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EGRAPH AND MESSENGER
By Clisby, Jones & Reese.
. ;!•• < >„rnph llnlltllng, JlMoa.
«I0
00
6 00
Telegraph and XwMnger, one year,
H:s mouth.
One moniti -
Semi-Wc.-ltty Telegraph end Heeeeager, one
jSunmoUi vYttekly Telegraph and Mcmeecgsr,
56 oo.ncuus, cm yes*
•him nth# 1
rejil.l- alwsy. In advance, end paper slopped
»Un Hi'’ jnoney rone cat, nnleee renewed.
The rousoUrUted Telegraph end Me«enger rep.
recent. e Urge circulation. pervading Middleton th
em and H«'ithweet»rn Georgia end Eeetern Ale-
l »-i. end Mobil# Florida. Advirtissmont* et ree-
eoaeble retee. In the Weekly et one doller per
•qnar. of three-quarter, of eu inch, each pobliee-
i<*. Jiemitleneee eboold be made by express
hr mail in money orders or registered letters. '
Troubles to the Way.
As President Grant bes declared hie inten
tion to support tbs Kellogg usurpation in Inn
iliana, ibe Now York Ban thinks bo bed better
leken.ep■ to protoot Federal offi:Ials in No
Orlcant from emit for thieving, or the Keliog
Lrg alataro will ha left without e quorum.
After on Imreatigeiion by Ilaya end Edg
•pen.! agents of Ibe Poetoffiie Deportment
Chitlr. W. Lixotl, poatmaster of Now Orleans,
end Bpoek -r of toe Kellogg Legislature, wes er-
rested on February 27.b, on the charge of em
biea lrg money order foede to a very Urge
emon'.t. The poatmatier's cashier, John V.
Donglsst, was alio arretted. Lowell waived ex
aminstloa before the commleeloner, and will be
tried in the U aiteJ dtetei D.etriot Court before
drunken Unroll.
The aeonoed official gars (10,000 bail, end
war soon back in hie appropriate place at Speak-
or of ibe n "itping body of thlavai and carpet
baggaie. Hot ho oogbt to bo protected against
these little legal Inconvenience*.
TI«o ftacon l’ostofllce.
The World’* Weabingtoa correspondent of Sat
urday saya:
Another rt markable feature in the wild ae-am-
tie for rffl«e inangnnfod la discloMd in the fo!
lowing feet*: A delegation of while men are
® r Hl n K ike appointment of a negro to an cfBce
now held by a white Uedteel, while a colored
mao, an <-x number cf Congress, ia working for
the retention of the present incumbent. It la
farther nnuhle that two of the white delegation
—one a Kadioal member of Congress end tbe
other a Uuited Slates District Attorney are
ex Confederate*. Tbe former nerved the “lost
can*e" gallantly, and attained the rank of Ma
jor, eh la the latter rose to the proud eminenee
of Colonel in the mite bureau. All tbe parties
bail from Georgia, and tho bone of contention
ia tho poateffloe at Macon.
Bolober and hi* friend*, we taka It, hu all
tbe “scramble ’’ to themselves—won tbe nomi
nation aud, doubtless, will gettbo place. Belch
er i* not a negro, or, as an Angnata friend once
told him, ia a negro only from eboioe and not
from oomplexion or detoent. He in so much
of a white man in nppearanoe that tbe Georgia
Legislature of 1807, in pnrgiog that body of
negroes, pronounced him white | but be prefers
to identify himsnlf with tho negro taco, and
the office, under his administration, will no
donbt red >ct his praf.roooee. Belcher is said
to be a B sitoniao and a carpet-bagger—a mu
of good education and business abilities.
Meningitis In i'nlbbert.
Hon. Herbert Fielder introduces a commu
nication to the Southern Christian Advocate
upon the causes of meningitis, with the follow
ing statement of the history of the disease in
Cnihbert:
This has been a sad month for our little In
land city. Exemption from diseases which de-
pend in any msnner upon malaria or local im
parity, has beeaitadistingaLhing characteristic.
Ilia schools and oolieges have fisnriahod, and
parent* abroil have justly felt assured In the
health cf their children sent here. The low rate
of mortality among the resident population for
•A® 1 *®* of jeare, will oompare lavorably with
that of any town cf similar six* on the conti
nent. It is not stated here to boast of, or to
invite criticism or comparison with any other
place; bat to illostrate what I have io say on a
subject that interests every person—health and
human lift.
Sporadic cases of meningitis occurred here
in 1863, and agrin in 1870. But tbe last tea
days of this month have brought sadness to
many heart*, because they have ooasigned to
untimely graves the loved of a number of home
circles. Some ladies and some little girls have
fallen victims; but a Urge majority of those
attacked baa been boys; and the drat esses were
generally fatal—terminating in from 12 to 48
boors. Many of the Utter attack* seem not eo
ternfle in the outlet—and after the drst aas&nit
U restated, to assume many of tho features of
typhoid fever.
Another fsot abundantly proven here, is <h*>
many, and perhaps a majority of the ease*,
have.occurred at elevated, aad naturally health-
fal sites—remote from say cause of malaria, or
looal impurity; and where there is no reason to
snspeot the slightest neglect of drainage, or of
personal cleanliness, or the presence of any lo
cal deposit to generate imparities; and where
the hooves and chambers were well ventilated,
properly warmed, and comfortably furnished—
places where, during the summer months, if
any arnkness occur anywhere, it is least to be
expected. These faotspreeent some deeply in
teresting suggestions to a population situated
as the people of this oountry are.
As to the supposed greater susceptibility of
boys than of gtrU to this diseasr, there seems
to be no phys.osl faot to warrsot it. Tbe more
rational explanation may be found ia tbe greater
tendency of boys to expose thtmielvea in severe
weather, aud their less regard for keeping warm
or dry.
Bat tho great fact that intere ,U all alike is,
that it occare with lerrido effect in tho msst
beelthfal localities. *
These general observation* receive confirms
lion by tho late msnifesUtions o'fiLe disease Id
Maoon, where dry, elevated and apparently the
most salnbrioos localities of the city have been
the theatres of its baleful work. Col. F. reasons
at length to prove that the causes or tbe disease
must be dietetic, in connection with irreguUri-
ly, imprudenco and exposure.
On this last point a word may not bo amiss.
The character of our Middle Georgia elimato
has clanged very mneh daring tho past six or
seven years. It is much radar, more fickle,
variable and sevens than it nsed to be. It seems
to be tbe battle ground bstween the groat con
tending weather foroea of tbe North and the
South, and the history cf onr Isto winters is bnt
tbe alternate victories of those antagonists, pro-
duolog remarkably violent dactuations of tem-
Tlie Kent Nlntn I.oun
The Qjv.-n.or advertises tho new State Loan
to-day, end wo r. far the reader to tho notioo.
These bouda bear olgbt per cent, interest, and
are exempt from ri.xuion, so as to yield a net
eight per •• v f >r the investment. Books of
iul>*ciip‘i>n, we learn, will be opecod at the
City Bank under the supervision of Mr. Nnt-
tiog, aad we hope tbe issue of this experiment
will show that Georgia oan get all the money
she want* without going outside the State. Wo
understand there ere substantial reasons for
anticipating a good solid subscription in Maoon.
Daxra irv DnowNINO.—We regret to hoar
Ihst Mr. Wm. M. Bozeman, son of Judge <1.
