Hamilton journal. (Hamilton, Harris Co., Ga.) 1876-1885, November 22, 1876, Image 1

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HAMILTON Si® JOURNAL. VOL. IV-NO. 44. THEJOtIRNAL bY L a HATTE j GHANBERKY. rA sH SUBSCRII’IION RAILS. ....*2 0° ons ropy ne tear l 00 On# eopv stx moil h °7„ C y one furnishing live subscribers, with rs . 'Vll"uhseriptmn must he paid in "3vnnre. ■I hl . paper will t>e stopped at the end of the ti„, yaJ.il for, unless subsc.ipttons are Pre .iuii.ly renewed. - pif.y numbers complete tlie year. CASH ADVERTISING RATES. - j~nm 3 mos" fi moa 12 jnos nsrrirwTjTowoo $ je w l iuehe* . 450 725 11 00 18 t)0 1 inches 500 900 15 00 22 00 4 inches 550 11 00 18 00 27 00 l column 850 14 00 25 00 35 0(1 i oi„mn 1° 50 25 00 40 00 00 00 j enlnmn'. 22 00 41 Pol 02 00 100 00 Mai liases and deaths not exceeding six j.ea will lie published free. Payment* to t>e madf tpartfrly in wlvancc, according to schedule rates, unless otherwise •armt upon. ..ha Ivrrion* ncntlinjr ad vert moment*. will state Hi, length of lime they wish them published snd tlie space tliey want them to occupy. Parties advertising by contract will be re tiieted to tlicir legitimate busincsa. I.WIAL ATIVItKTISKMKKTS. Kht-rHTa sales. per i"<d‘, fo,,r wc-nk^... $3 50 •* mortgage'fi fa sale*, per inch, aigbt weeks o 60 Citation for letters of administration, guardianship, etc., thirty days. .... 3 00 j Notiia to debtors anil creditors of an i estate, forty days 5 00 , Application for levi to sell laud, four | weeks f Hales of land, etc., per inch, forty days .) 00 , •• “ perishable property, per inch, 1 ten days I Application for letters of disipission from _ ynirdianship. forty dava ° ,K ’ Api Mention for letters of dismission from adndni'trstion, three months < *>o Fetal dishing lost paper*, the full space _ •f three months, per inch • < ,HI Cain pel ling titles from executors or ad ministrators. where liond li.a heen given hy tha **,-ceased, the full sjiace of three months, per inch; j *lO E ray noth'e. thirty days 3 li e for foreclosure of moitguge, four month', monthly, per inch 6 b" Hale of insolvent papers, thirty days. .. 3 <>•> Homesteail, two weeks - (K> Business Car ds TDr. T- !_i- S&n kins, M 9 |i|fi||f|| W* HAMILTON, HA. J. M. M O BLEY, attorney at law, HAMILTON , GDI. Will continue *<• pructir* law In nil the still* tail United State* Court*. J. T. I'.i/icnt. H. C Camkkox JiL O UNI A CAME HON, ITORN EYS AT LAW, ffIEILTOH, GEORGIA Will prortic* In the Stnte and Federal C‘>rt*. Office In the CourtJHmw* ALONZO A. DOZIEK, Attorney and Counselor at Law, COT TIME US. GA. Practice* in State and tVderaT Court* in O.otipa arid Aiahama. Make* Commercial l jam a *recialty. Office over No. 12fi Colnm )>■*. On. dec4-lv Sines 33oasior, ATTORNEY-AT LAW, HAMILTON, GEORGIA Will practice In the Chattahoochee Circuit, or nvwlirre elfle. Office in the Northwest •rner of the Oourt*hoow, up-ftair*. iaiß Columbus Dental Rooms’ W. T.’POOL, Proprietor, Georgia Home olurclros, R. A RUSSELL. 0. R. UUSSEELL RUSSELL & RUSSELL, Attorneys at Tare, COLUMBUS, - OA Will practice in the State and Federal Court*. ••fifth* over Acoe A Murdock’s stne. Broad street, Columbus, lia. SEW NILILIXEBY GOODS! Mis* Mary L Hbitk ha* again opened her •t oek at ht-r OLD STAND tvI will 1m pirated to a.*rve 1 nfr i c *tnnjer*, and as m*ny iwwon y,T# li**r a rail. Sh will low for C***b.wil a ti*f action gtianu.ttcd, *** WIKI KNOWS! Who knows where pins ami needles go, ’Vhere all Hie buttons stray ? Who know, where all the pennb s go That somehow get away ? Who knowa how all the china breaks That wasn't touched at all ? Ho * baby got •'o black a bruise Yet never gets a fall ? Who knows whence all the fashions conn; And where they disappear ? Why one brief month should make a fright Of wliat w<s “such a dear ?” . Who knows how li'tlc hills can swell To sin h prodigious six 7 Who knows, indeed, what's going on Beneath his