The Macon telegraph and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 1873-188?, December 05, 1879, Image 2

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IS HJJLt . KLBQXATB At MMSAJOfOMM It nVuM (NTT m*rnimf, (*tntft Mtmdsfj 4a llm »/ GUrry aad Sarrad atratla. UnUtraffacu Tin Dollar) mtr near. ft— DoUart for nj aosUi, 7Wo imltar. mmd fttlf Cant* for tkrw month a, — -«■ < m. laollar mar month for m abmrtor tamo. fpthn/SXT ADVKRTUSUSSTS (hat hol lar ror tfuaro of tomlimot ortou for tbo tint tntrrlion, an4 Mf Oonto for oil NiafiMi ■ aiMuw. LVtrrni ratao to tontrootort. jt,. iEL KGRAPH A.S h MSKSMXGBR ran moan's firm of Oto oldaai tteastpaptrt In that ooctaon of Gtorpio. onat for mono poor! boo tnrnaohod Iko torluot mm to thot toopo of Goortao. Alabama ami Florida trad inf at Uismc-.nt. It fnda tit mar into almost tear? , nUUiosnt hcnaakold and man of bnsinaaa in that ooottoa. At aa odoortinop medium in that romp* of aomntri FliluAX. DECKMBBK 6.1873. —There mo 2,233 counties in the United SUtee, l.tOD in the North, end 1,289 in the Booth. —Mr. Talmxge’e treelee* have rewired anramcasiy that the Btockljn Tabernacle mast withdrew front the PreibyteiUn de nomination becuua or tho ‘persecution’ of thePeeior by ‘wicked men,’and until that psreecntlon thi'l ceuo. —The Belcher U now the deepest nine on Continent. Toe inei'rio hu retched e perpendicular depth of 3,000 feet, end itirt« tog fromeUv*iof3X)feet, mtkctiudipet eo angle thet require* ICO feet In order to mike 100 feet in perpendicular depth. The miar is ettl to be In excellent order, end if ore be found on th* new level it can be broc h i.t to the surf toe with extreme f ed'ily. — i movement to protont e purse of 8250,- 000 to Oenerel Grant ie repotted by The Cin- ^•nr.sH Commercial. It ie added that it Is to be tho Rift of divon gentlemen In the East, who placing e high eetimate on the pnUic serviced of tho Gcnoral, wirb to make hU old eg* comfortable, and rolievo him from the ncoeealty cf accepting e professional post for rapport. —Tboae air solul Bepnbltcau counties of Nebraska, .n which not etiogle Dcmccratio ce other eppoeing vote, wts cut at the re cent election, remind mote Joke, as Mr, Lincoln used to say—not anew joke either. A Dnlchmrn and bis ecn, on their way West, stopped at Hot Bpi'nge fore Clink or freeh water. The old man dipped h's bill first into the scaldiog flood end screamed to hie tom to drive am *Ach, mein Gott, mein Gott, Hass, mein eun, tiife on mlt dat vagin, for hell 1st niebt far von die plaoe.* No Gcvzsaxztrr Gcss to Poo a r oa G a ix r. —BepreecnteUvo Harmer called on tho Becro- tary of War end General Hanot, Chief of O&ioanoo, on Monday, at tho request of ■evsral gontlcmen of Philadelphia, to ro- quest the loan, of tho War Department, of wtn* end (qulpments for the nso of tho mlbt 1 * rnd citizen* on the occasion of the Grant reseption on the 16th lnetant In that oKy. The Secretary of War eaid bo had no snore power to loan the property or tho War Department then Sesretarr Sherman bsd to 1^-, the money in the Treaaaty vaults. Ho therefore declined, and hoped bo would have no forth*r app!'cations. —Mr. Stophena w.llbe eixty-oight years old next Fcbnury. Ho was born two yesrs earlier t»»»" Mr. Tilden, end hfs birthday ie two days later In tho month. In hleontry Into pabllo life, Mr. Stephens outdatca Mr. Tilden by yesrs, having boon elected to Use Georgia Log'elaturo in 1836, at tho age of^wenty-fonr. Mr. Tilden was thirty-two yean old when, halML b* eat in the Now York Oosetiimiosal Oonveution. Mr. Tilden had no national reputation nntil he figured in tise dramatic exposure of tho Tweed ring, while Mr. BUphans at the ago of thirtyouo was a member of Congress, and began at aaeototakobiaplaca among the loaders in polities. Eocial Atthictios is Texas—A Galvcs- ton News special from Waco, the 2d says that last night, in tho cuunUy noarthoro, whan a danco was progrossing, Bud Wood; asked Miss Graoo Stanfield to danoe, which; shade:!.nod. Wood btesmo angiy and do- mandadthat the danco ceaso. Wood then followed Will Currie into tho backroom, and provoked a fight. Corrio knocked him down with the tongs. They met outride, and foagbt a dael with pistols. A dozen shots were exchanged. Cnuio was wounded in the hand. A bystander was wounded in tho l*g. Geo. Wood wae shot in tho thigh. Bud Wood than wont where Mias Stanfield was talk'ng with Albert Chech, end made two to sheet hor. Then remarking to ‘yen rro a friend of Outlie,’ ehot dead, knocked Jim Currie senseless with • pistol and escaped. —Tbs Jacksonville Union of tho 2d has the following: Las: night at 12 o'clock, Mr. Alston Walker, son of ex«Govemor Walker, diodst his boitdlug-honss in this city. The death was sadden and trill be beard with much regret. Mr. Wiikerhtd been a real dent of Jacksonville only a few weeks and was admitted to practieo law dating the pres ent term of tho Circuit Court. The lateness of the hour prevented ns from obtaining fu’l particulars of thsssd event. The sterner Wokiwa, Capt. Jones, ar rived yesterday from the Upper St. Johna, with 100 boxes and 41 barrels of oranges, 2 bales of cotton and 75 cases fguava Jelly. The cotton was for Whitefleld, Walker A Co., and the jelly fo: the New York steamer. It was made ly A.P ^Cleveland, of Brevard county. Two car loads of oranges were shipped p*r Central Bai’roxd last evening, to Sevan cab. The abOOMT Attic. Capt. Hodgkins, from Nassau, N, P., loaded with bananas, orange#, pino apples, etc., arrived Sunday. The cargo wrs consigned to N. O. Wamboldt, * The steamer Tuakawilla ar.Ivad last night with a l?-go cargo of oranges. Steam it abont to be appliod to traaspor. ■ tation on the Lth'gh and Dataware Oanal between IIinch Chunk and Philadelphia. It i* said that, by a new invention to be ap. p ied to the screw, there will be but little agitation to tho waters, and the waebisg ont or tba bints vri’ 1 consequently be avoided. The boat will have a carrying capacity of 105 tons of coal when drawing fire feet of water. If it worts satisfactorily, a number of them will be ijus'rucled. It hts taken a long while to wort up tne Lehigh and Delaware to the experiment. Whether it will be more aattsfactory than the plan adopted on the New York cant is remains tote seen. For micy vein the State bag had a standing oh fer of clue W)J to tho inventor cf a success fn! canal steamer (one. that is, which would not wash away the embankments) but the loons ye! wants a ciaimont. Tei Utx*.