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Tlie Greor-gia, Weekly Teleo-rapTi and. Journal & Messenger.
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jgiAL and commercial
,yc lily Review of MIC Market.
I ^..Receipts to-day 96 bales; sales XJD;
' £l ’ 1IS-
r pi* for the week ending this evening, 579
^ ilee l" 39 i shipments 1631.
r mirfcet ha* been a litUe irregular daring the
I there ,as been n0 violent fluctuations in
'* * cn jy (iio tone of the market changing. We
^ote an advance of a %c. on the operations
market closing firm this evening
fJlCfor Liverpool middlings—the best calling
1 2. 0OTC. '
jIACON cotton statement.
unhand Sept. 1, 1870-bales.. 2,334
t,>d* V • • ' ^
S^lWonely 01,456-94,552
BV ™1 tO-<la.V
Igpl previonalf
L cS tsn1 this evening 9,151
1 Tbs money market continues easy,
I ^ tanka are rlfll discounting, readfly, all good
l^r'r^ented. Tbero is considerable Inquiry in
I 4ocUnJ bond market, and those having eur-
H'cjji, » r e investing in this class of securities
just now, than at any time daring the last
pjjjjg are stoidy and firm at the following
I* 9 *' KtOUiSOE ON NEW TOEK.
% rrem.
ricU'SOB OS SAVANNAH.
%@%di3.
par-
’ CXTTFJ) STATIS CHERKNOT—LOANS.
Ifastu'h WStf pet oent
1 OOI.n AND Sir.VEB.
ijjijgrates for ..61 C8
I -'raVc3 forWrer*.1 03
1 07
STATE BONDS.
ItorriiT per cent. Bonds, new 90@91
ISmaTpcrcent. Bonds, old 87@90
IS^ia 6 per cent. Bonds, old 80
I %jtb Carolina old Bonds, 6 per cont 80
I ;-ah Carolina now Bonds, 6 per cent 65 •
I" CITY SECURITIES.
|«itcf Macon Bonds, endorsed by B. B. ... 88
Istof Macon Bonds 7S<®76
l&Ttf Savannah Bonds, old 81@84
ISrof Savannah Bonds, new 80@83
It?of Anguaia Bonds, old 78@80
IB of AnsiMia Bonds, new 78
I nr of Atlanta Bonds, 8 per cent 83
of Atlanta Bonds, 7 per cent 76
1 ’ RAILROAD SECURITIES.
I ;>;r-U Railroad 7 per cent Bonds 95 @97
■Snip* Railroad Stock 93
IftOTl Railroad 7 per cent Bonds 95@96
Ifsm! Railroad Stock U7@118
Icatvotlem Bailroad Bonds 92%@93%
Ijcelivatern Bailroal Stock 94
Ifwa A Brunswick It. It lstmort Bonds... 77@78
Ifisa.V llronswick R. R, 2d mort. Bonds.. .60@65
Ijkcc A Brunswick Railroad Stock (nom).. 20
llisn A iVeetem Railroad Bonds 95
Hum A Western Bailroad Stock 105@108
I|ikd A Augusta Railroad let mart Bonds.90@91
I Augusta Bailroad let mortgage Bonds^^^
If«n A Augusta it R. Construction Bonds.87@90
IlKOB A Augusta Railroad Stock 40@42
I ijjata A West Point It It. 8 per cent Bonds 1 00
llfiinta A West Point R. R. Stock 1 00
IjiiaiicA Gulf Railroad, consolidated mort*
I ps» Bonds 78@60
Ipiintic A Gulf Railroad Bonds, endorsed by
I City of Savannah 78@80
Iifiantic A Gulf Railroad Coupon Bonds 58@60
I Atlantic A Gulf Railroad Stock 33
I intern Bailroad 8 per cent. Bonds, endorsed
[ by Central Bailroad 90@91
I loBgtgomery & West Point Railroad Bonds,
| endowed by Central Bailroad 86@88
I lobile A Girard Railroad Bonds, endorsed by
I Central Railroad 88@90
I E-siseippi A Tennessee Railroad 1st mortgage
I Bonds SO
I Xniieippi A Tennessee Railroad 2d mort gage
I Bonds C7@70
I South Carolina R. R. Bonds, 7 per cent 75
I Sooth Carolina It It Bonds, 6 per cent 70
I South Carolina Railroad Stock 37%<$40
| CcUon State Life Insurance Company Stodk.85@90
Th« general market has been moderately active
Ilinng tboweek under review, and a fair jobbing
I tide baa been done, particnlarly in dry goods and
I scenes. The grain and provision markot is qniot
| cl prices aro firm and unchanged. Wo quote:
13%
13 @ 13%
11 fit 11%
18 {» 20
UK @ 13
12 @ 12%
9 @ 9%
22 @ SO
80 @ S3
@ 40
@ 11
10
32
Clear Rib Sides (emoked)....
