Newspaper Page Text
Cle §nutl)fm '•
MILLEDGEVILLE
TUESDAY. APEIL 30, 1872.
The Atlanta Constitution and “We.”
In our last issue we mildly protested
against Gov. Smith’s requisition upon
Gov. Hoffman, for a criminal before in-
dictment pieferred. Our State-rights
sentiments rebelled at the idea of putting
in motion the whole sovereignty of a
State to arrest a man under the protec
tion of its laws, upon the mere “ affida
vit of belief” of an irresponsible foreign
er, especially when the authority of the
Courts having jurisdiction of the offense
could so easily be procured. Our pro*
test did not raise the question of “ le
gality” hewever, but of “ discretion only.
For truly there is •' ample verge” for
large indiscretion, within the letter of the
law. Our conclusion was thus express
ed : “ But we had better use such dis
cretion, that our pieccdeut shall not re
turn to plague us. We think the Gov
ernor acted with ill advice in this mat
ter, which is the more to be regretted,
as a cause of partizan imitation, at this
especial juncture.”
The Constitution combats our view,
at some length. The substance of his
strictures (excuse the misnomer) is im
plied in these words:
“ Surely, our worthy contemporary
cannot be in earnest in the above stric
tures upon Gov. Smith ? Nor can be
have read carefully our own law on the
subject, as contained in the Code, lec
tions 56, 57, 58 and 59.”
And hi* argument is based solely up
on those sections of the Code. In all
soberness does our contemporary believe
the laws of Georgia to be operative in
New York, controlling the official ac-
tiou of Gov. Hoffman ? Those aections
do prescribe the course to be pursued by
the Governor, wheuja requisition is law
fully made upon him ; but that Govern-
or is the Governor of Georgia, and not
of New York. Those sections do not
prescribe any mode of procedure, by
which Gov. Smith shall make requisi
tions. Thig is regulated by the Consti
tution of the United States, and the act
of Congress of 1793. Your law has uo
relevancy to the case at all »nd
structure mu9t tumble, of course. “ Was
our contemporary in earnest ?’’
Our view is simply this:—The States,
having bound themselves by constitu
tional compact, to restore each other's
escaped criminals, on proper demand,
should observe that obligation in good
faith. But the State, making the de
mand, should carefully abstain from so
taxing her co-equal, except upon the
clearest official showing of the criminality
of the accused' The “affidavitof belief *
is no official showing at all. The Mag
istrate’s warrant to arrest raises no im
plication of guilt whatever, and would
not commit the accused even in the
county where issued.
The indictment of a grand jury is an
official showing, raising an implication
of guilt. There is no “comity” iu de
manding. that the great State of New
York he our bailiff, on frivolous pre'
taxt, or frivolous showing.
There is an obscure assumption in the
viewsfof the Constitution, that is preg
nant with mischief. It is, that a gov
ernor, upon whom ‘‘requisition” is made,
cannot look behind the face of the Re
quisition, to enquire into the sufficiency
of the grounds thereof. We see, by the
papers, that a peaceble citizen of Car-
tersville, has been delivered to impris
onment, iu South Carolina, on requisi
tion of Gov. Scott, on affidavit of a ne
gro, that the accused had violated the
civil light act, in South Carolina. Now
we all hold that the civil rights act con
travenes the Constitution of the United
States and is void. If it is true as
(and we hope it is not) that Gov. Smith
has delivered up a citizeu of Georgia, on
such a demand, however regular itsform,
and however closely resembling his own
requisition on Gov. Hoffman, we cer
tainly shall deplore it earnestly, to say
no more. We have no hesitancy in
declaring our satisfaction with the pres
ent State administration, and onr sin
cere hope that the incumbent be re-elec
ted Governor for four more years. But
we are not official organ, and cannot
commend what our judgment disap
proves. The Governor, upon whom a
requisition for a criminal is made,
should sift thoroughly the “showing”
and deprive the citizen of his liberty,
only under the imperative obligation of
valid law, on the best official proof.
The Great Western Canal.
