Newspaper Page Text
The Houston Home Journal j
AU tlio Difference.
PERRY, GA., MAY 25, 137L
-We.send a copy of this paper to a
number of persons who are not sub
scribers, .as an invitation to them to
become such; We hope they will
respond.
Take Notice.—Transient advertis
ing .must be paid for in advance. Don’t
send a notice to be published, .with the
.m^ssagejAtl’ll send the money in a
jfeiv days. ” It will not be inserted with
out i the' cash. This yule applies to
everybody except the business men of
IVrry, and it will be strictly adhered
Editorial.—We would really like
.to give onr readers a rousing editorial
•leader tbis week, but at this time,,
.which set set apart for that purpose, the
weather is so hot . and the editor is so
sleepy, he can’t think of anything to
write. Good people, if you are really
disappointed at not-finding a good
editonal right here, just sit down and.
•look oyer your Bibles; you will doubt
less find something there almost as
.good as what we would have written.
As for news—The Nationals hav<
entered Paris, and fighting is going on
daily in that ill-fate-d.city....The.C)omr.
jnuiiisfs, pr insnrcctionists, are being,
d -featell at every step, andihe.slajigh;
t is .reported to be terrific. We
Jiope that peace may soon settle down
on unhappy -France' and tliis dreadful
can age ei ase. • . ; .
t/ryv, Bullock, dra t him! has com-
raenyy'jl his K.tirElux proclamations
.againt i i o gim-iboats have appeared on
Big Indian this week; the'ghats are
becoming a nuisance iu Perty, cotton
. js Nvoi’fih bti cents, strong, and our
u vil lias washed his face. Amen.
‘ Railroad Mkktixo.—As there was;
no court this week the. railroad greet
ing was postponed. 'It will.take place
next Wednesday, if court is m session;
if not, then it will; be held on the
iJVcdne&diiy of court week. Mr. JPow-
ors has submitted another proposition
namely: that- if the people jhere will
make a voluntary contribution of. six
.thousand dollars, theroadwil bebuilt
at once to Peny; and for three thous
and live hundred nloie, it- will be
carried to Haynevillc. Make up this
n mount-, citizens; make it up, obi make
it u;i! It is so e:isy to get the Rail-
m d. let’s have ip.
—-- ■-..
SurKKtoii C(;ritT.—IJuite a large
number of-people came to JPerry last
JJondny to attend Court, but a message
w .s rc.ceived.from Jnjfea Cole, adjourn
ing court. to next Monday, on account
.of his illness, and the jurors agd .other
.parties'in.torested went home! again,
not well pleased at losing a day ’s'work
foi; nothing. We sincerely'hope, and;
so saying," we echo the Sentiuient-of
.the entire commiinirt, that theMudgi-
. will soon recoyier fiSftnSgS sickness and in the evening, aiid :
be able to resume Ms Mu ties.
We are informed tlvatia daughter of-
,T.ohu _R.. C. Abbott, the .yell known
jhistoriuu, is teaching a freedmeii’S
school in Macon, -
Thanks.'—Our tjpuiks -nre-l hereby
given t. > -Messrs. W. C. Singleton,'.W.
W. Collins, JL-ZE-- Grimes, J.-A. Pugh
and iteniy Hendee, .Cojiynittee, for an
invitation to the Basket Pic-aic of the
Macon Reading and S ’cial Club. 11
business did not compel us to remain
.at home. ye. should orteud yith much
pleasure. From the names of all the
committees, we feel sure it will he a
delightful occasion. We’d like to read
phe inside of some of those.^baskets,”
and associate a little with the contents
■ •
krir^i- '.‘a :
———»*■«. =-
r The Confederate iron steamer Ala-
b.vr.a was paid lor by two hundred
and ninely Southern gehtlSmeh—hence
t.r« *“2U0.” In all her cruises'she cap-
,uu--'d sixty-four . vessels owned by
TforUiern merchants. '
The New Tor
nominate G§n.
date forthgjPr
said that the reports of Ku-Klux'out
rages iu the South have been exagger
ated, and has expressed the belief that
the passage pf the Force bill was un
called for and unnecessary, as, ..well... as
unconstitutional. . -
The Herald forgets that when Presi
dent Grant was General of the Army
he expressed similar views; .while, now
that he is President and a candidate"
for re-election, he sees things in a very
different light, and thinks-it indispen
sable to his own peace of mind that he
should lie vested with dictatorial pow-
" mWI
c'd from Gen. Sherman’s present posi
tion, if is probable he would still be of
Gen. Sherman’s present opinion.
