40 P M Arrive at L'Alurabus ......... 5:*>5 -A M ^eave Columbus.... .......... 7:00 P M Arriv e at Macon 4:43 A M r Albany Train” connects at Smithville with 7 u ! a ' lla Trains and Arrive at Albany at 3:11 P M p ' L^ves Albany at 9:35 A M—Regular Mail Accommodation Train connects three times a Keek. t Li-t Gaines Train,” connects at Cuthbert. Pi rr t srt (iaines 7:05 A M and Arrive at “ rt Gaines 3:40 P M. eca.ninodation Train connects twice a week, ^esdays and Thursdavs. v , W. S. IIRANTEY, Aud “ r "*ry 1, ||70 5 tt NOTICE. Atuaxtic & Gclf Railroad Co., t Savannah, December 15, 1869. ) O N AND AFTER THIS DATE. BY AGREE- MEN T, the rate of Freight between Savan- nan and Macon, by the Atlantic and Gulf and Ma con and Brunswick Railroads, will be as follows : First class per pound $2 30 Second class per 100 pounds.... 1 40 Third class per 100 ponnds 1 00 Fourth class per HO pounds 80 Fifth class per 100 ponnds 70 Sixth class per 100 poitnffB 30 Seventh class per 100 ponnds 45 Eighth class per 100 pounds 35 Ninth class per 100 pounds..... 3U Cotton per 100 pounds 50 Salt per sack 30 Guano per 100 pounds 15 Freight received for ail Stations on Macon and Western Railroad, Atlanta and points beyond. H. S. HAINES, General Superintendent. February 1, 1879 5 tl L. J. (ifn.MAKTIV. JOBS KLAXNERV. L. J. GUILMART1N & 00. Cotton Factors, A IV D General Commission Merchants, Bay Street. Savannah, Georgia- AGENTS FOR BRADLEY^S SUPER PHOSPHATE OF Qa a S5E£ ca , Jewell's Mills Yarns and Domestics, &c., &c BAGGING, r6PE. and IRON TIES, ALWAYS ON HAND. Usual Facilities Extended to Customers. August 33, JsTO. 35 6m. SPECIALITIES. JULES JURGENSEN, JULES EMERY. ED WARD PEKREGAUX. and the Largest Stock of DIAMONDS in the State of Georgia. Gi-EO. Jr.. LIVE JEWELS: DEALER IN Diamonds. Pearls. Rubles, Emends, Fine Watch es. all Gold Jewelry, Sterling Silver Ware, Fancy Goods, Gold, Sil ver ami Steel Spectacles, And every other article usually kept in a first- class Jewelry store. Watches and Jewelry Carefully Repaired WHITEHALL ST., ATLANTA, GA. GEN. R. E LEE. Lee made for himself an immortal name. One other, only, had just such fame : Ere the Lion was laid in his grave, The Hyenas began to howl and rave. From tha Press it is clearly seen The beasts were few and far between ; A wretch who wonld asperse Lee's reputation, Should be outlawed by a civilised nation. Whilst a planet revolves in its sphere, nis memory to liberty will be dear; The hero has landed on Jordan’s shore, The road that Washington traveled long before ; His countrymen should not repine and.weep, Because the warrior has fallen to sleep ; His mortal remains lie under the sod. His spirit has fled to its righteous God ; The angels met him on the way, From Heaven the Christian could not stay. In paying his last and greatest debt, His sun in glory has forever set. When his body sank into the earth. Heaven gave a new-born epirit birth, Laurels.which entwined his brow here below, Makes his angelic face the brighter glow. Veritas. JKfffcclIatteottf*. Sept. 13, 1870, 37 3m MARK W. JOHNSON’S -A-grricuLltuii'a-l Store- Next to Brad field's Drug Store. Broad Street, - - - • Atlanta, Ga. I ^IVE Barrels Onion Sets, Barley, Oats, Rye, Wheat and Gra<s Seeds, Red White, and Crimson Clover, and Lucerne Norway Oats, Tur nip Seeds. Flower Seed, 100 Tons Guano for Wheat. The best Grain Drill. Keller’s Patent, Dixie Cotton Press, Griswold Gin Ingham or Cal ifornia Smutter. Agricultural Implements, En gines. Ac. Send for price list. Agent for Har den & Cole's Nurseries, Gaboon's Seed Sowers and llorseford’s Bread Prepaiation. Oct. 4 1 el 0 40 3m Schedule of the Georgia Railroad. O’ SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, ) Georgia Railroad Company, > Augusta, Ga., December 23, ’69. ) N AND AFTER SUNDAY,26th Inst., the Passenger Trains on the Georgia Railroad will run as follows: DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Aagusta at--.