Newspaper Page Text
Cj>? Hamilton Visitor
—■
BT P - w - D * BOULLT.
fafDAY MORNING, KOV. 28, 1873
Matters in Georgia.
* Olan ton’s jurist mill, near Hognns
v*ii*i waa recently destroyed by fire.
A white woman of Angnsta lately
eloped with a negro.
Larkin Butler, who wns probably
the oldest man in Troup county,
;j<l -a La Grange a few days ago,
*<yed ®4.
Lhe ;eport circulated last Septem
ber. ilnt two ladies near Msdison
had fa ;n heirs to a fortune in France,
has t ned out to be false.
"Nor. ro** receive.! 28.1 bale* of cot
ton i t month, and it took every
one of them to settle the guano and
other hills. And yet the farmer*
persist in raising cotton, and wonder
that times are so hard.
Jnd c Clark ITo well has erected a
cotton factory near Atlanta, which
will run 2,000 apin.lle* and employ
200 hands.
Maxwell, who hilled Woodruff,
has hccji sent to the penitentiary tor
U't&e year*. Is it strange that, crime
is w> prevalent when the
punishment is so light ?
Font’s circus has suspended in At
lanta. Some of its members are well
Wo> th> of suspension—by their necks.
A mini in Brboks county lately
kill' and a h{>g of his raising which
weigh, and 530 pounds net, although
oly tvo years an.l a half old.
The West Point News lately did a
good ileal of “ flowing" for Lent’*
eircits. Kow that it has shown tlicrc
it gi<c> Us reader* a lecture on the
impropriety of throwing money away
on eii '.uses. In the same issue we
otico an extensive “puff” of the
Ureas Eastern omens. Oh I cousis
tpucy, thou art a jewel 1
Uollifield of the West Point Nows,
hating “jined do tempciuns," offers
for sale his stock of liquor, consisting
ot four coses ef old London Dock
gin.
Mr. Win. Hatchett, the oldest cit*
iaen of West Point, died near that
place on the 1 7th.
HoHifield of the West Point News,
forewarns all persons against selling
ftny one goods on his* account.
Lucky follow, to, have au account,
these hard times.
'Hie late ctorm partially unroofed
the store of Mr. J. J{. Scott, in West
Point, 'besides damaging other build
ings, and blowing down trees and
fences. ’,
Mr. Owen Lynch was rno over by
an engine in Atlanta, lust week, and
diet! in half an hour.
Taxes ais coming into the Comp-1
Irolier General's office pretty freely.
The storm ill Tqlbotton blew down
a ne gro church, carried off a part of
the court-house roof, and seriously
injured the building. f ■
Burr A Flanders, proprietors of
the Macon flouring mill, have sus
pended. Liabilities over (1190,000.
'1 ie Btackshear Georgian says thnt
in 1 ieroe county the taxes have been
promptly paid. Not cue tax fi. fa.
has been loaned. "
Atlanta ha* a skeleton whale for
sale. • ' ' ’ ••’
1 ‘n' tree* “arc productive in
Spalding county.
A large killed near
ltotne the other day.
A man living near the line of Mori
wether and Talbot countie*, a bus
band and father, fold ten balo* of cot
ton, {rocketed the money, went hack
home, bundled np hi* clothe*, and
ran away with the daughter of one
*f bin neighbor*. '
White county farmers are soiling
corn at 60 cento r. bushel.
Mr. John l*lUman, residing near
the line of Washington and John
son county, was killed latey by being
crushed in a cane mill whilo grinding,
hi* cane for syrup.
The Columbus Enquirer says that
a farmer living below there owed a
grocery firm of Columbus $l3O. lie
brought up a horse which he valued
at S2OO, and sold him to hi* creditor*
lor the debt, they giving S7O differl
eucc. J udges of horse flesh say the
animal is worth only about $73, and
the grocery dealers consider them
solve* in big luck to have received
$5 for their $l3O debt. .
Msnv workshop in Atlanta have
closed, and about eight hundred me
chanic* have beeu thrown out of em
ployment.
