The Hamilton weekly visitor. (Hamilton, Harris Co., Ga.) 1873-1874, February 13, 1874, Image 2

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Cjjt Hamilton Visitor - r BI D. W. D. BOULLY. Friday morning, feb. 13, 1874 The Dead S-tAinwE. —The Siamese twins weffl regarded ns among the most phenomena of the fcge. Tlie stilfjeet of cutting them apart was efieu discussed, but always conclude} to be impracticable. Af ter their death several elf >rts were blade by medical men to obtain their 1 todies, and we now • learn that a committee of Philadelphia physicians, having obtained permission from the sorvivirttg relatives, have brought the bodies fb Philadelphia, and will soon make a scientific examination thereof, after Which they will publish a full report. _ .j<a - - ... The twins were slaveholders dur ing the war. Chang left property worth about $30,000, and Eng about $ 16,000. Tlteir combined weight was only 210 (founds. Mrs. Chang weighs 175 pounds, and Mr. Eng 300. . It is suited that they were North ern in sentitneyj, but when the war began, they declared for the Confed eracy, and two of their eons entered the Confederate army. During the wur orwof them watt drafted ; but as one confd not go without the other, they both escaped service. Obitcjaby.— Last; Friday’s issue of the West Point News contains an ex tended obitgary notice, announcing the death Of that paper, in which are named the (Several doctors who treated the patient, or, to be plainer, those who have published the paper. , We think the last doctor had the poorest success of all. He evidently did not understand the nature of the case, or the treatment required, as he was unable to keep the paper alivo three months. | • I^—■> Tlkavt Losses.—The Columbus Enquirer tells of a funner who raised 500 bales of cotton last year, and no oorn. He lost fIO,OOO. Anotben farmer, in Southwestern Georgia, who made 1,100 bales, and plenty of corn, lost $(1,000. The latter loss was due to storms, which beat out and destroyed several hundred bales in the fields. Other wise, be would have have made a large profit. ...... ■. ... tir There were 680 lunatics and idiots in the Georgia Asylum near Milledgeriilc lost year. They each cost the State fifty cents per day. There are 576 patients now in the Asylum. Of these 200 are white men, 218 white women, 44 colored men, and 54 colored women. The lunatics are 432, idiots 70 and epilep tics 67. The gardener of the Asylum raised 15,308 worth of vegetables. Among these were 23,500 heads of oAMge. 19* The number of eouviets now in the Georgia Penitiary is 014, of which 80 tee white and 624 are black. There is but one white woman in the penitentiary and 10 blacks. The most common crime ia burglary, and the next, larceny. There arc 207 burglars and 120 thieves. There are 60 murderers among the felons, 45 ravishers, 79 charged with assault with intent to murder and 10 with manslaughter. '.it 19* H. 1. Kithball returned to At lanta on the 9th. Next night he was serenaded by a few of his former em ployees, but it did not meet the ap proval of .the guests st the Kimball House, several of whom evinced their disapprobation by ories for Bullock, Blodgett, and others. Kimball saw that the demonstration wna unpopu lar, and mired alter saying a few words, when the aercnadors diapqgyed. Lauur Growth.— The Savannah Kewa saya that oysters weighing three pounds and measuring ten inches in length are found near Tampa, Fla The same paper saya that sugar* one fifteen feet high and twelve indies round at the butt has kecu grown by a (armor near that place. “Sold.