No project of the Cealary has beW opt
so muon of premise, to the material pros
perity of Georgia, as this great work.*—
That it is feasible, we take on the credit
of those who pretend to know, and who
certainly ought to know. The conflu*
ence of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers,
is the centre of water communication,
for a very empire of wealth and produc
tion, the grandest, most compact and
most wonderfully expanding, on the
Continent, To establish with that cen
ter a direct and cheap connection, of so
vast capacity as the proposed caual, ev
ery barge on which may bear the bur
den of five hundred of largest siz
ed freight cars, were in itself,, an
achievement of inestimable value. To
make Georgia, additionally,the chief pas
sage way for the commerce between that
mighty region and the outside world,
were to enhance the boon incalculably.
Yet while these things are surely indi
cated, they do Dot conclude the prospect.
A still richer, less bulky trade depends
on that canal, for the location of its chief
port.
We take it to be as certain as anything
in the future, that the great thorough
fare of transcontinental commerce will,
within a very few years, be surely es
tablished, in Tom Scott’s Texas Pacific
Rail Road ; that, whilst its eastern ter-,
minus, branching in Northern Texts
will be multiplied iu a great measure,
yet there will be one principal port of
delivery (especially of foreign trade,)
which will, to 6ome extent, monop
olize its benefits, and grow rich, in
consequence ; and that the competition
for that monopoly will be between New
York, on the North Atlantic, Savannah
on the South Atlantic, and Galveston
on the Gulf.
The argument for Galveston, and it
is a strong one, is in the shortness of the
land line. From San Diego, in South
ern California, to Galveston is twelve
hundred miles ; to Savannah, nineteen
hundred ; and to New York twenty-six
hundred. The Gulf terminus will be
greatly strengthened, by its cheap com
munication with the North-west, by the
Mississippi River. The arguments a-
gainst the Gulf terminus, are the want
of capital, the dangerous Gapes of Flor
ida and the poverty .of the countries bor
dering the Gulf, on the South. Steam
navigation has disarmed the Reefs of
most of their terrors, and the other two
obstacles are not necessarily permanent.
The argument for New York is its im
mense trade and capital, already estab
lished. Savannah occupies a middle po
sition between these, geographically,
and in respect of attractions, both as to
distance and trade.
These conditions being all fixed and
immutable, except the last, evidently
the one great step towards attracting the
tv. a I ap-ghmrc~ to oaVsfan&U, IS to build up
independently, & metropolitan trade, that
cannot be taken aicay from her. There
is as marked a difference between the
subjects o‘|Rai!road and Canal com
merce, as between their modes of trans
portation. Running, side by side, be
tween two given points, their freight
bills would never clash, in kiud—the
one would never encroach upon the prov
ince of the other. Light articles, of con
centrated values, seeking rapid transit,
would prefer the Rail; whilst cheaper,
and more bulky articles, such as coal,
iron, the cereals, &c., would as certainly
prefer water transportation. Ou the Mis
sissippi river barges, the cost of trans
porting coal is one-twmtieth of the Rail
road cost. But as it cost nothing to dig
the great river, or to keep it in repair,
and it will cost something to dig and re
pair the canal, one-tenth, of Railroad cost
'(of transportation may be reckoned for
the Canal. And at that rate, it may be
safely assumed that the North-western
trade, being chiefly of the “bulky”
kinds, if once directed through the pro
posed canal, will be a permanent fixture
of Savannah, that neither Tom Scott
nor New York capital can take away.
From
ttiie Wards fr«.
The New JJfnrk
Telegraph.
r li mored Snttrce.
oar rial of Commerce, j
__ Crop Nrtrsi
y—Farmers badly behind.
a journal which seldom meddles with Early county—Poor stand of corn;
partisan politic!, but whose instincts and j Httte eotton planted, says the News,
sy mpatliiea wi e all atrongly Conserve- I Sapll gram looks Well, such as rye and
tive, in a reieut article upou the politi- [ oats,
cal outlook as regards tbe Cincinnati
Convention, ex pi esses our sentiments
and, we believe, the sentiments of nine
tenthp of the Democratic party of the
country* iu the fotfowiug utterance :
■P
, Clarke county—Farm and garden op
tions very active, says the Banner.
