Newspaper Page Text
ffitsne «bS> itormss.
Louisville, G-a:
FRIDAY AUGUST 11, 1871.
Old Beast Butler a few days ago fell
into the Merrimae river, and tried to
diown, but fate had ordained otherwise.
Drowning waa too good for him. It ia
fated that he will die on, or rather, above,
dry land, standing on nothing and look
ing op e rope.
The OhayUefon Election.
Gen. John A. Wegener, the citizens'
candidate for Mayor, waa elected by a
majority of 777 votes over Gilbert Pills*
Vary, present Republican Mayor. The
entire citizens’ tieket for Council, is
deeted by about the same majority.
Famine.
From the aeoounts we have of the
prevalence of this scourge in Persia, to
gether with its usual attendants, it must
beggar anything like description. Pesti
lence too, has not failed to intensity tbe
horrors of starvation as it has elsewhere
done in former periods. Tbe Plague,
that wont of all diseases—whose bare
touch is eertsin death—has appeared!
Thus beleaguered, and nothing loth,
survivori eat the dead to Btifle the mad
dened eravings of hunger! Can any pic
tnrn of the imagination, transcend such
raalitios?
Green Tea.
The Lynchburg (Va.) News circulates
the information—furnished by one of its
correspondents—that the trees or bush
es which supply this delightful but cost
ly beverage, are grown in the yard of
Oapt. Robert Ballard of Bedford county,
Va., and that their seed bad been in
the Ballard family for four generations.
Does any one wish to raise a plantation 1
The evidences of successful experiment
mre all he could desire, and the means,
to make tbe start, quite accessible. All
tbe tea used by the Ballards, equal in
qnality to such as our stores sell, were
raised by themselves.
A Departure that is no Humbug.
Tbe Democracy of California, wbo
have been troubled for some time with
tbe disease called the “splits”—more
local and sporadic than otherwise—have
m-nnited, just for the fun of “licking”
their common enemy—the Radicals,
Carpet-baggers and Seallawags. That’s
the kind of ‘‘departure” we like —its
purport is plain, its incentive reasonable
nnd just, and all Democrats as well as
conservative Republicans will acknowl
edge its usefulness. It is virtually the
grown-up man redeeming the promise of
hia yontb, when wronged and beaten by
one older and stronger—“l'll catch you
come time or other, when I’m able, and
give you lick for lick for every one
you’ve given me to-day, and a few more
for interest.” Nor is it at all improbable
but what every one so righteously thrashed,
Will preach up tbe doctrine of "dead is
suet” and claim that “by gones” shall
he as if they never had been. Nay,
more. There witl probably be some of
the wronged and abased boys who may
fed wore charitable than others and can
forgive t or perhaps some will be induced
to drop their resentments. These of
coarse will “accept the situation,” but io
So sense to implicate or prejudice the
principle of the right of retaliation as a
general thing. No “split” will occur in
the ranks because of suoh difference.
The Attorney General
The Portsmouth (N. H.) Journal, a
Radical rough, thus relatas how A. T.
Akerman rose to his present high po
sition —
*!Attorney General Akerman.— Presi
dent Grant, it is stated, first became ac
counted with tbe present Attorney
General when the latter was acting as
State Agent of Georgia in Washington.
One day, when he bad finished some busi
neee in the Executive Office, the Presi
dent said, animatedly, 'I like that man,
aad as soon as a place is open in his
State, I mean to make him District At
torney.’ Tbe time came, and tbe office
was bestowed. In the pursuit of his
new duties, the President heard that
Mr. Akerman had been refused lodging
an n Southern city because of his Repub
lieanism, and that the Court had to be
in consequence. When Mr.
Hoar xaeignad, Mr. Akerman was nom
inated, entirely withont hia knowledge,
and was at his remote country home a
Weak before tbe news reached him.”
We see nothieg in the above that is at
all new except the Ku-Kluxory fabrics.
Mon that Hr. Akerman “had been re
fused lodging in e Southern eity be
•apnef hie Republicanism, and that
the Court bed to be adjourned in oonse
quence”! While we may not doubt
■noh wee reported to President Grant,
we do not believe It ever occurred as tbe
FMrt—onth Journal represents. Oar
•pinion is, that it was Akennsa's Gw-
maoism which raised him to both offices.
