Newspaper Page Text
£atohimrt)Hlc gispatrb.
~By George P* Wood#.
HAWKINSVILLE, GA . JtXV 20, 1871
laenffters of the Second Hnp
tint Church, at Atlanta, lmvo chosen
R»-r. Wm. I). Thomas, of Greenville,
hi. C., successor to l'r. Brantley,
who poos to H»l«irnorp tin* Ist of Sep
tember.
♦ ►
Pr. s4ciiiiier, pastor of the Colum-
Ibus'Raptist Church, will resign that
'Charge at the oml of this month.
Hon. Jefferson Davis, ex-President
of the late Confederate States. passed
through Lynchburg on tin- 13th m*t.,
en rrfttie to’4Vashingt«l*n'l ity.
-
'Wiiliam Oxford was tried last Fri
dlavfor murder,'tv Washington conn
tj and the verdict was involuntary
manslaughter in the commission of
an untowtul act. He was sentenced
Ito*three years in the lamitentiarv.
A young man named Irby was
killed at Buckhead in Morgan coun
ty, last week, ‘by a ear|»eiiter who
was engaged in building a house foi
.his ifather.
Col. Thomas H Huger, of the
Eighteenth Federal Infantry, who
was at one time Provisional Cover,
nor of Georgia, umler an appoint
miont of General Meade, has been as
signed to the command of the West
.Point Militant Academy.
Shingles \\ anted. —The building
ft'ommiktee'for the State I'air want
Shingles at the earliest day
tpoeaible, for which the highest mar
ket rates wlll he paid.
Macon ’Money— We -sse a pnra
•graph in the Sumter Republican,
stating that Macon City Council
money is not current in Atnerieus,
nud that brokers discount it. Such
Hunot the case in Hawkinsville. It
ns on a,par -with greenbacks, and in
-Home instaneeswe prefer it.. D\ir peo*
•pie have implicit confidence in Macon'o
Ability to pay all her indebtedness.
•From Irwinvill. — A letter from
Judge Wlloy Whitley informs us that
r'bey are having dry weal her in that
sweetion, but nevertheless crops look
swell and there are prosj>ects for n
T hou»tiful supi>ort and some to spare.
And we will add, also, that we never
Ik new the time when Irwin crunty did
mot have plenty to eat and something
*to spare. "Whenever Iher citizens
•come to trade with our merchants
tthey bring the ** wherewithal’' to
fork over for any and nil purchases
made, lienee their custom is pre
ferable to many others.
Fort Valley and Perry Rail
road.—Wc understand that all the
preliminary arrangements have heen
made for the immediate construction
©fa <r*ftaen<J from Fort Valley to Per
ry, a distance of twelve miles. The
Central Railroad has the matter in
hand and has promised to complete
It in time to transport the present
growing crop It will run through
one of the most fertile countries in
habited by the most solid men in
Georgia. They ought to have had a
railroad long ago, hut having grown
rich and careless they don't care much
about such things.-- Trlffjrnpfl.
Cotton Fiovrer. —The press dis
patches report total receipts up to
Friday night last 3,945.8.t£, against
2,854,081 —showing 1,01*1,751 ex
cess. Total exports for the same
time, 3,076 042. against 2,147.187 up
to the same time last year, showing
228,855 excess, or within 72,896 of
the entire crop excess. The exports
of the past week were exceedingly
small—l>eing only 7,093 against 10.-
623 for the corresponding week last
year. Stock at the interior towns —
at all the American ports, cotton
afloat and stock in Liverpool foot up
1,445,988 hales, against 1,291,432
tales at the same date last year,
showing an excess of 153,506 hales.
Horace (Jreely has licen accused
of having spoken eulogistieally of
General I>ec during his bite South
ern tour. At a public meeting in
New York. Henry Ward Beecher
lauded the personal character of Lee
in very high terms. Mrs. Kcckly.
the colored servant of President Lin
coln’s family w ho wrote a l»ook alnnit
her life at the White House, says in
this book that on the very morning
of the assassination Mr. Lincoln took
up a portrait of General Lee, scanned
the face thoughtfully, and remarked :
“It U a good face; it is the faro
of a noble, brave man ; 1 am triad the
war teorer at last."
