Georgia weekly telegraph and Georgia journal & messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1869-1880, April 04, 1871, Image 5
i j. e Creoi-g;ia; ~W eekly T'elegrfiboli and. Journal <fe JVTessenger. fliLEGBAPH. \\ ' jjarch 28.—The House special a bill which defines a new L.:* r 'j j, uo wn as Ku-klur, which shall P' wM io (be Federal courts—jurors to r«3» bw oa th in States whore insur- ! w .ho judgment of the President, ex- in ,j re the Governor or Legislature de- for federal aid, the President LyJJgj unt ier plea of enforcing the 14th is discussing the order of busi- r^vVrcnce of opinion exista A ma- | ^' commission favor a report which a irical auswers to all questions, with in „ ndation for or against annex- r T I; . jiarch 28.—Candidates of the 1*0111 i>iican Committee carried all but ^ >coed and seventh municipalities, li* j jaris estimates that a quarter |“'? E n voters abstained from voting. The t: Mcerian insnrreetion is confirmed. r ‘ !t Cuban battles the Spaniards lost ICO < s:onc. The insurgent General Acosta lb 1 ' 1 '?**!, o; 1 —The Official Journal of the KXmitiea says editorially: “The ‘ ,he newly elected mnmoipahty wiU niktion of a charter that will secure P'f'Jf ,he peeple and prevent the repre- • : nf large towns from being swamped K '° a V'ea ” An article in the same paper r ft hat »U matters essentially Parisian rf within the domain of the Commune. r- lie BepnWiqno advises the Commune the rotten Assembly and impeach its e t & Verite says the Paris deputies to r:' «rc determined to resign, l/nrerios March 26.—No Cabinet to-day— . Mount Vernon with the feiS Noimportant nominations. is'.thern confirmations. J« -t—Stunner resolutions were discussed lyjocr^eab p resen t e d a memorial K g’seat from the Fourth Mississippi rS^d protesting against tho entire Mis- ri Wegation. Referred to Committee on ^Shellabarger, from the Special ,rittce on the President’s message, reported 'for the enforcement of the Fourteenth "4ntnt. The argument continues until ■brides that any person who, under color v4 h<r, statute, ordinance, regulation, cus- 1 5 , n s8go of any State, shall subject, or , t0 he subjected, any person within tho gtouon of the United States to the depriva- ' e l , E y rights, privileges or immunities se- li by ’the 1st section, 14th article of the Esfoents to the Constitution of the United s. shall, any such law, statute, ordinance, L-Jiiioa, custom or usage of any State to the a >y notwithstanding, be liable to the party j] in an action at law, suit in equity or -j proceedings for redress, such proceeding U prosecuted in tho several District or Gir- sc'nrts of tho United States, with and sub- a wthe same rights of appeal, review upon -j ltd other remedies provided in like cases [cch courts, tinder provisions of the act of 39, ISG8, and other remedial laws of the 1 States which are in their^ nature appli es such case. IJ-tion second provides that if two or more Ws shall band, conspire or combine together (buy act or violation of rights, privileges i immunities of any person, to which he is aifti under the constitution and laws of the ites, which, if committed within a place rthesole and exclusive jurisdiction of the uted States, would, under any law of the «d States therein, force or constitute the eof either murder, manslaughter, mayhem, toy, assault and battery, perjury, subor- i of perjury, criminal obstruction of legal s, or resistance of officers in discharge cf I duty, arson or larceny, and if one or to f the parties to said conspiracy or com- hoo, shall do any act to effect tho object »f, all the parties to, or engaged in said siracy or combination, whether principal (rwessories, bhall be deemed guilty of a ay, and upon conviction thereof shall liable to a penalty of not exceeding |\COO, or to imprisonment not exceed tea years, or both, at the discre- i of the Court; provided, that if any |Sy or parties to such conspiracy shall, infur- Lvace of snch common design, commit the ce of willful murder, such party cr parties J/silty shall, upon osnviction thereof, suffer and provided, also, that any offence able under Ibis act began in one judicial rict of the United States and completed in (her, may be dealt with, inquired of, tried, termined and punished in either district, like third section authorizes tho President to tploy militia, land and naval forces of tho fated States to suppress insurrection, do- istic violence or unlawful combinations r conspiracies in any State, if constituted ' orities of suoh State shall be nnable to, or , from any cause, fail or refuse protection » ple in their rights or privileges. fourth section authorizes the President [: stipend tho writ of habeas corpus, and to due martial law in any State where unlaw- t combinations exist and be come so poweifal overthrow or set at defiance constituted au nties of States, or in any State where con jtttel authorities shall connive at, or be in splicity with,the success of unlawful combina- ; provided,that the President shall first have ! proclamation as now provided by law, nding such insurgents to disperse, and id, also, that the provisions of-this section 1 not be in foroe after the first day of Jane, [ ~3mlb, March 23.