M. Bozeman, of Fnlarkt county, and one of the
most substantial citizen* of that county, was
drowned lust Saturday evening in the Ocmnl.
gee river, a few tulles below HawkinaviUe. On
the day named, Mr. Bcziman left Hawklns-
viUe in a baltean for hie home absnt seven miles
dawn the river. Hii Intention was to land at a
point on the river abont one and a half miles
' from hie boose, and after fishing awhile at tho
landing, to walk homo. Be did not reach home,
however, tbst night, and hia non-appearanoe
creating apprehension, search was made the
next day, and in the afternoon his body was
found in a ilulee or bayou caused by high wster
in the river, only one of his feet appearing
above tho surface, indicating that be bad been
entangled someway, and thru drowned while
struggling io extricate himself. Hia death is
greatly deplored in that seoiion, a* be was one
of the moat active, intelligent, and worthy citi
zens of the oounty. ^
An Ausoksos Tuatxub.—A eullnd pnsson
who went from this oonnty last fall to that land
of roast pig and 'posaom and nelimlted sweet
potatoes, to ssy nothing of ebesp whisky and
tobacco galore, called Arkansas, was on the
street yesterday, and was quite a show for a
time. He has been walking five weeks to get
baek to this land of oppression, and looks as
gaunt at a plney-wood* shoot. Ho says be went
to work picking cotton when he got there and
found it a moat delightful and healthful pas-
time—the mod and water in tbe fields being
only abont a foot deep. He says the emigrants
died like sheep srith Ibe rot where he wav, and
that that is one reason why be had no more com-
pony on his return. Altogether ho seemed to
have bad • belly fall of Arkansas, and at this
present writing docs not meditate a speedy re-
torn there.
DrvrcurATic Pa ns h S< w Yorac —Tho New
York Herald of Friday my- the Democrat* in
that State have gsined large'y In the town elec-
tlona in lire interior. Tbe following table will
show the result in some of tbe towns on the
elec ion of enperv'aora as compared with last
year t
, 1872 , , 1873 ,
14. o. D-m B-o. Dam.
. n
9
11
11
M
v 20
13
18
15
o.it rio
. ii
4
5
11
O-wtgo
. IS
15
1 rt
10
Orange
. s
13
4
18
Kcn—t'.o .r
.. 13
16
11
18
Viator
. 12
8
12
12
78
77
95
A xzwfrarm <n old Ho*x| Ames’diatriot in
Masvachnw.* a * nla by him with most pa
thetic flieti-y to l i*Us Congress “imbecile
“He leaves," it says, “the honest rata who
have profited by bla sagacity, to flannt their im
maculate virtue in the faee of the world, and
plot new stealings. Bat Ames will live in the
Feeifio Bsilroad when they are fergotten in the
vile dost of contempt.” Constitutionally op
posed as are are to crowding tbe mourners, wo
abstain from comment.
Re-Election of Gbant. — Oar Democratic
frienIs who hire oonsolci thwxwalvoj with tho
hope that Grant’s second term will bo levs par-
tlx on than the first, because, yon know, he will
have no temptetfons to prostitute his power in
intrigues for re election, will see, with some
disappointment, that his candidscy for a third
term is already openly admitted. He is yet a
young man, and if not President fur the next
twenty year*, it will not be bis fault.
Oourax retired without the u.ual vote of
thanks to the presiding ofilosr of the Senate.
He said In hi* farewell address that he hss com
mitted no act which has proved the osnfidenoe
misplaced that oalled him to the position of
Yioe-Preaident of the United States. Whereat
Mr. Oakes Ames m»y be fnpposed to smile, and
the departed oontrat tor, Nesbitt, to wonder, np
yonder, whether Lin *l,lv > crofts aad bill*ever
reached their destination.
Fnozzn Our.—Oae consequence of the terri
bly severe weather in Minnesota is likely to be
a rather extend re emigration of. its inhabitant*
in search of a milder elimato. Some Germans
at New Ulm aro looking ont for a home in Cali
fornia. The hard winter, with Iosv of men and
eatt!*, is tho reason given for leaving the Slate.
O! fitly innabiifiats tf u.u settlement forty wish
(0 emigrate.
MACON, GEORGIA,.WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 12,1873
NUMBEB 6,582
■pcratqre.
Southerly and soathwesterly breeze* bring
upon us the geaial atmosphere of tbe Galf;
tempered by the warm waters of tho great
itroam and by a tropical sun. Ia these condi
tions the meronry ranges for a few days per
haps between sixty and seventy, accompanied
with gentle rains—but, in tho course of an af
ternoon and night, the wind hanling round to
the north or northwest, brings ns almost the at
mosphere of tho great lake*, the plains, prairi,
and Kooky Mountains, and we wske np in the
morning to find the meronry at 12 to 20, hav
ing changed in a night from spring to the rig
ors of a northern winter.
The last winter was but a succession of these
violent alternations, accompanied with much
damp and raw weather, In which oolds wore uni
versal and an epldemio eoiruDondina to th.
disease among the lories swept almost every
household.
Now wo question whrfhsr our people took as
good oare of themselves under this visitation as
they did of their brute beasts. They did not
take the same precautions in respect to addi
tional clothing, and against Imprudent self-
exposure. They did not catoh tho asms degree
of alarm in tho inoipient stages of oold and disease
and oombat tbom at onoe by proper remedies,
and keeping to their rooms and bod*, bat went
abont os nsnal, although they never allowed
their horses to be expoasd in an analogous con
dition. Much of tbe fatality resullmg from
colds the past winter may therefore be reason
ably traced to want of prudenoo and timely pre
caution and remedies.
And now let as learn a lesson for the fature.
Oar people mast take into consideration tho
changed oharaoter of our elimato and use woolen
nnderclothing—thicker shoes and w*rmer stock
ings. How many of them go without tlinnc-ls
and wear the thinnest ootton stockings they can
find all winter 7 Wa should be afraid to say
what proportion cf the young of both sexes sc*
think aro guilty of this imprudence, supple
mented by tbe lightest of shoos 1 Let us all
remember—parents particularly—that this cli
mate has become a trying oiimats, and tbe body
most be protected against its attacks by a good
wholosomo armour of substantial nnderclothing,
worn steadily through tho winter and early spring
months—introduced and diminished gradually,
and with proper care at tho beginning and end
of tbe cold season.
Last Week’s Cotton Figaros.
The Chronicle shows receipts of the week
ending last Friday night, 7th instant, at 82,307
bales, against 105,528 bales last week, 109,153
bales the previous week, and 122,052 bales three
weeks since, making the total receipts since tbe
lat of.September, 1872,2,798,164 bales, against
2,292,827 bales for the same period of 1871-72,
showing an lucreaso since September I, 1872,
of 505,337 bales.
Tbe interior port reoeipts for the same time
were 19,176, against 13,284 last year—shipments
16,492, against 15,967—stock lt)3,029, against
108 last year. The table of visible supply
foots up 2,417,0C2, against 2,454,324 at s&me
date last year ^showing a decrease of ootion in
sight amounting to 37,262 bales.
The Chronicle, editorially speculating on tho
cotton slants cf Europe, estimates as follows:
Supply January, 1873, 1,500,000 bales—esti
mated import* daring the year, 5,525,000—
showing a total supply far the year of 7,025,000
bale*—total consumption during ths year, 5,-
612,000 bales—leaving as stock on hand 1st
of January, 1874, 1,413,000 bales. Sxys the
Chronicle:
The consumption is given at 78,000,000 lbs.,
_ - 308,000 bales larger than in 1872. equal to an
increase or 4,000 bales per week. The increase
assigned to the cortinent is probable, even with
out much diminution in price, and notwithstand
ing the continued tendency there, as well as ia
England, to the production of lighter fabrics—
the effect of which, in redneing the quantity of
cotton for a given number of spindles, is far
more than is commonly supposed. Bat that
England can exoeed, or even equal her consump
tion of 1872, presuppose* a material decline in
the price of ootton. In the early part of that
year her cotton use was larger than ever before
attained. Daring the year miny adversities
eime; her profics became less, and tbe pros-
ifct of the ootton industry in Lancashire for
I STS is gloomy indeed. As between the prices
of raw cotton aud medinmor low counts of yarn,
there is fn advene change of f@jl, and then
the riso in wages, in eoaia, in all mill supplies
has within a twelvemonth altered the ooudition
for the worse by nearly 11 per pound of cotton
more. Does not the alternative appear to be
very clearlv presented, of cheaper ootton or
atorping spindles? If cotton was dear from
scarcity, tbe latter would necessarily oocur, as
it did in 1869, when the sitnatian certainly was
not worse than it is now. If there is a super
abundance of cotton, it seems unnecessary that
it* consumption shall be diminished by high
prices, and the estimate given astomea that it
will not be, bnt rather will be increased by
lower prices. |
How Don't, mi Ghost BE rosnirt?—Who
will deliver the inaugural address as President
of the United States on tho 4th of March, ISm i
—Baton Transcript.
