Griffin tri-weekly star. (Griffin, Ga.) 1865-1868, June 24, 1868, Image 2

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«* «ri Star. Alf • 9A» IW8» Afc>9* B*m»*iu.«.-W* have hm, ««!****riftf for* loog Om to mho a teriUaat Steurday we ■»• S , w^ to OM ttlfrfmfc titty ■teffboas**, oil more or Urn b«uy j o £opg| HMny WMtolry pnopli {n l!ir T iiT^r^'nf wheat hod already beat) dfcpcaod of at $2 IS, te* preset prie*. Th« boats lltZ Tpuwtl! Bto latk A 00.. W. R. Murphy, J. B. Hon •oo, Jottemi A (Theca utt, James Walk, •r, CrawUy * Son, *«d Param Wood. Moooro. Hightower ond Dr. Wright oaah boro* Drag Store. Moser*. Coaly At Redding boro o Confectionary, with a Soda fountain in the rear. Morrio A Whitehurst boro an axoallool Livery Stable, and young Morrio it entitled to a lock of onr bair for giriog no a ride all Oftr town and through the “rhu barb*" thereof, whereby we diaoovamd eeeorel improvement* going on, theming piaioly that Barneevill* it a growing place, la the bar line, w* noticed n neat loukii\g eetabiiehment kept by Mr. Calloway, and another place where they tell indifferent “epirita" by the Pound ! We found a fine earring* manufactory, • irriad on by n Sir. Summere, where aa ft te work ie done ns can be found in the Both, There is n good Jeweler- shop at Powell's corner, kept by Mr. 0. 11. Higgla* who ie a good draftrplayor, as well at a No. 1 Jeweler. A* lor Duo tor*. Barneiville be* her full qnoto. but don't bare any bueineae, except sueh at comes along in the due course qf nature —owing to the great healthfuloesa of the plaee. Finally, BiU Varner pre sides with much grace orer old Qid Barnet* Hotel. It sharpens a fellow's appetite to look at Bill, and he ie the refry pink of gallantry, end wait* upon the ladies with euch a test that several •f the lady boarder* have oome near dielng from pare earfeit Take her nil in all, Barneaville it a nice little place. Tb* merchants are tr'dfi awake, tb* cit aen* generally ia- Mr ligent and oonrecn*. and w* were •r well pleated with onr trip, that we •hall undoubtedly make our viait* more frequent hereafter f Httruto nr th Leawtamnx.—We are now enabled to speak upon undoubt el anthority. Bullock, Governor elect, to one of his confreres in thie oity, state* that the Legislator* will be oonrened •a the 4th of July. There ie a trick in tbit thing—it ie • >t th* wey honorable ii>*n bar* hereto* f ire managed th* affaire of Georgia.— Democrats, you know you doty ; do it, —Atlanta Constitution. •fipThe Columbus prisoner* new in' Atlanta, have react ad th* number of thirty, and their military trial ie ex* pentad to com# off took. Much interest ie mtnifeeted in the matter throughout thaw hols country, and active measures are being adopted in their behelf. Gen. Monde end hie subordinate* ore reaping a lugs crop of exeeratione for their course in the premia*. Smu Fix* Engine.—Wa ee* by tb* Bomter Rapnkliean, that Amerlene ha* raiaed money enough to perohase a Attn Fire Engine, and haa commit, eiooad an ageat to perohase one, Thie epmtk* well of the enterpriee and proa, parhf of that little oity. We obeerve also that Americas he* an Amateur Dramatic Club, which ha* been piaffing Pisano with nil the aeeampenimeot* of BraafUend Orcbeetre, fine etage eeeoe* ry, Ac. Bro. Hancock iein rapture* about it. Hurrah fur the merry ousts. Mpkdir TauL —James Grady, late a policeman of Savannah, ie new on hi* trial in that oity for the murder of two of hi* brother polioemen in April last. They were tryiag to arreat hint for dis orderly oondoet at th* time of the kills ing. • # Draw or Cot. Watkins.— W* regret to annoone* tb* death ofCoL E. P. Watkina, a prominent lawyer ot thie place. Be died at hie father's residence in Const* county on Saturday last, with eon-omption. Col. Watkina was. for a number es years. Ordinary of Henry oonnty, and Secretary of State for eight years. Du ring the war he we* Colonel of the 56th Georgia Regiment, nod wee in active service in Virginia, on the coast and in the Western army; and during the war h* represented this district in the State Senate. AH who knew him, respect hit memory and mourn hie lose. lie was a true patriot, a loving husband, and an indulgent parent. If* leaves a wife end five eons. To the many virtue* sen good citisen, w«’eanadd thethnwnee consistent member of the Baptist Church for e somber ot yearn, and we doubt not diet ohr leant* hie eternal gahr.