Shoulders
. Hams (sugar-cured!
| SULK MEATS-dear sides
Clear rib sides
Shoulders
| COFFER—Rio
Laguayra
Java
IKIED FRUIT, per pound 10
I MCE per pound 9
I HA—Black 160 @175
Green 2 00 @ 3 00
|ICTTER—Goshen 48 @
Tennessee Yellow 80
, Country 25
I ilEESE—According to quality... 18
15 @
I SrOAB—According to grade 15 *@
“ t grade.. 50 @
&
I MOLASSES—According to w _
FISH—Mackerel, bbls. No. 1,2,3. 15 00 @24 00
Kits 2 75 @ 5 00
Codfish per pound.... 10 @ 12
I HIT— Liverpool per sack 1 90 @ 2 00
1 HUSKY—Common Bye 1 05 @110
1 Fine 2 00 @5 00
Com 1 20 @ 1 25
Bourbon 2 50 @ 5 00
Virginia................... 2 50 @ 3 50
HE-Per dozen 285 @350
ftBACCO—Lowgradee per pound 60 @ 55
Medium...?.........:..... 60 @ 70
Good.
70 @ 80
Bright Virginia 85 @ 1 50
Fancy....?. 1.25 @150
iUiCR——Superfine per bbl 7 00 @ 7 60
1 Extra.... 8 00 @8 60
Family 9 50 @10 00
Fancy Family Brands 10 50 @11 00
GRAIN AND HAT.
OORN—TThito 1 05 @ 1 10
HEAL 1 15 @ 1 20
(■BITS 1 25 © 1 80
tors 75 @ 1 25
JHEAT—Per bushel 1 40 @ 1 £0
HELD PEAS 100 @155
| Hi!—Northern 2 0"
Tennesse Timothy..: 2 00
HerdsGrass 2 00
Tennossee 2 00
Morning Market Report.
Kzw York, March 22 — Flour steady. Wheat
, TJht and steady. Com unchanged. Pork steady
« 21 50@21 62. Lard quiet at 12%@12%.
^Cottonquiet and firm; uplands 15%; Orleans 15%;
Tarpontino quiet at 51. Rosin firm 2 50 for
i'rained. Freights steady.
Gold steady at 11. Governments steady at last
: SM’e prices. Stocks very strong and active. Money
^y at 4. Exchange, long 9%; short 10%.
.^London, March 22, noon—Consols 92%. Bonds
fttANKroET. March 22.—Bonds 96%.
Liveufool, March 22, noon.—Cotton opened with
»hardening tendency, uplands 7%; Orleans 7%;
«ies 12.000.
Fork 84s. Tallow 42s 6d. *
Markets—Evenlag Report.
KzwYork. March 22.—Cotton • firm; salos 2644
ales at 15%.
Flour, Southern qnlet; good to choice extra 7 65
1*200. Whisky activer at 91@91%. Wheat less
•dtve. 6orn in good request; new mixed western
^ Pork 2125. Bard heavy; kettle
, Turpentine 61. Rosin, strained 2 50. Freights
jm.
Money active at 5 on call but easy. Prime btisi-
?*** notes discounted at 7. Exchange 9%@9%.
EjW 11%. Governments closed doll; 62s 12%.
SWe bonds very dull; Tenneesees 63%, new 63%;
gEWsa 69; new 63; Levees 73%; 8s 85%; Ater
?a*.8s 101; 6s 68; Georaa Os 81%; 7s 90,- North
tvohnas 46; rfew 25i South CaroHnas 78; new 65%
.Governments, 6fa 11%; C6s 11%; new 10%; 67a
10%; 10-408 8%.
. GwcmsATt, March 22.—Com in good demand at
S“ Pdees- Pork dalL Lard drooping at 11%.
««», sides 10@10%@10%. Whisky, smCl sales
.New Onniisa March 22.—Flour duD; superfine
double 6 50@675; treble 7 00@7 25.
S® quiet at 70. Oats 65^68. Hay easier; prime
£“i choice 27 00. Pork doll; mess held at 2175.
jacou dull; shonldere 8%@8%; sugar cured hams
‘-•Larddoll; tierce 12%@13; keg 18%@14. Sagar
nempBS
Coffee etoady atl4@15%.
(jGO'd duty paid Sterling 21%. New York eight par.
v^to^adive, middUnga 14%@14%» net receipts
5S Srooe 4840; experts to Great Britain ;
£ Liverpool 306; to Jerk *65; to Cbnstradt 1604;
^Hanel805; aoastvrisp 1091; sales 13,800; stock
. March 29-Cbtttm quiet; mBOings 18%;
r®* 330; reoeipts 460.
March 22.—Cotton quiet and firm;
net reoeipts 2134; exports to Great
CmamSua- coastwise 1388; sales 400; Stock 63,844.
March 23.~=Oothm qnlat; mlddliuga 14%;
eoa-.^^Pts 176; exports to the continent ;
"rt'WiseSi; sales 1000 bales; stock 61,020.
Baituiobi:, March 22.—Cotton firm at higher
rates; nuddliags 14%; net receipts 100; gross 162;
ciportstoGroat Britam—; coastwise—; sales 1225;
stock 12,775. ’
Charleston. March 22 Cotton in fair demand;
middlings 13%@1S%; net receipts 708; exports to
Britain 1485; coastwise 886; sales 500; stock 23,590.