Very likely Ulysses S. Grant will be the hum
ble individual to perform that job. Tbe coun
try i* growing wiser as it grows older, and real
izes tho folly of changing a really great Presi
dent in deference to a usage that has nothing
but Us age to reoommend it.—New York Com
mercial Advertiser (Republican').
Excessive Cnuilon.
A Nashville correspondent of the Coorior-
Jonrnal tells the foliowing:
Think of a green Oonnectiont Yankee peram
bulating the streets of Nashville arrayc-d in a
a fall anit of Confederate gray! Ha left homo,
be said, deeply impressed with tbe belief that
every man in the Southern States was armed to
the teeth, ready to take the life of the universal
Yankee on sight. Easiness, colled him hither,
henes bis only safety was inside a snit of Dixie
cloth. His tailor was consulted, and our hero
doubly armed in rebel garb. What was hia
gratification and doligbt on finding tho Southern
people civilized, and 6ven conrteons I What his
otter astonishment when he visited Ibe Capitol
and saw two well dressed, genteel darkies ocen -
pying seals as liepresentatives—the one. Kelly,
from Davidson, lhs other, Peak, from Meigs.
TzmtniLB Disastxb at Sarxasa.—A terrible
saster, presenting some very extraordinary
features, occurred at Smyrna on the 10 h ulL
It appears that there sro a number of cafes in
that city which ere built upon piles driven into
the sea. It was in one of these establishments
that the catastrophe occurred. An entertain
ment was given on the night of Sunday by
seven acrobats, three of whom wore women.
About 200 persons attended the performance.
Suddenly, while all wore enjoying themselves, a
load cracking was heard, and in a few seconds
more tbe piles sustaining the structure gave
way and the baiidiug descended into tbe water,
carrying all the audience down with it. Within
five minntes' time the eafe was no lnncor to h-
been. Only a few persons neer tbe ontranoo
succeeded in saving tboir lives by jnmping into
tho sea. Search for tho dead revealed eighty
bodies, among them ail the acrobata but one,
dressed in their showy costumes, and fifty more
were supposed to be under tbo water. The po
lice have, in consequence cf this event, closed
all the other cafes built upon piles ia the sea.
Wbat Radical Rale Hu Made Phila
delphia.
If there is a spot on the American continent
where real, unadulterated, fourth-proof Icylty
abides it is Philadelphia—the home of all the
cardinal virtues, from a Radical stand point,
and where the atmosphere is almost too pure
for a rebel or a copperhead to breathe and live.
Sho is famous for her tremendous majorities
for the party cf great mortl ideas aad “Christian
Statesmen,” and is good any day for as many
thousands thereof as her viriuon* repeaters can
find time to stuff into the ballot-box.
What all this has done for her was eloquent
ly set forth the other day in the Pennsylvania
Senate, by CoL A. K. McClure, one of her Sen
ators, in a speech on a bill to reform hex elec
tion laws. He said her city government had
brought thame upon the whole people of the
State, and that her debt, which wa« steadily
growing, was now three times greater than that
of ths irhole Slate of Pennsyleania—thst her
taxation wa* "crashing,” aad that her official*
were “romoraeleaa extortioners who pervert
publio offiues to public oppression.”
This Is a pretty bad showing for the Badical
brigands who rule and rob under the name cf
loyalty, but u they haven’t quite stolen every
thing there was to steal, it strikes ns thit Mc
Clure ought to have given them a little credit
for moderation.
A HtimllfatiDj; bat not Remarkable
Fact.
Tho Chicago Tribune states that three United
States Judges—namely, Judge Delahay, of Kan
su; Jodgs Sherman of Ohio; and Judge Dnrell,
of Louisiana—have been put in disgrace in
twelve months, while daring the previous eighty-
three years of our Government but two United
States Judges had been impeached.
Ths Tribune ought to have added that all
three of these officials are Radicals of the strict
est sect sod most approved pattern; end that
the only wonder with ail thinking men is that
there are not thirty instead of throe, consider
ing the training they hive received and tho ex
ample* that have bean set them by the most
trusted leaden of their party
Aad now is any-body gams enough to make
us a EvsJy be*, that either one of them will ever
be exuviated? W« h*va great f*i'.h ia tho ca
paeity of tho Radical whitewash pot, ourselves,
but perhaps everybody won’t agree with u*.
REGULATOR
For over JOBTY YEARS this
PURELY VEGETABLE
LIVER MEDICINE
Hat proved to be Vie Great Unfailing Specific
for LiTer Complaint and Ita painful offirpricr. Dyfpep-
fia. Constipation* Jaundice, .Bilious attacks* Sick
Lolie, Depression .of Spirits. Sour 8tom-
INHALING SYSTEM
After jean of careful experiments, to meet a rreat
and urgent demand, we now produce from cur origi
nal Genuine Powders
THE PREPARED,
a Liquid form of SIMMONS'LIVER REGULATOR,
c ntaicinr aJl its wonderful and valuable properties*
and offer it in
ONE DOLLAR BOTTLES
Dr. Jones his extended his stay at Brown’s Ho
tel, JIacoa, 0»-. until ilirch the 21at-
F. H. BKHX A CO,
DR. J. A. JONES Cotton and Bice Factor* and Genera
CAUTION,-—Bay as Powders or Prepared
SIMMONS' LIVKR KEGULATOK unlesi in our en-
rrared wrapper, with Trade mirk. Stamp aad Sisna-
lore unbroken- None other id genuine-
J. H. ZEIUH A CO.,
Macon, Go., and Philadelphia.
Sold by all Druzziit*.
Ian2S-d*wly
The eontlnnal and increasing tendency to
wards emigration is regarded with great disap
probation by tbo leading European govern
ment*. Germany took the lead in throwing ob
stacles in tho way of snob of her citizens, or
rather subject*, as wished to expatriate them
selves—obstacles intended to approach to actual
prohibition—and now tho French government
has ordered that M. Pardoaet, emigration agent
for the State of Kansas, shall not be permitted
to lecture at Belfort upon tho emigration to the
United Slates.
Oct or the Sea.—A correspondent of tho
Liverpool Daily Bulletin, writing from Gibral
tar, tell* the following remarkable story;
He says that an American brigantine, named
the Mary Celeste, was discovered deserted four
hnndred miles cast of th3 Azores. The last
eatry in the captain’s log was dated November
24, 1872, tec days before her discovery. Mani
fests, bills of lading, and every document which
might have afforded any cluo to the history of
the derelict had been removed. The cargo,
consisting of spirits, was untouched, and the
vessel exhibited no marks of severe weather.
Tbe content* of the cabin, of considerable
va'ne, and evidently belonging to a lady and a
child, wore untouched. Tbe cause of tbe deser
tion of the vessel, and tbe fate of her crew and
possengors, is an absolute mystery.