**— The Enquirer says that when ihe panic began, a country man drew $15,000 from a bank in Colum bus, and invested it in the Tallaasec factory, thinking that the most se cure. Wonder what he thinks now! IST A w bite man was run over and killed by' the cars on the State Hoad, near Tunnel Hill, on the 6th. lie was sitting on the track, hut was not seen in lime to stop the trsin. lie is thought to hove been drunk. car Mr. Jas. I* Dunning, post mister of Atlanta, died in that city on the 6th, in bis 61 st year. Though a Radical, he differed from most of his party— being an honest man. IT A grown hare, perfectly white, lately caught lu McDufiie county. Matters in Georgia. Mr. J. O, Thomas was recently killed on the steamboat Julhi St. Clair, at Troup landing, on Flint river, ffv was intoxicated, and while making his Way on shore, fell against the bnl warks, and received such in jury as to cause liis death In ten min utes. The State Grange, during its late session in Atlanta, is repotted to have contracted for 150,000 pounds of ba con and 60,000 bushels of corn. W. 11. Thompson, pilot on the steamboat Julia St. Clair, was acci dentally killed in Columbus, last week, by the discharge of a pistol, while engaged in a tustle with Mrs. Edinan Tompkins, in which sho was trying to take the pistol away from him. Diamonds arc still found in Hall county, hut there seems to be no sale for them. Some of the negroes who have cm igraled from this .State to Arkansas have told the people along their line of travel that the poll tax in Georgia is ten dollars, and the editor of the Memphis Avalauclie gives the report credit. After fishing the Chattahooche river for a whole day, recently’, for'a negro boy who was supposed to have been drowned, he Caine to life. He hod merely run away from bis em ployer. r lho average African is a hard case. Col. John Lindsay of Gridin, takes Confederate money at par. A lady in Morgan county superin tended a plantation last season and made, with two hands, twenty-two hales of cotton, eight hundred bushels of corn, ten thorisand pounds of fod der, two hundred'bushels of oats, and one hundred bushels of wheat. Partridges bring fifty cents each in Augusta. James Jackson, of Banks county, died on the 20ih of November last, nt the greatly advanced ago of 115 years. Ho was a native of Virginia. The Athens Watchman says that “lie was an honest man—always paid his debts—was an old-line whig, and never took a doso of medicine in his life, even eschewing “ doctor’s stuff” in his last illness. lie left a wife, aged 110, and several children. The State Hoad lessees have paid their monthly rental for January. The seventy-first gin-house de stroyed by fire since the 30tli of last September is that of Mr. Jar. A. Ed wards, of Elbert county. Savannah claims the champion blacksmith. He puts twenty-five shoes on sixteen horses in forty-five minutes. The Macon Memorial Society has SI,OOO in hand to erect a monument to the Confederate dead of Bibb comity. A fiue buck, pursued by dogs, ran through the principrd streets and two houses of Cave Springs, and could only be captured by the dogs nearly drowning him in a creek. An old negro, nearly one hundred years old, who claimed ho was the second Jesus, died lately in Coving ton. A letter to the Macon Telegraph reports the bursting of the balloon of Wooten & Andrews’ Menagerie, at Tootuhsboro*, alter it had ascended about one hundred feet. The colored balloonist was picked up insensible, but not fatally hurt. A negro woman in Elberton was committed to jail tbo other dsy, on a charge of administering a dose of etryuhnino in a glass of whiskey to another colored woman, killing heriu a few minutes. Columbus is now getting cotton which formerly went to Griffin, I,a Grange and Newnan. Farmers as sign as a reason that the Columbus market is highest. The Indian Springs Echo says there is a mania in Butts county against guano and oolton; also, that at a sale lately mules and horses sold at an average of fifty dollars each. A man in Floyd county raised last year 530 bushels corn on eight and a half acres. Cue acre produced 80 bushels. The Star reports that the court* home at Griffin was acton fire by hot bricks used tor keeping the judge’s feet warm. James Cooper, o( Gordon county, was killed the other day by the com bined influence of mean whisky and a runaway horse. Some of the cotton stalks in the lower tier of counties in Georgia have not yet been killed. The Quitman In dependent reports the appearance of cotton blooms on some of