The Bainbridge weekly democrat. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1872-18??, February 06, 1873, Image 1

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Weekly Democrat, J, p, blisheb Eveut Saturday jY BUSSELL & J ONES. ISISG RATES AND RULES. yiVERTIs: i ] T «.rti"*mcnts inserted at $2 per square ' fir<| insertion, and $1 for each subae- ictiit <'a c - ' uare is ciplit solid lines of this type. ,J (ern ,s made with contract advertisers, j notices of eiglit lines are 515 per 1)r §",0 per annum. Local notices ,aJ jess than three months are subject to ska? rates. niract advertisers who desire their ad t ,nUmeuts changed, must give us two ,«kt' notice. I’banrin* advertisements, unless otherwise i imUtcd Fn contract, will* be charged 20 St per square. j ?’ Vjrriaeeand obituary nrtficcs, tributes of J, : and other kindred notices, charged Vuer advertisements. Gt-rtiscnients must take the -run of the i '„ r ' wc do not contract to keep them in particular place. \nnonncemcnts for Candidates are $10, if j t f„r one insertion. Bills are due upon the appearance of the I it,moment, and the money will be colleot- I c ! J. needed by the Proprietors. \V t -hall adhere strictly to the above rules, I u-Uilldmart trom them under no circum. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. $3.00 2.00 1.00 10 □ GM | pet atmim, in advance, i„nths, in advance, | j’rr three months, in advance, tinjletayy,in advance, LEGAL ADVERTISING, thirifs sales, per levy, $3; sheriffs mort- per levy, $5; tax sales, per levy, t-it.ui.in lor letters of administration. 54; - :: fir letters of guardianship, 4; appli- :i fir dismission from administration, 5; |. ;fciti(ni fur dismission from guardianship, ij'l'licttion for leave to sell land (one - an. 5, and each additional square, 3; ^fitaiion for homestead, 2; notice to debt- iind creditors, 4: land sales (1st square), ul each additional square, 3; sale of per il, property, per square, 2.50; estray on,, sixty days, 7; notice to perfect serv- »,!: rules nisi*to foreclose mortgage, per an. 4; rules to establish lost papers, per | an. 4; rules compelling titles, 4; rules ;<rfcd service in divorce cases, 10. bin of land, etc., by administrators, cx- rt-rt.ir guardians, are required by law to •ie'-lun the first Tuesday in the month, -i"i the hntirs «f 1 u in live forenoon and Itithc iifternoon, tit tlic court house door p:>C"iinty in which the property is ritu al Nnice of these etiSes must be given P» public gazette 40 days previous to the is fur tlie sale of personal property 'Vgiven in like manner 10 days pre- !• .-.-,l«r day. sins in the debtors and creditors of an tv i.ui*| alsu be published 40 days. ■ ili.-tf .ipidieWfian will be made to ilie V;i, Dr. N. L. Asgler. Of this gentleman >the AUanta-gun says : Few men have retired from office with cleaner handtOhfm TTrHYngier (“WKK docs from that of Treasurer of the State of Georgia. When men high in office, from Governor down, were resorting to all sorts of schemes to plunder and rob the State, Dr. Angier has stood faithful ly to his high trust and saved Georgia thousands upon thousands of dollars.— But for the honesty, fidelity and nerve of Dr. A., the financial condition of this State would have been beyond redemp tion. The people owe him a debt of grati tude we should like to see acknowledged in some honorable manner. He cer tainly deserves it. But. fcw.mea could- have gone through the temptation he lias and withstood the overawing influ ences which have been brought to bear upon him by an unscrupulous combina tion of plunderers, with {he power to force their demands with a more or less degree. Baited States Army—Its Strength and Location of Troops. The work of recruiting for the army is steadily going on, recruiting officers being located in all the important cities of the country, and thus the" army will be kept up to its full standard of 30,(100 men, the number authorized by the late law of Congress. The number of com missioned officers now on the rolls of the W T ar Department is something over 2,100,- the reduction having been en tirely completed. The army now con sists of five batteries of artillery, ten regiments of cavalry, twenty-five regi ments of infantry -and one battalion of engineers. r These troops are stationed as follows: The engineer battalion at Willett’s Point and West Point, New York; the first artillery in Virginia, South Carolina"and Florida; second in North Caroiiua and Virginia; third in New York; fourth in Wyoming and Virginia; fifth in New York and New England States. The first cavalry is in Arizona, 2d in Mon tana and 'Wyoming, 3d in Nebraska and Wyoming. 