Wilmington, March 22.—Cotton firmer; middlings
13%; net receipts 74; exports coastwise 185; sales
65; stock 3153.
Boston, March 22.—Cotton firm; middlings 15%;
net receipts 131; gross —; sales 600; stock 10,000.
Norfolk, March 22.—Cotton firm; low middlings
ij^ net receipts 705; exports coastwise 757; sales
Galveston, March 22.—Cotton strong, good or
dinary 12@12%; not receipts 880; exports to Great
Britain 1312; co&stwiee 803; sales 1300; stock 53,993.
^London, March 23, evening—Consols 92%. Bonda
Tallow 43s 9d.
Liverpool, March 22, evening. — Cotton firm;
uplands 7%@7%; Orleans 7%@7%; sales 15,000
bales; speculation and export 8.000.
Frankfort, March 22 Bonds 90%.
Tiro Sides to a Story.
The Tribune editorially says of the attrac
tions of Santo Domingo:
“No mind could escape being more or less
biased in favor of a country where oranges
bloom in a season when all New England is de
voting itself to the cultivation of tubercles.
The sturdy and industrious farmers of the North,
who have never enjoyed a day’B leisure bat as
the pay for six days’ work, cannot help being
impressed by these stories of a country where
nature has thrown off the bigotry and parsimo
ny of our unsympathetic skies, and seems to
have concluded to live in truce and good fellow
ship with man.”
All of which sounds well enough, but in it
also there is more of sound than sense, for its
correspondent tyaon the spot writes as follows:
“I shall not try to paint the picturesque hor
rors of that scorching ride, in the midst of a
tattered mob of many colors, whose natural
complexions, however, were soon so thoroughly
dusted that black and white were undistincash
able.” _
And a£sin he says:
“The sun beats fiercely down upon the peace-
fnl waters, and the grim mountains look dry
and almost bare, though there are woods near
their snmmits. The land is not considered
very productive, though there are plantations a
short distance eastward. Irritation is necessa
ry, for some times-rain does not fall for a whole
year, and President Baez said there was a pe
riod within his memory when not a drop fell on
theso mountains or their valleys at their foot
for nine years.”
Isn’t a country without rain for nine years a
nice one to invest in ?—N. T. Exprets
Visible Supply of Cotton.
The New York Commercial and Financial
Chronicle, which furnishes every Friday the
table of cotton receipts, etc., telegraphed by the
Press Association, makes the following exhibit
of cotton in sight at that date:
1871. 1870.
Stock in Liverpool bales 804,000 295,000
Stock in London 76,340 09,380
Stock in Glasgow 350 460
Stock m Havre 44,230 95,330
Stock in Marseilles 4,600 6,800
Stock in Bremen..... 2,750 7,5#fi
Stock rest of Continent...... 25,000 35,000
Afioat for Great Britain
(American) 332,000 S20>0p0
Afioat for France (American
and Brazil) 3,846 39,816
Total Indian Cotton afloat for
Europe 167,000 139,734
Stock in United States ports. C44,882 499,197
Stock in inland towns 100,750 96,W9
Total 2,202,847 1,585,113
These figures indicate an increase in the cot
ton in sight to-night of 617,730 bales, composed
with the same date of 1870.
of Congress from Louisiana, seeking to
nate the whites and establish another Haytien
then went to the root of the evil by taking the
ballot from the blacks. No longer able to sit in
the Council House or engrossed in politics; they
have gone to work, and the consequence is that
in this once almost bankrupt community,
S00, much of it at 7 per cent, premium, WmS
offered on a call for a £4,000 improvement leah.
Onr correspondent adds: “In every department
onr changed circnmstanoes are being felt, and
business is rapidly taking an important place in
almost every parish where previously negro
squatters and political demagogues found en
couragement.”
Destructive Fire at Camilla, SfHv
ell County.
Under date of the 19th inst, onr travelling
agent, Mr. Mason, writes us as follows from
Camilla:
A fire broke out here about half past nine
o’clock last night, in the store house occupied
by Messrs. Wm. Russak & Bro., and in a few
moments it and the adjoining buildings, occu
pied by M. Einstein & Co., Butler & Heath and
N. T. Elliott, were wrapped in flames. As it
was evident that there was no hope of sMMtk
either of these building, the citizens commenced
at the first alarm to remove the goods, and suc
ceeded in saving a greater portion of them.—
The total loss will be about $15,000, on which
there was insurance to the amount of about
$9,000. Mr. Elliott had no insurance on either
his goods or store. The store occupied by
Messrs. Russak & Bro. was not insured. It be
longed to Mr. 3. T. Owen. About one-half of
the business of Camilla was done by thenartu
burned out. I learn that Messrs.- Bnw*t ■
Heath, Einstein & Co. and N. T. Elliott,
hang out their shingles ngainimmediately. The
fire it is supposed originated accidentally.