The Columbus Enquirer doesn't
wai t any subscriber# who carry con
cealed weapon*.
The Monroe Advertiser say*: Mr.
Cyrus Sharp, clerk of the Superior
Court inform* us that about sixty fio
tors’ liens have beeh foreclosed up to
This time, aggregating about $30,000.
A white man oamed John Rico died
in Augusta tho other day, from the
effects of whisky.
Oar New York Letter.
Fifth Avenue Hotel, )
New York, Nov. 19tl, 1873. (
All the wonwn of New Nork are
divided into two classes: The hun
gry, etringy, and scraggy; and the
well fed, fat and baggy. Those
which promenade the streets the
livelong day, and, for all I know, the
livelong night too, are the hungry,
stringy, and scraggy. To stand on
Broadway for two hour* and watch
the women that pass! I declare to
yon, it is enough to disgust mankind
with the human race. One feels like
patting np prayers for another flood
—always provided it shall bo so cer
tain as to preclude scientific dispute*
about it hereafter. Now, the other
das* of women—those which sre
well fed, fat, and baggy—inhabit the
houses. They never go out into the
air at all. They remind one of stuffed
geese. Their faces are oval. Their
chiti* are so fat that the weight pull*
their mouth* Open. They look like
roughly moulded piece* of putty, of
the consistency of wheat dough,
painted anything from rose to scar
let There is but one really beauti
ful woman in New- York—she is
superbly beauttf’tl. Stic is not a
New York woman; not even a North
ern woman. No ianitr where she
comes from. But she i* a Southern
woman. Aye, but the South is u
large place. No matter what State
she comes from. But it’s Georgia.
Well, welt t Georgia itself is not a
small place; what city or county?
Well, no matter; hut it’s Atlanta. ,
There!
Who wants to know anything
about the theatres? I should think
the American people, if they had half
the sense tiiey ought to have, would
have been bored to death with thea
tres long ago. For nty part, I am
benrtily tired of them. I don’t caro
a snap for any of them, or anything
connected with them.
Last week was a week of lectures.
Wilkie Collins, John G. Saxe, and
Charles Bradlaugh were the most
notable. AH of the leoturea were
poor, confoundedly poor. The fact
is, these Northern neople don’t know
how to apeak anyhow. Neither do
the English. If Ben Hill were to
stand up here in Cooper Institute, or
T&niinany Hall, and make one of his
great speeches, he would startle tho
natives. They don’t know anything
about great orators np here.
Last Sunday morning I went ovor
to Plymouth Chiircb, to hear Brother
Beecher. I was much pleased with
him. lie defended the poor laborer,
who, after working in tho cold and
dirt all day, at night seeks the genial
society of the Inger beer saloon.
Where else should he go? To a
prayer-meeting? “ He would freeze
stiff!” 8o lie would. Unless it was
in tho country, in peach time, with a
good old still near by—like they used
to have out there uot a thousand
tnilea from Hamilton.
A* you see from the papers, noth
ing is talked about here now but the
“ Virginia* outrage.” It *eem* to
me they are making an outrageous
hubbub that will end in nothing. In
dignation meetings are the order of
the day. Last night they had a
large one in Tammany, and another
in Steinway Hall. Wm, M. Evarts,
Sunset Cox, and others, made blood
and-thunder speeches. There is tre
mendous pressure being brought to
bear upon the Administration, and it
is barely possible something may
come of it. Meanwhile the officials
and the capitalists here and in other
large cities, are making use of the ex
citement which prevails, to nut out
of sight, and keep the people from
thinking of, the great question of
labor against capita], and especially
the demand that the Government
furnish work for the unemployed this
winter. Nevertheless, that is the
question, and it will not always be
Eui off. Of course I have not room
ere to enter upon so large a ques
tion. Bradlaugh has beeu here lec
turing on the great question ot
“ Labor. ’’ He showed that he had
not gone to the core of the matter;
he is faithful to the traditions of his
people, and hopes to mend things by
latching. This * cannot be done.
