Newspaper Page Text
THE MONROE v 5jL ADVERTISER.
GKOItOE A. KING 4 CO.,]
VOL. XVIII.
She ittoum ’hhvetJistt.
FORSYTH. "TUESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1873~
Job* P. Kino, is again well.
Vi.xu skkneci U lejfOrted in U[>ou county.
Pekht will liavs anew jail before very long
'!'. W. M. Cox, of Perry, died very auddenl/ It
* ih .
Ai t,i mta had her first oysters this season, la‘t
v/. i-k.
tildlr I.N |. hi era c< mpia nc t ctnlle and bilious
f. v. r.
Ikihi potato :a aell in Albany, ill’.y cent* per
P‘ h.
Tin: new opera house iu Grille, is ab >ut Com
pleted.
(ißonotA has 82,002 apt ad lea ol which Columbus
lias 32,000. [ ’
Albany is boasting over the abscence of rowdy-
Utn and crime.
.a*
Six new stores have just been completed in |
Miiledgevffle.
The Atlanta Constitution has discontinued its
rp c nl mail engine.
.♦
Savannah shipped 3.813 bales of cotton to Liv
erpool on the 20th.
Tub Griffin Star, lias ordered u new press, with
improved “rollers.”
——
Josupn Gohdy, stabbed Robert Kennedy, near
Thundering Springs, last week.
Mini sickness is reported In the eastern por
lion ol Dougherty county.
Mu. Ki.waud Eubanks, an old citizen of Hawk
ii. vllte, died on the 15th, aged 73.
Hoi: Maxwki.L, a drunken ingrale, stabbed Clif
ford Woodruff, near Hogansville last week.
A’.oNtv was eo scarce in Augusta, last week
ll.u Ciebile ot cotton was greatly retarde-d.
Col.. J. T. Lumpkin has retired from the edi
tonal department ol the Atlanta Constitution.
■ - - ♦• ♦
Hit Jno. T. Hanks, a distinguished physician,
ol (it ,tliii w tro has tieen in bad health is improving.
Cai*t. VY. Adams, an old citizen of Webster
county, and a soldier ol the war ol 1812, died las
week.
Hu.l, nkats killed his brother. Cap Seats, ut the
I. idenceot lit* mother, iu Hamilton county, last
week.
VIH. K. Taylor, Secretary ol the State Grange,
will move his office to Macon alter the lstol Oc
tober.
Tim Reporter says that there is an average ol
three car loads of slate shipped frem Rock mart
■J iiE watt r works ol Atlanta have beeu discus
sed through the papers until! resistance has be
come necessary.
ton Patriot learns Unit a young man by the
name of Traylor stabbed Mr. Trice bear R—*&*
villo last week.
■ ♦♦♦
Tiikkb is over one hundred and seventy granges,
ut the present iu the State, with new ones being
organized eveiy day.
I-'kom the report* of deaths over the State, the
conclusion is that the duration of human life is
greater tha the past century.
H ;
T:m Union and Recorder leariii that Site people
i.l Heard and Carroll counties are in 1..v0r of re
storing the Capital to Milledgoville.
• *♦.
A. *i. Stlih-kns lias contributed $590 lowurd
building a Catholic College in this State. Gen.
Tt oaibs will also give the same amount.
•] he (iritlin News intimates very strongly that
the ill nicy crash iu New \oik came very near
closing out tue cotton market last week.
♦♦♦
Tim TUomJSville Times repoits the storm in tiiat
'section, last week. as severer than any for a mini
bt rof years. Tito damage is estimated at at least
£IO,OtU.
The Union and Recorder publishes the lull text
o! Col McKinley's speech betore the agricultural
convention at Athens on “Copy hold Land and
Labor System.”
—
A ttirzK to the Griffin Mews says that Whites
viUc, which is lecaltd near the line ot Coweta and
Carroll counties, is a thrlviug place, aud is being
rapidly built up.
Jknnisus Clay proposes to n ffia off bis splen
did lour-ia baud team and phaeton, during the
State Fair. There are live hundred ebauees, at
$lO each, two huudied ot which have been taken.
A man by the i ame ol Grant, whilst alleu-piiug
0 arrest a Mr. Abbe*, last week, uear Brooksville
tu Spalding county, shot - and killed tt.e latter
whilst lie was attempting to make his escape.
■ *♦
The Telegraph aud Messenger says: Rev. Lov
pierce, l) D, the oldest minister in the United
States, was iu the city ou Sunday, and preached
one ot Lis churaciertslieally abie set mo us iu the
Mulleny Street Methodist Church
Ninety railroad accidents have occurred withiu
the past mouth in this Country, nearly all o! which
resulted from iucompeWUPy and recklessness
Some centra! supervision UeU 13 be demanded
ovei this great interest, which shall regniate
speed and institute a severe civil service reform
among the employees.