How rr wxs Dons.—The New York Tribune
■ays:
•‘An analysis of the vole In tho House on the
salary question shows that 62 of the 193 who
favored the increase were not re-elected to Con
gress. That is to say, they had done their work
at tho rate of compensation originally agreed
upon, and they hod no immediate prospect of
coming back again. They therefore grabbled
five tbonaand more apiece. These men, wise
In their day snd generation, undoubtedly think
that ‘the happiest tims is now.’ ”
Asotuee Sthikx Imitocxxt—There is reason
to apprehend that New York is again to be the
scene cf a protracted struggle between labor
and capital—more determined, and perhaps
more disastrous, than the eight-hour strike
which began in May last year and lasted six
weeks, forcing capital to lie idle, crippling
trade, and causing bitter coffering in the home*
of tho strikers themselves, who were, mo*t of
them, finally forced to abandon their demand
to avoid starvation. Workmen of all classes,
through their trades-unions (the Crispins being
most prominent;, are organizing for a demon
stration about tbe 1st of May, snd there are
signs in the sky that portend a stubbornly con
tested strike, for employers and capitalists too
are on tbe alert, and combining for mutual de
fence.—Springfield (Jfass.) Republican.
A ansiSTEEur. brother, who married rather
sooner after the death of his wife than some of
tho sister, thought proper snd brooming, ex
cused himself as follows: “My dear brethren
and sisters, my grief was greater than I could
bear. I turned every way for peace and com
fort, bnt none come. I searched the Scriptera
from Ginisee to RiTerlations, and found plenty.
of promises to tho widder, but nary one to the
widderer. And so I took it that the good Lord
didn't waste sympathy on a m in when it was in
bis power to oomfort himself, and, hiving a
first rate chance to marry in the Lord, I did so,
aud would do the sams thing again Besides,
my brethren, I considered that poor Patsey was
just as dead as she would ever be.”
A waesixo to lovers who sit up late comer
from Ohio. Two youog people at ML Victory,
after exhausting their supply cf small talk, fell
asleep over ths parlor stove, when ths lady's
dress took fire, and before it could be extin
guished she was eo severely burned that she
died in a few boars.
This odd advertisement is from an Eaglieh
newspaper: “My husband is out on a strike.
He prefers that to work. He ain’t of any use
me. I must work to keep ths children and
myself. His ten shillings goes in beer. I'll
swap him while he's on a strike for a sewing
machine.”
Thz ruin cf most men dates from some va
cant hour. There la a satirical poem, in which
the dev:I is represented as fishing for men, snd
fitting his bait to the taste and business of his
prey; but the idler, he said, gSTe him no trouble,
as he bit the naked hook.
Govxssob Sprague’* house st Narragansett,
near Newport, ha* more than sixty apartments,
and is provided with a telegraph wire leading
to New York, or, one might say as well, to Lon
don, Constantinople, Sou Francisco, and Can
ton.
A Sacra stents stableman bought an interest
in a ready-made clothing store recently, and oc
casionally startlra a customer by coing at him
with a brash, with a cautionary “Whoa, there.”.
EDWARD SPB.LNZ.
X OTAP.Y PUBLIO and EX-OFFICJIO JUSTICE
OF THE PEACE. I can be found for the
ireeent at all hours of the day at my office, adjoiu-
ng the law office of A. Proodflt, oyer the store of
Jaques A Johnsons Third street, Maoon, Ga.. to at
tend to ail Magisterial business. angSSly
DR. W. W. FORD,
DENTIS T,
84 Mulberry Street.
OAME rooms with Dr. Emerson. Office hours
O from 6% a. st. to 1 p. a., 2X r. if. to £K r. m.
Just Received from Tennessee
I CAR LOAD GROUND PEAS.
1 car load GOOBERS.
1 car load PEA NUTd.
I carload FINDERS.
For sale cheap to Georgia Legislators or “any
other man.”
fcb2Stf JOHNSON * SMITH.
NOTICE !
Stock in “T-ie Macon Fire Immrxnce and
Ti nit Aetioci»tiou” »-ii co ita or-fixation, tbe Boexd
of Directors have decided to increase the «tock to
Tiro Hundred Tbone»nd Dollars, over One Hondred
Thousand Dollars having been already taken. All
parties deairons of subscribing will plo&eo mako
early application to the undersigned
J. MONROE OGDEN,
feblltf Secretary snd Treasurer.
NOTICE.
Justice or the Peace 710th District, 6. W
T HE undersigned is now attending to tho duties
of Justice of tho Peace, and will bold hi* reg
ular Courts on the Third Saturday in each munth,
at the Court-rooms established iD Ralston range
for said District after ths sale of the o'd Court
house. E. O. GRANNIES,
fulfil 3 lm Justice cf tho Peace.
THE PLACE TO BUY
HARDWARE
CHEAP!
JOHNSON & DUNLAP’S,
73 THIRD STIIUSTi
200' DOZ ‘ pai)i,ooks '
100 doz. Builders and Deadlocks.
200 doz. Pocket Knives.
400 sets Table Knives aud Forks.
100,000 Elf's Caps.
100,000 Cartridges.
100 bags Shot.
150 pairs Fire Dogs,
200 kegs Nail*.
60 kegs Horse and Mule Shoes.
50 boxosHorasShoo Nails.
100 doz. Axes.
100 doz. Curry Combs and Horso Brusboa.
1000 purs Trace Chains.
CARPENTERS’ TOOLS
Of all kinds, and a full line of
BUILDERS’ HARDWARE.
Carriage and Wagon Material.
The largest stock in the market.
Full Line of fooiware ani Corflage.
Of all kinds.
Blacksmith Bellows, Anvils,
Hammers Eto.
FULL LINE OF SAW MILL GOODS
Of every description.
Gin Belts ani Belting of all Sizes.
This stock of goods has been bought in person
aud for the ready “dough” and shipped at the
ireseut low rates of freight. Ail we ask Is a call.
X we don't sell you goods, it shan't be our fault.
Remember, we are headquarters for the cele
brated DANIEL PRATT COTTON GIN, warranted
in every reepect.
Also, tho GENUINE DIXIE PLOW—one and
two horse—formerly sold by W. W. Parker.
aepl9eod6m
FILLEY’S FAMOUS
ARE MADE SOLELY BY THE
Excelsior lanficiniii Company,
ST. LOUTS, MO.
Aro doing more snd
" OAK^ better cooking,
Doing it
QUICKER AND CHEAPER
Than any Stove in the Market.
Letters on PreTslent Diseases that
Affect the American Nation.
SYMPTOMS OF CHRONIC CATARRH.
BY DB. J. A. JONES.
rpnE xbove cui representa DB. JONES’ now
X method of caring diseases of the Lungs and
Throst, As'hma, Bronchitis, Trachetis, Lajringet-
is. Consumption, Enlarged Tonsils, Pleuntis,
breaking up Congestion of the Lungs and Liver,
and effecting cures of the Bespiratory Organs with
certainty and ease, that cannot be reached by any
other method.
His remedies are reduced to warm spray—are
specific in their nature; they reach the whole dis
eased surface at every breath; they are carried di»
rectly into the blood without haring to go through
the process of digestion: only certain prepared
remedies can be used by this system
A few so-called family doctors aro experts
with the Inhaler and their Caustic- 4 , iodinea am
other relics of barbsriem psculiar to that practice—
the result is, they aro destroying the reputation of
the only system that will cure Throat Diseases.
Only certain mild remedies can be taken into ths
Lungs and they aie not kept by druggists nor known
to the general profession.
