The Daily news and herald. (Savannah, Ga.) 1866-1868, November 22, 1866, Image 5

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g* : f Volume 2. Savannah, Georgia, Thursday, November 22, 1866. No. 268. FrltflHf" 1 Indian Outrage. I kavexwoktu, Kausas, November 15.— ti-Times <<l ibis morning has a ttxll account i . ransom irom the Kiowa Indians of a 'it-family by Lieutenant Hesselberger, of h Third United States Infantiy, which is t-ftioned at Fort Dodge. The prisoners all fj.mced t" '>n e famriy. and a; tbetime they “ e “ mitcn by the Indians were returning " c ' a v 'i S jt to some sick rela’ivea, and were h i a few miles from home when surprised I (il jiiured. In the melee that ensued, the 0 f tbe family, James Box, was killed 1 ff alpcd. Tbe remaining members of the ? C ,ilv were immediately placed on animals ““i || Urr ied to the haunts of tbe savages. !? nam es of the captured were Mrs. Box, Lid eleven months old, and her three ’ diti-rs—Margaret, aged seventeen years, i,,cptiine, sixteen years old, and Ada, ‘Jen years old. In the haunt of this relentless foe the child fell from the of its mother, while the Indians were wwliHg the worn-out animals that carried ? j it was crushed to death among the Lks, the mother not being allowed to dis mount and see it. The mother and the two Li st daughters were subjected to the most uaheurJ of cruelty and outrages by their brutal actors, while the youngest, owing to L health, although spared a fate less horri- Ho was nevertheless most barbarously used. iL child, unable fo understand the com- oands of her fipudjsb task-masters, was placed upon «°t»Uy roasted. , . ' hi hen rescued, she had almost forgotten her mother tongue, lieutenant Hesselber- .reruad bis party, after the treaty with the Indians, relumed to the post, and procuring ibc necessary rgnsom, again betook tbem- jjlves to the capip of the Kiowas. Arriving t l,tre, the two eldest girls were delivered to liai, be paying a sum of money to the Indians iiu’owned them, so as to prevent a Tepeti- i ul indecencies to which during tbeir stay kiil ilie Indians they had been continually mtijicitd. The day knowing, Lieutenant B -silburger ana his party, with the two *)rtt girls, Started for Fort Dodge, where toy arrived the ne*t day. The guide and iriendiy Indians took a direct mute from „ r p imp of the hlewas, reaching the fort by irhorter and fluicker route, A few days pir tbe Indians brought the mother aud irimgest daughter, and a ransom in the ope of nine blankets and provisions beiog a, they were delivered up to tbe cum in d-int of tbe post. Altogether they were iCiptlvily about teu weeks, ana in that toe suffered all the cruelties tbut the fiend- malignity aud heartlessness of their cow- ailv captors could invent. They are now L\>il Leuveuworlh, (laving left Tort l(V>dge in charge of Lieutenant BesSelburger on the -ili iu'sr. His instructions arc to Tdport to Gvncral Hancfick,' how absent, who will mte final - disposition of‘the unfortunates. Ley will probably be Sent to. tbeir taftiftea in pt a 5. The Cotton Prices. Cotton is sick. Within a few days prices :<te lalleu about eleven cents per pound— per bale—and what a fall is that, my Miitrymen ! Buyers, too. are sick °V c f lll P taJition aud prospects. They feel yery sore u are not expecting relief shortly. Indeed try prognosticate further decline, ana talk slotting twenty to lyyenty-flvo cents in the ■a* shortly. Ttiere is nothing so weak tu aback aud shaky in the knees as the cot- •j-market when it gets iuto one of these iricfils or collapses. It seems to have no •'suioiary force, no self-assertion, pq stqrf(i- j aiijut it, no solid ground beneath its feet, jib! in proportion as it is pert, brusque u -tlt-assumiug on the rise=-does it slink, „tl and wh mper the moment prices . t .c way. It is said extravagant estimates itue amount of the crop prevail in the ImiiitjB markets and there is no telling, un- uIk - m>- correc ed, where the decliue will , vp. V. i-ttue enough there is no more :. iug "Ini will be the price of cotton than > ti will be the verdict of a petit jury. uiwLile, the wheels of trade are well blocked all rouod, and we need look i.ittic movement, till holders feel forced 'snmii,' or huyers see reason ti eleyate .: figuresMacon Messenger. i> hie Pbilastubopist so Profane ?