—lntelligen dhr. A THUS BILL. The New Fork Herald—th* ablest paper te America, if net ie the world— ptesente the following eeneiee review of American polities. Any one at ell te. miliar with the history of oar polities will appreciate the tratbiutease es the picture: * *>._ ■» •*, time*bsW*S?.alT^eflle^vieta! •itud<M itid tb# fate of dTc&Atioi,Gmpir«« •ad bw vw beea by th# piece and power. The presidential pel iciet tb# United St#t## T for instance, are vara *lur*eiy shaped and control!- uJt hw ,h»„. anUnaibaaa T| an ! nnirtn lasa^m #ll Vj U»Ww 1 Duttftlton. DVElDniBg DOW* ever, with the stormy administration of Oooertl Jackson, wa think is eon he very readily shown that the drift of American polite- and ups and downs of onr political partio* since that day have been shaped through the disappointment* viduejb^,?v-‘ k ‘fr : With Gen. Jackson a* President, te his first eeleetion, Oalbooe oame in aa Vie*-President end as th* rightful heir to th* mantle of “Old Hickory." Hot Martin Van Boren, as Secretary *i Bute, contrived to supplant him. Ilow Jaekaoo's first Cabinet earns to resign en masse t how Van Bursa, soot oat a* Minister to England, was compelled to return, rejected by ‘the Seuete through tb* easting vote of Calhoun; bow Van Boren thus became, by th* wUt of Jaok eon, (1832), Vice-President on the Jaok eon ticket, and in 1836 President “in footsteps of bis illustrious predecessor," wo need not hero detail. It is enough to know that in being supplanted by Van Bureo in the regular Democratic line of euoceseion Calhoun actively be gan to lay the foundations of a purely Southern political organisation, first aa a ballance nf power, and lastly as th* machinery fob e Southern Confederacy. This ulterior design sharpiy cropped out an angle of forty-five degrees in the South Caroline nullification movement of 1832-’3, Calhoun at that time being a member of th* United States Senate, and at dagger*' points with Jackson’* administration. In 1832, under Cal. houn’s influence against Jackson and Vao Buren, South Carolina east her Presideotion vote for John Floyd, of Virginia, and in 1836 for Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina; but in 1840 ebe came round to Van Buren, on bis promise that if Mooted end Congress should send to him a bill abolishing slavery in tb* District of Colombia ho would giro it his veto. Thus apparent ly, the feud between Oath >un on the one side, and Jaokson and Van Buren on the other, was compromised on the slavery quesion; bat we shall presently see that the truce wan short one. In 1844, failing to oome up the requi sition of the Southern Calhoun pro-sla very vligaroby on tit* Texas annexation, Van Buren was overslaughed by them in the Democratic Convention with the the two-third* rule, sod Polk was nominated, Van Bureo con •anting with the understanding that he ■bould have another trial in 1848. But in the C invention of that year Caas was ehoeen, and Van Buren, not disposed to tr lie any longer, took the field ae an in dependent candidate on the free soil platform—no further extension of ela very—and thus Case was defeated.