It is true he suits the administration
like wax—pliant as Osrie and obsequi
ous |s Boraehio. But whether'ha ia tbe
right sort of bait te fish for
man waters, if indeed any kinl will be
acceptable there, is~ altogether another
matter. We have no peraonal acquaint*
anee with Mr. Attorney General so
called—but. of his legal capacities for
the place, we think “they are email po
tatoes, few in the hill knit stringy at
that.” *
The'Pope-
Ills Holiness is reported to be still
hammering away upon Lis temporal
rights. It is cause for regret, that he
attaches such an infallible yearning af
ter the things of the earth! Os what
intrinsic value is the civil rnle of a few
“acres of barren ground, long health, I
brown furze, any thing”—to that illim- |
itable range of spiritual power whieh be
enjoys over tbe most numerous and pow
erful Christian denomination ever ae
eorded, .in this world, to mortal man 1
But be is not happy. He needs and
must have a silly-bus fixed up expressly
for Victor Emanuel’s benefit. It is none
of our business we acknowledge, still we
could wish tbe venerable Prelate’s clos
ing life woold sanction the separation of
Church and State and leave to bis eue
cessors tbe sole glory and responsibility
of a purely ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
BULLOCK'S FINANCIERING
Systematic Villainy Exposed.
A BLACK~ EXHIBIT.
Radical Misrule in Georgia.
Where the Money Went.
The Eu-Elnx Investigating Committee.
Treasurer Angier's Testimony.
Washington, July 31, 1871.
Editors Chronicle If Sentinel;
I send you further extracts from the sworn
testimony of Treasurer Angier, presented to
the Ku-Klux Investigating Committee at
Washington, D- C-, July 14,1871 :
Question —Give us all the information you
have relative to the granting of pardons by the
Governor, the general issuing of proclamations,
offering rewards, and tne coat of these various
things.
Answer—l have here a statement ot tbe par
dons gi anted by the Governor; It is taken di
rectly from the pardon book by Mr. Hemphill,
who is tbe agent of tbe Associated Press at
Atlanta, and the proprietor of the Constitution,
a newspaper published there. It appears by
this statement that since August 2d, 1868, the
Governor has acted on four hundred and twen
ty-six applications for pardon. Os these, three
hundred and twenty-one cases, involving thrte
hundred and fji ty-six offenses, were pardoned,
as follows:
Murders pardoned 48
Murders commuted - 18
Simple larcenies pardoned ....76
Other larcenies - 14
Assaults with intent to murder 2U
Burglaries iu the night 18
Burglaries in the day 18
Manslaughter 18
Assaults - 2(1
Assaults with iutent to commit rape f>
Homicide
Cheating and swindling -3
Stabbing 3
Horse stealing 7
Bigamy 6
Forgery - 4
Periury 3
Robbery - 8
Fornication and adultery 7
Seduction I
Incestuous adultery 1
Arson 5
Misdemeanor 9
Bastardy 1
Rape 1
Compound felony 1
As regards the finances of the State, it is im
possible to give testimony precisely without
putting it in figures on paper. 1 have prepared
a statement in that form, complying, as I un
derstand, with the instructions which I receiv
ed from the circular of the Chairman of the
Committee, Mr Scott. In this statement I
have tried to present as clearly as possible tbe
details iu regard to the management of the
State finances, and tbe contrast between dif
ferent periods. This statement I certify to be
correct. The statement ia as follows :
1857 Ordinary expenses of
Georgia $ 275,632 43
1858— Ordinary expenses of
Georgia $ 304,637 59
1859 Ordinary expenses of
Georgia $ 369,653 53
1860— Ordinary expenses of
Georgia $ 325,600 00
Total ordinary expenses of
Georgia for four years im
mediately preceeding the
war $1,275,523 55
1868— Less than six months
ordinary expenses of Geor
gia $ 401,865 08
1869 — One year ordinary ex
penses of Georgia $ 848,298 2
1870— One year ordinary ex
penses of Georgia $ 924,413 27
Total ordinary expenses of
Georgia for less than two
and a half years, by Gov.