very eyes ? Who knows just whore her husband goer When •‘business" keeps him out? Who knows when host to wear a smile, And when to wear a pout ? Who knows the timn to face the fact That she’s no longer young ? Who knows how best to speak her mind. And how to hold her tongue ? Who knows tlie most ennv nient day To bring a friend to dine ? Who knows the half of wh it he spends On clubs, c’gars. and wine ? Who knows one bonnet cannot last A woman all her life ? Who knows the woman is the same When swectlieait turn* to wi'e ? Who know, ally all the pret‘v girls Arc often last to go ? How all the ugly women wed Who never have a beau ! Why should men f nev wives so large Aud large men fancy small ? Who knows, in fo< t, how half the world Was ever matched at all ? Who knows how farto trust a fro nd, How f*r to hate a foe ? Just when to speak a k'ndly Yes, And when a sturdy No ? Who knows —the grim old Grecian sage Kays gravely, from flty shelf. The wisest man in all the wot;ld Is he w ho knows himself. He Wanted Live Ones. They were just in from the up country and upon their first visit, to a great citv. They were n good, simple coup’**, bent now upon ‘seeiii’ the sight'.’ They stopped before a door over which uas painted the word ‘Oyst -rs.’ After a whis; ered C instillation they entered and ap proached a spruce chap In hind a count 6". •I* this ’ere an nyseher factory ?’ naked the o’d woman. This is an nv*tc*r saloon sir ! *nid tin* chap with ponderous dignity. ‘•Wei that’* ’bout the same thing, I reckon ; lmve yu got any new oyscher* nut now ?'' “O yes, plenty of am ! How many do y tt want ?’’ •‘How many ? Why ver don’t sposs I want a whole drove on ’em, d’ye ? Ketch n* onu !’ “One oyster I—why one oyster ain’t no sample even ! D'ye want it in the shell !’ ‘Wall, now, I didn’t kno’ as they had hulls on ’em but of course you II hev to take off the back for ti*!’’ “How many ? Pint ? Quart ?’’ ‘•Lis en to that, ole woman. Sell in’ oyscheer* up here by the quart jes’ like they’ll huckleberries 1’ “Get ’em in cans ! Could give you a pint sir.” “All right. But, I’ll take ’em by jiiigs, cf I don’t have another blast ed Imitrshurry ilurin’ Chri*unas week ! Y e’re sure them’s all-square toed sound in limb.” “Here’s some loo* ’un of Ihe same sort, sir !” “What! look ’ere, them things ain’t what yer call oyscher.*, is they? Durn my leather breaches of I ilidn’t think an oyschei was a orier new fangled duck or sea sand tultle! Here old woman, do ye want them things V pointing at thu oysters .in tbe bowl. “Why, ole man, ‘she whispered half audibly, ‘them’s dead—they’re mortyfying already !” “Ding my everlastin’ buttons ef that ain’t so ! Why them oyschers looks like they was carved outen’ whit-leather and died very young — they’re so cold and slimy ez git out! Yer can’t fool mo on ’em, bud, not much —when I buy oschers I wants to sec ’em ketebed right up live and kiekin, Ido ! Excuse me from ’uns, speshinlly when tliey’r too durned dead !’’ And the old fellow went array without any sea fruit. Out ov DKiiT.—lt is undesloodr that the Mount Vernon Association is now out of debt and has a surnlns on hand. The Centennial travel to the tomb of Washington brought about hi* very gratifying result. HAMILTON, HARRIS CO., GA„ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1876. AN IRISH FAOLIS. ‘Tlio Rim) Son, ami Hie Good Son.’ “Ah’ it "'as once’ long ago, in the "LI conn llt rev,’ Raid Airs, Biddy, “there lens a livin’ a line, tlane, honest, poof uiddy woman, an’ slut havin’ two sons, an’ she fetched the both of’em up flue at,a careful, Imt one of ’em turned out bud iutiroiv. An’ one day says she to l.im, savs she ; “I’ve given you your livin’ as long as iver I can, and it’s you must go out in the wide world to sake your fortune.’’ “.Mother, I will,” says he, ‘‘An’ will yon lake a big cake-will me curse, or a little cake an’ a bless ing ?” says she. • “The big cake, pure,” says lie. “So she baked a big cake ami curs ed him, and lie wint away lnnghin.’ By and by be came fondest a spring in tlie goods and sat down to ate bis dinner oft' the cake, and a small little bird sat on the edge of the spring. “Give me a bit of I hat cake for me li'tlc ones in tlie nest,” says she ; and be caught tip a stone to throw at her. “I’ve scarce enough for nieself,” says he ; and kho bein’ a fairy put her bake in the spring and loomed it, black as ink, and went away up in the trees. And while ho looked for her to kill her a fox wint away with bis” cake. “.So he wint away from tli -.t place very mad, an’ next day ho stopped, very hungry, at a farmer’s house and hired out to lind the cows. “Be wise, says tho farmer’s wife, ‘for the next field is belongin’ to a giant, and if the eoivs gets in his clover he will kill you dead as a sllione.’’ “But the bid son laughed and wint awav out to watch tlio cows, and before noontime lie wint toslapc nn in a tree, nnd the cows all went in the. clover, an’ on! comes the giant and shook him down out of the tree an’ killid him dead, and that was tho end of the bad son. “And'by the next year the poor widdy woman, she says to the good son : : Ye mu*t go out into the wide unrmh! and sake your fortune, for I can kapo you no longer, 1 says she. “.Mother, I will,” says lie. “An’ will ye take a oig cake wnl me curse, or a little wid mo bless ing ?” “The little cake,’ say;: he. “So she licked it for h.m and gave him her blessing,” and he wint away and she a-weepiii’ nfilier him foine and loud. An’ by and by he came lo the same spring in the woods where tlie bad son was before liini, and the small little bird sal again on the side of it. “Give mu a hit of yet cakes for the little ones ill the nest,’ says she. “1 will,” says lie, and ho broke off a foine piece, and site dipped her bake in tbe spring mdtoorned it into sweet wine ; and when lie bit his enko, shure an’ she had loomed it into tine plum cake intirely, an’ he ate and drank and wint on light hearted. And uixt he come to the farmer’s house. “Will ye tnul cows for mo ?” says the (armor. “I will,’* says the good son. ‘•Be wise,” says tho farmer’s wife, 'for the clover field’ beyant is belong in’ to the giant, an’ if you lave in the cows ho will kill you dead,’ “Never fear !’ says tho good son ; I don’t shape at my worruck.’ “And he goes out into the field and lugs a big stone up in the tree, and thin sidsivery cow far out in the clover fields, and goes back again to the tree. And out comes the giant a-roarin’ *o that you could hear the roars of him a mile away ; and w hen he finds the cow bar, he goes under the tree to shake him down, but the good little son slips out, the big g one, an’ it fell down and broke the giant’s head intirelv. So the good son wint running away to the giant’s house, and it being full to the eaves of gold and silver and splendid things ! “See w hat fine luck comes to folks that ib good and honest ! An’ be went home and fetched his old moth er, an’ they lived rich an’ continued, and died very old, and rlupictcd.— [Sarah, St. Nicholas. Biiley, the Danbury News man, is being lion zed in Boston, where he lectures twice a week. Tilt’ Man wlfti (Have Odds. After a strange man had finished eating a hearty imutl atone of the stands in the City Hall market yes terday he remarked to the woman: “As I was silling down to this meal 1 said to myself that I'd hot one dollar against the dinner that the Groenbaok candidales would not car ry a single state. If they do you have won the dollar, anil shall have it. “I want thirty five cents of you," she rop'ied pulling off her comforter. Or I’ll bet you five dollars against the meal that the Democrats carry New York State,’’ho continued. “I want my pay or there’ll be trouble right hen!” situ exclaimed, slipping off her bonnet. “Or ill bet the same sum on the same terms, that the Republican, will carry it,’’lie remarked, as