Ifet. of the head—heavy, dull, aching over the
eye*, sometimes extending back through different
parts of tbo head, aud causing a weight or heat, of
coldness on top of the head, snapping and crack
ing noise in the ears, dullness or hearing— often
tho secretion collects in middle ear, closing np the
eustachian tubes, prodocing deafness—tbe lining
membrane being the sam-* from the head tkroogb
the whole alimentary canal, and down into the
lungs, it has but to extend itself to affect tho whole
system. It becomes virulent in tho nose some*
times, causing a tenderness, or producing offensive
breath, discharges of yeJlovrieh matter and scabs
tho eliape of the nostrils, or if the partition bone
is only affected, then the Ischars are flat, and
whoa they diechargo, which is generally after exer
tion. the noso is open, tho patient breathes more
easily and the head feels more clear—the heavi
ness over tho eyes and across tho forehead is sel
dom entirely gone, but it ia aggravated by every
fresh cold. The offensive smell for which the un
fortunate chows many kinds of drags to neutralize
or destroy, aid thereby be enabled to go into soci
ety without boing a positive nuisance, which pr
sons of both sexes are, on account of this barbi
oua and offensive disease, called OZOENA, which
has nova* assumed & Tertiary form of cancer, des
troying everything but the outside skin, letting
the nose sink in, extending to the throat, destroy
ing the voice, etc, when the disease is called La
ryngitis, Trachetis, Bronchitis, eto.
joaxru HXKilAX. JAfl. B. FAKBAMOIUL
JOSEPH FLYEG1N A CO,
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants.
Bay Street. Savaonnh, Ga
Liberal advances made on Ootton consigned to us
or to our correspondents in New York
Id
SYMPTOMS 01 TIE THROAT.
A collection of tonaciona atimy secretion ailing
down into the thruat and thrown out—tickling,
rasping, hoarseness and scraping to koop open the
wind pipe; difficult breathing, oppression and sore*
nesa under tho breast boue; tenderness in tho left
side; rheumatic pains between the shoulders;
stiff neck on taking oold ; palpitation of the heat;
torpid liver; eomeames yellow complexion; gen
eral dull and heavy feeling ; extreme shortness of
breath ; soreness of etomach pit; bloated sensa
tion ; belching of wind ; yawning, gapirg. keep
ing mouth open to breathe; distress, sleepless
nights ; worse when lying down, and it now termi
nates either in Consumption of the Lungs, or fol*
lows the mucous membrane through the whole ali
mentary and urinal canal, erasing Dyspepsia, Oos-
tivenees.Piies. Inflammation of the Bladder,trouble
in tbe Urinary Organs, (and in women, nearly the
of female diseases), and general Con-
oriUralVof wUe&*aDd milnyo&sHflffiBma, coll-
ed by twenty different names, tbe sufferer may ex*
iat for a while. Dr. Jonee cures this dangerous
and insidious disease by tbo iErieu System—using
specific medicines known only to himself, applied
to the diseasod surface, in the form of spray. He
relieves tho eufforor in a few minutes, aud sup
plies the patient with all that is required to finish
the cure at he m a.
OZOENA,
An Offensive Disease in tbe Nose.
■Which eata away the partition bone, destroys
the sense of smell, prodaces green or yellowish
ecibs, the shape of the nostril—sometimes flat, of
ten tainted with blood and matter; causes weight
and dull aching over the eyes, headache. loss of
memory, giddinoes, etc. This disease ia often
caused by neglected colds, by Eupprossed skin dis
eases, Scrofula, Scarlet Fever, Fsoriaais, Syphilis,
and other contagious diseases, and is itself conta
gious. It often extends to tho throat, producing
Hoarseness, Bronchitis and CONSUMPTION, it
ia a Tertiary form of Cancer, DE3TROYINQ the
NOSE and THROAT when too long neglected. DB.
JONES is tho ONLY Physician in tbe United States
who thoroughly understands curing this dangerous
and offensive disease. He destroys the offensive
smell m FIVE MINUTES, and relieves the enffer-
er in overy way AT ONOE, and OUBE3 the disease
in a short time. For this disease Dr. Jonos has
special instruments with which to apply hia specifio
remedies to the spot. Nasal Douchts and catarrh
remedies generally drive this dieeiBO to the lungs
more quicyv.
Letter No. 3.
By DR. J- A, JONES* c f London.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH.
Are always
Low-Priced, Sellable
AND OPERATE PERFECTLY.
Will do your
COOKING CHEAP
AND EASY,
QUICK AND CLEAN.
OAK
TRUMAN Sc GREEN.
ire all Waranted!
- -w And
bold by
feb2260d&w4xu
MACON, QA.
Prevalent In America and Europe.
1. Of the Head—Tingling, itching, with a sense
of dryness and obstruction of tho nose, sneezing,
running of a watery secretion; as it progresses,
the secretion becomes mucous, entire obstruction
of one or beth nostrils, n&wking, tickling of the
throat, coughing, eto. 3. Catarrh of the Chest pre
vails as an epidemic sometimes, and is called influ
enza ; with or without fever, and many of the
symptoms jutt mentioned; there is oppression
scroes the breast, rawness and turning of the
throat, first diy, afterward a copious secretion of
mncou8, which m»y become opaque or frothy, dif
ficulty of breathing, pain in tno head, and doll
feelings, a sense of soreness, extending under the
breast bone to the stomach-pit; tho fits of cough
ing may occasion vomiting, oppreeeion, prostra
tion; as the d esase progresses, the sputa becomes
ropy and viecid. This disease is called the Grippe
by seme. Catarrhal Inflammation of the eyes
arises from colds, causes obstruction of the car
passages, watery eyoe, fistula, lachrjinalis, dimness
of vision, eto.
SUPPRESSED CATARRH may produce inflam
mation of the lungs, brain or eyes, or give rse to
rheumatism, nervous disorders, weeping, moaning,
tremors and convulsions, drowsiness, chilliness,
strnirg. twitching, palpitation of tho heart, eto.
When the frontal sinuses above tho eyes, posterior
and anterior nasal passage*, become clogged np,
and even the antrum or cavity of the cheek
bone become* filled, or partly, it often
produces a presturo on the nerves that
supply these parts, and pains like the
most excrutiaty:g neuralgia Is the result. The
disease follows the muoous membrane through the
eustachian tubes to all parts of the same mem
brane of the ear, erasing hypertrophy of the drum,
interferes with tbe functions of the glands of
Wharton, which secrete the wax; a dryness follows,
hardness cf bearing, ioaring, buzzing, singing,
whistling, cracking, tho ringing of bells, aud simi
lar noues, which vary, and which are simple effects,
and when the cause is removed, the effects cease;
this hardness of hearing increases with each cold.
Dr. Jones hus made old standing diseases of
every name a speciality all hia life. He is well pre
pared, and performs all the more difficult and del
icate operations in surgery, especially of the eye,
ear and ncse. He is a graduate of the beet medi
cal colleges in Europe and America, and his diplo
mas proving the same are suspended in his office.
C3~ Letters containing one dollar will be an
swered.
Dr. Jones’ fees vary from 4 SO to 42000. His
terms are cash. Eia fees are considered very low
for the great amount of good he does.
Opthalmia or Sore Eyes,
Of these there are nine structural varieties, each
of which have peculiarities, but are very much
alike in many r?epects, and are cured by Dr. Jones
without burnings or caustics of any kind, in from
twenty-four hours to a month or two. The patient
need not be with him but an hour in any case.
Strabismus, or Cross-Eyed ness
I* a a contraction of one or more of tbe muds* of
tbe eye; it is remedied by cliriding tbe muscle
which is contracted; is attended with no danger,
and ia on tlM. surface of tbe eyeball; wa con re
store all such cases to tbeir natural appearanoe and
right by a akillfol operation which we bare per
formed eleren hundred time* in twenty years, and
in which we are always encceeafnl, ms in fact, we
are in all delicate and difficult operations which we
are prepared tq do off-hand.
SAVANNAH CARDS.
X. MilXH AID. I. MS1XEAXD. 8. MXI5XAXD, X. A. 1
II £1 Si HARD BROS. 4k CO.,
WH0LK8ALZ DIAL I IS UK
Bools, Shoes, Hats, Rcaiy-Made Clothing,
GENTLES! EVS FURNISHING GOODS.