Bullock $ 2,174,576 55
Substract total ordiuary ex-
Senses for four years under
lovernors Johnson and
Brown $1,275,523 55
Leaves against Gov. Bul
lock’s administration for
less than two and a half
years more than Johnson
and Brown for four full
years $ 899.053 03
In the above estimates the payments on ac
count of public debt are taken out of both ac
counts, also all appropriations to or for repairs
ofbnildinga. The payments on account of
school fund do not enter into the account of
either ; as, under Governor Bullock s admin
istration, the school fund has been taken and
used for general purposes. The payments on
account of artificial limbs and schooling maim
ed soldiers ; burial of Confederate dead ; re
moving furniture, library, office fixtures, books
and papers from Milledgeville to Atlanta, are
all taken out. Also payment on account of
Convention scrip. So each period stands fair
ly alike on ordinary expenses, which shows
Governor Bullock's administration, for less
than two and a half years, eight hundred and
ninety-nine thousand fifty-three dollars and three
cents more than Governor Johneon’s and Gov
ernor Brown’s {or Jour years.
With no deduction from the accounts, as of
ficially reported, they stand thns :
1857 Total amount paid
out of State Treasury $ 511,789 90
1858— Total amount paid out
of State Treasury $ 745,470 64
1859 Total amount paid ont
of SUte Treasury $ 874,465 92
186(1—Total amount paid out
of State Treasury $ 662,600 00
f 2,794.336 46
1868 (less than six months) $ 430,957 77
1869 (twelve months) $ 1,857,825 98
1870 (twelve months) $ 1,470,021 02
93,756,804 11
jtMj ill nit-1 linu, .*‘l.7 ■ 1
Deduct four yean before the
war **,794,336 46
Leaves an excess of Govern
or Bullock for lose than
twe and a half yean over
four years * 964,468 31
Total for extra services for
1866, 1166, 1857, 1868,
1869, and 18*0 (six yean) * 17,000 00
Oev. Bollock, for extra legal
services for loss than half
the time, has paid $ 36,600 00
Rewswds for fugitives 1855,
1856 ’57, ’SB, ’59 and ’6O,
(six yean) all charged to
contingent fond $ 1,400 00
Gov. Bollock has paid by
warrants on the Treasury
(net charged to the contin
gent fund) $ 51,100 00
Less than half the time, tbo’
thirty times as much..
Advertising proclamations,
1666,’66,’57,’58, ’59 and
’6O (six years) $ 5,000 00
Governor Bollock has paid
for less than half the time
by warrants on the Trea’y $ 98,300 00
Incidental expenses of Executive depart
ment, 1656, ’57, ’SB, ’59, ’6O, ’66 and ’67 (sev
en years,) under this head, only twenty dollars
is charged, but I hare included “small articles
I furnished Executive department” and “articles
furnished Executive mansion,’’ making in all
$2,186 76.
Governor Bullock’s incidental expenses for
less than three years, $23,800 00.
The section of the appropriation bill author
izing the Governor to draw warrants on the
Treasury for service or labor authorized by tbe
General Assembly, for which no provision is
made for compensation, has never been used
by any Governor except Governor Brown, and
then in amount about seven thousand dollars,
while Governor Bullock has used it to the
amountof four hundred and sixteen thousand
six hundred and twenty dollars and ninety cents.
The annual general lax since Governor Bul
lock’s administration has been about 300,000
annually more than it was before the war. —
Still, he has had engraved six millions dollars
new State bonds, while the rate of State taxa
tion is now over six times as high as it was in
1860.
Taking last year as an average, the tax for
this year, independent of the rental of the
Western and Atlantic Railroad,
will be $1,280,756 57
Rental of Western and Atlantic
Railroad 300,000 00
$L580,756 57
Ordinary expense? for
1871 500,000 00
(which is considerably over the
average before tbe war, and
more than in 1860).
One-half rental of Wes
tern and Atlantic
Railroad for school
purpose 150,C00 00—650,000 00
(This lut amount, however, to
gether with all the other
funds set apart by the new
Constitution specially for
common school purposes,
and to be used for no other,
the Governor, has, and is
using for ordinary expenses)
leaves a surplus to meet the
public debt of 1871 930,75657
Matured State bonds before
1871- 173,000 00
Which should and would all have been hy
pothecated with the seven per cent, mortgage
bonds issued specially far that purpose had not
Gov. Bullock, iu violation of express statute
sold $265,000 and used a portion of the pro
ceeds on the Kimball Opera House.
State bonds due in
1871 $154,250 00
Interest due in 1871, 427,375 00—754,62500
Leaves a surplus for 1871 176,131 57
After paying all past due bonds and cou
pons, where the necessity for these $6,000,000
new State bonds Governor Bullock has had
engraved, or auy portion of them? With any
regard for ei o lomy there should be a large
surplus in the State Treasury. At the close
of 1869,1 lioneHly estimated the surplus tor
1870, after paying.all libalities, including the
maturing interest, at over four hundred thou
sand dollars, to be used as a sinking fond.