A negro man was killed by
ning laat week in Houston county.
Hawkinsville as a Railroad
centre.
If all the railroads projected to and
from Hawkinsville were completed
(and they may he at no distant day)
our little town would enjoy advan
tages Iseconed to none in the State.
W.- believe that in time eompetithm
1 will force the building of certain
lines ol railway that are now little
t, bought of. *lt is already publicly
known that the Kufaula and Mont
nery Railroad has been purchased
! by' the stock holders of the Macon
and Brunswick, which road is com
pelled to have a connecting line with
tlic great West. This purchase
cannot he made available to any ex
tent without tl»e building of other
roads, which w ill certainly he accom
plished. The people along the route
from this point to Atnerieus nr<* ear
neatly interested in the proposed
Hawkinsville and Americus Railroad
and are willing to take stock in pro
potion to their ability. They need
co-operation from other sources,
which, when obtained, will ensure a
speedy completion of the road, la
rious meetings have been held in
Dooly and Sumter Counties to as
ccrtiau the wishes of the people, but the
financial etnb .rrassincuts of the coun
try have retarded further progress.
We may look for more energetic and
decisive measures before the close of
the year.
Col. George 11. Ilazlehurst, Presi
dent of the Macon and Brunswick,
was in town one day last week and
by appointment was met here with
private conveyance by Ndh. dolin'
\\. Woodward, of Dooly, and the
two gen lemcn procee led on their
way to look out the best and most
feasible route for a road. Such, wc
understood, was their object, and wc
do not hesitate in giving it the con
firmation of our own opinion.
A torsta to Aup ny. We clip the
following f mn the Augusta Chroicle
Si Sentinel, of the 7th :
“If the road from Pollard to Al
bany shall he constructed, about)
which 'here appears now to he little
doubt. Augusta must have a road
to Albany. Such a road would bring
to this city over one hundred tlioiii
aud hales of cotton annually, and
would make Augusta the great grain
and provison depot for all Southern
and Southwestern Georgia and South
Alabama. Such a connection would
double our trade, and give such an
impetus to business as would astonish
the mossy back old fogies who are
croaking against new enterprises.”
With all oni heart, Brother Wright,
we on brace the idea, and "ill help to
move the elements for a line from Al
bany via Hawkinsville, Davishoro
and Bonny Doon to Augusta.
Colonel Tift will build his road to
to Pollard a- sure as the sun shines,
and this link will he a necessity.—
Allow>J AVics.
Sui>i*en Death.— Mr. Joint R.
King, and «d<l ami proiuiuont planter
of Houston county, died very sud.
deni) on Thursday night last soon
after going to bed. 11** had been in
Perry during the day. and had re
marked that lu* was feeling better
than he hid felt tor a long while.
Soon alter he and his wife had laid
dowu, his wife felt him make a (>*•-
elllinr struggle or tremble iu laid,
and spoke to him, hut receiving no
reply, she laid her hand upon him
and discovered that lu* was dead.
. He was known as a most upright
and worthy man and has Wen sell
ing his cotton crop in this market
for inanv years, lie was sixty-live
]or six \ cars of age.— l\'li’<jrn.
Jkfe Long, — A Northern corres
pondent, w ho leceutly interviewed the
1 colored Congressman, Jeff Long, has
! this:
Passing and -wn a streeet iu Macon
a sign informs you that Jeff Kong
keeps a grocery store. Jeff is a col
ored man, who represented th s Con
gressional district at Washington dur
ing the forty-first Congress. He
j made a bitter speech in favor of the
' Ku-klux bill, but he says now that he
“ aint never seen no Ku-klux.” Jefl
savs he lived economically in Wash
-1 ington and saved his salary as a Con
■ gressman. That enabled him to
i ojHMi a store with apparently $3,000
worth of stock in it. and he is doing
well. The coh»red people mostly
deal with him, nnd as their trade is all
cash it the is safest kind of a business
Jeff was formerly a tailor. l»ut got
tired of that business. He serves his
customers in court dress—ns hiny hat
faultless white shirt, Nilsson liccktu
and white Marseilles vest.