them. Mr* Jss. Neal, Jr., of Flat Hiogls, Spalding County, dropped dead re cently while walking iu his garden. Several boys of Greensboro’, Ga., were recently fined $3 each for dis turbing religious worship cn the Sm day previous. An example ol that kind was needed. Matters in General. Xufttapving stations are to bf .laced at Cape’Henlopen, and at the niouih of the Chesapeake, and thence down to Ilalieras. They are to be finished this summer. . The temperature at the North for the fast few days gives promise of a fair ice crop. A sharp shock_.of earthquake was felt at Farther Point, Canada, on the 1 st. It shook stoves and other move ables in the .houses. Two shucks were also felt the same day in Ili mouski, Canada. A negro boy in Chambers county, j Ala., was bitten by a ground-rattle- snake on the 22d of January. Memphis is excited over the abduc- j tion of a young lady of that city.; She had attended a ball with her sis ter and brother in-law, and they went home, leaving her in charge of a young man, who promised to see her home. She has not been beard of since. A couple were recently married at midnight in a Pennsylvania cemetery. The Duke of Cambridge, the com mander of the British army, was re cently assaulted by a retired army j officer, in London. The prisoner, I who is supposed to be of unsound mind, was, put in jail. A St. Paul dispatch states that twenty men engaged in chopping wood, near Fort Rice, Dakotah, were murdered by Sioux Indians lately. The Richmond Dispatch thinks President Grant has done more to sustain his motto, “Let us have peace,” in dropping Gov. Davis, of Texas, than he has by all his other measures combined. It is reported the Port Royal Rail road Company has contracted to ship twenty thousand bales of cotton to Europe for one party. A remarkable instance of mortality in a single family, took (dace lately near Binghamton, New York. On Sunday, Dectmber 28 last, Mr. and Mrs. Holiday celebrated the sixty fifth anniversary of their wedding at Downsville, Delaware county. At that time sixteen children of the fara- ily, of which Mr, Holiday was the eldest, were all living, and fourteen brothers and sisters of Mrs, Holiday were also in good health and present at tlie anniversary. Since then the entire number, thirty—all, in fact, ex cepting Mr. and Mrs. Holiday—have died. A negro ploughing on a plantation opposite Montgomery, Ala., fastened his loaded gun to the plow stock, so as to have it handy, and a jolt dis charged it, killing him quickly. Incendiaries attempted to burn the court houso at Glasgow, Kentucky, recently. A large pile of kindling wood on the floor was set on fire about midnight, but the flames were extinguished in time to save the building. There is a wild orange tree on Or ange Mound in Florida which is sup posed to have been bearing fruit for moro than a hundred years. In reply to a protest of Louisiana bondholders published in the New York papers against the funding scheme, Gov. Kellogg makes the statement that four millions of bonds, mostly held by the signers of this protest, were issued by his prede cessor to the Chattanooga Railroad without adequate consideration to tho State, and that two and a half mil lion of there bonds w ere issued in tit© night ami hurried out of the State on a special train, there being no rec ord of them in any office of the State. ! He claims that many holders of meri torious bonds have signified their uc-1 ceptance of the scheme. Virginia finances aro badly disor dered, and the State debt is quoted nt a low figure. General Kemper, tho new Governor of Virginia, has re cently been devoting a good deal of attention to this subject, and is re ported to be preparing a special mes sage to the Legislature, reeotumeud ing the funding of the debt into new bonds, based on the present market price. His plan is to have but one character of bonds, for which all the old ones are to be exchanged, on the basis of paying either six per cent, on the market value, w hich is assumed to be one half the par, or three per cent, on the preseut par value. There