The Brunswick Appeal says : It is said that
there hu* already beeu actually expended iu the
construction ot the Brunswick and Albany Rail
road since work commenced in 1869, the sum ot
say, tG.909,000, in round figure?, about $375,000 of
which auiouut was expended in grading, bridging,
etc., west ot Albany. It is also estimated that it
will require about $1,500,000 to tiuish and equip
the whole line tor business.
The Tbomaston Herald says : Mr. T. L. Walk
er tormerly a merchant iu Tbomaston, but who
has icsided, for the past fifteen yeais in Louisiana,
<1 id at New Orleans one day last week ot yellow
lever. His wife and two child en who were ac
companying him from Shrevesport La ,to Meri
whether County, also died on the road, of the
same disease. Mrs. Walker was a sister to the
wife of Irby H. Travlor of Upson county, *nd the
entire family were well kuown to the people of
thi > section.
—
The editor of the Appeal, published in Bruns*
*w\ck, is responsible for the following: Walking
_ wij Newcastle street a few evenings ego, we
' 'verbeatd the following remark made
stopped and v fl| ApptaU; " Nowltcll
to a iton-eu ten c. when aomabody will
vos , the day will t, ... . . '
, , *•>. character, etc,
write a long eulogy on your
and the printer will put it in type, w. J
bl tea rule above and below it, and with a..
f kh.-i this will be done for yon as a pauper. Youi
liberalities, wealth, and all yonr virtues will be
extolled, bat the printer, as he arianges the type,
will remarkßoor, mean devil, he never took
the Appeal, and is now swindling the printer out
of Lis funeral notice.” Pretty rough, that, bnt
nevertheless true.
failure of Jay Cooke Sc Cos.
TJ*e continuity of the isothermal Hue is broken.
The public have discovered that the line o: equal
heat, which passes through the laLd of the orange
andthjppalui, does not run through Duluth and
thence westward on the liue of the Northern Pa
cific railroad, and yesterday a card suddenly ap
peared on the door of the tanking bouses ot Jay
Cooke A Cos, announcing the suspension of the
firm The three American houses of this concern,
at Philadelphia, Washington and New York, are
in equal financial trouble, but it is denied that the
London house of Cooke, McCullough ct Cos. will
be afltclcd by the disaster, that concern, managed
by ex Setretaiy Hugh McCulloch, having tele
era] L and !hat it wilt honor all just demands upon
it. The failure or suspension ol a bouse of capi
tat and cl aracter, like that of Ji-y Cooke A Cos ,
Inevitably produces a panic. The Wall ttreel t.a
rometer, ever sensitive, showed a sudden and
maikt.l depression. Btock. tumbled reckless y
and uiournlully. Western Union dropped more
than ten pt r cent. New York Central fell tour
per cent. Wabash lowered nine per cent. North-
I Western came down six and a half; Rock Island,
three and a half, and Pacific Mail nearly thirteen
per cent. This decline in stocks, from its sud
denness, more than because of its magnitude, will
carry down many brokers who handle them.
Richard Schell, the large banker and broker and
heavy dealer in New York Central, is already un
der the weather, aud to-dsy will record many ad
ditionul failures on Wall street. Moeetaiy at] irs
co intertwine by the system of correspondence,
checKS, dratts and depoeits, that the evils that iol
low the failure of u bouse like Jay Cooke 6i Cos.,
whose reputation is national and wnse capital
was supposed to be limitless, are to wide spread
ing us Vo touch almost every considerable city iu
the country, ij nearly all oi which Jay Cooke &
Cos. hud liuaucial cori espondenls. The magni
tude ol the disaster which has overtaken this
house cunnot accurately be estimated, but it was
doubtless overestimated in the late panic. It i3
not so much what has happened as what the fail
ure lorcbodes that is cbitlly disastrous. The de
positors were tor the most part bunks and bank
vis. The creditors ot the nmortunate concern can
generally rfford the loss they will suffer. The dt
clino- in stocks b only temporary, and will simply
afford sumo- sliaip operators wbo have courage .o
make easy lot tunes on the rising of the tide. The
belief ot Jay Cooke appears tube ibat the concern
will resume in a tew days, but that may be a taith
it A according to knowledge. It depends wholly
upon now lut and Law tire concern is involved in
the NoitUeru Pacific affairs. At alt events, no
gctit-.al ffuuncial panic need be apprehended,
ifiougii the losses cOnseq lent upou the tailure
will go tar and w.de.
The immediate cause at the suspension ie te- j
por.c-d to be the heavy drawings ol ihc Philudci- |
j bia house upon the Washington and New Y’ork '
bronchos. These were dountieea the teeaxion ol j
the disastrous embarrassment widen overtook 1
those branches ot the great banking institution
and the banks ct Washington, Philadelphia aLd
New York in which they were heavily iuteresten;
but the o-au.it is beyond It is not the Midland .
railroad whose route lies liom Oswego to New
Yotk. It L the beauties aud dec.itfuluess oi that
isothermal line that wrought the ruin. The Phil
adelphia housed Jay Cooke & Cos. were the tiscal
agents of the Northern Pacific Road. The swotd
ot Damocles has beeu impending over that enter- ,
prise lor more man a j„-.. ..use uo.t agents
have made large advances to the road. The July
interest must be paid, the running expenses muR
be met. The cost of construction must be pro- |
vido-d for. Nearly all of this bas bo-en done with !
the proceeds of ibe sale of bonds, and when the
people Incan to twist the isothermal line a lew
hundred miles to the southward, and to under
stand the approaching bottomlessness of the'
scheme, the road failed o. its resources.