General Beauregard will s|r-ihl
a few weeks at the White Spring?
in Virginia, with his family.
Rev. Rotart Elliott, son of Biiho|
Klliott. ha*- Wen called t<> the pa**-
torat- of St Phillip'- Kpi-c*ip:d
<'liui<-li. Atlanta.
I’fjtfc'lrlA Klol In New York
| The New York papers of 'Thurs
day contain vivid and interesting de
scri | itions ot the terrible riot in that city
on Wednesday, the day celebrated by
an Irish religiousdenocninationknown
as the Orangemen. The Hiliernians
or Roman Catholics, being opposed
to any such a creed, which openly in
sulted them in various ways, emleav
to prevent a procession, and in eon*
sequence was enacted one of tfhese
bloody scenes characteristic of Pa
risian frenzy and mob law. The fol
lowing arc a few of the!particulars of
this bloody drama:
The situation at the crossing of
Twenty-fourth street, where the wri.
ter stood, was terrible. Before the
eyes of all, there lay eleven pros
trate bodies. Two ot three were
piled together as they had fallen. A
dead woman was stretched across a
dead man. A man with a fearful
wound in the head, which covered
his face with blood, writhed in ago
uv for some moments, and then slow
ly crept to the doorstep, and feebly
strove to raise himself upon it, pre
senting, as lie did so, % full view of
his ghastly injuries. An aged work
ingmaii, evidently an Irishman, had
received a shot in the arm and sat
down upon the step, and desjH*r
'itlely faced the troops, in the midst
of tiie firing, while holding his bleed
ing arm extended before him.
NJlillT SCENES AT THE HOSPITAL.
The scenes around Bellevue Hos
pital late last night were heartrend
ing in the extreme. Crowds of tear
ful, anxious women ami sobbing
children thronged the streets iu front
of the main entrance, as the ainbu--
lance arrived and deposited its gliast-
Iv burden, the wailing and lamenta
tion of the suffering ones were pite
ohs The dead were in unfit condi
tion to expose to the gaze of friends.
They lay in the streets, with blood
stained faces and dust-grimed gar
ments. and the sight was sicken
ing. Tliir y-two lay side by side
in the starlight, in the rear of the
morgue.
A GIRL VICTIM.
The body of Mary Ann York, ten
vear< of age, was stretched upon the
centre of the floor. An ugly bullet
wound was iu the hack of the head,
but did not mar the face Her feat
ures were in repose, and seemed light
ed with happy gleams. She had just
come from her home, at No. 224
We.it Kighte.eiitli street to see the.
soldiers march by, little dreaming
of the awful result. While gazing
with delighted eyes upon the page
ant, the crash of the volley Caine, and
jtffoiv the horror-_u£ the tragedy
could transfix her TTOiitcnance, she)
sank down in death. She seemed
asleep and dreaming sweetly. The
agoiit of her father, who came in
and recognized the body as these*
linefi were written, was terrible to'
witness.
\ 'WOMAN BUTCHKUEI).
Next to her is the hody of the wo
man referred to nlnivc, about thirty
vears ot age. She was of a short,
plump figure, an oval face, plain fen
t-mv*. long dark hair and blue eyes.
Slu* was dresse«l ill a plain calico
suit, with black gaiters. A musket
shot had gone completely through
her head, from temple to temple, and
through tin* broken skull the brains
oozed out and mingled with the lake
of gore upon the stones Wnath. .She
| w;ii shut twice through the hands
| and through the ahdemon. She must
i have died with a single gasp, for the
* head was throw n hack and the lips
j scarce!) parted. No one had identi-
I fied her.
) Priests now appenred upon the
\ ground, seeking to perform the last
i office for some past praying for, and
(lie groups of relatives, children and
! brothers, with disordered hair and
: dress, and tears and imprecations
j blended, stooped over the Irodies aud
added to the hideousness of the re
sult.
Among the other victims were a
voting man, apparently a laborer,
who lay near by. He was al»out 35
vears of age. was dressed in black
pantaloons, dark, linen coat, plaid un
dershirt and calf boots. He had black
haircut closely.and a black moustache,
lie was killed by a shot in the back.
