The Buena Vista Argus. (Buena Vista, Ga.) 1875-1881, October 24, 1877, Image 1

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V. A. SINGLETON, Editor &. Pro’p. votnn; in. G EOU Gl\ A NTl<il II I I S. Ancient Tumuli oil the Oco ikee IliVer. r l'he iolluwiug interestingnitilde on the monumental retnains of Georgia is livm the Chronicle and Qcustltu tionalisl, au'l will attract tlm ititeti tim of till feeling an interiPt in tin j>;chistotid condition id' the State: About a mile and a halt m tdi ol the Fomenny Mills in (Jr. cue county, and I cuted on th(s left batik ol the Oeoiie ■ river, arc three tumuli sur rounded by traces ot extensive and li g cummin and inhumation:). Tin* largest is situated rather more than ] duo hnndred yards east. of the uver, and ri.s s forty leet above the level of thevahey. In general oittriiG it may be described as a truncated done. lb.? apex diameters, me,mured mirth And .south and east and west, were respectively sixty live and sixty eight feet. At the base, however, the. 1 1 auks are extending the direc tion of the east and w, st. To silch u tnarki and degree is this the case that there appears a< diff rondfl of thirtydive feet between the base din meters running moth and south, and east and west, ttie former being 1 :J:i feet and the latter 108 feet. At ■ the centre el' ilie top may be seen a I circular depression, some twenty feet wide and two hot deep. Toward ! tlie north tho brow and face of this j tumulus are quite precipitous. When first obsvrvnl by the Enro p an. this monument was coven and w ill a growth id' iit’is ns dense. and roeiningly as old as that ot die cir i mi:j icil .lowlands. As the neigh' Inning fields were cleared, tins was a’so denuded ol Its veg ctatii i; aid eallivatfd with the hoe, its lieh sariaco yielding g. nerotts /harvests' both of coin and cotton. AbkoiTh now overgrown with hnucl/ics, Weeds and rm.-dl trees, wh e. icati lhiily retiud.cd minute in >bOt'tion, it appeared quite probable, j dm tin sis'll S Oil'the Mltfhbe of the vc . y in the iutinedi do vicini y, t:.-- some si:vi re liesliet. yaus ago, bad impi-hod rqnm tluv -lioi'Gtorii t ;■-i < f this mound and earned away i cm: .iden.Ue j orllen of it.i northern lb:! k. l-’atler more t’nan one linndied >nil's io the north of this tumulus, •snd \ i ending to Ihe northwest, is an irr. gehiilv elm}) and oxo ivation—a! j (..sent Ironi t n to lit ecu feet dt'iip i ;•,! puthillv filkd widi water—from widen the o iitli used iu the const) ue t oil of these initiuii was obtainer. As yet. no at*en;pt has been nntde to open the large mound, bat ngain-t i!s astern face tlie overflowing Vnteis ot till) Oconee at one time Hushed, wearing it, away for some dl-tance, and leaving a perpendie.t l,ir trout ol' ten feet or more. Here were -disclosed human bones, the of dogs, and large beads made of the columns of the droutbus vhjas. It this partial revelation be accepted ns indicative of the general Contents of the tumulus, it slum'll be classed as a huge grave mound. We tl i line, however; adopting this con clusion without tuitherinvcs igation. It may be tfiat the remains and relics there unearthed belong to la er and secondary interments; Instances ol this sort, as we well kilow-, arc offre- quint occuirci.ce. Two hundred yards to the sotiih is an e iptical grave mound, not more than four feet high; but covering a considerable area. Tlds sttuc!me,., in tle direction of its major axis, is about 150 feet long. Its minor axis is two-th rds less. The surface and neighborhood arc littered with li■ >- man bones, sherds of pottery, frag ments of pipes, shell beads, mussel shells, and various relics. Across a shallow lagoon, and 250 yards southeast of the largo liinluhis, Is a third mound, well preserved, ton loot high and quite level at the top. In every direction, except where it looks toward thenoftll; its Sides slope gently. Having been constantly Cultivated l'or litany ycdrS, this structure lias encountered no lnc-n --sidercable waste. At tlt © base, its north and south diamCtet* wits one hundred feet, Measured at right angles, the other diameter was 88 feet. To the Cast, west and South are