The Best Wat to Advertise.—The best and
cheapest mode of advertising in.the world, is
that in the newspapers. Every successful ad
vertiser will say this. Seed strewn there—if
the seed is good for anything—always brings np
a crop of some value, most generally a hundred
fold. Placarding the dead-walls and showering
band-bills among the people are auxiliaries in
advertising, bfit it is doubtful whether, as a
rule, they more than pay the expenses, while
there is no doubt that they are a aWiBfc
The blankest of dead-walls is only disfigured by
posters, provoking, in the well-regulated mind,
a sense of aversion to the man whoso advertises
and the articles upon whose excellence he expa
tiates ; while as to hand-bills, nothing so preju
dices a citizen against going to see any show or
buying any goods, as the ugly .slips of paper
thrust at him from all quarters, eloquently
recommending him to do those things.—Jour
nal of Commerce.
The Teachers’ Convention.—The convention
of Georgia teachers meets in Columbus on the
second of May, and continues in session three
days. Wo trust it will be largely attended.,
She Trustees of the Public Schools hard Mftgj 1
arrangements for the meetings. The eXOmuSt
of our Public Sohools will be interesting, espe
cially those in calisthenics. We supp»e the
annual May pic-nic of all the Sunday sdbeote In
the city and neighborhood will take place While
the convention is here. Our city is proverbial
for her hospitality, and arrangemi
made to accommodate oonafortably t
come. Probably the City Council -
measures in regard to the entertainment at
convention at the next meeting. There is much
of interest in Columbus-to see—onr sple:
manufactories of iron, wool and cotton,
unrivaled water power among them
hope every teacher in the State may
Columbus Sun.
Don’t Crx !—But rejoice, for Prof. Isaacsen
the inventor of the celebrated “Sure Pop” has
hit upon the really only certain rat, mouse,
roach and bug killer. Let the people encourage
an article which is the result of long study and
experience. The rats eat this paste readily
and then run the way of the wind, (to get air
•fee.,) and then die, away from the premises.
We hear many of our friends speaking in the
highest terms of this article. It is no humbug
and no one troubled with rats will ever regret
investing 25 cents in a box of “Isaacsen's Gen
uine Sure Pop.” For sslo by all Druggists.
eod&wlw
Cancers, Tumors, Ulcers.
Astonishing cures by Prof. Kline, at the Phila
delphia Cancer Institute, 931 Arch St., Philadelphia,
Pa. At Branch Offices, by Dr. Dalton, 238 W. 4th
St., Cincinnati, O.; by Dr. Greene, Charlotte, N. C;
by Dr. Healy, Stubblefied House, Atlanta; Ga.
WONDERFUL CASCES& ANTIDOTES.
Xb Knife. Kb Cauttie Medicine. A T o Blood.
Little Bain.
For particulars, call on or address either of the
hove.jan27-w3m
MARRIAGE GUIDE.
EVERY ONE HIS OWN DOCTOR.
A private instructor for married persons or those
about to be married, both male and female, in every
thing concerning the physiology and relations of
our soxu&I system, and the production and preven
tion of offspring, including all the new disco reties
never before given in the English language, by
Wm. Young, M. D. This is really a valuable and
interesting work. It Is written in plain language
for the general reader, and is illustrated with nu-
tOotabs engravings. All young married people, or
itete contemplating marriage, and having the least
impediment to married life, should road this book.
It discloses secrets that every one should be ac
quainted with; still it is a hook that must be locked
up and not lie about tho house. It will bo sent to
any address on receipt of 50 cts. Address Dr. Wm
Young, No. 416 Spruce Street above Fourth, Phila-
delphta. v oct22-w6m.
PRICE REDUCED
OdLY $50 PER TOM IN FITE TOM LOTS.
MORE THAN TWO HUNDRED PLANTERS
THE LAN6D0N FERTILIZER
Negro Suffrage m Jamaica.
The New York World, of Sunday, gives tfcfe
following piquant illustration of the effect of
negro suffrage and of its subsequent abandon
ment in the Island of Jamaica:
• In 1865 the Island of Jamaica was convulsed
with a negro insurrection, the misguided blacks,
stimulated by the mulatto Gordon and some
early carpet-baggers from this country, among
them a fellow afterwards a Republican nt@gtat*4|MflL M urc is known to every SCIENTIFIC AGRI-
" -- - exten jg_ HJBLiURIST.
this last year, and the MOST FAVORABLE RE
PORTS are heard from it. Its PURITY and
STRENGTH are guaranteed. The value of .
BONE PHOSPHATE
COTTON SEED MEAL
These articles form tho bulk (4-5)
of the “ LANODON,” to which are added proper
or Santo Domincan government. The ^sllab ofJPOT^S G^UM^dSALT-. The*e
government promptly stamped this ingredients form the cempeund.
IT IS A HOME PRODUCTION.
Largo capital invested here in the Works affords
a security for the guarantee of its PURITY.
HON. C. C. LANGDON
(Agricultural Editor Mobile Register)
gives advisory supervision to the production of this
Fertilizer.
NO HIGH FREIGHTS from the far East, nor
LARGE COMMISSIONS TO AGENTS HERE have
to be paid, as must be true of an article of foreign
(Northern) manufacture, and hence the “Langdon”
ei(L be sold, and IS SOLD CHEAPER, than any
Standard Fertilizer in the market.
