Newspaper Page Text
COME AND SEE j Telegraph & Messenger.
ut ss'.hcg goo.1e at on usually low figure.. j
Husk Towels it $1 25 per dozen, worth
>>*•
’ rCr,h *’’ 25 -
p t 9»»k, all linen, at 40c, worth 5c.
flcmeepcn, at l’JXe, worth 16.
tt j j- tripad Victoria Lawns at 20c.
loNsKfOr
I'jpt line of Press Good* it greatly reduced
r ult cdUnitlSe.
ft & we Linen Collar, it 5c.
, tjct - Erwa ind Eeufe Tery low.
lot of Fini from 6c upward,
i !|rr Linen Drills it 20c.
t^UiOe.
rencm who may give ns i call can-Jtazn that
*,1 ao.1 are telling good, it aboTo ratet. A call
"p^tlully solicited.
W. A. BANK) A 80NS.
,j,f <3 Secopd street, Maoon, Gi.
IXHOPSON & CO,
gtre reoelnd daring the put week eome
I'eifeot Be amiss in the way of
french HuUins,
Batiste, Sash Ribbons
ladles’ Ties, Fans,
Iluchlngs, White Suits
^ o»r j other eeaaonible and desirable goodi.
Vt «e reedy and prepared to go on low pricea
t ite 1 Ion* »tory ihort, wo aMcrt bc’dly. t'
” ',ruce prices we will rednet u much is
".etiedneer in town, or in the world.
SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 2i. 1873.
TI1E GEOKGIi STATE FAIR.
Keyor liufl*. AMreet.
W. A. HOPSON A 00.
in. GOODS AND FRIENDS.
iv ecwrfferirg, for the money, gooda to my
riatde it a i< coord prico. All those giving
Kill w II he eaiieted that they cm purchase
,,Af.cn me is cheep »e can bo bonghl in the
eiritt »•*** co ‘ i *‘ 0,a ot
U ajiBhhAWHITE GOODS,
KOTIONS, HOSIERY.
All kind* of DOMESTIC*, eto. etc.
A. BAUM,
.j-p!u Block, cor. Second at. and Cotton ave.
j«t»
M MBUl Jut BT Macn.
truucti »tenoral Banking Bntlueai.
WWMl
l ft PLANT, D. FLANDERS,
B.L JEWETT, W. B DINHMOOE.
i. B. PLANT, D. 8. LITTLE,
O. H. HAZLEH UB8T.
I. O. PLANT, President.
f.W.WWOLET. Ouhler. milO-tilnovl*
10. BONN, President. B. F. LAWTON, Cuhiar
HANGS BANK OF MACON.
«a«e In Hafl’anew Bnlldlig.
keoeives deposits.
LOW AND SELLS EXCHANGE,
XikMAJvucMOn Btocka, Bondi, Cotton in Store.
Alio on Bhipmcnta of Cotton.
U)LLEOnON8 FBOMPTLY ATTENDED TO
htllly
1.0. PLANT & SON,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
MAOON, Q A.
fcjAftrll Exchange, Gold, Silver, Slocks
and itouds.
DEPOSITS RECEIVED.
Ca which Interest will be > Allowed,
AS AQXUnCD Drew.
payabijH ojxt oall.
ni Made on Cotton and Produce In
titoro.
(oileriioMM Promptly Attended to,
toil,
IV. Ucisxeei. ffa. llazi.xncmiT
J. W. Locxxrr.
Cubbedge, Hailelmrst & Co.,
Bankers and Brokers
MACON. GA.
mcErre detobith, buy and bell ex-
II CHANGE, GOLD, SILVEit, BT00K8, BONDS
iM Coeurreot Fnnda.
Ullrctious Slade on all Accessible
I’olnts.
BM2.-0 open at all boon of the day.
XM-lyr
Cubbedge, Hailelmrst & Co.’s
SAVINGS INSTITUTION.
IFItEEBT rAID ON ALL SUMS FUOM $1
TO $5000.
niFIOE B0DB8, FROM 8 A. K. to 6 P. at.
A' jan4-tf
PLANTERS’ BANK
rosr TALLET, GEORGIA.
I Unpoaita, diaconnta Papar, bnyiand
| .1 Mile Etching*; aleo, Gold and Silver.
oea made at all aoccwaible points.
laAedtlma.^** 11 ,D wllen tnade for a spe-
| **■ J. Aronsoa. Prut. W. E. Bboww, Outlier
vaxmosm:
Anderaon, OoLHi
L
L. M. Felton.
L Hngh L. Donnord,
■- W. A. Mathews.
Dr. Wm. H. Hollinshoad. de!7tf
FABEL
XAlTUrACTUXXBOF
star and tallow
iANDLES, SOAPS,
LARD OIL.
■a, Se. H Wet: Main Street, between First and
Second.
ly. So*. 73, 73, 77, 79 anJ 81 Maiden Lano,
between Ohio and Adama Streets,
>U1SVILLE, KY.
Cub paid for Tallow, Laid and Greaee-
jrlSem
Matoe’s Umct.
Mxcow, June 1, 1873
To He People of Upper and Lov.tr Georgia:
As yon are aware, the Georgia State AgrlcnL
tore! Society will bold its nezt Annual Fair at
this place, commencing on the 27th dev of Oc
tober.
Every tine Georgian is justly proed of his
native St-.lc—rich in minerals as it la varied in
®°ii—wealthy, indeed, in ail that should const,
tnte a people prosperous and happy. We have
here that diversity of production and peculiar
adaptation of tha various sections to the dif
ferent in,-ini'riel pnranits which combine to
make op the natnral elements rnfScient for an
Expire. In agriculture, u in everything else,
harmonica, concert of action strengthen, and
supports each ate’ton of the State. Lower
Georgia ha, her peculiar interest to fotter and
protect and her great strength to boast of.
The same may be said of upper and middle
Georgia. The city of Macon occnpie, a grand
central position geographically, and her citi
zens have provided within her limits fair
ground, and equipments equal, if not superior,
to any to the Uaited States, for the accommo
dation of visitor, snd for the exhibition of any
and every article which may be branch:
here for show. The Executive Committee
md members of the Sate Agricultural Society
have evinced a determination to make this next
the great Fair of the State. The handsome and
liberal premiom list now being circulated
throughout the State epeaks for itaelf. An ex
amination of iiz pages will convince every one
that the Society means bn-me-s. Bat the
“ conntv displays” are looked forward to as (be
promicent sod great leading features of the Fair,
sod will doubtless present a grand panoramie
view of each county sod section inch as has
never before been witnessed by the people of
Georgia. The purpose, of this appeal are,
therefore, to invite and urge every county in
the State, if possible, to be represented in some
way, so that we may have no blanks in tbe pie
tore. To do this is a plain, patriotio duty; a
duty which, if zealonaiy performed, will con
dneo to the prosperity and sneoess of every
connty in the State, without an; regard what
ever as to which gets the $1000 premium of
fered. This premium will, of ooor.e, go to tbe
county which shall forniah tbe “largest and
and finest display." Bat, as will be seen by
referenoe lo tbe premium list, there are three
other handsome premioms to be distributed
among other ooooiies, as follows:
A premium of $500 to the connty making the
second best display.
A premium of $300 to the county making the
third beat display; nnd
A premium of $200 to the county making the
fonrtn best display.
There are now three prominent connties Id
the State which are known to be bendicg and
concentrating all their vast powers and resour
ces upon this great contest—one in Upper Geor
gia, one in Middle Georgia, and one in South
western Georgia. Other connties will report
progress, and enter (be list for competition at
tbe next m.-ettng of the Society, to bo held in
Atbons next month.