Georgia News. j Tliomasville has subscribed $2,100
from API, ouu exchanges. j to the Methodist Orphans’ Home.
; Brooks eountv claims a population of ■ A'Eufglar alarm gnn lsAhaAatest At-
P,SX). She produced last year 6.000 j lanta improvement.
i bales of cotton, a large surplus of pr«^ ! £>is: desperate neglo crfmim
Matthew Marris, at Davis benzmery,
twelve miles from Athens, one night hit
week.
Baker county juvjpiles are uncom
monly “spry.” Two of •them aged 8
and 12 years respectively, and black
apd white,, as to color, stole a horse and
boggy last week and were arrested in
Bainbridge.
Collector Robb yesterday expressed
to the Secretary of the Treasury §41-
- rr 000 in gold, received as import du
ll Grant had never been promote . fln .? _ ^
Nesro Voters in Indiana.
grafigMEfapljy;.-
The Nashville Union and American
says: i ^
who voted the'Democratic .ticket was
beaten and egged as he left the polls by
a number of negro bullies whp were
employed by a white Radical to do the
work.' About fifteen other negro men,
who ihten’dfed'”voting the Democratic
ticket were deterred from going to the
polls by this exhibition of Kn-ZKlux
ruffianism. Had this occurred/in a
Southern city to a Radical negro, it
would have been held a sufficient cause
to have called for military interference.
It shows that the negro is not-tb. be al
lowed to vote the Democratic .ticket in
the North any more than in the South.
The Radicals do not intend that the ne
gro shall exercise in the right of a free
man in the matter of voting.”
♦.* —
Advice of an Old Lady.
Now, John, listen to me, for I'am old
er than you, or I coujdn’t be your
eiother. Never do you marry a young
woman, John, before you : have con
trived to happen' where she lives at
a, efJ_.-x.-_.-
ties on. Tuesday last. This is one of
the largest days recipts at the Custom
House in many years.—Savannah Ad
vertiser.
An earthquake Ea^urday morning,
at Augusta, kicked np a tremendons
hobbeiy among the sinners of that
sleepy town. Two. distinct shocks
were felt; It was noticed that next,
day there was an unusually large atten
dance at the various churches.
The little daughter of Sir. J, H. Ot
to, of Macon, was drowned on Friday
morning in a tub of water,
- Some horseman has paid, five thou
sand dollars for a half intererest in
the: celebrated Georgia trotter Bis
marck;.
Albany received twenty-three thour
sand nine hundred and twenty-four
bales of cotton from September 1st,
1870, to May 1st, 1871.
Rev. Mr. Smith, of Dalton; will lec
ture in that place shortly in behalf of
Miss.-Rosalie, sister of Edgar Allan
Poe.
In Walker county, oii the’ pth inst.,
M A Ellison shot and kflted. F. M.
Coulter. Ellison is in jaiL
A T. Stewart, of New York, has re
cently ordered rtvelve hundred pairs of
the celebrated cotton blankets -made in
Colmnbus.
lie new/Catholic Church in Atlanta
least four or five times before break*
fast./ You should know how late she
lies in bed in the morning. You should
take notice whether her complexion; is
the same in the morning Wit is imthe
evening, or whetlierth’e wash aind tow
el have robbed .her of Ijer evening
bloom.' You Would take' care to. sur
prise her, so. tbiit youcan see her momr
ingrdi-ess,*'and observe how . her hair
looks when, she is not expecting you.
'If possible, you should be where you
could hear the morning . conversation
between her and her mother. If. We
is ill-natured and snappish to her
mother, bo We‘will be to ypu, depend
on it. But if you find her'up and
dressed neatly in the morning, with the
lending a hand to get
ready in good season, she is a stunner,
John, and the sooner you get her to.
yourself the better. \ -
Daniel Webster said of Agriculture:
•‘No man is so high as to be. indepen
dent of the success of this great inter
est; and no m.an is so low ; asbiot to be
affected by its prosperity or decline.—
The cultivation of the earth is the most 11
important.labor of inah/ ” '
by the
sometMng he had in Ms pocket. It
was a knife, wMch, being of no use in
Ms pocket, he stuck it into the school-
master’s leftside. The sWoolmaster’s
heai:twas so much affected by this
cutting reminder that he at once gave
ear to that boy, and has never lifted any
little boys since.