There is-but one possible solution
that will be complete and effective.
Here it it, in a nut shell: The gov
erument must resume its proprietor
ship of every foot of land, and then
relei it in uniform quantities to the
people, t trust, say for fifty years.
At the same time the wages system,
which, in fret, is the Pandora a box
from which flow all our ills, must be
utterly destroyer!. It must be pro
hibited by law, this hiring of people
for wage*. Cooperatite labor must
take the place of teases labor. Un
der llie present disgraceful system,
ninety-nine one-buuaredtha of the hu
man race are condemned to a life of
ignorance, poverty, hunger, and
wretchedness. Toil as they will,
they cannot better it. For the high
est wages will ouly afford a poor sub
sistence for the laborer and uis' fami
ly. His ancestors lived just na he
does for a thousand years. Under
the same aysieni hi* posterity will
live so forever. On the other hand,
in the midst of all this world of pov.
ertv and wretchedness, the wealthy
few surround themselves with un
told luxuries —luxuries enough to
make the whole world comfortable,
which they caunot consume, which
waste* before their eyes. They do
not deserve it. They never worked
for it. It came to them without any
merit of theirs, as a consequence of
an infernal system. The Internation
ale sava there is euough in this wo. Id
for all of God's creatures; and it
shall be disposed of so that all at
least may live. What! divide out!
I think we bad better turn the world
over, upside down, and kick it into a
cocked hat to boot, rather than that
ninety-nine hnndredth* of the human
race shall starve in the midst of
wasting luxuries! But enough of
the serion*.
Aa you know, the great trial of
Bos* Tweed has been going on here
for some time. Yesterday the case
was given to the jury. Of course
nobody thought it possible to con
vict the “ Boss.” People looked for
a disagreement by the jury a* a fore
gone conclusion. Nevertheless, to
the surprise of everybody, the jury j
this morning brought in a verdict of!
guilty. Your readers will remember
that Tweed was tried on over two
hundred indictments for appropri
ating some millions of the city’s
money to his own use. He was
found guilty on nearly two hundred -
of the indictments.
“ Cuba, Cuba, Cuba!” I hear it |
all around me, even while I write I
you this. “Oh, for a fortnight of l
General Jackson, or Gov. Marcy!”
exclaimed Sunset Cox last night at
Tammany Hall. Precisely! If the
old Southern Democracy was alive,
and had control of the government,
wouldn’t it make Spain dance a fan
dango to a hot tune ? But those
times are gone forever. Maybe it is
well. Slay tho gods of the Jew* and
Christians abide with them !
Away up here on iikes to see
■ anything that reminds him of any
| thing fit lua own Slutff For instance,
( last Friday, just as I was entering
inv hotel, I saw a monkey show,
which reminded me forcibly of one
of our home institutions—the Atlanta
Herald. The poor monkey was
made to dance, and cut many a caper.
He was also made to climb a‘ pole, in
j order, I suppose, to demonstrate the
accuracy of a certain saying whereof
you have heard, and which, if nty
memory serves me, runs after this
t'ishioii: “The higher a monkey
climbs a tree ” Well, no matter;
I reckon you know the rest; hut if
you don’t, why, just ask Charley
Pritchard; he can tell yon. The
whole performance reminded me so
foreiby of Henry Grady and the At
lanta Herald, that I was compelled to
•it right down and write Grady all
about it. I could not tell a lie. I
was obliged to tell him the whole
truth. So yon need not be afraid of
publishing this.
There are no distinguished South
erners in the cifv now but myself.
W. D. T.
The Gen’l R. E. Lee Monument.