The COTTON SEED MEAL is produced at the
Works, and the RAW BONES are gathered from the
surrounding country and ground at my mills.
FARMERS ARE INVITED to visit tho Mobile Oil
Mills and witness the operations of producing the
Langdon Fertilizer.
Planters should instruct their Merchants to buy
for. them
THE LANGDON FERTILIZER,
Because it is a simple composition of articles known
to be good, and tho Purity of which is in
sured.
Because it is sold at a lower price than any article
of like quality could be, which is brought
from a distance.
Because it will give greater return from Its .use,
pound for pound, than any other fertilizer,
no matter what the price.
FROM THE MANY TESTIMONIALS from prac
tical men, theso are here given:
Tuscaloosa, Ala.,1
,'@4, , December 22,1870. )
toW. fr.L.MaiM:
wm Sm—Your circular of the 1st inst. came to hand.
As we found the Langdon Fertilizer tho best that
we tried, I give you my experience-with it. Our
land is poor, red hill land. Used 200 lbs. to tho
acre. We used one ton of GiUam’s at $75; three
tons of Zell’s at $85; two tons of the Langdon at
$60 per ton. The land was all worked alike, and
the same quantity used of each. I did not keep the
weights of each field separate, hut attended to the
picking and weighing myself, and know that there
was more cotton gathered to the acre on the Lang
don than any other part of the place. The Zelrs-
was next. From my own experience, and in the
opinion of all fanners who took notice of it, the
Laegdon Fertilizer was far superior to any that wo
CH& Respectfully yours, etc.,
O. H. FITTS.
Hr. Thohas H. Kenhed7, of Meridian, Miss., af
ter recounting his experience in the nee of the
Xangdon Fertilizer, says: “when I lived on my
plantation in Alabama, X used many kinds of Ma
nure, but I never used anything that would begin to
compare with the Langdon Fertilizer.”
as
<H«A£w-t,
Negro Jubobs.—Chief Justice Mason, (Radi
cal) of Nebraska, has delivered i
against negroes sitting as jdrora in
The principal point madfe is that the
and fifteenth amendments grant rights to ne
groes, but impose no duiies upon them, and
that jury service is a burden and not a privil
ege ; that the State Constitution can be changed
only by the same power that enacted itj that
Congress could not confer-such authority tp
change upon the -Legislature.
A BSD Story Is boU at a Badiori
new to the ways of the House, who mistook the
meaning of the clapping for pages which alwsyg
follows the chaplain's opening preyer.
that beats ifae,” said he, ‘if dost see anything in' ‘
that prayer worth cheering.”
THE FRIGE AT THE MILLS IS $50 PER TON,
in five ton lots, $55 for a single ton,
$3 per 100 lbs. for small lots.
It & exchanged for Cotton Seed, 300 pounds, in
strong sacks, delivered free on board boat or cars
at Mobile, for one ton Cotton Seed, free at the
r or depot up country—sacks and twine fur-
by the Mills.
its cheapness, Gol. Langdon gays, “Itschesp-
am fully convinced that, at the price now
2xed by you, to-wit—$60 per ton. (Prioe reduoed
to 955.) It is much the cheapest fertilizer in our
jqaitot. Found for pound, I consider it more val
uable than the preparations that are selling at $75
to $80. For my own use, X wonld greatly prefer it
to Peruvian Guano at the same price.” Of its merits
ys, “The result is the beet Fertilizer in the
for our Southern lands, in my opinion.”
Again—“It contains more fully and completely
tMh any other; the elements necessary for the
production of Southern sops and the lenovation
of Southern soil.”
tmf. Charles U. Shepard, Jr., M. D., Professor.
Ohemiatry, South Carolina Medical College, ami
or of Fertilizers for South Carolina, who
fall and careful analysis of the Langdon
, w, says of it: “Itte a very superior article."
crush at the Hills, Raw- Bones, which are
' d fine. Price at the Mills, 945 00 per ton.
* Raw Bone is too well known as a strong
' need comment: -For Trees, Shruhbe^.
it has no equal. The Ground Bone of
Oil Mills is warranted to oofitaia.no-
thing but Bona*
Address all orders for either of the above Fertil
izers, accompanied by cash or orders on yonr mer
chants here, to MOBILE OIL HILLS,
“ ’ F.“O.'B0X 723, Mobile, Ala.
$12 00 per ton, Gash, paid for Cotton Seed
' at the wharf or depot here—sacks and
" free of charge at yonr i»n«ur«g or
BONES WANTED.
mul 00 opr ton will be paid for Bones delivered at
tffiHnUs. It will pay to gather them about the
OOUfiffTand ship to the Mobile Oil Mills.
Jan4-eod<kw8mos
m: pss’
NZTROGBNZZEB
SUPERPHOSPHATE
OF LIKE!
PRICE REDUCED.
STANDARD GUARANTEED!
Fifteen Hundred Dollars
TO BE DISTRIBUTED AMONG THOSE APPLYING MAPE8’
NITBOGENIZED SUPERPHOSPHATE
OF LIME TO THE
OTTER AND SFR1NS CROPS OF
18 7 1.