—The news of yesterday renders it highly probable that there will be no farther trouble with the Ute3. Ou Monday last one of the ohiefs who, in conjunction with Jack led the assault on Tkoraburgb, mxdo confession and sur rendered himself a prisoner to the Com mission. He also implicated the Mor mons so far as to testify that they had promised to assist the Indians in any war with the United Slates. It now remains foe Chief Jack to surrender ana unbosom himself. Tho Utes evidently see the hopelessness cf resistance, and have con cluded to accept defeat without a fight. Tee Chilians scorn to be overraning the Peruvians. The capture of still an other important town in Peru is • an nounced, with heavy loci on both Bides. Ethzbzax. mildness still characterizes the weather. The temperature yester day was like April. A World of Good. One or the most popular medicines now before the American puoi.c, is Hop Bitters. You see it everywhere. People take it with good effect. I; builds them up. It is not as pleasant to the taste aa some other Bitters ss it is cot a whisky drink. It is more like the old fashioned bone set tea that has done a world of good. If yon don’t feel just igbt trj Hop Bitters.—Hands News- All Eloquent Silence. The Philadelphia Tima, of the 21 in stant, reports an interview of its editor- in-chief, Mr. McClure, with Senator Gordon, in Washington, and speaks in wsrm commendation, editorially, of the views expressed by the Senator. In that interview, Gen. Gordon very earnestly ad vocated the polloy of silence in respect to tbo bitter sectional attacks on the South ern States, £0 frequently a ade in Con gress, and states that on this point he is in full accord with the most noted Dem ocrats; conservative Senators, such ss Lamar,Bassom,,loses, of Florida, Hamp ton and others. Of the probable effect of such a course, could it be universally adopted by the Democratic Congressmen, he cites tbo case of the last epeech cf the late Senato* Morten—the most bitter and exooriating inveettva ever delivered—made up of as saults, general and particular, personal and political, in tho course of which he attacked in turn States and communities^ persona and parties, calltaf upon them by name to defend themselves, putting personal questions to Senators and using every artifioe to provoke responses in tits sime temper. But the Southern Sena tors, appreciating his purpose, agreed among themselves to make no answer, and subsequently Morton declared that ho had never been eo outdone in his life, and that he C3me out of that affair badly crippled. But whether eilence in respect to these scotional onslaughts bo considered in the light of policy, or of a true, patriotic dig nity and msnbood, it is equally to be approved. Nothing good can over come of an altercation over alleged facts which .an never be brought to a specific and decisive teat of truth or error. General allegations against the Southern people, which, in the naturo of the case, are In capable of particular proof or refutation, leave pnblio opinion unohanged and only Inflamo popular temper, whioh is tho object songht after in the attack. The defendants cannot and do nothopo to disarm prejudice or conciliate animos ity in their responses. They eimply con ceive them to be a matter of duty to their constituency. But their conetltuency do not need any light or information on the eubject-matter, and know that In every each altercation they aro bound to get tho worst of it as to all malerial and im portant points. Tho object being to keep alive and inoreaao tho odinm of the outside world—tho North has its ear and the Eonth has little access to it. Tho North prints and circulates a thousand copies of tho nttack to ono of the reply. Materially, therefore, (not intellectually) it is a fight against enormous odds, whioh ia always a losing fight, independ ent of tho merits of the controversy. The more of these controversies pro voked, tho greater tho Southern loss and tho Northern gain. But it is easy to appreciate tho diffi culties in the way of carrying out this polioy. It demands great and universal self-control. The impulse of every pa triotic man is to defend his homo and peoplo whenever assailed, and with the younger, mora enthusiastic and less ex perienced this impulao ia almost uncon trollable. But, at the same time, ono spokesman is csgood as another in nurs ings controversy. Ia point of fsot, the lightest exponent of Southern opinion in such a contest serves Radical purposes best. What is wanted is haste, hsat, in caution and violence. If tho policy of silence shall be adopted, it will ba a good sohool for young representatives. “It is impossible,” eaid Cacteliar, “ to keep si lence in Spanish.” Can young Southern representatives accomplish that feat in the English tongue ? EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE. Kimball House, Atlanta, December 4,1879. The writer was not a little surprised npon entering the train of tho M. & W. R. R., at Ymeville, yesterday, to fiad passenger and smoking oar jammed full of travelers, nearly every one of whom wereperfeot strangeta to him. Where did they come from andwhither were they going was a pertinent question, whioh no one seemed able to answer. We had thought at this period of the year the liDS OP 1UAVEL set In the direction of Florida, with its golden orange grove3 and blushing flow- era, and not towards the frigid North. Bat bnsinees takes people (drummers in cluded) everywhere, and, doubtless, the revival of all branohes of industry in the country has turned loc3e and pat in mo tion, t j and fro, thousands of capi'alista and speculators bound upon every possi ble errand. Finding it Impossible to “locate,” thanks to the unvarying oonttesy of Con- dnotor Beneau, the writer was allowed to obtrude within t'le forbidden portals