—Colonel Nelligan’s sorrel iron the two year old stake, beating the dinted Sauce Box, Williamson, and the Girl toy Heart, also Capfc. Jinks. Time 1:49. -ni very heavy, rain falling in torrents. [Huxioh, March 28.—The House has im bed Ed. W. Jones, Judge of the Second Ju- 1 District, on charges of drunkenness and xcefal conduct in Raleigh, and similar con- t in Goldsboro, Tarboro and Williamston, w be went to hold Court The Senate has tired the charges and the trial commences Richmond, March 2S —The jury in the ex "or Cahoon case, discharged, stood nine for fittil and three for conviction. A member -fc# Legislature and a lawyer were arrested ^corrupt practices in the case. ISisixiun, March 28.—Arrived—barks Her- • k, and Valenciana, from Havana; brig Mary *“o*evelt,Boston; schooners Annie Amsden, »; J. EL Stickney, Baltimore. Cleared— ships Leo, for New York; Vicksburg, i; schooners W. W. Pharo, and Enchant- i New Pork; Susana; Saybrook, Dunham, Ftoenoe Treat, Liverpool. ],*** Ouleakh, March 28.—The steamboat Jeof Bolton, burned to the water’s edge. The 3 and machinery were saved. «w Yobk, March 28.—Arrived, tho Mont- l^tMAmLES, March 28.—Thiers made a brief i in the National Assembly. He de- tho wisdom of his policy, and took a l oath that he wonld not betray the He- i-— I Pijxa, March 27.—La Verite says a new Min- |f>y will soon be formed which will include l^gUe as Minister of Foreign Affairs, Alella- p®. Minister of War. .lie rich generally abstained from visiting ! polls, ana the -merchants voted the con- live ticket. The individuals elected are », with the exception of Flourens, Blan- i Pigatte and Gambon. tarries ding continues, and tho utmost, vigi- • - i.i manifested by tho insurgent Na- r*»la. Place Vendome has the aspect of a |<j®p. It is said that the Versailles Govem- 3 is negotiating with the Prussians to allow t increased number of French troops on this |-* of the Loire. ^oaiaor says General Cremer is suspected by p* Committee, and has gone to Versailles. - T^oos, March 28.—The Times’ special dis- I. 61 J a Paris has nearly resumed her usual l^nce. Of five hundred thousand electors T? **rig. oi.jy twenty thousand voted at the i^on Sunday. Twenty members of tho Com- were elected. It is expected BJaquine I ^ to President of the new Government, and centre in Flourens, Pigatte, Delecimse, |»nc and Vermorel. Four Generals are oc- at Versailles with the question of the “• Ilr T reorganization of the country. The "'-3 special also states that the Prussians daily J** Versailles Government to agree to Ger- | !if ® pupation of Paris, and are as frequently r 1 t?e SHnf0loif . March 28.—Sharp passages in Potato-day. B Poaking against the Sumner reso- 6ai ^» 111 aNuding to Sumner: The mis- , of ibe Republican party waa not ended, ,-* ■ . w °nld beseech the man who would en- •“ u ' destruction, to take his position with enemy, and not, Judas like, stab “sek the party to which he professed to ^ E _8id if it was proven that orders had nftval commanders, in gross on of the constitution, then something more than mere rhetorical flourishes about Gen. Grant’s services, or about the Secretaries of Slate and Navy, would be required to answer tho proof. Schuiz proceeded to argue that under the con stitutional clause, vesting in Congress the war making power, the Executive could not commit an act of war twlesa in case of actual invasion of the territory of the United States, or by ex press Congressional authority. The instruc tions of the President to onr naval force, di recting them, in certain contingencies, to fire upon the vessels of Hayti, a power with which we are at peace, was most clearly a usurpation of the war-making power In reply to the queries by Howe and Stew art, as to whether discretionary power was not vested in the President, Schnrz added that if those Senators would turn to the debates of the Senate in February, 1859, they would find that PresidentBuchananhad asked for discretionary power to protect our citizens in transit of the Isthmus of Panama, and the Senate had indig nantly refused it. It was most audacious to contend, for that was the logic of it, that the President had tho power to steal the war-making power away from Congress. The fact was that President Grant had fallen into the mistake of supposing he was the United States of America. It smacked very strongly of what was called in Franco personal government. The Dominican Commission have agreed upon a report, except upon tho matter of the health and debts of the Island. They will be ready to report on Thursday, possibly to-morrow. The Commissioners will present no opinions or ar guments, bnt confine themselves to direct an swers to the questions contained in tho resolu tions under which they were organized. New Yobk, March 28.—Sixteen Erie locomo tives have been seized to satisfy a judgment in favor of Mr. Vandyke for injuries received in the Cairo rock disaster. San Francisco, March 28.—Sumner’s speech, verbatim, waspnblishcdhere and in Sacramento. It was all received by telegraph. Versailles, March 28.