These six millions of New State bonds are
exclusive of the State aid to railroads; for in
dependent of this amount, tbe Governor has
had engraved and sent to him State gold
bonds, purporting to be for additional State
aid to the Brunswick and Albany Railroad
Company $ 2,760,000 00
Add to this the amount the Gov
ernor reported to Henry
Clews &Cos., the middle of
March as having received
the endorsement of the State
(how many more since I do
not know, as the Governor
refuses to answer) 5,923,000 00
The previous bonded indebted
ness, including all bonds is
sued before 1869 6,554,450 00
$20,637,500 00
Deduct new currency bonds re
turned to State Treasurer’s
office 500,000 00
And wc have present liabilities $20,137,500 00
Counting all the bonds engraved, legitimate
and in use, the amount of interest on which
will be twice the amount of the annual general
State tax.
But the evil and danger do not stop here.
The Governor approved bills granting further
State aid or endorsement to railroads to the
amount of about thirty millions ($30,000,000)
more.
And if I have been correctly informed,
State endorsed bonds have been issued by
Governor Bullock before a mile of railroad
was completed, or the first cent of subscription
paid. If this recklessness and waste are not
speedily stopped, but are followed up with new
issues of bonds, the result is inevitable. The
State will soon be absorbed, and the toiling
farmers, with what little they can gather up,
will be forced to flee their homes for safety
from the tax-gatherers.
(Signed) n. L. Angier,
Treasurer of Georgia.
The New York Times (Radical) says
yon may make light of the Democracy,
but to-day, iu tbe State of New York,
there is a clear Democratic majority of
ninety thousand. We never bad the
Irish, and now we are losing all the Ger
mans.
Acting Second Assistant Postmaster
General Freeman, has ordered a daily
mail service between Atlanta and Gaines
ville, Georgia, on the Atlanta and Rich
mond Air-Line Railroad, to commence
on the 15th inst.— Constitution.
A census-taker out West reports
eight thousand colonels in his district.
“There used to be more in that part of
the country," be says, “but a large nura
ber of them have been raised to gen
erals.
Sully, tbe Philadelphia artist, now
nearly ninety, is said to have painted
more portraits of celebrities than any
artist of his time. He is still an active
worker.
Fatal Railroad Accident.—A dispatch
from Navesota, Texas, of July 29th,:
says: A construction train bound north
this evening, with nine cars and eighteen
laborers, was precipitated into tbe Nave
snta river. The accident was caused by
tbe derrick of the wrecking car striking
the lattera! braces and rods of the bridge.
The euperstrnctnre of the first span was
carried away, and the second, third end
fourth spans went to the bottom with
the cars and engine—a mass o i rains.
Five were Knstantly killed, two fatally
injured ana twelve more or lose injarea.
One men was thrown twenty feet into
the *ir sud, falling, vae instantly killed.
1 —
Lut Tbasadey, Attorney General
Akerman *aa Ac oaly member of the
Adniaimital left in Washington.—
Then perhaps never was a finer illustra
tion es the little end of nothieg whit
tled dew* to a point.— Louisville Cou-
The Cincinnati Times and Chronicle
speaks of Governor Bullock as having
“gravitated in the Democratic ranks.”
An Alabama paper says it “has heard
of condensed milk, potatoes, meats, See.,
bat condensed Radicalism is tbe latest
thing ont.” “It is pat up,” it continues,
“by a few Democratic editors expressly
for their Democratic friends who wen
unable to swallow tbe article in its
crude state. It is called ‘new depar
ture.’*’
The Alabama negroes are bolding sc
cret political meetings, aad white trash
are warned that ii they hang around
they will “go away with a flea in their
ear.” Let one but whisper Ku-Klnx,
however, and tbe brethren incontinently
flee away with a “go” in their ear.
Butler lias so far encountered only
twenty-six other Radicals wbo wsnt to
be Governor of Massachusetts. He
thinks, however, that he squints toward
the nomination more deoidcdly than any
of them.
The Louisville Courier-Journal says it
is firing into the “Bourbons” rather than
the radicals, because tbe former “will
get in the way." The Boorbons “get in
the way” becaose they know too much to
be afraid of blank cartridges.