—Yfe | aaly legret, says the New York World, c are obliged, as a matter of public I b. tu transfer fo our columns thp report Liiithe New York correspondent of the | lA 'iipoqimouwenlth tnafces °f the con- auf hr. florace Qree'ey, on fhe oc- I a*of I)r. Huilcr’s reception in pity Hall . V liut Hie General (Wallbridge) was I et as tn see if the hyenas would listen to 1 L.1-Greeley. At this time an enthusiastic . -nlican kept tiring a healthy cannon that I ttnltlie veteran Greeley’s nerves. Pressing l or,rd in General Wallbridge (the ebair- Greeley, in a Dervous trepidation, I citCmit. ‘ It you don’t stop thatti—d d—d | «ooo Hi leave the stand. I cau’t speak I ' it ibat d—d thing ; it will drown my THfc RAILROAD BOBBERS. Fall and Accurate Accaont of TMefr Capture. • itjaiuiu C. Truman has been appointed I J fuKt-oiBee Agent forthe Pacific coast, ‘gi.as started for the scene of his duties. LliM [From the Louisville Courier.] We yesterday gave an account of the arrest of part ol tbe gang of marauder! who so successfully captured sud robbed the passenger train on the L. A N. R B a short time ago. From the parties who made the’ ar- r<iat, and from one of the gang, one Stephen Conwell, who bu turned State’s evidence, we learn the follow- i»g particulars oi the manner of ferreting out the des peradoes and capturing them. But before proceeding to thisi we will mention the following ciremnatancea relative to the robbery. Shortly alter the robbery of tbe pky train on the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which was so suc cessfully accomplished, one Capt. BUI King, formerly of the 52d Kentucky Federal regiment, with a mm.n named Wesley Finn, who formerly served in his com pany, conceived the bold and desperate design of cap turing one of the passenger trains and robbing aU the passengers and the Adams Express safe. They at once set about organizing a band for this purpose,and soon had a brother of Finn’s, two brothers,named Owens, and four other men in their party, making a band of nine, all ready to act when occasion offered. They were to meet at Hoy’s mill, which is about four miles from Franklin, and about tbe same distance lrom the railroad, aud from there conduct their oper ations. Hoy had a negro man—a shrewd rascal who knew every foot of the county and all about the rail road—and feeling that they needed him, got him also to join their band in order to use him as they re quired. AU things being ready, they met at the mill uu the night appointed, when King thought ho would peed another pistol, aud rode over to Conwell’s house to borrow it. Con* ell did not like to lend his pistols aud inquired what was going on. King at once let him into the plau and easily induced him to join them. They all then went over to the railroad to a point selected by the negro, aud at once commenced tearing up tbe track. They bad barely time to tear Up two or three rails ou one side of the track when the train was heard coming rapidly along* They then piled some loose rails on the track and moved back a couple of hundred yards to await the coming of the train. Conwell states that the train came rushing along in the darkness, and when the engineer discovered the obstructions lie reversed the engine, but tbe train still rushed