—Marseilles continues tranquil. At Lyons the regular authorities have resumed the administration of affairs, and at St. Eitinne, where the Reds obtained control for awhile, the Government officers have been restored. Tne Army of Prince Frederick Charles occu- ?ing France, which has been in motion for a. few days past, is now stationary. Lesoire reports 180,000 votes werecaBt at the election on Sunday, about half the number polled at the last plebiscitnm. The Journal Officiel contains an article signed by Valiant, advocating tho assassination of Duke D’Aumole. The Revolutionists In Fall Possession of Paris—Another Attack on the City Im pending. Paris, March 28.—A Sub-Central Committee has been formed. It consists of twelve mem bers, among whom are Massy, Reol, and Gari baldi. Honory is President. A decree has been issued, organizing twenty-five battalions of infantry, twenty batteries of artillery and fifteen batteries of mitrailleurs Daval organ izes tho artillery and heavy infantry, and Ber- geret the cavalry. They are authorized to levy contributions on everything. Gen. Ghier, a member of the Committee, commands the gun boats on the Seine. Flourens has resigned. Valgranne has been suspended. The Commune will be officially proclaimed on Thursday. The Prussians are concentrating at Lisle, and will remain there until the disorder in Paris is 6nded. A London Times’ special from Versailles says that forty thousand Prussians are expected there to-morrow. The Government is steadily organ izing a' trustworthy forco to march on Paris, which will possibly be made in eight days. In Marseilles the Republican Committee has is sued an address reorganizing the Paris Govern ment A dispatch from Aix says the Minister of War has declared Marsailles in a state of seige. Paris, March 29.—The red flag of the Revo lutionists is displayed everywhere. The Central Committee have split, and some of the members have been arrested by their colleagues. Tlie Truth About the Meridian Affair. Jackson, March 28.—Theodore Sturgis, a brother of the absconding Mayor of Meridian, who published a card in the New York Tribune; purporting to be a correct account of the Meri dian riot publishes a card denying the state ments of his brother, and says: “I am fully satisfied that the facts are misrepresented and am convinced that the publication was got ten up for political purposes.” This Sturgis is a Northern man and has re sided Sonth many years. His brother came South three years ago. Aaron Moore, whom Sturgis reported killed, is here and unhurt. The investigation into the case of the rioters is con cluded, and shows that the negroes brought on the troubles by the turbulent and overhearing conduct towards the whites, and by murdering the Jndge while on the bench. The Underwriter’s Insurance Company refuse to pay the insurance on Stnrgis’ property, hav ing proof that he was the incendiary. Perfect peace and tranquility exist throughout the State. New York, March 29.—Arrived, San Salva dor, Oceanic. Washington, March 29.—The Senate is dis cussing Sumner’s resolutions. The House is on the Eu-klux bill. The de bates are becoming tedious and the galleries are deserted. San Francisco, March 29.—The First Mort gage Bond of the Southern Pacific Railroad for $28,000,000 was recorded to day. It re cites that the Company proposes to bnild a road to the Colorado river, 750 miles. Washington, March 29.—Secretary Robeson has gone to Philadelphia. The Senate and House debated all day. Sum ner’s resolutions were laid on the table. Sher man’s Eu-klux resolutions will come up to-mor row. Judge Carter refused to honor the requisition from the Governor of North Carolina for Ber gen and Kirk. A requisition is also here for Holden. The vote tabling Sumner’s resolutions was 39 to 1C. Robertson, Schnrz and Sumner vo ted no. Synopsis of Weather Statement. War Dep’t, Office Chief Signal Officer, > Washington, D. G., March 29,7:30 r. ar.) Probabilities: It is probable that clouds and light rains will, on Thursday, extend along the Eastern Atlantic and the lower Lakes. Fresh winds are favorable for the Lakes, Atlantic and the Gulf coast. Richmond, March 30.—Ex-Mayor Cahoon, before Judge Gnigen on a writ of habeas cor pus, was bailed for a new trial in the sum of $7,000. There was a heavy frost, with ice, here this morning, extending up to the Potomac. It is feared the fruit crop is destroyed. London, March 29.—Dispatches to the Daily News says the Arab Chief, flidi Mockrani, lead ing 40,000 troops in Algerias, has declared against Franee. Versailles, March 29.—The Government bafi issued a circular announcing that order has been- restored at Lyons and Tonlouse. The insur rection failed in all the large towns save Mar sailles, Narbonne and Sante Etienne. The Government is ready to-day to meet and crash the insurrection. Versailles is rapidly becoming a military camp. Gardes are continually arriving from the departments. An amicable arrangement between the Paris and Versailles governments still regarded as possible. Paris, March 29.—The Committee of the Be* public resigned their powers, but were newly elected. At the inaugural sitting of the Commnn6 Council, a resolution was adopted declaring that the National Guard deserved well of the coun try. The Council ad jonmed at midnight with out coming to a conclusion upon the vital ques tions. Versailles, Maroh 2D.