— Tins, too, wa* the beginning of the break-up of the Northern Democracy on the slavery question, la 1852, the compromise measures of Henry Clay being the platform of both parties, and General Scott being the Whig candidate, the Whig party was destroyed from the distract among the conservative* of the Abnlitidnist Seward, aa the head of tba Whig party, aod from the disgust of the anti-slavery men with Soott’a platform. Io 1844 Clay would d< übtless have been elected but for his quarrel with Presi dent Tyler, whose t* fluence was thee turned over So the Democratic party, aa Case would haVe been elected in 1848 but for the quarrel with and defeation of Van Baron. In 1856 Filmore's Independent ticket (end Fillmore had hi* grevanoe* to rec tify) took away euffloient strength from Fremont to give the election to HtJehan. an, and In 186-T an old quarrel lat tee firm of Seward. Wood aod Greeley, re sulted in the shelving of Seward at Chi oago and in the nomination of Abraham Linouio. In 1860, on the other side, in retaliation for hie rough treatment in the Senate at the band* of Joft. Davis, Benjamin, Meson, end Slidell, we find Dooglae taking such a position of antag onism on slavery aete break up the Democratic Convention and th* Demos emtio party, the results being LSnooln's eleotioo, seoemien, a Southern Confed eracy, the greatest rebellion te history, and tb* greatest political revolution of modern time*. In 1868, in their violent repudiations and denuoiat’on* of Cbiof Justice Chase, the Republicans have lost their best end great*** statesman, while io the nomination of Grant and Colfax on their two-f*o«d platform, they have eo incensed “Old Ben Wade" that he ie ready to repeat the lesson of Van Buren at the first invitation. Thee h will be seen that sines the time of Jeokeon. onr Presidential poli tic* end the destinies of this groat coun try bava boon shaped and directed by the personal right* aod wrongs, and intrigue* and revenge* of leas than a dozen men. We see, too,- that While Jackson-, a strong and resolute man, «u in power over it, the Democratic were held together intaotfogsinst all per sonal defection* end desertions; that When he withdrew from it* manage ment, the party began to break to pieces. We im that it was the same with the Whig party, under Henry Clay, and the earns may be said of htoeofo and th* Republiean party. A political party, to bold together, requires * recognized master, just as a ship requires*' captain. Without one on eitaor side, we Sad-the gree pa tiee of the present day aU at sea. Haitian says, be ie in favor of run ning Andrew Johnson against ten Radi cals for the same reaeon be give* arsen ic to rate: tee rate ante the areeqie, mid , the ersenia kills the rate—Ex. * MILITARY LAW.. tea? to commend himself to favor near the headquarters of the army. Some soldiers recently expressed thrir^polUD candidates tbev era opposed te and v *“ J ; .tut ie tie terror* of a general order. Shepard, tttesssae&gsa order*, or otherwise, and therefore was not the eaaa to lose this. Where wa* the offense 7 Ie it an offense for soldier* to have political opinions 7 Why, teen, lumi ill# Rftptibliotp so stuck the*Coogwm that created te* anny7 Is it an offense for soldiers tqriva ex pression to ibeir opinion* 7 That can hardly he. sins* Vagram authorised their voting even in their camps ia tb* very beat rs ten war. But they groan ed for General Graatand cheered for McClellan and for Andrew . Johnson, end as Grant ie the commander of thgav my, that, mpo Shepard, is insubordina tion. But Cfrant ii a proper subject for the political opinion* of the people.- Ue is a eaadidsto, and teat is th* char acter in which, undoubtedly, be receiv ed the attention of tee soldiers. Bow far, exactly, ie the spirit of discipline to be carried in the matter of commanders who or# candidates! Will it be an of fense punishable by oourt-martuti for any soldier to vote against Grant! It is doubtful whether Shvpevd himself knows which was te* greater insubor dination, to shout sgainst Grant, who is commander, or hr Johnson, who is President; but,perhaps, when be has oonsulted the carpet baggers who cum* to him from Ms Radical master* at tee capital, he will be able to answer any question on that point How long shall men hold their liberties st the discre tion of ereaturc* like the Brevet.Brig*- dierT llml or ran Dxsfot.