are in the United States eight hundred and sixty-four blast furnaces iu working condition, capa ble of an annual production of four million tons of pig iron. This is a greater quantity than the country can consume, and as the furnaces are all resuming operations, another glut in the iron maiket next fair is pre dicted. Last year twenty-four establish ments iu Kennebec and Knox coun ties, Maine, cut and housed 301,000 tons of ice, valued at $552,000. Samuel A. Adams was recently granted a divorce by a Vermont court on account of the “ intolerable severity of Sarah, his wife.” , A Bjiave Woman’s Fight with a BdKJt*R.-*te New York, recently, Mrs. Slmonsj of 101 east 12th street, heard footsteps in one of the bed rooms on the second floor. Being alone, Mrs. Simons armed herself with a poker and quetly entered the %ath-room. Seeing something mov ing in tiro dark, she attempted to take hold of it, and to her astonish ment discovered herself in the arms of a burgular. With remarkable presence of mind she dealt him a stunning blow with the poker, and the man fell at her feet. After pun ishing him severely she threw him bodily over the balusters. Then she fainted, but a few moments afterward her husband returned, and learning the facts reported the case to the po lice. The Albany News says: On the night of the 7th old mammy Mar garet died at J. L. Dozier’s place, iu this county. She was 110 years old, and had given birth to 26 chil dren. Her oldest son is still living and is 91, aud the yoffijgest, also alive, is 58. This is remarkable longevity, but the old man calls them all children. lie has reached his 120th year, and though blind, is sprightly and vigorous. This old la dy was quite active aud picked out two bales of cotton last fall. {3P~ , Snoiv to the depth of five inches was on the ground iu New York on the 3d. A Change.— Grant has- refused to send his bayonets to keep the Radi cal party in power, it having been de feated by 40,000 votes. Why has he refused ? Six months ago he would have protected Gov. Davis in his un surpation, with the whole force of the government. But the fall elec tions indicat ed a tremendious uprising on the people against Radicalism and Grant is afraid to order bis bayonets to the front, lie has'favored every swindling monopoly—every scheme of plundering the people—every com bination of capital against labor. The farmers have risen in their might and the rogues’ party is doomed. Texas owes her freedom from mili tary interference to the farmers of the West. On with the Granges! Down with the thieves! —Southern Home. ■si l l>l Webster on a 'Bridge. —We do not believe that so much benefit can be derived from the same amount of money in any other way as by pur chasing a Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary. Is a person at fault about the application of any particu lar word, or of the way it should be used, and its different meanings, ho has but to look in Ins Unabridged, and he will find examples of all. Every thing that can be illustrated by figures or diagrams is so illus trated, (by the 3000 illustrations.) It is a perfect eyelopedia, and we would advise any one who has no “ Webster on a bridge,” as Mrs. Partington has it, to do without an extra coat or dress and get one, — they will never regret it.— Hub, Ad vertiser. GET THE BEST. Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, 10,000 Wolds anti Meanings not in other Dictionaries. * 8000 engravings; 1840 pages quarto; price sl2 We commend it as a splendid specimen of learning, taste and labor. [Montgomery Ledger. 