A negro juryman went to sleep during
the trial of a case at Lake City, in Flor
ida, last week, and was robbed of a
pocket-book by a brother juryman who
sat next to him, also colored. Nice
crowd to try other people’s rights.
The New York Sun has an account of
an Indiana man who “preaches like Mr.
Beecher, lectures like John B. Gough,
and gets married like G. G. Bowen.”
Now if the mao could only travel like
Grant, drink like Dick Yatee, aud steal
like Ben Butler, be would be a perfect
prodigy.
Tbe Albany News says that the col
ored convention of Dougherty county,
held on the 22d ultimo, nominated all
sound Democrats for county officers, and
there is not a Radical jn tbe field.—
Wbat do you say to that, Mr. Greeley 1
Was it tbe work of the Ku-Klux 1
The Grand Encampment. —The
Grand Encampment of the Odd Fellows
of tbe State of Georgia bold tbeir an
nual convention here Wednesday.
There was an unusually full attend
ance of the members of the noble broth
erhood from every portion of the State.
Atlanta, Savannah, Macon, Columbus,
Augusta and all tbe smaller cities and
towns sent tbeir delegates.
The assemblage met at ten o’clock, in
the magnificent lodge owned by the Or
der in this city.
Hanged. —Jim Toombs, negro, was
hanged at Periy, Houston county, on
Friday last, lor killing another negro
who was working with him in a field,
about seven months ago. When on tbe
gallows be gave the negroes present
some good advice. He told them to
throw away their firearms, be industri
ous and obey tbe law. He said that
having no master and a pistol bad
brought him to the gallows. —Macon
Telegraph.
Ned Myers and Lewis Coppedge, col
ored, recently suffered tbe extreme pen
alty in North Carolina for murder. Cop -
pedge made a speech from tbe gallows in
which be said : “There is a party they
call tbe Union party—tbe Radical party.
They never do us any good. They do
us barm. They make us do mean
things. No Radical ever come to me
and said, Lewis here is something for
you before you die. I advise you all to
take care of yourselves.”
Radical Africa Broke Loose in Charles
ton. —Tbe Charlestonians, on Monday,
had a fearful time. The Radical ne
groes paraded tbe town, assaulted sev
eral houses and their inmates with
clubs and brickbats, demolishing win
dows—plundered stores, and made sev
eral attempts to fire them, which fortu
nately were frustrated. Tbeir fury
seemed to have been mainly directed
against tbe Germans, for no other rea
son conceivable than that General
Wagoner, the conservative candidate for
Mayor, is a German, and they made
lively threats of burning down every
Dutchman’s bouse. The telegram re
ports that on Tuesday night after the
votes were polled, both parties claimed
the victory. But, if we are not mistaken,
tbo law allows the canvassers several
days to make out tbe returns—so that
the result is not determined by voting,
but by coqnting.— Telegraph .
Two hundred and twenty-two actors,
actresses, and other theatrical people, in
New York, are seeking professional en
gagements for the autumn.
New York city has four hundred and
sixty miles of streets, three hundred
and forty miles of water pipes, and two
hundred and seventy*five miles of sew
ers, nineteen thousand gas lamps, thir
teen hundred care and omnibuses, and
ainety-fonr thousand carriages.
There Is a Difference. —New York city
owes a debt of $50,000,000. Her assets
to meet this debt foot up $266,000,000.
The city is nnder Democratic rule.
Philadelphia owes a debt of $50,000,-
000. The tax in tbe city is $5 40 on
the SIOO, jnst about the heaviest rate of
taxation in the country. Philadelphia
is in the hands of tbe Radicals.
The State of California ie controlled
by Democrats, and its bonds are SIIIJ.
Kentucky is under Democratic man
agement, and its bonds are $1 10£. This
beats Ku-Klux. What States run by
tbe Radicals present a better.— Ex.
John Martin, of the Young Ireland
party, who was sentenced to death
twenty-five years ago, and afterward
had bis sentence commuted to transpor
tation for life; for participation in the
Irish rebellion of that date; is now a
member of the British Parliament.
“Tbe whirligig of time bath its re*
vangei.”
jMBIT-wSro.
Andrew Johnson intends to visit Psris.
The college property of the Metbo
diets in lows is veined st $420,000.
Cincinnati hsd three hundred end
sixty-five divorce cases last year, one n
b* *n * which
there are one thousand varieties.
have been made in California this sea
son.
There are sixty-eight colleges for fe
males in the United States.