on uut;l the engine struck the obstruc tions. Reaped from the track, and rolled hissing down the embankment. The gang then rushed forward to the cars, and each man tired a stmt or two in the air to intimidate the passengers, intending to Are into the train if any one responded to tbeir Are. No one fired, and the gang then entered the cars, two of them and the negro, tmwe ver, remaining outside as a guard, to fire on any one that attempted to getaway. As soon a-t they bad robbed the passengers they started to the express car to rob tbe safe, but found that the car was thrown oyer op its side; that the door on the upper* side of tbe cur was locked firmly, and that was catch ing on fir**; they, therefore, being rather in a hurry, nfied the baggage car, and then mounting their horses rode otntirougn the woods about four miles, where they divided tho plunder aud threw away all goods worthless to them. When this division was made each uiau had about $10o in money, but King, Finn, aud the Owens bad a much larger share. They then all dispersed to their homes. Soou after this affair some thirteen men of and vicinity, instigated by a desire to 1 E t>. tiou of these desperadoes; and to, the $10,000j reward offered lor thtqr future, forced au organiza tion under eonn^ufl of CAptl’ J. B. ‘ Harris, tor —rpWP 9f v^pVunng; them. The first 6luw as tq. this littery wasgiv6if by some persons who. were on the iixx who had formerly worked bn the oil trelf new Franklin with the Owens', and who seemed confident that they Recognized them in the rartv Who robbed the train. Thisfwaa the (4 the Huiis party’s operations, the services of a good detec tive, \vbn wag not known to the robbers, they put biifi to watching them. Abner Owens was sent for by the proprietors of tbe oil well, by request of Harris, aud was found in the woods engaged in burying the body of Harvey King,a brother of the captain's,wlm iti* supposed was murdered by the Owens, to ^esp him from informing. He came into the well, and was at ouce arrested, and sent to thja oily Tuesday night. Conwell was suspicionod.'and being an ignorant and rathpr pqw*?aty youth, they arrested him the same day that thoy‘aid Owens, and he at once conleeaed the whole plot. ' King came to Franklin the same day to get the sheriff to issue a writ against this Owens for the murder of his brother, and while in town went into, the telegraph office, and listened a while to ttye dis patches regarding the jobbery‘K-ud, and prefeqde4. to be as deeply interested in terreting them* bqt as any person could be. While there Cwwell ‘ pointed him out to tho Harris banci who le$ linn go then, but ar rested him that evening. A geuerai arrest of the others also ipade on Tuesday night. Ab- Owens was found at hoipe h\d in a straw-bed with a feather bed, in which U person was sleeping, still ou top of him. Others of the gang, seveu in number, were captured, besides Conwell, and were brought ou to this city Wednesday nigiit and placed in the military prison. The names of the parties captured thus far are Wm. Kum. Abe Owens, Abner Owens,. Wesley Finn, Bob Wainscott, Wm. Finn, Jo Payne, and (Stephen Conwell. Two others, whoso names we withhold, are still at large, as ia also the negro, but they are still being hunted up. Our readers will remember that we mentioned the arrest on suspicion of three men. Johnson, Bussell aud Smith, by the passengers ou the train comtiig y>p ou Wednesday evening, aud of their being comforted to jail. These men were all released yesterday morn ing, Conwell stating that he did not know t&£m,‘that they did pot hplung to me gang, Sind Itftd never been ^iih It. * We are glad to be able to chronicle this sweeping ar- r«!sf, aiid feel‘that we'fcanhot give sufficient credit to •fhe indefatigable captors who labored so hard and tq such a successful termination. Most of thep\ be-, longed to the celebrated Morgan’s cavalry, and were fearless and courageous men, Harris, however, be longed to a Federal regiment. \ye arq glad t0 W that ^hey sfilf be wpll requited for their troiibU. A 8ad Calamity.