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THE OGLETHORPE ECHO,
PUBLISHED
EVERV FRIDAY RORYIAU,
15 Y T. U,. GANTT,
Editor and Proprietor.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
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\\ here payment delayed <> months 2 50
Where payment delayed 12 months... 5 00
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tions from other counties unless accompanied
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RATES OF ADVERTISING.
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Liberal contracts made with regular mlvcr- I
tisers, and for a longer period than 3 months.
Local notices, 20c. per line first insertion,
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I
ANNOUNCEMENTS. !
Announcements inserted in this column i
(it $5.50, where, paid in advance. "?ssT
For Tax Collector.
tea?" J. G. Hartsfield is a candidate !
for Tax Collector, subject to the Demo- !
cratic nomination. Friends. !
For Tax Receiver.
JSfcit' The friends of John T. England
announce his name as a candidate for
Tax Receiver, subject to Democrati
nomination, on the third Friday in No
vember next. Many Voters.
For Tax Receiver.
fS&frr The friends of G. W. Young an
nounce his name as a candidate for TaxJ
Receiver, subject to Democratic nom
inat on, on the third Friday in Novem
ber next. Many Voters.
COUNTY IVEWS. j
REPAINTED.
We sec that Mr. Martin Johnson has
had the residence of his mother, near
this village, handsomely painted and !
othervvays improved. This is. one of the
most desirable places in the connty.
QUERY.
Will someone be good enough to send
ns the names of those youug men who. i
are in the habit of writing and passing !
notes to young ladies during prayer I
meeting ? AYe are very anxious to hand
their names down to posterity.
- —
A SMART BOY,
Little Frank Tiller, aged 11 years, and
weighing 6f> pounds, son of our esteemed
fellow citizen, TANARUS, R. Tiller, living near
the Glade, picked 2(M> pounds of cotton in
one day ! We claim for Frank the cham
pionship of the State among boy cotton
pickers.
MR. J. J. C. McMAHAN.
This gentleman is authorized to collect
and receipt for subscriptions or other
moneys due this office. Any contract
made by him will he recognized and car
ried out by us.
Subscribers can leave money with any
qf our merchants for us.
CAREFUL.
Our yqung friend Andrew A. is the
most obliging elerk in town. A gentle
man recently purchased;°f. him a five gal
lon jug , and. Andrew, dppe it up for him
in fine tissue paper. % He now thq
Lord ljcyer tried' Job, properly—if he
had puf him to wrapping up large jugs
ip, thin paper he would rank as anything
but the meekest map.
COLORED. EXHIBITION.
Lexington* Ga., Oct. 16, 1874. ;
I take great pleasure, to announce to j
the public that there will be a grand ex- j
hibition and tableaux, at the A. M. E. i
Church, in, this place, Qii.Tuesday *ven- ;
ing, October 27. We respectfully invite
our white friends to attend, and also our ;
colored friends. Most respectfully,
Chas. C. Caksilev j
N. 11. —Exercises to commence pre-J
cisely at 9 o’clock. oct23-4t
NEW HORSE DISEASE.
This week qujr friend Roan, of foxing-*!
ton, brought, out. a. drove of fin*, horses,
and as is customary vyitli drayei>, had
their tails done up in nigs, to prevent
the hairs being torn out on the cars. Ip .
passing through Lexington with thgi#
they were seen, by a lady, vyho privately
informed her husband at efiniter that
•‘Mr. Roan bad some beautiful horses,
hut that they all had, the holtw-Jait,
which appendages had to be split open,
but that they were now up nicely,
and she did so hope they would get well,
as it was a pity to see such nice animals
ruined!”
Ice was formed in Washington on
Wednesday morning.
KU-KLUX.
The Adventures of a Crawford
Collector.
A CANE FOR COAbKENNIONAL
INTERFERENCE.
50,000 U. S. TROOPS WANTED.
One day this week, a solitary horseman
was seen slowly wending his way along a
lonely country road, not many miles
from Crawford. His bright, restless eye
and troubled look plainly told that he
had missed his way; his jaded steed
told that he had traveled far since the
rising of the sun ; a large bundle of white
papers, carefully folded, said plainer
than words could speak that he was a
col lector for a Crawford house ; his slim
poeket book, which did not even make
a bulge in his pants, showed that
he had not collected a “ Red and his
heavy clothing and large beard plainly
told that he was preparing for winter.