Crops Doubled, Trebled, and Quadrupled
During the past five years by the use of
' ONE HUNDRED POUNDS OF
Maps’ Nitrogenized Snprposte of Lime.
EFFECT OF ONE APPLICATION
SHOWN ON FOUR SUCCESSIVE CHOPS,
Increasing the Fourth Fifty per cent.
In general results for tho past five years it has
been unsurpassed.
Hundreds of certificatesfromthol’eadingPlanters
in every portion of Georgia, South Carolina, Ala
bama and Florida approve it a FERTILIZER of the
highest standard.
For Terms, List of Premiums offered, and Certifi
cates of Planters, send for our Pamphlet, address
ing
PURSE & THOMAS.
Genebal Agents, Savannah, Ga.,
Also, Dealers fn
DISSOLVED BONES, PLAIN,
DISSOLVED BONES, AMMONIATED,
BONE DUST,
LAND PLASTER,
PERUVIAN GUANO
PURSE & THOMAS,
feblC-2tawiwtf
SAVANNAH, GA.
r'l EORGIA, BAKER COUNTY—Mrs. N. J. Cook
\JT having applied to mo for exemption of realty
and personalty and setting apart and valuation of
homestead, I will pass upon the same at my office
in Newton on the 20th day of April. 1871.
inarl8 d2t&wlt CLEMENT GORE, Ordinary.
STOLEN!
F tOH my stable, near Colloden, Georgia, on
the night of the 12tb, one black mare MULE,
about four years old, fifteen hands high, has a
small white spot near one hip, not certain which. I
will give twenty fire dollars for the mule delivered
to me at Colloden, and twenty-five dollars for the
thief, with evidence to convict.
JOHN W. BLASINGAME.
mar23 dltiw3t Colloden, Ga.
District Court Notice.
Ninth Senatorial Diskuot,)
Morgan. Ga.. February 28.1871. f
O FFICIAL notice is hereby given in compliance
with the Statutes, that the District Court will
be held at Newton in the county of Baker, on the
2d Monday in March next, and on the 2d MoDday
in each month thereafter untiil otherwise provided.
JESSSH. GRmriN.
marl-80w
Judge District Court,
9th Senatorial District of Ga.
Bmmwmmm
• PRESTOS
Cognac Bitters,
** FIEST PRIZE
Paris Exhibition 1867.
Purify the blood and
strengthen the system,
eradicating the effect of
dissipation, maintain the
human frame in condition
of healthfulness, dispel the
Blues and all mental dis«
tempers, and relieve those
whose sedentary hsftlte lay
them open to depression.
They prevent and cure 3M*-
6*cs emd other Hfevers, J^ygr awtf
sigve, Chills, SHarrhom, 2>y*dn-t
iery, Dyspepsia, Sea-.Sisimess,
Colic, Cholera, Cholera Mo.rbu+
ana every compfatnt Inci
dental to diet or atmos
phere. Ladies *”<*
them a sovereign beon, «•
- they eradicate all traces
of Debility, Kervousness,
Inertness, and Diseases
peculiar to the sex.
(^Thousands of Testimo
nials can Its seed a* the
d«ee of
Mi JACOBSON, Sole Proprietor,
64 & 69 mtar Stpet, N. Y.
fl. FJEB8T 4 CO.
General Agents for the State of Georgia.
New Styles, Seduced Prices.
MASON Sc HAMLIN
- •• yf*** * ifTOO U
Cabinet Organs.
For Parlors, Drawing-Booms, Libraries, Churches,
Sunday-schools, Lodges, etc.
T HE most popular and widely used of large mu
sical instruments. Elegant as furniture; suit
able for secular and sacred music; not requiring
tuning, or liable to get out of order.
Fifty styles, at $50, $65, $100, $125, $150, $160,
$175, $200 to $2000 each,
The Mason & Hamlin Organs are the acknowl
edged standards of excellence among metruments
of the class, having been awarded -
SEVENTY-FIVE MEDALS
or other highest premiums, for demonstrated supe
riority, in Enrope and America, including the first-
class medal at the Pans Exposition.
NEARLY 1,900 MUSICIANS.
Including a majority of the most eminent in Amer
ica, and many in Europe, have given written opin
ions that they EXCEL ALL OTHERS.
(See Testimonial Circular Sent Free.)
New Styles and Reduoed Prices this month. Ani
Blustratcd Catalogue, with elegant illustrations
from photographs and full information, sent free.
Address MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CQ., 596
Broadway, New York, or 164 Tremont st., Boston.
For sale in Macon by G. P. GUILFORD & CO.
nov2GeodAwtf
USE
Hamilton’s
Compound
TROCHES
BUOHU
FOR ATT. DISESES OF THE
KIDNEYS AND BLADDER,
DYSPEPSIA, RHEUMATISM
Being the strongest preparation of
BUOHU
BYER OFFERED TO THE PUBLIC.
I. 6. HERBERT & €0.,
PROPRIETORS.
No. 3? Park Row, New York.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
HUNT. RANKIN & LAMAR,
J. H. ZEIUN & CO.
feb7-eod&wly Agents, Macon, Ga.