4t?i in Texas, 5th in Arizo- ,;a. v—„„.i p„i;e.u ]» Tennessee. Kentucky and Mississip pi! hi New Mexico, 3th in Texas URE If M ""I OnVnmy fot-Tcavc-to sell land, .vc ■'published 4<>r two vmvnfhsv f..r letters of ttilwiinirirdfitin. j P 1 . ' *. :!y i and 10th in Indian Territory. The 1st regiment of infantry is in New York and Michigan. 2d in Florida, Alabama, and Tomtes.se, 3d in Kansas, Colorado, and Indian Territory, 4th in Kentucky, 5th in Kansas, 6th in Dekota, 7th in New Mexico. 8th and 2th in Wyoming and Nebraska, -10 and 11th in Texas, 12th in Arizona and California, 13th and 14th in Wyoming and Montana, 15th in New Mexico, 16th in Tennes see and Kentucky, 17th in Dakota Ter ritory, 18th in South Carolina, 13th in Louisiana and Arkansas, 20th in Dakota and Minncssota, 21st in Washington Territory and Oregon, 22d in Dakota, 23d in Arizona, 24th in Texas, 25th in iuusliip. mats tve.puWisii'-d -ti.v dismission tv.im stditiriiirirntii'o, 'x tv»r three months—tor dismission » sii.-ir(li:insliip, 4tt days. Mfs'f.vr foreclosure »r wmrigSRes must be :-'.ie 1 monthly tor tour mouths—t«*r i'S- ;i$bin<r lust papers tor the lull space of to months—for compelling titles from ex- Itfirs or adininisftutors, whore bond has ion given by the deceased, the full space of - months. Il'ublicatimi will always be continued ac- Y'liug fo these, the legal requirements, ; otherwise ordered. IT, r, i-Urfl* . good* found will fin< all on «* cllA»*- ■l ■oprirW'- G*0» gI> 1 "Rekindling- Hatreds.” [it is “offensive” to Forney for the |cliern people to erect a monument to ftaetoory of General Lee. He says: Southern Generals were Rebels, it is contrary to every theory of taiment that their memories, as t should l>e perpetuated in brass In losing the war they lost ['tut to renown ns warriors, and the ' "* of monuments to them amounts •itig eke than the assurance that -■ tj of the South is her rebellion, ("t for the good of -the country "ting men of the South be |- ;: -vir duty to the Government in os as would be learned from ts to Lee and St niew;fll Jack- ■ ore also toid that such efforts hatreds.” - L net know, says the Wilming- r what theories of goYei nrnent 1 11 with erecting a memorial to ' - "hem Forney himself is obli i ' "a great 'man and a brave Poes Forney wish the work ’" ru gratitude and admiration 'i by Presidential ukase or Con- L : '-i enactment? Ilis language '-useless bitterness would imply 3og sitting near his chan? and starin at himAercely^Wiwf'iuiie? matter he settled on a plantation in the Yazoo ^ at ^°g ■” barber answered Valley, Miss., from which point, it is an unconceirhc¥ t »ir, “That dog is said, he took his colored family to Cin cinnati, in order that their freedom might be there established. always there. You see, when I cut off an ear—well, he cats it.” An unlettcrred correspondent in the interior writes to ask “what is the Cred it Mobilier the papers are talking so much about?” “Well, it is simply a double-jointed, back-acting swindling machine, modeled after a French inven tion, but it is of such intricate construc tion that we couldn’t well describe it without the" assistance of a quantity of diagrams anil the portraits of half the members of Congress.—Courier Journal A New Oileans mother was question ing her little girl in Geography as fol lows : _ “Who first went through the Straits of Magellan ?” Daisy quickly answered, ‘ Magellan with his squad- ioil* “What do you understand By this squadron, Daisy ?” The question was'Hot iff theTioofcv "IrarBaisy ws$ ready for the emergency. “Oh, I know; it’s one of those women that ain’t quite white.” Depopulation of France. Figures just published in the Paris Journal Official show that France has lost two millions of population during the last six years. Reporting to the President of the Republic, the Minister Tif the Interior says that, in virtue of