Twice had he traversed one piece of
road, twice had he passed a trio of dimin
utive contrabands, perched upon a
fence, resembling, in their dirt and tat
ters, scaree-erows; and twice was he
eonvinusd that he had missed his way.
At last, as a dernier resort, he ap
proached the three young mokes, and
proceeded to interrogate them in regard
to the correct route to Mr. AVatson’s; but
scarcely, like Balaam’s ass, did he “open
his mouth and spake,” than off scam
pered his audience, each secreting him
self as best he could. The “solitary
rider ” could not aceount for this sudden
exit; but was finally enlightened as
its cause by one of the scampers, who
had succeeded in climbing a tall pine
suppling, and so flattered himself that he
was out of danger, exclaiming :
“ I knows you; you can’t fool me, so you
just as welt take off dal ugly kiver on
your face ! You is one of dem Ku-Klux /”
If a thunderbolt from heaven had
dropped in front of his horse, he would
not have been more astounded. To hear
his heavy brown beard and moustache,
which latter he had waxed and trained
to curl in the most artistic manner, and
the former, which had been the envy of
the men and praise of the fair ones for
the past ten winters, and that eye and
face, which all knew to beam with intel
ligence, denounced by a little negro as
an ugly kiver! a mask ! was more than
human endurance could stand.
Quickly dismounting, he scaled the
intervening fence with an alacrity that
would have done honor to a trained AYil
liani goat, reached the sappling which
Ydift freighted with his tormentor, and
tearing it up by the roots, captured the
“varmint,” whom he deliberately tore into
0,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,
pieces, scattering them to the four cor
ners of the county, as a sad warning to
future juvenile mokes who choose to in
sult a “ solitary horseman.” True.
♦♦♦
A GOOD ONE.
An Oglethorpe man, on a visit to the
State Fair, imbibed pretty heavily of old
Robinsmi County chained-lightning.
Toward noon, feeling that the inner
man needed something more substantial
than his present contents, he walked into
a restaurant, and order a “ (hie,hieh) —1
of a dinner !” The waiter instantly han
ded him a bill of fare, the first word on
which was raw oysters. Our friend, who
was some “ half seas over,” not very
clear sighted at best, and who had lately
dug and ate potatoes until they were al
ways uppermost in his mind, held the
paper up before him, and after some five
minutes’ hard spelling on the first line,
made it out to be 11 raw potatoes.” He
instantly called the waiter, and com
menced the following tirade against the
house : “ Waiter, what in the (hie) h—l
did you (hie, hie) bring me nothing but
(hie, hie, hie) raw potatoes for (hie) din
ner for? I’ve (hie,hie) had nothing but
(hie) these —-—roots at (hie, hie) home
for six (liic) weeks !”
FREIGHTS.
w e see that the authorities of the Geor-_
gia Railroad have reduced the tariff of
freights on that road from Covington,
Conyers, Lithonia, Stone Mountain, and
Decatur to Augusta from 60 to 45 cents
per one hundred pounds. While they
are reducing we would like tu call the at
tention of Messrs. Authorities to pur lfftle
station, and would say to those gentlemen
we would like “ a little reduction in
ours’.” There is a most tyrannical and
qpjust discrimination made by the Geor
gia Road not only Crawford, but
all the stations on this branch, in favor
of.Athene Our merchants, in order to
secure any kind of equal rates, are forced
to order their freights shipped to Athens,
sixteen miles above here, and then re
turned to them. By any other plan they
ape sufyected to a ruinous tariff. This
epprse is alike annoying to. both railroad
men and'merchants—to tire former from
unnecessary hauling and handling, and
to the latter.from haying to wait on their
goods a longer time than should be. We
hope the proper authorities will look
into this matter, and give our merclu n s
ct leas! an equal showing with Athens.
THE FRUITS OF CIVIL RIGHTS.
A gentleman from Greene county
brings u< the following, which he said
was rumored, but he had not learned
names or particulars. We give it just as
related to us:
A negro man, one day this week, en
tered the house of a widow a white
lady), and seating himself before the
fire, proceeded to inform her that he had
come to il tahe her daughter to a colored
party; that the civil rights bill had
passed, the colored man had the same
rights as the white man, and if the white
ladies did not chose to go with them they
could be made to go !” The impudent
brute was finally ousted by a younger
brother, who is said to have cut his
throat, but this our informant does not
credit.