B 11
Near Fort Valley, May 22, 1871.
Mb. Editoe:—Last week I traveled
over a portion of Houston, .Bibb, and
Macon, counties, and regret to say
everything- so far as my Observation
reaches, relating to crops presented
almost an impenetrable gloom. While
in Macon, I saw but few business trans-
. actions^ though the .city is . improving
> Gf Baltimore, for at a rate to indnce one * to believa . ^
•• ; ''- 0l!0 - This is for newspaper adver- - twenty cents for cotton
next faff The Superior Com-t of Ma
con county was in session last week—
l£ev\— AnvmmsrNG Gonteact.—Dr. •
William H. Tutt, the'“Great Medicine
Man,” of Augusta, Ga., 'concluded an
advertising contract, a few days since,
vitii Messrs.. Griffin & Hoffman, Ad-
i for newspaper adver
tising alone, andembraces-all thefirst-
. class papers in the United States and
British Provinces. In addition to the
: hove,Mr. Pughe, of Augusta, is engag
ed in printing i;000,000 -Almanacs for
Dr. Tutt, who is distrihntiug them gra
tuitously from Maine to California.—■
Thus it will be seen what an immense
business Dr. Tutt is building up, and
how liighly he appreciates the value Of
advertising and the liberal use of Print
er’s Snk. We are glad to know that
Ms enterprise is being crowned with,
success. His printing expenses for
.this year will amprixJt to over, fifty
.tliousand dollars. -
-There is an ehei^ry ip the keeping of
boarding houses in Arkansas quite un
known elsewhere. The proprietor of a
private hostelry in a town of that State,
having heard ffe.qnent eopplaint from
his boarders about the regular recur
rence of hash, prepared himself to
crush the rebellion's spirit. At the next
jnnrnmg meal he placed two revolvers
beside Ms plate, and remarked, “Who
soever says he don’t like hash lies.”— :
He then.began distributing hagh, and
no man declined it.
Most young men consider it a great
misfortune to be born poor, or not to
have capital enough to establish them
selves, at their outset in life, in a good
comfortable business. This is a mistak
en notion. So far from poverty being a
misfortune to them, if we may judge
from what jye every day behold, it is
really a blessing; the chance is more
th n ten to one against him vho starts
wifli a fortune.
the'able cbiinselofs in attendance were
Attorney General. Farrow,. Willis B.
Hawkins, Samuel Hall, W. S. Wallace,
Wiri> IF. Robinson, - (3ias. ‘ T. Goode,
Phil Cook, Eli Warren and others.—
The farmers of-Macon county are fully
up with the culture of their crojis, in
wMch particular they beat Houston
:md Bibb; but at the same time cannot
boast' of 'an advanceiii'growth.'of cropk
The public roads in Macon county,
more especially west of Flint River,
are in spendid condition, which I
think speaks well for John L. Parker,
ordinary, commissioners, overseers,
hands and all concerned. Houston
county, will you not emulate the ex
ample of Macon, and give us good
roads?
Oglethorpe, the the county site ‘ of
Macon, is rather in a dilapidated con
dition, but nevertheless is doing her
share of business. Montezuma, for
its size, has ho rival as a business
town. Marshally|ile also is a flourish
ing village. In good old Houston,
public roads ns a general thing, are in
very bad order, and we would say
(grand) jurors look npon the roads;
roads cannot look upon jurors.
Truly, etc.
Naqap.
visions, and her debt is small.
criminals escap
ed. from Bibb county jail cm Wednes-
f M- W. Park was shot and killed by. day.
r_i.il _ i'U - , . T»,
Rev. W. T. Brantley, ofAthu
peceived a call to the pastors’
Baptist Church in Baltimore, -
The buggy-stealers are operating in
Jefferson comity.
The Commereiid says the taxable
projoerty of Rome in 1870 was §1,359-
533, and in 1871 1,395,100.
■The Eagle and Phoenix Manufactory
of Columbus has received six hundred
and sixty-eight bales of cotton that
have pot parsed through the warehous
es.
A Gwinnett county mail, ip order to
get Ms name in the’papers,ate fifty eggs
at one meal. The name duly appeared,
but it was at the head of an obituary.