the treaties ofi peace with Germany, 1,689 communes, comprising a popula tion of I,"5 37,238 souls, were^given up' Ingitis. by the vanquished to the victorious country; although from this number must be deducted that of the Alsatians and Lorrainers who gave their “option” for Fiance ’ and afterward quitted the country. That numbet, however, now that ail the truth is known, is not very great, and gives little consolation for the actual loss, which may be roundly put at a million and a half. But a graver and more ominiously suggestive fact ap pears from these returns, that France, quite independently of the cession, has within her present limits lost 367.000 of her population—or at the rate of 1 per cent, in the last six years. It must v— .>u.(.u,LurwI, however, that last year was execpiTOTntr—ntiroi — —*—r- -,di the mischievous legacies of the war, the results of delayed or prevented mar riages. the ravages of epidemic disease, and the other evils which inevitably follow in the train of such a conflict as that of 1870-71. energetic and honest man. Subsequently A Dog Fighting an Eagle- A splendid specimen of an American eagle was on exhibition at Waynesboro a few days ago. It measured from tip to tip of its wings seven feet, a noble bird, and it was sent to the University of Virginia, to grace the ornithological collection there. The capture of the king bird was very peculiar He swoop ed down upon a bevy of fowls near the cabin of a colored man named Charles Wade, on South River, at a place called Red Bank, and seized an old rooster. He was about to bear it off when a little dog interfered to prevent the theft, and an encounter between the dog and rob ber was the result. The brave little canine amused his antagnist until .his master came out and joined in the melee. The eagle, with instinctive boldness, stood his ground, and was dispatched with a club in the hands of the colored reinforcements.—Staunton ( Fa.) Ftofli- catar. L. J. Guilmartin. John Flannery. L. J. GUILMARTIN & CO., 'Cotton Factors Gen’l Coi^SiCJQefdh ants, BAY STREET, Savannah, Ga. Agents for Bradley's Phosphate, Jewell's Mills Yams and Domestics, Tobacco, &c. Bagging and Iron Ties always on hand. Consignments solicited. Usual ’facilities ex tended to customers.- [aug22 4m A~M0DYL nYwSPAPER Cure for Meningitis- The Freeport (111.) Bulletin publishes the following letter from a gentleman in Michigan to a friend in Freeport: I only write to tell you what will save every case of “cerebro-spinal them It is the same epidemic thal raged in this State in the winters of 1847 and 1848, which broke up our Legislature, and which carried to the grave every one it touched until the old-fashioned hemlock sweats were adopted, after 'which every case was saved. Our people sent about twenty-fire miles and procured hemlock boughs, and they sent for it from all parts of the State. There was a company here called the “Hook and Ladder Company,” that for weeks did nothing night »nd day hut going from house to house giv ing hemlodk sweats and it saved every case. Thorough sweating might do, but there is nojnistake. hemlock Texas and Indian Territory. But few recruits are being sent to the West now, and none to the £orth-. This premium excited so muck eatius- west, as the Mississippi river is closed iasm mnong tlic operatives that many by ice. States are being changed from one locality to another in some few instances and when spring opens it is quite likely that the troops in the Western States and Territories will be relieved. The army is now in an excellent condition, and in recruiting great care is taken to ecure the healthiest men. Illegal Postage. L " -Urrml ,,f Commerce is showin 'Withstanding the recent dccis- Post Office Committee against -master, he and his suborninates [, ,!° csact double and unpaid g mi letters paid only in part.— K ka? a suit pending against - aster to recover postage thus |, ( »p«vd. The editor says: ' fcety one to whom such a letter ' s k"ul<l refuse to pay (he ind bring snit at once for the k 11 1 l ke letter, there would, be ,rr av of >-4l‘ The Essence of Meanness. We have heard of men who were rated as too mean to die, to avoid pay ing funeral expenses, but we have sel dom, if ever, heard of a case of mean ness equal to that related in the follow ing paragraph, copied from the Phila delphia Ledger: Woman’& Worlc.