—The deputies of the Right in the Assembly demand the removal of the Lefts. Thiers positively refuses compli ance. General Ohausey promised the insurrec tionary committee, before h§ was released, that he would not fight except against foreigners. Olemencean has resigned his seat in the Met sembly. Ruehetulon, a member of tho Left, has declared himself a turncoat because the Official Journal has defended assassination. A motion was made in the Assembly to-day to in terrupt the communication with Paris. The Government Circular says France is ral lying to the support of the C asserts that the continued occupation of Franck territory by the Prussians is due to the insur gents. The Government has temporized with the insurrection to avoid Wood-shed. Menotti, Biootti and Garibaldi have declined to fight; except against a foreign enemy. Paris, March 29.—At the Assembly at Ver sailles to-day there was a turbulent meeting of Deputies. A large body of cavalry and infantry have arrived from the west, and large military oamps will be formed at St. Germain for the protection of the government. Berlin, March 29.—Reichstag has approved the commercial treaty between the German Em pire and San Salvador. London, March 29.—The bill admitting laity to a larger influence in parochial matters, roused much feeling and met with strong opposition. Gladstone begged for a delay, but the bill was carried to its second reading. The Germans officially deny having encour aged the insurrection. The House of Lords passed the funding bills and adjourned. In the House of Commons the discussion of church questions occupied the evening. New York, March 29.—A "World special from Berlin says there has been correspondence be tween Bismarck and the Central Committee at Paris. The latter represented that the Thiers Government was unsupported in any proper •way by the country, and tho election of a new Assembly became necessary. Tho Committee offered, meanwhile, to pay in a few dajs the instalment af indemnity due to Germany. Bis marck’s reply was favorable. The opinion hero is strong that the restoration of the Empire by the aid of tho Imperial army is inevitable. Brussels, March 29.—There wa3 no sitting of the Peace Conference to-day.' The time of the second meeting is undetermined. It is ru mored that the events in Paris caused a delay of negotiations. St. Petersburg-, March 28.—The Patriarch in Constantinople complained to tho Russian Sy nod that the Sublime Porte is disturbing the order of the Church in Bulgaria. Tho answer of the Synod is published. It shares in the dis satisfaction felt ■ by the Patriarch at the rela tions of the Porte and the Greek Church in Bulgaria, but considers tho convocation of a council, which was proposed by him, unneces sary. Letter from Senator Blair. Washington, March 18,18T0. To IT. AT. Cooke, Editor of the Montgomery, (ilia.) Mail: Dear Sm—Yours of the 11th inst. has just bodn received. I am flattered by your request that I should endeavor to compose the “dead issue” controversy among our friends in the Sonth, and I might be tempted to proffer my advice to them if I thought it would be effect ive. But our people don’t like to be advised. They prefer discussion and to form their opin ions on public questions by that process. I have contributed in that way and shall continue to do to the utmost of my ability. In my judgment the actual issue of the cam paign is the broad one, whether we have a Fed eral Union on a constitutional basis, or an abso lute Government with power in the hands of those who possess it to prolong its own existence indefinitely. This draws in review the past, and continuing process by which the arbitrary Government of to-day has been established and is to be maintained, and the reconstruction acts and the amendments most necessarily figure in this review; but the question of whether they went through the forms that entitle them to be put on the statute book is really an immaterial one. It does not change the argument a par ticle whether the forms were complied with or not, and it does not affect our ability to put the Government in the hands of the people if we carry the election, whether they are valid or in valid. The manner in which these amendments were adopted, and the still more significant measures passed and proposed for their enforcement, ought to satisfy men of all sections and parties that liberty itself is at stake in the coming con flict. No thonghtfnl observer of the present as pect of public affairs, who does not, from tim idity, wilfully shut his eves to the conclusions of his reason, can donbt that those who, to grasp power have subverted the organic law, in defi ance of the known will of the people, will fail to adopt any other measures of fraud or violence which may be found necessary to maintain them in the possession of it, and that our only secu rity against new and greater violence than has heretofore been practiced, is by tho timely awakening of the people to the real dangers which surround them—so that a spirit may be arousedwhich will overawe and disembark those daring enemies. Not to see, or affect not to see, this danger, and to engage the public mind in the discussion of eeonomic and civil service measures, and to belittle the iron man who so lately brought that Senate to his