The Northern Pacific has been chartered tvlittie j
more than nine years, mid was to be completed iu '
1876. Government guve it the right oi way and j
alternate sections ot ten square, milea ot Lnd. ,
The oiiginal charter oid not provide for the issue j
of mortgage bonds. An amendment lu 1809, made j
in tit: closing hours ot that session of Congress, 1
did so provide. Under the provision the Compa
ny lias s >IJ bonds to the amount of over $2,000,L00
bearing gold intererest at the rate ot 7 3 10 per
cent. The Company could only pay the annual
interest, nearly $2,000,000, by selling more bonds.
They have been approaching their own ruin for a
year and a half. The failure ot Cooke & Cos. is
the preface to a more wide spread misfortune, or
to the knowledge ol it—the known worthlessness,
or well nigh so, of the Northern Pacific bonds,
which are held by farmers and workingmen aud
meu of small capital throughout the North and
East. Cincinnati Enquirer.
In posting Col. Waddell, aecorling to formula,
Capt. Phillipi used these words: “He is Nidtr
ing and lost to The Columbus Sun attempt
ing to explain tli's gibberish, gels off the follow
ing good thing:
“‘Lo? ’ is a wo.d that we cannot fathom and
theretore must mean something terrible. When
Daniel O'Couue'i bad his loss with a fish woman
and demolished her by saying • she was a hppoth
enuse and a parallelogram in petticoats,’ he cou’.d
have settled her bash iu an inatant by telling her
she was 4 lost to Res.’ Our philological editor
bas scratched him elf bald trying to find this word.
We saw him last night diving iuto dictionaries
and encyclopedias that rose about him as he read
like a block house. Jle thinks ttt- word is Modoc,
aud means tne same as “ Kcuo,” but ihir is nut
tatisfac ory, tor it explains ouc hard wo and by an
other. Who kuows ilit* mt-anlrg ot “ Keuo” iu
this land ? A dis[ atcli u-ce.vej per cable a t Lour
ago from the ce’ebraLu philologist, Max Mu-llt r,
resds as follows;
Limburg, )
State i v Nassau, Germany, >
September 17, Midnight’ )
I “ ‘Los ”is a Gall!-: word, or rather Ene. It is
now nearly obsolete, and means a man without
j jjnj mil to Lis coat. It was once used in Ireland,
I when lighting jvas more iu vogue, it being the
; custom ot tbosp impetqous people who were al
ways anxious to fight anybody, to eat iecg peat
tails, which dragged behiud them for several yards
| on the ground, and the person stepping on the
! coat tail challenged, as it were, the coat-taiiee,and
the eoat-tailee at once turned and belted the coat
| tsjlpr pyey ibe head with a complicated weapon
I kuowu as the shilllah. Pome of the people under
! the influence of Christianity aud a (tread of sore
heads, abbreviated their coat tails so as to avoid
being insulted, aud thereat the long coat-tail-men
became iudiguaut and called them * Los.’ But
| why they called them 4 Los’ I am at this moment
at a * Los ’to state. The 4 Los ’ people are now
legally iu the majority, and men wear coat tails
for convenience, and not as the means of kickiug
up a rumpus. Max Muellek.
Collect $196 14.
.
We quote as follows from the Chronicle and
| Sentinel of Friday:
“ From dispatches received yesterday, it was
ascertained that ihe Financial Chrouicle foots up
; the cotton crop of 1572 3at 3,930,508 bales. Ac
cording to this the lucky winner of the $1,740, the
ftmouut iu the Augusta cotton pool, is Mr. Berry
i Beb-oP, of this city, his estimate being 5,931.277,
or 760 baits over the actual crop. Mr. J. J.
Doughty ***° 01 clt *' is tbe ncXt Eeares L bis
estimate being H ' ooo ÜBder the Financial Chroni
cle’s statement. Ttav.' ma j° ri, y ot remainder
of the 358 estimates are no.* ler ®^ ood to ba ar b;-
i low the red crop.”
FORSYTII, GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 30., 18/3.
ISy ami-Sly.
There’s a little mlscLie'-maker,
That is sidling half in Lli=s,
SketcbiLg pictuies in >. dreamiond,
That we never see in this ;
Dashing from onr lips ihe pk-a.-ure,
Of the present while wr sigh,
Y r ou may know this mkclnet-uiaker.
For his name is 44 By-acd Bv.”