—Across the narrow stream which divides tee States of Georgia and South Carolina, comes' the deep thud of Tyrant's tramp, as he move* on to new deeds of despotism, and sets his foot more firmly and more and more heavily upon the neck* of a gallant but weak and powerless people. Ah I bow tba blood boil* in the reins, the teeth gnash together, end tee hnnde clinch, a* the rod of the Despot waves over a noble but enslaved State 1 Intelligent, proud, hospitable, in peace; brave, heroic, gallant in war, the people of South Carolik* are now suffering under a tyranny more Raffing and terrible than those of her Southern sister States—galling and terrible as they are. But a few days ago, a num ber of oitieene of Hamburg were drag form the most menial and degrading servioes, limply because they would not let a political party have tits use of a Church which was under their con trol. They bad a right to refute the use of ibt edifice for the orgies of tee enemies of thoir country ; and, in ex oroising this right, they violated no law, no military order. But tba Gsstler of South Carolina cannot brook the eon tempt which the people there feel for him, and are too proud, too candid, to even wish to conceal; and so must needs vent hie wrath upon the innoeent and unoffending. And yet the bitter cap of woe is not full. Carolina, tby humiliation ie not complete 1 Th* vulture* who are bat tening upon tby chained and lacerated limbs, are not eatiated. Yon will not bow to Oeeler't oap ae you pas* it in the streets, and you make no geoufiexions tb shoulder-strap*, or to "flaunting lies" as they wave over your desolated land. And eo your humiliation U not com plete. Those who were onoe year slaves —those who, now, as then, are your in feriors—must be placed over you, and ■it in vonr oounctl chambers to make laws for you and complete your galling list of woes. Seven negroes In the Council Chamber of Charleston i Sev en negroes by order of Geeler I Aod yet you bend not the knee or bow the bread, stiff-necked people of South Onr. olina. And yet, you point to Geeler, with the finger of soorn, and eigh for a Tell, a llofer, to rid yon of thie tyran ny 1 0I be firm Ibe patient I The day of deliverance is at hand, end the sun of justice will soon, we hope, light yon on to freedom, pMaesnd nrpspertty once more. The people of the North, we are told, are waking to tee "ein and failure;" of reoooetruetion, and era pra panng to burl from power the minione of tjTftLiiT. Be patient f The day® of NeroTof Dyonisiue, of Geeler, are num bored 1 Be patient 1 The galling chain of tyranny will, ere long, be stricken from your limbs, nod the fetter# now prepend for you be foeteaed upon your oppressors. Be patient, be firm, pre serve your manhood and so» “tgelty ; the God of Justice will right the suffer ing South yet; end, though we b»v* no faith in men, yet let oe not loss forth fn God—but trustiug in Him, yisldiog no prineiple of right or justice, ever main taining a strict and patriotio integrity, we must and will pea* safely through this fiery ordeal, while the hitter Cup of wo* prepared for us will be forced upon those wno have eo prepared it.—Banner of tee South. Axaivat, or now# Piisohxiw.— The train brought In from Columbus yester day seven more prisoners—ex-Deputy Marshal Wood, and ex-polioemen Cash, Kirke, Roper Wiggins, and Messrs. I A J. Marx, of the establishment of S. Pomp A Cos. This makes over twenty cititeoe, besides eix colored persons, that ere incarcerated here for the mar. dm of Ashhurn. The negro, bitab, Hmneh Flournoy, nod the detectives are having the arrests made, and we would not be surprised to hear of fifty or a hondVnd More on tee teny sqfHu—ln tetligenoer, MTSsrioa s oti sir tut. liseie cm out On WfutodOsteerwr tavwtAA PRESIDENTS VETO L. ■ WaeniMVon, June 20~The vste "Tlbffeu teweto^wsns opfoion ie this al plan. The term* proposed are •earcely applicable to u Territory, eer tainly no* to a State which has occupied a place ia the Union nvteA quarter of a sentnry, and th# President ie unable by the o to the States themselves. The bill fail* to provide how Arkansas shall slgbify its acceptance of the fundamental condi tions, nor does it prescribe penalties' for their