An unknown m m. about 25 years of
age lay next. He was dressed in
li<lht pantaloons, dark coat and calf
boots. His face was smooth and his
hair dark. Two bullet wounds in
the head had Wen the cause of death.
An unknown man. about 28 years of
age; had black hair, without whis
kers. and was dressed in black coat,
light vest, white shirt, red undershirt,
and black pantaloons. He had re
' reived three shirts in the back of the
! head. An unknown man. about 45
vears of ago. with heavy black whis
kers around tin* chin and neck ; was
' shot in the nipple. An unkown man,
1 about 35 years of age appraentlty a
lataror, was dressed in a black suit,
had sand) whiskers and hair; he had
' In-en shot four times in the neck.
An unknown man, about 30 years of
nge, very handsome, with fair, almost
womanly complexion, with rosy
* checks, lay w ith hi* hands u|x>n his
? : breast aa though in sleep. He was
j about six ft-et iu height, had black
I hair, neatly arranged with a side part
t j and nicely waxed moustache. He
was dressed in a pair of light panta
|.mhi« with stripes. inix(*d vest, black
, coat. He wa> shot in the heart.
The list nftlte dead foot up various
!\ from forty--five to fifty-lHc, and the
n»iin<l'il l i'Mii on* hundred and eight
to one hundred and fifty, of whom
some ten or fifteen it is believed were
mortally hurt. ‘lt is impossible,how
ever, to asertain fully how tau'ny
persons were “wounded, as many of
the injured got themselves away from
the scene of the trouble to their
homes without the aid of tlu authori
ties. i
[From the Houston Home Journal.
A Trip lo JHon gomrrj 4 oimi). 1
Sfa. Editor.—l have just returned
from a tour into South eastern Geor
gia. I went by Macon and Bruns
wick railroad to Lflmber City—about
ninety miles distance—and here I
saw the gl6omiest prospect fur a sup
port’that I have'ever seen Some
'small farms on the route look as
though'they would do something, but
I think the average would be one
bushel of corn and less than one huu
dred pounds of cotton to the acre.
I left the rail road at Lumber C ily 1
going eastward towards Hell’s or
Mobley’s Ferry on the Oconee river.
The first few miles are a deep sandy,
barren country, reminding one of star
vation, and if I had been land limit
ing I should have here turned hack in
disgust, but I went into Montgome y
county, near tbe junction of the Oco
nee and Ocmulgee rivers. On sonic
wet land in that county there w ill be
a crop failure, but there I saw the
best crops I have seen this year of
corn, cotton and cane.
There they have lands of all grades,
some of which will produce twenty
five to thirty’bushels of corn per acre,
or a thousand pounds of cotton with
out fertilizers. There are blit lew
large planters in that count)', as the
best land is in small bodies; hence it
is a good county fora poor man to
purchase a good home as cheap as
he would pay for a year’s rent for one
in this section.
It is skid to be remarkably healthy,
but the soil seems not'to be adapted to'
Radicalism, as there never Inis been a
Radical vote polled in the county.
Crops In l lorldii.
From the Floridian of Wednesday
we qnote the following crop report
of that State :
Wc can say very little good of the
growing crops. On some plantations
cotton is looking fair, while on oth
ers it is grassy and unpromising.
The rains have been so heavy and
continuous as to demand a heavy*
struggle with grass. We heard a
gentleman remark last week that he
had rarely seen so little fruit on cot
ton as now. This is partic hilly t rue
as to late cotton, but the earlier gives
more promise. There is no doubt
as compared with last year that the
depreciation is at least 25 per cent,
if not more. Oln the flat lands eve
rywhere in tHe KltitC,‘t'lK eod is well
nigh flrownerl out. Nor is the corn
crop promising. On the higher lands,
where it has been well worked, the c
'*•>!! tie fully an average yield: hut
where there-has been a failure to work
it, very li'.Ve will he made A far-,
riier from Micco^ftktc* informs us that,
on the line of the road from that
neighborhood to Thomasville tlierti
are hundreds of acres which will not
yield half a bushel to the acre.