feet which had his predecessor pleading at their bar, is to cry “peace when there is no peace,” and so con tribute to betray the country. If onr friends would unite in an earnest effort to arouse the country, all will be well. And to this end it is only necessary to let the people see what the real issue is. Nor have I any fears that they will fail to see it. They already see it in spite of the mistaken efforts of some of our friends who counsel what they think is policy, as if it was a matter of convention among pub- lie men what the issue should be and not a mat ter of fact, which they cannot control any more than they can the advent of the seasons. They may not see it so plainly, either because they do not observe with sufficient attention, or be cause they shrink from it from feebleness and apprehension. Let us go to the people, fairly and boldly, and invoke their judgment upon the record radicalism has made for itself. All the contrivances by which the Radicals have sought to trammel the people and fortify themselves in power can thus be effectually swept away. The differences among onr friends to which you refer are not serious. They arise, I believe, chiefly from the mistaken idea that those who continue to assail reconstruction and the amend ments intend to abolish negro suffrage. This is not the object, and it is a very inadequate view of the subject. This suffrage really de pends very little on the amendments, because among other things, it has not accomplished the object of those who imposed it, (whioh was to give them the control of the South) and they have begun, themselves, already to dispense with it in the District of Columbia, where it was first started. But the States which have adopt ed it do not propose to revoke it and will not, I < am confident, unless after a fair trial it is shown to be necessary for a good government. The Fifteenth Amendment will, in this event, be easily disposed of, for the Radicals, who have already ceased to have a motive to main tain it, will have ceased to cant on the subject. It is not, therefore, to get rid of negro suf frage that we continue to assail and refuse to acquiesce in usurpations, by which the Govern ments of the people bare been, and will«ontinuo to be, wrested from them. The contest is not to take away suffrage from the negroes, bi preserve that wise distribution of the powers of Government without which all suffrage is but a mockery, and to prevent that control by the national functionaries which is sure to create imperialism, and will inevitably degrade, im poverish and enslave the toiling masses. . Yours truly, Frank F. Blair. Wliat America Sends to Australia. The value of American goods used in Aus tralia amounts to several millions of dollars an nually. In what may be called a domestic de partment, American manufactures reign almost snpreme. The flour from which the bread is made, the oven in which it is baked, and the broom with which the industrious housewife dears away dust and cobwebs, (says an ex change) all hail from America. Enter the house of an artizan, his own property in most cases, and you will find that it is built with American lumber; the doors and window sashes are Amer ican ; the chair in which you sit is American; the table on which he takes his frugal meal, and the wooden bedsteads on which he sleeps, are American. Ifhehasbaconfordinner,thechances are that it once ran free in the woods of Ohio; if he has fish, they have come from Newfound land; his coffee is from Jamaica, and his rice from Carolina. If he has babies about the house, they are fed on maizena from New York. No lumberer will use any other than an American axe, and the traveler arms himself with a revolver from America. Tubs, pails, and wooden ware in general are all American. Yet very little of the trade is carried on in American ships or from American ports. It passes through the hands of some Engjish house, whose owners make sure of their percentage before it reaches the merchants in Melbourne, Sydny, Aucland Adelaide, Hobart Town, or Brisbane. MARRIAGE GUIDE. ETORY ONE HB OWN DOCTOR. A private instructor for married persons or those abont to he married, both male and female, in every thing concerning the physiology and relations of ays France is ral- our sexual system, and the production and preren- Govemment, and tion of offspring, including all the new disco rexies sever before given in the English language, by Vb, Young, U. D. This is really a valuable and interesting work.; It is written in plain language for the general reader, and ie illustrated with nu merous engravings. All young married people, or tfcppe contemplating marriage, and having the least impediment to married life, shonld read this book. It discloses secrets that everyone should be ac quainted with; still it is a book that must be locked ay and not lie abont the house. It will be sent to any address on receipt of BO cts. Address Dr. Wm Yenng. No. 416 Spruce Street above Fourth, Phila delphia. ocm-wSrn. Cancers, Tumors, Ulcers. Astonishing cures by Prof. KJine, at tho 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 CANCER ANTIDOTES. Eo Knife. No Causlie Medicine. No Blood. Little Pain. For particulars, call on or address either