The colossal monument to the mem
ory of Geu’l Lee which is now rapid
ly being constructed under the direc
tion and skill of Prof. Volentine,
will, when completed, be the greatest
triumph of art and mechanical skill
ever produced in this country. The
structure will be surmounted by a ie
olining figure of Gen’! Lee enveloped
in his military cloak. The form will
bo finely carved in marble, and the
expression of countenance rendered
in life-like correctness, tn order to
complete this grand monument at the
earliest possible day, tho Executive
Conunittoe of the Lee Memorial As
sociation, of Lexiugton, Va., which is
composed of such distinguished men
as Gcn’l Pendleton, Gen’l Terry,
Hon. Wm. McLaughlin, Col. Preston
Johnson, Col. Jas. K. Edmondson,
Chas. Davidson, and others, have, by
pomission, authorized the publication
and sale of a perfect life size steel en
graved portrait of Gen’l Joseph E.
Johnston. The proceeds of its sale
to be applied in furtherance of the
object of this Association, namely:
to the erection of a monument to the
memory of Gen’l R. E. Lee. at the
Washington and Lee University,
Lexington, Va. The portrait will be
sold only by subscription, through
regular authorized agents, and every
subscriber will receive a cotificate
signed by t£e Secretary and Chair
man of the Lee Memorial Association.
We commend this portrait to the
public, and hope some good energetic
man wilt secure the agency in this
section, in order to help on the good
work. Messrs. W. W. Bostwick &
Cos., Nos. 177 *fc 179 West Fourth
Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, have been
constituted and appointed General
Managers of Agencies, and any com
munications addressed to them for
circulars, terms, and certificates, will
receive prompt attention.
Fatal Accident. — Pittsburg, No
vember 4.—Shortly before 12 o’clock
to-day a young man named William
Warnock was suffocated by being
buried under an embankment. The
deceased, together with an elderly
tnan and boy, were eugaged in dig
ging coal out of an embankment off
Kirkpatrick street. They had been
working several hours, and were eu
gaged at bearing in, when a huge
mas* of coal and earth came down
and completely buried thwm. The
mass was packed so closely at first
that it was feared that all the parties
had been killed. Warqock was first
reached, but wfcon found, life was ex
tinct. The boy and old man were
next taken out. They escaped injury
with the exception of a few slight
bruises.
Miss Howard, daughter of the Rev.
C. W. Howard, of Bartow county,
entered sixty-four coops of chickens
of her ovu raising, at the State Fair.
Atlanta had received 21,413 bale*
of cotton up to Saturday morning.
Written for the Visitob.
“W. I). Trammell and his Re*
markable Letter.”
A few days ago I noticed an edi
torial, in the Atlanta Herald, headed,
“ W. D. Trammell and his Remarka
ble Letter.” Thi* editorial I ascribe
to Mr. Grady; for the writer says
he has known Mr. Trammell a long
time—which means since they were
|in college together—and no other
| editor of the Herald has known him
even this long. “We publish else
where,’’ reads the editorial, “a letter
from Mr. D. W. Trammell, a crazy
yonng man, who formerly lived in
Atlanta.”
Having but little confidence in the
scientific, as well as logical ability of
this little editor, I have equally as
little in his judgment upon the men
tality of Trammeil as being in an ab
normal state, which he, in his P. H. D.
ability, is pleased to term, “ crazy.”