Grass is to lie seen everywhere, the
stalks spirdling and burned to the
very tassels. There is a great deal ol
“come out” in cotton, but none for
corn after this time of year. What
is not made now is beyond recov
ery.
Negro Ktikliix In North enroll
mi.
Wilmington, July 11.— A fearful
butchery was perpetrated ii*i K«Mieson
county yesterday afternoon, by Hen
ry Berry, Dowry and Bard—negro
outlaws. A Sheriff's posse having
in charge Lowry's wife and several
others who had lieen adding and
allotting the outlaws, were ambusca
ded near Buis’ store, on the Wil
mington, Charlotte and Rutherford
Railroad. The following of the Sher
iffs’ posse were killed and wounded :
Killed, Hflctor McMilien, Archibald
Brown and Hector McNeill. Woun
ded : D. McCormick, Berry Barnes,
and James Lowry—the latter a col
ored man and cousin of the outlaw
Lowry, but co-operating with the
Sheriffs posse. The fight resolved
itself into a regular battle, which last
ed some time. The “Sheriff's posse
fought well, even following the out
laws into the recesses of a swamp,
but it is not certainly known that
any of the outlaws were killed.—
Lowry, the leader of the outlaws, and
Captain F. M. Wishart, had a regu
lar duel on the railroad track, each
loading and firing deliberately five or
six times, but neither was wounded.
The whole county of Robeson is at
last fully aroused, and it is believed
a company is now being inaugurated
that will result iu the extermination
of the outlaws. A committee of cit
izens of Robeson county came to this
city to-day to secure arms and ammu
nition. Every member of the Low
ry tand is a negro.
Gen. Jos. Johnston. —(teorge Al
fred Townsend recently asked a body
of regular officers at Angle Island
who they thought was the ablest Con
federate General. The answer was:
Joe. Johnston. Joe. cleaned his re
treat up the |>eninsula tafore McClel
lan as sraootiie as a threshing floor.
He didn't leave a meal of victuals or an
old pair of shoes. lie amused Sher
man around Atlanta one hundred
days with feints at an offensive move
ment w hen hcTiardly commanded an es.
fective |K>orhouse. Joe. Johnston
was a!wsrs a clear soldier of pre
science and nice strategy and dexteri
ty.
Latest News by Telegraph.
MIBBORURI.
St. Louie, July 15.— The Fort
.Smith, Arkans.s Era. of July 3d,
learns from Deputy U. T. Marshals
McLemore and Baer that Satanta
and Bigtree, two Kiowa chiefs cap-l
tured at Fort Sill when Gen. SJier-
Ynn 1 !’. \vao there, and **eiit to Austin,
Texas, attempted to escape from, pris
on and actually released themselves
from shackles by gnawing the flesh *
from their hands and feet, hut were'
discovered and shot dead. Marshals.
McLemore and Baer report the peo
ple of lliP Texas frontier very un
easy, lest there should la* a general
outbreak of the reserve Indians in
the settlement to take vengeance.
XISSISSIITI.
Jackson. July 15. —The United'
States Marshal returned from east
Mississippi with four white men
charged with whipping a colored
man. The prisoners are represented
as being ot the most respectable cit
izens. A trial will probably he held
next week.
ALABAMA.
Mobile, July 15.— Iii the case of
Braxton Bragg. Jr., for killing Madi
son Wilson, it was ordered by Court
that defendant give personal reeogni
zati -e in tin* sum of $2.50b, to Hp|iear at
the next term of the City Court.
No investigation into the merits of
the case was had.
WASHINGTON.
Washington, July 15.’.. Akerman
instructs District Attorneys to make
extraordiuay exertion in the execu
tion of the Kti-Klux bill. Whenever
they hear of outrages they shall pro
cure warrants from the Federal com
mander, arrest the parties accused,
and have them bound over or com
mitted. until the ensuing term of the
Federal court.
Virgil S. Lusk has been appointed
special assistant District Attorney to
|hikli the harsh features of the law in
North Carolina. Federal troops are
placed at his command.
Washington, July 15., An ex-.