—Last Sabbath seventeen freed* men. converts of the Baptist faith, says tpe Feruau dina Courier, were immersed in the river pea^ tho lower wharf. A colored preacher, whose paipe we did not learn, conducted the ceremony Ut a most impree- siye and solemn teanhW- Everything was done de- qpntly and in order. The occasion had drawn to gether a large concourse, including a party of ten, mostly females, a portiou of whom numbered among the converts, from Cumberland Island. Returning to their homes on Monday, when opposite Fort Clinch, their boat capsized. Colonel Barlow and Mr. Memt, Dilot, promptly dispatched boats to their as sistance! but unfortunately before the scene of tbe disaster could be reached eight had snnk beneath the all-devouring flood. Only two were rescued. —“ Indians not taxed” now cannot vote, but if universal suffrage should become tho rule, why should “Indians not ta^ec^* fye excluded? Is not tbe Iud\an a n^an and a brbVbeV ? J9 be not so. warm in his regard for our’race that in the West he neVer lets an opportunity pass to 1 secure a lock of our hair as a memento to be hung in his wigwam ?— Boston Post, Iatercitiaf and Vain able Discovery—- Fossil Remains of a Mastodon li* Tsor, N. Y., Nov. 9.~About a month since, daring the excavations of a peat bed in Cohoes for the founda tion of a mill now In coarse of erection by the Har mony Manufacturing Company, the jaw-bone of a mastodon was di^overed about thirty feet below the surface of the earth. This relic of the antediluvian age is of immense propurtions, and has atti acted the attention of geologists and students of n.ture from all parts of the country—-letters of inquiry respecting it and personal examinations having been made by some of the most distinguished savaris of the United States. But yesterday even this wonderful discovery was eclipsed by the excavation of still further fossillifer- oue remains, which complete nearly the boues or framework of the mastodon. Eighty-five feet below tbe earth’s surface, aud about fifty feet below the place of the original discovery, the workmen yesterday came upon the remaining bones, consisting as follows: Two lusks, backbone, the upper jaw and cranium, a num ber of riba, tbe hipbones, shoulder-blades, and tne bones of the hind legs. The tusks were each nearly six feet long and about nine inches in diameter. One or them upon exposure to the light crumbled to pieces, like clay, resembling that substance in appearance and texture. The ribs, of which there were fourteen found, are about four feet long, tbe largest being four feet nine inches. The upper jaw bone is four feet nine inches long from the extremity of the mouth to the cranium, aud across tbe forehead measures about three feet. So heavy is it that it was with difficulty lour laborers could move the mass. The sockets in which originally wore located the eyes of the monster are almost large enough to admit the head or a man. The hip bone is five feet lotig, and weighs one hundred pounds; the shoulder blades measure two feet nine inches, and weigh about fifty pounds each. The bone of the leg at the knee joint measures thirteen inches in diame ter. The vertebra of the back bone are eight inches m diameter. The other fragments found are in har monious proportion to those ( already mentioned. Prof. Marsh, of Yale College, was present soon aitei the discovery was made, and pronounced it the most remarkable scientific event of the age. The structure will now be united in its several-parts by means of wire, and thus a very accurate idea can be formed of the aixe aud weight of the monster to which it be longed. After a separation of countless ages, proba bly, the several parte will be reunited. Important Cask Decided—The Will or Madam Jumel.