He is sitting by our heart] -stone,
With bis sly, tn win- . tig glance,
Whisjiering ot th • comi'.ig morrow
As the See. •; hours ad vane.-;
Loitering ’mid our to :u r. tlcciiou ,
Hiding forms of beauty nigh,
lie’s a t mouth, deci ltlul lehow,
This eiiehauter 44 By-and-by.”
You in-aj know him by his witc-liing.
By his eat ties.-spo i:ve ir;
By hi- s!v obtru-ive pr -. -nce
That ij s.eating everywnerej
By the trophies tLat he gathers
Where his touibre victims lie •
For a hold determined teUow,
Is tLis conquerer “ By-atid By "
When tha call ot duty haunts us.
And the presceuce seems to be
All the time that tvtr mortals
Snatch from dark eternity,
Then a fairy baud seems painting
Pictures on the distant sky ;
For a cunning little artist
Is the tairy " By and-By.” .
44 By-and By” the wind is 3ighing:
4 “ By-and-By” the atart replies;
But tue phantom just before us,
Ere we grasp it ever llie-u
List not io the i le charmer,
Scorn the very rpaciou . lie:
Only in the fancy liveth
Tuis deceivt-r, ‘‘By-aud-By.
.V Social L’sajje.
There is a word to be said just hero concerning
that usage on which the leiormers exhaust their
whole store oi invective, viz.: the banishing of
immoral women from society, while immoral men
suffer no such exclusion. Il what they urged was
the equal reprobation of these off'cLders, well aud
good ; but since it is rather their equal social ac
ceptance which they contend for, the square truth
must be said, thut however these parties may stand
before Ileaven, such arc the facts of earth, that :
it is the presence ol immoral women, not men, in j
society which would instantly fetter .theie the :
freedom ot every virtuous member of the sex. It !
is because the line is so strongly aud imxorably
drawn between reputable female society and the
disreputable, that a man o! careless life is com- j
pelied to leave his careless manners behind him \
when lie enters the foimer, certain else to be i
promptly kicked out ol it lor his failure in virtu
ous etiquette, even by men who might think very
lightly indeed of bis lapses Ire in virtuous charac
ter elsewhere. Odious were that society wit .-tea j
lady must bristle with the airs of a pi ude, to be '
certain ol respectful behavior from the other sex, I
and into such bondage would modem womeu in
evitably come, in all general ct mpanies were the
meretricious of thei. own sex common and un
marked there. It is idle to s.-uthneutaiizi about
the ut.mi6Uikible airol innocence; it is hateful to
vvomer to tie mistaken, even afar ell, in such mat
ters ; they Seel sinned by the speculation ot a
glance, and it is the silting ot their ov n six which
saves them trom such annoyances, even in a word
of unsifted men. Uuder present social rules, vir
tue is not obliged to proclaim itself, litstly, be
cause it is virtue, and, secondly, because it is in
the place of viitue; aud th second r -ason would
be imnorlant to Diana i! she went mong people
who had never peisoual'y heard of Biautt, aid
who were disqualified, by having lost their own
purity of soul, from knowing her by instinct.
It is not pleasant to expound these matters.
Nothing ot our presen t subject is pleasant to ex
pound ; but it is time somebody undertook to
point i ut that all Ibe old wcniauly traditions are
not founded iu sheer nonsense, or hardness ot
hear!, and women have been especially censured
for this uuiquai discrimination for their own eex.
We say (hey have at least this one most logical
and neceesaiy reason for su;h diseriminaiion, v : z:
that free social range tor bad and good women
cannot exist together. When Greek courtesans
went abroad, Greek wives stayed at home, and
were compelled to the ignorance, the rusticity, the
meager, 1 al -developed life aud character which
are the r* suit ol a c-ged existence.
Tuis isati existence which no.ieof us desire, imd
to which the daughters o' this republic have never
beeu wonted. American womeu have bail an un
exampled freedom, because American men have
had, on the Krhole, an unexampled tespect for,and
belief ir, women. The soil of old Puritan moral
ity made the opt ii, confident ground where the
women of this country have walked; and however
that toundatiou mt y be sinking through the grow
ing dissipations of men, our highway oi liberty,as
we linve endeavored to show, wculd be far more
fatally ruined by the siiiiil.tr diffusion through so
ciety of corrupt worn a , Lula. Gray Nob'c ; Scrib
ner s for O-tobc r
The Corn Ckcp West —The Tribune has crop
d.spatehts rom about nitty counties In Illinois,
embrac ng the greater part of the corn growing
section, and trom some twenty counties in differ
ent patts of lowa. With the exception ot about
bill the counties the reports from Illinois all put
the ccm crops only from one-half to two-thirds
pi an avetage yield will be short, there is a great*
ir average planted. Reports ficm lowa are very
similar to those from Illinois. Drought has in
jured the corn very matt rially, and the seasou is so
far advanced that rain now will hardly benefit it.
>i.