traces of spins Or graded Ways for facile ascent; This mound occupies a Ceiilfal and Commanding position, in flic midst of a fertile alluvial field of fifty wires. Although its Contents are unknown, We conceived the inipresnon that it Was designed as an elevation for and chief aid’s lodge. Home ot the Spanish historians mention the existence of artificial tumuli, flat ou their top*, and located near the banks of streams and in rich valleys; which limy state were elected for the purpose of sustaining 1 lie houses ol' chiefs and their fami lies. At the foot Of such a structure a s-quare was iaiil out., around which Wore built tiro dwellings of the prim e'pid men of t.he I rib '. Outside rose | the wigwams of thb common people, j Adi-position to place the residence j of the chief in a commanding posi ! lion -tints elevating his abode above ! the lodges (if his shnjocts—and a dc ' sire to c ntrihitte to his comfort and sc -utiiy, are suggested itV cxp'nnii > ion of the expo til! i Giro ol to natch labor. Arotint!" the base, and fa- a eon-j idrruble distance on bvbry llattd, are j traces of piimitiv'e occupancy, alli [l'Tsuaditlg its of the futlt that in! former times this tumit'us Wassnr-! rounded by the dwellings of people i who had here fixed their llduies. The space adjacent to the large tumulus, to the cxtbnt, of & une (bitff acres, Appears to linve been largely i if not exclusively dedicated to tlie purposes ot sepulture. Every freshet, .which sweeps over this area uncov-. ers tinman skeletons disposed in eveiy direction only a feW feet below tbe surface. So thoroughly. aud frequently tins tins territory been torn by fivshets, that it has lust itsj oi'ig nal level, and now’ exit bits on | eVery hand deep furrows, heaps of broken pottery, quantities of hum in bones, and fragments of vaiions nitichs of use, sport and ornament. 'ldle freshet of 1840 was the first, as far as we can learn, whhl), in a marked manner, invaded the pre cincts of this ancient burial ground. Upon the subsidence of the waters many were attracted to the spot by the multitude of terracotta vessels, human bones, shell-beads, pi[>#s, di.s codial stones, grooved axes, cobs and other objects of primitive mantif c-j tore. One gentleman Collected! nearly a quart of pearls which had been perfoi ated and worn as beads. The pla; tat'on negfobs supplied themselves with clay pipes there unearthed. In the possession of not a tew of iheiii wa re strong clay ves sels, thence obtained, which they I ii-i’ll for boding soap, o'c; Large j calumets and other ol jects of special interest were secured by the curious j and carried to th ir hour s, where,; for a season, ih.y lormed m liter for; spmikumn Hint idle talk, all 1 in the < in! im'ih l iihes 1 toil, or brok* n. S'.ihr siqiieiit inundations have brought ui light ■■ thilar proofs of sepulture and emiy manufacture, but. ilii.s treasure house Inis I" on su often visit and and so caiel'uHy .seuici ed tint its pres.nt yield falls Jar short of that which was encountered when ihe HuriLon freshet invad.d this place of tiie dead. 1' is a sad fact that tile denudation of tiie banks ot the.se Houihern streams and the destruction of ex tensive fores's in redue ng wild land to a state of enllivaiiou have proved the proximate causes of serious in jury to and often of tiie iotal demoli tion of many prominent and inter.st mg aboriginal structures. “Before these fields were shorn find tilled, Full to the l>rim our rivers flowed.’’ Limpid tlion, with constant vol umes they pm sued their accustomed channel-'. Subsequently, becoming tin bid with the red soil washed from the slopes of an hundred Lids, and no longer fed Wi’ii regularity by well shaded and pure springs, but at one time enfeebled by droughts and again engorged by torrents, these streams have lor many years been liable to sudden and violent fluctuations. Mul titudes of margaritiferous unios, upon whose flesh these primitive people fed, from who e innenvalls and em brace were obtained supplies of peals, and from wiiose i' idsccnt shells orna ments were fashioned, haVc been torn from their habitants by unruly currents and violently imbedded be