he wiped oft’ liis sandy goatee. “I never bet and 1 want my money and I want mv pay!" she called out being now ready for action. “Great Heaven a! but look at the odds I offer you? be gasped. “I not only let yon bet on either side, but I offer you flic mostjfoarlnl odds that have ever been given sineo the advent of the Christ inn era !” “I can’t help the odds,” she an swered as she got bold of bis coat tails You don’t leave here till I get my money.” “Or I’ll bet you $33 against this 35 cent debt,” be went on “that, nei ther TT ives nor Tildon will be elected One of them must be, but I offer to bet they won’t be simply to permit von to coin $35 out of my enmities. Great Jigs! but mh another offer was never known since Oliver Crom well kept a fighting dog!’ “Thirty five couth!” she shrieked, pulling him arond. Lat but not, least. I’ll bet you forty to one that, I hnve’t hail thirty tivo cents about me for a month! Come now, T offer you every chance to win. Xho gave him two roli 1 kicks and wan designing and drafting a third when bo made a bo'3 and Lift a coat tail in her cra.p. While an officer was looking for him around the market he was placidly surveying Soldier’s Monument and picking his teeth with a straw.— Detroit Fife Press Rediscovering the Hods. Vu'ean, we are (old, raised among the gods, but was kicked out, the heavenly abode and fell for nine days before he struck the earth. He pre sided over fires, and was always con nected with fl tiling work of some kind or another. Molten metal and metal at white heat quivering upon the anvil into shapes of beauty or strength figure in the history of the limping god. But a day came when the gr-at god Pan and all the court of .1 iipitcr Olympus failed into night. Tnen their great souls became trans laud into stars. Verms, bright and beautiful, rose from the waves at eve and the great Jupiter lie-mod a glorious beacon in the sky. Red handed Mars lived once again in a fierv planet above our head. Old Sat n'u aloft, a far, weird point of light. Fleet-footed Mercu ry wan seen at rare times and for a moment’s space above the western verge of the skv, as fitting to one .whose mission was tc go hither and thither'betw een heaven and earth, oftener oil the road Minn visible in cither. Neptune for Centuries was lo**, but lo ! the sage Leverricr found him at, last sailing serenely in bis car on the tar verge of the sOlar system, as he did over the waters of old. Vulcan seemed lost forever, but at last it was shrewdly thought that, if he hail been saved from annihilation and had a choice of abodes, that surely his would be near where the metals that h whilom loved to work were incandescent in the mighty furnace of the tarn. And by long looking they found hitn w here ho had floated for centuries “dark with excessive bright.” On the 2d or fid of October lie i* to pass between the earth and the sun, and all the great telescopes of the world will lie lurri ed to watch for the flitting of a small black spot. The knowing men t the eye pieces will recognize it a* the soul of him who fashioned the armor of Achilles and hamine.'cil out the thunderbolt of Jove. This is lie romance of tlie stars. Bong range practice— twenty yea is experience as a cook. Wliat Ruins Coll on Gins. Thousands of cotton gins are need lessly injured if not entitelv ruined, by one simple cause. That, cause is permiting moat of lint cotton ( hat, is cotton that bn* been once ginned,) to be mixed ivi'li seed cotton and passed through the saws the second time. Such lint cotton catches in the the teeth dogs tlie saws dulls the teeth, and bends or breaks the ribs, weaiß the boxes ami strains tho whole gin sons to make it produce a bad sample, and speedily almost wotbless. It likewise increases the draft, so as to distress rho mules propeling the gin and creates so much friction a* often to set the gin house on live. Tints can explained the burning of many a