There ate two hundred and sixty-niae persons
and firms In Savaunah whose real aLd personal
property, according to the returns made to receiv
tr, is valued at $20,000 and over. T here are thirty
person-* and firms whose property is valued at
ov r SIOO 000, snd tho.-e who letum over J2-0,-
000 are ou'.v rine in numb r. The richest man ;s
put clown at $324,500, arid the richest woman at
$285,500. The ikhist business firm reports
$307,470, aud the next best $250,000. The vari
ous houses engaged iu business in that city range
from the above Earned figures dowu to a few
thousand. Tbe colored ptopla make a fair exhib
it, there being twenty-one individuals of that race
who return over S2,OCQ
—tt*
Tge Union and Recorder says: “The con
tracts for iurnishirg supplies to the Lunatic Asy
lum for the ensulug quarter, beginning first Octo
ber, were awarded last Thursday. We learn that
a large part of these supplies, especially ot cloih
m> "il! be furnished by New York merchants.
Ot course we m .ke no complaint against the offi
cars for accepting the lowest bids; but the Asy
lum is a Georgia institution, supported by taxa
tion of the citiz-ns of this Stale, and we believe
if the contracts for supplies were restricted to
Georgians, exclusively, it would be a more satis
facto’-y policy.”
A an offset to Mr. Hill’s speech to the farmers,
tie Savannah News said : “If losing $50,000 iu
a few years at planting ean qualify a man for giv
ing advice to agriculturists, then it is peculiarly
appropriate that Farmer Hill should lecture at
county fairs apd giye yeomaqry of Georgia the
benefit ot his skill and experience.
Why is it that the Atlanta Constitution is con
tinually advertising Bishop Gross and PapLm ?
Have the Roman Catholic proclivities of that jour
nal become eo predominant, that this ecclesiisti*
cal hierarchy and clerical despotism is always up
permost in the mind of its staff? “Out of ths
abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.”
f—
One agent reports that he has so!d fifteen thous
and dollars worth of guano to the farmers of Up
son county.
“in G-od we Trust.”
M ACO X ADYE I £ VISE MEN TS.
CROP OF 1873.
I, 0 0 Pounds Turnip Seed,
RUT A BAGA>
*
RED TOP,
■WHITE FLAT DUTCH'
Ma&QY©!/,
Drumhead Cabbage,
FLAT DUTCH CiBBAGE,
I
i
ATS/II.L BF, BOLD In any quantity as low asnnv
VY lioiiso iu Hit- Stale.
JOHN INGA LI A,
4fh A Poplar Street*, Holl'u -.worth's Block,
Macon, Ga. |
GUILFORD, WOOD & CO, !
AT l ANT A AM) MACON, GA.
i
i
Importers, Wholesale and ReHil
dealers in
' fiaiis mails, sheet mssic. j
AND
!:$:!! Millin'
OF
EVERY DESCRIPTION,
Consisting in part of
VIOLINS, F.JLJ I KS,
GUITARS, ITCCuLAS,
BANJOS, CLARONETS.
ACCORDEONS, DRUMS, ETC.
SOLE SOUTHERN AGE TS FOR
CKICKERING, GUILFORD & WOOD,
And other Pianos, also for the Celebrated
ms¥ im
Send for illustrated Catalogues aud Price
Lists,
PUBLISHERS OF THE
GEORGIA MUSICAL ECLECTIC
Best aud Cheapest JOURNAL iu the South—
One Dollar a year—Specimen Copies sent Fiee.
GUILFORD, WOOD & CO.,
julyls-tf Atlanta and Macon.
Great Central Short Line
TO THE
WEST AM) SOUTHWEST
VTA
CHATTANOOGA and McKENZIE, TENN.
ONLY ONE CHANGE
ATLANTA to ST. TOUIS !
ONLY ONE CHANGE.
-A.tlari.ta to IVleinph.is !
Time Card—February IM, IST3,
8.30 a. m Leave Atlanta 8.10 p. m
4-28 p. m Arrive Chattanooga 5.69 a. m
12 45 A. M 44 Nashville 1.05 p. m
8 30 a. M 44 McKei zie 8 30p. u
2-10 p. u 44 Little Rock 6.30 p. m
10 30p. m. 44 Union City 10 30 p. m
12 00 noon 44 Columbus,Ky 12. nioht
11. p.m 44 St. Louis 12 50 a. m.
Cali for your Tickets to Memphis and Little
Rock via Chattanooga and McKenzie, Tenn.
TG ST- LOUIS AND THE NORTH WEST
via Chattanooga, Nashville and Columhu-, and
you will have NO DELAY", NO CIRCUITOUS
JOURNEY down through the Statts of Alabama
aud Mississippi-
WE MAKE QUICKER TIME!
BEING THE ONLY
Direct Liue and at Cheapest Rates. For
further iufoimation, address
ALBERT B. WRENN,
Southwestern Agent.
Office No. 4 Kitnbali House, Atlanta, Ga. Post
Office Box 253. aprltf
L. T.'WHITCOMB, Agent,
99 Bay St., - Successor to J. A. Brown,.. ,9t> Bay St.
IMPOKTEU Or AND DEALEK IN
West India Fruits and Vegetables.