But while tbe foregoing county prizes are in
tended to r< present tho leading features of the
premium list, they ore by no means tbe most
aitraouvo. The city of Macon has nnitod with
tbe society in tbe effort to present a list of re
wards that will not only please bnt actually
recompense the exhibitor for some labor and
expense. And among others which may be re
ferred to with pride and satisfaction, aro the
following:
For best acre of clover hay. $ CO
the practicability of these grand schemes for
reducing freights that we most atop now
lo oonaidar—for no matter how feasible
they may be, Georgia is ii in m
condition to wait their completion. The emer
gency—bread—is upon us, snd we must go to
work, and go to wotk to day. We mnat teach
oar boys, by precept and example, rh«r the
great Tirioe of life and tbe neoeeeity of the
age is to be fonnd in the truth of tho old Latin
maxim, “ Labor omnia tincit.” The people ot
Georgia should never be dependent upon any
line or any system of transportation for the
mesi and the bread, the hay and the fertilizers
used upon their farms. Snch a policy will
bankrupt end starve ont any people in the
world. Show me the man with a fat smoke-
hon^e and a well fi'led barn, and I will Bhow
you ore wfcu is not affected by low-priced oot
ton or high transportation. On the other hand,
point me to that farmer with a lean smoke
house and an einpiy corn.crib, and I will show
you a miserably poor and mistaken wretch,
whose dependent and destitute oondition can
never be reached by high-priced cotton, or re
lieved in aty way by cheap transportation. c€nes -
The truth is, we have been betting our bottom
dollars so long on three fatal cards, called
“credit.** *‘ r-nfton — aril “aafa—ill,— •• • -
50
50
50
25
'• a urn as.
IUGAN
&
j. o. enu.
STILZ,
i, Oats, WM ail Hay,
EXCLUSIVELY,
110 Seoond streot, between Main and Biver,
LOUISVILLE, KY.
“AMPLE 8TOBAOE.
133 orders for Corn from points in Illinois,
* Biking purchase accepting through Bill or
g from slapping points. aprt6 6m
6. W. McCREADY,
ERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT.
And Wholesale Dealer in
lour, Heal, Hay, Corn, Oats,
•V'K, FtUktfs, Onions, Butter, Ckttst, Errs
U* West Main Street, Bet. Third and Fourth,
L’OtJIGVIIjLill, ST
® tt * nUos *° “hiug order* for Mer-
Beater Hey Praia.
For best acre of Income hay
For beat acre of native grass,
For hMt acre of pea-vine bay .......
For beet acre of com forage
For largest yield of Southern cane, I acre...
For beat and largest display of garden-
vegetables 25
For largest yield of upland ootion, 1 sore.... 200
For beat crop lot upland ebort staple cot
ton, not lesB than fivo bales 500
For best one bale upland short staple cot
ton Tool
(and 25 oenis per pound for the bale.)
For best bale upland long staple cotton.... 100
(and 25 cents per ponnd paid for the hole.)
For tho beat oil painting, by a Georgia lady 100
For tbe best display of paintings, drawings,
etc., by the pnpils of one school or cul-
For the beat made bilk dust, done by a Luy
of Georgia not a dress-maker.
For best made home-span dre-R, cone by a
lady of Georgia not a dreas-maker
For beat piece of tapestry in worsted and
fl ihfi, by a lady of Georgia
For bebt fnrnibhrd baby basket and com
plete set of infant clothes, by a lady of
Georgia 50
JNk hwdeomest set of Moaohoir-eeae, glove
box snd pin cnabion, made by a lady of
G(-;jr r in
For best ball duzen pairs ot ootton sooka,
knit by a lady over fifty years of sge, (in
gold)
For beat balf dozen pairs of ootton socks,
knit by a girl under ten years of sge (in
gold)
For tbe finest and largest display of female
handicraft, embracing needlework, em
broidery, knitting, crocheting, raised
work, etc., by one lady 100
For tbe be9t combination horse 100
For the best saddle horse 100
For tho beat style harness horse, 100
For the finest and beat matched doable
team 100
For tbe best stallion, with ton of bis co ts
by bis side 250
For the best gelding 250
For the best six-mnlo team 250
For the beat single male 100
For the best milch cow 100
For tho be.t bull 100
For the best ox team 100
For tbe best sow with pigs 50
For tbe largest and finest collection of do
mestic fowls 100
For tbe best bnsbel of oora 25
For the best bushel of peas 25
For the best bnshel of wheat 25
For tho best bnsbel of sweot potatoes 25
For tho best bushel of Irish potatoes 25
For tho best fifty stalks of sugar oane 50
For tho best result on one acre in any for
age crop. 150
For the largest yield of corn on one acre... 100
For the largest yield of wheat on one acre. 50
For the largest yield of oats on one acre.... 50
For the largest yield of rye on one acre..... 50
For the best result on one sore, in any cereal
crop 200
For the best display made on tbe groaedi,
by any dry goods merchant 100
For the best display made by any grocery
merchant. 10®
For tbe largest and best display of green
house plants, by one person or firm 100
For the best drilled volunteer military oom-
500
than ten
performers - 1
(and $50 extra per pay for their musie )
For tho best Georgia made plow stock 25
For tbe best Georgia made wagon, (two
horse,). 50
For tha best Georgia made oart 25
These are among tho many premiums offered
by tho city of Macon, and the State Agricultu
ral Society, aggregating in all more than $15,-
000. But it la not to tho value of tho piemi-
ams that wo look for rewards. Tho exhibition
promises nobler results than this. There will
be a great moral influence growing ont of it
Tho political eoonomiat will hero find food for
his thoughts. The artisan will scan, with eagle
eye, the work of his peers. Tho thrifty farmer;
the enterprising merchant; the fowl fancier,
and the stock importer.; Use horticulturist—all
wilt bo outerUmed, pleased and instructed.
Here we will loam the sources of supply and
demand in our own State. Here we will learn
where, in our own State, each and every article
is prodacsd, raised or manufactured. Onrpeo-
ple will hero be taught where, in their own
country, they may follow that pursuit best
suited to their interest and taste, without being
foroed to hunt homes among strangers, as i9
now too often the case. Exhibitors from Upper
Georgia will here find a market for the ready
sale of much, if not all, of their perishable ar
ticles at full, remunerative prices. In addition
to all this, much general good most necessarily
grow out of these annual reunions of so many
of the thinking and working men and women
of the country. The spirit of State pride is
fanned into new life by these meetings, and
we forget, as it ware, our indvidnal misfor
tunes in rejoicing over onr mutual successes.
Let ns then devote one week in next
October to the very profitable work of
meeting and discussing the important ag
ricultural and commercial interests of the
day Let it be a week devoted purely
to the exploeion of false theories and
putting into practical operation the safe,
sound, business ideas of the times. ^ Among
other things, let us prove, by the variety and
merits of our exposition, the great and absolute
danger and folly of looking to railroads, rivers
or eanats for relief from “card times.” Let our
Fair in October be the only argument addnoed
by ns to prove the otter fallacy of that grand
idea, that ignie faiuus, colled cheap transport
ation, which has so suddenly become the all-
absorbing theme among men in search of relief.
For it may in time—indeed, it has already—be-
oome a serious question with thoughtful, ob
serving men, whether we have not now too
much transportation. Oar seeming advantages
may sometimes become cur greatest misfortune.