• Mitchell county—Short crops, certain ;
Corn to bo replanted, and little cotton
’"."i'JYiS’Tff’uWicifw, ,
Ranks co.— farmers behind. Wheat
looks well, but little planted. No clo
ver visible, saya the Athens Watchman.
Floyd county—Farmers working vig
orously for ten days of good weather,
says the Commercial.
Atlanta and Savannah Railroad.
—The Atlanta Constitution says the
stockholders of the Atlanta aud Savan
nah Railroad, in session on the 25th inst.
reorganized their Board of Directors by
the election of the following gentlemeu :
J. H. Hammnnd, W. A. Huff of Macon,
Campbell Wallace, J. D. Pope of At
lanta, R. C- Humber, H. D. Capers.
The magnitude of that trade has made
Chicago, though ice-bound half the year.
It can make Savannah metropolitan too,
and the chief entrepot of European and
East Pacific commerce. We welcome
Tom Scott, therefore, with all his ener
gy, enterprise and selfish speculation.
—.
Pinehbae Imitation of a Pewter Original.
Not many days since, ceitain Rail
Road magnates convened at Augusta,
seeking to prevent the completion of the
Road from Augusta to Beaufort. This
sounds strangely—that South Carolina
and Georgia Rail Road Kings (?) would
prevent the building of a Rail Road in
South Carolina, giving Georgia another
outlet to the sea ! They would set up
monopolies, uot by building up superior
facilities, through superior energy and
economy, but by choking down compe
tition ! This kiod of “political econo
my” has been tbe bane of the South for
a long time. It is the dog-in-the man
ger economy. It obtrudes Itself into ev
ery interest, and cramps the spirit of lib
eral enterprise. It yelps at Gov. Smith,
and Frauk Blair, and Tom Scott. With
Pharisaic Bourbonism, it spurns the as
sociation of State-rights patriots, who
will not accept its “mark and brand.”
Prostrate in the dust, it affects the style
of victor, and accepts deliverance only
on condition of the humiliation of its de
liverers. It cliugs to an empty sound,
as with heroic devotion to moral truth.
It projects petty schemes of selfishness!
and when defeated by its own folly,com
placently wraps itself in the mantle of
“injured innocence.”
“The so
meeting in New York adopted a aeries
of resolutions which, with all respect to
the men who prepared them, are not
what they should have been if intended
to be fair and frank. It is nonsense for
them to place their opposition to the re-
election of Grant on the vague one-term
principle- No one trusts them when
they dodge the issue in this way. Ev
ery one says they have left the way open
to go hack to the support of Grant at the
last moment. Why do they not com
mit themselves distinctly and openly to
the real doctrine that General Grant is
not fit to he President, aud that be is
surrounded by corruption, which is the
bone and h!oo«i of his administration ?
Are they afraid to say this ? If the Cin
cinnati Convention prove so cowardly
as this, it may look in vain for Demo
cratic support. If the managers imag
ine that tiiey have oniy to meet aud
nominate a ticket, and that the Demo
crats will run like a flock of sheep to the
new shelter thus provided, they err pro-
foudly.
If the Cincinnati Convention is wise
iy managed, so that it shall be the ori
gin of a representative Republican Con
vention to meet at a future day, and the
Democratic Convention be called to
meet at the same time, it may be feasi
ble to unite the action of the two Con
ventions on one candidate and a platform
of honesty, aud to sweep the country.
But let the Cincinnati gentlemen dis
miss from their minds the idea that tbe
Democrats are so weak and used up that
they are ready to follow any lead. Some
old office-seekers, weary of waiting for
the day of retuiiug power, may be will
ing to accept any terms, however hum
bling, by which they may belong to the
winning party, but the truth is too plaiu
to be lost sight of, that the Democracy is
an immense power, welded together by
the blows of frequent defeats, and that
thousands of its members think they can
win without any outside help. Let, there
fore, the Liberal Republicans be careful
and wise, or they will make a miserable
failure.”