nullification. It is seriously ques t-noed w her her tee Constitution has been ratified aeordiag to law, bat as sumed to be in fore* before its adoption. The Arkansas Constitution restricted franchise on its ratification by tetts un known in tee reeonetraotion act*— among them the acceptance of political and oiril rights of alt men. It is well known that a large portion, if not a ma jority, of the electors don’t accept this test, aod if applied to voter* North there is reason to believe that many of them would remain sway from the poll* rather then comply with its degrading conditions. " The President concludes: Should the people of A kanses, therefore, desiring to regulate the elective franchise so as to make it conform to the Constitution of a large proportion of the States of the North and West, modify tee provisions referred to in the fundamental conditon, what is to be tee consequenoes 7 Is R intended that a denial ot representation shall follow 7 And, if so, may we not dread, at some future day, a recurrence of the troubles which have so long agi tated the country 7 Would it not be tee part of wisdom to take for oor guide the Federal Constitution rather than resort to measnrea which, looking only to tee present, may, in a few years, renew io on aggravated form the strife and bit terness caused by legislation wbieh has proved to be ill-timed and unfortunate 7 Uovm.— The time was occupied in discussing unimportant matters until veto of Arkansas bill, wbieh passed 110 to 31 without standing party vote, sl eep t Stewart of New York, who voted with Republicans. The tax bill reported to-day comes np Monday, and will occupy House with* out iuterruption till ooooluded. It re duces whisky to sixty oent*. It is elab orate io detail* for collection. It i* probable that a general amnesty will be proclaimed on the 4tb of July, TELEGRAPNIO. Wxmukotox, Jane 21.—Seward has relumed. Th* new tax bill make* tobacco 32 and 16. Government deposits 3 per cent per annum, and other deposits 1 per cent. Whiskey, u heretofore stat ed, ie 60 cents. Tbs machinery of tee bill recently re-committed, is preserved, but beyond tee items mentioned above, there are no changes. The Conference report of removieg disabilities was reconsidered and passed by two-thirds of bote bouses, and goes to the President Naw Yoxx, June 22.—Cotton dull at t oent lower. Salee 880 bale* at 30J Flour drooping ; Southern $9 25@r15. Wheat drooping ; new amber Georgia, $2 70. Corn closed a shade better; mixed Western, |I rs@sl 07}. Mess quiet Lard a shad* lower. Groceries and naval shores unchanged. Govern ments steady. Southern State* bond* active. « Cbaxlistos, Jane 22. —Gotten qniet. Sales 32; middling nominal at 26}@30. Receipts 25. Lott-vii.t*, June 22.—Flour fi7 25. Corn 9DA93. Pork 28 25® 128 60. Lard 19R418. Shoulders 13}® 13}.— Olear aides 17}. Savannah, June 22 —Cotton opened firm and closed dull; no wile* ; mid dling 80 cents. Receipts 84 bale*. Livaaroou Jane 22.—2 P. M.—Cot ton cosier. Soles will |not exceed 10,- 000 boles. Pork ond lard dull. Natal ■tore* heavy. ROL The Noble County (O.) Repub lican say* i One of our worthy eitnene —nstrictchuroh member—woe reading the church paper last Sabbath, having occasion to lay it down for a moment, a '■porting’ son-in-law substituted in ite ■tend the New York Clipper. The old gentleman soon picked up the paper, and after ,-djusting hie sp-ctacles raid an interesting account of tee late prise fight After rsnding the article, he laid tee paper down, wiped his spectacles thoughtfully, and remarked to hie wife that th* Presbyterian woe not tee church paper it need to be, *nd that he would discontinue taking st when thie expired. Wife looked at the psper and ooon diaeovered the imposition, maeh to the old gentleman’s gladnoaa that the paper bod not deteriorated eo much af ter all. BoowNLow e Epitaph —The follow* ing is Brownlow’s epitaph given ten dinner in Ohattanooga t “Pause, gentle reader 1 lightly treed l For God's rake let himlie ; We live in peace