That which ia oft-times a convenience is not al
ways a blessing. It may become a vital neces
sity for ns to inquire wtietner or not these im
mense railroad lines—traversing and corduroy
ing. as they do, onr country from mountain to
seaboard—ore really feeding or absorbing as?
Xnat transportation which fosters and enoour-
agee onr improvidence while it depletes onr
pockets, may be the transportation least of all
uiners wanted in thia country. And the objec
tions now so strongly urged against onr railroad
systems might not be entirely overcome by
these proposed water line*. It ia not, however,
credit,” “cottor,” and “caterpillar,” that
we now have nothing left na bnt onr mules and
lands; and in seven cases ont of ten these are
pledged to some warehouse firm for supplies to
mtke thia year’s crop with- And yet, in the
face ot all thia crouching poverty and embar
rassment, we learn from the newspapers of the
country that more land ia planted in cotton this
year than last, or even any year since tho war.
No wonder, then, that we ahonld be crying cut
for more transportation.
Fifteen years ago, when I first commenced
the produce business In Macon, my little orders
for grain and meat seldom went farther west
than tbe fertile bills of Cherokee Georgia, and
the narrow valleys in East Tennessee. I had
time then to writo and send letters for these
supplies and wait the retnm of quotations be
fore baying. I, with other merchants, pur
chased there, et onr leisure, all that was neces
sary to snpply the wants of Middle and South
western Georgia. Now we send onr immense
ordeis by telegraphio wires to the riehfislosscd
broad plains of Illinois snd Missonri; and if,
by any chance or ill lack, a railroad bridge is
burned or a transfer boat is sunk and a little
blockade occurs en route, a panic ensues ard a
meat, bread and bay famine st once threatens
every man and beast south of Chattanooga.
This is oor miserably poor and helpless condi
tion to-day—fesrfal and unreasonable as it may
appear to outsiders. Bat that annual deficiency
of fifty millions of bushels of grain in the four
Btates of Georgia, Alabama, Florida and Sonlh
Carolina, commented upon so gravely by tbe
late Canal Convention in Atlanta, tells the whole
story. We have suddenly awakened, as it were,
from a deep Bleep and discovered tbe unwel
come fact that we are a poor, thriftless non-
prodecing, ail consuming, dependent people.
And just so long as the farmers and planters of
Georgia pnnne their present mad policy of bay-
ing fertilizers to make cotton to bay corn, bacon
and bay with, ar.d then pay two per cent, a
month for money from April to November of
each year to ran this wild schedule, just so long
will they be pitiable beggars snd borrowers at
tbe doors of transportation offices and Georgia
shaving shops, provided a worse fate does not
speedily overtake them.
Tbe trntb is, the whole country has beoome
one common counting room snd hnge gambling
shop. What we once did with the axe and tbe
hoe, tbe plowshare and the reaping book, we
now seek to accomplish by strategy andohance,
oredit and speculation. And we must, sooner
or later, come back to firat principles or we
mnst perish. We have too many able-bodied
young men in shady places; loo muoh tape cat
ling end pin selling snd too little ootton chop
ping snd hay curing; too many yard sticks
thrown aronnd loose on smooth-top counters
and not enough hoe-handies and plow.stocka;
too many law books and lager beer barrels in
proportion to tbe rail-splitting and ditch dig
ging; too mnch foolish fashion and foppery,
and not enough sledge- hammers and saw-horses
—in a word, too mnch vholesale idleness.
Georgia baa to-day, bnried in the rich bosom
of her varied soil and precions mineral bods,
greater wealth and grander resalts than can
ever bo worked out by canal projects or
Congressional enterprises. And how is it to
bo done ? Not by dreamy theories and myth
ical plana, bnt in talking corn instead of oanal
—in diversifying and developing our own vast
resources—in writing more abont home effort
and leas about foreign immigration—in plant
ing lee-s ootton and maonfaciuring mors yarns.
Ia this, and this only, lies the great secret of
Georgia anpeess—agricultural aa well as finac-
cial andoommeraisL Wo are immensely rich in
resources hat miserably poor in the handling of
them. What we want is ttori:—honest, hard-
fisted, intelligent, well-direcei toil, labor and
application in developing snd utilizing what we
have here at home rather than so many spas
modic efforts to bring from abroad that which
we should not bug. Oor poverty, like onr
pride, ia the resnlt of misapprehensions and
m'staken ideas of onraelves, of our country
and of each other. The abolition of slavery in
the South has developed a vast world of sickly,
sentimental, lazy, indolent, stnpified, inert
snd nnapt population—a population of yonng
and middle-aged men, some of whom have
known better days. These men pat on old
store clothes, hang aronnd dirty grogshops and
dingy hotels, (moke cheap segara and drink
mean whisky, affect old habits and anti-war
style, talk politics a little and curse destiny and
free negroes more, fret end fame over the re
snlt of tbe late war, write and sign np mort
gage liens on their cotton orops before they are
planted, pay two per oent. interest on money
for nine months in the year and then promise
to pay annually in the fail mure money per acre
for commercial manures to scatter over their
lands than some of them originally cost.
And, finally, when inattention io bnsircss and
general bad policy aud mismanagement have
brought them and thoir State to the extremity
of desperation—when rain and bankruptcy stare
ns all in tbe faee—we issue proclamations, call
pnbllo meetings, invite distinguished gentlemen
from abroad to oome here and sympathize with
us. We meet in banquet hails,drink mnch cham
pagne and discharge more gas over the great
and absorbing questions of canal schemes, Con
gressional aid aud cheap transportation, than
was ever expended by onr forefathers in dis
cussing the Declaration of American Indepen
dence.' Atd wbat does it avail? Will these
idle and extravagant demonstrations over work
ont the great problem of Georgia independence?
No! Never nntil labor becomes popular will
money get easy. Never, until we feed fancy
less, and learn to fatten chickens snd hegs
more, will want disappear and plenty step in.
When those plain secrets of life shall have been
learned, when the wild mania for speoulation
shall have departed from onr farm houses and
plantations, when onr planters shall leant from
experience to abandon Wall street brokets and
“cotton fatnres,” and come to deal more di
rectly in the produotions of square little “spots”
of potatoes and corn, when sgricultnre shall
beoome the rnlieg feature and controlling inter
est in onr State—then, and not until then, will
we become an independent, prosperous and
happy people. And wa have here in Georgia
all the elements necessary to this great end.
Here God has blessed ns with everything essen
tial to tho prosperity and growth of man or
beast, if only worked ont Everything, from
a chicken and a churn to a cotton field and a
coal bed, from a ground pea patch on the sand
hills to r. gold mine in the mountains. These
are among the rich, rare snd multiplied resonroes
of Georgia; these oonstimte onr strength, onr
refage and oar power.
Think of it. farmers snd planters of Middle
Georgia! Here wa are, in tbe heatt ot tbe
Empire State, tho boasted owners of lands with
out stint, blessed with a climate and soil where
two crops of grain or two of potatoes, or one
each of pea vines and hay can be successfully
grown on the same land the same year, aud yet
we go to Baltimore to buv guano to make a lit
tle ootton to sell in New York to get money to
buy bay, oats and corn away ont in the rich
States of Kentacky, Indians, Illinois and Mis
souri. And jast so long as we are the volunta
ry patrons of pro3nee deders, heartless rings
and pampered monopolies, Bach as now own
and control, operate and direct our only lines of
trsde and transportation north, south and west,
just so iorg will we be fit subjects for lien-
diafts and homestead laws, mortgages and re
pudiation. The South must work out her own
Independence. The remedy is ours, if we will
only apply it Too often have we been beguil
ed by plausible schemes for great improve
ments and financial relief. Let as no longer be
lulled into a false security by any promiaea
which can be made, outside of our harvest
fields and hog pens, our hay patches and cane
mills. It is here we shall find it. To this end
the Stale Agricultural Society throws open the
doors of her Exposition halls, offers her pre
mium lists to the pnblic, and invites competi
tion from every section of the country.