PINE APPLES. Oranges, Apples, Banana.\
Lemons, Potatoes, Nats of all kinds, Onions,
Etc., Etc.
99 Bay Street. SAVANNAH, GA.
apr&tt
BRI )WN *8 OT EL,
IMMEDIATELY OPPOSITE PASSENGER DEPOT,
M.A.CO ZST, - ..... oeoEGIA.
E 111. IlliOWjy & SOp¥ 9 Proprietors.
WOMAN’S RIGHTS.
ONE WHO HAS LONG STUDIED THIS .\B
soibing subject now presents tu the women
of our country the result ot his investigations. He
is happy to say that he has at last discovered
‘ k Woman’s Best Friend.”
It is adapted, especially, to those eases wheie the
womb disordered, and will cure any i.regular'tv
of thej“ MENSE3.”
Dr. J. Bradfield’s Female Regulator
acts like a charm in “ WHITES,” or in a sudden
check in the * 4 MONTHLY COURSES ” from c .Id,
trouble ot mind, or like causes, by restoring the
discharge in every instance. So aisj in chronic
eases its aclion is prompt and deei-ivc, aud saves
the con.tituiion from countless evils and prc-miG j
ture decay. This valuable preparation is tor sale !
at
SI 50 PER BOT ILE
b> all respectable drug* 'ts in the land. Prepared I
and sold by
L. H. BRADFIELB, Druggist, Atlanta.]
a thousand women testify to its merits.
Neah Makibtta, Ga , March 2!, 1870. j
MESSRS. WM. ROOT & SON.—Dear Sir-:
Some months ago I bought a hottie of BRAD
FIELD’S FEMAI E REGUL ATOR trem you, and
have used it in my family vita the utmost satis
faction, and have recommended it to three other ;
families, and they have found it just wriat it is'j
recommended. The females who have, used your i
REGULATOR are in perfect health, and are able. •
to attend !o their household duties and we cordi
allv recommend i' to the luiblie.
Yours respeetluliy, REV. 11. 1!. JOHNSON,
We could add a thousand other certificates, but :
e consider ttiej above empty sufficient proof ot 1
its virtue. All we ask in a trial. S Id iu Forsyth '
t;v L. GREER & CO., and W. L. CARMICHAEL
uiurlS.ly
JAMES LOCR'REY
ATLANTA DYE WORKS,]
The Largest Works in Georgia
Dung and Cleaning in all its Branches, and by a j
Full Corps ol the Be.st Workmen.
Haying enlarged my dye: works,'!
nud increased nn facilities in every reej ect, i
1 am now prepared to execute all orders for Dye
ing and Cleaning at the shortest possible time,
aud at low prices, l have now a full corns of ex
peiienced workmen, JUST FROM THE NORTH,
and am fully prepared to execute rapidly all worn
1 fiat may be ottered.
J-gf“ollice on Mitchell Street, rear Whitehall.
JAMES LOCIIKY,
apll 8m Post office Box 54.0. |
Established in 1357.
PETER LYNOIrI,
NO. 92, WHITEHALL STREET,
ATLANTA, G-a,.,!
WHOLESALE 4K<>GE5£,
ANO WHOLESALE
DEALER IN LIQUORS & PROVISIONS.,
A Specialty of
GIBSON’S PHILADELPHIA FINE WHISKIES !
All orders accompanied with theca*hor
good city refereooe promptly attend and to. Can !
give best of Atlauta references th t your money I
will be honestly and propei lyappropiiited, should |
you rtmit when ordering api 1,73 -iy
GEOHGII <£x. ~
SOAP FACTORY,
ATLANTA, (3-A.
HITCHCOCK & CO.
Now turu out
POOR MAN’S SOAP,
CHEMICAL OLIVE SOAP,
K. fc. J.LE SOAP.
FAMILY aOAP,
No. 1 DETERSIVE SOAP,
PURE PALM OIL SOAP,
GLYCERINE TOILET SOAR,
HONEY TOILET SOAP.
Aud will b*- pleased to fill orders a. a
Better Figure
t|;an cau be boqght and laid down frotn any other
factory iu the laud.
I Warrant Every Bar of Soap we Make.
s vii’L c. iirrcitcoPK,
aprl.ct CHEMIST.
A. K. SEAGO.
WEOtSSALE GROCER.
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT
AND DEALEKIN
Flafttation Supplies,
(Corner of Forsyth and Mitchell Streets,)
W. H. C. Mickelberi.y, 1
}ate of Griffin, Ga., r ATLANTA, GA.
is now with this house. )
aplLct
£U O. SIMMO N Sft
a©? at law,
septlO.Ty THOMABTON, GA
ISLINGTON'S HOTEL
FORT VALLEY, . GEORGIA.
Large Comfortable Rooms and every Convenience.
A First-Class Bar Attached
Marshall House,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Board Three Dollars Ptr Day.