GENERAL TOOMBS.
This old war-liorse of Georgia is in at
tendance at Lexington Court this week,
looking as fat and independent as ever.
For General Toombs we entertain the
most unbounded respect. He ranks first
among those true patriots who stood by
the South through her greatest afflic
tions, and was one man who was not
afraid to do and to dare. AVith an honor
as spotless as the falling snow, a patriot
ism pure as the water that flowed from
the rock touched by Aaron’s rod, and a
heart as kind and tender as it is brave,
we feel that when that Great Day shall
come, when the deeds done upou earth
will be brought to light, the good recor
ded. against this great man will so far
outshine his few transgressions that the
Recording Angel will drop a tear upon
the latter and obliterate them forever.
IN A BAD FIX.
A young man living near Wolfskin, in
this county, recently started to call on
some of the fair ones. During his trip
he was caught in a shower, and so had
his “ store clothes ” thoroughly saturated
with water. This did hot, however, de
ter him from his visit. Reaching the
house of his adored one, he requested a
suit of her brother’s clothes, in which he
might array himself, while his were be
ing dried. They were, in due time,
transferred to his carcas, and his clothes
to a chair in front of the fire. But dur
ing his absence from the room, as ill
luck would have it, the fire was commu
nicated to his [the ladies will please stop
reading here] drawers, and soon nothing
was left of them but one leg. Fortunately,
however, there was cloth enough left in
this piece to make John Robinson a cir
cus tent, two pairs of drawers for the
largest man in the county, and three
sheets.
IMPROVING.
From a gentleman just returned from
a trip over the county we learn that im
provements are going on in every section
—new dwellings going up, old ones are
being renovated, and receiving coats of
paint, barns, stables, and out-buiklings
have a fresher and more substantial look
than formerly, fences, as a general thing,
are iu good order, and, in fact, every
thing is gradually recovering from the
desolating effects of the war. Lct.our
people now make a mighty effort and
throw aside the lethargy and despon
dency which has invaded the country
since the late struggle for independence;
let them stand together in one solid and
immovable phalanx when we hold elec
tions ; let them stand aloof and spurn
all Yankees and Yankeedom—buy noth
ing from them you can possibly do with
out ; let them strive to live strictly with
in themselves and for themselves, and all
will yet be well.
DR. W. M. WILLINGHAM.
We invite the especial attention of our
citizens to the card of Dr. W. H. Foster,
in another column, wherein lie gives
notice that he has retired from the prac
tice of medicine in this county, (having
determined to locate in Augusta,) and
recommends Dr. W. M. Willingham,
his successor, to their confidence. While
our county lias lost one of her best phy
sicians in the removal of Dr. Foster, she
has reason to congratulate herself on
still retaining bis successor, Dr. Willing
ham, who is fresh from the best medical
schools of America, and although as
yet a young man, ranks among the first
physicians of the land. Dr. F. may rest
assured that liis former patients will lack
for nothing that medical skill and strict
attention to duties can supply. We con
gratulate Augusta on having such a val
uable acquisition to her medical ranks as
Dr. Foster. Truly, our loss is her gain.
WRITE FOR US.
W e are determined to publish a local
paper, and to do so successfully, we call
upon our friends, all over the county, to
keep us posted as to everything taking
place in their respective neighborhoods.
Write us each week of the marriages,
deaths, roads, improvements, schools,
crimes, magistrate trials, church, school,
and crop news. In fact, there are daily
occuring events in the county that
would help render our paper interesting.
You need not trouble to write it up—
only give us the points, and we will fix
that.
John Mathias, a white blacksmith of
Cartersville, raped a little girl in that
place on Wednesday, and left on the
train for Atlanta, but was captured at
Marietta,
COURT PROCEEDINGS.
Visiting Lawyers—List of Cases Tried.
Court, tlii-i far. is passing off very
quietly. There baa been an unusual
large attendance every day. and an unu
sual small amount of tangle-foot enibibed.
Judge Pottle presided, and, as usual,
is giving universal satisfaction.
The following is a list of noted visiting
lawyers, who are in attendance :
General Toombs, Washington.