gin bouse by tho supposed spontaneous conilmtiou of e itt on. ITonce every owner of a gin house should be careful about where bis moat cotton is placed, al-o about permitting the “flying” or “hangings to fall on bis seed cotton. Above all should bo be pareuiar in preventing tlio giuner or ltis assistin', when re turning from tie lint room after “packing the cotton back,” as it is called from having any lint on liis clothing. Tlie usual assistant a 1 a gin to hand seed cotton and ‘pack lbaek’ lint is a playful urchin, who de iglits first to wallow in the lint, rooms and then without divesting himself of the lint adhering to Ins clothes next to roll on the seed cotton. Oftentimes every boy black and white, on a largo plantation after a general frolic in the lint room will immediately em ergo therefrom and continue their wrestling rolling romping over seed cotton with a half pound of lint so sticking to each one’s ragged or woolen apparel. Such play is of course d-lighlful to th" boy., but, it is dear sport to tlie owners of the gin. In m .ny gin houses, too, while packing cotton for market much lint is mixed with the Reed cotton, either by careless ness or by wind. A g n is a costly machine but it, is not, a delicate one or put out of order if previously ginned lint is kept out of tho saws. In fact’, a good gin rightly managed, should —with little sharpening and small repairs—pick fitly bales per year anil 'last, a plan ter of average longevity bis lifetime. Fall Ploughing. A correspondent give* hi* reason for fall ploughing ns follows : By experienceftnd observation lam sat i-fi-d that all soils ought to bo ploughed in the fall, especially grown sward, for several reason First, the sod rots during the winter, and thus supplies llie soil with nu triment, ready prepared for the Veiling crop. Second, the lumps be count pulverized sooner, permitting the land lo be stocked down in bet ter shape. Thii'l, a team can work much easier in the fall, and the farm er is less hurried. The action of the longer long is hem fioml. A corres pondent of an exchange, discussing the same subject says : I have tried fall ploughing on light and heavy soils. On light soils which never produce ashes and clod*, it does well. On heavy soil it is commonly detrimental. If followed by a ilr,y winter, at sometimes succeeds ; but commonly produces a hard, cloddy soi l , which is long becoming mellow. I have known thin hardiness to last a year afterward. Even when the land was thoroughly ami regularly drain ed, this unfavorable result followed. It is, therefore, necessary to use caution in ploughing heavy or adhe sive, clayey land in autumn ; and as a rule, it should he avoided. — Sonl/t --ern Farmer. Tho Baltimore (laz'd(esavK Every attempt that the Grantists Dave made to tiro the Northen heart has failed; Bloody shirt has failed; Southern claims lias failed; the 'income tax as sault has failed, every thing has turned dust nn.i ashes in the hands ot the corrupt set of wire pilfers that, is seeking to fasten itself perpeiui y upon the country. Bob Ingersoll the atheist, is a failure; Blaine the bully is a failure; Morton is bowling failure Selims is rhetorical failure; the heavy levies of money upon Hie unfortunate cilice holders lias been a failure; biit chief of nil failures is Z. Gaudier, lie has managed this cam paign bunglinly, blmideiiugly and brutally. He will go down to history, os ;lic chainpioiitSimpaigu botch. Newspaper Borrowers. There are certain classes of people who make it a rnlo never to sub scribe for a newspaper, but who are the very first one to find fault with the course of the editor. Now, we never wished any one any harm, but havu this to say in regard to these fellows : Alay your egg be rotten at break fast, your meat spoil before dinner, and ion go supperless to bed. Alay your wite be cross, your servant girl prudish, and your neigh bor’s fences high. -May your dreams be