And upon the same subject, the Chi
cago Times, tbe most influential Demo
cratic journal of the Northwest, and
which has most earnestly favored a coa
lition between the Democrats and “Lib
oral” Republicans, and the acceptance
by the former ot the candidates to he
nominated by the latter at Cincinnati, iu
its issue of the 17th has a double leaded
editorial commenting on and censuring
the course of the Chicago Tribune, and
other Republican papers, in seeking to
change the character of the Cincinnati
Convention from Liberal Republican, as
originally announced, to merely a Re
publican Convention, which requires as
a sine qua non the political annihilation
of the Democratic party, as well as the
defeat of Gen. Grant. It says :
“Now it should be distinctly known to
those who set up this new theory of ih^
theory, that Tt is not the theory of the
Liberal Republican movement, as three
millions of citizens who expect to vote
for the candidates to be nominated at
Cincinnati, understand it. They do not
understand that the Republican party is
merely to divide itself in halves, each
half nominating its favorite man aud in
viting the Democrats to come help elect
him, after which the two halves will re
unite and go on plundering, robbing,
stealing and rushing the government in
to despotism as before, while they laugh
at the ridiculous loonies who have made
themselves their catspaws. They do
not understand that the term liberal un
der which tbe Cincinnati Convention is
called can be construed to comprehend
any such illiberal arrangement. They
do not understand that anything of the
sort is necessary of the Cincinnati Con
vention. If they did so understand it,
or if they should be made to so under
stand it, the Cincinnati Convention
could hardly be expected to realize the
hopes of its most sanguine friends.
The large judgment for 8475,000 was
given Bgainst the United States, by the
court of claims yesterday iu favor of An
drew Lowe, of Savannah, Georgia, for
the proceeds of three hundred and forty
nine hales of Sea Island and 2,246 hales
of upland cotton, seized by treasury
agents, just after the close of the war.
The famous Elgee cotton case, so long
pending, was decided in favor of the ti
tle of 0. V. Woodruff & Co., represented
by R. M. Corwine, cf Washington, and
C. M. Conrad, of New Orleans—the
judgmeut being for some §366,000. It has
been erroneously stated that the trial of
this caso was delayed to await tbe de
cision of the Supreme Court on the con
stitutionality of the so-called Drake
amendment, relating to the effect of
Presidential pardons in the Court of
Claims. On the contrary, the loyalty of
the claimants was fully established, and
adjudged by the Court of Claims.
SPRING, 187%.*- c-sa
maco.v
M A N U F
The Atlanta Sun says that Dr. Lips
comb is busily engaged in visiting the
many industrial manufactories in the
State, in connection with the donation
of the land scrip to the State Un : versi-
ty He has already examiueil many in
North Georgia, and will proceed at au
earlv day to Macon, Columbus, Savan
nah’and, indeed, will make a tour of
•11 South Georgia, where, we feel assured,
he will meet with the same hearty con
gratulations and encouragement that
have bean extended to him elsewhere.
Strength of Political Parties.—
The following figures, taken from good
authority, possess a peculiar interest in
view of the approaohing Presidential
election. They may help to lift up the
spirits of the despondent:
Democratic vote in 1S68, 2 643 612
Democratic vote in 1870, 2 711,S60
J. B. Ross & S. T. Coleman,
- AT MACON, GEORGIA,
OFFER TO THE TRADE an unusually large stock of
Dry Goods, Notions,
—Boots Sf Shoes,
and Clothing.
r april 9 3m
G.1,
A C T i
: OF
(COTTON GIN*.
Material and
COTt,
Gin.
r *' tL
Cast! ii
Makes a genuine, paf , r
n. Employs none b
trom the shop of the iiUl . .
price hew
MAKES THE Htr
New Rib*
Whleting Saws. J
New Brush and ’(R “
Increase,
Radical vote in 186S,
Radical vote in 1870,
Decrease,
9S 248
2,97S,551
2,6S5,374
293,177
Aud are Agents for the Largest Cotton Mills i n the State.
Merchants wishing Goods will please give as a call.
TERMS will be made LIBERAL.
iO
New Babbit Bax “si'* I
My unproved U„: ;' J
swinging front *i 0 . 0o Lj:
Repair of Brush as p , r '
other work as low i„ P
freight oneway, i t _ t( ;
All work warranted to’tr
1 • - . «t'e _
1 tu r Cir,..