17* very scholar, and especially every miiiis -4 ter, should have this work. [Western Presbyterian, Louisville. Best book for everybody that the press bag produced iu the. present contury. [Golden Era. Superior, incomparably, to all others, in its definitions [B. W. McDonnold, Pres. Cumb. Univ’y. The reputation of this work is not con fined to America. [Richmond Whig. Every family In the United Slates should have this work. [Gallatin Rep T>epoettory of useful information; as such it stands without a rival , - [NuMiviUs Dispatch. A necessity for every intelligent family, student, teacher and professional man. What Library I* complete without the best English Dictionary ? ALSO Webster's National Pictorial Dictionary 1040 pages octavo; 600 engravings; price $5 . The work is rosily a gem of a Dictionary— just the tiling for- the million. [American Elueatiomtl Monthly. Published byG.JfcC Mkrbiam. Springfield, Mass; sol ) by nil booksellers. LOUDENBER & BRO., MANUFACTURERS. Wholesale and JRetail Dealers in CIGARS, Onr lloos Wxsr of "Sex" Heiuusa, Randolph St, COLUMBUS, GA. Cheapest pliu'o tn the city to sot your Cigar*. Country Merchant* should try our brand selling st $2.60 per hnnitred-the beet ever sold st that price; also the finest Havana Cigar*. very cheap. Cull on us if yon want bargains. -f*~ Country trade solicfUd. i Orders by moil will receive prompt attention janlSO-'iai ’medical noticeT All panics indebted to me for medical services will please call and settle Immediate ly. Notes and accounts on hand and un paid on the Ist day of February next, will be sued indiscriminately. If you would save cost and your fceiiugs. come and make Im mediate arrangement*. f-r I mean business. I am willing to work for those om.t who pnv me oooe a year. Turns CASH — OS BKMXttIXR MY SKRVICFS. T. S. MITUHEU, M. D. lUmiltn, Gs., Jan. 9, 1571 iru GRASD LOTTERY OP REAL ESTATE 1 TMeGrooJ?Sia lical Es'fite and- Imraigrali ui Company CFi Btt TUlf BimirWjVHß fOLLOWIXO SCUrAtt^ $123,000 OF REAL ESTATE IN GEORGIA i 640 Prizsos! WHOLE TICKETS ONLY SOLD ! CAPITAL PRIZE - - $25,000 I Tickets Thn Dollars Each ! ...... —,—., Ti-*eaiMw(l by State ttuthoiity, ml drawn in public in .V:u'U.,tji, Oa. - Class A to I* drawn on the 2,’lh At Ap >!, 1874. Oil? prizes, amounting in the aggregate to $120,000. Fir-t Arid Capital Prize—An Improved Lot in the cilv of Atlanta, situated at the corner of Lloyd’and Wall street-, within 00 feet of the Union P s-eneer Depot, 25 feet front, and ruamng back 110 feet to 20 feet alley; a new anti elegantly constructed four-etory building thereon ; basement a ore-rooms anti sleeping apartments, can be rented for S3OOO per annum ; valued at $25,000 Second Prize— A City Lit on west side of Spring et) eet, between Cain and Harris streets, iu A'boita, 1 renting 100 feet, ami running back 200 feet to an alley, wherpn is anew and e egmtly built Dwelling, containing 11 commodious mount besides bath-rooms, store rooms. etc., with wat r-works attached, hot and cold water pipes, and all necesso-y out buildings—oil- of the most desirable resi dences iu the South —valued at $20,000 Third Prize—A Farm in the far-famed Ce dar Valiev, Polk county Oa., 2 1-2 Kl'Tcs from Ccdaftown, containing 350 acres—half cleared, balance well timbered —abundu.t running Water, comfortable buildings, etc , valued at sl2 500 Fourth Prize—A Farm in Nocooohee Val ley, While corn y, Oa., of 250 acre-, well improved and iu a high state of cultivation, good dwelling, new and masonry outhouses, adjoining the new ali i magnificent posses sions of Oapt. .1 H Nich' ls, valued at SIO,OOO Fifth Prize—A Farm of 800 acres, situate twenty miles west of Macofl. iu Crawford county, Ga., in the foikof Big and Little Echacorma creeks—half cleared and in a good state ol cultivation, b.il nice heavily timbered with oak, hickory and beach —good dwelling, outhouses. e‘c., capital gin and cotton press, valued at. SB,OOO Sixth Piize—A Tract of Land of 25.a< res, situate in Richmond countv, Ga , one-lialf mile from the corpoiatc limits of Augusta, Ga., with all the improvements thereon, con sisting of an elegant frame dwelling with all the necessary out-buildings, in good order, etc., valued at SB,OOO Seventh Prize—A rcc ntly improved City Lot in Marietta, Ga , containing about two acres, with a ten-room dwelling ihereon in good repair, kitchen, servants 1 house, dairy, stables, etc., within 200 yards of the railroad depot, valued at $7,500 One Prize of $7,000 One Prize of 4,500 One Prize of 1,300 Three Prizes, each 1,100 TWO Prizes, tacit 