A. J. WILLIAMS
.PATENT
Pfii DROPPER.
Patented Hay 4th, 1869,
T HIS noble little machine
was intended by the in
ventor for dropping peas, for
which purpose it claims a spe
cialty. And even as Com and
Guano Dropper it has no
equal. AsaPeaDropper.it
needB only to be seen to con
vince anyone that it Is a per.
feet success. The present
season the inventor has drop-
ned nearly one ton 6f guano
with the Dropper, in the hill,
with his com, and he is now
prepared to recommend It for
putting guano into' the hill
with more correctness and rapidity than any other
mode he has tried. •_
It is light, only weighs one pound and a half,
simple, and not liable to get out of order. It is
used in the same manner and with as much ease as
a walking cane. Children can use it with perfect
success before they can drop by hand.
I wish to establish agents to sell tho PEA
DROPPER.
Price at retail, Three Dollars. ,
Any one ordering the Pea Dropper, will please
address JAMES H. FRYER, Agent.
Bameeville, Ga., April 25,1870. mai23 w3m
OLD C1RULIM BITTERS,
DELIGHTFUL TONZC
WE take great pleasure In offering the old CaTO~
ft lina Bitters to the public. They are compound
ed with great care, and contain some of the best Ton
ics in the Phermacopia; As evidence of the superi
ority of our Bitters overall others, we have certifi
cates from many of the leading physicians in eur
tate. who have prescribed them in their practice.
THE OLD CAROLINA BITTERS
Will be found invaluable for
WANT OF APPETITE.
GENERAL DEBILITY.
CHILLS AND FEVER,
DYSPEPSIA.
We do not offer our Bitters as a euro for all dis
eases, bnt as an Aromatic Tonic, they have no equal.
For sale by Druggists and Grocers everywhere.
Principal Depot.
GOODRICH, WINEMAN & GO., .
Importers ofohoice Drugs and Chemicals,
Charleston, S. &
For sale in Maeon by
atay25-eodAwly
L W. Hunt & Co,
s
o
8
A
D
A
L
I
8
OS AO All IS!
rTHEGhKAT AMfi pM S li-.ALTH RB-
JL storcr purifies th. *».i cures Scrof
ula, Syphilis, Skin " i,'- o-.-tism,Dis
ease, or Women, and a-. Ot.uaic _eotions o '
the Blood, Liver and Kidneys, xtecommendw.
by the Medical Faculty, and many thousands
of our best citiiens. Read the testimony ot
physicians and patients who have used Rosa-
daiis; send for our Kosadalis Guide to Heaalt
Book, or Almanac, for this year, which we
publish for gratuitous distribution; it will give
you much valuable information*
Dr. R. W. Carr, of Baltimore, says; I take
pleasure inreeomm ending your Kosadalis as
t very powerful alterative. I have seen, it
used x two eases with happyresults; one in a
oase cseeoudary syphilis, in whioh the pa-
toeat piousuncod hunself cured after having
taken five bottles of your medicine. The other
oatlins are tnat the patient.will soon recover.
Telia., bays:
I have used seven bottles of Kosadalis. and
son entirely cured of Bhejusatiim, .Send me
fear bottles, as I wish it for my brother, who
nas sorofulous sore ires. . ..
W3&8 operfeot
IADAIsIS
» 80 LB BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
-Laboratory, No. 61 Exohange Place, Bal-
titn0r «jlcment» Co., Proprietors.
6-«od*wtf
For sale by
J.H.ZBDUNAW,
LW;Hoinraco.
G KOB6IA, MACON COUNTY.-*-Hrs. Mary IT.
Oarvdr, wSow ot Robert Carver, late of sad
uoiwou,., uuuer u.v »*■ — oe provided,
laod'Iwtil pass upon tho same atmy office at ia
| o\slock ». on Friday, 7th Apnl cent. %is 21st
j m.rOa aatAwt JNO. L. PARKER, Ordinary.
18 7 1.
RUSSEL COE’S
AMMONIATED
OF L1ME»
A REPUTATION OF TWENTY YEARS !
100 POUNDS TO THE ACRE ENOUGH!
The Great Test Question ef the Year for the South-- What Fer
tilizer to Use to Yield a Large Profit ?
PREMIUM OF $1,000 GOLD !
ia I
WHAT iOO POUNDS WILL DO ?
WE hereby offer and agree to pay the above liberal PREMIUMS to the Planter of this State
who will produce the largest amount of Merchantable Cotton to the acre, by the use only as a
Fertilizer, of one hundred pounds and no more, of RUSSEL COE’S AMMONIATED SUPER
PHOSPHATE OF LIME.
That tbisreompetition shall create a general interest, and that each portion of the State may
have a fair showing to compete for a premium, we have divided the State into two sections, that
of NORTHERN GEORGIA being all that country lying north of and including the tier cf counties
Habbis, Talbot, Upsov| Monboe, Bibb, Jones, Baldwin, Hancock, Glasscock, Wabekv and
Columbia. And SOUTHERN GEORGIA that portion lying south of said counties. And to
each section we will award
Five Hundred Hollars in Gold!