of the hove. jan27-w3m THE SINHER Manufacturing Company AT THE WORLD’S FAIR Constituted by the homes of the people RECEIVED THE GREAT AWARD OF THE HIGHEST SALES! *' And have left all rivals far behind them, for they SOLD IX 1870 One Hundred anil 7wenty->.cven Thousand Eight Hundred and Thirty- three Machines! being more than 40,000 in advance of their sales of the previous year, and over 44,000 more than the sales of any other Company for 1870, as shown by the following figures from sworn returrs of the sales of licenses. The Singer Manufacturing Co. sold over the Florence Sewing Machine Co 110,173 Machines. Sold over the Wilcox & Gibbs’ Sewing Machine Co 98,943 “ Sold over the Weed Sewing Ma chine Co 92,831 “ Sold over tho Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co 70,431 “ Sold over the Howo Machine Co. 52,677 ** Sold over the Wheeler & Wilson Manufacturing Co 44,625 “ all of which is mainly owing to tho popularity of what is known as tho “New Family Sewing Ma- chine,” which is now fast finding its way into eveiy well regulated household. For circulars giving full particulars of machines.thoir folding cases of many varieties of wood and finish, their attachments for numerous kinds of work, which, till recently, it waB thought that delicate fingers alone could perform, as well as particulars about all articles used by their machines, such as twist, linen thread, spool cot ton, oil, etc , etc., apply to any of their authorized agents. A. L. CLINESCALES, - 23 Cotton Avenue, Agent for Macon. H. D. HAWLEY, General Agent, mar24 d,wAswlm Savannah. OLD UiKULlM BITTERS, DELIGHTFUL TONIC Wf E take groat pleasure in offering thooldCaro- TT HnaIJittors to the public. They are compound ed with great eare. and contain some of the be3t Ton ics in the Phsrmacopia; As evidence of tho superi ority of our Bitters overall others, »e havo certifi cates from many of .the leading physicians in our 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 onr Bitters as a cure for all dis eases, but as an Aromatic Tonic, they bav> no oquai. For sale by Druggists and Grocers even vrnere. Principal Depot. GOODRICH, WINEMAN & 'JO., Importers of choice Drugs and C uemicals, Chs -ioston. S. C. For sale in Macon by L. W. Hunt & Co. inayS-eodAwly District Court Notice. Ninth Senatorial District,! Morgan, Ga., February 28,1871. j 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 Monday In each month thereafter untill otherwise provided. JESSE H. GRIFFIN. Judge District Court, marl-30w 9th Senatorial District of Ga. STOLEN! F ROM 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 five dollars for the mule delivered to meat Colloderi, and twenty-five dollars for the thief, with-evidence to convict. JOHN W. BLASINGAME, mar23 dlt&w3t Colloden, Ga. Notice to Debtors and Creditors. A LL persons indebted to the estate of Henry N. fills, late of Bibb county deoeaseed, will please come forward and settle with the under signed, and those having claims against said estate, will file the same with me, proven according to law. febl4 d6Wtw6w W. A. CHERRY, AdmV. PRICE REDUCED PATENT A PPUCit -O ANUFACTUREOATTHE PURITT IW^'t-MIl COARANT«|).VnMAtlN.P„pV. ONLY 850 PER TON IN FITE TON LOIS. M0RK THAN TWO HUNDBED PLANTERS Tuscaloosa, Ala.,1 December 22,1870. ) 88EISf8®®'S FRENCH Cognac Bitters, FIEST PRIZE Paris Exhibition 1867. Purify the blood and strengthen tho 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 habits lay them open to depression. They prevent and cure Bili ous and other Fevers, Fever and digue, Chills, ^Diarrhoea, SDyscn- tery, ^Dyspepsia, Sea-Sickness, Colic, Cholera, Cholera Jlforbus, and every complaint inci dental to diet or atmos phere. Ladies will find them a sovereign boon, as they eradicate al! traces of Debility, Nervousness, Inertness, and Diseases peculiar to the sex. Er"Thou8and8 of Testimo nials can be seen at the office of V. JACOBSON, Sole Proprietor, 64 & C6 Water Street, N. Y. ar. FEBST A CO. General Agents for the State of Georgia. kaa AGENTS WANTED, Male and Female, to OUl/ sell two new articles as saleable-as Fleur and needed in every family. Samples sent free by mail, with terms to clear $5 to $19 per day. This is no gift enterprise or humbug, but they are new articles of real merit. Reader, if you want profita ble and honorable employment, send on your name and postoffice address, and receive full particulars with sample free by return mall. Address N. H - WHITE, Newark, New Jersey. mar25 d6Ucw4t Col. W. B. Mann: HHI Sm—Your circular of the 1st inst. came to hand. As we found the Langdon Fertilizer the best that we tried, I give you my experience with it. Our land is poor, red bill land. Used 200 lbs. to the acre. We need one ton of GiU&m’B at $75; three tons of Zell’s at $85; two tons of tbe Langdon at $60 per ton. Tbe land was all worked alike, and the same quantify nsed 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 Zelfs was next. From my own experience, and in the opinion of all fanners Who took notice of it, the Langdon Fertilizer was far superior to any that we used. Respectfully yours, eto., . O. H. FITTS. Mr. Thomas H. Kxnnxdt, of Meridian, Miss., af ter recounting his experience in the use of the Langdon Fertilizer, says: “when I lived on my plantation in Alabama, I nsed many kinds of Ma nure, but I never usod auy thing that would begin to compare with the Langdon Fertilizer." THE FRIGE AT THE MILLS IS $50 FEB TON, in five ton lots, $55 for a single ton, $3 per ICO lbs. for small lots. It is exchanged for Cotton Seed, SOO pounds, in strong sacks, delivered free on board boat or can at Mobile, for one ton Cotton Seed, free at the landing or depot up country—sacks and twine fur nished by the Mills. Of its cheapness, Col. Langdon gays, “Its cheap ness—I am fully convinced- that, at the price now fixed by you, to-wit—$60 per ton. (Price reduced to $66.) It is much the cheapest fertilizer in onr market. Found for pound, I consider it more val uable than tho preparations that are selling at $75 to $80. For my own use, I would greatly prefer it to Peruvian Guano at the same price." Of its merits he says, '“The reasit is the best Fertilizer in the world for cor Southern lands, in my opinion.” Again—“It contains "more folly and completely than any other, the elements necessary for- the production of Southern crops and the renovation of Southern soil.'” Prof. Charles U. Shepard, Jr., M. D., Professor of Chemistry, South Carolina Medical College, and Inspector of Fertilizers for South Carolina, who made a full and carefnl analysis of the Langdon Fertilizer, stye of it: “It is a very superior article.” I also crush at the Mills, Raw Bones, which are ground fine. Price at the Mills, $45 00 per ton. Ground Raw Bone is too well known as a strong Fertilizer to need comment. For Trees, Shrubbery, and Grapes, it has no equal. The Ground Bene of the Mobile -Gil itiita is warranted to oontain no thing bnt Baste. Address aU orders for either of the above Fertil izers, accompanied by cash or orders on your mer chants here, to MOBILE OIL MULLS, P. O. Box 72S. Mobile. Ala. O" $12 00 per ton, Cash, pud for Cotton Seed delivered at the wharf or depot here—sacks and twine forniefaed free of charge at yoar landing or depot. BONES WANTED $15 00 per ton will be paid for Bones delivered at the Mills. It will pay to gather them abont the country and eSup to the Mobile Oil Mills. J «n4-eodAwStnoB GDANO EXCHANGED FOR COTTON. LAWT0I1 & WILLINGHAM, Successors to Lawton & Lawton, AND GUANO DEALERS. Advances Mad© on Cotton in Store. in tho event of a backward season for painting enables the planter to put ater, even as late as the 1st of June, with a certainty of success. this last year, and tho MOST FAVORABLE RE PORTS are heard from it. Its PURITY and STRENGTH are guaranteed. The value of BONE PHOSPHATE AOT COTTON SEED MEAL as a manure is known to every SCIENTIFIC AGRI CULTURIST.' These articles form the hulk (4-5) of the “ LANGDON,” to which are added proper ititiea of POTASH, GYPSUM and SALT. These .enta form tho compound. 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” can be sold, and IS SOLD CHEAPER, than any Standard Fertilizer in the market. The COTTON SEED MEAL is produced at the „ Works, and tho BAYTBONES are gathered from the, T\ /f~ A I F £7^ (Zl “ surrounding country and ground at my mills. I V| F\ I P; k 7 FARMERS ARE INVITED to viait the Mobile Oil — Mills and witness the operations of producing the Langdon Fertilizer. Planters should instruct their Merchants to buy for them TH£ LANGDON FERTILIZED, Because it is a simple composition of articles known to be good, and tho Purify 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 nse, pound for pound, than any other fertilizer, no matter what tho price. FROM THE MANY TESTIMONIALS from prac tical men, these are here given: GUANO! GUANO! WE HAVE ON HAND A GOOD SUPPLY OF THOSE CELEBBATED GUANOS, JPEHUVIAJNT GUANO PATAPSCO ' —AND— THE COTTON FOOD, Which matures tho crop three to four weeks in advance, thus insuring the crop against early frosts, or - ... - - * " ' "' * “ ' inhisc a crop three or four woeke ENGLISH DISSOLVED BONES, Which we will sell on terms suitable to the Times. £ebl9 tf LAWTON & WILLINGHAM. NITROGENIZED SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME! L J. WILLIAMS’ r \TENT PEA iiiiOi'PER. Patented May 4th, 1869. T HIS ntfifle little machine was intended by the in ventor for dropping peas, for which purpose it elamm % spe cialty. And even as Com and Guano Dropper it has no equal. Ab a Pea Dropper, it needs only to be seen to con vince anyone that it is » per fect success. Tb» present season the inventor has drop- ned nearly one ton of guano with the Dropper, in the hill, with his oorn. and he is now prepared to recommend it for putting guano into ths hill with more correctness and rapidity than any other mode he has tried. It ia light, only weighs one pound and a half, simple, and not: get ont of order. It is dimple, used in the same manner and with as much esse as a walking cane. Children can use it with perfect success before they can drop by h*“d. I wish to establish agents to sell the PEA DROPPER. Price retail, at Three Dollars. Any one ordering the Pea Dropper, will please address JAMES H. FRYER, Agent. Barsesville, Ga., April 25,1870. nuir23 w2m SAMUEL Y. GREER. (Successor to Dialogue sad Greer), Fire Hose Manufacturer 520 YOUTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, ESTABLISHED IN 1821. S