It may aometimes suit the interest of small
politicians to excite sectional antagonisms in the
State; bnt no snch petty jealousy is to be found
in the heads and hearts of those engaged in the
industrial pursuits. AU are expected at the
Fair in October. Macon unites with the State
Agricultural Society in a cordial invitation to
everv county in the State to be represented. It
will impart new life, vigor and energy to every
industry; it will disseminate knowledge and
cuHnre among the great masces of tho people;
it will kindle a lofty emulation among the work
ing classes; it will present one vast field for
testing theories and trying conclusions; it will
cement us, as a people, in the bonds of frater
nal union, snd none should be deterred from
fear of defeat—for the triumph of one will be
the triumph of all, and there will be no re j Dicing
over any defeat.
From tbe ladies we expect mnch—yes, almost
everything. Without their kindly aid and han-
diwork.we shall have no Floral Hall, and with
out that pleasing feature in perfection the Fair
can nevsr be a grand success. The good women
of our country saved ns here two years ago—
without their timely efforts the Fair of 1871
would have been an immense failure. Their
hearty eo-operation now is all we want to insure
snoouas.
Let us then unite in one mighty effort to
throw together, in one common display, the
grand and aggregate specimen resonroes of our
proad old commonwealth. Let it be such an
ezpoaition of ots pride and onr strength; snob
an evidence of our skill and taste, oor genius
and oor energy, end especially of oor love for
agriculture snd onr homes, ss shall challenge,
in kindness, the competition of the Sonth,
while it excites the envy and admiration of the
world. W. A. Herr,
Mayor of the city cf Macon.
California Justice.
Old “Judge” B. of Santa Crur, California,
was one of the oddest of the many oddities
seen in early days in that wonderful State.
From early manhood to its prime he wandered
over the wilds of the Rocky Mountains, trap
ping and banting till he brought up in Califor
nia, shortly before the occupancy of that country
by the United States forces—making a precari
ous living by hunting and tannine the skins
his game. '“Many a time,” said he, ‘‘hare _
gone bare till I could tan a buck skin to make
me a suit of clothes, and ofierier have I packed
elk skins fifty miles to a little trading port,
where Stockton now stands, to sell them for a
dollar apiece, to buy me ammunition and gro-
/VMM ^ A E/lUt flio lima P/vlr.rol Pnnnntr D ! I
PLUMBING
GAS FITTING!
AM now prepared to do F1BVT CLASS
1 PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
About the time Colonel Bennett Riley
was Gouernor, old B located at Santa Cruz,
when being able to read and write, and possess
ed of good “horse sense,” he was elected
Alcalde, or Justice of the peace, which office
he held to the satisfaction of himself and the
community over which he exercised jurisdic
tion, till the catastrophe which brought his ju
dicial career to a close, and which he described
in this way: ‘‘Well, the windin’ up uv my Al-
cadeship was this: “A half-breed Yaquero thar
in Santa Cruz tack it into his head to git jeal
ous of his wife, and so he went off and got rip-
pin’ drank on agua ardiente—come home, tied
up his woman to the bed-post by the hair of
her head, and just nat’rally whipped the life
out of her with his raw-hide lariat. Next
morning eome of the neighbors come in and
found the greaser in bed, the bloody lariat in his
hand, and the poor “mugp” deid a3 a skinned
elk. So they fotched Mister Vaquero up be
fore me, with all the witnesses, and arter bear
in’ the case patiently, I found him guilty and
sentenced him to be taken to out into the Plaza
and shot, which was done accordingly. Then
to do things up squari, I sot down and wrote a
letter to old Ben Riley—military guv’nor, you
know—and told him the whole state of the case
and submitted it for his approval. In about
ten days I got an answer back, a just givin’ me
h—1, saying I was only a justice of the peace
and hadn’t no jurisdiction in capital cases no
how ; that the man should ha’ been tried be
fore a regular court and jury and the sentence
sent to bun for approval before it was executed,
and whole raft of truck of that kind; and wind
in’ up by* saying he should deprive me of my
commission of Alcalde. Well you bet I wasn’t
goin’ to be backed down that way, so I up and
wrote him agin; told him the greaser was tuck
red handed in the act; that I decided the case
on “ principles of nat’ral justice,” and he got
just what he deserved; that if a justice of the
peace wasn’t to keep peace in his district, I’d
like to know what he was thar for; and as to
his taking away my commission of Alcalde, I
didn’t want it nohow, and he might take it and
be d—d. And do you believe it, he never
answered ray letter
COOK’S HALL,
PEBBY, GA.
T HE attention of managers of pnblic entertain
ments U called to thin Hall, which has been
lately fitted np in the beat style, with scenery, etc.
Tbe Hall will eeit ibont 400 persona and ia conve
niently eitnited in tbe large and growing town of
Perry, to which tho Southwestern Huiroid h&a
Uteiy constructed & branch from Fort Valley
Apply to JOHN B. COOK,
feb!9 6m* Perry. Gi
A. H. PATTERSON,
PROVISION BROKER,
25 II iIN STIttET,
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Befers to Seymour, Tinsley & Co. and Johnson
& Smith. Macon. Oa.apr*25 3m
C1IA8. (JOUN&ELKAN & CO.,
General Commission Merchants,
Boom 14, Oriental Building, CHICAGO.
Geo. F. Robinson.
Refer to W. A. Half, M&coa. may2 fm
BE® 3?EJOM s S
SPECIAL FLAVORINGS.
CATOOSA SPRINGS,
GEORGIA.
k Groat Fountain_ofHealtli and Pleasure
Will be opened for tho reception of viaitora on
JUNE let, 1873.
BOARD $50 PER MONTH.
For anily&ia and descriptive pamphlet address
W. O. HEWJLTr, Proprietor,
maylCd&wIm Catoosa Springs.
VAXILLA, LEMON, ETC.,
For Flavoring Ice Cream, Cakes asd Pastry.
171th great care, by a new process,
wc extract from the true, select Fruits
nnd Aromatics, each characteristic fla
vor, and produce Flaxorings of rare
excellence. Of great strength and perfect
purity. So poisonous oils. Ezcry flavor
as represented. No deceit—each bottle full
measure, holding onehalf more than others
purporting to hold same g^aniily. Use
them once, vid use no other. The most
delicate, delicious flavors ever made. So
superior to the cheap extracts. Ask for
Dr. Price’s Special Flavorings. Manu
factured only by
STEELE Ss IPIRiaiE:,
Depots, CHICAGO and ST. LOUIS.
Manufacturers of Dr. Price's Cream
Baking Powder.
R IDICULOUS IDEAS are enteitamod about
purgatives. . It is d&Dgeroua to scourge tbe
stomach, to rasp the bowels, to prostrate tbe ner
vous system with furious evacuants. Nature has
given a sample, in the fauna* tieltzer Spring, of
what the bilious, constipatod, or dyspeptio system
needs for its restoration, and in
Tarrant’* Ifferresccnt Btltzer Aperient
Science has improved on Nature ty combining all
the valuable ingredients of the Gexman Fountain
in a portable form, and emitting those which have
no medicinal virtues. This agreeable and potent
saline alterative changes the oondition of the blood
and purifies ail the il-iida of the body. Sold by all
druggists.june2tawAw2w
DIAMOND SPECTACLES.