Judge W. M. Reese, Washington,
Colonel Edwards, Elberton.
Col. M. AY. Lewis, Greensboro.
Colonel Hester, Elberton.
Col. Charles Ifußosc, Warrenton,
M. P. Reese.
Colonel Grant, Union Point.
Gen. D. M. Dußose.
Frank Little, Sparta.
The following is a list of business
transacted up to the hour of our going to
press:
Thirty judgments (plain cases) for
debts entered.
Josiah Pollard vs. Wm. B. Lester;
case for damages in a horse trade. Ver
dict for defendant.
George AY ash ington Maxwell vs. Julia
Maxwell, both of African ’scent; libel
for divorce. A total divorce granted.
James S. Sims vs. Swepson H. Cox;
partition of mines and minerals of gold,
copper, parites, paint, slate, iron, silver,
illuminia, and various other minerals.
Verdict for defendant Cox, generally,
against valuable mines and minerals of
value or profit. Attorneys for defend
ant : Toombs, Reid, and Mathews ; for
plaintiff: AY. G. Johnson.
Wilcox, Gibbs &Co.vs. Isaac R, Hall;
suit to recover payment for alleged worth
less fertilizers. Verdict by a special jury
for defendant Hall.
Court will last all the week.
CORN-SHUCKINGS.
Since our farmers have taken to rais
ing their own provisions, the pleasures
and happy gatherings of olden times are
again coming in fashion. None of these
gathering are freighted with more true
pleasure and joy than the old-fashioned
corn-shucking, alike to black and white.
We hail this as a good omen, and will
count the year we commence to make
our own provisions as the hegira of the
South —that day will she be indeed free,
not only from the tyrants of the North,
for she can then stand aloof from them,
and watch them scirm and suffer for our
trade as they made us suffer by their
thievery and oppression, (God grant the
dyy may soon come, and we believe it is
now beginning to dawn upon us,) but
free from the merchant, the factor, and
the .extortioner. That day the farmer
can set his hat on the side of his head,
cast upon his former masters a withering
glaee, and whistle at them, “ Root Pig or
Die!” #
There were two corn-shuekihgs last
week, that we heard of,, one at Mr. AY.
W. Berry’s and another at Mr. G. A.
Stewart’s, both of whom made so much
corn that they, like the rich man
the Scripture tells about, had to tear
clown their barns and build larger ones.
They had better take warning at his sad
fate, ancl give their surplus to the poor,
[which is the editor of the Echo.]
AN INTELLIGENT OFFICIAL.
A North Georgia friend sends us the
following, which is an exact copy of a
summons served upon the party named
by the Mayor of Belton, Ga.:
“ Belton, Ga., Oct. 8, 1874.
“Pink Williams You are hereby
required Laying all other business asid
be and apperc before the Mayors Coart
to be hell in said town on the 9th hist at
8 o’clock in the morning a. m. to answer
the Chargas pending against you for vio
lating see 380 in getting Drunk quarrel
ling fighting using vulgar and profane
language hooting and howling on the
12th Sept this you will fail not Ac
“J. P. H., Clerk.”
TAKE NOTICE.
I would respectfully ami earnestly call
upon those indebted to the firm of It. S.
Martin & Cos. to lend them a helping
hand in this, their “ day of deep distress.”
I hope that the confidence I have placed
in my old customers has not been mis
placed, ami the best possible way to
prove that my estimate of them. w.as cor
rect is for them, on# and all, to- come
forward and pay off old scores, or so
much as they- eaai<, and show at least a
willing mind to help those who, on* their
part, have aided them.
R. S. Martin..
—_
HORSE KILLED.
A-fine mare, belonging to Mr. W. A*
Cunningham, of tjaisvcouaty, killed, her**
self, a few andp vfrw since, bv running
against a tree.
WEDNESDAY'S TRAIN- BEHIND TIME.
Tlie night train on this branch was
some three hours-behind time, caused by
its crowded condition. Nothing else
the matter.
Mr. W. W, Groover, of Brooks count}-,
has sent a report of his experience with
a two-horse farm to the Atlanta Fair for
competition. He realized $3,257.70,. his--
expenses being 81,015, leaving a clear
profit of 82,212.70.
ATHENS NEWS.
Brumby has a full assortment of goods
in his line.