of a luxurious palaco sleeping car, which, as it was daytime, wco perfectly empty. Here he was “monarch of all he sur veyed,” and could cogitate, sleep at will, read, and make oooasional incursions or excursions into the other coaches, not LIKE A SOARING LION, seeking whom he might devour, but faithful journalist industriously hunting up news items for his readers. But our efforts in the lattor direction wero.almoet barren of results. Perhaps, however, an indignant couple, ere thi?, mado one out of twain, will enter a tremendous dis claimer to tho latter remark. But we did not intend to leave them out in the cold. Among onr fellow passencers was the rxaellent Mr. Hornadsy, pastor of the Brunswick Methodist churab, who was en route to Forsyth to marry a young pair whom, as there aro so miny “SLIPS TWIXT CUP AND LIP,” shall bo nameless until their union has bean officially announced. Mr. H. Bays Brunswick is thriving and very hopeful of the future. She has direct communi cation now with Ncssau, trade is brisk, and tho people are jnbilant over the prospect of the extension to Atlanta,|asd. In due time, to the far Northwest,of their railroad. It was eertainly a moat gra tuitous and disrespectful remark cf onr eatceired c;ntemporary, the Constitution, that the road which has done so much to build up Brunswick and develop southern ososqix began nowhere,” that is at MaooB,and “ends nowhere,” whichmeans Brunswick. That was emphatically a blow ‘‘fc.Mowthe belt” to all ths South country not includ ed within the city limits of Atlanta, er the radius of her influence. But it is to be hoped that this unknown land, whioh is thru aummarilylconsigned “to the tomb the capulsts,” will survive the attack made npon it by the “organ of the Capi tal.” And.enpassant, it is impossible to understand upon what ground the Ccniii- tution, in its sc-oalled issue of to-day, predicates the opinion that thero will be NO LEASE IN JANUARY of the M. & B. R. R., no extension to At lanta, and only a big lawsuit with whioh the State will be left to grapple. Per contra, the Governor apprehends no further action on the part of Mr. Stanton as his movements are blocked by the fact that the State cannot be rued, and is de termined that the lease shall be effected at the prescribed time under the precise terms of the law. There are other par ties who will be In the field probably on that eventful day—one from Georgia, another from abroad. A lively time, therefore, may reasonably be expected when the bidding begins. It is aa certain then aa any other hu man event that tho LEASE WILL BE ET7EOTED at the appointed time, and the required extension made according to the terms of the late law. The only lawsuit that ever can be docketed, la a trial before the Supreme Court of the United States, on the oon- atitntiocality of the act of the Legisla ture of Georgia, prohibiting certain classee of its citirens from bidding at all upon the lease. Thi. 3 , Eoae of the disappointed stockholders of the Central Railroad, or the oompany itself, may at tempt The legal fraternity are divided as to ths possibility of making ont such a ease. We cannot assert, however, save npon rumor, that any effort of the kind is in tended to be made. Suffice it to say, the road will certainly be leased to the high est bidder who comes within tbo scope of the law, and the proposed extension will follow of necessity, or the lease be for feited. We have .it npon the best authority, that the act of the Governor, in adjourn ing the lease to another day, has been en dorsed by some of the first legal minds of the State, but sincerely regret that the matter bad not been differently settled in the first instance. No one, however, has been hurt in the premises, and it is ex pected that the INCREASED COMPETITION which will be developed on the next lease day, when all the requirements of the aot have been complied with, will re dound more than ever to the intereets of the tax payers of the State. Jnsthere, wo would again Indulge tho hope that the capitalists of Macon and Brunswick may come to the front, and lease the road themselves. Certainly no other parties have such vital interests involved in the resnlt. HEADED OTP. Wo made one abortive attempt to draw ont a prim and natty looking Yankee, who esked if the writer lived in Georgia, but could get no responselon the “Grant boom,” Hayes’ message, whether wo were to have a hard winter, the probabilities of raiD, or anything else. So the writer retired in good order, and ere long roach ed the GATE CITY IN SAPXTY. Here he was taken in charge by “Kimball” porter, and warmly greeted and comfortably cared for by the genial managers of this magnificent establish ment. We fonnd everything in apple pie or der about their celebrated hotel and ta ble, servants and rooms all that the most exacting guest could demand. Msj. W. H. Seldeu, one of the genial proprietors, is always at his post, and spares no pains for the comfoit of his patrons. Ia the office ho has the able assistance of Mr. Ed. Calloway, whoso name is a house hold word to every traveller in Georgia, and his not less agreeable co-adjutors, Messrs. W. D. Wiley and E. D. Chris tian. The Kimball is fairly booming, and tho Markham too seems to be enjoy ing a fair ran of custom. We did not see Mr. Huff, (perhaps he was in transitu botween bis two homes) bnt fonnd his pleasant: partner and our -old friend Mil ler ready and willing to do tho honors of the honse. Atlanta certainly is able properly to support two first class hotels, and we wish them both euooess. ins municipal election yesterday was something new to a Macon man, Friends of tho respsotivo candidates would sound the merits of their favorites at the polls in regular auction style, and tickets wero proffered and went circling round on all sides. Ono little urohfu had a basketful], which he was crying in real newsboy fashion. Colored and white all seemed to vote without let or hindrance, and we saw no fighting or .bulldczing of any kind. At one time, owing to tho multiplicity of whito aspirants, there was imminent danger that TWO OUFFEE3 would ba injected into the city council But the