Jones & Baxter,
General Commission Merchants,
AND DEALERS IN
Produce, Provisions, Staple Groceries, Fertilizers, Lime,
Plaster, Cement, 4c.,
ELECTIC
r »;-
6Aoa
OF I
The Washington Republican says :—
“ It seems to be the general impression
at the capital just now that Congress will
adjourn about the 1st of June. Members
6eetn to be anxious to get home to watch
their district*, and such of them as are
desirous of re-election, to look after
that very important matter. There really
remains very little to be done in the
way of legislation, except the tariff,
which a great many believe had better
he let alone, and the civil rights bill.”
1ST O. lOO
r april 9 3:n
CHERRY STREET,
MACON, OA.
Jeff. Davis’ Commission.—The Bal
timore Sun’s Washington correspondent
says: Colonel D. D. Morrison, of Illi
nois, now in this city, forwarded to day
to Jefferson Davis the original commis
sion of the latter as Colonel in the U. S.
army, signed by Andrew Jackson, Pres
ident, aud Lewis Cass, Secretary of
State. Tbe document came into the
possession of the Illinois troops after
the capture of Jackson, Mississippi, aud
was returned to Daris, .accompanied by a
cordial letter from Col. Morrison, his old
companion in the Mexican campaign
terminating at Buena Vista.
The Land Scrip Money.—The At
lanta Constitution of 23d, says : “The
$50,000 received from the sale of the
Agricultural Land Scrip, by Actiig Gov
ernor Conley, has been invested by Gov
ernor Smith most admirably. He has
put the amount in the new bonds of the
State, being issued to pay the old bonds
falling due., has bought them at tbe
market pri|jjjLjiinety cents, thus increase
jug this panV the scrip fund at one
ttroko from ^DD.000 to $55,000, upon
which seven pro cent, is due.”
SPECIAL NOTICES.
The Death-Bed of Gen. B. E. Lee.
A magnificent 14 2 18 inch Engraving,
representing the death scene of Gen. Lee
The family and friends are grouped sor
rowfully around the old hero’s death
bed. It is truly a gem of art, one wli ch
should hang in the parlor of every South
ern home. Sent by mail, mounted on a
roller and post paid ou receipt of 20 cents.
Address J. 0. & W. M. BURROW,
No. 200, Main st., Bristol, Tenu.
Ageuts wauted, local and traveling,
everywhere to sell our Popular Pictures,
Charts, Books, Photograpes, Stationery
Packages, &o., &c. Quick, sales, large
prof Is and no risks. Book Agents, Trav
eling Salesmen and every person, male
or female, wishing lucrative employment,
will please send for our twenty page cat
alogue.
April 30.JS72.
r* iVtAAc fieUftfiT' urof reliance, that
absolute, undoubting faith in the effica
cy of Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters as a
remedy for indigestion, bilious disorders,
intermittent and remittent fever*, which
notoriously prevail in all parts of the
United States? This confidence has
been growing for twenty years, and it is
still extendiug. It is not the result of
credulity ; it has not been engendered
by any human device, but is the spon
taneous and natural consequence of ex
perience. What people see daily going
ou under their own eyes they cannot
question. When families in unhealthy
districts that resort to this wholesome
vegetable tonic, as a preventive, escape
periodical fevers, and their immediate
neighbors, who neglect this precaution,
are prostrated by the disease, how is it
possible that the phenomenon should he
without its lesson ? In like manner when
it is seen that obstinate cases of dyspep
sia, of liver complaint, of constipation, of
nervous weakness, and of general debil
ity, yield to the operation of the famous
remedy, how can even incredulity itself
withhold its endorsement ? Eye-wit
nesses of the salutary effects of the Bit
ters are to he found in every civilized
settlement on this continent. The thou
sands upon thousands who owe their
restoration to health and strength, or
their preservation from sickLess, to its
extraordinary medicinal propeities, are
enthusiastic in its praise. The multi
tudes who recommend it in a neighbor
ly way to their ftiends and acquaint
ances, as well as those who make public
their estimate of its virtues, are always
ready to state their reasons for the faith
that is in them. They hare all felt or
witnessed its beuificent operations,
april 26 rpn lm.