TEAM Fire Engines, Forcing and Suction Hose, Leather and Rubber Backets, Pipe, Nozzle Screw, and Patsnt Coupling of all iipiis. feb22wly PRICE REDUCED. STANDARD GUARANTEED! Fifteen Hundred Dollars To mi BBBB8RB AMOKS THOSS APri/TIKG 1UTZB KXXBOaXKXZZD SUKEHPHOEPHATE OF TSM» TO XHX OTTER AND SPRIND CROPS OP 18 7 1. Crops Soabled, Trebled, and Quadrupled During the past five years by the use of ONE HUNDRED POUNDS OF Mapes’ Nitrogemzed SmMe of Lime. EFFECT OF ONE APPLICATION SHOWN ON MUR ’ SUCCESSIVE CHOPS, Increasing the Fourth Fifty per cent. In general results for the past five years it has been unsurpassed. - Hundreds of certificates from the leading Planters ia 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 Sc THOMAS, Gbkxbaz. Aoxkts, Savannah, Ga., AJUto, Dealers In DISSOLVED BOXES, PLAIN, DISSOLVED BONES, AHMONIATED, BONE DUST, New Styles, Seduced Prices. MASON Sc HAMLIN Cabinet Organs. For Parlors, Drawing-Booms, Libraries, Chmcheo, Sunday-schools, Lodges, eto. qnHE most popular and widely used of large mu- X sical instruments. Elegant as furniture; suit able for secular and sacred musio; not requiring toning, 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 nstrnments of the class, having been awarded SEVENTY-FIVE MEDALS or other highest premiums, for demonstrated supe riority, in Europe and America, including the first- class medal at the Pans Exposition. NEARLY 1,000 MUSICIANS. Including a majority of the most eminent in Amer ica, and many m Europe, have given written opin ions that they kinEL at.t. OTHERS. (See Testimonial Circular Sent Free.) New Styles and Reduced Prices tins month. An • Illustrated Catalogue, with elegant illustrations from photographs and full information, seat free. Address MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN CO., 596 Broadway, New York, or 154 Tremont st., Boston. For sale in Macon by G. P. GUILFORD A CO. nov26 eodAwtf USE Hamifton’s Compound TROCHES OF BTJ C HU I, 3 FOB ALL TISBSES OF THE KIDNEYS AND BLADDEB, DYSPEPSIA, RHEUMATISM,. Being the strongest preparation of BUOHU STIR OFFERED TO THK PUBLIC, ban Th. HERBERT & CO., proprietors. No* 37 Park Row, New York. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. HUNT. RANKIN & LAMAR J. H. ZEILIN & CO. feb7-eod<fcwly ■ , Agents, Macon, Ga. febl6-2taw*wtf LAND PLASTER, PERUVIAN GUANO PURSE Sc THOMAS, SAVANNAH, GA. No. X Peruvian Guano, s c OLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO, AMMONIATED BAWBONE SUPERPHOSPHATE,. PREPARED FISH GUANO, - ACID phosphate, FLOUR OF BONE, DJSSOLVHD B#XB, LAND FLASHER. Fob Saxs ex ASHER AYRES, Guano Dzpot, Poplar Bt., Macon Ga, Jan20dftw3m H 0 S A D A L I S OS A DALIS! r piIK GREAT AMERICAN IIHALT JL storey purifies the bloodjand cure* ilRB- J Scrof- matton, Dia- the Blood, Liver and Kidneys. Recommended by the Medical Faculty, and many thousands f our best oitisens. Read the testimony of : Syphilis, Skin diseases, Rheas M_of Women, and all Chrome i t very powerful alterative. I havi used l two cases with happy results; case cseconda^r syphilis, in which publish for gratuitous distribution; 14 will live rou much valuable information* Dr. R. W. Carr, of Baltimore. tavS; I take pleasure in recommendinc your Rosadalisas " have seen it inn ins tient pronounced himself cured aftei " t&ksi tre bottles your medicine. T iia case of serofnla of lone standing, raoi dly improving under in nse. and the I oati>nsare that the patient will soonreoover. I hare carefully examined the formal* by whioh your Rosadalis is made, and 2nd it an excellent compound of alterative ingredients. Samuel G. McFadden, of Murfreesboro, Tenn., gays: I have used seven bottles of TLondalh. and am entirely cured of Rheumatism. Send me four bottles, as I wish it lor my brother, whs has scrofulous sore eyes. Benjamin Bechtol; of Lima, Ohio, writes: I havo goffered for twenty years with an in veterate eruption over my whole body: a short time, sineo I purchased a bottle of Meadsjis- and it effected a perfect core. HOSAUAIiIS IS SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 49-Laboratory, No. 61 Exchange Piece. Bal timore. Clements d Co., Preprletora For sale by S. B. ZF.lUtV « CO, 6-eodJkwif W. HCKT * CO- TEN UOLLABS W ILL purchase the want of the South—a sala ble Fertilizer, instantaneous bn effect home manufactured—every turner his own eVraWf to extract from material now wasting on every plante- d the eesenceoffei* tion, the cream of manures and I tiUaera without the vast expenditure* ef agaitor ruinous credit, or expensive hauling from depet Or muck land. Oorn soaked in a solution ef ti, no mole, bird or worn will touab; mixed with fresh leaves and straw and will make a well retted ma nure heap in an incredibly short time. ObttoaMed soaked in a solution of it and then dried, wiR es cape worms and produce a heavier pod and mure fleece. It will be seen .that it being a sektbl# arti cle its effect will be quickly felt and plants ASttve such a vigorous start as to defy the dSwmiasflfouir summer. A* dXIXH. P. a—For the benefit of those I way not be able to see and who recognize the duty of every _ to redeem our waste places, I have depmRaa re ceipts of bow to make with T. W. Htlia. in Maoon, Ga., who will forward on r price, 1