T HESE Spectacles are manufactured from “Min
ute Crystal Pebbles” melted together, and are
called Diamond on account of their hardness and
brilliancy. It ia well known that specucles cut
from Brazilian or Scotch pebblea are very injurious
to tbe eye, bee.use of their polarizing light.
Having been teetod with the polariseope, the
diamond lenses have been found to admit fifteen
per oent. leas heated rays than any other pebble.
They are ground with great acientifia accuracy,
are free from chromatic aberrations, and produce
a brightness and distinctness of vision not before
attained in spectacles.
Manufactured by the Spencer Optical Manufac
turing Company, New York.
For sale by responsible Agents in every city n
the Union. E. J. JOHNSTON,
Jeweler and Optician, la sole Agent for Maoon, Ga.
from whom they can only be obtained. No ped
dlers employed.
The great demand for these Spectacles hie in-
dnoed unscrupulous dealers to palm off an inferior
and spurious article for the Diamond. Great care
should be taken to see that tbe trade-mark o
which ia protected by American Letters Patent) is
stamped on every pair. ootlSd/kwlv*
$300,000!
MISSOURI STATE LOTTERY
Legalised by State IntlMrlty and Draw
In Public In SC. Loaf*.
Grand Single Number Scheme.
50,000 huhbeka.
CLASS F. TO BX DRAWN JUNE 30. 1373.
5,bso muxs, uocxiue to sxxuxxl
Having employed
COMPETENT WORKMEN!
From Not? Yotk.
ALL WOKE GUABANTEED. -
Have just received the celebrated
BBINLEY SHAFT PLOW
Which i* endorsed by every p’aater who
has seen its openlioo.
AM RECEIVING WEEKLY
FOKOE PUMPS,
DEEP WELL BOTABY PUMPS,
DBOYE WELL PUJIP3,
LIFT PUJIP3, and
HYDRAULIC RAMS!
Which I am selling lower thin they can
bo boaght elsewhere.
EDWARD ROWE,
No. 5 Hollingsworth Block, Mscon, Ga.
Junc4:f
FR- FR- PR-
RADWAY’S
Ready Relief
OURES THE WORST AINS IN FROM ONE
TO TWENTY MINUTES.
lot One Hour After Resdlng Utli AdTer-
lisfnient Need Any One Sur-
fer with Pain!
METROPOLITAN
BON AND BRASS WORKS,
Canal Street, from 6th to 7th,
RICHMOND, -XNJN.
WM. E. TANNER & CO.,
Eneineers, MacMsisls ani Foimflers.
ENGINES OF ALL KINDS.
Send for Circular.
JanUIy
H. R. BROWN,
AGENT.
E. O. STANARD & CO.,
rnoriuETOBH
AGIE STEAM FLOR MILLS,
Cor. Main aud BAtes St. laonis, Mo.
Capicity I.QoO barrel* per diem. apr293m
A BE composed of substance* derived from the
Vegetable Kingdom, and are particularly de
signed to act gently, but thoroughly on the fctom-
ach, Liver, Bowels and general circulation. They
act a* kindly on tho tender infant, tho most deli
cate femalo and infirm old ago, as upon the mo
vigorous system, eradicating every morbific agent,
invigorating the debilitated organs, building up the
Gagging nervous energies, and imparting vigor to
body and mind.
They increase the powers of digestion, and excit
the absorbents to action whoreby all Impurities o
the system are carried off. Tho old stereotype
opinion that calomel must be used
“TO CARRY OFF TEE BILE"
Has given away before the light of science. The
vegetable kingdom furniehea a remedy free from
all deleterious effects.
For Dyspepsia or Indigestion,
Headache, pain in tbe shoulders, dlzzinoss, sour
eructations of the stomach, bad taste in the mouth,
bilious attacks, palpitationbf the heart, pain in the
region of tho kidneys, despondency and gloom, and
forebodings of evil, all of which are the offspring
of a diseased Liver,
■. Ms Pills Gave do Epal
Thoy are specially recommended for Bilious, Be-
mittent and Intermittent Fevers, which prevaili c
miasmatic districts doling the summer ana autumn.
These diseases are invariably attended by derange
ment of the Livor and Bowels.
FOR CHILL AND FEVER
They are * specific. Physicians all admit tha
qrnnine onlv effects a temporary suspension of the'
attacks of Fever and Ague, unless its use is pre
ceded by a reliable anti-bilious medicine.
THE TESTIMONY OF THOUSANDS
establishes beyond a doubt that
DR. TUTT’S LIVER PILLS
followed by Quinine, is a positive core for Chilli
and Fever, and all bilious diseases.
tub Fxtox-zm. txbxb
To take them is when yon have nausea, loss of sp-
letite, yellow cast of tbe skin snd eyes, rush o
flood to tbe bead, cold extremities, ringing in the
ears, pain in tbe back, aido and shoulders, high
colored nrine, vertigo and bilionsnee£ While using
them so chasoz or diet ok occupation is necessa
ry. PRICE 25 CENTS A BOX. Sold by all drag-
gists.
DR. TUTT’S
IMPROVED HAIR DYE,
This elegant preparation is warranted the
BEST IN THE WORLD:
Its effect Is instantaneous; Imparts no ridicnlons
tints; will remedy tbe bad effects of inferior
dyes; perfectly harmless; oontainsno
eogarof lead; baa no unpleasant
odor, and imparts a natnral
glossy color.
Price One Dollar a Box. Sold by all Druggists.
Laboratory 18 and 20 Platt it., N. Y.
angSldeod.awAwly
RADWAY’S BEADY RELIEF CUBES EVERY
PAIN 1 IT WAS THE FIRST AND IS
THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY I
That instantly stops the most exerntiating pain,
allays Infiimmatioa. and cures Congee!ion, wheth
er of the Lungs. Stomsch. Bowels, or other glands
or organs bv one application,
IN FROM CNE TO TWENTY MINUTES.
No matter bow violent or exerntiating the pain the
Rheumatic, Bed ridden. Infirm. Crippled, Ner
vous, Neuralgic, or proe’rated with disease may
suffer.
Radway’s Ready Relief!
WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE.
Infl&mmatioa of tho Kidneys
Iufiimmation of tho Bladder.
Inflammation of the Bowels.
Congestion of the Lungs.
8ore Throat, Difficult Ere&ting.
Palpitation of the Heart
Hysterics, Croup, Diptheiia.
C&Urrh, Influenza.
Headache, Tooth&ce.
• Neuralgia, Rheumatism.
Gold Chills, Ague Chtlls-
The application of the BEADY BELIEF to the
part or part* where the pain or difficulty exists
will afford ease and comfort
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in
a few moments cure Cramps. Spasms. Sour Stom
ach, Heartburn. Hick Headache, Diarrhea*, Dysen
tery, Colic, Wind in tho Bowe’s, and all internal
pain*
Travelers should always carry a bottle of BAD-
WAY’S READY RELIEF with them A fow drops
in water will prevent Bickne?a or pain* from
change of water. It is better th&n French Brandy
or Bitters ae a stimulant.
FEVEH AKT2D AGUE!
FEVER AND AGUE cured for fifty cents. There
is not * remedial agent in this world th&t will cure
Fever and Ague, and all other Ma’arions, Billions.