Twenty five million feet of logs are
awaiting a rise in Black Eiver, Wis
consin.
One steamer from Charleston carried
11,000 watermelons to New York.
It is estimated that the corn crop of
lowa this year will amount to 100,000,-
000 bushels.
One hundred and seventy-nine trains,
carrying passengers, daily arrive and
depart from Chicago. A
In the course of one year the pin fac
tories in the United States* eight in num
ber, produced 6,720,000,000 phis.
During the year ending June 12th,
870 patents have been issued, and 359
trade-marks have been registered.
A gentleman near Suffolk, Virginia,
sold $3,000 worth of strawberries this
year from three-quarters of au acre of
land.
- ■
Ten Mile Hill, on the South Carolina
Railroad, has a rattlesnake fourteen feet
long, and twelve inches in circumference.
Col. Thomas A. Scott is the Presi
dent of two railroad companies, Vice
President of eleven, and Director of
thirty-four.
New Haven Las three handred and
seventy-four manufacturing establish
ments, with an invested capital amount
ing to $10,000,000.
Onß street railroad line in New York,
the Third Avenue, has eighteen hun
dred horses, three hundred passenger
cars, and employs eight hundred men.
—The Central Park property of New
York cost $606,391, and up to the first,
of this year there had been spent in m*
provementsand elaborations $6,330,732.
John Shipman voted for eveiy Pres
ident we ever had—twice for Washing
ton and Abraham Lincoln—and died
in his one hundreth year in Vermont
the other day.
Joseph Caldwell, of Columbuß, Ohio,
mysteriously disappeared a year ago,
and it has just been ascertained that he
died in an insane asylum at New Or
leans, and was buried a pauper. He
left a snug little estate in Columbus,
valued at $150,000.
The Rev. B. M. Palmer, D» D., of
New Orleans, has been made the recipi
ent of a purse of $3,000, raised by the
members of his congregation, in grate
ful acknowledgment of bis untiriDg and
efficient services in their behalf.
The Nation cites the notable feiocity
of the Frenchwomen on boibtßides to
show the female suffragists that there is
no probability of woman’s purifying pol
itics and eliminating bitterness from
■trife.
A person at Pike’s Peak, writing to a
Minnesota journal, says the miners are.
very much discouraged in that region ;
they have to pass through a solid vein ot
silver four feet thick before they reach
the gold.
« - err **
A Calcutta newspaper says the prin
ciples of Darwinism was mantaioed five
hundred years ago by a Mohammedan
saint named Mahmud, who lived in a
village named Gilau, near the Caspian
Sea. - V
The recent events in France must
give every classical scholar an increased
detestation of Homer’s “Helen.” She
and the Commune stand alone in histo
ry or fame as guilty of setting Paris on
fire.
Os all the Atlantic steamers which
color of France, the meteor flag of Eng
land, and the black eagle of Germany,
are the ensigns borne.
The Czar Alexander has appointed
his grandson, the Prince George, son ol
the crown princess, a colonel in the Im
perial Guard. The battle-soarred vete
ran is only about a month old.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
PRIZE TURNIP SEEDS.
DIRECT IMPORTATION FOR 1871.
THE SUBSCRIBER has received from
Europe a full supply of RUTA BBOA
and other PRIZE TURNIP SEEDB. They
surpass any grown in America. The White
Globe and Norfolk variety was grown last year
in Georgia and South Carolina aa large as a
common size water bncket. Col, A. P. Butler,
of Edgefield, 8. C., todk the prize at the last
Fair in Augusta for the Yellow Ruta Baga,
grown from these imported Seeds. The Tur
nips also took the highest prizes in London,
New York, Augusta and Columbia. Also, the
best imported Early and Late Winter Cabbage
Seeds. For sale by C. PEMBLE,
Augusta Seed Store, No. 11 Washington St.
t#-'Seeds sent by mail free of postage.
August4,3w. p n,
MOUNT DE SALES ACADEMY
FOR YOUNG LADIES.
(Conductzd bt the Sisters of the Visits*
tiob.)
ani as, OAVomvau,
FIVE MILES WEST OF BALTIMORE, MD.
PM tHIS ACADEMY is situated in Baltimore
JU County, commanding an extensive view
of the snrTbunding coantry, the city of Balti
more, the Patapsco River and the Chesapeake
Bay. The grounds attached to the Academy
are extensive, and afford the pnpils ample
space for exercise. The halls for study and re
creation, the dormitories, Ac., have been con
structed with a yiew to promote the comfort of
the young ladies.