--. .... .... .7.00 A M. “ Atlanta at ....5.00 AM. Arrive at Angust at...... .3.45 P M. “ at Atlanta 5.30 P M . NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at.......... 10.00 P M. •• Atlanta at... 5 45 P M. Arrive at Augusta 3.45 A M. * Atlanta 8.00 A. M. S. K. JOHNSON, Superintendent. January, 18 1870 3 tf Schedule Macon & Brunswick R. R January, 7th, 1870 REGULAR THRO’ PASSENGER TRAINS Sunday, the 9th inst., as follows : Leave Macon at 9.15 A M. Arrive at Brunswick at 10.:.0 P M. Arrive at Savannah at 10.00 P M. Leave Brunswick 4.30 A. M. Arrive at Macon. -6.K> A. M. TRAINS TO HAWKINS VILLE. Leave Macon 3 °0 P M. Arrive at Hawkiusville 6.30 A M. Leave Hawkinsville ‘Lie am* Arrive at Macon • 10.25 A M. This train runs daily Sundays excepted. RETURNING: Leave Brunswick at 8.00 A M. Leavo Savannah at J.lu A M. Arrive at Macon at 7.50 1 M. Trains make direct eonnections at Jesap, both ways, with trains for Bainbridge, Thomas- the crossing of the Atlantic ana Gulf Road ville and all points on that Road, as weu t as mth those for Jacksonville. Tallahassee, and all sta- tions on the Florida Roads. Fare to Savannah and Brunswick....$ 8 00 Fare to Jacksonville 00 Fare to Tallahassee Fare to Bainbridge-.-.-- ------ lj 00 Fare to New York, Philadelphia or Baltimore, by steamers 27 tit* Under recent arrangements made with the At- miitic & Gulf Ro^, freights to and from Savan nah and New York have increased dispatch. The Southern Express Company will operate on this line to Brunswick, points in southern Geor- gia and in Florida, commencing on Monday, the 10th instant. ROBERT SCHMIDT. Master transportation. January 18,1870 ® Planters’ Warehouse, 1ST o. 2 "Warren Block AUGUSTA, GA. HE UNDERSIGNED respectfully tender their thanks to tiie many Planters and Fiieuds who supported them during the past season in the WAREHOUSE and COMMISSION BUSINESS, aud again offer our services to the PUBLIC for patronage at 11 per cent. Commissions for selling cotton—the same price charged last season—and hope by strict peisonal attention to business and instructions to merit a liberal support. CASH advances made on Cotton in store, and orders, for RIGGING. TIES, &c . and FAMILY SUP PLIES carefully filled and selected by one of our firm in person. W. H. HOWARD & SON. Sept. 20 18711, 38 3m. M. J?. STOY ALL, Cotton t/T”ctrolioms© AND General Commission Merchant. Jackson St., Augusta, Ga, C ONTINUES to give his personal attention to the STORAGE and SALE of COTTON aud OTHER PRODUCE. Orders for PLANTATION aud FAMILY SUP PLIES carefully tilled. LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES MADE on Consignments when desired. Milledgeville. Oct. 4. 187(1 40 3m. IN M1M0RIUM. PLAYED OUT, On tha 25tb day of October, 1870. THE HOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES of the General Assembly of Ga. for 1898, '69, '70 This Body Received its squelchment from tha hands of ONE RUFUS B. BULLOCK, Its Master, Whom it sarvoil ‘Not wisely, but too well’ For tha State’s good, Born of Eespotism, IT Will be forever luminous in the PHOSPHORESCENCE OF ROTTENNESS It lived But as the tool of partisan villiany. And its disdained dissolution Came most fittingly Through the agency Of the power that dispisnd while using it, And contemptuously killed it The moment its subserviency Ceased to he profitable. Ransacked History Can show no parallel toils Hybrid for CORRUPTION, WEAKNESS, EFFRONTERY, IGNORANCE. EVIL PLIANCY. its best and utmost to wrong it left undone, il was in the days of onr forefather! to predict whom we shall fall in tove with. !t is still as difficult as it ertr was to decide who is likely t« fall ie !ove with us. The only result which comes of meditation on the subject is a sort of ronviction that under certain perfectly inexplicable conditions it is possible for anybody to fair in lor* with anybody else. WILBEBF0RCE DANIEL, COTTON FACTOR, AGENT. Ootton'Food. G-uanO, No. 3 WAKSSH SZ.OCS, Opposite Globe Hotel- Augusta, Ga. All business entrusted to hint v ill have strict personal attention. Orders for Bagging, Ties or Rope and Family Supplies promptly filled- COMMISSION l.j PER CENT. REFERENCES. It did faithfully, and wbat harm was what it was not asked to do. Criminal Speculators Will mourn with tender grief Its demise. I T Had one Idea That pervaded ever and always : And when the most of Its members die. The winds Will sing it as their requiem, And Time will make it glitteringly Infamous, That better than Honor, Country, or God, They Loved NINE DOLLARS A DAY. For months It neglected business Doing the work of bat a few days ; And then in a few days it bustled Through the work of months, To the State’s vast Injury, ITS OBJTUAYRY Makes so heavy a draft on Langnage For words of wickedness. That it can never he thoroughly written It has emulated Apet In fantastic folly. Hew te Hake a Thaasaad Helfars. A TANKER RBCUPT. My gel tin’ the best of my wife’t father is one nf the richest things on rec< r l. I’ll tell you how it w«s.