8car’et, Typtmkl. Yellow, and other fevers, (aided
by RAHWAY’S PILLS) so qaick as RADWAY’S
BEADY BELIEF. Fifty cents per bottle.
HEALTH! BEAUTY!
STRONG AND PUBF. BIOH BLOOD — IN
CREASE OF FLESH AND WEIGHT—
CLEAR SKIS AND BEAU HFUL
COMPLEXION SECUR
ED TO ALL!
TELEGRAFHail MESSENGER
1873.
1 pris* of_
1 prise of~
1 prise of.„
I prise of_
4 prise* of_
4 prise* of—
2) prised of-
a) pmee of-
-150.000
.. 13,450
- 10.0U0
- 7.500
~ 5.000
« 2,500
- 1*000
500
500 prise*
9 prise* of....
9 priiea ef^.,
9 prises of.
9 prise* of.
S6 prise* of.
36 prise* of.
ISO prixa* of.
5,000 prises
49 priiea of 250
Ticket* $10. Half Ticket* $5. Qoartwi t 9 ***-
Our lotteries are chartered By the State, are
always drawn at the time named, and ail drawings
are under the supervision of sworn commissioners.
The official drawint will be published ia the
St. Louis paperu. and a copy ot drawiaw ee*t to pur
chasers of tickets-
ev- We will draw a similar *wh—■ (he lest day el
every month durine the year 1$7S.
4V* Remit at our risk b7 Postofflce Money Orders
MstandLottar DrfttgiKyreafr^Bend^wadr-
ev Image.
CHANGE of SAILING DAYS.
INCREASED SERVICE.
ACIFIO mailIteamship CO.’S
Tliorex HIKE 10 CALIFORNIA, CKINA
AND JAPAN,
Touching at Mexican Forts,
AND CAEEIKO TBE Di S. WAIL
Fares Greatly Seduced.
O NE of the large and
splendid Steamships
of this line will leave Pfer
No. 42 North Biver, foot
of Canal BL, at 12 o’clock,
noon, on the 10th, 20th and
30th of every month(except
Whet those d&tee fall on Sunday, and then on the
preoeding Saturday) for ASPINWALL, connect
ing, via Panama Railway, with one of the Com
pany’s Steamships from Panama for BAN FRAN-
CIBOO, touching at MANZAMLLO.
AD departure* connect at Panama with steamer*
for South Pacific and Oentral American porta.
For Japan and China, steamers leave San Fran-
deco first of every month, except when it falls on
Sunday, then on the day preceding.
One hundred pounds of Baggage allowed to each
adult Baggage Masters accompany Baggage
through, and attend ladies and children without
male protectors. Baggage received on deck the
day before sailing, from Steamboats, Railroads and
passengers who prefer to send down early.
An experienced Burgeon on board,
and attendance free.
For Freight or Paaeenger Tlokete, or further In
formation, apply at the Company’s Ticket Office,
on the Wharf, loot of Oanal etreet, North Biter,
New York.
NSW f.liMBX.ACM,
DE EADWAY’S
SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT
Hsb mado the mo*-t astonishing cures. Bo quick,
so rapid are tho changes tho body undergoes, un
der the influence of tLis truly wondexfnl medicine,
that
EVERY D*Y AN INCREASE IN FLESH AND
WEIGHT IS SEEN AND FELT.
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER!
Every drop of tbe SABSAPAUILLIAN BEFOL-
VENT communicates through tho blood, sweat,
urine, and other fluids and juiceB of tho system,
the vigor cf life, for it repairs the wastes of the
body with new and sound material. Scrofula,
8ypbiii*, Consumption, Glandular Di8Q«8oa. Ulcers
in the Throat and Month, Tamors, Ncdes in the
Glands and other parts of tho syetom, 8oro Eyes,
Btramorous Discharges from the Ears, and tho
worBt form of Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Fever
Bores, Sc*ld Head, Ring Woim, Balt Bhenm, Ery-
eipo'ap, Acne, Black Spots, Worms in the Flesh
Tumors, Canco-s in the Womb, and all Weakening
andP&iDfnl Discharges, Night Sweats, Loss of
Sperm, and all wastes of the life prirciplo, are
within the curative range of this wonder of Mod
ern Chemiktry, and a few days* uso will prove to
any person using it .for either of these formB of
disease its potent power to enro them.
If ihe patient, daily becoming rodaced by the
waato and decomposition that is continually pro
gressing, euccvoda in arresting the20 wastes, and
repairs the same with now material made from
hoaltby blood—and this the BABSAPAR1LLIAN
will and floes secure—a cure ia certain; for when
once this remedy commences its work or purifica
tion, and succeeds in diminishing tho loss of
wastes, its repairs wfll bo rapid, and every day the
patient will feel himself growing better and strong
er, the food digesting bettor, appetite improving,
and flesh and weight incroasiDg. Not only does
tho 8AB3APARLLLIAN RESOLVENT excel all
known remedial agents in the cure of Ghronic,
Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin Diseases, but
it is tli9 only positive euro for
Kidney nnd Bladder Complaints!
Urinary and Womb Diseases, Gravel, Diabetes.
Dropsy. Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of
Urine, Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all
cases where there are brick dost deposits, or the
water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like
the white of an egg, or threads like white silk, or
there is a morbid, dark, bilious appearance, and
white bone dost deposit, and when there is a
pricking sensation, burning sensation, when pass
ing water, and pain in the small of the back and
along the loins.
Tumor of 12 Years’- Growth
Cured by Radwaj’s
Resolvent!
Bevebly, M«ss.. Jaly 10,1837.
Da. IUlway:—I li&vo liad Ovariin Tnmor in tho
ovaries and bowela- All tho Doctors said “thero
was no holp for it ” I tried everything that wae
recommended, bnt nothin:; helped me. I saw
your Reeolvont, and thought I would try it; bnt
had no fai*h in it, bccaneo 1 had suffered for twelve
years. I took eix bottles of tho Resolvent, and
one box of ltidway’a PJta, and two bottles of yonr
Ready Relief; and there ie rot a sign of tumor to
be seen or felt, and I feel better, smarter, and hap
pier than I have for twelve years. Tho wor«t tnmor
was in the left side of the bowels, over the groin
I write this to yon for the benefit of cthors. You
can publish it if you chooeo.
it ANNAH B. KNAPP-
WORMS!
The only safe and enre remedy for TAPE, FIN,
and WORMS of aU kinds.
PRICE $1 00 PER BOTTLE.
An Important Letter!
From a prominent gentleman snd resident of Cin
cinnati, O., for the past forty years well known to
the book publishers throughout the United States:
New Yobk, October 11, 1870.
Dr. Badway : Dear Sir—I am induced by a sense
of duty to tne suffering to make a brief statomsnt
of the working of your medicine on myself- For
several years I had been affected with some trouble
in tbe bladder and urinary organs, which some
twelve months ago culminated in a moat terribly
afflicting disease, which ths physicians all e&id was
a spasmodic stricture in the uretha, as also inflam
mation of the kidneys and bladder, and gave it as
their opinion that my age—73 years—wouia pre
vent my ever getting radically cured. I had tried
a number of physicians, and *had taken & largo
quanity of medicine, both alcpatbic and hemeoe-
pathic, but had got no relier. I had read of astom
iahing cores having been made by your remedies;
and some four months ago read a notice in the
Philadelphia Saturday Evening Poet of a cure hav
ing been effected on a person who had lorg been
suffering as I had been. I went right eff and got
some of each—your Sarsap&rillian Resolvent,
Beady Belief, aud Regulating Pills—and com
menced taking them. In tbree days l was greatly
relieved, and now fed aa well as ever
O. W. JAMES, Cincinnati, O.
DR. RADWAY’S
Perfect Purgative and Reg
ulating Pills.