The streets begin tfi have a lively ap
pearance once more.
A fine drove of sheep and shoats came
to Athens last Friday.
Holman is selling off his stock of
horses and mules very fast.
Many of the merchants bought their
goods in Charleston this fall.
Saturday night there wits allegro dance
over the river, followed by a fight.
A large quantity of cotton was brought
to town Saturday, to pay guano debts.
An ox was driven up Broad street
Monday with horns about three feet
long.
Three large brick stores are being
built at the corner of Clayton and Thom
as streets.
The Chief of Police, Davis, with his
assistants, keeps everything quiet and in
order about town.
Jim Wilkins is selling good heating
stoves at from $5 to SB. Everything
else low in proportion.
A first-rate sermon was preached at
the Primitive Baptist Association by Mr.
Eubank, in the morning.
The factory dam in this city ha< been
thoroughly repaired, and the factory is
again in running order.
J. F. Wilson & Cos. have a handsome
and cheap lot of. furniture. Oglethorpe
people can’t do better than give them a
call.
Drs. Pope and Lowrance are putting
up a neat brick office on the upper part
of Broad street, next to Flisch’s confec
tionery.
Miss Sallie Arnold, daughter of the
former pastor of Oconee Street Church,
of this city, died suddenly at Thomson, a
few days since.
The dancing season has commenced
with the negroes. They almost nightly
have a dance in town. Saturday night
never escapes.
A stalk of cotton was in Judge Pit
tard’s store the other day that held bolls
enough, on it to make two and one-half
pounds of cotton.
An honest colored man of this place
found $25 in cash, and', gave it up to the
owner voluntarily. Barmnn should se
cure him as a curiosity.
They are at work on the Presbyterian
Church steeple, and are planting trees
around the church. The minister, Mr:
Lane, is a pure, upright man.
The omnibus ran foul of the mail
hack a few evenings since, at the depot,
breaking one of the wheels of the latter
so badly that it was rendered useless.
I. M. Morris has brought on a fine
assortment of new and fashionable goods,
which he is selling very low’. The peo
ple of Oglethorpe had better call on him
if they wish rare bargains.
Airs. Ware, an old and highly respect
ed lady, widow of the late Dr. Warc, of
this place, died suddenly Thursday mor
ning, the 15th inst. She was one of the
oldest residents of Athens, beloved and
respected by all who knew’ her.
Saturday afternoon, two men were
riding out in a buggy. As they approach
ed Cooper’s livery stable, the single-tree
slipped off, falling under the heels of the
horse. lie attempted to run, and gave
several severe kicks, but they succeeded
in holding him in the road until he was
quieted, when he moved off all right.
A negro at Cooper’s stable was kicked
on the tliigli a few davs since by a horse
he was harnessing, but was not materi
ally hurt. A horse is in poor business
when he attempts to hurt a negro by
kicking him, uhless he hits the only vul
nerable part about the darkey, viz.: the
shin.
A gqntleman by the name of Davis has
purchased Motes’ gallery. He is said to
be a fine operator. Wren, the former
operator, leaves shortly for Jacksonville,
Fla-. Htj is a clever fellow and a good
operator. Athens will miss him. Davis
appears to be quite a gentleman. We
expect he will do well here.
Two negro men, employed at work
about the new College building, had
some words. While one was stooping
down to pick up mortar, he received a
blow over his head and shoulders, at the
hands of -his opponent. The negro who
received the blow is not hurt, but the
portion of the hoe that struck his head is
said to be untit for use until repaired by
a blacksmith.
The lady who was urging some friends
to dinner felt disgusted when her 8-year
old son came in and said, “ Mrs. Jojnps
says she can’t spare no bread, and Mrs...
Fox ain’t to home, so I didn’t get any
butter.” The friends thought they had
better ~ dine elsewhere, and the lady
thought so, too ; but she taught that boy
that the way of the transgressor was
hard.
Now is the time for candidates to an
nounce their names. We charge only
$3.50 to publish them until the day of
nominating, the third Friday in Novem
ber next. Maimed Confederate soldiers
half price.
Subscr be for the Echo.
letter from the cslade.
The Echo Meet* with Admirers—A Word
of Warning.
Point Peter, Ga., Oct. 19, 1874.