—The agent of a woolen mill at South Royalston, Mass., recently offered a prize of five dollars to the girl who should weave the most cloth within a period of three months 11. F. Abell. C. E. Hochstrasscr H. F. ABELL & CO., GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, And Dealers in Plantation, Family, Steamboat U .GROCERIES. Consignments of Florida syrups solicited, irticular attention paid to all orders and consi(punci»ts. [oct24 Gm ff$ Broad St., Columbus Ga. The regiments in the Southern "of thq female weavers began to work at six in the morning, and continued.until ■seven o’clock in the evening. At the end of the three months, the “champion” had woven 2,505 yards, the remunera tion for which amounted to 8123. The work was exteusive and the prize mean, but the man who offered it was meaner, for he refused to pay it- cases upon which dam- idtunatcly be collected. But , ^ ( fl «nple of disregard of law is eau wonder at the pro- „' r -nie. '"hen the officers of the P'j.v no more respect to l” We Won’t Vouch for 'Em. Roast beef,” said a boarder to the waiter at the Sharon Hoffse. “How will you have it, sir?” “Well done, thou ood and faithful servant!” Louisiana still has two State govern ments. If she would swap them both off for a cheap dog and then shoot .the dog she would be much happier than she —Courier JournM. Miss Leonora Methuen, a young girl of sixteen, residing near Marsville. Cal., took her little dog and gun the other day, and sallying out, bravely pursued and slew a thirty pound wild cat, the destroyer of her pet lamb. ^ ‘•Do try to talk a little common sense, exclaimed a sarcastic young lady to a visitor. “Oh!” was the reply, "that would be taking an unfair advantage ot you” That Chattanooga lady is weeping and wailing, and gnashing her teeth. She recently claimed the body of an unknown dead man as that of her son, and took it from the charge of the city authorities. The son has since returned alive and well, and thc lady presents *. bill to the city for funeral expen^ V Breton peasant, on his way to Paris, stopped at a Barber shop m Ram- bouiliet. While the barber was strap- bis razor, the peasant noticed a THE SAVANNAH DAILY NEWS. Tlie Savannah Daily Morning News is ac knowledged by the press and people to be the best daily paper south of Louisville and east of-New Orleans. Carrying with it the prestige and reliabilty^of age, it lias all the vigor and vitality of youth, and its enterprise as a gatherer of the latest and freshest news has astonished its contemporaries and met the warm approbation of the public. During the year 1873, no expense of time, labor and money will be spared to keep the Morning News ahead of all competitors in Georgia journalism, and deserve the flatter ing encomiums heaped upon it from all quar ters. There has, as yet, been no serious attempt to rival the special telegrams which the News idhugurated some years ago, and the consequence is that the reader in search of the latest intelligence always looks to the Morning News. The telegraphic arrange ments of the paper are such that the omis sions made by the general press reports are •promptly and reliably supplied by its special correspondents. The Morning News has lately been enlarg ed to a thirty-six column paper, ■ and 4liis • broad scope of type Embraces, daily,’every' thing of interest that transpires in the do main of literature, art, science, politics, re ligion, and general intelligence; giving to the reader more and better digested matter than any other paper in the State. It is, perhaps, needless to speak of the politics of the Morning News. For years and years—indeed, since its establishment—it has been a representative Southern paper, and from that time to the present, in allcon junctures, it has consistently and persistent ly maintained Democratic States Rights principles, and labored, with an ardor and devotion that know no abatement, to promote and preserve the interests and honor of the South. The special features of the Morning News will be retained and improved upon the en suing year, and several new attractions will be added. The Georgia news items, with their quaint and pleasant‘humor, and the epitome of Florida affairs, will be continued during the year. The local-department will be, as it lias been for the past year, the most complete and reliable to be found in any Savannah paper, and the commercial columns will be full and accurate. The price of tlic Daily isSlO.OOperannum; S5.