Address for particulars,
MOUNT DE SALES,
CatonsvilU P. Q., Baltimore Cos., Md.
July 39, pnfijn,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
1 s
4th Sheet, Macon, Georgia.
Biilds • tti * RqKiifft all Sorts of ICadu&ny*
Urtrni CHn Gear from 7 Feet to 12 Feet.
Sugar Mills from 12 to 18 laches.
Both ’Wraug&t <3z> Cast, to Suit all Flaces.
MY
b* Tried,- sail Proven a Complete Success
-17 R«AB THE FOLLOWING:
Farmers are Referred tot ferfificates.
MACON, GA., December 16th, 1870.
E. Crockett, Eeq., —Dear Bir: Your letter received. The HORSE POWER that I bought
of you is doing as well as I can wish. The pTfowife 4s **qod. one, and jo easily adapted to
any Gin-House. Mine has, so far, proved sufficiently strong enough for the work to be done.
I am ranning a forty-fire saw Oin, with feeder attachment, with two males, with perfect ease,
itaepeetfally, Ac, A. T. HOLT.
COOL SPRING, GA, October sth, 1870.
Mr. E. Crockett, MaconMr. Daniels has fitted,*p ydnr POWER satisfactorily. For neat
nesss and convenience, as well as adaptability for driving machinery for farm purposes, cannot
be excelled; in this it has superiorities over the old wooden or mixed gearing.
I use four mules, and I think I could gin oni 1500 pound* tint Cotton per day on a forty-saw Gin.
Respectfully yours,, . J. R. COMBS.
GRIFFIN, December 6te, 1870.
E. Crockett, Esq., Macon, On.,— Dear Sir : lam well pleased with the HORSE, POWER
you sold me. I think it is the best 1 have seta. Very respectfully,
8. KENDRICK, Superintendent Savannah, O. A N. A. R. R.
ALSO TO Capt. A. J. White, President M. A W. R. R. -, McHollis, Monroe Conn .
ty; Jas. Leith, Pulaski County; Dr. Reilly, Houston County; W. W. West, Harris County;
Johnson A Dunlap, Maeon,o«.; Sims, Spalding County; ——— Alexander, Hillsboro;
Dr. Hardeman, Jones County ; Edmond Dumas, Jones County. Aug. 5,3 m. rpn
COTTaN PACKING
I [” '
RENDERED EASY WORK
BYTtiE USE OF
SMITHS IMPROVED HAND POWER PRESS.
i 0u.4-;;
■ o t . to woBK tm. ' ; ■
A Southern invention and one of the moat complete of the age; pronounced by
the most intelligent planters of Georgia and Sooth Carolina; batter adapted for
cotton packing than any Press or Bcrew in use; Simple,'Datable, and not Liable
to getont of order; hue great coneentraiibn of power, and twobanda can pack
r eotton readily, jmd.oaJy four required to pack rapidly and easily,
kA* an packed a bale of cotton weighing 530 lbs., doing
Manufactured by
WHELESS is CO.,
COTTON FACTORS, AUGUSTA, GA.
p & r May, 6, j .p 69 rlB 3m.
JOHN VOGT & CO.,
j t-yxotj mis-.*- -
- importers, gr 9 ,.
French China, Belgian and Bohemian Glassware, Lava ware
OPmp&aQ&a sadaaapXtoa®© OatJo®©
SB * 87 3>AJftSe PLACE,
MX _ -,i.l ;
Between Church Bt. A College Piece, N?W YORK.
64 Rue de Peredis Poissonuiere, PARIS. 0 Open Jeurdxn, Limoges, FRANCE.
46 Neuerwell, HAMBURG.
June 4,1871, apt 5 73 22 6m.
C JLO T HI NO.
r (■
jvd .3! <--t i •*:.;<,« X' - : ■ ' . ;
We invite the Public Along tHe NEW LINE ol RAILROAD through
BALDWIN and HANCOCK Counties, to call and examine our new
SPRING BTOCK OF * ’
Readymade Clothing
AND °
Gents’, Furnishing Goods.
<’ *i .IV i•« , rs,,. «| t ■ .. • ■ ('
We keep the best of every thing, in our line, and will be sure to please
you if you will give us a trial.' '~v . n .
IWINBHIP * CiWAWAY, Nmh, 8«
Ita ibi, - uy