alarm was sounded promptly, aomoof tho candidates “came down,” runners through the oity annonxeed tho impending result, and the Anglo-Saxons and white “f urrinecs,” turned out at the last moment in sufficient strength to de feat the sabli contestant?, who, by the way, are said to ba very olever and .re3 pectable colored “gemmen.” A MUDDY BUT PLOUIUSEING CITY. Last evening the thick clonds mar shalled their murky hosts and organized a torrent of rain which descended piti lessly for many hours. The streets wero deluged, and the wayfarer out of doors, trod ancle doep in water even unon some of tho pavements. It he missed a cross ing and got swamped in tho highway, his fate was doplorable indeed. The loss of a shoe or hoot, and a plentiful be-spatter- ing of red clay was the least to be ex pected. But despit its mud, and chilly, changeable climate, ATLANTA IS GOING AHEAD constantly with majestic strides, and eo great is the faith of her people in tho future of their oily, that albeit many scores of honses and stores bear on their doors the ominous words “to let,” still saoh far-seeing and sagacious men to ex-Governor Brown keep piling up brick and mortar into artistie and 6legant architectural shapes, confident that they will “bo wanted” in due time. It ia a fact, which nono will dispute, that in this bustling, wide-a-wake city, profit3 and salaries of every kind, from the Governor of f ie Stato and jndgee of the Supreme Court to the lowest errand boy or counter jumper, are exceptionally low, and the puzzle is how do the people make both ends mee f . Still they manage to lire, though one store will _ sometimes have three cccnpant3 in a single year. Bat no sooner doe3 one break, or clear out, than another, attraoted by the pres tige and vim of the Gate City, and the BIEBNAL BLOWING of the inhabitants moves in, if bnt to spare the fate of bis predecessor. _jThe writer asked a merchant what was the oause' of allithe hurry and bustle be saw about him ? “Why,” he replied, “the majority of tho people you see thU3 frantically running around, rre in quest of the same half dollar, which will fca needed to get them a dinner.” Georgia has jnst cause to be proud of this coble and growing oity, though if her people were less aggressive to mid dle end lower Georgia, they would be more popular. Thus far of our BRETHREN CF THE PRESS, we have encountered Mr. Clarke of the Post, Mr. Howell of the Constitution, Hr. S. T. Jenkins of the Southern Enterprise, and some of tho publ’ihers of the Index. All were genial and effable, and the wri ter expects to see more of them. It was Bad to ees the vacant editorial cauotum of tho late piquant, able, and spirited Pis patch. But such is life. J.U revoir. ~ H. H. J. “There may be some virtue ia all of them,” lie said, “but for actual worth and rapidity of effect I know nothing made that can ezeel Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup Ketorned .Exodusters. A Mississippi correspondent of the Nashville American has this to say abont the meagre few of the Kansas Erodusters who have managed to crawl back decrepit and forlorn to their old stamping ground on the Mississippi: The returning few whs have been able to get back from the “happy land,” have had a wonderful effect in chilling tbe ar dor of the prospective emigrant. Their abject poverty, their rags and their pitched facas, tell a far more eloqnsnt story, and one that touches the heart of the negro more forcibly than their verbal accounts of suffering and want, of disease and death, of famine and cold. Some, who a year ago left with full purras, good teams, and all the necessary comforts; who left with buoyant hopes and joyous anticipations of the cosy cot tage, the green pastures, the fertile fields and the abandant crop?, with the beauti ful prairie stretching away to the horiEon with herds of buffalo, deer and antelopes in the distanoe, and all sorts of things to make up the picture like the cheap chro- mo, which delighted their eyes and fed to excess their imagination, have returned, broken in spirit and in fortune, having left their teams and household goods in strangers’ hands, having left some of their loved ones sleeping beneath the in hospitable sod of Kansas, glad, only too happy to get back themselves to their sunny Southern home, poorer in this world's goods, bnt richer far In expsrf# snoe. GEORGIA PRESS. The Bachelor Department of the Chronicle and Constitutionalist has been presented with a tiny pincushion as a reminder to Stovall of the days when-he used to get “stuck." Being shaped after ibe pattern cf a lady's foot it will doubt- lees al30 serve to remind him of the days upon which be got kioked. R. A. Daniel hu bought oat the SwainEboro-Hcrald, and entered in among the Georgia editors. This is tbe seoond Daniel that has ventured into tEe lion’s den, but it is tbe first instance on record of a visible prophet In the newspaper business. A Flint river fisherman had a tussle with a logger-head turtle half as large as a cotton bale. When the turtle eaoaped, it was difficult to tell which of them en joyed the reBt the most. Me. Ben C.- Kendrick, a young ..far mer of Talbot county, raised with two plows this year, 27 bales of cotton, 150 bushels of corn, 100 bushels of pea?, 60 bushels of oats, 30 bushels of wheat and 75 bushels of potatoes, clearing over $1,000. A Savannah policeman attempted to arrest a vagrant mule yesterday, but the animal declined a lodging at the pound to enoh an extent that he had to be chloro formed. Mumtoed, of the Southern Rifles, is a deadly shot with the army gun, aa his exploits during the late target praotice abundantly proves i he can drive almost anything at one hundred yards, including the markers. Ii is said that it was a novel sight to see the scorers and jndgeB rooBting on the target, during Mum- ford’s “double wabble” intervals. J. F. Ceosby and Mis3 H. F. Finch,of MoDuffie county,are married. Likewise Mr. Joseph Crenshaw, of Barnett and Miss Mary Love R033, of the same county. Yesterday was tho day in Savannah for renting the market stalls. The Harlem Columbian gives the Or dinary of its county a jostlo that will