->^ You must know that he’s monttrous stingy. The complaint seemt to run in the family, and everbody round our parts used io notice that he never by any chance asked anybody to dine with him. So one day, just, for a chunk of fun, l said to a friend of mine, Jeddy Dowkins—a dreadful nice fel low is Jethly—“I’ll bet you a penn’ orth of shoestrings’ gmst a row of pine that I get old Brn Merkins, that’* my wife’s father, to ask me to dinner,” “Yeou get eout,” said Jeddy ; “why yeou might as well try to coax a cat into a'showerbath, or get moonbeams eout of eowcumbers.” “Well,” said I, “I’m going to try.” And try 1 did, and 1*11 tell yeou now I went to work. Jistas old Ben was sittin* down to dinner at 1 o’clock, I rushed up to the house, at a high pressure pace,,red hot in the face, with my coat tails in the air, my j|eyes rollin’ about like bil liard-balls in convulsions. Rat-tat- lat—ding-a-ling-sling ; I kicked up an awful rumpus, anil in a flash out came old Ben himself. I had struck the righ minii. He had a napkin un der his chin, and carvin’-knife in his hand. I smelt thedinneras he opened the door. “O, Mr. Merkins,” said T, “I’m tar nation glad to see you. I feared you moughtn’t be at home—I’m almost out of brealh, I’ve come to tell you I can save you a thousand dollars.” “A thousand dollars,” roared the old man ; ami I defy a weasel to go “pop” tpiicker than his face burst in to smiles. A thousand dollars! Yeou don’t say so ! Du tell !” ‘•Oh!” said I, 1“ see you are havin’ dinner neow. I’ll go un dine myself, and then I’ll come back and tell you all about il.” ‘Nonsense,’’ said he, “don’t go earth with gi away ; come in a-nd sit down, and en— ment of Uhlans who were in the plain I MIMS Haute. The following extraordinary state ment appears in a Belgian paper call ed the Nodvetles du Jour, from one o» their correspondents at the seat of war, whicn note was conveyed to Brussel, by a carrior-pigeon : “Paets, October 1.—Nada returned yesterday to Paris- His return was not effected iwithaut much trouble, al though hie balloon was favored by a good wind since bis departure from Tour*. Bat I wili n»rrate the facts in their chronological orJer. He left Tours at 6 o’clock in the morning, and the bold aeronuat arrived in viaw of Paris at 11 o’clock, floating about 5,000 meters above the front of Charenton. At the same time as the Imerptde— which was the name of Nader’s bal loon—appeared, a second balloon was observed in the horixon. Nader wae seen to dispey a srteamer with the French national color*. Immediately another national flag floated from the car of the other balloon. Vigerous hurrahs and cries of ‘C’est Durouf!’ proceeding from the front, greeted the appearance of the two aer onauts, whose balloon gradually ap proached. When they were within a short distance of each other, suddenly a loud report was beard in the air, fol lowed bv a series of explosions. These were nt 6rst thought to be demonsta tions or signals of victory, until Nadar was seen to fling himself into the net work of his balloon and to cling to its sides. During this time the other aeronaut continued discharging shots at Nadar, which were traced in the sky by their luminous effects. The Intrepid a descended rapidly, and it appeared to the spectators below that tome incomprehensible event had taken place above. But mark what the French flag in the neighboring ballooa had come to. It bad been removed, and a black yet- tew standard was observed to be float- wife MARAiAea Maxims.—A good is the greatest earthly blessing. A man If what his ’ It is the mother ^ character and destiny Make marriage a judgment. Marry into a diffe temperament from yoi Merry into a family long known. Never talk at one a lone or in company. Never both manifest anger at once. Never speak lood to one another un less the house is on fire. Never reflect on a past action which was done with a goad motive, and with the best judgment at the lime. Let each one strive to yield oftenest to tba wishes of the other. Let self abnegation be the duty, aim and eflort ot each. Tba very naaresr approach to do mestic felicity on earth, is the mutual cultivation of an absolute unselfish ness. Never find fault, unless it is perfect ly certain that a fault has been com mitted ; and even then prelude it with a kiss, and lovingly. Naver allow a request to be repeat* ed. “I forgot,” is never as acerpubla excuse. Never make a remark at the ex pense of the other { it is meanness. Never part for a day without loving words to think of during your absence. Besides, it may be that *you will not meet again in life. ing in itt.place. Then all was xtplain- ed. Treason ! It is a Prussian ballooa ! He has firad on the Intrepid* ! Na dar ia lost !’ were the cries that borsr simultaneously from the French peo ple. But Nadar was safe ; for he was seen to descend rapidly in h : s car, and the balloon to nearly reach the earth. Ha cast out the ballast, and re-ascend ed, having stopped the hole made in his balloon by his adversary. Then shots were rapidly fired from the In- trepide into the Prussin balloon, whicb one, loamg all power, descended to the velocity. A deteeb- Judge John P, Kiiipr, Pies’t Ga. Railroad. Wm. J n ruinousaggressefiaion on popular rights E. Jackson. Pres’t National Bank of Augusta and lt ^ea as destructive ms the Augusta Factory; J. u. Gardiner. Esq., Pres t T. W. WHITE, MILLEDGEVILLE, GA., Will practice in this and the adjoining counties. Applications for Homestead Exemptions under the new law, and other business before the Court of Ordinary, will receive proper attention. October 13.1868 41 tf W ANTED.—A Northern man—friendly to the South, and a believer in the old Jefferso nian idea of government—a College graduate, de- gires a situation as Teacher in some Southern state. Satisfactory references furnished if desired. Address stating terms, “LLAbMtOi A Publishers’ Box No. 7, Dayton, Ohio or Recorder Office. . Grtobor 19. I*# ” gusta Dickson Fertilizer Company: H. F. Russell, Esq.. ex-Mavor City of Augusta; Antoine Poul Jaiu, Esq , Director Ga. R. R . Augusta ; Col. L. M. Hill, Director Ga. R. K , Wilkes County. Sept. 2d 1870. 38 3m. 1870. 1870. WILLIAM & J. CARAKER, DEALERS IN FUBKflTUME t© S 1 /&, 3i 2, IK S .f? © ^ “ SUCH as painted, grained, and Walnut B E D--R 0 0 M SETS. Will (ill bills of Pine and Oak Lum her. All kinds of ROCKING CHAIRS, SITTING CHAIRS, COUNTER STOOLS and DESK STOOLS. SIDE BOARDS and WARD ROBES of any description and he“f quality—fine WAL NUT BOOK CASES—WALNUT or OAKexten sion table—any kind of MARBLE TCP or table without marble. BED STEADS of all size and kinds aiwavs on hand Children's CRIBS and BEDS, Walnut and Onm—a'so, small roekersfor Children and Misses—also on hand a lot of finest TIN SAFES. We are prepared to furnish at all rimes, sash, blinds, doors of all size and window glmdes anti fixtures. BURIAL CASES. We are prepared to furnish at ad times, any style of burial cases both METABIO and WOOD EN Always on hand the best style of wagons, from one to six horse, and are prepared to renovate old Buce-ies and Wagons at short notice. Also, a fine ot of Children’s Carriages which we will sell cheap All kinds of Buggy and Wagon material kept 1 constantly on hand ; such as spokes, rims, hubs, shaft and Buggy tooges ; and can furnish Buggy and W agon Harness at all times. We will repair all kinds of old furniture and rebottom cane seat hairs neatlv and with dispatch. Milledgeville July 19th, I87U. 2» ly DKVIL. Its monument is An incongruous heap of Broken laws. Debris of a shattered constitution, Outrages upon liberty and sacred law. Shameless scoopings into the Pnb. Treas’y, Wild havoc with every interest of the State Reckless trifling with the vital pnb. credit, And a rnbbisb pile of the Worst Partisan Drtiltru, That Political malignity, aided by human imbecility, could abourt. Its twin monster Still holds its baleful sessions To carry out Executive behests, aud Worry an oppressed Commonwealth, But The task of this memoiial Staggers tbo pen. Humanity Would be proud to erase the sad record Of this body, Failing, however, in this, Human nature explains to posterity The dread stigma Of this Legislature’s depravity By the one word : “RADICAL.” fAtlanta Consritutton. Falling in Love.