Confederate captain named l alliafer
ro. planting mar .Macon. Miss., testi
fied that fifteen colored persons were
killed and many whipped in that vi
cinity within the past year, that
there is an organized hand of Ku-
Klux in that county. Talliaferro at
tended several of ils , fbec , ! ,: iigs, though
never t«'»•'>k the'rcqhfred oath,the sujs
position of those present being that
he was initiated by tlu* captain of
the band, who can swear in a mem
ber. His friends and neighbors all
belong to the hand. Talliaferro gave
the committee details of the organi
tion, signs, grips, etc. He once went
oil a raid with the baud, and was
present when se.veral negroes were
whipped. Their object was to obtain
entire control of the negroes and
make tln m vote ns their leaders wish.
No prosecution has been or could be
instituted in that count)-, as no one
dare prosecute. Talliaferro was wit
i ness before tin* graml jurv at Oxford,
il Mi is.*, and ' ii his testimony several
members of the Ku-Klux were iu
i dieted.
1 IMR-Tf*
I’arirJiilv 16.—A great (ire was oeea
sinned at Khcims to-day by Ilie'eXpTo
sion of a quantity of |>etroloum. Fifty
persons were killed ami wounded by
the explosion, and many buildings in
the business portion of the city were
burned.
Paris, July 17.—TheOllieial Jour
nal states that the explosion in the
works of St. Maine was accidental,
and there were six persons killed and
thirty wounded.
Singular Freak or the Storm
King.— The storm which passed over
\ Augusta on Monday afternoon played
wild antics on a gentleman’s plauta
till i:i Beach Lshu.d. South Carolina.
Two adjoining fields, each containing
one hundred acres, surround and by a
high, strong, and perfectly new rail
fence, were planted One in corn the
other in cotton, both of which were
in splendid ord r and growing finely.
A perfect hurricane, accompanied by
a deluge of rain and hail, swept, over
these two fields, leaving the sur
rounding country literally untouched.
The corn was completely riddled by
hail, the fodder being rendered unfit
for pulling, and the cotton battered
and heat down in such a manner that
the owner is afraid it is ruined past
redemption. The fencing which was
as substantial as rail fences can be
made, was prostrated to the ground
while a large hickory tree, w hich had
stood in the field for many years, was
torn up by the roots. Several other
trees were blown down, and the area pre
sents by the appearanceof having been
swept a besom of destruction. Not
a drop of rain fell in the neighbor
hood.— (.'onstituiion aliist.
Tlu s WytheviUc (Va.) Dispatch re
lates the following:
Not far from us a young lady at
tempted to leave the paternal man
sion, at dead of night, by lowering
herself from her chamber by meaus
of a pully and ro|>e fastened to the
window. Hie had just reached the
ground, where her lover awaited her.
when the enraged sire appeared, seized
the young man, fastened the hook to
his clothing, and raised him skyward
, leaving him dangling in the air until
morning. The elopement is post
pond indefinitely
t Live Ciiurcii. —The Baptists
of Kufaula, after eonpleting one of
I the hsndsomesi churches in Ala
bama, last week raised sll**o to
I fresco it.
iftfr -ADVERTISEMENT*
Note Lost.
Lost, sometime in April Inst .. v .
Seventy Dollars and a Half 0
undei&ned by Allen King'in',
of Marsh. All persons are lon u- DUI
from trading for said note, and the
is hereby notified to make |*v„, ent
other person than the original holder , r.c
note. This July 18, 1871 ,f li *
JESSE HAIUtFIr
july2o-lm # KtLL -
Pocket-Bbok LostT
I*pßt, on Monday Inst somewhere win,
the limits of town, a Pockei-Buok con -
ing $1.65 cash and a note on Arthur
man tor Twenty dollars 1 will navasnit.i!
reward lor the recovery 6f' the ‘book
contents.
DOW I.OG'AX
july2o-tf. **'-h*Alv
Turnip Seed.
ISTew Or op, 167].