Forfectly tasteless, elegantly costed with eweet
gum. purge, regnlate, pnrify, cle&nee, and
strengthen. Radway’s Pills, for tbe cure of all dis
orders of the Btomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys,
Biadder, Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipa
tion, CostivecesB, Indication, Dyspepsia, Biloua-
neee, Fever, Inflammation of ths Bowels, Piles,
and all Derangements of the Internal 'Viscera.
Warranted to effect a positive cure. Purely vege
table, containing no meicnry, minerals or deleteri-
ons dregs.
O" Observe tho following symptoms resulting
from Disorders of Ihe Digestive Organs:
Constipation, Inward Files, Fullness of the
Blood in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea
Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fnllnee, or weight in
the Stomach, Soar Eructations, Sinking or Flutter
ing at the Heart, Choking or Buffering Benaationa
when in a Lying Posture, Dimness or Vision. Dots
or Webs before the Bight, Fever and Dull Pain in
tbe Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness
of the Skin and Eyee. Pain in the Side, Cbeet,
Limbs, and sudden Flushes cf Heat, Burning in
the Fleeb.
A few doses of Badway’s Pills will free the sys
tem from all the above named disorders. Price 25
cents per box. Bold by Druggists.
READ
‘‘FAIiBH AND TRUE”
Band one letter stamp to RAD WAY A GO No
32 Warren, oornor Ohuroh street, New York.
Information worth thousands will be sent yon.
msyUeo&kwly
The proprietors avail themselves of the
lull in advertising to present their claims
again to the public. Nothing within the
range of our ability ia omitted to make
tbe Telegraph and Messenger In all
its editions acceptable to the reader. As
a vehicle of the earliest news on ail cur
rent topics— and of careful and candid
exposition, we concede no superior in this
State.
In point of circulation in the range of
the country trading with Macon, the dif
ferent editions of the paper are far be
yond competition. They literally per
vade the Central and Southwestern coun
ties of Georgia—addressing and inform
ing almost every merchant and house
hold.
No business man of Macon can aflord
to he without the use of these columns
as an advertising medium. No one abroad
seeking a market for any commodity in
this region can intelligently dispense with
their aid in facilitating that obj’ect.
For successive generations these two
papers, united for the past three years in
one, have commanded this great field of
circulation, and their hold on the public
confidence has never been disturbed or
interrupted. We are to-day with a larger
cash paid circulation than ever before,
and we hope to go on increasing with the
progress of the country. We do not say
it is the “largest circulation,” but within
our proper field—where we can carry the
earliest news, it is beyond even approxi
mation by any other journal.
THE WEEKLY
RAILROADS.
CHANGE OF SCKEDUXJE
NO CHANGE OF CABS BETWKKH AU
GUSTA AND COLUMBUS.
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, 1
Gxcboia OumuL Railroad. '*
Savannah, September 27,1878. J
O N and after Sunday, the leth inat., Passenger
Trains on the Georgia Cestaal Railroad, its
branches and connections, will ran aa follows:
up dai mini.
Leave Savar-nml, T ,, , ■ , , 8:45 A ■
Leave Augusta............... 9:00 a
Arrive at Augusta 8:80»
Arrive at Miliedgevillo .....ll:56rx
Arrive at Eatonton 1:50ax
Arrive at Macon 7:16>a
Leave Macon for Atlanta 10:00 pm
Leave Macon for Columbus .. 8:05 p M
Arrive at Atlanta............ 8:08 am
Arrive at Columbus.. 6:00 am
Making close connection with trains leaving Au
gusta, Atlanta and Columbus.
_ DOWN DAT TAAnt.
Leave Atlanta. 1:45
Arrive at Maoon 7-46 A
Leave Maoon 8:00 A
Leave Augusta 9:00 a
Arrive at Angola 5:80 p M
Arrive at Savannah g : i5 p M
This train oonnects at Macon with the 8. W. Ao-
commodation train leaving Oolumbne at 8:30 P. X.,
and arriving at Macon at 4:45 a. u., and makes th
same connection at Augusta aa the up day train.
EIGHT TRAINS 000(0 SOUTH.
Leave Savannah 7:00 pm
Leave Augusta 8:15 pm
Arrive at Savannah 4:30 A. m
Arrive at Maoon 6:30 am
Leave Macon for Atlanta 7:35 AM
Leave Macon for Colombo*......... 5:45 A M
Arrivq at Colnmbna 11:15 A M
Arrive at Atlanta 1:35 pm
Making prompt throngh connections st both At
lanta and Oolnmbm..
NIGHT TSAIN3 OOINO NOBTH.
Leave Columbus 4:10 p M
Leave Atlanta... 2:80pm
Arrive at Macon from Columbus 9.85 P M
Arrive at Macon from Atlanta..... 8:20pm
Leave Maoon 9:50pm
Leave Savannah 11:00 P ss
Arrivo at Miliedgevillo 11:55 p M
Arrive at Eatonton 1:60 AM
Arrive nt Angusta 6:20 am
Arrive at Savannah 7:80 AM
Making perfect connection with trains leaving
Augusta.
Passengers going ovor the Milledgcville and
Eatonton Branch wilt take nisht train from Colum
bus, Atlanta and Macon, day.troins from Augusta
and Savannah, which connect dally at Gordon
(Sundays excepted) with tha Miliedgevillo and Ea
tonton trains.
An ologint sleeping cor oa all night trains.
THROUGH TICKETS TO ALL POINTS can be
had at tho Central Railroad Ticket Office at Pulaski
House, corner of Bull andBiyan etxeote. Office
open from 8 a M to 11-x.ind frernb toOpm Tick
ets can also bo had at Depot Chico.
William rogeiw,
junelStf General Superintendent.
Change of Schedule.
ON MAOON ASD AUGUSTA HAILRCAD.
Forty-Oao Miles Saved in Distance.
OFFICE MACON AND AUGU6TA RAILROAD,\
Macon, May 18, 1872. /
O N and after Bun day. May 19, 1872, and nntil
further notice, tha tra-na on this road will
run as follows:
DAT TEAIN—DAILS (SUNDAYS EXCEPTED).
Loavo Macon 0:30 a. X.
Arrivo at Augusta 1:15 P. a.
Leavo Augueta 12:16 P- M.
Arrive at Macon: . 7.30 P. at,
(JT Passengers leaving Macon at b.SO a. m. make
close connections at Camak with day passenger
trains'on Georgia Railroad for Atlanta and all
joints West; also, for Augusta, with trains going
North, and with trains for Charleston; aleo, for
Athene, Waehington, and all stations on the Geor
gia Railroad.
•F* Tickets sold and baggage checked to aU
pointa North, belli by rail and by steamships from
Jbarlaetsn.
augVtf 3. K. JOHN3QN, Bnp’t.
Is the largest weekly in the Cotton States,
and prints 56 columns. Its ample apace
admits of a perfect resume of all the news
of the week, domestic and foreign. The
contents of a single number would make
a large volume, aud aflord in themselves
abundant miscellaneous, political and
news reading for the week. This is pub
lished at S3 per annum or $1 50 for six
months. Specimen numbers will be for
warded gratis on tbe receipt of an order
enclosing stamp for-that purpose. We
would be glad if our patrons of tho Week
ly would Show it to friends who aro not
subscribers. This edition of the paper is
sent to hundreds of Georgians who have
emigrated to other States and keeps them
perfectly posted in regard to every im
portant public event in tho old Empire
State of the South.