(HMbr six months; $2.50 lor three months; $1.00 lor one month. THE TKI-WKEKLY NEWS. V. M. Boruni; P. B, Garkc; J. A. Knighton Bomm, Clarke & -« Knighton, DEALERS IN FAMILY AND FANCY GROCERIES. DRY No. GOODS, SHOES, Notions, &c., &c., 3 BOWNE BLOCK, Respectfully call attention of their friends, and the public generally, to their cheap and well assorted stock of goods, which they are Determined to Sell at the LOWEST Guardian'8 Sale. GEORGIA'MILLER COUNTY. Will be sold, before the court house door the town of Colquitt, said county, on the first Tuesday in March next, between tlie usual hours of sale, West half of lot number 352, in the 12th district of Miller county, for the benefit of the heirs of Henry Cook, deceased. WM.DEE3, Jan. 8, 1873. Guardian.^ The Great Democratic Journal! THE NEW YORK Weekly News ! BEN. WOOD, Editor and Proprietor. ihefeiTilml^of a h ffiNffTiflfft. v “lE^ci»ftHH^ that has been said iu the foregoing in regard to the daily edition may be repeated of the Tri-Weekly. It is made up with great care, and contains the latest dispatches and market reports. The price of this edition is $0.00 per annum; $3.00 for six months, and $1.50 for three months. THE WEEKLY NEWS, i • 4 The Weekly Morning News particularly ^commends itself to the farmer and planter, and to those who live off the lines of railroad^ It is one of the best family papllfrs In £h» country, and its cheafwresa-brftigs it- atithfc the reach of all. At sontaiu^ thirty-six solid columns of reajinfe matter, »nd is mailed so as to rea’ch subscribers "with the utmost promptness. It is a carefully a*d -laboriously edited compendium of the flews of the week; and contains, iu addition, an infinite variety of other reading matter. Editorials on all topics, sketches of men, manners, and fash ions, tales, poetry, biography, pungent para graphs *nd condensed telegrams enter into its make-up. It contains the latest telegraph ic dispatches and market reports up to the hour of going to press, and is in all respects, an indispensable adjunct to every home, price—One year, $2; six months, $1; three months, 50 ^ents. Subscriptions for either edition of the Morning News may be sent by express at the risk and expense of tile proprietor; address J, H. ESTILL, Savannah, Ga. RATES ! jB©“Wc are constantly receiving new and fresh supplies of Choice Family Groceries, and will not be undersold B y A n y O ne ! IN THE MARKET 1 aSf Wishing to devote our time and attention exclusively to the grocery line •-» ofen etnel nf TYRV GfillBS At Greatly Re duced Prices. flgj?” No Trouble to show Goods !*”©8 Please call and examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere. THE PEOPLE’S JEWELRY STORE OF W. C. Sabers Pedigree of the Louisiana Senator. An exchange says : “We suggested a few days ago that Pinchbeck's claims to prominence as a representative of the ncuro race in Louisiana was not very well founded, that, in short, he was as much Indian as negro, and more white tiuuk either. We have now before us a private letter from the au&or of th* interestin work, -The Recollections of Fifty Years, etc., who has been familiar with Pinch’i history from boyhood.* He says Pinch's grandmother <Jb the maternal side was a uiustee or half-breed of. the Indian and netcro races, and that her child, the mother of the so-called Senator, was the daughter of a white man, “making the blood of P. B. S. Pinchback one-fourth negro, one-fourth Indian and one-half white.” Our correspondent proceeds to say ? “I know that his (Pinch's) grandmother was reputed to be the child of the In- diaiuchief Downing by one of his slave women, gowning was the father of the Indian chief of the same name recently deceased.”