yond life, in sand batiks and deposits of mud. The stable bottoms upon which they rested and multiplied have been "‘render, <1 uncertain and unwholesome ; and thus it has come to pass that a marked extinction ot siiCh annual life has been caused. Fishes; too, and turtles are far less numerous than they were in those early days. The rapid precipitation of volumes of water from bald territories gives rise to freshets which, overleaping ’lie established river banks, chafe against structures in the overflowed valleys originally secure from all danger of this sort Primitive burial places, grave mounds and monu ments have in this manner often been rudely torn asunder, and the surfaces of Valleys dedicated to septiltUrc, sport and habitalion, scarred almost, beyond recognition. This Work of disintegration and obliteration is steadily progressing. In some loca ities —Within tlic memory of the liv ing—august mdnuments have entirely disappeared, while the configuration of others has boon ed marred that the present ruin conveys no intelli gent, impression of the original structures. SuCh tribute does an untamed past pay to an ail-subdu ng present. In view of these changes, and of other injurious itifliichces eh londerod BIEXA VISTA, MARIOY COUNTY, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, OlTOld 7 '• i ; by a civilization - general 'y cureless tif these ‘early monuments, speedy and intelligent obsei’vation of the location and of jthesi primitive structures becuies imperative if wc would know and in* ; Icrpict them aright. On the right bank of the Oconee river, about a utile and a lutlf above i its confluence with the Apitlacheb, situated in the low grounds o! the I plantation it Thos. ]’. Esq, jis a cireulur earthwork some twenty I fed h gh, and covering about the (eighth of an acre. The sides iirb sloping, tis in the case of other Conl cd mout.tls along the line of litis rival', but the peculiarity which dis tiiigh slic-B it. from its Companions ift that around the apex s out <arth walls were raised to the height ol several feet, thus causing a depressed „or -'larded top. ; Near the banks of the Apalachee riv r, iu Morgan county, may still be seen occasional artificial pits, some four feet in depth anil six feet or more in diameter. Upon removing tlie debris of earth and leaves with whidli they a.e tilled, their bottoms and sides indicate tlie influence of long continued and in'etise li es. Fragments of pottery also occur in ; tinm. Ii would seem that they con i' stitnted a sort of rude oven in which I the Indians baked their clay Vcsse's. AVc might mnlt'ply instances of tu : muli siill extant in the valleys of the 1 Oconee and its tributaries, but hav. | ing* already described and figured j those in East. Macon and its vicinity,* : enough has probably oven said to | convey an intelligent idea ol the ab ; original monuments of this section of tlicStaic. On.viA.es C. Joses, .J a. Augusta, Ua., October 1, 18T7. ’Antiquities of the Southern India ns, p. lgs, ctscq ; New Yolk, 1M73. A JJKSPKHATK LEA I*. .1 limiting from a Train Stunning I’orty .Miles an iinur, N. Y Memtry.l An ex raoidinarv ini I vob iig a heroic act oil iho Jfarr ot a po lice iiop.-cior, occterefi on the Mien- Eastern lldlwav, near (fffchesler; i'. g 'and, rteenlly. A slim, active man was brought, before tiie Barnsley magistral as ciiaiged with being a deserter. He gave the name of Waller Marsdon. mi 1 red lie came fom A-liton-uiider-Lyne, He was taken to the police station at L’oti isione, an I on being cxtllVited a small wait, was lotr'il on the hick ol h'S neck, l ie; G ,smite was then seai'ciiecl, ami die prisoner answerin r the lie-cr p ion of a man named Join a Beaumont, who was 'wauled’ as a deserter, he was detained. He then admitted lhat he was a de seiter from die Six Dragoon*. Wlien brought hofnru tile in gislratiS lie pleaded gniltv, and was ordered to he forwarded bv civil escort to his regiment at G dchester. Tnis task was deputed io inspector Cor ien. The officer and the prisoner left Penistone, by the 7:30 tiaiu lor Cold est, r. All went right until iLey had got between Peterhoro and Hindiin. when the inspector