SEMI-WEEKLY
This is published on Wednesdays and
Saturdays, at $4 per annum—32 for six
months. Wo earnestly recommend this
edition to readers at all points who re
ceive mails two or three times a week. It
is a paper containing few advertisements
and full with fresh and entertaining mat
ter in great variety.
The Daily Telf-giuth and Messen
ger is published six mornings in the
week at Ten Dollars a year—r$5 for six
months—S2 50 for three months, or 31
per month.
advertisements:
In the Weekly are one dollar for each
publication of one inch or less. In the
Daily, one dollar per eight text lines first
publication and fifty cents for subsequent
ones. Contracts tor advertising made on
reasonable terms—circulation of the
paper considered.
TO FARMERS:
The approach of active operations in
cropping will render one of the editions
of this paper invaluable in your pursuits.
It will contain all the earliest crop infor
mation and general agricultural news.
CLISBY, JONES & REESE,
SUMMER ^SCHEDULE.
DAILY PASSENGER TRAIN
TO AND FRO At
KEConJriiflSFM, small anil Florida,
Office Macon and Brunswick Baxlboad,>
Sir.cod, Ga., Mav 2,1878. j
O N And After Sand&y, May tho 4th, passongor
trains oa this Ko&d will be ran as follows:
DA! FAESENOKU, DAILY.
IiO&YO Mftcon..... 8:45 A. M
ArriYe at Jeesup 6.00 p. m
ArriYOat Brunswick.... - ....10.15 p. u
Arrivo at Savannah 9.50 P. x
Arrivo at TallahaaB60 7:4G r K
Arrive at Jaclraon viiie 7*16 pm
Leave Jacksonville.... 7:10 am
Leavo Tallahassee 6:40 a m
Leave fsavannn&h 5.20 a. m
Leavo Brunswick 4:16 a. m
Leavo Jcssap 9 00 a m
Arrive at Maoon 7 00 p. m
P&seengeiB from Savannah will take 4 SO p. M.
train for Brunswick, and 5.20 a. m. train for Macon.
KAWX1SSYILLB ACCOMMODATION TRAIN, DAZDI, (.SUN
DAYS KXCEPXCD.J
Leavo Maoon: 9.90 ?. M
Arrive at Hawkinavillo 6 50 r. m
Leave Hawkinsville 7:05 a. X
Azxive at Macon 10.50 a. X
W.J JAHV18,
may2lf Master Transportation.
CHAN0-22 OF SCHEDULE.
OFFICE MACON A WESTERN RAILROAD,)
Macon, Ga., November 16, 1872. J
O N and after Sunday, November 17, the follow
ing Schedule for Faesonger Trains trill be
ebsorveden this rood:
DAT TASEENarU.
Loavo Mason 7.25 A. M
Arrivo at Macon 7-45 A. M
Loavo Atlanta 1.45 A. M
Arrive at Atlanta 1.26 r. M
‘ NIGHT PAAEXNQSA.
L0170 Maoon 10.00 F. X
Arrivo at Macon 8.20 7. M
Loavo Atlanta 2.80 7.x
Arrive at Atlanta 6.00 A. M
Making clcso connection at Macon with Central
Railroad for Savannah and Augusta, and with
Southwestern Railroad for points in Southwest
Georgia. At Atlanta with Western and Atlantia
Railway for pointa Wost.
A. 3. WHITE,
norl7tf
Superintendent,
GRANGE OF SCHEDULE.
SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, J
SOCTEWTSTENN llAILBOAD OcKPAKI,
Macon, Go., June 18, 1872. )
O N and after Sunday, tho 16th inst., Passenget
Trains on this Road -fll run as follows:
DAT tCVAULA FASSZNOZB THAIS.
Leave Macon 8:00 A. M.
Arrive at Eufaula.. .....4:42 7. M
Azxive at Clayton -6:15 7.x
Arrive at Albany 2:40 7. an
Arrivo at Fort Gaines .4:40 r. M.
Connecting with the Albany branch train at
jgmithviiie, aud , x ith Fort Gains* Branch Train at
Guthbert daily.
Leave Clayton 7:20 a. st.
Leave Eulsda 8:60 A. at.
Loavo Fort Guinea..........8.85 A. a.
Leavo Albany.... 10:46 A. M
Arrive at Ma—<n -— - 6:25 7 M.
■ufa tla mans mr/anr Airs ax;mmodasumi
TEATJ.
LeavoUaoon................... ..... 9:10 7. if.'
Arrivo atEufaula ..10:20 A. M.
Arrive at Albany 8:45 a. m.
Arrive at Fort G*inee 11:62 A. a.
Connoot at BmithviUe with Albany Train on Mon
day, Tuesday, Thursday snd Friday nights, and
at Outhhert uu Tuesday and Thursday. No train
leaves on Satnrdsy nights.
Leave Eufaula 5:15 p. x.
Leave Albany 8:40 7. ss.
Leavo Fcrt Gaines 1:10 F. M
Arrive at Maoon 5:20 A. M<
coLmmca dat fasssnozb teain.
Leavo Macon 5:45 A.
Arrive at Colembna 11:15 a. m
Leavo Columbus 4:10 7. v.
Azrivc at Maoon 9:85 r. m
VIRGIL POWERS,
jgnt ly Engineer and Bnpcrictondent.
CHANGE OF SCHEDDXE
WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD GO.)
Omen ot tz:e 1’nzi-iiiANT, >
Atlanta, NOvemberlO, 2Sv3.)
On and after this date—
WESTS-'iN riFBXSS,
Connecting for New York and tho West.
Leaves Atlanta... 9,-30 f.m
Arrives Dalton s ; 02 A.M
Arrives Chattanooga. a.*
DAY rAkSENOZB TEAIN,
To tho North and West, carrying Pullman Palace
Cor to L-onisvillo-
Loavea Atlanta ........8:80 A.M
Arrives Dalton j-o, p M
Arrives Chattanooga 4:28 t'.m
LIGHTNING EXFEZSB.
Passengers leaving Atlanta by this train arrive la
New York the second afternoon at 4.40 r. M.,
13 hours and S9 minutes earlier than p.,_
seegors ieavmg by Augusta tho same
evening.
Leaves Atlanta..................4:15 p.m
Arrives Dalton [19:50 p!m
SCCTHEEN LXTEZaS,
Cjrrying throngh I’alaoe Car from Louisville
North and West,
Leaves Chattanooga. 5-26 p.M
Arrivee Atlanta 1:18 A.M
DAY 7ASSSNQKB TRAIN,
From ths North and West.
Leaves Chattanooga 1:00 A.M
Arrives Atlanta 9:15
AGOOMHODATIOX TEAIN
Leaves Dalton 8:00 A-M
Arrives Atlanta 1:82 7.x
JOHN T. GRANT,
novI4 tf President pro torn.
BATCHELOR'S HAIR D YE
T HIS eplecd’d H&Ir Dye lathe best in the world
Tho only True and Perfect Dye. IIarmless,
Beliaole and Instantaneous; no disappointment;
no ridiculous tints or nnpleaeant odor. Bemediee
the ill effecta of bad dyea and washes. Pro^uc*
Immediately a superb Black or Na f ~*
and leaves tne hair Gio*" "
genuine signed W. A
gists
novX2 ly
S F
For a epeef
private natn
cular of ad vie
Western Medii
Cincinnati, Ob
NO PAY will
for treatment
will oonvinoe
one in the r
tore Meat