To the purchaser who will authentically prove that in the' cultivation of ONE ACRE OF LAND
he has not used over one Hundred Pounds of RUSSEL COE’S AMMONIATED SUPERPHOS
PHATE OF LIME, and the amount of Ginned Cotton produced shall exceed in quantity that
raised and authentically reported by any other competitor in this section. Tho award will be
made in the first week in January, 1872, in the city of Savannah, when all onr Special Agents
will be present to represent those they shall have supplied, and as a guarantee of. justice to all
interested. Let every Planter in the State denounce Fertilizers of which they have to use 400,
500, 600 pounds, and even more, to the acre, not to speak of many that are worthless, and decide
this year whioh is the GREAT FERTILIZER 1
Test Bussell Coe’s Ammoniated Superphosphate of Lime with any
Quano or Manufactured Fertilizer in the Country.
We give you an unimpaired Standard and a reputation of Twenty years to work upon. Tour
expense is but $3 to 83 50 per acre, and if properly and economically used, we will warrant to
you a profitable yield.
Professor Samuel W. Johnson of Tale College, and Chemist to the State of Connectient, in big
Report, 1870, on “ Commercial Fertilizers,” to the “Board of Agriculture,” says therein, refer
ring to RUSSEL COE’S AMMONIATED SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME:
“ We have but one single Superphosphate whose reputation is so good that dishonest dealers
care to steal its brand to sell their trash by.”
Send tons or either of our Special Agents for Analysis,-Testimonials or any information de
sired relative to this GREAT FERTILIZER.
To be entitled to compete for the Premiums, at least ONE TON of a purchase must be fox
cash. We want Agents in every county in the State, where there is no one yet appointed.
Apply for authority to the Speoial Agent to whom you are the nearest located.
TERMS—Cash, Approved Acceptance or in Exchange for Cotton:
LITTLE Sc PHILLIPS, Gen’l Ag’ts,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS;
NEW TO
132
IRK,
12 Fxon
it Street
SAVANNAH, GA., -
79 Street.
SPECIAL AGENTS.
MESSRS. GROOVER, STUBBS & OO., Savannah, Ga.; Messrs. O. H. PHINIZT & CO.,
Augusta, Ga.; MARK W. JOHNSTON, Esq., Atlanta, Ga.
janl9d&w tf
W. A. HUFF, Special Agent,
MAOOZr, GEORGIA.
GUANO EXCHANGED FOR COTTON.
LAWTON & WILLINGHAM,
Successors to Lawton & Lawton,
AND GUANO DEALERS.
Advances M!acLe on Ootton in Stene.
GUANO! GUANO!
TfB HAVE ON HAND A GOOD SUPPLY OF THOSE OELEBBATED GUANOS,
PERUVIAN GrXJANO
PATAPSCO
“AND - <;r v-- '
COTTON FOOD,
ENGLISH DISSOLVED BONES,
Which we will sell 01 terms suitable to the Times.
febl9 U.
LAWTON & Will
INGHAM
TEN DOLLARS
XXI ILL purchase the want of the South—a aolu-
Yt Me Fertilizer, toaUnUneona to effect, home
manufactured—every farther bin oWn chemiat to
extract from material now wasting on every planta
tion, the cream of manures and the eeaenceof fer
tilizers without the vast expenditures of cash or
xniDDua credit, or expensive hauling from depot or
muck Ian£ Com soaked in a solution of it, no
molo, hirdorweoa vrtU touch; mixed with freafi
leaves and straw and will make a welt-rotted ma
nure ho, in an incredibly short titoe. Cotton wed
soaked in. solution of it and then dried, will es
cape worms and produce a heavier pod and more
fleece. It willbe seen ,that it being a soluble arti
cle Us effedtinB he quickly felt andTpUate xeoefte
P. si—For the benefit of those I may not be able
to see and who recognise toe duty of evety effort
to redeem our waste places, I have deposited re
ceipts of how to make with T. W. Ellis, Druggist,
In Maoon, Ga., who will forward on receipt of
price febl5w2m
Hoflee to Debtors and Creditors.
A LL persons indebted to the estate of Henry
A N. Ella, late Cf Bibb county deceaseed, win
please come forward and settle with the under-
signed, and those having clabhs against said eetote,
will file toe same with me. proven according to law.
fehl* dtt&wfiw W. 7L CHERHir, Adir’r.
SAMUEL Y. GREER*
(Successor to Dialogue and Greer),
Fire Hose Manufacturer
520 XOBTH STBEIT, PH1U*A*BU,
ESTABLISHED Iff 1821.
S TEAM Fire Engine*. Forcing and Snegtan Hose,
Leather and Rubber Bucket*. Pip< Nozzle
Screw, and Patent Conjfiing of all kinds. *Ob22wly
No. 1 Peruvian G-uano,
(SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO,
AMMONIATED RAWBONE BUPEBP JtOBPHAT*,
PREPARED FISH GUANO,
AOTD PHOSPHATE,
FLOUB QF B0NE, iu jLf*
DISSOLVED BONE,
LAND)
Foa Sana b*
ASHER AYRES.
Guawo Dkpot, Poplar St.,
j*a20 dJhv6m