—The Saturday Re view says : The man who likes ehatly woman finds his doom in a girl who never opens her lips ; the cynic who hau s bread-aiui-bmttr trembles before a miss iu her teens ; the prim young neophyte of the parsonage worships the horsiest of Diana. No doubt there is a method in all this madness, anil a philosopher yet to come will rescuethis bit of outlying existeuoe from the realm of caprice. But, as yet, nobody has brought love within the calculation ot chance. It is just as impossible as joy yourself, like a good fellow, and have a snack with me. 1 am anxiousto hear what you4iave to say. I pretendecT to decline, savin’ I’d come back ; but I’d thoroughly stirred up the old chap-’s curiosity ; and it en ded by his fairly pullin’ me into the house and I made a rattlin’ dinner of pork and beans. I managed for some time to dodge the main point of his inquiry. At l«*l l finished eating, and there was no further excuse for delay; besides old Ben was getting’ fidgity. ‘ Come, neow,” said he* “no more preface. About that thousand dollars; come, let it- out.” “Well, I’ll tell you what.” said I, “yeou have a darter, Misery Ann, to dosposeof in marriage, nave vou not-?” “What’s that got to do with it?” in terrupted he. “Hold your proud steeds don’t run off the irat.k —a great deal to do with it.” said I. “Neow answer my ques tion.” “Well,” said he, **1 have.” “And yon intend, when she marries, to give her SI0,000 for a portion ?” “I do,” fie said. “Well neow, there’s the pint I’m coming tew Let roe have her, I’ll take her with 9,000. ft,000 from SI0.- 000 according’ to simple substruction, jist leaves $9,000, and that will be clean profiit—saved as slick as it whis tle!” The next thing I knew there wag a rapid interview going on between old Ben’s loot and my coat tails—and I am inclined to think the latter got the worst of it. Hi po^ id ay A Northern tribut* to Gsxbral Lee.—the Cincinnati Equirer pays the following handsome tribute to Gen. Lee : The world knows of his virutes and his private worth, and the men who have commanded armies can bear wit ness to his valor and skill as a man of arms. He was the great General of the rebellion, and compared with him the bloody Corporal who aits in the White House to-day sinks in the scale as would a John Balfour of Burley, if weighed with Miltiades. It was hi* strategy and superior military knowl edge which kept the banner of the South afloat so l ing, and the campaign of the Wilderness, the defence of Rich’ mond.and the bold advances into Ma ryland and Pennsylvania, which only failed because of Insufficient numbers established him l«ng before the close of the war as one whom the powerful press of England might well proclaim “The Great Captain of the Age.” There is no man so bigoted to-day as not to believe that; it Grant had commanded the ill-provided, half-fed army which stood like a wall of fire around Bichmond, and the command of that grand army which went doifre into the Wilderness could have been given to Lee, the flag of the Union would have Hoaleii over the Confeder ate Capital long before it di^h. •nd who ba*n following the aerail com batants throughout this exciting strug gle rushed forward, and, surrounding the balloon received their champion God know* in what condition and than all hastened off atfull speed to the Prus sian advanced post*. In the meantime Nadar descended safely at Caren- ton, where he still remains.” JaikioG’s Msiksr. An anecdote relative to his parting from his mother in his outset in life illustrates this as prominent in the at tributes of hi* nature at that time.— The writer heard him narrate this affair after his return from Washing ton, when his last term in the Pre sidential office had expired. When about to emigrate to Tennes see, the family were residing in the neighborhood of Greensboro, N. C. “I had contemplated thi* step for some months,and had msdc arrange ments to do so, and at length had ob tained my mother’s consent to it. All my worldly goods were a few dollars in my purse, some clothes in my sad dle bags, a pretty good horse, saddle and bridle. The country to which I was going was comparatively a wild erness, and the trip a long one, beset by many difficulties, especially from the Indians. I felt, and so did my mother, thit we were parting forever. I knew she would not recall her prom ise ; there was too much spunk in her for that, and this esused ms to linger a day or two longer than I had intend ed. “But the lime came for the painful parting. My mother was a little, dum py, read headed Irish woman. Well, mother, I am ready to leave, and must •ay farewell.’ She took inv hand, and pressing it, said ‘Farewell,’ and her emotion choked her- “Kissing at meeting* and partings in that day was not so common as now. I turned from her and walked rapidly to my horse. “A* I mounted him she came out of the cebin wiping her eyes with her npron, and came to the getting-over place at the fence, ‘Andy,’ said she (she always called me Andy), ‘you are going to a new country and among a rough people. You will have to «a- pend on yoursalf and cut your own way through the world. I have noib- ing to give you but a mother's advice. Never tell a lie, nor sue anybody for •lander nor assault or battery. Al ways settle them cases youreelf.* I promised, and I have tried no keep that promise. I rode off some two hundred yards to a turn in the path, and looked back ;she was still stand ing al the fence and wiping her eyes. I never saw her alter that.” Those who knew him?be*t will testify to this last promise made his mother. A man in Kansas City, Missouri, pays his wife a regular salary ef font dollars par week te keep her month shut. Every time the speaks to Liao, except when ab* •olnrely necessary, he “docks” has op# ♦eat # we^d. The Virtues of Lazy Men.—The lazy men ia always too good-natured. He never flies into a passion. He might erewl into one, but the idea ol his fly ing into anything is preposterous. Who ever heard ofalsxy man breaking in to a bank where a crowbar had to be used, or drilling into a safe ? Nobody. He rarely lit* about hi* neighbors, for it would be too much exertion, but he can lie at a bar-room all day. He is of inestimable service to a billiard sa loon, keeping the chair warm and watching tha game, for few would care to play where there are no spec tator#. The t*azy man never gels up revolutions insurrections, or other pop- alar excitement*, and don’t make & nuisance of himself by tramping round the country,making incendiary speech es to promote public discontent. In his own neighborhood he is never a busy body in other people’s affairs. Lazy men don’t disturb the quiet of peaceful neighborhoods by putting up factories, furnaces, and such abominations. The Diamond Fields of Georgia.—Dr. M. F. Stephenson, of Hall county, in a communication to the Gainesville “Air-Line Eagle,” says : We are glad to see in the Northern and European papers, that much ex* ertemen! prevails on the subject of South African diamonds, which are now being found over a space of 1,000 square miles of great value. This will react on our section, which, from every geological indication, and its pe culiar mineralogy, will ultimately— whenever developed, yield more aod finer ones than South America or Afri ca. Our opinion is predicated on the fact of over forty having been picked up by the gold washers in every depos its mine from Hall county, Ga., for six hundred miles, to Virginia, some of which were of.much greater value then any yet found in Africa. Al! we want is a little capital, only $1 000 or 2,000, to develop the fact again, and drew the attention of capitalists to the subject, who can introduce diamond miners who understand washing for fhem. By this course, I have no hesi tancy in saying, that in six months the most brilliant success would attend the experiment. Married Men.—There is an ex pression in the face of a good married man who has a good wife that a bach elor’s cannot have, it is indescriba ble. He is little nearer the angels than the prettiest young fellow living. You can see that his broad breast is a pillow for somebody’s heaJ, and that iiUie bands pull his whiskers. No one ever mistakes the good married man. It is only the erratic one that leaves you in doubt. The good one can pro tect the unprotected females, and make bimseif generally agreeable to the la dies, and yet never leave a doubt on any mind that there is a precious little woman at borne all the world to him. [&zr. Advertiser. Who Won The Prize.—At the Catholic Fair at Atlanta the “facina- ting” Miss Gussie Mitchell, having re ceived tha highest number of votes— was awarded the silver tureen offered as a prize to the most popular young lady by the Slipper Club, of Columbus Ga. The popularity seems deserved, as <re think the lovely being who won it slippered several members of the club during her brief stay in our city, and it i* proper she should receive the reward of well doing. The “beautiful and accomplished” Miss Mary Grant, having received the next highest number of votes, won the set of jewelry^ Having setflk beith ladies, we adopt as most deserved the descriptive ad jectives used reporter of the Constitution —^Gohimnm Sun. ^ v . * The most direct toedied of determ ining hoi se?power. Stafiil behind ap * iucfcly bi« bind