. - • • *r i $ ; ; Further particulars are given of Pinch’s ancestry, particularly of his father who was once somewhat exten sively engaged in gold digging in North ern Georgia A Mammoth Eight-Page Sheet, Fifty Six Columns Reading Matter. Contains all the news, foreign, domestic, political and general, with full and relm >le market reports. Each nOmber.also contains several short-stories, and a great variety of literary, agmuiiural and scientific matter. e ,c., constituting, it is confidently asserted, the most complete weekly newspaper in this country-. terms, two dollars a year. INDUCEMENTS TO CLUBS: Five copies one year, £9 00: T»«pi«. and an extra copy «o the sender, Slo 00. Twenty copies, and an extra copy to the sender. S23 00; Fifty copies, and an extra copv the sender, $55 00. Parties sradir 2 cTttlis as aMve, inay retain 20 per cent of the money received by them, as commission. Persons desiriag to set as agents supplied with specimen MindTes.— Specimen copies sent free to any address , aU letters should be directed to New York Weekly News, Box 3,795. New York City Post Office. _ H J, SWEARINGEN & CO., (CHy Drug a Store) have UST received w large and varied TOOK of Drags and Medicines, Paints, Is, Perfumery, Gardeu Secd ELL selected and in almost S ' . , Oils. Perfumery, Gardeu Seeds, etc., w JJNDLKSS variety, pure. J/^ ND full strength , . J^EMARKABLE in quality; ■JN prices reasonable. N GF "■"EVERYTHING in «tir line Beware ef Counterfeit* 1 JOB MOSES’ »< uttemtintiy oomnsaraiTss. Dithtntu Drug- girt* tndnoor to nil the counterfeit! to mum greater frq/tte. TM (vnvtiu have the name of Job Sl*Ma ogomeMpmetuge. AUoOurgMre worttto fmttmttmm. The omul Pills are onriilinil in tbs enrs of ail thoM pslnlbl and dangerous dlsrosss t» «hiah ttu ftmale constitution is subject. They mndesata all axeeeees and remove all obstructions, ftonr what- frerctoM, they are jw£ucnhwi®sun5? ih6?5!^ta » short Spin fkti linal Affection*, Pains in the Book and Limbs, each package rive fall directions and adrics, or will be ssat nee to all writing tor them, sealed from observation. N. B.—In all ca«es where the oiwrnrs cannot hw obtained, One Dollar enclosed to the Sole Proprie tor, JOB MOSES, 18 Cortlandt iL, New Yorkr insure a bottle of the genuine* containing ' im mail, eec ‘ ‘ * ita contents RELIEF IN TEN MINUTES. _ BRYAN’S PUZMOSIC WAFERS ‘ Cure Ooughb, Colds, Asthma, Bsohokitis, So an Throat, Hoarsbnbss, Difficult Breathing. Ir- oiriiRT CoBdUMrnb* and Lung Disrabbs. They have no taste of medicine, and any child will take them. Thousand* have been restored to health that had before des of cases* Ask i Price 35 cents per bo tor, 13 Cortlandt Street, New York. THE CREAT FRENCH REMEDY. DKUnAnai’8 specific pills. Prepared by J. GARANCIBRE, No. 214 Rao Lombard, Paris. These pills are highly recommended by the entire Medical Faculty of France as the very best remedy in all cases or Spermatorrhoea, or Seminal Weak ness ; Nightly, Daily or Premature Emissions; fix- nal Weakness or Impotency; Weakness srisingfrom Secret Habit* and Sexual Excesses; XthsoNMofthi Genital Organ*; Weak Spins; Deposits in the Urine, and all the ghjutly tram of Diseases arising Overuse or Sxoe*f>ea. T1 edies fail. Pamphlet of be sent Free Sent by mall, receir‘ “ St. 'OXE '•(‘her than port liquors will be sold— Whisky and Brandy iimnixed. • ■■ ' t. B. BAFGHN, ATTORNEY’ AT LAW AND LAND AGENT, Colquitt. Ga. A. M. Sloan. J. H. Sloan. A. M. SLOAN 4 CO., COTTON FACTORS AND COMSIS* SION MERCHANTS, Claghora & Cunningham's Range, Bay St, SAVAHHAH, GA. Liberal advances made on consignments and who was considered an and cotton in store. L nov -EEDEl) by the people in N [Don t forget the place, Tm Ctrv Qu G'T' 5 Sro BE >] ^■OUNTRY tan be obtained here, ,U by spc-cfal order through us. GURLEY, RUSSELL & BROWN, ATTORNEYS And Counselors at Law, Bainbridge, Ga. Office in Courthouse. [16-6m Is now replete with one of the finest stock: of goods in the line erer opened in Bainbridge. We here enumerate a few of the valuable ar ticles in the .JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE DEPARTMENT, Seal rings, Ameihyst rings—plain and en crusted with gold and diamond*—plain gold rings, 18 carats from 2 to 8 dwts. in weight; gents’ gold chains, from 18 to 55 dwts.; la l- fts Nfllson and Opera chains, from 25 to So dwts.; new stvle collar, sleeve and shirt but tons of gold and pearl; Masonic pins" and key-stones in great. varity; ladies' sets of "jewelry (pins and ear-rings J from $2.50 to $40; gents’ silver and plated watch chains from $1 to $18. Silver-ware (quadruple plate); complete stock of latest povCltic-. Spoons forks, tea *etts, cake, frnit snd card baskets pitchers, gohlcta, waiters, etc., etc. Silver thimbles (warranted the best). specUblcs in gold, silver and steel frames, from 50 ctr. to ► ' "jll Gold pens of the best makers. Solid . s&m* ; * 4 silver-ware (Warranted sterling siver), gold and silver watches. 