—The Jury in the Jumel will case, ou trial at New York for some days past, have rendered a verdict that the deceased, Madam Eliza B. Jumel, well known aa the wife of Aaron Burr, and one of the conspicuous female characters of the Revolution, who died at New York in July, 1863, aged 90 years, was of unsound mind when she made her will. Her estate is worth over a million of dollars, principally in valuable New York city property, and it was bequoatl^d chiefly to re ligious and charitable institutions by the testator. The heirs brought suit to break the will. On Monday the Court charged the jury. He said that it would appear that more evidence would have been presented on both sideg than had been produced, but they should render s verdict in accordance with the testi- U\°MX VhSX hM heard# The principal point to be de- vqfcd wap whether Madam Jumel was iu a sound state of mjnd vrhen she made the will. It appears she was a very old lady, nearly ninety years ol age, and she had. been affected with paralysis, after which she la- bpred under the delusions referred to by some of the witnesses* If she was of an unsound state of mind, owing to the effect of those delusions, she was not tttpable of m&kmg the will. They should decide on the case according to the evidence they had heard. T0« jury rendered a verdict, after five minutes de liberation, that Madam Jumel was of unsound mind whan the made the will; that the paper purporting to tie her last will and testament is not such, and that the plaintiffs, William Ballon Jones, Stephen Jumel Jones, Rliaa Jumel Tranchell and Louisa Jumel Med- dox, are the next of-kin and heirs at law ot the said Htiaa B. Jumel, deceased, aa alleged in said com plaint. th;b GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY THORN’S CO.HPOU.VD EXTRACT OF COPAIBA and SARSAPARILLA Han acquired the utmost lame iu every part of the world; it h»» beeu examiiu'4 approved or and sanc tioned by the facnlly ot medlclue. end recommended by the most eminent ot the profc slon. As a SUBS nn&SPKKDY cure for all Diaeases of tUe 01,11,ora, Kurneva, and Ubikiby On navi aoni to acqnaa Tup G»MH-sr Obaerve ttaU LABEL, J0V.’! I T »i!Pil WTOW o,i y ntt Toni. Aud covering ; the bottom of KJkOB Hip. vac &TAUP ON KACH POT Will also beer The NAMJf of the PROPKIKTO and the United States Aoent. NON* OTHER 13 GENUINE. - Observe these precautions and addreaa orders TARRANT a CO., No. 818 Greenwtc-i street. New Yo;k. ■ Sold by all PiuggUta.]e2Q-aew6m To The Pnblie. T HE PAVILION HOTEL, Charleston, South Caro lina, ao long and ably conducted by the Lite H. L. JJUTTEBFIELD, will atilt be kept open lot tho accom modation of tho travelling public. Its former Iriuuds and putrona will find tbe ueual accommodations aud attention bestowed on them aa formerly, and the pub lic favor, already so well established as Tile Hotel of the travelling Merchant* tbe South, will, by ear- neat efforts, be tatthlyHy preserved. Enw. (VBnuta J- H. O’Byiise. ^ O’Byrne Sc Son. Wmrva.TjW ADD RETAIL DEALERS IN GROCERIES, ' ~ Liquors, Ac., Ac. TTTE solicit a share of the patronage of our friends W and the public generally. The Senior partner of this firm having done business in this city for up wards of thirty-two yean. Comer Bryan and Jefferson ,/ oc5-ly Miscellaneous. LOW PRICES! Quick Sales! W E have] ust received and opened the LARGEST STOCK of - ■ i DRY GOODS io be found in this city, and which we offer at LOWER PRICR8 than they can ba bought lor U anff other house, consisting in part ol Svery variety of Dress Goods Housekeeping Goods Domestics <idu Prints Cloths and Cacsimeres Figured Llneiia and Drills Embroideries and Laco. Hositry aud Ol >vr. Kihuous an 1 Hr.ids Hair Rolls and Curls Lace Points and Vena Bradley's KmpreesTrails Handkerchiefs Ac., Ac., AC. EMSTEIN & ECKHAN, my'21-U 161 Congrseasireeu SAVANNAH, GA. FURNITURE. DEGRAAF & TAYLOR, 87 and 80 Bowery, and 65 Christie St., HEW YORK. S TILLcontinue lo tie the Urged Furniture Mahii facinruts lu the city. I PARLOR. DINING-ROOM and CHAMBER FURNITURE, Canopy mad Victoria Bedsteads, FOB THE SOUTHERN TRADE, At 80 percent, reduction in price. ocs For Sale or Rent. rpHAT FINE SEA-ISLAND COTTON PLANTA- _L TION ou the Buffalo Creek, in Glynn County, and at the junction of the Brunswick and Albany and Macon and Brunswick Bail Roads, containing 2,800 .icrea mixed laud, with about 800 acre, cleared, good dwelling, and all necessary out-buildings. This place ia known as the Auquilla Plantation, and ia admirably located lor a Mock farm or Sea Island cotton place. Parries desiring lo bny, or rent for ensuing year, are referred to the undersigned, at Macon, Ga., or to F. W. IIazlehubst, near Brans wick, Ga. oc29—lm W. BAZLEHUB8T. BLANCEYTLLE SLATE muffle C01PX VAN WEST, FOLK 00., GA. Oap’l Stock, *300,000 SHARES, 680 EACH. Diacaoiosa—H. Brigham, J. F. Devsr, E. 0. Gran nies, A. Wilbur and A K. Mars halt Prudent—A. Wilbur, Savannah, Ga. Vina PasMDmtT—K. C. Grannies, Macon, Ga Seosetary—A. E. Marshall, Atlanta, Ua. T HIS Company will soon be prepared lo All any orders for Slate, however large, for roofing, lor iurniture manufactured out of state, for lintels, for [lavement, and for any other use* to which slate can oe applied. The quarry is cowMsient to the cities of Atlanta, Augusta,' Macon, Albany and Columbus, (la.; to the cities of Selma, Montgomery and Mobile, Ala.; to New Orleans, and will shortly be to Mem phis, Peuu.. aud Si. Umis, Mo. Tho euperiorltyt Mate for rooting purposes, and its special adaptabu.t to various articles ot furniture and for pavement well known. Orders may be addressed to A. S. MARSHALL, 8,-Cy, J8 STEAM ENGINE AND SAW HILL FOR SALE. A FIRST CLASS SPECIMEN STEAM ENGINE and Haw Mill, manuiactnred to order at the Fal lon Works. Ne . York. Consists of an engine ol so horse power, retmw fine boiler, with all the conve niences complete; iron frame, 4* feet carriage; 8! inch saw; patent self-eel ting head blocks; 1”A feet log chain, with pulleys and first class belting for the mill complete. The whole is pertectly new aud can ue purchased low on application to antui tf LaKoCHB. WRST A DANIELS. THON. W. BROOHN MANUFACTURER OF FURNITURE AND GENERAL UPHOLSTERY. 8U Doc Street, Philadelphia, Pa. N. B.—All ORDERS sent by Mail promp'ly a tended to. fyBl-tf A Fine Black Mare FOB SALE, by BELL, ('• VLLY & CHRISTIAN. m: d ucr to be Kind, gent 1 '' and in a lasdiv Horse—good lor a >e scan at Pan. Butler's Stable, luting-Room. orll eve r ' light rocka.rs Terms kt. ... IST uttix* Powell «Jfc (Jo. } *NKERS, M A C O N, GEO C. A. NUTTING, A. H. POWELL, ISAAC SCOTT. EDWARD PADKLFORD, Jemrn SAVANNAH. To Planters. SAVANNAH, October 1st, 1866. THE J. B CAEY & Ca*S “NONPAREIL FRENCH GUANO” •ITrHICH Is now offered lo Planters possesses quali- 1| ties which its peculiar to it alone, and render it (hr superior to any other known, aa has been fully provenby the "French Academy of Sciences," and alao by practical peraeaa or enlarged experience in every department ol Agriculture. Among the meritorious qualities which peculiarly :dMmfiinhthe " Nonpareil French Guano,” may be enumerated the following: lit. It will promote the growth of Cotton, Corn, To bacco, or any kind of grain or vegetable, equal to A Ho. 1 Peruvian or Mexican Guano, as has been fully tested, at the same time being entirely free from the objactionsbiepiDperties at the above, as it is a Perma nent Improver ot the Soil, instead of a stimulant. 2d. It can be applied to the leaves as well as the toots of plants, without any danger of burning them, if used properly, and we guarantee that wherever ap- & ff the sail will retain its moisture, and will not e, even the most clayey. Sd. It will prevent Worms or Insects from destroy ing either plant or grain, and wherever it is applied every kind of worm or insects will instantly disap pear. its properties being repugnant to insect lile ot every kind. This quality alone will be a great benelit to agriculture wheu it ia estimated what vast nuinjMA ■s Southern planters know, have lost their crop Em sect depredations In a circular it ia impossible io fully enter into the merits at tbe “Nonpareil French Guano," but we as sure the public that we have not exaggerated, and.it only remains for those interested to test its value, when we feel oonfldent that it will rapidly supercede all others. BEFERE8CE8 I 1. Pendleton, Clark county. West Virginia; CoL B. Morgan, do.; 0. Cimble, do.;E. McCormick,do.; Mai. Gram, da; CoL J. Ware, do.; C. Sheppard, dot; P. V. Sheppard, do.; J. Endrrs, do.; Daniel McCullough, FaMlaid District, South Carotins; Dr. Wm. Monroe, Baltimore county; V. Merrymsn, do.; 8. Psttemon, Harford county, Md.; B. Eirlaad, Calvert county, Md.; J. P. Silver, Cecil county, Md.; John Merryman, Balti more; R. Sinclair A Co., Baltimore. Kg’ Beware of Counterfeits. AU of our barrels will be stamped with name end address. Jonx Mebbtkah, Esq, formerly President of Ma ryland's Agricultural Society, says: Baltuioee. July 21. If!GO. J. B. Cast A Co.; Gexts—My girdner lias been making experimenls with your “Nonpariel French Guano"—he h.,3 ap plied it to beets, cantelopes and very young cucumber vines, which at this season of the year arc very liable to Injury from insects. As far as we can judge, it is a first-rate article, and comes up to your claim of iis merits. 1 shall use three tons on wheat aud rye this tall. Messrs. J. B. Cary A Co., through their Agent, Mr. Louis T. Guienot, having made an arrangement with the firm of BELL, WILLY A CHRISTIAN, planters can rely upon obtaining the genuine •' Nonpareil French Guano." A»- This la Use Principal Depot. -$* Aff- Beware of Counterfeits I All onr barrels will be branded with our name and addreaa. oc2-tf FERTILIZERS A. Lister He Brother’s RAW BONE SUPER-PROSMATE OF LIRE PURE GROUND BONE. T HESE FERTILIZERS, being made from i lie best materials nut m the most approved manner, are confidently racommendnd as the li.-st. in the m itkeu C. U. CRANK A CO., Gi ueral Agents for the Mauufactureis, Newark. N. J. Messrs. La Roche, Wear A Daniels, Age:i s. Sa- vaiiiish. Ga sepgit 2m FULTON PETROLEUM AND MINING CO. Capital Stocky - - - $200,000 MHAKKS, ffSU EACH. FIRST PAYMENT, $15 PER SHARK And no other assessment made, exea>“ bv direction of a majority of ail the Stockholders. 0FF1CKB8: !. P. SLOAN President E. E. ItAWBON Vice President. JNu. C. WHITNER ..sccretaiy. P.P. PEASE Treasurer. ROUT. LOGAN General 8u[ierintendent. DIRECTORS: J. P. LOGAN, ROBT. LOGAN. R. R. ItAWBON, S. R. McOAWRY, r.P. PEASE, JNO r. WUITNKR, V/. F. PAUKHLRSr. This Company propose* tn r nemte In Georgia, Ala- bamaand Tennsesee. Having leased Lauds in the immediate vlc'uily of recent uii discoveries, it now offers a portion ol its Stock lor sale, the amunn; paid upon which ah dl he letnrnod t,> i r [michastr tieforn any general di-'ideim wui is- ,i. elareu. A limitedanountoi'Slock nn> lie stcured bycjll- Ing on the nnd .-raigiicd. agem a iu this «iv oefi JBELL, WYLLY A CdftlSTIAN. Law Nptice. T HE underslgntd has removed his Law Office to the second floor of the old City Hotel Building, on Buy street, . nefi.tr HENRY WILLIAMS.,