A. B. LIJCE, Proprietor.
octaict
[THOMAS WOOD,
Next to Linif House,
jMHJON, GA MACON
DEALEK IN
iflll IIIIISIII,
I CHAIRS, MATTRESSES
BEDSTEAD3,
And SPRING BEDS-
PARLOR
ITB,
In Plush, I Dir, Cloist,
id Reps.
BED-ROOM Suites,
in great vaiietv. Mar
ble aiid W'ocd Top.
GA. T> I 3 IT,TIIST G.
Y FINE ASSORTMENT ot 15 tis*el*, Tapee
ri tries, 3 ply, 2 ply. Wool Dutch, Cottage and
Hemp Rugs, Mats and Druggets. Nottingham
Lace Cur’ains, Lambraquitis, made to order in an
style. Window Shades, Wall Paper, Oil Cloths
(table and floor,) Matting, etc., etc.
All the above at exceedingly low prices.
janels.tf
GRANDEST BCTIEMS ELVER KNOWN
o
Fourth Grand Gift Concert
1 OR THE BENEFIT OF THE
mill LIBIARY 0F -OITICKY!!
82,000 CAS m GIFTS %sl 5*00,000
Every Fifth. Ticket Draws a Gift.
5250.000 for SoO.
3 tie Fourth Grand Gift Concert authorized by
special act of the Ligislature tor tbe benefit ol the
Rublic Library of Kentucky, will take place in
Public Library Hail at Louisville, Ky ,
WEDNESDAY December 31, 1873
Only Sixty thousand tickets wiil tie sold and
one half ol these are intended for the Euiopean
Market thus leaving only 30,00'J lor sele in tbe
Untied Slates where aOO.OCO were disposed ot for
the Third Concert. The tickets are divided into
ten coupons or parts, and have on .heir backs the
Scheme with a lull explanation of the in >de of
drawiug.
At this concert which will be the grandest mu
s’ca display ever witnessed iu this country the
uaprcci dented sun of
$1,500,000,
divided into 12,000 cash gilts will be distributed
by lot among the ticket-holders. The numbers of
the tickets to be drawn from one whe 1 by blind
children aueftbe gifts from another.
LI*T OS* 1 GIFfS.
ONE G <A S D CA S H GI FT $250 000
ON u, GRAND OA.-II GIFl’ 100.000
ONE GRAND CASH GIFT 50 000
ONE GRAND C \SH GIFT 25 COO
ONE GRAND CASH GIFl’ 17.000
10 CASH GIFTS SIJ.OOO each 1(0,000
30 CASH GIFTS 5.000 each 150 000
59 CAsII GIFTS 1,000 each 50(09
80 CASH GIFTS 500 each 40,000
100 CASH GIFTS 4CO each 40 000
150 CASH GIFTS 300 rach 45 000
250 CASH GiFi’S 200 eacti 50 000
825 CASH GIFTS 100 each 82 500
ii,ooo CASH GIFTS 50 each 550'000
TOTAL, 12,000 GiFi’S, ALL CASH,
amounting to $1,500,000
The distribution will lie positive whether ail
the iigACts are sold i r not, and the 12,000 gifts all
paid in preportion o the iickets sold—ail unsold :
tickets beiug destn ye.l at tue First and Second !
Con :erta and i.ot represented iu the drawing.
FJill’B OF TICKETS,
.V'hok tick-tp SSO; Halves $25; Tenths, or each
coupon j 5; E!ev< n Whole Tickets lor 8500; 22)^
Ii kt*ts tor $1,090; 1;8 Whole i ickets tor $5,000;
227 Whole Tickets lor 810,000. No discount on
less than $520 worth of Tickets a' a tune.'
The ui pa railed success <-. the Third Gift Con- ]
cert as well as the satisfaction given by the First j
and Second makes it only necessary to announce :
the Fourth to insure the promp* s..le ot every ;
ticket. The Fourth Gift Concu t wil be cou-‘
due'ed in aii its details like the 'Third, aud full j
parfieulirs may be learned from ciicuLis which |
wid be sent irce from this office to ai! who apply
for them.
TieKeis. now ready tor sale, and alt orders t- \
com; uaivd t y the money promptly tiffed. Lib-rai
terms given !o tho.-e who buy to evil ag: in.
T RIOS, E. BIIiMLKITE,
Ag’t Fuol. Li or. Kv. aid Mansgei Gilt Concirt.
i'cblic Library Bunding, Louisville, Ky.
auglOtildecl
GREER & GRESHAM'S
Livery anti Sale Stables.
I X CONNECT! \N WITH THE LIVERY STA-
L ble we are runmug daily a splendid
FOUR HORSE COACH*
TO THE INDIAN SPRING.
We are also prepared to inruish Cair'inges, Bag
gies, Ptaitons or Hacks to parties deeming hem.
The Stage wiil leave Forsyth at 9 a m , ar
rive at tLe Spriug *t 12 u.; leave the Spa g at
3)-£ P. M., arrive at Forsyth at 6 p. m .
Oonnecticns to and from tbe Spring wiil be
made with all daiiv train*.