since fie ia dead, Bui Aril 1. in*/**! XATKOrt DWnWXC WIU-Osr* ttvsv- OempUiaLiid DrnwjwU E C ”trong gov eminent” it has Radical party succeed m electing Oca. Grant, he may follow the ex ot aid scatter CpngrcM as Crom well dispersed ihe Long Pariia* ment. As tba contingency is within the range at possibility, it neech of NolL ,# when Grant will find The descriptive parts ready made for application to the Radical mem bers, and, as he has bees accus tomed to wax eloquent through the aid of Rawlings and Wash burn*, we recommend a plagiarism from iron Cromwell m something far better than an echo from his sneaking keepers; Cromwell thus spoke : . ‘ *. • “It is high time for me to pat an end to yoar sitting in this placer which ye have dishonored, by year contempt of all virtue, and detied by the practice of every vice. Ye are a factions crew, ana enemies to all good government. Ya are a pack of mercenary wretches, and would like Esau, sell ycur country for a mess of pottage, and, like Judas, betray your God for a few pieces of sil ver. Is there a single virtue now remaining in yon 7 Is there one. vice you do not possess ? You have no more religion than my . horse. Gold is your God. Which of you has not betrayed away your conscience for bribes ? Is there a man among you that has the least care for the good of the Common wealth ? You sordid prostitutes ! Have you not defiled this sacred place, and turned the Lord's tem ple into a den of thieves 7 By your immoral principles and wick ed practices ye have grown intol erably odious to a whole nation.— You, who were deputed here by the people to get thoir grievances redressed, are youraelve becoms their greatest grievance. Your country, therefore, calls upon me to clegn this Augean stable by putting a final period to your ini quitous proceedings in this house, and which, by Goa's help and the strength he has given me, I now intend to do. 1 command you, therefore, upon the peril of your lives, to depart immediately out of this place. Go 1 Get you out! Make haste ! Ye venal slaves, begone ! Take away that shining bauble there, (the speaker’s mace) and lock up the doors.”—Consti tutionalist. , A Fatal Accident. —We learn, by private letter received in this etty, that Wm. M. Nolan, of Mc- Donough, accidently shot himself while carelessly hand itg a pistol, on Monday the 15th instant, caus ing the death of the unfortunate young man, in about one hour af ter the shooting. Young Nolan was smooth of prominent qualities and bid fair to occupy a useful position in society. He had just returned from William and Henry College, Virginia, to spend vaca tion at the borne of his childhood, and by this unfortunate accident, is prematurely cut off while in the vigor of youth. When will boys learn to be cautious in handling fire-arms 7—Cov. Ex. 80-. The white men of the South can stand want, they can stand hunger, they can stand toil, perhaps they can stand even die francuisement, confiscation and death, but they cannot stand ne gro rule. And they will not stand it for any considerable period.- They may, for the sake of the wo men and children who are dear to them, submit to it for a little time, whilst the bayonets of an infernal tyranny aie bristling at their throats, but the first opportunity, they will hurl it from them as a man wonld a venomous snake from his bosom. He who thinks that the white race can for any length of time be held in subjection to negroes, has no belief in man, no trust in God.