last him for some time. Thornton has the honor of first pin ning the Gubernatorial rose-bud up-, on our - distinguished lappek There is no rose without a Thorn. The LaGrange Reporter insinuates that a prominent paragrapher of the Consiitu* tion wears the blue ribbon as a temper* anco recruit from the tobaoco department. Having loved and lost our grip upon tbe comforting quid, wo are prepared to be lieve that the ribbon is worn as a signal of distress. Professor White, in Athens, gave the University boya a blowing up the other day. The Daily Banner says: While tho class in ohemistiy at the University yesterday was engaged in watohing the interesting experiments of Professor Whito in combining and ex ploding gases, a bottle filled with pure oxygen and ethane gas was shivered by the explosion and hurled In fragments over tho room. Several 'membeta of ths olaas were struck by piecoB of the bottle, but fortunately none wero seriously hurt. Masers. Camp, Howell, McRie and Wot. ton were the moBt damaged one?, beitig out about tho head and face, but not enough to. cause auy of them to lose a recitalicn. The bottle wad one that had boan frequently used in similar experi ments, and no one was more surprised at its bursting than Profc:3or White, who touched tho flame to the gas. The pieces flew in the opposite direction from the Professor. If thoy had gone towfitds hin}i he would most protr.bly have {been badly hurt. The noise of the - expulsion was deafening, and the eoarowa^ ono that will net soon ba forgotten. It fri a good deal larger than tbe hurt. >f- Talbctton Standard: We learn that a k dreadful fight oocurred in that distriot in Talfcot, known as Cracker’s Neck, on .Sunday morning between two young 'men, Robert Hancock and Nathan Isom. It seams that the men had fallen oat about something and got into a fight at .the time mentioned, when Hancock knocked l3om down with a huge rook, knooking all hia tseth down his throat, and after he. fell, Btruck him several time3 on the head with a huge rook. Isom was picked up for dead and carried home, where at last aacounts, he lay in a critioal.condition, and ere this is read he is no doubt dead, Drs. Bryan and Birdsong were summoned and took from his head numbers of pieces of his fractured skull. The rock with whioh the awful work was done was oovered with blood, hair and the brains of the unfortunate mm. Young Hancock was arrested on Sunday evening and turned over to a bailiff, from whom, we learn he has made his escape and fled the conn try He claimed Isom was lushing on him with a knife when he knooked him down, It is an urfortnnate affair and creates great sorrow in the community where it occurred as both the young men were clever, hard working boys and well con nected. A negro woman In Taiootton left her little girl In tho kitohen. There was a fire in the kitchen. The obild was abont tea years old. Swainsbobo Herald: Doctor Scoven left nt our offies last Wednesday a dry and well matured Mexioan squash 44 inches long, from 2j to 4 inches in diameter He said it growed on Mr. Jaoob Leicka’ place, on a vine that came from a seed direot from Mexico, He said .he bbw the vine last summer when it was in its most luxuriant state, and that it was im mense—running from 45 to 50 feet in every direction, bearing qnite a number of quashes, each Urge enough for a full mess for a large family. He also state* that he sat same of them and found them much sweeter and more delicious than any other species of squash he ever eat. The squash is now on exhibition at tbe Herald office, ar.d those wishing to see it are invited to call and take a look at it# Exchange : General Eii Warren, of Houston county, said he was the first man in Georgia who ever picked a hundred pounds of cotton in ono day. This oc curred about fifty years ago. Tee Chronicle and Constitutionalist is responible for the comment which fol lows the clipping given below. There ia a spice of revenge in tbe closing sentence whioh leads ns to believe that tho success of its Mayoralty ticket has not compen sated that paper for other disappoint ments. Thebe have been sixteen executions of females in England since Victoria’s ac cession to tho throne, and during the same period only one woman was hung in thi3 country,—Kew York Star. The Star Ia mistaken. We know of three women who have been hung in this country since the war, and Attere were doubtless other executions that es caped onr attention. Mrs. Surratt we3 hum in Washington City in 1865; Susan Eberhati was hung in Webster county, Georgia, in 1873 or 1874, for esaiating ber paramour to murder bis wife; and about the same time a colored women was hung in Elbert county, Georgia, fur poisoning her rive’. Of cour-e, welsare out of our list—for want of space—the names of women who ought to have been hung, bnt who wero not. For our- we think women have the same right to be hung aa men have, and we trnst the day will soon come when this right will be fully accorded them. The Sparta Ishmaehte says : We EoepecV any man’s fealty to Demo cratic principles who find* matter either of comfort or of rejoicing in Dr. Felton’s dennne ation, in a Radical paper, of .the party of which he professes to be a mem ber. There can be no sort of donbt of Dr. Felton’s right to give aid and com fort to tbs enemies of bis people, if ho *ees proper sc. to do. There can be no doubt of the taot that he has seen proper to do so; and that he has accomplished it with • great deal of Pharisaical self- complacency. Bnt we insist npon it that there is something of unmitigated mean, ness in a man’s stabbing the party of which be professes to bo a member, with a dspger borrow; d or stolen from the Radicals. No wonder the letter is comforting to the small boy of tbe Repuilvcaa. No wonder be feels satisfied with tbe lengths to whioh it goes, and hastens to discharge himself of a thanksgiving editorial on tho sub ject. If he will take himself by tbe ears and hold himself still long enough to get cool, he may possibly be wise enough to disoover that the ambitions parson has overdone the thing entirely. In getting into a rage and tearing his politioal shirt