150, 1 and 8 day clocks calendar clocks Tor "counting rooms, offices J CUTLERY DEPARTMENT. The best and finest iwt of cutlery in (he city, consisting Of pocket knives for "gents, ladies and boys, and from the most celebrated makers, such as Rogers and Wo.stenholm. Dinnert breakfast and tea ivory handled table knive* (Rogers' and Efts’ best); scissors, of all kinds; razors. Call and give this cut lery a special examination. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. We invite particular attention to this de partment. Music boxes from $2.75 to $250; • ,. y^riolins from $2.50 lo'$25; banjos, guitars, S* O — ( U pecordeons, •tambourines, bones, harmonicas, — es trasiflets hand-organ*,.drums, files, flutes, etc. Violin strings 3 to 4 lengths, best Italian; guitar and ccfte strings in great variety. FANCY GOODS, ETC Ladies' jet, pearl and tortoise-shell pins, ear-rings and neck-laces. A large assort mem of beads; ladies’ writing desks, work-boxes , port-folios, etc. Photograph albums. Lubins and Atkinson'S handkerchief extracts, (.luna and marble vases; China ornaments anil 'toilet setts, China cups ami saucers, China ! dinner, tea and furniture sets tor children. I Croquet setts, spy-glasses, opera-glasses, etc. | Marbles, dolls and toys—largest stock ever in this market. Walking canes, pipes and smoking tobaccos, and thousands of other things too numerous lo mention. A fine lot of Stationery always on hand— VINEGAR BITTERS Vinegar Bitters are ncA « vile Fancy Drinic, made of Poor Ram, Whiskey. Proof Spirits ana Refuss Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,** “Appetisers,** Restorers,** &C., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and rain, but are a true Medians, made from the native roots and herbs of California,free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enrichineit, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease. No Person can take these Bitters accord* mg to directions, and remain long nnwell, provided their bones are not destroyed tor mineral poison another means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia or Indigestion* Headache, Piia in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dis* siness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of tbs For Female Complaint.t m young or old, married or single, at tlie dawn of womanhood, or th. torn of life, these Tonic Bitter* display so decided as influence that a marked improvement is aoon pereep- For Inflammatory and Clarottle mat ism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of u. Blood, Liver, Kidueys and Bladder, throe Bitters hay, been most successful. Such Diseases are caused tty Vitiated Blood, which is generalljtproduced by derange ment of the Digestive Organs. ’ m They are a Gentle PurgaUwOwell ai a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acMfl as a powerful ageet in relieving Congestion or Inn*" mation of the Liver and Visceral Organa, and m Bilrom ^Fo”*Siein Diseases, Ernptions, Tetter. S*X«- Rbeuiu, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Cae- huncles, King-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Ery- sipelas, itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Hnroroa and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and earned out of syettro la a short time by the use of these Bitter*, On* bottle»» such- cases will convince the mott incredulous a tMgg C “cieuu*e C, the Vitiated Blond whenever rea find its impurities bunting through tht skill in Pjmyts» Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when yon ffnd it ob structed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse H *£*■**? foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep tnt WNi pure, and the health of the system will follow. * Grateful thousands proclaim ViitOAK