Mr. Editor — Dear Sir: — We mu>t
thank vou for the Echo. Though we
have had hut two issues, vet these arc so
full of spicy and interesting reading
matter that the Echo has already en
deared itself to every family in this
community, and is looked upon by old
and ypungas an “elder brother.”
We read, with avidity, every line of
your last issue, and wished there had
been four times as many.
But hold your ear closer, Mr. Editor.
Are you not puffing “ them depot fellers”
too much? We fear you are. Now,
some of them were rwaivd in "these
parts,” and we know them well. “ Birds
of a feather flock together.” We have
always found them good on three things :
telling tales, eating chestnuts, and
marking their goods high.
And yet there is a virtuous man,
whom I have often noted in their com
pany, but I know not his name. A
good, portly man, corpulent, of a cheer
ful look, a pleasing eye, and a most noble’
carriage, and I think his age some fifty,
or inclining to three score ; and now, I
remember—his name is Stokely. I see
virtue in his looks. If then the tree is
known by the fruit, as the fruit by the
tree, then kindly I speak it, there is
virtue in that Stokely : him keep with—
the rest banish.
Alav the career of the Echo be “ up
ward and onward,” is the sincere wish of
the people of tile Glade.-
THE ECHO.
Opinions of the Press.
Friend Gantt, formerly of the Athens 1
Northeast Georgian , has established a
live weekly journal, called the Ogle
thorpe Echo, at Crawford, a thriving
village on the Athens Branehofthe Geor
gia Kailroad. Air. Gantt is a smooth
and racy writer and his paper will be
beneficial in many respects to the entire 1
people of the county. We hope they
will not see him and his family cry for
bread! Patronize him, gents. — Green*--
boro Herald.
New Paper. —The Oglethorpe
Echo “ unfurls its banner to the
breeze,” with T. L. Gantt, Editor ami
Proprietor. The first number is before
us, and to say it is neat and tidy in aj -
pcaranee, tells only half the story. It is*
full of interest and will be liberally pat-*-
ronized. We send you a cordial greet
ing, Brother GantG — Covington Enter
prise..
We are glad to place upon our ex
change list, the Oglethorpe Echo, a
new weekly just started in Crawford, by
Air. T. L. Gantt. It is neatly printed,
tastefully edited, and bids lair to estab
lish itself as a first-class journal.-Suc--
cess to its energetic proprietor !
nah Daily Sun.
TO SUBSCRIBERS..
As will be seen by reference to our
terms, subscription must be paid in ad
va.nec, or delinquents will have to pay
twenty-five cents per quarter additiona
so long as payment is postponed. But
owing to the fact that but little cotton
has as yet been sold, we propose to give
our patr<ms until the first of December -
next, when, if payment is not made, our
rules will be enforced in ever]/ instance..
We do not desire any subscriber who can
not pay for his paper in advance. We
are determined to run a first-class news
paper, and to do so successfully will
have to demand the cash. We com
mence The Echo unincumbered by
debt, evejy dollar on the purchase of the
paper haying been paid, and so subscri
bers need have no fear that our contracts
will not be carried out. The support
already received assures the succsssful
publication of our paper.
Notice of Stokes’ Great Sore and Pain Idedi
cine, of his Own Discovery, and Manufac
tured by Stokes & Lyle, Social Circle, Ga.
I have cured, and will try to cure again, all.
kinds of Sores, of long or fresh standing, Piles,
or Pains of any kind, with my, \S A f ■k K LIN
IMENT AND TONIC, .For Five IMhir. in i
advance, I send a package which, if it fe It: .to >
give satisfaction,.,! will redeem, a id i -tuirr.j
the money; Provided, you follow the direc
tions. . As I jdqn’t furnish brains, 1 want i:
physician to supply them for me. I rni no
practical. phv.deiaß, but the boss of my dis
covery, cured when pnysieians luivo
failed from New York to the Gulf. cttfM
OUR TRAVELING AGEE7.
Mr: JR.rE. Brannan is our regular.y
thorizej Truyeling. Agent.
and all of,our friends arc requ. st.-d,*?;-’,
solicit names, and.thu- assist hi extern.-
ng our circulation, .
- -
The citizens of Quitman, appr •io-mlad
an attack from the negroes on Lund, y
night last and airanged to give them a
warm
and all is n
agaiirt a- <[h( ,