D. QUINN,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
BOOKS, STATIONERY, MUSIC and PERIODICALS,
183 BROAD STREET, Aogusla, Ga.,
Manufacturers’ Agent ami Wholesale Dealer in all kinds of Blank
Books, for Mercantile use, including Ledgers, Journals, D.ry Books, Re
cords, Pass Books, Memorandum Books, Time Books, Drawing ami
Scrap Books, Autograph Books, Copy, Cyphering and Exercise Books,
for school use, &c., &c. The Writing Papers include Cap, Letter and
Note, American, English and French Ruled and Plain, Stamped and
Unstamped. The stock of Envelopes embraces Letter, Note and Offi
cial sizes, of all colors and qualities, beside a full line of General Station
er}’, inclu ling all the innumerable minor items for use in tbe Counting
Room. Also many articles that would be appropriately desigraed as
Fancy Stationery. In tbe Book Department, will be found the Stand
ard Text Books for Schools and Colleges, Dictionaries, Bibles anil
Prayer Books, Music Books, and a large assortment of Juvenile and
Toy Books, and a well selected stock in General Literature. In lire
Miscellaneous Slock, in which we deal, we can offer to buyers as favor
able terms as any establishment in the trade. A new price list will
soor. be issued, which will enable purchasers to make selections and or
der by mail, if desired. Such orders will receive prompt and carefnl
attention, since tbe most thorough systeramarks the mode of doing busi
ness in this establishment. april 16 rn 3m.
A. M. J ll RSON,
COTTON FACTOR AND
COMMISSION" MERCHANT,
w McIntosh street, augusta. Georgia.
april 20-3m
LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS.
Keep the Hair Unblemished.—“I am
like an old hemlock—withered at the
top,” said a venerable Indian Chief,
pointing to his thin and bleaching locks.
Thousands of meu and women in civ
ilized society, much younger than the
old Sagamore, are like him, “withered
at the top,” simply because they have
neglected to use the means of preserving
and beautifying the hair which science
had placed at their disposal. If Lyons
Cathairon be faithfully applied once or
twice a day, to the fibers and the scalp,
it is just as impossible that the hair
should decay, wither, fall out or become
harsh and fuzzy, as that a meadow, du
ly refreshed with nightly dews aud sun
lit rains, should become arid and barren
of green blades - This matchless prep
aration not only keeps the hair alive and
the skin of the head in a healtbv and
cleau condition, but actually multiplies
the filament aud imparts to them a lustre
flexibility and wavy beauty nnattaina
hie hv any other mode of treatment.
It does uot, like the metallic and sul-
phnrus hair dyes, dry up the natural
moisture of the seaip, but supplies nu
triment to the roots of the hair and vigor
to the fibers.
Dr. Sage's Catarrali Remedy.—$500
reward for an incurable case. Sold by
druggists, or by mail, 60 cents Address
R V. Pierce, M. D. ; Buffalo, N. Y.
pr It. *
E. J. DOZIER.
W. R. WALTON.
DOZIER & WALTON
Wholesale Grocers,
AND
Dealers in "Wines, Liquors, Etc.,:
269 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
Fine Steel
for tbi
POSTPOLIO, SC2AP-E002, jw, i
PUBP0S23 OF
Nearly 300 DiffnTjf?
HISTORIANS. PORTS m, "
MRS, EMPERORS. ,
HISTORIC AND IDEAL
T HESE Engravings^
Eclectic Ma<;aziv F i !,; ITl
years. The subjects have
great care on boil sides of th (•'
are printed on different sized
size. 7 by 10. or quarto size,;
PkiCk : Small size. 10c.: , , '
A specimen of each size and tV
receipt of 25c ; aud. on rece pt : i
each size will be sere. H 0
Catalogues sent Fm* To
E. II. BELTON, i
I OS Fulton St., N ew J
april 16rpn lm. ]
Oliver, Douglass i
43 THIRDSTR KE -j
MACON GJ
SOLE AGENTS Op
Steward and Great Ul
COOKING STOVE
Cotton Plant ImpriH
IKON WITCH
And various other patterns of CjvL.I
all guaranteed.