, a ,
him: “Where would you be now,
Paddy, if the devil had his due?”—
Faith,” replied Paddy, “I’d be walk
ing by mysdf to New York.”
rjEORGIA, HOUSTON COUNTY.—George W.
VI Bcssett has applied fcr exemption of person-
a'tv, and I will pass npdirtKe same on the 7th day.
of June, 1871, at ten o’clock, A. M., at niy office.-* --
May 25, 1871. W. T. SWIFT, O. H. C.
will soon be.cp.mpletedjit will be one of
the handsomest church edifices in the
Soutlp
. Atlanjta thinks her sales during the
past year will foot-up twenty-five mil
lions of dollars. _
Tivo suflrage-slingers in Pike county
wejre,drowned : recently .in attempting
to rob ntrothne on Flint river.
lie ;Rome Commercial is publishing
Bullock’s proclamations on cohdiriohs.
Any compensation which may be re
ceived for. them in., excess of-. §800 is to
be returned to the State Treasury.—
Grady winds, up his -_ explanation in
this, lively manner: “We believe that
Rufus Beelzebub Bullock is the com-
pletest yillian that ever sat in official
chair. we believe that he has stolen
thonsands upon thousands of . dollars
same countenance,'the same smile,.ih'e. Horn the treasury ; we believe that it is
"same neatly combed bnfrj fbe same in a xt.a.—~ T
ready and; pleasant answer to her moth-
— which characterized . her deportm ent
the-righteous duty on the coming Leg
islature to impeach the scoundrel and
kick him out of the sight of honest
men; and, that’s all we have to say up
on the subject of proclamations and
public;plunder. ”
The Bainbridge Sun says that young
lawyers, fleas, hnd. snap-beans are flourr
idling thereabouts. . -
Mrs. SaIHe-James, of Pierce - county,
and her husband, though only in mod
erate circumstances, have raised twen
ty-seven orphan - children, and given
to each a start in life, besides raising a
large family .of their own.
“Lovick Pierce College” is the name
of an institution of learning which itis
proposed to. establish, in Quitman.
. The Quitman Banner -says: “The
Savannah .News gives marriages under
the . head of ‘matrimonial experi
ments.’ They publisb them in Macon
as •horrible accidents.’. We. expect to
publish them as ‘happy mistakes.’ ”
Wm. Boges, an orphan -bpy, living
in Hall county, was instantly killed on
Tuesday by the accidental discharge
of his gun.
“Bismarck,” the Macon trotter, is on
his way to the. North, where he is ex
pected to distinguish Tnmqplf
An Augusta mother wants to know if
a. teacher has a right to paddle a pupil
at a pic-nic. She endeavored to test
the msitter in a justice’s court, but the
result was unsatisfactory.
Dr. Westmoreland, of Atlanta,-has
been sentenced to ten years inthe pen
itentiary for shooting Dr. Redwine,
but his counsel will argue- for a new
trial.
A relation of Foster Blodgett, rejoic
ing in the cheerful soubriquet of Shade
Judge James M. Clark presiding.—
The trial of Jrtolsenbake, charged with' _S. Pardue, is passing counterfeit mon-
tlie murdca: of Geo- /W. Edi, of Ogle
thorpe employed nearly all the - week,
ey in Augusta.
The Radical Kn-Klux are operating
the accused was found guilty. Among in Pickens county. A colored Demo-
Induca all your neighbors to sub-
i scribe for .he Houston Home Journal.
crat named Andy Gwin had Ms house
burned recently, and two other colored
Democrats were badly beaten at the
sametime. The RadicalDepnty Sher
iff of the county was the leader of, the
Ku-Kluxes.
The lightning struck a negro woman
in Merriwether county last week, and
glanced off and killed a mule with
which .she was plowing. The woman
was unhurt, of course.
A Fort Gaines man, in expressing
an opinion that the place is health;
cheerfully inrites the public toinspe
the grave-yard.
Two negroes in Cuthbert had a
playful little row last Friday, in wMch
one carved the ether in suoh a manner
that he was the chief attraction in a fu
neral procession wMch took place the
next day.
Colored sisters-in-law in Thomasville
bring tbeir relations to terms with a
spade.
A homed frog, all the way from Tex
as, has been added to the museum of
the Thomasville Enterprise.
Cartersrille had a female lecture last
Monday night.
Mr. N. C. Monroe, of Griffin, recent
ly lost a little boj, who was bom the
same hour and day, and died the same
-hour and day as his grandfather, the
Hon. Nathan C. Monroe, of Macon.