pit* ters the most wouderful Invigorant that ever sustains* system. . . . • ,p«, and other Worms, lurking m the system of so many thousands, ire eflectsaljy ds- stroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiol, ogist: There is scarcely an individual upon Uie faceol US earth whose body is exempt from the presence of wonss* It is not upon the healthy elements of the Wf tm worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and sk»F deposits that breed these living menders of distaM. No system of Medicine, no vermifuge^ no antkelsg* flics, will free the system from worms like these Bit- ‘ e Meenanleal Dl.en.ee. " Perron, engaged i* Paint, and Mineral,, such a, Plnmber^ Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in lile, m» be subject to paralysi, of the BoweU. To guar.- thi, take a do,e oflVAl.m s VlMBGA* BlTT* the sinking lystem. Fin, T«] Wai.kuk's Vinsga* Bittsu out* or twice a iveek. a, a Prerentive. Bilious, Remittent, *nd Inter Fever., which are : , iHtmK prevalent in th. vrileyse# cm great rivers throughout the United Stat»s, eqMa»llT those of the Mississippi, Ohio, nessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colored*, Bro.ee, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Sivineah, R*ae- oke, James, and many Olliers, with their vm* tnbui*- ries, throughout our entire country during tu* oummev and Autumn, and Temarkably so unusual beat and dryness, are inronaWy aceompenie. by extensive deningetneuts of the stomxcu and Uvsr, u* other abdominal viscera. There are always more or uu obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable^sU» of the stomach, and great torpor xn the bezels, Dtis| docked up with vitiated accumulations. In their Iceet- ment, a purgative, exening a powerful in * ot ®5* these various organs, is essentially u^essary. There i» no cathartic for the purpose equal to D*. }■ Wnucmu . .Vinegar Kittkbs, as they wUl speedily groove M. dark-colored viscid matter with which the bowel, m leaded, at tiie same time stipulating.the secrmopsjK the liver, and generally restoring the healthy fuoctiro. ° f MrrK.u,i. Evfl, White Swedieg^ Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Coitw.JeroW** Inflammations. Indolent InflammabonAMwcunM AI ^ °iu1hS f, r ?„“5‘. 5 o?he^a|Sl g easi, Wa,area’s Vu«M> roTritS? pTcat curauvc powers in tn- most W.tBer'. Callforn.u yi»-*.rBl««. Te .he%"usIT,,d^rrmSviega^y U *hfpropertle. of Dr. Wai.kuu’. VntUGAU Ritters Aperient. Diaphoretic and CaruusiUWt Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Im- tant Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Biboro. , Tlie Aperient and mild Lava live propevtiroefl Walkku’s Viwugar Bittebs are the beet earo- eoard in ail cases of eruptions and malignant fcvero. th-ir balsamic, liealing, and soothmg properties prole*, the humors of tlie fauces- Their Sedunrc proptrU.ro allay pain in the nervous system, ftonssrn, and Mmlfl either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramp., rot Their Connler-lrriunt influence extends th roughens the system. Their Diuretic prcmertie* act on th* Kid neys' correcting and regulating the flow of noire. Team Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the lirer, m the roere- tion of bile, and its discharges lhsBbgh the biliary direst, and are superior to aU remedial agents, Kir the cure *» Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, efc. . Vurljry tlie body against dfueae* n puri fying air iu fluids with Vinega. Brrrua*. No ep*. , o ..i l-ij -f . thus fun inuad Th* best in the city. Call and see W. C. SURER?, Broad St., Bainbridge, Ga. Watches. Jewelry and Clocks repaired and warranted. oct3-U demic can take hold of a system thus ~ - - liver, the stomacn, the bowel*, the kidney*, w nerves are rendered disease-proof by thi* great wmg- Cr »fo-ectIoi*e.—Take of the Bitter, on going to be* at night from a half to on* aod ouc-half winc-gUmfaa. Eat good nourishing food, such as beefsteak, chop." venison, ro*« beet and ont-door exercise. They are composed of purely able ingredients, and contain no spirit J WALKER, Prop’r. R.H. MeDONALD*. Druggists and Gen. Agts., San FranosCO, Cal.- andeer. of Wajiington and Charlton Su.. NewYrolL c-QUj BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS.