Newspaper Page Text
(ji ITJiiAN BANNtII
w! li. BENNEir, Editor.
H. M. KcIKTOBH, Associate
' THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 187a.
Iti-oolx Count!/--It» Soil and it* lin
jiroccincut hi/ Mciniiriixj.
Tin- lands in Brooks may be classified
mi-t-r two general and visions of pine and
hntmnoek. Much the larger portion
tome under the first diviH : .on,but there is
some hammock land in each district in
the county. One accustomed only to oak
and hickory woods, Would be apt to con
clude that the pine land* were all poor.
In tliis, however, lio would be mistaken.
Some of our pine lands are very pro
dmtive- better than some of the ham
mock. On the high ridges, remote from
any of the water courses, they are apt to
be poor. And sometimes there are pine
flats near the creeks and rivers which are
wet ami sobby, and are not fit for culti
vation. Asa general thing, however, the
pine lands nearest the water court* s are
the best.
WV believe it, is generally thought that,
the fertility of our lands depends, to a
great extent, upon the foundation of the
soil, 'Where there is astiff, redelay foun
dation, not far below the sod, the lands
may generally be regarded as productive
and durable. When beneath tie* surface,
you find nothing but sand, whether white
or yellow, the land is not apt to be so fer
tile, and certainly not so durable. The
same rule governs, to a great extent, an
to the hammock lands. Htifl, *ed clay
hammocks are valuable. Sand ham
mocks win re the growth looks perhaps as
well as the other, may be very product
ive fora few years, but is much sooner
exhausted.
Hammock lands must not be confoun
ded with swamp lands, for what we de
nominate hammocks areas high and dry
as the pino lands, though as a general
thing, these hammocks are contiguous.to
s mie water course. Wo also have some
swamp lands and ponds that might be
productive, if properly drained, but no
effort to reduce them to cultivation lias
been made, on a large scale, that we are
aware of. We know of several instances
where a few acres that had been ditched
and cultivated proved remarkably pro
ductive. Whether the efforts to reclaim
such lauds would be profitable, must of
course depend upon the character of the
lands, the situation, and the expense nec
essary to bring them to cultivation. In
some countries wo have no dount they
would lie made very valuable, but under
our present system <>f labor, we presume
they will remain, at least for a long time,
“Waste lands.”
In sonic portions of the county, par
ticularly in the southern part, near the
Florida line, there is some liuio mixed
with the soil. This, however, is the ex
ception, as our lands are generally free
from lime. We are informed hy one of
our oldest and most, intelligent citizens,
that there is one or more places in the
county where lime rock is abundant, and
that a good article of lime ecu easily be
manufactured from them. We are no
geologist, and make no pretentions to
inui h learning, as to rocks their forma
tion- character, Ac., hut we have fre
quently seen u» ks in the Witloeoochee
river whose appearance, incur opinion,
strongly indicated the presence of lime.
The large blue Spring near that River- •
mentioned in las! weeks issue-, also ftffojds
evidence of this mineral. It might, be
well for our citizens to consider whether
the lime in our county was not sufficient -
ly accessable to be made useful in our
farming operations. In this Southern
climate the growth of weeds and grass in
our fields is rapid and vciy rank, and
thus a large an mount of vegetable mat
ter is easily accumulated. This incorpo
rated in the soil, mixed with a little lime,
would in all probability do more to reu.
der it productive than most of the com
mercial manures that are brought from a
distance. And while we might, by re-.
peatinig this pl-eceas, continually improve
our lands, we would not be depleting the
finances of the county by sending off our
money to distant regions to purchase
fertilizers.
There is one thing that ean be said for
our lands : they are easily improved by
manuring. Perhaps there is no place
when-a ll;tie help in this way tells bet
ter. The fields being level or only gent
lv sloping, the m mure is not apt to wash
rff, ruu it the sub-sod is stiff rod clay, its
effects may be seen for years. 1. t such a
field be once well cow-p. lined, aud it is
bard to ted when it will be exhausted.
Our In mis being thus susceptible of ini -
piovcincnt, should we not pay more at
t> ntioo to raising manures r Guano and
phosphates, and tin ir compounds, may
pay some years, but if we want perma
nent and substantial improvements, wo
must not neglect "-akingmanure at home,
flkve weu’d faithfully give it our atten
t"on, we would 1 • ; ston shed at the
: mount that could be raised in one year,
'ihetiotbis, very few pretend to any
FVBt«m in making it, but only propose
to gather it at odd times. And if any
Ibinc hr j ]■< us so that some of the farm
work bus to 1 e mis; ended, we are almost
Mite ta stop tin- un nun business,as that
which is not immediately pressing, and
Xthc’-efore an lw«f !«■ do ] - u»?d with.
A i real mistake !
The 7ttih>bihl(/" Mia talc* the Han
i mr to Tank for it* I'iciii* on lludi
j cal Volitlc*.
| Tin- ikrinbridge Sun oflast week says,
' we misunderstood him when we said that
I he pretended that the Republican party
I was but a continuation of the old Whig
party. All right! we are willing to be
corrected if our inference was wrong, es
pecially m that, correction relieves our
old Whig friends from the odium of be
i ing responsible for the rise and progress
lof the Republican party. He says, “we
simply asserted that certain leading prin
ciples of the Whig party are also leading
principles of the Republican party, Ac.”
What tlie Hun considers the “leading
principles of the Republican party” we
cannot tell. In our issue of the 4th
; inst. wo asked him when did Clay, \Veb
j sfer or Berrien advocate certain proposi
tions which we thought were the leading
characteristics of the Radical party, but
he does not. answer. However, as be
“simply asserted,” his proposition about
the principles of the Whig an 1 Republi
can party, it is hardly worth while to
give (i simpleassertion much more atten
tion, especially, as in the very m-xt sen
tence, when i ailing us to account for our
I views, he says, "wo ask for facts, not
assertion*.’'
We are glad, too, that the Colonel ad
mits (if we do not again misunderstand
him) that the Republican party may be
judged not alone by itsplatfonn, for as
stated before, we have not the various
platforms of that party.
But the Sun takes us to task for as.
setting that “the Republican party once
said the war was not to free the negro,”
and in order “to correct the Bahhkb as
to this’ assertion,” quotes a resolution
from the platform of the Radical conven
tion at Baltimore in 1864, that re-nomi
nated Abraham Lincoln for President,
favoring the prohibition of slavery iu the
United State.', forever. Ah 1 Col., your
logic is defective in this, inasmuch as
you have to assume, as one of your prem
ises, that the Republican party is always
consistent with its-ls a. very violent
presumption, not at. all sustained by its
past history. The argument is this : it
proposed to abolish slavery in 1861, hy
| the war, therefore the war was undertak
en for that purpose, and we were wrong
in saying that that party once raid the
war was not to free the negro, &c., &•■.
But. we give you facts. Iu 1861, after
Mr. Lincoln was inaugurated, and Con
gress was entirely under the control of
the Republicans, it adopted a resolution
introduced 1.-v Mr. Andrew Johnson, in
which the object of the war is set forth
as follows: * * * “that this war is
not prosecuted upon our part in any
spirit of oppression, nor for any purpose
of conquest or subjugation, nor for the
purpose of overthrowing or interfering
with the rights orestablished institutions
of the States, but to defend and main
tain the iSnptvinaey of the Constitution
and all laws made iu pursuance thereof,
and to preserve the Union with all the
dignity, equality and rights of the sever
al States unimpaired; that as soon as
these objects are accomplished the war
ought to cease.” Now, remember this
was a joint resolution passed by both
bouses of a Republican Congress, aud in
troduced by the very man that the next
! Republican convention nominated for
Vice I'resident. It was declaring theob
i jeets of the war, yet not ono. word was
said about freeing the negro. When
* that was left out, was it not tantamount
j to saying that that, (freeing the negro)
| was not one of its objects ? Nay, more
I when it says, the war was not “for the
| purpose of overthrowing or inter/- ring
| with the established institutions of these
j States,” (one of which was slavery) did
j it not say it was not to free the negro?
' Then the “dignity, equality and right* if
i thi' err-rid Sluter" waste l e “ituimpa'rul.”
j One of these rights then . xistiug, was
slavery. That the party afterwardspuss
-1 ed a resolution to free the negro does not
! prove the falsity of our statement, but
| only the duplicity of the party. In fact,
; it was by this duplicity, preteuding the
war was only for the re-establishment of
the Union its it was, that they gained
over to its support, tile Northern Demo
crats and many of the moderate Republi
cans. Mr. Lincoln himself said on the
■ltli of March, 1861, “that he had no law
ful right to interfere with slavery, nor
any inclination to do so.” Again, “r.v
dnrance • f our political fabric depended
upon the rights of each State to control
its domestic institution*.” Abundant oth
er evidence could be adduced to 'sustain
us, did time and space allow.
But even the resolution quoted by the
l Sun nowhere says the war was undertak
en to free the negro. It deprecates the
existence of slavery, and favors its aboli
; lion, but dees not pretend to give the!
i object of the war.
But the Sun says {he reason tlie Booth
j eni States were kept out of the Union
! after the war, was because we refused to
accept the terms offered in the 1 1th
Amendment of the Constitution. Well,
i if we were out of the Union what busi
ness had we with their 14th Amendment ?
What right has a foreign State- or torri
torv ratifying amendments to the Consti
tution of the Uu. ted States? We had
no representative in Congress that adop
ted this Amendment. Your theory is,
we were outsiders (at any rate, we were,
practically) conquered subjects, not al
lowed a voice in the national legislature,
and v< t required to do the highest act of
legislation : ratify an are ndmeiit to the
1 constitution. In xour very reconstruc
tion at's you commence by saying:—
“Whereas, no legal State governments
now ex’ ; n the Rebel States of Virgin
ia, Ac., A‘-.” If they were not legal State
governments, bow could they ratify
amendments to the Constitution r What
absurddy ! You wanted to compell uh
to ratify, did you, legal or riot ? If we did,
what ought such ratification to be worth
in a free gov- . ament, whose foundation
depends upon the voice ol’ the people
voluntarily ■■xjiro .K and ? You band the
robber your purs", who strain with a
. pistol ut. your head, hut what i ourt world
1 construe that act to be a gift ? Tlie truth
is, the 14th was all wrong,
and the Republicans tie inselves Lave rc
! lieved from its operation a large majority
of those intended to lx l effected by it. ii
is a disgrace that it ever was penned,
intleh less adopted.
; But when we ask, “did not the Radical
: party by military authority take poss- s
i sion of the States, Ac.”? the Sun an
; swi'M, “No, the Radical party did. not'
j but. tli - Government of t he United States
j did,” Ac. And who controlled the Gov
ernment ? The Radicals. That dodge is
) too thin. If tlm Government does any
thing' while the Republicans are in pow
ler that they think creditable, it is all
light to nay that the Republican party
! did it, for you know they were the gov
ernment. If, on the other hand, sonie
i thing is done that they do not care to
i father, then the government and the par.
!ly are very different; things Beautiful
i consistency!
j But what right had the Federal Gov
j eminent, to reconstruct and rc-rcoonstruct
j the States? Did they lose their - exist-
I cnee as States by the rebellion, so-called ?
>lr. Lincoln, the Radical President of
the United Slates, said himself, in tlie
house of Representatives (of which he
was a member) cu llm 12th of January,
1-848, “Any people, anywhere, being in
clined and having the power have tin
right to rise up and shake off the 'exist
ing Government, aud form anew one
that suits them better. This is a most,
valuable, a sacred right.” Did the exer
cise of “a most valuable, ii stirred rigid''
forfeit, their existence ? Chief Justice
(Ji.is--, a Radical, and the highest jiuli
: eiul functionary in the United States said,
| in delivering the opinion of the court iu
tin- case of Texas v.s. White.: “The con
stitution in all its provisions looks to an
indestructible Union, composed of inde
structible Sintra." We do not propose,
how. ver, 1.0 discuss again the old doctrine
of t he right of secession, Ac.
But the Sun says the Federal Govern
ment. did re-reconstruet when we became
so insane us to defy the constitution, both
of the United States and of the State, by
a declaration that colored mni were inel
igible to office.” Well, grant, for the
sake of the argument, that this was
wrong, who first perpetrated it? A
Radical Sogishv' ure. You may suv there
wen- some Democrats in that legislature,
mni they voted to unseat the negroes.
True, hut was not the Senate uu 1 House
both overwhelmingly Radical ? Did they
not have power enough to elect. Mr. Con
j ley, n Radical, Pivsidedt of the S, nate,
j and Mr. McWhorter, Speaker of the
House? And did they not have uiajori
j ty enough to pass various other radical
| measures in sp t.- of the few Democrats ?
And yet this same Radical legislature
expelled the negroes from their seats be
cause they irere /e n.es. If anyth.ng else
wa re wanting to show their Radical pro
clivities, aud their ability to carry them
out, w e might ask : Did not the s .me leg
islature fleet you, till. Whit,hi/, to tin
l lilted S : liter St mite,Mill Foster Blodgett,
| and we believe, Fallow, also ? And that,
| too, in spite of the Democrats, for we
! hardly think many of Urn few Dim- -rat.-
that were there voted for either of tins
■’r.o. V\ e might go l ack and show how
the Radical convention that formed our
State Constitution dodged the question
of the eligibility to offices, and what were j
the views of some of the leading advo
cut«: sos this Constitution on this subject, j
but time and spaceforbidsthat we should
protract this article much longer. If we i
"insanely" did this wrong, we thing we I
have conclusively shown that the Radi
cals were first afflicted with this insanity,
and the first to deal this heavy blow upon
those who elected them to office, and I
whom they profess so ardently to love I
and . banish.
But the Colonel is cm--1 in his sarcasm |
when be tells us if we are not satisfied
with tlu- unconstitutional acts of Con
gress, to go to the .Supreme Court of the
Uuited State- a tribunal that has been
manipulated in later years entirely in the i
interest of the Republican party. Gov.
Jenkins \\i nt to the Supreme Court, but
they could not take jurisdiction of p hit- i
col questions. Glorious satisfaction
would a poor Southern Democrat have in
appealing to a bench of Radical Judges.
But instead of the .V- n trying to make 1
the government worthy of esteem, as we j
suggested, in order that we all, Demo-!
erats as we.l os Radicals, might love it, I
he prefers to continue his homilies on
our duty to iove it anyhow . And al-j
though it might be mismanaged, “still |
the heart ol the citizen should go out to- j
wards it, and iove and cherish it,” that
illustrious men of antiquity have handed I
down through ail ages, that “country
takes even precedence of self.” Would
that some of our Republican friends could i
chaiubt r that idea 1 We have no doubt, ;
with some of them, country (party) and
- are ver y closely allied, and it is easy
for such to love. But if it is always the
duty id’ the citizen to love his country,
mismanaged, though it be, then Roland,
should love her conquerors, th? Irish j
tier oppressors, and such men as
Adams and Henry and Jefferson aud
W ashington were traitois, and guilty of
base ingratitude. in not leaving Great
Britain, their mother country. Shame
upon them that self should prv dominate
over their patnotUui, and induce them ,
to set up another government in defiance
of the mother country .
CEO no I A SEWS.
—The crop of fresh babies in West
Point are said to be numerous and loud.
Three hundred and eighty pounds of
cotton were picked out by a negro in Up
son county the other day.
—The chicken crop of Hall county
will be exhausted now, as she is soon to
have three camp-meetings in full blast.
R,iik-top Harris says that one of
the editors of the Atlanta Constitution
wears a mole snake iu his pocket, to
fright.-n off neuralgia.
—As we were not reliably informed as
to the correctness of tie-rumor, as her
alded I.v an exchange, until we heard it
from hfs own truthful lips, Pendleton of
the Valdosta Times, will please pardon
us for not stating, in our last issue, that
Mr. A. P. Burreu -y, of Appling county,
lias a fine hoy, about one year old, whom
l he calls Alexander I'e.mlleton Burrenry, af
j ter the lion. A. 11. Stephens and the ed
itor of the above named paper. Verily,
that boy, withtwosueh intellectual name
sakes for prototypes, representing both
the statesmanship and most advanced
| journalism of Georgia, ought to make his
i mark among the gigantic minds of his
-A beautiful young lady, without a
hustle, invaded Marietta, with a cart, load
of chick- us and eggs for sale, the other
dav. Notwithstanding the financial pan
j ic,*the youngsters of that place run wild
! over this slock of marketing, and > ven
I those who had never been known to buy
such things before, were seen to count
out the greenbacks into the trembling
| bauds of the 1« wit. king female, whom, it
; is al-osaid, wore but eight yards of calico.
! During the Thomas county fair, one
hundred aud s- veiity-five-doi’ars in gold
i will be paid in premiums to the most
successful Knights one bundled dollars
to the first, fifty dollars to the second, and
tw< nty live to the the third.
A young man about s- vnit • n years
of ag.- » s sentenced, in Hall county, to
tb penitentiary not long since for horse
stealing. He gave a Jiet.tious na ne. aud
remarked that he wou’d not give ii in al
name for t. t housand dollars.
We learn from the Albany •> * that
the health of Dougherty and Worth coun
ties has never b ell Ivtte *.
—The effect of the storm in Dougher
ty county was by no no uns u o-ui.iu.
Alaeon Telegraph :it ■ ■ i■. s h’gbly
probable that, copper mining is likely to
become an important interest in Middle
Georgia. Home mouths ago a company
was formed for the purpose of testing
the value of the mine on the j lace of Mr.
William Tuggle, near Union Point. The
company bargained with Mr. Tuggle for
the place, to pay him so much for it on
the 20th of September, provided their
tests proved the mine to l.e of any con
siderable value. The services oi ,m ex
perienced Englishman was obtained, and
some tfli.OOO spi lit ill examining the
mine. Thd result of the test was satis
factory, and hist week the company paid
$15,000 in cash for one acre of ground
with the privilege of mining two hun
dred acres. The company will at once
[nit, up $75,000 worth of machinery and
proceed to work the mine to its tullest
extent. It is believed that it will be a
source of great, wealth ; as the mine is
represented to be a very rich one.
I.itter /'ruin tterrivn.
UniTons Bhtrass : The considc atlon
of practical methods and means by which
the overburdened ngrßultanil interests
may be relieved, including the question
of cheap transportation, the enactment
of laws for the more efficient control of
corporations and monied monopolies,the
tariff question, and the bearing of the
present tariff on the interest of farmers •
and kindred matters of great moment to j
the welfare of the farming community, ■
are occupying the attention of the West
and South. This subject has forced it - :
sell on the consideration of the whole!
country us no subject ever has dune be- !
fore, especially is this the ease in the:
Western and Southern States. Long I
suffering but bearing with patriotic for
titude almost intolerable burdens from !
which tln-n seemed no escape,tin-farmers
are at last compelled to council together
for the means of relief against the “pred
atory classes,” who ar- proving upon
tln-ir vital cnoe-ie . They saw that up
on this their very existence depended, ;
and resolved that as a preliminary to any
other step, they would act unitedly to- j
get her, aud co-operate to secure common .
benefits and common relief.
This idea was ..aught, up with marked !
favor throughout the West and .South, i
and a combination of the tillers of the j
soil to protect- and promote their own in
terest, absolutely unparalleled in the an
nals of history, is fast i-eiug formed and
solidified over a great portion of the Un
ion.
We are not prepared here to give in
detail the objects proposed. It is enough
to know that a class and interest on
which depends the welfare and material
existence of all oiht-r classes are erusli
ingly burdened; and only bv co-operation
and combination, that class, and those in
terested, ean he relieved, and secure a!
proper share ill the control of our public
affairs.
We know that from these Farmers’
Movements old political hacks arc In-glu
ing to awake,' rub their eyes, and ask :
"A\ hat is the matter,” “What does it
mean,” “What are they going to do r"
There are questions wo cannot answer. ;
Do not know what the right answer is.
nor do we care what may be the effect on
mere parties in polities, so long as tin
farmers do right ami seek to promote
their own and others’ interest. Their j
organizations are becoming very strong
and very numerous, and so long as they
are likely to effect good by promoting
changes beneficial to the community, we
bid them God speed.
Me presume that they intend opposi- ■
turn to monopolies all over the land, i
These monopolies are oppressing the
{ample: Ooiign ss is squandering the pub
lic domain by subsidies to railroads, and I
a high tariff is protecting the manufac- i
luring interest at the expense of all oth-!
ers. Credit Mobilier steals, back pay
salary grabs, custom house roberies. and
all manner of corruptions abound in eve
ry department of the Government. Their
object is right a good one, and their on
ly dnugei lies iu the wav they may keep
the doors. Keep out bad. selfish design
ing men. Ignore all connection with } >.--
lit .eians of the day, aud the th’ng will
succeed. " Bubexkx. !
! >avunnali Adveitlsr m r, n(s
BRESNAN’S
I-:i B(!PS’A\ IKll.Sii.
SAVANNAH,' GA.
Tin: ( iii Ari.sr // 077./, rx tiii:
CITY.
Hoard and Lodging Per Hay,
Oxil.3 t 51.50.
j The Prop Wnr is cb-Vrmimul t!mt the'Atlvntion
ami litil of I alt* givi-tt to guvsts
SHALL NOT BE SURPASSED
j by any oftbe high priced hotel* iiTlhis section
oi' country.
1 The Biiildirp, bating been rretyi'ly Enlarged
! and Improved, now air rds accommodations lor
j 200 gueslß.
! ENTRANCES : L'r, ]->B, 100 unu n 2 Bryan
j Sticet, oppo*i: < • Mai kv'.
,1. ZIYi ES A A \, Prop.
:i7 ts.
M. M. BULLIVATT;
Dealer in
SHAD. FSESH AMD^stp.^
Vegetables Fi'ii ' and Other Produce.
order* promptly to Terms
Ca*h or. Delivery.-*-^
S3y xL I s - iV J ls - * l ’ (U]
37-ts
D. Y. DAr-ICY,
(Late of Chiabolm & Danny.)
! 05 BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA„
COTTON FACTSRj
AND
General Commission Merchant
j Cniudgnment* of LOTION. WOM,. HIDES
: and all kind* of Country Prod' solicited.
Advance* itiude ■" < ottor. Ac.
I June 19. IS7II. -dll
J, A. FOLHILL,
t m 1 and Lniiist,
We. S3 /■ bereo u At.,
s vva . a 11, - <; 2:0110'
Cast* orders fr.,m tho country avlicifed.
ICE?, IC
fliijAVom], u
Old r. trh'isl:; ! frr I'rr’vrft,
v.ir.i.Y'- mi. oa.
j ) E-PKCI 11 i.l. i 'NNI ■! N : TO TILTH
1 V friends ad tic pub! nerultv, that (he
lm ve a large n-i k of
vij iz 1 : ice
; In store, whioh "they - fler at lire lowest market
; price.
Orders lor tin* c.- .nfry. • quantity. wih
| receiveprompt attention, 20 3m
LOOK I! EKE!
j If you need School Book*. Paper, Envelopes,
! Ink. Pens. Blank Books. or unvrhing eke in that
| line; or il you want to buy a Pi-iuo, an Organ,
; Violin, Flute. OuitHi lutiijfi. i umboHne Drum,
| .Strings. 01 a piece of Musio. just send or’eull al
i s.rnuEixKir- book am* mi sic house.
1 import >1 re t from i .'nr"pe almost everything
1 I sell, Ctitab goes and price li,;s tree sent eve
1 ry where.
H L. sIfUEIXKU Importer,
.SeVanuah, Oa.
! Apri!3, 1873. 14-if
ik. it. couex, Jtu .jos. i:rr,t.,
t il Bnq<js .
COIIEX &FIU.L,
Cottox F\( TORS
BHIII mm KEICIAITI
Oil Hay NT., Savannah, Oa.
liel'cr re p' et Lilly to
J. TV. I..Timor ,V Cos. I Ti*"\ A CoiiDOV
V A 11.itt.rf'~Si.\ ,V iv j IL M.yi’iM Cos.
Mil, l Hatch. K-o V. P. .'Tv Bank A Trust Cos
Agents far Sloths Challenge Soluble
3?:'..,pb;.te.
D. J. RYAN’S
KOl T THKi:?<
PIi(;(o«r p!i c ;,i; IVirHypr
Stock Depot, Savannah, Ga
First-Class Stock
\ T Northern Pr ee> - vi,.- tn. . freight, In
. sura ee, daryage. A '
for fTiti -LI f.
September 25. 1573.
John ?. ]\cii?uVS m s
Cotton Factors
m m mm
AGENTS For.
Gullett’s Improved Saw Gin
CNB
Hi'livrj’s liiipi i v.d Mi Can' y Gin.
tor. Br.au and Pray ton Streets.
SAI'JATVJ.R. OA.
Prompt alto ticn p ven to all business in
iru-K'd 10 ihent. Lit.era! advances made on
consignments ot co’.to and Tier p, tb.ee
Bagging and Tie, always on baud at tones
njarket price.
g t i.a.n-u Ai::;.:.
v* Paine.', iiali.t
M. J. DOYLE,
m At.ER r.v
Family G.ccer es,
LIQUORS.
FRUITS,
VRGETAISLE ,:c„
j .'ole Ag ni fur Juba Titles S<n o-1.t.. .-u
aII£,
3ia j:ket so va 1; /•:- - /;. tsr sun:,
BAVAHW/.n, a/i.
Ciders from Ihe countr- j- >*r.. l t’y ut‘cndcd t>.
i Setitcmber 23. !>9 3sn
P.II. Mul!i It & to.,
BETAIL DEALERS IN
BOOTS A\i) jiHOES,
ld9 CONGRESS STREET,
Savannah, Ga.
I Pep'ernbcr 25, 1873. Cm
—v r~--~ ~
<Ju tin n <lv rtisem n s
NEW GOODS!
JUST RECEIVEI).
Jacob Bau m ,
DEALER in
Dry Goods, Notions, Hard
ware, Crockery,
fjllituiit" <•« Dlijlll.
rj*A KKS pUo-inre in nntifying his friends and
I the public generally that he has received
FILL l\li mm STOCK
fob l-st:*,
j which w in be sold on fair and honorable terms
j T hen*- goods were pnrchnKed on very favorable
i terms, and I am confident can and will bo sold
; is cheap as any hou>e iu town.
My stuck embrucea abuoat i-veryt king kept in
Ia retail a lore in the interior— l»
• Dry Oot Am,
! ' Dress (AaAs.
Ikon* stl' QoOfU. /
Rendu Mkl* ( 'rfh/DfJ,
Shot's'
Hatf r, cfv. «f’e
* The T,nd ; rs are specla'ly in\!ted to jku me a
j visit, as 1 have many things that will meet favor
| in their r\ es,
| Purchasers are ftUo specially invil
I ud o give me a cal’, us 1 urn determined to sell
| as lew us any < Ue
I Thankful f«»r past favors a continuance of cos
1 (urn is solicited. J VCOIJ H U M.
I Sent.-■mnei-17. 1873. tnmn2l
W.s. (SI
1 I 1.U1A.1 A.
i> ■" ; ■.
DRY COOL
| m " Ur- I O
mcjfc r E n r
LADIES* DID SS GOODS, cfr.,
which ne is fM lling
as r*tr fois t\isu 9
| 1 have also on hand and will keep eons..-* H |
I sappitV'd wi.h 1 hintailon Fwrtdslditsi Good* and |
Fsenil.) <A'fifci ies.
Feeling il.ankful fer past favors, l respect- !
I fully smicit the o'mUum and patrormce of my old !
\V.%\ in ‘‘mViirTkys.
I Quitman. (*»i , Sept. I". 1 5 73. [i»7-3m
li. W. J.EYERETT,
Qm7tiun>, (Ha,
HERILY NOTIFIES ibe public tbut heist
. still at bis old siar.d.nnd baa on hand, of
! his own manufacture, a variety ot
EUCCSES AND WACONS,
which he is offering at very low prices.
He is also supplied with a complete assort- j
merit ot material for
REPAXXIISro V£HZC2*23S
of e\ ery description wiih neatnesy and dispatch. j
He is also prepared to do all kinds of
P XLVriML TRiMMLYv.,
- AND
Elackßmithing.
Having had main ye »is experience in his bus - I
ine>s and bei< g s i|*pl« and with r<»mpeN*m and;
faithful workmen, he u lici'sthe patronage Ot j
the public, and g*»a ante, s sirisfactton.
H. W. LKYEaETT. i
Quit mar.. Ga ?cj t. !S, 1X73. ts
E. IVB3. igt.,
fONFCCTIOXIPi i\D BIKER
AND OEALKU IN
Candies,
Calcs.
Emits,
Drescrrcs,
Dickies,
( Vrn netl Gnods.
Da milt/ Supplies, tfr, 9
Qi ivM vrs, <i V.
I have also on hand, am! will kt j en constantly j
TOYS anp NOTiONS,
which I will sell
Ceteap for Cash.
T manufacture m own Candle-. Takes. Breads, I
I tc., and ca guarantee ibeoi pure and uua
dune* ated
My old customers and the public generally |
are invited to call and examine my new’stock. i
E I V ES, Agt.
Quitman, Ga., Ist, 1873. 4m
Milk Clniiisui in ix Yimites!
r rNFER.SIGXFJ* are now prepared to
JL furnish ;he « *l*lie with their new patent
Si.v •lliiaiiie (hiti-ii.
The vL ICKE-i AND BEST method t.-r !
chin ing milk ever invented
'. all at • " ’*•
S Tin:DTI and A f EDIT.
Quitman,Ga.. July 17, 1873. 3m
?!fto
WANTED
/ , / . Fa, 111 ::: is' - n* 'luring llie
IM; i ;.i: -■ i'.'er re ntli* lc do business
In- ,iu ni'l Tij T nii:g i("vnf»bT| s llnsincfs
lvsiieci b if. - Will. lor piuticu-
I ari, HddrvM .-CR ANTON A CO., Hartford,
CSB-Oin IIINGECONEIC BN Eli FOR
nfl.oiU >1 N CHIMNr.YS marie bv
Ii I.I.'NE it' ii WO'jD, preduces lb« largest
j liglu Can b, u-. .1 .li any coal oil lamp. For
j sale by ail lamp dealer*.
37/011
Akciils Vv
6t:\i) fob carai.ouci,.
BCJIESir. s:\t.M. nifHF.EftJ. \,a York.
STEAM ' Ef-IG WES,
BGILEE3
AND MACHINERY
; Stationury and Fort tble Seam Engines and
i Boiler. Gray** Au'i Fidriion Uot-ton l’ress. Cir
| cular. Gang and M !i * a v Mills; Portable and
; Stationary l* Souring Mills, Sugar Gane Mi l. and
i Sugar I’iins. X i r-iw (binge Loc motives and
■ Dummy Ko does for r.-ot roads and mining
purposes new and second-hand Iron and Wood
Working Machine! vof every description. .Send
! for circular WASHINGTON IRON WORKS,
GO V. m y Street, New' York.
■ l< brated Av.ti-Priction
Cotton Press-
The cheape-i. sim; !< -? and ni-*st perfect (’otfon
i Screw eV'-r iuvi-nttal. S !id fer circular. WASH
INGTON IKON WORKS (UVesey Street. New
| York, sole iManutaetni'era.
WOJiKX T'S;
' alid Amei'lean Jt-wcii v, i* ;ukf (lame-. Ac., in
| iheir own I'.caluiv*. No capilal ne.-deiL I’uta
; h znr. Teui!-. A- -eul 1 r. 1' O. \ 10KEUV
A' Auglirlu. Maine.
II ft KIEV ll:i|iidly with Stencil and
a Ke, ' ■--k Oalti s Itah'gue*
Teel Pill pa:. i■uL. r- iilEl 1. E..M. Spencer, 117
j Hanover St. il- *ton.
rill ir. (.1? r. ' TEST I.WKNTIO.N OF
I MIEAIiK. A/' wani.-il everywhere.
c.’.!np!e.- :i:,.l t ruiall- e All Lv; * W.C. ItAIJiCU,
: RursvlivlUo, Ky .
6•I )S Yt'llOM ANT Y. in Bi.nl rimrniiiig.”
{ lio.v■ ei'hcr *' x ntfv lodn ite and gain
■ the Sow ami atlV-cii' otany peiroo they choooo,
j inatamly. Thi* r'lnple nieii ul aiijiiircineiH all
i can p"-o—>, five, bv anil 10l 1:5 cell!*: together
| With a Mani; g. tn.’l !-. Egv p;iaiiOracle Dream*,
I Hail* 1" EaiWs. A «|-i-.u I"" *. DM ,00" *old.
Aililre** T. WILIJAT A DO.. I'ubfirher.-, i'hila*
| ilelphiu.
LL-T AND OLDEST 1 \ MILT MEDICINE
SANFORD’S
Liver Invigorator,
• V pi.hnv \ :a , l * r ! . *i jo.d Tonic, for
| . 1 i ;• •! n I• !. '.H, -,ek lleftd
j rd e i-' i- \ t ,»ud •* i •< • ,i!ue»fie«ttK of
j Liver, s- nii 3 and L vG-l.- Aky ur Druggist
.im
■
, , - :• • * «;r i ■ • I i.e u ftlict
"l: } t •; I T . (id!- INK S
j | : n M,.| :r -i ;t i kind- <c l it.-,
: S .1 and • on\ ;,!-i ' Cholera and
I vo . e i'k.-sj!:;.-- .i, • IL I ! '*e : y under i*s
the trreab
. . ■! R A \ ;• I I‘i.V ?()!> ruin FI KR
. ! , -f i ii- ii. v has 1.0 «qunl as
■
! m| !j. s '{ a.e for Mil. bv all druperiat*.
HHiml ' i..■» b■ . Li.M'LiA &
; BLN 1 LFY. ( imi loUe, N. C.
OT'TTT'T ethelnl Tpereni.u.Ey,
HU ill
EATIES ATT ■ T L.
.ULMSI'RDNI. M l).. Berrien Spring*. Michigan.
ptosm siAei; Air
ing }>eopfe, of either sex. ynu:iir »r old* make
more money at work for ns in (heir spare mo
ments, or all the time. than at anvthint? else.
Particular' free. /Id ire** G STINSi »N& CO.,
Portland Maine.
WANTED, v.wmg:'
iicsineßS ti nt will Pay
fiom $1 lo S8 rer day. can be pursued in your
own neighborhood; it is a nuo chance for those
out of employment ° r ‘ ;;n ~ leisure time; girls
and boy* fVeqaenily. do a* well as men. Partic
ulars free.
Address J LATHAM Sc CO.,
292 Wasbi.igiou.St. Boston, Mass.
iTLER, BRCOIIE&.LiPP,
Imp jrtcis s,j and Jobbers cf
FCRESCN AND DOMESTIC
Dry Goods,
:ir>S TIROADV, AY
And 59- 61- 63 &05 Franklin St,
rs i:w YOim.
37-3 m
Ui\!>owG(.a Gi< :t :it *‘u(ioii i* now de
served!} paid to r!:e kinds of Window Glassosed
in dwellings, stores and churches. All quail
ties of American and French Window, Picture,
Photograph, Gut, Gn md Itimmeled and Color
ed (»i a.-*, wholesale ar.d retail. Lom Mr P. P.
Toale, No. 20 Jlayne street, Charleston. S. C.
Send f« r price curd.
FRESH BEEF.
THE UNDERSIGNED Oesire* to notify the
citizens of Quit man and surroundingcountry.
that he will keep constantly on hand, at his
stand in from « f bis Cid; epper Street,
in quantities to suit purchasers, choice and
jNratly X?uJ<*lH‘re<l Beef,
Mutton, and other ftesh meats, at reasonable
prices, and respectfsdly solicits the patronage
of the public generally.
Call ear.v in the morning and be supplied.
and li ga:*dy,
Quitman, July 17. 1873. ts
YoSicp U> Debtors :u;<! (,'n ililors.
S ATE OF GEORGIA. Bv.ka Coun'y
NOTICE is herebv giv**n to all persons hav
i.g livnnml* "gains*. 'W ILLIAM I i.LAOM late
of said Conn! v d.ect-a **d, to pre>en ; them to US
ior to our A *Tney-, liennet .* Kini?sberry,)
properly made o if, w ithin the me p ‘scribed
b> law Ail p.-r-Giii* iud b t >a»<: deceased
i•• hen b\ .i ' and !• ■ make immediate puy-
W. R. RYALS, j
C. W ii YAI S, 5 A m*fs.
i T'XliiA \ ioiiu vus-7 and Ixjw s at
ll* I aINL A LAI L*s