A Yankee was. walking withanIrish-
NEW
rjEOEGIA, HOUSTON. COUNTY/ -Mrs. H. A.
As "Peurifoy, wife of A. W. Penrifoy. has peft'dn-"
ed for exemption of personalty and eett'ng apart
mid:—’—»■—— ’
^eA.^it ! mFofflbS'"W€
W. T. SWIFT, - O. H. C.
Wliit% Wire Clothes Line,,
Braided and iifeim Warranted .not to
mat or inhire/clothe* in ionf way/ For a*5e
by / ' F- W DOBSON, f .
mli30-tf
Perry, Ga.
GL'ANOI GUANO!
PPPENIX GUANO,
r AND PLASTER COMPOUND,
- WILCOX GIBBS * CO. MANIPU
LATED GUANO.
I am offering ihe above well known
standard fertilizers for cash or bn
' time it'*£
tEATLY REDUCED. PRICES
to correspond with the low price of
cotton: ' 'I:■' ■ -.
C. D. ANDERSON,
Fort Valley, Ga
dec!7-tf.
DU. OMEs - S. ffOESOKT,
D E
N
PERRY,
TAM .
T I ST,
- - - GEORGIA,
HAWKKSYILLE, GA,
He will spend the first half of each
month-in. Ms. office in Perry oyer the
old Drug Store,-and one fom th, hr the;
■nd valuation of homestead, and I will pass upon- latter .half of each month will be gi veri
?l^ e X O ^ttmY h 0 at ten ‘ ^ Mspracticc h Hawkinsniie.at Mrs.
Hudspeths,
ESff'ATtTxTSiTrBm X3KT 1852.
. . ..
THE MOORE COTTON GIN !
Also-, A Qeriuine Pattern of the GRISWOLD GIN.
FORMERLY AT DOUBLE WELLS, GA.
j -fuTiT
rpHE undersigned, having resumed the manufacture of the above Gin, propose to. make it what it
JL what it was before the war—-the Favorite of the South.. Our work stands upon its own merits,
and we think this a sufficient guarantee. We have secured the services of some of the best mechan
ical talent in the Northern shops, in addition to some of n the best workmen fropi the shop of .tlie late
Samuel Griswold., Mr. Chas. Gardner, who served eight years* appienticesliip under E. Carver &: Co.
East Bridgewater, Mass., and who was employed as Superintendentof the Double-Wells Shop from
the commencement of the maunfactiie of the Moore Cotton Gin, until its suspension, is again at his
poffL'and will give each gin his personal inflection before it leaves the shop.
In calling the attention of planters to our Cotton Gins, we desire that they should notice the im
provements that we offer,.which.are substantially as follows:
For obtaining any inclination of the Gin Bib or Grate, is used; the object of which is to improve in*
/the quanti^yr ginned,, or lessen tiie quantity and improve the quality of thalint. Also, to gin damp or
-wet-cotton fo alter -tha picking or separating the lint from the seed—either to take more lint off. or
less lint from the seed, as circumstances require. We use both the common Roll Box and a Swinging
Front. The latter is arranged to let out all the seeds and hulls in a moment and is very easily managed.
THE CIN
We make, cannot be excelled by any hair brush used. The bristles are all drawn in by a cord, and
the timber is all selected from the best lumber, well seasoned; and every bruslLis made perfectly fire
and rat proof.
ri a v: f s .: A «. n & ,
CY Ll NDER ANJ>- 'BRUSH BOXES
CIN S A W S;.
We make all the Saws that we use from the best English Cast’ Steel, and of ary size, .that may ~be de
sired. We employ, to superintend and; manulactiue our .saws; one of the best saw-makers hi tie
South; and our machinery* for the manufacture of Gin Saws cannot be excelled
We are the oiily successful manufacturers of this useful and important invention—tlie Cotton Gin
with the Cotton Seed Crushing Mill attached. It will hardly be necessary hero to allude to the immense
saving and economical use of crushed cotton seed as a manure. We received a gold medal as a pre
mium from the Irfir.of .the. Ccttpn Planters’ Convention, held jn Macon,. Ga,; I860, for the best Cotton
Seed Crashers attached to tlie Gih J Stand, to crush the seed as fast as it esrtaxicB from the BolL We
refer to some of the many certificates that we have on the subject
TRIAL OF THE C1NS.
We keep constantly on hand seed cotton and all ginsarejxied before leaving the shop, old or now ones.
REPAIRtHC OLD CIM3.
TVe haveja. complete assortment of the very i^esf Cotton'Gm Machinery in the country, and make
repairing old "gins a specialty. Planters will do well to .send their old gins and have them made as good
as new at a much less cost than a new Gin can.be bought for. Send on your orders and old gins early.
We are authorized by Messrs. Findlay’s Sons to receive orders for Findlay & Craig’s Screw Cotton
Press, and Craig’s Portable Horse power, and Castings generally.
For particulars send for Circular and Price last
~ v>. SAWYIilR' & KO0H72,
FTFDEaYS ZD?OF' works, macor, ga.
ma25 iiuml
G 0 TO THE
PALACE DOLLAR STORE!
In Brown House Block, MACON, GA.
A. FEWSUPPLY _QFG/}DJ>S RECEIVED EVERY DAY FROM ATEW
YORK.
ma2 5
Z0UI&B..
A H. HlGtttOWEB,:
Jast-eeD. Andeews, f
GENTS’ LINEN CLOTHING,
At D. EEMPNEB’S
AND CHILDREN’S
\
Clotli and 1 eather Boots and Shoes!
AT.U. KEMPNER’S^a^^^
THOSE BEAUTIFUL . ? '■ ’
ues, Alpacas, Percales, Grenadines, Lenos, Japs,
silk Striped Poplins, etc.,
■
Can i;e pqund oney at
J). KEMPNER
w*
m.:
V A Xi!
J. D. MARTIN,
Watchmaker and Jeweler
Axid Dealcrin
WATCHES, CLOCKS and JEWELRY,
Has removed to tke old favorite comer, ai
joining Rice & Killen’s, where.he ivill be
lileased to wait on all having business in
his line.^ .
um
Still Ahead of All Competition ! ! i
THOS. WYNNE’S
Improved Open-throat, Curved-breast,
Doable -X, Sdl-ribbed-deaning-seed, Pre
mium hiidDiploma
Cotton Gins/
Manufactured by
THOS. WY2CSE, near Bd Air, Richmond
Gmnty. Ga.
.Short-Staple Gin, with attached-ciide fine.
Upland Long and Short Staple Gin, with
attached circle fine.
Common- Ribbed Gin, with same attach
ment. . - .
- %£" AU Sizes Made to Order. m!8-3
The Paper Sot The People!
LATEST SPRINC STYLES.
II OS. GHOATE DESIRES TO INFORM
ill her fiiendstind customers who have so
liberally patronized her in the past, that
she wfil' continue her business at her resi
dence just above the Methodist Church,
formerly known as the Carpenter Stand. . -
Dresses made in.any style desired;prices
moderate; aU my work wairanted; good fit
ting a specialty.-I-h'ave a small lot of trim
mings which ! am pffering low. • Give me
$20,000 offered for New Subscribers
The Atlanta Constitution.
W. A. HempkiiP& Co.. Prop’rs.
f
_j.. j? ji fz'& ti'i'S ''
Daily, per anntnn,..§10.00
“ six;xnontiis,. 5. Ot).
Weekly, per aimum,.7. .§ 2.00
Payable in Advance.
0 0 OK’SHALL.
THE PERRY THESPIAN CORPS
Win again appear before the public
OX
Tuesday, May 31, 1871
m the 3
THEILLING TRAGEDY ENTITLED
THE ROBBERS;
And will conclude with the side-split-
- ting Farce, i ~ ♦«
COUSIN JOE’S VISIT.
Wednesday, J«ne lost,
They will present the
UNRIVALLED . POPULAR DRAMA,
' .. THE/ .,
INNKEEPER OF ABBEVILLE,
; AND THE
MOST LAUGHABLE NEGRO FARCE
~ \ EXTANT,
THE TICKET TAKER.
ApaHSSiON. ,.V.N.,"..... .50 cents.
HALF TTGKETS.........25 cents.
RESERVED SEATS ..75 cents.
Door opens at 71 o'clock P. M. and
Performance commence at 8.
Tickets can lie'secured at the fol
lowing-places: Rice’&'Killen’s, J. W.
Mann’s, E. ZL. Felder’s and T. J. Ca-.
.tor’s stores. Hal-l-2t
We propose to sell this first-class Fcrtilii
zer for
400 Pounds Low /Middling Cotton,
@.G O.OO,
Per ton,:payable.November 1st Now is
'tbs'time to get a genuine article oh liberal
terms. -For sale - by
CROCKER, MATHEWS & CO.,
FORT; VALLEY, GA.
mh9-tf
SLACK WALNUT LUMBER.
For Sale by
JONES .& BAXTER.
Corn, Oats, Hay, etc..
2000 bushels choice White Com, -
500 bushels Tennessee Oats,
200 bales Timothy and Clover Hay,
300 bn. Doited and Water GroundMeai
10,000 pounds’Wheat Bran,
75 bn. Cow Peas, (speckled and yellow),
On consignment and for sale cheap bv •
JONES & BAXTER.
Bacon! Bacon! Bacon!
50,000 lbs. C. R. Sides and Sbonlders just
received and for sale at reduced prices by
/ :. JONES & BAXTER.
y KS& SONS
utiful Assortment of
Spring Prints,
I"" Piques,
Lawns,
Ma.
nijp
Bltoched Goods,
Cottonades,
linen Diapers, etc., etc.,
SECOND STREET,
HAC0R, . GEORGIA.
maylStf
V/M. BRUNSON,
DEALER E?
&J . O C E. p I E S
CONFKCTIONEBIES,
AND AGENT FOB
ALL THE APPROVED KINDS OF
<3-.Tr A. KT O.
persons indebted to me willplease
come forward Jiiid make immediate pay
ment. as I ut-ed Uie monev to carrv on my
bnsiness. WM. BRUNSON
jan2t!-tf
DE-LLEHS IX
Hardware, Iron & Steel,
PAINTS, OILS, CLASS,
Cottcu and Com Sweeps,
Macon, - - - - treorgia.
mLJO- in
rtfiARTiN & COLYER,
FORT VALLEY, - - GEORGIA,
- WV/Lsale. and-rttadl'dailers in
GE0CEJ-i& : ,PROVISIONS,
Grain of aU kinds,
Tobacco, Stgam,
Liquors, Candy r
Flour, Mad,
Coffee,Tea,
Sugar, Salt,
R. C. WILDER & SON,
STEAM SASH FACTORY,
MACON, GA.,
Tli if d St. nexJ to. Artopfs Marble Yar^
HAJTCFACTDBEES'or
DOORS, .
SASH;
BLINDS,
T MOULDINGS,
BRACKETS
. grveftto
Cottage and public Houses.
Roi
your orders,
mall-tf
■Satifaction'fpiamnleed.
R. C. WILDER 4 SOX.
DRUGS,- DRUGS!
Dr. J. C. GILBERTS
Is the place to buy PURE and UNADUt
‘DERATED MEDICINES.
HE SELLS AT 3IACCX PPJCES.
CALL AND BUY YOUR SUPPLIES
TERMS STRICTLY CASH.
dec28-tf
C o p al and Japan
i ....; ’ ■■ i- _
VAHSTISH,
AT J. C. GILBERT’S DP.UG STOKE,
dee 28-tf
Window Glass and Fatty
FOR SALE BY
Ur. a-. O. G-XtiEEHT.
dec 28-tf
Tin and Wooden. Wai
All Of which will besold vey low for Cash.
Give us a Cali; ' mh30-3m
PLANTERS’ BAJVTK,
FORT VALLEY, GA.
Authorized Capital, • - - - $200,000
cxDEh cn.vr.TEC moil the sis is.
Eeccn-es DeppsiLs, discounts Paper, bays
.inJsells ExcEahge.'atso Gbld and Silver.
Collections, made at all accessible points.
W. J. Andebson,'
-W. E. Beows, -
- - President.
- - Cashier.
PIEECTOES:
CROCKETT
- Works,
■ ALA CON, GA. ,
Bniid Iron Eailiugs for Grave Lots Public
Squares, - &k; nuke
HORSE P'OWER SA W MILLS,
Grist Mills, Portable Engines, Iron and
. Brass Castings of (ill hinds.
mh'.lO 3m E. CROCK.-IT.
DUSLOfi & DrtEYFOUS,
wwnr.ykAT.F. DEALERS XX
FOREIGN ANT) DOMESTIC
LIQUORS, WINES,
ETCm ETC.,
Tiiird Slxeet,
ADJOINING J. COLLINS A SON’S WAEEHOCSE
MACON, GEORGIA. A
decl7-3m " *
T? Wm A ^ T.. ABBETT’S LIVER KEBiCHE
Wm. R. Brorni, Dr. Wm. A. Mathews
Dr. W. H. Hollingshead.,
mh2- 3ni
R
osadLalis!
A SAFE AND CEiaCilN I
D
Flour! Flour! Flour!
40 barrels “White Rose” Choice Familv,
40 barrels “White Lilly,” Choice Extra,
200 sacks Tennessee Extra Family.
For saleat low prices by
JONES & BAXTER.
WITHOUT EXCEPTION, THE BEST STOCK OF SPRING AND SUMMER
P B I N T S.
Call and examine them at D. KEMPNEtt’S BBIGK STORE, Penar Ga
..* :/' - . .. -
Cheap Whisky, Tobacco etc; |
45 barrels low priced Whisky,
30 boxes cheap, sound Tobacco.
30 barrels Molasses.
'Sugar, Coffee, Soap, Candles, etc.
For sale by
«prft5-tf . JONES £ BAXTER.
i ...
s
For all kinds of
\>
LIVER CO P/I PLAINTS,
The Great American Health
Restorer!
Purifies the hloofi and cares Scrofula, Sy-
pliilia, Skin Diseases, Bkeumatnmx, Diseases
of Women, and all Clironie' Affections of A
the Blood; Liver and Kidneys.' liecom- t H
mended by the Medical Facility and manv
thousands of onr best citizens. .4- u
■ Bead the testimony of Phvsicians and In
patients who have used Kosadalis; send for
our Eosadalis Guide fa Health Book, ox H
Almanac for this year. whlch we publish 2
for gratuitous distribution; it will give you
much valuable information.
Dr. B. W. Carr, of Baltimore, says:
I take pleasure in recommending your
Rosadalls as a very powerful alterative.
I have seen it used in two cases with happy
results—one in a case of secondary syphi
lis, in which the patient pronounced him- \ M
self cured after having taken five bottles of | Fl
your medicine. - The other is a case of {
scrofula of long standing, which is rapidly j. K
improving under its iise.and the indications
are that the patient will soon recover. I
have carefully examined the' formula by H
which your Bosadalis is made, and find it
aii excellent compound of alterative ingre
dients.
r Dr. Sparks, of JCicbolasville, Kentucky,
says he has uscu EvSililis in cases of Scro
fula and Secondary Syphilis with satisfac
tory results—as a cleaner of the blood, I
know no better remedy. ‘ - -£
Samuel G. MiFadden. of Murfreesboro’,
Tenn., says:
I Lave used seven bottles of Bosadalis,
and am entirely cured of Bbeumatisin;
send me four bottles, as I wish it for my
brother, who lias scrofulous sore eyes.
Benjamin Bechtol, of Lima, Ohio, writes,
I have suffered for twenty yerrs with an *nl*
veterate eruption, over my whole body; a
short time since I purchased a bottle of Bo-
sadaiis and it effected a perfect cure."
Bosadalis is sold by aU druggists.
•kiid all diseases and indispositions L-H
*naic Axon, a oiscascu buuc or j (
n l-VLl'.Cl, SUCtiaS.-;.!; I
Office, Nq. 5 Commerce street Baltimore.
. Clements St Co., Fropriettes*,
. . . Foa Sale in PkArt, by - '
3>P; i. C GILBERT.
- * rn'h2Jl,
L I V E R 5
DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, S001--
NESS OF THE STOHACH, LOWNESS
OF SPIEITS, CHOLIC, COSTTVE-
KESS,
Fever and Ague, Bilious Fever,
Dropsy and Jaundice.
This Medicine is pwely Tcgctahh
AND PEBFECTLY HARMLESS, -
But itB eflicacy is too permanently estab-
nsned in tne ckiutnern and Western a
to req»aie iuitncr i ccomnifeudation. -
Tnsr wise will gi>*e it a trial—that is
Hundreds of Certificates from the^best
men in tne country attest tho value of out
medicine.
RRIQE ONE DOLLAR-
Sent hy mafi oa receipt of price.
CRAWFORD to WALKER
PBOPEIETORS,
WEST POIXT, - - - . GEOBGIA-
For aale hy
■:Sf
Olatthev:, Ross & Co.,
Fort Valley, Ga.
Sr. J, C. Gilbert,
ilecJT-ly Perry. Ga-
Jimmie and Acute TnHammatim-;
■ i