noticed iiis prisoner living to get one ot Lis hand culls off. He then linked both ol die haiidculls together in Order to pte vent the prisoner using iiis hands. They changed trains at liitelnn and at Bud berry, Suffolk. This was tiie lasi eliang iog place, and iiere a third-class com partment was secured, ond iho two weic the ot ly oeeupanls until Bures Station was readied; Hero they were joinvd by a gentleman and an old lady, the latter of whom let down the window on the otT side of the carriage. The pris oner was sitting in front Ot tiie in spector. and whilst the latter just turned his head prisoner took the opportunity, and jumped head foremost through the open window, the inspector callght him bv one ot his legs, hut iie escaped, and many of the affrighted passengers be lieved lie Was dashed to pieces. The inspector, however, looked out, saw him roll over twice, and then, getting on iiis feet, he made off in the opposite ilitec lioti to that it) which tiie train was going. The shouts of the astonished passengers could not arrest tile attention of tiie engine driver, wild as tiie cord in tended to affotd communication between the passengers and the driver would not act, tie was powerless, lie, however, opened iho door, and, contiary to tiie wish of tiie passengers, mounted on the top of one of tiie catriagcs. Allot' crossing one of them ho had to get down in order to clear a bridge. With tio little difficulty lie at length rOabhod tile driver, and tiie speed was slackened, hut not hefote the train had run fully a tltile and three-quarters; A smart chase ensued; and the prisoner was Caught as he Was trying to get thrbugh it gap in the hedge. He was brought to liures and handed over to Inspector Cordeti. who lost no time in safely lodging him ill Colchester Barrack. Major C. 11. WiPiamSjfortticrly of tiie Co’umbus Times, has removed to At lanta, and will practice law in the office of .fudge Lcfflirane; A. UK.MOCIiATIC t’AMILY .VJfAy,sIA 1 M l actS kVui ili Itcnii iiilM'i'iiig, 0n i.ibi fhn. ■ 1. Mini !'ci| -'I 'iHpppj five pounds ot llifeui on. One tlfdi y,oh) si ling and flooring is needed ilnth (Vc iqinibcl' o( s pinifc h Ct of Sill fare to bo covered, hccHuse the lap in die matching of die floor. One thoit&rfnd hl.dis vvill Cover seventy yitrds of surface, aiitl eleven petin ls of lalli nails will nail tlletfl oil. biglit titisheli ol {fond liiiit?; tix'cen bu.-liels of sand; and one bushel ol liair, will make enough indrtaf to plaster due hundred square yards; A Cord of Stoite-, linen bllslleis Of lime and a cnbio yhnl bf shnd will lay one hnndred cubic feet of wall; F.ve courses of brick Will My one foot in height itn a Chlmncv, nine blink in a course will make a flue eight inches wide find twenty ihebes long, and e glit bricks in a colitse will-make a line eight inches wide and siiieen inches long. Mites. If die fo’lowiiig be trlio it iS tvortii several tears of subscription to the Akuus to every housewife in tlie land, especially w here t!.e initeS take to the dwtfing. Try It Tlie recipe is fur - mshed by .sl.correspondent of tlie Courier Juiir'nel, who wiiteS an fol lows: Last summer otir beH iioti.se waaß so ii.tested with lids Verigin that the setting hetja died on their bests. One afternoon ! notree tlie martins car rying to their box, wdiick was on A pole near tlie ljerieiy, scute gieeh leaves. 'Vatching tlicm>i. found they were get ting die,leaves of the .male ft. c. barren) persimoWj I galiieivd sottto of tlie leaves, dne-v them into the nest; aiid dn die lion house ftowr, and in less than one hour the liousi; was free from the ventiin. Id boil tlie r leaves, aid sprinkle With the decoxidn will be as eflebtiVe; A Big Slait! of Diutfioihk C" Of* atjjjuH ‘Si tl\e Steamer iCo'n. iol tlio V:oi"h ( f.'i oin on-, |„-t Firtlav, it Mas di st)olojc-'ef!.^ifl,ar a p.-u*l:;,g • of dial •non Is valued at 811,000 and a box of pi iIIIIIIIII Wort h ah,.wit 8I 00 iVi.ro mrsms ing ;rt ilie same (fine it was that the four h officer of itie Kolit, u limit named Mover, had Mislerlons'r •!is ‘•pearcl. I lie iliain unis were shipped In:!! Son!lihani|iton lo a firm, in l iiis ci:v. Missis. Oelrich it Go. have taken t'veiv nioasmc to have Meyer alrested, ■in I i’inkerloiffs Detective Agency lias been emp'oved; A icivanl of 81.000 Inis been offered for, Meyer’s appihhcn sion. ,\rxl Coiijfrtisjl. The Ilonso of Representatives stands -Democrats 1-15 ; Repiiblicr.ns I HO. giving a Democratic majority of fifteen. Tiiete nro five Contested seats —two front California, two from Louisiana, find the one from Colorado. Randall and Cox are the principal contestants for Hpenkir. Sout! c.n members generally favor Barnhill, and it is expected he will, without trouble, be nominated in caucus, and of course elected. —Mr. Ofus. Gilberts, of Dooly coun ty, owned two puppies and their mother. Oh the 27th n't., a moc casin snake, 3 feet long, and 6 incites in circumtcrence, was discovered near l lie steps in the rear of the house. The excitement caused the puppies to rail up; when otto was bitten and almost instantly killed. Tiie other then went in reach, and was, a'so, bitten by the snake. Mr. Gilbert seeing the first puppy died so sail- 1 tidily began immediately to adminis ter remedies to tiie mother and sur viving puppy, both of which lingered two days and died. After death it was discovered that the fi sh near where the fangs entered each of the dogs would drop from the bon- s. Queen Victoria’s allowance from die nation during the past year was about $3,033,545. The Prince of tiie Wales received $20,000 ; the Duke of Edin burgh, $125,000; the Duke of Con nithght atul Prince of Leopold each $7.1,000 ; tiie Princess of VVal°6 $50,- 000; die Duke of Cambridge, $00,000; die Crown Princess of Pctsia, $-10,000 ; Princess Alice, Princess Helena, Prin cess Louise and die Duchess of Cam bridge; ear.l l $30,000 ; and the Princess Mary of Leek $25,000. It itpjleds from the anlilial report of die Colniis3ioners in Lunacy, just pub lished; tbit on the Ist of January this VCar tliert wrre GG,636 “binaries, idiots, and persens of unsound minds”—regis tered its Inch—in Eriglahd and Wales. Tiffs mlraber, however; iS exclusive of lunatics. So fobnd bv inquisition, who lesi 'es in cliaige of theit conlmito tees. I ierefore, all told, the insane u he day mimed amounted to 88,888. Wit mi(t Jtuijuth and every boy to be a | <v ' !l 'haic pot it'oes fold dollars per bllsOVt twenty years. _ A jaur.g man sent I ty ~e nls tt) s firm in Michigan who advert ; S ed ;* re cipe to piev. lit had dicams. Ue rt'ci ved ! a slip of pMjii-t on which Was wrij.ieti: j| I >ui’t go to Sleep.’ A colored prtiaeher ih Alahaihn puis liiii tool on cieessive bribery at elections and crushes it. ‘Din ding,' lie says, ‘ob gottin' a hundred dollafs fof a vo b is ad wrong. 'lbu debars is as much as it’s woH.’ Ihe old rimn vho always hespondS at ilie witing tittle whs on listtnl at tlie Ocean Grove carirpgroUnd lids year as usual. Tliiirsdaj' a c.lergylhan, referr!no to sinners in his pi dyer, used tins ex pression : ‘AVe See item suspended over hell. ‘Glory to God!’ lai.g out the ie-pon.se with all tbe entbubiattn ot an! old-time methodivt; A contemporary tells vouiig ladies how to ariange tlibir hair in a fashion able style; 'bet it all down,’ it says, and coiiib it out Willi a crosß-cut saw. Then go upon the roof o ( the lions and stand still while the wind plats (whatever is appropriate) with i'; Then catch up the back with a bow of nbboti and allow the front to stay as it is; It is said lliut ‘the moon has gained about iln inch in rapidity of motion’ within the last hundred years. 'this is no doubt true—for young men will tell you that, when (diking at the gale with their sweethearts, ihe moon spies down much quicker now than it did when they were boys wailing to rob a water* melon patch iu tlie dark. The attorneys of Shaw are making strenuous etturts to get a ilfcw trial lor their elicith They may sttbbced find it so jt j.s riot by any means ber lain that the comlenined mhu will liang in October. The Chattahoochee river is very low, and navigation is slow. The l-'iint never gets too low. for the hi"gosL|! ads; The it'Chiplh of tliibd fruit liy the 0< n ril radi'otid H.- uwtbih —miing ■Vujrii = i HI v,aS \,o66jd;K) pounds;. Tin ce hare just arrived at Phila-i dolphin for the '/■ ological (j.