If this little editor be so wonderfully
gifted as to determine the condition
of one’s brain whom he has not seen
in twelve months, or so many weeks,
a* the case may be—and that, too,
from a letter embodying in the whole,
some of the leading ideas of the
greatest of modern philosophers, 1
might safely divir . that such a one
would be eminently qualified to pre
serve an equilibrium in his own intel
lect ; and while he mnst exert great
effort to prevent its transforms
tion from human to brute intellect,
he should be generous enough to
offer some remedy—at least in theory
—for the restoration of those who
are “ crazy,” and who, in the unarti
ficial light of reason, can’t help being
so. If, too, it be an established fact,
that he is perfectly well acquainted
with all who have ever traveled,
even so far as he himself has traveled
—from Rome, Ga., to Athens, Ga. —
I must accede to the otherwise er
roneous statement, that “Trammell is
the most remarkable person that ever
traveled!” The little editor himself,
is more remarkable than Trammell,
in some respects. While he, in his
world of self-conceit, is too obtuse to
see that he is contracting his mind
into the room of a mustard seed,
which may be predicated of all con
servatives, too, Trammell is unfold
ing his, and means to do so as long
as he lives, and until the question,
Who made God ? to his mind is not
much startling. I doubt not that if
Trammell has ever asked the little
editor, “ Who made God?” that the
reply given by the latter was taken
from the Shorter Catechism, thus:
“God is a Spirit, infinite,” etc. —
seeming not to observe the difference
between the definitions of God, and
that of God’s maker 5 ! From the
consideration that the argumenta
tive and metaphysical capacity
form no part of bis construction, it is
very well that he would not quarrel
with Trammel!, whom one of the
Professors at the University, onoe
termed the philosophc-yd the class,
- TrnruijifcU has a, hliVe, generous
soul, into which those 'of the whole
conservative party could be thrown
and sounded! While he has inde
pendence enough to call at St. James
and order a five-cent pie, and two
pence worth of goobers, he has lib
erality enough to give a beggar the
last dollar in bis purse! Such gen
erosity that, when he has succeed
ed in his great International schemes,
“ dividing out,” as the little editor
would say, he would give to all but
himself, and to himselt he would take
the glory of having made life, to hu
manity, a boon instead of a curse!
Well may tho little editor say bo
suit* the commune and the commune
suits him. If he should ever go to
New York, and see Trammell in a
carriage with a nitro-glycerine case,
and a torch as a court of arms, and
a hoarse rabble shouting his praise, it
would be the triumph of triumphs—
the triumph of the heroes of huinani
tyover humanity’s oppressors.
Success in the cause for which
Pelescluse, Washington, and Lee
fought; for which Jefferson Davis
fought; for which he was hand-cuffed,
cast into a dungeon, and cursed as a
traitor! The chief difference being,
theirs was local, his universal.
Mrs. Westmoreland, too, is a
champion in this same cause; and be
it said, to the glory of Trammell and
the disgrace of Georgia, that of all
the people in her State, from his pen
alone does she get justice. As for
myself, full well I know that what
ever part she played in the “ Women’s
Congress,” ’twas well done; and that
she lives a whole atmosphere of puri
ty above those pigmies who, in her
own State, are attempting to crush
her—nsy, villify her, and make her
appear to the worl#, what these very
villifierß are in fad ! If the South
ern women are not going to co-op
erate with Mrs. Westmoreland, the
sooner they are all dead the better;
for they are disorganizers, and are t
willing to make humanity miserable
from the consideration that they hap
pen to be the wife-servants of some
men that can support them.
Some men oppose universal suf
frage, because women will then be as
free as they are—will be educated ;
will have ideas of their own; will be
no longer tyrannized over by them ;
will no longer be slave* for their so
called husband*—synonymous with
master. Whence come these auto
gods, who make governments, con
trol kingdoms, empires, and re
publics? Who deoide who shall be
the magistrates of these governments,
by the ballot of one-balf the people,
and debar the other from voting by
brute force and penal enactmentsf
Wonderful to tell, that they are the
off-spring* of some low order of ani
mal, whom they are in the habit of
designating “Mother!”
Strange logic that these great auto
gods should be sprung from such
simple, senseless animals, when every
organic body is the product of one
just like itself! Strange, too, that
these auto-gods will associate them
selves wiih another animal just like
their mother —one whom they term
wife—synonymous with slave. These
are the sonrees of those great auto
god statesmen who stalk abont in
their robes of state, and declare that
their mothers and wives are as sense
less as horses, and as incapable of
knowing whom they prefer to be the
chief magistrate of their State, or
government. I should rather think
they would blush for their littleness,
and weep that they ever had been
born! According to their theory,
and practice, too, their mothers and
wives have no sense, no capacity, no
property, no children, no right, no
liberty, no authority, no power, no
will, no self, no responsibility, no
conscience, and no soul! Gnat God !
Before I would be such a conserva
tive, I would jump into a hogshead
of petroleum, with a lighted match
in my hand!