—Warren ton Clip. Health of Gov. Brownlow. — The Rome Courier learns from a Sntleman jsst from Knoxville, at Gov. Brownlow is prostrated with palsy, and cannot sneak above bis breath. His friends think he cannot live through the Summer, though the Governor fully expects ter serve out hie six yen/s term in the United States Senate. HATTON'S on, or uris-owra tabu te tb* Xaok, Siwt, BMw, SfconMtn »nd.Joints. HEW ASTERtXSSMSETS To onr Patrons v - u... ■ --- ... ... mm-'WM' &OHO EXPECTED* &A6E POINTS BLACK and WHITE, M. A. HIGHTOWER A CO.’S, , J*M M. im-St OrarfltaHt.r a iteWffi. . TH THI DISTRICT COURT OF THE T'NIT -1 ED STATES for U» N.rtiwra Dl.ufoV es Oner totes .alter rs I LY. A.' 10e'cloak, A. M.. »c te« Mhcool w wjriAte <A«W rfraswr., thU l»te Oaref JosatSSO 6. t. DItAKS, Amite—. Iwteßte-tw _ , KTOTIOBI. TN order to moks dw ewoneetJcm with te* n A wad train -n tbs South Uurolta* Kutlro-l, u 4 to tmpn-TS tee eonneettuao with the trail, sa Iks ISM, at • o'clock, A. M.,u follow.: DAY PABSKNOXK TRAIN. [DOty, tesdsj. EsceptcS.) Lein Anjutts T.W A X Last* Atlanta .00# A 1? Arrive at Augurta S.« t M Arrive at Atlauta te# »'* NlttUT P .6SKNOE* MAH» TRAIN, Leave Augusta........ ........ 10.00 f It Leave Atlanta a 0.40 P H Arrive at Augaeta. 3.00 A it Arrive at AUaout - T.40 A It Peeeengun for MlU«dfe>Ute, Woehlngtoa ate Athene. Oa, inav take the Dhy Raueuger Train' from Aufueta suit A lanta. Puarrfvn for Wait Point, Mor.tfomvry, Be haa, HoMle and Neve orltane, mutt leave Aafneta «a Night Powvofler Train at luOOPM , te nuke clue eennectlona. Pmfhprn for Nathvitle, Corinth, Or and Jue«- tlen, Memphfa. Loutvvtlla and #l. Leub, eon taka either tralNnhl ritekeehite connect lone. TUKODOH TtCKtns aod Baffafa cheeked thr .ofh te the above place*. PULLMAN'S 1 ALAt t tLn'PINQ CARS on aU *s?££$ r ear AU Train* between Augueta end Weet Point. E. W . OLE, 'Jcntral rfoperlntendtot: June to, tSto-iw Oias Repaired. NOTICE te hereby given that r will repair GINS at reoaottobla rate* through th* euntaier.— Urine the Ula* to my tout*, three utlee north es Oriffln J. U. M ITCIIELL. jane to, ISOS-tf Hog&nsville WL<®m Prop. geo. c. loonev wtu * high SCHOOL at llaganeetlln. Ga . an Ui* rite es JULY. MSS. I hie tea plraehnt end healthy locali ty *n «h* Atlanta * Weet Petal Railroad Tuition rate* from 110 ta $M per even an. Matte M 5 ektral K trd can bn had at the beet Snnte* a* Jttne to, IteS-Iw Pocket Book Lost, LAST S*tnrd*y I toot my POCKET BOOK la or" near Urttßn. The Bovk contained a (null eum es money, nnd tb* foUuwtng popen. I wocht' 1>« thenkl'ul for the retetrn at the papers The Beak If found, may be left at Cuncinghauii' Store. Alt penone vr* forewarned front i ading for MV or laid notea or paper*, a* If not found, I ebali pro ceed to setaMteh ooploe accenting to law : t Not* on Q. 'W. Strickland, due Ist day of ife vemher, IS6& for the emeuntuf ..... 1 Note reRI. Ntricktasd, duo tat day «iNv venrber, 1848, for the amount of ~ . .. ..tot to 1 Not* on t B Mathew* and Brook*, due let dey of November, 1-48, for the air onnt «#.. ,t#T o# 1 Not* on 3. J Conte end J A William* the del* not recollected, for the amount of S# h# 1 Bend on John Turner, end Mi. Turner eeenri ty, du* let day of November, for the amount nf I Bond' onr Riley Turner, anti John Turner secu rity, due lat day of November, 1408, for iheantsunk of .... MOO Other aoeoante and receipt* not recollected. . -a , *1' AC STRICKLAND, Truetee, June to. 18dS-#t BOOKS. XXX To tho Trade* —rax T'vEALERS in Hooke and Btatlesery, and Teach i/ ora. are reapeetfnfty Informed that w* haves* hand the largest stock es Tkeologie’ißooktt Literary Books, Bibles, Testaments, Mario Books, faTenile Book*, .klbuats, School Books, School Apparatus Writing Papers, Stationery, Flat Papen, Blank Books, Xovefopee, BOOKS! Sunday School Book*, And Indeed of evejjihth* to onr thto, that tote k* fonsd in the South. W* a* 11* the trad* at NEW YORK Wh»!«mle PRICES! sa*““ J Ta£aS4".-«?#a. Jane to, ISSS-Sa Atlanta, Georgia. Ice ! Ice! Ice! Am S THE SEASON IS NOW ABOUT COK mvnrtng for tha ae* of XCEi I 1 I"/ 0 ? peep*• rad ta eupply my old ceeleinem and friend*, and a* tneny new one* a* may fee! dig pfeed to buy OI in*. I am the only house that keep* ICK the year round in Macoo. You eah-KM lttu*ayqaaslityyonw*et,aaAat The Same Pnco as Last Seam 7 a.“ ' “ax ats'issr Appll Ifi, 186# Wl __ * ‘ EICELLBNT RESIDENCE WITH four sores of Land aUobed ; everything in fins repair. For •ale low. Is oonvanieat to. banioega part of te* oity. Apply to LOGAN A FITCH ia*. 14, 1868-ts Beal Estate A»*to. this Office