-irden three Anibhtn sheep; the first of the Urebt! ever brought to this country. MeS-rs. Hdllidily, Line tfrCojoll Lowndes county, have 1,300 biirl'olsl offos'ii, and a iarge quantity ol tur-j pentine renily for .shipment cailyinl this month. A LOntlbn tblegram say' that bw-l ing to the depression m the Cottonl trail', the Nuneaton ebttbn mill,l which eirploys over 500 opeiatives,l will be closed Tubal Cain invented music, hut. hcl Wos honest about it. lie never! <ireadied tliat a woman would sing! thiough liei* nose, or that a voiingl man Would (’tire a Whole neighbori lioutl distrabtrd with a fiddle. the Peruvian government wants lo borrow $2f,000,000 for a few years and will secure the lender with a batik of guano 150 miles lo.ig and a mile wide. 'Hie visit of the Sioux Chief to Washington will cost the government SSOOOO. The South Carolina State Agricult ural Society have of} ted a stoo jnize to the best drilled infantry company in the United Slates, to he contested for during tire State Agmubura! Fair in Columbia on the 15 h of November next. Come and see if we sail under false colors. Prints Bc., and downward. Other goods lor ladies- and mens’ wear and use, prices in keeping J/ens’ “best” Brogan Shoes $1..85j and down to-$l .35. \IJk I' lll 1 Stock. Ladies and Children Shoes correspondently lhw. . , i GRAXITJE CUPS AND SAUCERS, per set 75e. ALL. ©TIIER CROCKERY GLASS-WARE PROPOETI ATEL Y PRICED. , Stores at Bed Bone and Buena Yista wait night and day to do up these goods at the given prices. octl7-2m ' % cDo ©B©!j§T, l MIL * hsifiiNOSFELDIR. "" GENEVA, GEORGIA, Dealers in Stapte and Fancy Dry Goods lIEAVI A\D FAIC V U HO( EI!IC, GII7T3’ FURITISHIKS GOO of every description, llard-irare, ll!luwnvarc, Ctorktrpwavt, Hilriicii t'liuinbel- and Parlot Furniture, Millinery Gaoisof tie latest styles & design?, In fact, everything for the Living ami the Dead J We arc agents f. r Mrs. Demorcst’s Dress patterns, and will furnish them in any style. s.ieS and number very cheaply. BET&Ih hj Q UQ® PssiJLE* &m mmm wmmmms* FIRST-CLASS FARE, A\D OVEN AT Alt HOURS. BAR AND BILLIARD* SALOON CONNECTED WITH THE HOUSE ijAltiAlt SXRBiK-f; AMKUtCUS; OA #,?. csaipum - - • _ __ IIU G 6±fAP4Aiffi Win never shuts up late or soon, Who cooks good things rnorh, night and neon, Who keeps a number one Saloon ? Hugo Chatman. Who has good Oysters, Crabs and Fish, beef. Mutton, Turkey, or any dish. From Sautag.'. up to what veil wish ? Bigg Chatman, Who night and day stands there to sell, l’lant Oysters on the big half shell, With Stews and Fries as hot as well ? sept 12-3 ms Btroo Chapman. ial Subscription $2 OO Mice stoke MER.NO I And' COLLAR', -BON TON emitting and sewing pcKliT * TABLE KNIV LS, fcIBSORS, <kc, Ac. Tll sid UrtwieKt or CAR PE T NC feORGU, AND AS lilt ia our larger cities- Iwc'l assoitcd sloclt oi L coi * ller.irtNew York, a ftlot of LsKIN JEANS SUITS, SUPER COR TO ANY Wt/iE SAME PRICE. Synods in the piece. |k s a t less than cost,for effect* y;e profits shall be as lew as ISGranbeiry St Sarlow, stock.* - I KECHiVINb , |d Stock of Groceries* [<K, iy Cv*rK. and nspAifuU<j solicit a pot ■y* jhfir supplies m tfns Market tuK and SCHEEV COHSTIW. Wff T ATTENTION, to all business cu le confidence of all. ’*'mg % 1 1 J a * v f ’ Si ft. are making ilddiliuns daily ■> .WOhAfc&r-bs, lijßAav ■■am IriRS, MAftU'tn\l<. .BVOtiINO * r^^B m> siroT,” [’oWoFtt .t cAr.- Ph’v vTI ItT A t T.. ur.il Al. l. 0111-WR lip xj; a e.BOCKUf BXOR' A ..and-will M litdeKfD METER, WEBSTER, MACON AND ft are making from GOOD \Vf'F \T APffil H M jRIMjj Bi Cl ft LARUE A YIELD OF FLOUR, FROM lv THE STATE, AED FAR LUFF. it SEEN IN TEIS COUNTRY. p.vr;o;o.y ill follow _gj [BELL & EFOWI/POF, i’roprietora. i Who meets his guest with friendly smile, j And for his friends will go his pile, i And give them grub in any style? Bead Cuapma*. ; And when at night he Sits well fed. With Bugg's “Log Cabin, " and level head. ! Who'll put him in hia little bed? BfOO C2APMAW. | Oh ! good old hbuse on Lamas street, ! Oh ! good old Bye—goad things to eat, 'Oh best of places where you’ll meet Bugo Chatm. Pi. No. 4