Office, 80 and S21 129 Erooxhtcn SL, SaTiSSiB,
White 8b. K.Y.f iseptlt 6m]
A. X. cbuopiox. oxo. o. rauziX.
CHAKPI0X is FRKEMAX,
Comer Bay and Drayton Streets,
SAVANNAH, Ui.
septM 6m
Commission Merchants,
142 Bay Street,
8JL 7ANY AM, GA.
s«pt!4 6m
OWItiHT L. ROBERTS,
COTTON FACTOR and COMMISSIO
144 Bay Street,
septl46m
MERCHANT,
- SATAXXAR, GA.
L. M. WbRirxLD, [ Bo beet Wants,
Formerly of Maoon. | Savannah, Ga.
WARFIELD A WAYNE
COTTON BROKERS
—AMD—
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
O FFER their services to the Planters and Ship
pers of Ootton ia the interior, and beg to so
licit a share of their consignments to this market.
Liberal Oath advances made ou consignments of
Cotton
Will bay and sell future deliveries in the Savan
nah and New York markets on the most reasonable
terms.
Refer to Morris Ketchnm, Esq., New York
Ketcbnm A Hartridge, Savannah.
Bavannah Rank ani Trust Company, Savannah.
O. A. Nutting, Etq., President City Bank, Ma
oon, Ga.
L O. Plant, Esq., President First National Bank,
Maoon, Ga.
Messrs. Onbbedge, Hazlehnrat A Co., Bankers,
Maoon, Ga. aept!4 6m
k. it. AWDESSOW. OXO. W. AHDXHSOX, IS.,
mo. w. axDEBsow.
J.YO. W. AffDEKSO.VS SOYS,
Cotton Factors & Gen’l Commission
Slerchauts,
Corner Bryan and Drayton Streets,
SAVANNAH, GA.
0-LIberal advances made on consignments.
*eptl4 6m
3. BA VAST, JB. W. B. WATLES. JULIAN MYXiiS
DA VAST, WAPI.ES & CO.,
actors and Commission Merchants,
5C Bay Street,
Savannah, Ga.
sept!4 6m
eept!4 Cm]
Jverpool.
FLANNAGAN, ABELL & 00.,
128 BAY STREET, BAVANNAH,
Commission merchants and Cotton
Factors,
T'URNISH Bagging and Ties and make liberal
advances on consignments. Remittances
ptlv made. They have tho direction of tho
sale of the English Stonewall Fertilizer.
sepH Cm
A. as. SLOAN. J If. SLOAN.
A. M. SLOAN Sc CO..
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants
Ol&shorn & Cunningham's Range, Bay street,
SAVANNA!!. GA*
Liberal advances made on consignments and oot
ton in store.•ep!4tf
CBOCIETT’S JBBN WOffiS
larget New Iron Vorfe in the State.
EDWARD C. ANDERSON, Jr.,
BANKER.
Factor M Commission Merckat,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
PECIAL attention given to Consignments of
. _ 1 Cotton. Gold, Stocks, Ronds and Foreign Do
mestic Exchange bought snd sold. Collections
promptly remitted for in Now York Exchange at
market rates. No Commission Charged on Col-
lections made in tho city. septl4 6m
XZTOHCSt. A. L. HABTJUBOZ
KETCHUM & HARTRIDGE,
Bankers and Commission Merchants
Xxchanxe BallttJnar, Saynnanb, Ga.
BxrKRZMOZs: Moaea Taylor, President City Bank
N. Y.; P. 0. Calhoun, President Fourth National
Bank, N. Y.; John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, N. Y.;
Morris Eotchum, Banker, N. Y.; J. N. Norris,
Cashier First National Bank, Baltimore; M. McMi-
ehael, Cashier First National Bank, Philadelphia,
septl! 6m
jamu KiaxarY. geo. w. bcott.
KIHKSET 4k SCOTT,
OTTON FACTORS and COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
Kelley’s Block, Bay Street, SAVANNAH, OA.
IBEliAL Advsncos made on Consignments
J Refer to Merchants National Bonk, Savannah
Bank and Trait Company, and Southern Bank State
-Georgia. aopil4 6m
M. Conncto, Jos. B. Tubxzh,
Bavannah, Ga. Levyville, FIs.
CODDING A TURNER,
Cotton Factors & Gen’l Commission
Merchants,
No. 86 Street, Savannah, Ga.,
'OBOMPT and carefnl attention given to the sale
JT of Cotton, Wool, Hides, Syrup, Beeswax, Tal
low, and Prodace generally. Liberal Cash Ad-
vanoea made on Consignments. sopt!4 6m
O. E. Gbooveh, O. F. Stuebs, A. T. MacIntvbe,
Bavannah. Savannah. Thomaaville,
6R00YKB, STUBBS & C0.,
Cotton Factors and General Com
mission Merchants,
94 Eay Street, - - SAVANNAH, OA.
/^VUB Largo Firo-Proof Warehouse is Completed.
Consignments are solicited for sale, shipment
: storage, on which liberal advances will be m&do
desired. Terms reasonable. Bagging and Ties
urniehed. septl4-6m
05
G. B. LAMAR, Jr.,
Cotton Broker, General Commission Her*
chant and Dealer In Fertllliers,
FFIOE Kelly's Building, N. W. corner, down-
_ ' stairs, Bavannah, Ga. Will purchase Cotton
Seed, both the Black or Sea Island, and the Green
or Upland Seed. Sells Cotton at a Brokerage
Commission of 00 cents per bale, (no advances bo
ing required,) or will advance on usual terms—
Consignments solicited. Advances made on ship
ments to his friends at the North or abroad.
seDtl4 6m
Premium Shelby, Ala,, Lime.
7T1QE following analysis of above made by Prof.
Casssls, viz;
Moisture evolved at 212 degrees, Fahrenheit. 0.60
Carbonate of Lime 98 C5
Phosphate of Lime 0,75
Siiex 010
100.00
Kept constantly on hand fresh from the works.
dec29 3m ASHEB AYRE8. Poplar street.
A. C. KAUFMAN.
BAUgBR.
AND DEALER IN HODTHEhN SECURITIES,
CHARLESTON, S. G.
S OUTHERN COLLECTIONS receive the Special
and Personal attention of this House. Retains
made FAITHFULLY and PROMPTLY in New
York Exchange, which always rales BELOW par
daring the active business season.
<7* Notes, Drafts and Acceptances payable in
South Carolina. North Carolina and Georgia can be
concentrated at this point with Profit and Saving of
Labor.
ga- All btuiness attended to with fidelity and
di, patch.
•W Quotations cf Southern Securities issued
weekly. febll 6m
GUANO.
P URE PERUVIAN, IMPORTED DIRECT, AND
for s&le at Goveromout prices, by
R. Q. LAY, Agent,
Jan2Gtf
. Agent.
Bav&hnadi, Ga.
COOK’S HALL,
PERRY, GA.
T HE attention of managers of public entertain
ment* Is colled to this Hall, which has been
lately fitted np in the best style, with soenery, etc.
The Hall will seat about 400 persona and is conve
niently situated in the large and growing town of
Perry, to which tbe Southwestern Railroad ha*
lately constructed a branch from Fort Valley.
Apply to JOHN B- COOK.
feb!9 #m* Perry, Qa,
NEW YORK CARDS.
W. A. RANSOM Sc CO.,
Manufacturers and Jobbers of
BOOTS AND SHOES,
138 AND 140 GRAND ST., NEW YORK.
Represented by Ool. B. W. Hogan, of Georgia.
CARHART, WHITFORD & CO.,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in
OLOTHINa,
418, 420 and 422 Broadway, corner Canal street,
NEW YORK.
J. M. HANDLEY. declO 3m
UKTITED 8TA.THH
Comliiiiation Spring Power Company,
PRINCIPAL OFFICE
54J Broadway, New York.