RUT A BAG A,
FLAT DUTCH,
RED Top
WHITE GLOBE,
COW HORN,
YELLOW GLOBE,
ENGLISH NOLFOLfc
•' COUNTRY,
Also Cabbage Seed, and all others Ibt
Fall planting are wart anted as represented
J. A THOMPSON
jul.v-O-tf Druggist
The Htkp.
SIMMOKStete
■ J.IO. I*l V r 11 luneasincss,
Sometimes the pain is in theshouf
«’er, and is mistaken for rheumatism. The
stomach is affected w ith loss of appetite and
sickness, bowels in general costive some,
’iincs alternating with lax. The he»d
troubled will
LIVER ErilS
m^mm Jeonsiderahlc |o«
of memory, accompanied with painful sen
salion of having left undone something
which ought to have been done. Oftn
complaining of weakness, debility and low
spirits. Sometimes many of the aWr
symptoms attend the disease, and at other
times very few of them; but the liver is
generally the organ most involved. Can
the liver with
DB. SIMMONS'
Liver Regulator,
A preparation of roots and herbs, war
ranted to be strictly vegetable, and can do
no injury to any one. It has been used hr
hundreds, and known for the last fortj
years as one of the most reliable, etfiraciow
and harmless preparations ever offered H
the suffering. If taken regularly and pet
sistently, it is sure to cure.
Dvspepsii
H e nd-arli*.
REGULATOR ■tivein-ss, sii J
bead a rh*
chronic dinr
«(fn:
tines of the kidneys, fever, nervousnw
••bills diseases of the skin, iinpuritv of th
bb*od, melancholy, or depression of spirit
heartburn, colic, or pains in. the howuli
pain in the head, fever and ague, drepot
boils, pain in the back, &<•.
Prepared only by
X R ZBILITM Al CO.
Druggists, Macon, tin.
Price. *l ; by mail f 1.25.
I lie following liighlv respectable prrsiw
mi fully attest to the virtues of this vain
bb- medicine, and to whom we most t
sped fully refer:
Gen \V S Holt, President S W R It (V
!>'■' J K Felder, Perry, Ga; Colonel EI
Sparks, Albany, Mastcrson, Es
Sli-nff Bibb county ; .1 A Biitts, Bainbrid:'
Ga ; Dykes & Sparhawk, editors Florida:
Tallahassee; Rev J \V Burke, Macon, 0»
Virgil Powers, Esq, Hup’t SW It It; H<
Alexander II Stephens, Bishop Pierce, (k
John B Gordon, David Wills, I) I), C.re
ville Wood, Wood’s Factory, Macon, C>
Itcv F, F Kasterlimr, P E Florida Conf'
ejiee. Major A F Wooley, Kingston, G
Editor Macon Telegraph, and others.
For sale by J. A. THOMPSON,
Hawkinsville, Ga.,
And all Druggists throughout the Solid
jnly2(My
Bacon ! Baconj
>l— , —•
10,000 tbs. Bacon for Sal
*
—AT
DYCHE’S.
Cheap for Cash
ALSO —
A good variety of Coffee, Sugar, FI 1 ’* 1
Lard, etc., all of which I offer at very P
rates. J. H. DYOITES,
julvtl-tf Hawkinsville,
GEORGIA—Irwin County.
Whereas, Jacob Whitley. Sen., ha?*
plied for the guardianship of the pen**
and property of Mary and Margaret F»
vis. minors of Jacob Purvis, deceased
These are. therefore, to cite and
isb all concerned to be and appyar #* "
office within the time prcscribdilby I?*..
show cause, if any they liavfcSww.’’**' 1 ,
ters should not be
Gi\ cii under stir blind and
WILEY WTWLJd
july 6-30d (Printer's fee 3.5(f)™
GEORGlA—Pulaski County-
Whereas. F xetl '*
oil the estate of dee«v
ffudies tne for di*=nii-iS!''C
Tbe«*e are, and adtne
ill p< i-ioii-. coni n
my office, within fMVfNjR©:
law, to show *-ansc, ii ivm Ahcy lmvc.
said letters should not *’
under mv hand and oflkiaT Sifma*" Ts .
J J. SPARROW ( »rdin«
•d* •> niHm i Printer’s fee $4
• 4*^
sheriff's Executions for sale at this