varied be tween tho embrace of crocodiles and the acting back step of a mule. Alay you have steel filings in your oyer and bo obliged to use chesuut burs for eye stones. Alay tho ghost of starving editois and printers’ devils, gnat it, lean and hungry haunt you constantly. Alay your boots squeak and run down at the heel, and pinch your corns terribly. May your horse be balky, your cow give sour milk, your chickens get lousy, and your pigs havu tlie scurvy. Alay your creditors never let up on you, your friends bo sent to an insane aunylum, and your enemies prosper. Alay ysur wife run oft with a circus your business go to ruin, and you go to Chicago. No Grit. It was midnight. The young man had farowelled himself oui, and Emo jiitc had locked the door and was un tying her shoes, when her mother came down stairs wif.lt a bedquilt around her, and said : “Wanted to creep up-statra with out my hearing you, eh ? Didn’t think I knew it was an hour after midnight, did you ? “The girl made no reply, and the mother continued: “Did ho propose this time ?” “Why, mother!’’ exclaimed the daughter. “You can, why, mother!” all you want to, but don’t 1 know that lie ha* been coming here for the last year ? Don’t I know that you’ve burned up at least four tons of coal courting around here ? ’ The girl got her shoes off, and lire mother stood in the stair door and asked : “Emetine, have you got any grit?” “.I guess so. ‘I guess, you haven’t. I just wisli tfiat a feller with false teeth and a inulu on hi* chin would come spark ing me. Do you know w hat would happen, Emelino ?’ “No.” “Well, I’ll tell you. He’d conic to time in sixty days, or he’d get out of this mansion like a goal jumping for fl *wer-*ieds.” Emelino went to bed to reflect over it. Why wu Übk Tine Bight Hash —The habit of using tho right hand in preference to the left, among those people whose monuments dale from the remotest antiquity, appears to be a universal fact, and this is ac counted for by the anatomical me chanism of the human body. It, is known tlmt the right lung, liver, lobe and limbs cxced in size those of the left sole, involving of course, a great er ninonnt of tissue st met tire and a larger supply of nerves and blood vwteN*f6rtheir nutrition. A person wall ing in ft T ui-e fog figiVref with his feel 'thc% i giuoni of a circle, and If hfi i* light handed, he takes a di rection to the left, because the light leg natural y takas a longer stride. The left side if the brain is larger than the right, ftud tut ttappear* that the power of tferbal ariienbni m in the right handed is confined to h certain convolution on the left side, the conclusion is arrived at that in speaking and thinking, the left side of the brain is used, this being the result of dcxlrul education. Tho opinion has also been expressed by some tnedtcil writers that amnesia and aphasia is right banded men in dicate disease of the left brain, and that hammer p iHy and w riters’ .cramp show the results of excessive working of tbe left brain. The Scientific American says every spirtualist is either a rogue or a lu natic. $2.00 A YEAR BOVEttNMENr or UEOIIBIA. ICX Bl'l'Tl V k HEIM ItTMKNT. lours M Smith governor L’ W Alexander and J W Warren secretaries exeentve department. TlimmisC Howard anil a amuel f! William clinks executive department. J BCoupimll warrant dark. W H Grigsby messenger anil recording clerk, STATE IIOUSS OmCKIlv. N (' Barnett secretary of state. .1 E Jones clerk. W I, Goldsmith comptroller genur*!. J W Ken free and J W Goldsmith clerks. John Jones treasurer. Miller Uiievu clerk Joel Umjihsm librarian. K A Kiowellcn sup't of puli'tc buildings, etc. G J Oil state school commisdoner. Dr Thom is V Green sup't of lunatic nsvlum W 1) Williams sup't academy tor the blind. W O Connor sup’t deaf amt dumb a-) turn. SUCH EM K COIIIIT. Hon Hiram Win ner chief justice Hon II K Mettiy judge. Hon It I* I'uppe judge. N J Hammond