B. 0. GARDNER, President.
W. B. MILTON, Secretary. augl7-Smd
RAILROADS.
ATTORNEYS.
liXU H. BLOUNT.
THAAfl WtTinrMIW
BLOUNT & HARDEMAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
MAOON, GEORGIA.
Office, at entrance Ralston Hall, Cherry street
deSStf
C. B. COLE,
.A-ttorney at Law.
O FFICE with Lanier A Anderson, i
street, for tho present. 1
JOHN P. FORT,
A.ttox*iiey at Law,
84 Cherry street, Maoon, Qa
m*
C. W. HOWARD,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
UOOir, GEORGIA.
Office at entrance of Balaton Hall, Gherry street.
“All bnainosa will receive prompt attention.
E. H. HARMAN,
A-ttorney at Law,
Balaton's Hall Building, entrance Third Btreet,
MAOON, GEORGIA.
Will practioo in the Courts of the Maoon Circuit.
Prompt attention given to the collection of claim*.
U. M. GUNN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BYRON, SOUTHWESTERN B. B., GA.
PE0IAL attention given to collection.
W. AVAST. I. H. nnASHAW.
AVAST & BRANHAM,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
FOBT VALLEY, GA.
feb9 2m
JOHN H. WOODWARD,
attorney at Law
—AND—
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Jan21Iawd8m VIENNA QA.
MAKE AND SELL
■WA.TH.Tl
J
WHEELS,
STEAM
<1
u
ENGINES,
SAW
n
A
MILLS,
GRIST
V
ffl
MILLS,
FLOUR
ft
MILLS,
SUGAR
0
MILLS,
PORTABLE
Pi
CORN AND
FLOUR
(5
MILLS,
STEAM
ENGINES,
FOR GINNING
and THRASHING
HORSE
fe
POWERS,
FOR GINNING
0
and THRASHING
GIN
0
GEARING
FROM EIGHT TO
<
TWELVE FEET,
BOXES,
§
GUDGEONS,
AND
SHAFTING,
IRON
CASTINGS,
BRASS
#
Id
CASTINGS,
RABBIT
METAL,
STEAM
ft
a
PIPE
AND FITTINGS
ft
OF ALL KINDS,
SELF
0
OILERS,
SAVING
ONE-HALF
TH hi
r
OIL.
STEAM
GAUGES,
ALL
b
SIZES,
WATER
fi
A
GAUGES,
FORCE
u
*J'
PUMP,
LIFT
ft
PUMP,
DEEP
H
WELL PUMP,
STEAM
PUMP,
IRON
31
RAILING
FOR ENCLOSING
&
n
PUBLIC
SQUARES,
PRIVATE
RESIDENCES
§
AND
GRAVE LOTS.
n
M
IRON FRONT,
LINTELS,
ft
0
COLUMNS,
SILLS
AND
WINDOW
0
WEIGHTS.
SEND FOR
Pi
CIRCULAR
AND PRICE i
0
LIST TO
E.
anglltf
CROCKETT,
Fourth at., Macon. Ga.
NGLISH BAKING POWDERS
—AND —
NGLISH FLAVORING EXTRACTS.
OR making sweet and wholesome Bread and Bis
cuit*. A BETTER ARTICLE THAN ANY IN
B MARKET, having the qualities of the best Bak-
, Powders and Yeut combined, and recommenced
all eminent English Physicians. Bread made iron
>
English Baking Powders
i be baked at once, or may remain in the dough
forty-eight hours, and is guaranteed to make as good
Bread or Biscnita aa if used immediately after mixing,
and ia warranted free lrcm the deleterious cfleets ot
Baking Powders generally, being manufactured from
strictly pure ingredients, and under the euperveion
f one of the beat JfnglUh Chemists.
For sale in quarter, half rad pound tins, by all re
spectable Grocers and Druggists. Wholesale by
SEYMOUR. TINSLEY 3c CO.
GREEK. LAKE ACO.
COLEMAN 3c NEWSOM.
Head Office for the United States. 191 Dane streeet.
New York. nov24eodly
g-ettysbtjjflg-
KATALYSINE WATER.
T has been demonstrated, by a series of practical
experiment*, conducted by eminent physicians,
and attested by thousand* of gra'efui people who
have been relieved from their sufferings by it3 use.
that the Gettysburg^Katalysine Water is the nearest
approach to a specific ever discovered for Dyj'pejsia.
Neuralgia. Rheumatism. Gout, Gravel. Diabetes,
Kidney and Urinary Diseases generally. It restores
muscular power to the Paralytic. It cures Liver
Complaint^ Chronic Diarrhoea, Piles. Constipation,
Asthma. Catarrh and Bronchitis, Diseases of the
Skin. General Debility and Nervous Prostration from
Mental and Physical Excesses. Ills the greatest An
tidote ever discovered for Excessive Eating and
Drinking. It corrects the Stomach, promotes Diges
tion, and relieves the Head almost immediately. No
household should be without it. Every hotelshould
keep it on hand. For sale by all Druggists.
-S3-Fore hiatorr of the Snrinzs. for medical re
ports of Hi. power cf the water over disease, for mar
velous cnrei, and for testimonials from di*tmzaiahe<l
men. send lor BROS., Gen’l A sent'.
227 South Front St.* Philadelphia, Pa.
Gettysburg Swing Co.
For sale J J. ff ZEILIN 3c CO.* and Druggist*
generally* jan7*eoddm
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE,
NO CHANGE OF CABS BETWEEN AU
GUSTA AND OOLUMBU8.
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE, J
Gzoboia Oxxtbal RaiLBOAD, V
Savannah, September 27,1879. )
O N and after Sunday, the 16th Inst., Passenger
Trains on the Georgia Central Railroad, its
branches and connections, will run as follows:
UP DAY TSADr.
Leave Savannah................. «»v-r-t-<— 8:46 am
Leave Augusta 9:00 a
Arrive at Augusta.....................*.
Arrive at Milledgeville ....11:66PM
Arrive at Eatonton 1:60 am
Arrive atMaoon 7:16>M
Loave Maoon for Atlanta............*...10:00 p M
Leave Maoon for Columbus 8:05 P M
Arrivo at Atlanta....*^^.** 8:06 A M
Arrive at Columbus. 6:00 AM
Making close connection with trains leaping Aw-
gusta, Atlanta and Colombua.
DOWN DAT TaAXX.
Leave Atlanta. 1:45
Arrive at Macon......................... 7*45 A
Leave Hsoon 8:00 a
Leave Augusta..... 2:00a
Arrive at Augusta 6:80 pm
Arrive at Savannah 6:16 PM
This train connects at Maoon with the 8. W. Ac
commodation train leaving Columbus at 8:20 f. m. v
and arriving at Macon at 4:45 A- m., and makes th
same connection at Augusta aa the up day train.
KIQUT T&A12TS Gonca SOUTH.
Leave Savannah 7:00 pm
Leave Augusta 8:16 pm
Arrive at Savannah 4:80 a. M
Arrive at Maoon 6:80 a m
Leave Maoon for Atlanta 7:26 am
Leave Macon for Columbus..... 6:46 AM
Arrive at Columbus. 11:16 AM
Arrive at Atlanta.... 1:25 pm
Making prompt through connections at both At
lanta ana Columbia.
MIGHT TRAINS 0011(0 XORTH.
Leave Columbus.... 4:10 pm
Leave Atlanta 2:80 p m
Arrive at Maoon from Columbus 9.85 p M
Arrive at Maoon from Atlanta..... 8:20 pm
Leave Maoon 9:60 pm
Loave Savannah .11:00 pm
Arrive at Milledgovillo 11:66 p M
Arrive at Eatonton 1:60 a m
Arrive at Augusta 6:20 a M
Arrivo at Savannah 7:30 am
Making perfect connection with trains leaving
Augusta.