If Mrs. Westmoreland’s ideas are
not a specimen of the best Southern
women’s, I despise my nationality,
and pity them as a set of prisoners
who would be guillotined, if they ex
pressed themselves otherwise than
their masters or keepers do; and those
who are not married, I presume,
are afraid to grt for universal suffrage,
for fear that they would never have
the chance to be some man’s slave. I
have heard them, and heard them talk
when they didn’t know I was any
where about.
Mrs. Westmoreland, to-day, is
worth more to humanity than all the
conservative party ever has been.
And when the very small critics impute
immorality to her first book, I say, de
part ye now into some Danteau hell,
to have your life consumed by the
plague of flies! T.
Important Decision. —In a case
tried in Fulton Superior Court, last
week, to recover $3,000 on a stock
of goods destroyed by fire, which
stock had been removed after the in
surance was effected, Judge Hopkins
ruled that the act of removal cancelled
the old and required an entirely new
contract of insurance.
The case goes to the Supreme Court.
Stewart county is over $5,000 in
debt.
GEORGIA — Haems County.
J W Sewell makes application for letters of
guardianship for Fannie A, and Ida C Bond,
minors of Ephraim Bond, deceased:
All persons concerned are hereby notified
to show cause, if any they have, by the fu>t
Monday in January next, why said applica
tion should not be granted.
Given under rnv hand and official signature
this 25th day of November, 1873.
nov2B-td J. F. C WILLIAMS, Only.
" beep market.
The undersigned announces to the citizens
of Hamilton and vicinity that lie has opened
a Beef Market in Hamilton, and will supply
the public daily with good beef and sausages
at reasonable prices.
i>ovsß-lm J. W. McINTOSTTj
Read this carefully and judge for yourself
In our telegraphic columns of this date ap
pears a dispatch from the President of the
Singer Manufacturing Company, announcing
that the first prize and grand medal for sew
ing machines at the Vienna Exposition hag
been awarded to that Company. We not*
that several other companies claim to have
received this award, and now we believe tbfe
public to be interested in knowing to which
company the claim in justice belongs. Time
will soon enable us to know the facts, and
until the facts are known, it is better to re
ceive these statements with a reserve of judg
ment.—[New York Graphic, August 22d.
AMD BSBB ABB TUB TACTS:
The Singer Seieing Machine Com
pany and the Vienna Exposition.
The following cable telegram, which ex
plains itself, was received in this city, on
Wednesday morning, by the Singer Machine
Company:
Vienna, August 19, 1873.
Singer Sewing Machine Company, New
York City, Vienna Kxpositibn, first prize, the
medal of progress, awarded the Singer ma
chines ; also the medal for the best specimens
of work done, and three medals to employees
for superior excellence of productions.
Inslek A. Hopper,
Pres't Singer Manufact'g Cos.
[New York Herald, August 23d.
Our popularity is shown by our sales.
1,200,000 in daily use!
219,758 sold the past year!
45,670 in excess of any other one
company!
The only perfect and most successful
Sewing Machine in the World l
It is THE WORLD’S FAVORITE !
Agents in every county, from whom you
can purchase one on easy terms of payment.
The Sieofr Manufacturing Cos,
C. A. VOSBURGH, Manager,
Savannah, Ga.
J H Brarahall, Agent, Columbus, Ga.
STOP AND REFLECT A MOMENT.
I)o you owe Dr. Bruce ? If you do, for the
sake of humauity, pay him, or you may not
get his services again. Do pay all, or a part,
as he Is in great need of money to pay his
own indebtedness novl4-tf
Farm for Rent,
Two or four mule farm for rent. Mules,
corn and fodder can be bought on the place
if desired. Apply to
novM-lm J. F. C. WILLIAMS.
GEORGIA— Harris County.
Jacob M. White makes application for let
ters of guardianship for Daniel M., John W.,
and Ann E. McDonnell, minors:
All persons concerned are hereby not ified
to show cause, if any they have, by the first
Monday in January next, why siid applica
tion should not be granted.' Given under
my hand officially, Nov. 20, 1873.
novU-tU J. F. C. WILLIAMS, Ord'y.
J. W. PEASE & NORWAN,
COLUMBUS. QA,
■WHOLESALE AND DETAIL DEALERS IN
©®®se 3 siz&'ismsn&i&'s’s, 2Pn£S?®e 9
SEUSIES? SSUSIKSi, S>2l<33M3£lßff and &($ 0
Rosewood seven octave Pianos from S3OO t 0,5500. Geo. Woods A Cos,,
Mason & Hamlin, and other Organs. Violins, Guitars, FJptes, Banjos,
mouth harps, sheet music, etc. We make orders for sheet music and music
books every few days, and anything wanted and not in stock, will
ordered and furnished at publisher’s prices. nov7-ly
— L - —M—lrttwa
BARGAINS! BARGAINS!
MILLINERY AND FANCY DRY GOODS AT PANIC PRICES’
MHS. LBB
IS NOW OFFERING HER ENTIRE STOCK OF
XffUlfiaEdHSS’lElß'Sr 41SJE) W&SStS'K ©®®©S
©ASIEI 9 &5? IFAiSJH® IPI£n©BSB
The ladies are respectfully invited to call and judge for themselves. All goods miut
paid for on delivery. [Colnmbus. Ga., Nov. 2)st—3m
' - — 1 ' _ . i .. m
AT COST FOR CASH!
I AM NOW OFFERING
MY ENTIRE STOCK OF GOODS
AT COST FOR CASH!
nov2l-lm J. S. JONES, Columbus, Ca.
JLgggg. 1 ■!■ ... i ..
W. J. CHAFFIN,
BOOESMI.XJBR cto STATIONB3IV
AND DEADER IN
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS,
CHBOHOS, V&AKBS AND SXONX.'DINM*
NO. 92 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
A- WITTICH- C- K- KISSEL
WITTICH & KINSEL,
PRACTICAL watchmakers,
NO. 67 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
ffuwram
All oftbe Latest Manufaotures-
An entirely new stock of the best goods and the latest styles has been recently bought la
New York, and is hereby offered at the Lowest Cash Pricks.
Diamonds, gold and silver Spectacles and Eve-Glasseß, gold and silver Thimbles, ladies’ and
gents' Chains, plain and fancy Gold Rings of beautiful workmanship, and every
variety of article found in a First-class Jewelry Btore.
Stencil Plates of every description cut at short notice.
Sole Agents for the celebrated Diamond Pebbled Spectacles and Eye-glasses, and Agents
for the Arundel Pebble Specks, which are slightly colored, and in high favor with every
body using specks or eve-glasses.
Watch, Clock and Jewelry repairing in all its branches. Hair Jewelry, Society fridge*,
Diamond setting, or any new work made to order at reasonable charges.
Engraving promply executed. oct24-ly
‘ ■ ■ I ! BB—— Ji'ggßgg!
FALL AND WINTER GOODS.
1870. 1870.
CHAPMAN & VERSTILLE
Announce to their friends and patrons that their stock will be kept con
stantly replenished with Seasonable Goods at Lowest Market Prioes,
Will receive In payment Eagle & Phcnix money and Cotton at highest market rat*.
B. B. TONGB,
-* v. i # # i .v. ■. li i
Dealer lxx
HATS, CAPS, UMBRELLAS, &c.,
<A Old Stand of F. London ,
NO. 91 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA,
Has on hand a complete and select stock, suited to both city and country
trade. octl7-3m
WILLIAMS, PEABCE A HODO,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
G-rooera And Liquor Dealer*,
No. 20 Broad Street , Columbus , Georgia.
The proprietors take pleasure in calling the attention of their friends and
the public to their large and varied stock of Groceries, Plantation Supplies,
Can Goods, Domestic Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats, Notions, etc., whicn are
much larger than we have ever offered, and will constantly keep on hand
every variety of goods usually kept in a first-class Grocery Store. We res
pectfully invite our friends and the public to call and examine our stock and
prices before buying elsewhere, as we are determined not to be undersold.
Goods delivered free of drayagc in the city and depots. oot3-3m