attorney-general. Z 1) Hayi'on clerk. Hcmy Jackson repotter. Tlie Supremo Court ills at seat of govern tilent, beginning on tlie third Mon lay in Jan nary an 1 first Monday in Jut) in each yew UIIATTAIIiIIICHISK JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. M. J. Cranford ju Ig* W A bittle solicitor genera’ Clmttahooclicc— th McuUys in March and September. Han Is—2d Mondays In Apiil and October. Marlon —3d Mondays in Apiil nnd October. Muscogee—2d Mondays in May nnd Nov’lier Stewart-4th Mondays in April *H October. Tnlhot— 2d Mondays In March aud Sept’licr. Tailor —lst Mondays in Aptll and October. MORNING .NEWS, SATAXX.4II. GA I * - "J 'I UW POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 1873, WHICH Include*National. htiileimil county election*. imjf which will iimhnibtc lly lie the most active and h>thy centot-d of miy since the memorable canvas* of IStit I, is now f irlr opine I. The National Ecinncriitlc Party will this year make a bold, via rmis, mid pould- Tcs slice ssfnl struggle for the lui'nhirnaiic* and supremacy of those principle* which are vital to tiie prospeiity of tin* Republic and is- Hcnfiial to the well-being of tbe people’ In additon to the President*! election, the people Ueorgi i and Fh-ridn will elect new State goveri'icnts. In Florida the cmnpsian promises to lie unusually viuoroiis, amt there I*a protsiliility that for Ilia fhst time seme the war the people of that Itidicai-riddeir Stale will elei t a PomocV'tfe State gnvurn nient. In lie e eampaians tile people of the South are deeply interested; and every ent*-!- liffcnt citizen who lias the welfare of id* country and his section at heart, should ae ijimint him elf with every detail of the great work of redemption and reform that 1* now so rig on, To tills trnl lie should snbseiibe to ass'st in circulating the SAVANNAH MORNING NKWH.'un independent Democratic i ew.| n per, of pronounce opinions and (carles* in tinir expression; a paper that 1* m'ngn’xe iv ervwhere ns Ife best dni y in the South’ Ds cditoilal departments it vigorous, thoiigiitful, and eon isleut, while P* nows and haul de paitmerit ate marvels of indnst y and cotn pietei ess. Its department of (le rglu ai.d Idorlila affairs i* not confined to a mere bar on summary of events transpiring ill Ihose Slat's, hut is enlivened by comment ut once apt timely, and lie y. The ample oisonices of tdc establishment ill lio/levoted to furnishing the reader* of the Morning KTowS with the latest intdligi nco from all |ni ts of the world, thunmli the pie s dispatches, spe cial telegrams, anil by lie an* of spcoiil cor n spondenee; and through Iliese ageiiciss the paper will lie the e-il'est chroireier of every noteworthy Incident of the political campaign of ISTfi. KUIkSRIITION Dai y, 1 year $lO ("0 ” IS mold ha SIX) ” :i months 2 VO Tri-weekly, I year IS 00 (i month* 3 month* Weekly, 1 jiar 2 . ft month* 1 (” !i months 0" Specimen copies sent free on receipt of,Vend*, MJ-.Money tun he sent by I’nst Office Oidor, ih'gis.oied Js iter, or Kxi re-s. at our risk. j. h. F.-mu. • Savai n h, tin. The firozgin Daily Ccmmonwtilli. IS PUHUSHED EVERY EVENING 1 Except Sunday) liv ilia (.'oMjioNwtou.tii Pi iiijsiiino CimrAsr A'JJ.AXIA, GEORGIA. And is edited by Col. Oaky \V. Styi,k, 1 >t# of Him Alhnny News, with efficient iissislunls Tim I'ummonwkal.ul -Ives I lie ClirrelU. news of I lie 1 11 v, Shite, mi 1 e wwli* re. market te iv ias and vi 'arcus editorial* on MUsiiSeipat Toli’iial and General Sut.j.eis The cimiimr ennvmci, Stale National, wi l * Is- elisely wriit lest and properly pruseiile-l while the Mechanical and Amieultnial inlir i el- of the Jfiatu will n t lie neglect'd has a laige and rapidly increasing drouUtion. T KHJVIS- One mouth. Tdcciilm ; i wo mouths, $1 2j Kom months, $2,00; Oimi v&ir. $0 00 HUNTING, BINDING and KUUXG of every kind. dune in tho style and **t low fri< t*. ( 03LMuN WKAI-TH PGDUMNG CO. AtL*XJA, (liohiXA U