000 One Prize of, 750 Six Prizes, each 550 BiX Pi izes, each 475 S'X l’riz s, each 480 Six Prizes, each 300 S'X hundred Approximate u Prizes..., 6,000 040 Prizes, amounting in the aggiegate to, $120,000 MODE OF DRAWING. There will bo u; on the stage two glass wheels, the contents of which can be seen by all the sp- ctators. A committee of two citi zens. in no way connected witli the manage ment, and of undoubted integrity, having first comped and examined, will place in the larger wheel 12 600 tickets, exactly alike, and having printed numbers from 1 to 12,000, corresponding to all the tickets sold. A sim ilar committee, having first counted an I ex amined, will place in tub- a precisely alike the prizes, which arc placed in the smaller wheel. Both wheels will then-he turned un til tin ir contents arc tlu r nghly mixed. A boy under fifteen ye ns blindfolded, will then draw from the larger wheel one of the 12,000 tickets, and holding it up in full view of the spectators and auditors, its numlH;r will he called by the crier appointed for this purpo-c, so that alt present may hear 'i he number will then be passed to the committee of citi zens, who will say whetlrcr the number has been rightly called. It will then be pas-ed to a register, who will file it, and record it upon a hook prepared for that purpose. A boy of similar age will then draw"fiom the smaller wheel one of the tubes containing a prize, which will be opened and held up to the view of the spectators and auditors. The value of the real estate prize will then Ire cricl and pissed to the committ- e, who, after inspcciion will give it to another register to file and record, lire prize thus drawn will belong to the ticket hearing the nmnbet drawn immediately before it. Thus this pro ce-8 will continue, drawing first froth the large wheel containing the tickets, and then from the small of prize wheel, until all the tubed containing tho prizes are drawn. An accurate record of the above will ire kept on file, certified to by the committee of disinter ested citizens officiating The prizes below three hundred dollars in value are approximations, and will he deter mined and ]>aid as follows: The numbers of all the tickets sold being considered In a cir e'e, numerically formed, end having the highest number, 12,000, and the lowest, 1, brought together, then whatever number in tliis circle may lie by lot determined to be entitled to the capital prize of $25,000. will lie taken as a centre, on each side of which the next three hundred numbers iu numeri cal order will lie counted for the ten dollar prizes, thus making on the two sides of the capital the six hundred nearest numbers, each of which will be entitled to a real estate prize of ten dollars. All the tickets drawing iarger prizes will be exdndod, aud the circle extended to include six hundred on both sides of the capital—being three hundred on each side —it being the purpose of the management not to duplicate prizes. Mokzy—All money received from sales of tickets will tie deposited hi bank immediately ou receipt ofTomiitanccs. Tuansikr or Titles—Within ten days after the drawing, parties putting real estate upon the market under this scheme are required to make good, valid and unencumbered titles thereto to the Georgia Real Estate and Im migration Company—avid Company obligat ing themselves to transfer such title in fee simple to the party or partic- who may draw sueh prizes of real estate. Tl kets can l* had on application, person ally or by letter, to authorized agents, the managers, or JAS. GARDNER, Fres't Ua. R. E. and I Cos , Atlrota or Augusta, (la. Corporators—Hon Willi-m Schley. Savan nah, Git.; Robert Schley, Esq., Augusta, (la.; Col. James Gardner, Augusta, Ga. Minogers—A. M. Wallace, Atlanta; H. L. Wilson, Atlanta; J. D. Waddell, Atlanta. Parties desiiing to d : spoe of their real es tate through the Georgia Real Estate and Immigration Company in their next Grand Lottery, to lie drawn on July 1,1874, can do oo by* addressing JAS GARDNER, Pros’t Ga. R. K. and I. Cos., Atlanta or Augusta, Ga. W A Liyinostox, Agent, Hamilton. Ga. Agents wsnti-d in every county. fublStd DEATH-BED OF GEN. LEE. A magnificent 11x18 inch Engraving. The family and friends are grouped sorrowfully aronmf the old hero's dentli-lvd. The scene is so touchingly beautiful, the sentiment of the picture is so sweet, and the character*so so lifelike, that everybody admires it. It is truly a gem of art—one which should hang in every Southern home. Seat by mail, post paid, on receipt of 20c, or 3 for 50c. Address W. M. Ben row, 200 Main -t. Bristol, Tenn. /.O' Agents wanted for this and variety of other fin.