POCKET AND TABLE CUT Li;
and Pad Locks, Schovil and Sbr-
Hoes. Wood and Willow War*,-:-
and Fittings, Wholesale MauutaciK
WAKE. Full line of House Fan <
OLIVER, DOUGLASSi|
april 9 rp tf.
t. a. JOHNSON, tSu
CLI5T0S.
JOHNSON & DlNll
DEALERS IX
IRON, STEEI
Agricultural Imple*
Carriage and Wagon 1
rial, Varnishes. It
And agents for the D. Pfil
GIN.
Ii Third Street. Midi
r apn! -
dr. w. H.
IBERAL Terms to Wholesale buyers, and usual time rates allowed. A large *toek
' on hand constantly. Purchasers visiting Augusta will please call and examine
april 23 3m
DOZIER St WALTON
AUSTIN MULLARKY.
JAMES H. MULLARKY.
Cash is Good; but Prompt
Cash is Better ! •
And that is what those in waut of DRY GOODS find out at the Dry Goods Store of
MULLARKY BROS.,
262 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
r Y n v°A U »ncvo ment ° f DrC93 G 0 . 0 ^'’ c * n now be a full and completely new line DOL
G»„I !2! vT i0 n qua ' ltl ®? ; Grenadines, Alpaccas, Silk Poplins, Jaconets, Jaoanese
Uoocls, and many other Dress Goods too numerous to name.
Our Hosiery and White Goods Stock, is selected with attention by a careful New York buy-
cr, and our assortment ot Prints, Plaids, Stripes, Osnaburgs, Ginghams, Sheetings and Shirt
ings, is one of the best ever offered to the public. *
i>»^nS i8 r doi i g a busi, ? e3j : buys everything for prompt cash, and accordingly
far C ‘ eaper thin a X h ° u ’ e that b " y * ou cred,t - aud the consequence is that those
Nevv York prices^ pr ° mpt Cash for th " ir &oods, will find that we can sell them cheap and at
COME SEE AND JUDGE.
April 20, 3m eow rn
MULLARKY BROS.
X. A.
Hollingsworth
Block,
MULi hath,
macojst, GA.
CAN SUPPLY YOU ALL WITH
CORK,
BACON,
LARD,
FLOCK,
MEAL,
RICE,
SUGAR,
COFFEE,
SlfUCP,
MOLASSES,
TOBACCO,
WHISKY,
My Terms are Cash, or such Paper as can be used to raise Cash and
I will Sell ijou as U w as anybody.
N. A. MEGRATH, Macon, 61.
rJuue€,i67l. SI.]/
Tenders his professional services'.
/ Office over Drug Store of J. it. C-t :
marchl9-3in r
Tax Notice!
I WILL commence receiving tbe I-l
turns of Baldwin County, for I
1872, at the Post Office in Miiir
Monday April 1st, 1872, where I *'•
attendance every day, except wkea J
to the county Districts until June 3uo i
at which time the Books wi;i be cloaei.
The following appointments are
the County Districts.
321 District—-Monday April Utfo f
April 16th; Wednesday May 1st.
32*2 District—Tuesday April 9th;
April 17th; Thursday May 2nd.
319 District—Wednesday April 19-b •
day April 18th: Friday May 3rd.
3]8 District—Thursday April IU- 1
April 19th; Monday May 6th.
115 District—Friday April 12th: M--*
April 22nd; Tuesday May 7th.
105 District—Monday April I5th --“j
April 23rd; Wednesday May 8th.
JOSIAS MARSHALL, B
New Stock]
Fred. Haugbl
R espectfully invites the la j
GENTLEMEN of MilledgevJen-
cinity to call and examine his
SUPBRIOI 1
AND
FASHIONABLES^ 1
OF -y;
LADIES, GENTS AND BOi-
Boots and Shoes.
Feeling assured that they cannot be &
if equalled, by any other establish^ 1 ".
Be Warrants His VToti
—HE—
Dv£ arm factur© 3
AND
Repair 5
TO r O»9B»' *,1
and all work entru.-t d to Li® ^
fully and cheaply ero;uted, with u P t
April?, 1872.