Paeaengers going over the Milledgeville and
Eatonton Branch will take night train from Colom*
bus, Atlanta and Macon, day;trains from Augusta
aud Bavannah, which connect daily at Gordon
(Sundays exoepted) with the Milledgeville and Ea
tonton trains.
An elegant sleeping oar on all night trains.
THROUGH TICKETS TO ALL POINTS oan be
had at tho Central Railroad Ticket Ofiloo at Pnlaski
House, corner of Bull and Bryan streets. Office
open from 8 a m to 1 p m, and from 8 to 6pm. Tick
eta oan also be had at Depot Offioo.
WILLIAM ROGERS,
Jnnel6 tf General Superintendent.
-I
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE.
. Maoon and Bbckswiok Railroad Goupant,
Maoon. G*., February 21,1872. _
O H and after Sunday, 23d February, train* on
this Road will be ran ae follow*:
DAX PA88ENOEB TRAIN, DAXLX (BUNDATE EXCEPTED.)
Leave Maoon 8:45 a. a
Arrive at Josonp 6:30 p. a
Arrive at Savannah 10.10 P. a
Arrive at Brunswick 10.20 p. a
Leave Bmiuiwiok 4.80 m a
Arrivo at Jeeanp..... 6.42 A. X
Arrive at Maoon 6.25 p.M
NIGHT PASBXNGXB TRAIN, DAILY.
Leave Macon 8:00 P. a
Arrive at Jessup 5:20 a. a
Arrive at Savannah 9.10 A. a
Leave Savannah..... 6.15 p. a
Arrive at Jeeenp 10OOP.a
Arrive at Macon 7:00 a. a
Both day and night trains connect at Jeaaap
with traine to and from Florida.
HAWKIHbVILLX ACCOMMODATION TRAIN, DAILY, (lUX-
DATS EXCEPTED.)
Leave Maoon 8.00 p. a
Arrive at Hawkinevilio 6.80 p. a
Leave Q&wkineville 7:05 a. a
Arrive at Maoon........................10.60 A. K
feb22tf WM. MaoRAE, Gen'l Snp't
Change of Schedule*
OH MACON AND AUGUBTA RAILROAD.
Forty-One Miles Saved in Distance.
OFFICE MACON AND AUGUSTA RAILROAD,)
Maoon, May 18,1872. f
_ ^^ W1-
run se follows:
DAY THAIS—DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED).
Loavo Macon 6:80 A. M.
Arrivo at Augusta 1:15 p.m.
Leave Augusta 12:16 p. m.
Arrive at Macon.7.80 P. M.
tar Passengers leaving Macon at 6.80 a. m. make
clone connections at Gamak with day passenger
trains on Georgia Railroad for Atlanta and all
Dints West; also, for Augusta, with trains going
north, and with trains for Charleston; also, for
Athons, Washington, and all stations on the Geor
gia Railroad. _ — _ „
CWTickots sold and baggage checked to all
ointa North, both by rail and by steamships from
lharloston. _ „
ang7tf B. K. JOHNSON, Bnp't.
O 1 ^
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
OFFICE MAOON A WESTERN RAILROAD,)
Macon, Ga., November 16,1872. /
O N and after Sunday, November 17, th# follow
ing Schedule for Faeaecger Train* will be
observed on this road:
DAT PAOSENOEH.
Leave Maoon.........7.25 A. II
Arrive at Maoon 7.46 a. m
Leave Atlanta 1.45 A. K
Arrive at Atlanta . 1.261. M
NIGHT PAOSENGEB.
Loavo Macon 10.00 P. X
Arrive at Macon........................ 8.20 p. x
Leave Atlanta 2.30 P. X
Arrive at Atlanta...... 6.00 A.X
Making close connection at Maoon with Control
Railroad for Bavannah and Angnata, and with
Sonthweetern Railroad for pointa in Bonthweat
Georgia. At Atlanta with Western and Atlantia
Railway for point# West.
A. J. WHITE,
novl7tf Bnperintendent.
CHANGE OP SCHEDULE.
SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE,
So UTH WESTERN KaELBOAD OOKPAHT,
Macon, Go., Jane 18,1872. j
O N and after Sunday, the 16th inat., Paaeengex
Train* on this Road will ran a* followi:
DAT XUXAULA PASBXNGXB TRAIN.
Leave Maoon ..8:00 A. X.
Arrive at Eafanla.. ..4:42 P. x
Arrive at Clayton 6:15 p. x.
Arrive at Albany ....2:40r.x.
Arrive at Fort Gainea 4:40 P. x.
Connecting with tbe Albany branch train at
Smith vide, and with Fort Gainea Branah Train at
Gathbert daily.
Leave Clayton —.... 7:20 A. X.
Leave Eafaula.8:50 A. x.
Leave Fort Gainee.........8.86 A. x.
Leave Albany................ 10:46 A. x
Arrive at Maoon.5:25 p.x.
EUYA7LA uanx FREIGHT tZO LOB BXXCDAIIOB
TRAIN.
Leave Maoon 9:10 p. x-
Arrivo at Enfanla. .....10:20 A. X.
Arrive at Albany 6:45 a. x
Arrive at Fort Gainea 11:62 A x.
Connect at SmithviUo with Albany Train on Mon
day, Tneaday, Thursday and Friday night#, and
at Oatbbert on Tuesday and Thursday. No train
leaves on Saturday nights.
Leave Enfanla......................... 5:15 P. X.
Leave Albany 8:40 P. X.
Leave Fort Gaines..................... 1:10 P. x
Arrive at Macon 6:20 a. x
CCLUXBU8 DAT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Maoon. 6:45 A. X
Arrive at Colnmtn#............11:15 A X
Leave Colombo* 4:10 P.x.
Arrive at Maoon..... 8:35 p. x
VIRGIL POWERS,
]an26 ly Engineer snd Superintendent.
CHANGE or schedule;
WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD GO. 1
Office op the Pbesidznt, >
Atianta, November 10,1872.) .
On and after this date—
WESTERN EXPRESS,
Connecting for New York and the West.
Leaves Atlanta................-*.—.......9:30 p.M
Arrives Dalton. .3:02 A.M
Arrivoe Chattanooga. —•. .6:28 a*M
DAY PASSENOEB TRAIN,
To tho North and West, carrying Pullman Palace
Oar to Louisville.
Leaves Atlanta .8:80 A.M
Arrives Dalton 2:01 F.M
Arrives Chattanooga 4:28 p.m
LIGHTNING EXPRESS.
Passengers leaving Atlanta by this train arrive In
New York the second afternoon at 4.40 p. M. a
13 hours and 39 minutes earlier than Pas
sengers leaving by Augusta the same
evening.
Leaves Atlanta..........4:15 p.M
Arrives Dalton .9:60 p.x
SOUTHERN EXPRESS,
Oarrving through Palaoe Oar from Louisville.
North and West,
Leaves Chattanooga....5:25 p.M
Arrives Atlanta 1:18 A.M
DAT PASSENGER TRAIN,
From the North and West.
Leaves Chattanooga 1:00 A.M
Arrives Atlanta ...........9:16
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN
Leaves Dalton 6:00 A-H
Arrives Atlanta 1:82 p.m
JOHN T. GRANT,
nov!4 tf President pro tem.
LOST ENERGY
Weakness. De
«ponder: cy, Bash-
fulness, Syphilis.
For . speedy care of those or other ailments of a
private nature, call or send stamp for private cir
cular of advice to both eexes. Address box “O,”
Western Medical Institute, 137 Sycamore street,
Oinoinnati, Ohio. Tbe remedies are eo oertain tbst
NO PAY will be required of responsible person,
for treatment until cared. A visit to its Mnsenm
will convinoe yon tbst this Institute ia tbe only aura
one in tbe United Etatee to cure Syphilis and re
toe re Manhood. deolleodAwly