- engravings. Fiom $3 to SlO a day ca- e sly Is. me t. i'eblO It WILL HOT fii UNDERSOLD. Saddles, Harness, Bridles, Collars, Whips, Trunks, Satchels, Wagon and Plow Bridles, Homes, Back-bands, Trace chains , And all other goods in my line for sale as low as rtri: u>wssr. Ati'of my goods are hunfl mde—made at home—and satisfaction guaranteed. Hepatßlxo done cheap and pood. Will make any kind of New Work to order. I positively will not be Undersold by ahv house, and will give time to fprumpt customers. W. R. KENT, 102 Broad street, Columbus, Ga. J AN. PEASE & NORMAN, COLUMBUS, OA,, WHOLESALE aEd RETAIL DEALERS IE @m©ASJS s gsnsui? iPHOiFfcaaißS* <m? Rosewood seven octave Pianos from S3OO to SSOO. Geo. Woods & Co j( Mason & H*mlin, and other Organs. Yioiins, Guitars, Flutes, Banjos, mouth harpy, sheet music, etc. We make orders for sheet music and music books every few days, and anything wanted and not in stock, will be ordered and furnished at publisher’s prices. nov7-ly BARGAINS! BARGAINS! MILLINERY HD FHCY DRY [GOODS IT PAXIC PRICESf ; MRS. Li B H IS NOW OFFERING HER ENTIRE STOCK OF Ass© muj (s&siHa ah .jpassji® Iran®ms 8 The ladies are respectfully invited to call and judge for themselves. All good* must be paid for on delivery. [Columbus Ga., Nov. 21st—3m W. J. CHAFFIN, BOOBLSELXiEri tfc STATIONER., AND DEALER IN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, 6HROMOS, FRAMES AN© SSQULMNGS, NO, 92 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. A- WITTICH- C- X- KINSEXw WITTICH & KINSEL, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS, JIWILIRS MB BNfßlfllS, NO. 67 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. -lillllk sirmraß watches, 0 'oWmk siiaV.K& clocks, -mAiMm V •-SfpPr, IPIAKE® JEWELRY, "‘stSlfei WAKE. -Ait of tire Latest Manufaotux*e. An entirely new stock of the best goods and the latest styles has been recently bought in New York, and is hereby offered at the Lowest Cash Pricks. Diamonds, gold and silver Spectacles and Eve-Glasses, 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 Store. Stencil Plates of every description cut at short notice. Sole Agents for the celebrated Diamond Pebbled Spectacles and Eve-glasses, and Agents for the Arundel Pebble Specks which are slightly colored, and in high favor with every body using specks or eye-classes. Watch, Clock and Jewelry repairing in ail its branches. Hair Jewelry, Society Badge* , Diamond setting, or any new work made to order at reasonable charges. 1&8- Engraving promply executed. oct24-ly FALL AND WINTER GOODS. lava. 187a. CHAPMAN & VERSTILLE Announce to their friends and patrons that their stock will be kept con stantly replenished with Seasonable Goods at Lowest Market Prices. /EW* Will receive in payment Eagle & Phenix money and Cotton at highest maiket ratoe. E. E. TONGB, Dealer in HATS, CAPS, UMBRELLAS, <fcc., At the Old Stand of F. London , NO. 91 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, Has offhand a complete and select stock, suited to both city and country trade. octl7-3m WILLIAMS, PEARCE & HODO, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Grocers and IsiOLuor Dealers. Fo. 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., which 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 onr friends and the pnblic to call and examine our stock and prices before baying elsewhere, as we are determined not to be undersdfe. Goods delivered free of drayage in the city and depots. oct3-3in