GREER & GRESHAM,
tncy27.U Forsvth, Ga.
THE GREAT TEXT BOOK.
History ot the United States
BY
ALEXANDER 11. STEPHENS.
For sale by CYRUS U. SH VR!’.
1 augS.tf.
[PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS
B. PYE & SON,
Wholesale and Retail
dealers in
STAPLE AND FANCT
DRY GOODS
WE ANNOUNCE To OUR FRIENDS THAI
w<- have opened oar large and well assorted
stocK of
S££l££| £r Q © 9
Atul are prepared to furnish them with cveiything
usually kept in
a first-class house
=U the lowest prices. We have in store
Oue Hundred Halts Prints Irani S t> 12 V eta
Men and Uoye Suits fioui s:> 00 to S'JO O'J.
. A Sartre and varied assortment oi
DRESS GOODS
H \TS, CAPS.
ROOTS. SHOES,
CARPETING, DOMESTICS
AND NOTIONS.
Every department is well stocked and we are
obtekmineii to sell. It will he to your advau
"“*e to call be.'ore purchasing e’sewhere.
" c wi, l duplicate any IHacon or
Atlanta UilU.
|an2l lv
K. 1.. I.ENKV 1 Tr. B. PAPT
IT. . IIIIIT i CO.,
No. 4S Third Street, . . Macon, Georgia.
DEALERS IN
Saddles Harness, Bridles. Collars.
Saddlers’ Finding* Generally.
HARNESS. SOLE, UPPER AND
ENAMELED LEATHER.
OTOCK COMPLETE AND NEW. SATISFAC
„ . tion as to style aud quality guaranteed. Price*
as low as any other Southern house.
Repairing attended to promptly.
Vo r., „ . W - L- IIENRY & CO.,
V°* 48 *" ,rd Street, opposite City Bank and next
door to Seymour, liusley & Cos V
m,rll U "* Macon. Ga.
A GREAT BLESSING.
N EVER, siuce the time “ wbcu the morning
stars sansr together, ’ has there been a greater
medical discovery and blessing to the human race
ttun the
GLOBE FLOWER COUGH SYRUP.
This delightful and rare compound is the active
principal, obtained by chemical process, from the
“ t-* to tie Flower,” known also as “ Hutton Root ”
and in Botany as ” CephaUntkus Occi tentalU.”*
tilob*- Flower Cough Syrup is almost an infalli
ble cure for evert description of Cough, Cold*
Hoarseness. Sore Throat, Croup, Whooping Cough
Pleurisy, Influenza, Asthma, Brorc’.iitis, etc.- end
will cure Consumption, when taken in time— ae
tbou.-ands will testily.
Globe Kiowt-r Cough Syrup will cure the most
obstinate eases if Chronic Cough and Lung af
fection' wh< n all ulher boasted remedies tail.
(ilotie Flower Cough Syrup does not contain a
particle ot o imn or any of its preparations.
filobe Flower C ugh Syrup does not contain a
particle >i poison, or any ingredient that could
hurt the most delicate child.
Globe Fiowr V/ougb Syrup has become, where
known, the moat popular Cough Medicine in ib
country, bee.use it has successfully witbstoid the
tree great teats of di-ri', viz: Time, Experience,
and ot Competition, t.nd remaiur, after passing
through this ordeal, the best article of its kind iu
the wo; id.
(ih'b • Fk.wcr r cugh Syrup is pleasant to the
•afte, dim d-iet not disagree with the laoat delicate
stomach.
Physicians who lieve consumptive patient,, are
invited to try the <4ia(>e Flower Cough Syru ’. It
m-egical ettects will at once be felt and
edged.
Beware of eon iterfeita: the genuine has tht
words Giobe Flower Cough Sgtup blown in each
bottle, uud the *uren ot the proprietor b upon
eacu label, ibetr de mark label aud compound
arc protected by Letters Patent.
Don't like any other article as a subslititntefo
Globe 1- lower Cough Syrup. If your drugetet or
merchant has none on hind, request him to order
it for yon
Thoueands of Testimonials of the moit wonder*
fill cures are constantly being receved from tb
Nonb, East, tr cat and South—s>>uie of which
stem ulniist miraculous.
Sold by all D-.ugriMs at *1 00 per bottle, 15.00
for one-halt dr-gen.
J. 8 PE VI BE. TON & CO., Proprietors,
Atlanta, Us.
ror sale Su Forsyth by McCOMMON & BANKS
and L. F GREEK & CO.
HEARD, CRAIG & CO., Wholesale Ag< nts,
a pl** ly A i la tit a, Os.
Southern Fruit Trees for Sale!
sls per 100.
yyM. K. NELSON,
Proprietor of the
GEORGIA NURSERY
Offers for Sale a Fine Stock of Young FRUIT
FREE', Strawberry Plants, Etc., Etc.
Price Li-t gratis. LVicriptive Catalogue for®
stamp. Addi ess,
’VM. K. NELBON.
jattf.tf VUOUSTA. a
NO. 33.
I