he exposes only his own unseemly bris tles. In endeavoring, Him like, to ex pose the Democracy to ths ribald jeers of the Jacobins, be ha* displayed his own uncomely and unkempt nakedness. An attempt was made by a young med ical student, to bribe the cemetery keeper in Atlanta, to eecnre the bedy of a young girl for dissection. Fortunately the bribe was refused. Savannah News: Between tbreo and four o'clock yesterday afterncoa quite a serious affray occurred at the Waihalta salooD, corner of Whitaker and Bryan streets. In the pool room attached to the saloon, a young man, whoBs name we understand is Cranston, had been noting in a disorderly mancer, and a3 he was under the influence of liquor, the bar keeper, Mr. Herter, promptly “fired him out.” Subsequently, whilst Mr. Herter was behind the counter, with his back turned, Cranston, who hud stepped into the place again, approaoh- ed aim quietly, with a billiard cue in his hand, and suddenly struck Herter on ths head with the heavy part of tbe cue, com pletely shivering it and knocking him to thefloor in a semi-unconscious state. The disturbance attracted tbe attention of Magistrate Russell, wheso office adjoins, and who with a couple of offioers has tened into the saloon to ascertain the oanse. An attempt wo3 made to arrest Cranston, but he showed resistance, and it was only after difficulty that he was se emed and carried over to the office, where he was placed nnder the oharge of Con stable White,' a wtfrrant meanwhile hav ing been issued. Daring tbe temporary absence of Magistrate Russell, the young man attempted to leave theplajp, when offi cer White told him he was a prisoner, and could not depart. The prisoner re plied, it is stated, that he. would cut the heart out of any 019 who interfered with him, and displayed an ugly knife as token of bia earnestness. He managed to get cut of tho office, and with knife iu hand endeavored to enter tho.Walhalla saloon again. Officer White followed him and a straggle ensued, which resulted in the discomfiture of Cranston, who rcoaived a severe blow on the head with a billy or olub in tbo hands of officer White, who waa compelled to defend himself aa the young man ap peared determined to ont him. Meanwhile a physician had been sum moned to attend to Mr. Herter, and in a short time Dr. Fernand arrived, and af ter an examination cf Herter’a head found that tbo billiard cue had cut the soalp to the bone, inflicting a very ugly, thoughriot necessarily fatal injury. He will, however, be confined to his room for a fortnight or more. After a good deal of wrangling, whioh colleated quito a crowd, Cranston was subjugated and allowed to wash tbe blood off his face. Ha was then put in a wagon and Bsnt to jail, where ho will be kept unlilan investigation can be bad. ■On8 of the most essential conditions of perfect health is perfect rest. This can be assured to the baby by judiciously using Dr. Ball’s Baby Syrup. Sold ev erywhere for 25 cents a bottle. Try it; keep trying it, and try it again. We say this because we believo that the health, happiness and prosperity of the people depend npon the proper use of these medicines, which have proved so successful in eradicating disease and de feating death. Tbe modioina is so effec tive in its cure of diseases ia the great Southern remedy, Simmons’ Liver Regu lator. Try it; we believe that tbe 'first trial will be satisfactory. F1SDIKG “GIRLS” IN THE RLE. UI. How a Missionary Obtained Free Board and Lodging- Amerioan Wesleyan.} An English town missionary, a short time ago, related a remarkable inoident. There was alodging house in hie district, which he had long desired to enter, but he was deterred from so doirg by his friend, who feared that his life would thereby be endangered. He became at length bo uneasy that he determined to risk all oonsequenccs, and try to gain ad mission. So one day he gave a somewhat timid kaookost the door, in response to which a coarse voice roared out, “Who’s there?” and at the eamo moment a vi rions looking woman opened tho door and ordered the man of God away. “Let him come in, and see who he is and what he wants,” growled ont the same voioe. The missionary walked in, and bowing polririy to the rongh-lcoking man whom he had jnst head speak, said: “I have been visiting most of the honses in this neighborhood to read with and talk to the people abont good things. I have passed yoar door es long as I feel I ought, for I wish also to talk with yon and your ledgere.” “Are you what is called a town mis sionary ?” “ I am, sir,” W23 the reply, “Well, then,” said the fieroe-looking man, “sit down and hear what I am go ing to say. I will aBk you a question out of the Bible. If you answer me right you may call at this house and pray and read with us and our lodgers as often as you like, bat if yon do not answer me right we will tear your clothes off your back and tamble you neck and heels into the street. Now what do yon say to that; for I am a man of my word?” The missionary was perplexed, bat at length quietly said: “I will take you.” “Well, then.’* said tho man, “here goes. Is the word girl ia any part of the Bible. If so, where oan it ba fonnd, and how often ? That ia my question.” “Well, sir, the word girl is in tbe Bible, bnt only once, and may be found in the words of the prophet Joel, iii., 3.. The words are x ‘And sold a girl for wine, that they might drink.’ ” “Well,” replied tbe mao, “I am dead beat; I am deadbeat;! durst to have have bet five ponnds_you could not have told.” “I cohld not have told yesterday,” said the visitor. “For several days I have been praying that the Lord would open a way into thi3 house, and this very morning, when reading the Scrip ture in my family, I was surprised to find the word girl, and go: the Concordance to see if it occurred again, and fonnd that it did not. And now, sir, I believed thst God did know, and does know, whet will come to pass, and surely His band is in this for my protection and your good.” The whole of the inmate a were greatly surprised, and the incident has been overruled to the conversion of the man, his wife and two.of the ledgers. Wbat Eminent St. Louis Physi cians Say: Ooldoris Liebig’s Liquid Extract of Bsef and Tonic Invigorator, is a very agreeable article of diet, and particularly useful when tonics are required, being tolerated when other forms or animal food ara rej sated. In Diptheria, Malarial Typhoid Fevers, and ev ery depressing disease its use will be atten ded with great advantage. W* have pre scribed it with success, and believe it to bs a most valuable remedy. J. H. Leslie, SI. X>., G. P. CJopp, M. D., 8. B. Persons, M. D., B. A. Vaughan, H. D., Drs- 8- L. and J. O. Nledlet, and others. Bold by John Ingalls, Macon. Thousands 0! persona have their eyes turned towards Wsll Street. That ia where thousands of dollars arc made daily from investments ranging from |50 to 9250. The reliable brokers, Aler. Prothingham A Co., 12 Wall street, New York, send their Financial Report free, whioh explains fully. VEGETINE —WILL CURE** SCROFULA, Scrofulous Humor. VKGZTiyE -will eradicate from tho system cry taint of Scrofula and Scrofulous Humor. It Ti»g permanently cured thousands in Boston and vicinity who had been long and painful sufferers* Cancer, Cancerous Humor. The marvellous effect of VECETEvE in case of Cancer and Cancerous Humor challenge* th8 most profound attention of the medical faculty* many of whom arc prescribing YlOWlH to their patients. Canker. Yegetece ha3 nwver failed to cure the mo*t Inflexible case of Canker. Mercurial Diseases. Tho TteBOB meets with "wonderful success In the cure of this class of diseases. Pain in the Bones. In this complaint the Veoetiae is tho great remedy, as it removes from the system the pro ducing cause. Salt Rheum. Tetter, Salt Kheum, Scald Head, &c., will «er. tainly yield to the great alterative effects of Vegexine. Erysipelas. Yegetixe has never failed to euro the most inveterate case of Erysipelas, Pimples and Humors on the Face. Eeason should teach us that a blotchy, rough »r pimpled skin depends entirely upon an Inter nal cause, and no outward application can evef cure tho defect. Yegetixe & the great blood puriffor. Tumors, Ulcers or Old Sores Are caused by an impure stato of tho blood. Cleanse tho blood thoroughly with Yegetixe, and these complaints will disappear. Catarrh. For this complaint tho only substantial benefit can be obtained through the blood. Yegetixe is tho great blood purifier. Constipation. Vegetixe does not act as a cathartic to do- biUtate tho bowels, but cleanses all the organs, enabling each to perform the functions devolv ing upon them. Piles. Vegetixe lias restored thousands to health who have been long and painful sufferers. Dyspepsia. If Vegetixe is taken regularly, according to directions, a certain and speedy cure will follow its use. Faintness at the Stomach. Yegetixe is not a stimulating hitters which creates a fictitious appetite, but a gentle tonic, which assists naturo to restore tho stomach to a healthy action. Female Weakness. Vegetixe acts directly upon the causes of these complaints. It invigorates and strength ens the whole system, acts upon tho secretive organs and allays inflammation. General Debility. In this complaint tho good effects of tho Yege- tiNE are realized immediately after commencing to tako it; as debility denotes deficiency of tho blood, and Vegetixe acts directly upon tho Hood* Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. VEGETINE . .Prepared by H . B. STEVENS. Boston, Mass. THE HOLMAN Fever and Ague, LITER AND STOBACI PAD. AND fJUEDICAIi ABSOKPTIVE . 51BODY andPOOT PIASTERS | THOBBURF’S FBESH GABDEN SEEDS. TTPON reeoipt of the amountwe willm. U applicants the following seocormb)— Jersey Wskotield Cabbage Superior Fl»t Dutch.. Kxtrm Early Kcvptisn Beet...... 1 “■““We Pure per dot. per i b Mm tot a AND ABSORPTION SAIT [F or Baths> Cure without mrdiciao. simply by Ahsotptlor. The best Liver, Btomach and Spleen Dcctor in the world. Facts for the Public Theitomachand I Liverare tbe sour ! ces of vigor and health if kept in a liealthv condition. Thero is no known remedy that will so promptly and effectually insure a healthy stomaoh sed liver, and so thoroughly fortify the syattmagsins t ths sudden chan ges of our climato ss the wonderful vitalising, health- giving Holman | Liver and Stom ach Pad. It i* also'a sure preventive of disease. Do not fail to try it. The Holman Liver and | Stomach Pad works by absorption. IS two-fold in its action—gives and takes. IT is honeit, effective, harmless. IT is marvelous iu its prompt and radical cure of every species of liver and stomach difficulties, tho scat of most all diseases. IT is worn over the vitals, liver and stomach. IT removes torpidity of the liver, gives tone to tho stomach, arresting fermentation and pa’u by giving it tho natural quantity of bile and gas tric Juicos. IT also vitalizes the entire system with Na ture’s true tonic. , XT arrests oil deteriorated and poisonous fluids in the stomach, and thus prevents their entering the syst.-m by way of circulation. XT abtorbs from the body every particle of | blood poison, whether bilious, malarial or medi cinal. and loaves tho wearer inperfect health. VfS WILL FOBFEIT S50 TO ANY MAN, VOM4N OH CHILD THU PAD PAILS TO loe Noopariel Csulillower S0c Georgia Collards - coo Scotch Kale 10c I-arge Plat Irfek...— 2oc American Gathering Lcttrcj... tie Whito Cabbsge Lettnoe coc White Portugal Onion Me Curled Parsley 10c French Breakfast lie Hound Sarey Sninnch xoc Salsify- 20c Descriptive priced catalogues uroa applicant to J SITHORBUBN *00. oct!4 6m 11 John xt-oet New York, IN IS n Vegetine and all other remedies advertised in this paper can ba had at decs ELLIS’DRUG STORB. THE GENUINE DR.C.MeLANE’S Celebrated American WoffiVi SPECIFIC ^ - OR VERMIFUGE, SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. T HE countenance is pale and lead en-eolored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pupils dilate; an azure semicircle Slips along tiie lower eye-lid; the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unuSual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vom iting.; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels irregular,;at times costive; stools slimy, not unfrequent- ly tinged with blood; belly swollen and-hard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompa nied by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and dis turbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but generally irritable, &c. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form; it is an innocent prepa ration, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. The genuine Dr. McLane’s Ver mifuge bears the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. —to:— •> DR, C. McLANE’S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy “for all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints^.Dyspepsia and Sick Head- Ague Cure Is a purely vogctablo bitter and powerful tonic, and is warranted a speedy and cer tain cure for Fever and Ague, Chill* and Fever, Intermittent or Chill Fover, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical or Bilious Fever, rad all malarial disorders. In miasmatic dis tricts, tho rapid pulse, catted tongue, thirst, lassitude, loss of appctitc<)>ain iu the lack and loins, aud coldness 3T the spine and extremities, aro only premoni tions of sovorcr symptoms wlucu termin ate in tho ague paroxysm, succeeded by high lever and prolusc perspiration. It ts a startling fact, that quinine, ar- . __ senio, and other poisonous minerals form OUBB*bp' , PEYBR" AND AGUE* TEW DAYS I tho basis of most of the “ Fever and Ague AFTER PUTTING IT ON—AND WORN AS I Preparations,” “Specifics,” “Syrups.” DIRECTED—UPON SATISFACTORY PROOF I and “ Tonics,” in tho market. Tbe nrew. OR OATHOP A RESPONSIBLE PHYSICIAN arations made from these mineral noisorA THAT THE WEARER HAS FEVER AND I aUhoughXey^UtaMe? ri.!d S break tho chili, do not cure, but leave th? malarial and their own drug poison f- tlio system, producing quinism, ilizzincMl ringing in tho cars, hcadacbo, vertigo. an< other disorders more formidable than tho disease they were intended to cure. Ayer’s Ague Cure thoroughly eradicates theso noxious poisons from tbo system, and always cures tho severest case*. It contains no quinine, mineral, or any thing that could injure tho most delicate pa. tient; and its crowning excellence, above its certainty to cure, is that it leaves rim system as free from disease as before the attack. j For Liver Complaints, Ayer’s Ago* Cure, by direct action on tbo liver and biliary apparatus, drives ont the poisons which produce theso complaints, and stimulates tho system to a vigorous, healthy condition. Wo warrant it when taken according to directions. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Practical and Analytical Chemists, •— Lowell, Mass. sots SY ALL SBUOSISTS ETSSTtnlEBX. Hunt’ Bank!*- Lamar Wholesale Agents. fehlS JVX^g^OJXr. G-A. New York Omca U W Paitoor I (152 Front street. - Special Partner. N Y. XI. PHA8EU OBANT. Comm Factor akd General CoMXinioa Merchant. No 73S Bat Sr. Savaitxxh. Ga. /"lOTTON, Rico and Naval Store*. Liberal »il- V ) vances mado on consignment*. Order* Mr Bice solicited and filled at lowest market price* rompt and personal attention given to all bn*i- os. A trial solicited. MpSIm REEDS, HABNESSES, FRAMES, RODS, HOOKS, PATENT WIPE HEDDLES For Cotton and Wooten Mills. MANUFACTURED BY D. 8. BRQ«, LOWELL, MASS. THAT THE WEARER HAS FEVER AND AGUE. IT is a fact incontestably proved in thonsands and thousands of cases that tho HOLMAN LIVE Sand STOMAOH PAD will do all that is claimed for it. It will cure Fever and Ague. Bihou9 Disorders, Liver complaints Intermittent Fever, Periodical Headaches. Dysp psi», Agno Cake, Chill Fever, Dumb Ague. Bilious Fever, Jaundice, Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble?, Irregular action of the Heart, Rheumatism, all kinds of Female Weakness, Sick Headache, Lumbago, Sciatica, Pain in side, back, stomach, shoulders and muscles. Bilious Colic, Bilious Diarrhea, etc. For safety, convenience and effectiveness, it commends itself to every houiehold. From Br. Lovlc Pierce, Father of Bishop Pi-rco, who ia known *11 over j tho United States. Macox, Ga, June IS, 1877. Holman Liver Pad Co: Gentlemen—I put on the Fad two weeks a,o to-night, and can say now thatl am fully per suaded of its just claims to all its converts havo said in its favor. How tho future will bo I am unable to say. For tho first live days the effect | was so decided as to make ms doubt my own ezperienoe. I suppose I have opened a market for a half dozen mere to-day just for my opinior. I think my Pad is working wonderfully, consid ering I am in my nicety-third year, and my de- racgemintof ten years hold on me. Respectfully, LOVIO PIERCB. PARTICULAR NOTIBE.—Invalids at a dis- tance by writing to us a full description of their ease will receive the samo considerate attention as if they werepresent in our office. All infor. mation and consultation GRATIS. Send for Dr Fairchild’s famons lecture, “Nature’s laws,” mailed free uron application. DESCBIPIIYEPBICK LIST. REGULAR PAD—J?, incipient disease of tho Stomach and Liver, first stages Chills ana Fever, etc. SPECIAL PAD—53; Chronic, Liver and Stom ach Disorders of every form; alto Mala ria, Biliousness, etc. XXX PAD OR SPLEEN BELT-51, is intended to covor Stomach. Liver and Spleen and is a sovereign remedy for enlarged Spleen and obstinate constipation. INFANT PAD—$i CO; preventive and cure of Cholera Infantum, Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever, summer complaints. BODY PLA8TKBS-50C. FOOT PLASTERS, psir 50c. ABSORPTION SALTS—box 25r; 6 boxes 5160. Address HOLMAN LIVER PAD Office. SMYTH &~GO„ Agents, 67 Wbitchall.street ATLANTA, GA, , 100 Broughton street. SAVANNAH, GA. I NB.—Cat this outforlnturo reference. nov22dthsnn wtf StIHsSsi ff$!j!*s5g ta i co-od- 2 b &srv * B B ; * ft g; a u 5^ S W If 51 *=> ' »IPji * B® -™*itn II illfSm Signature is on every bottle of the GINUIM WOBGESTHBSHIRE SAUOE. It imparts tho most ddicious taste and sett to SOUPS. GRAVIES, ! FISH, ! HOT COLD EXTRACT of a LETTER a MEDICAL GIF- TLB MAN at Hr dras to hi* bnUm VOKWIMk May, 1851. . Tell LEAAPK- Iriks that thw ISauce ii big! J e»- ,Jteemed in i*U, JOINTS. |ablo u well a* the ^ fbokW’ i GAME, A a. '^ii-^’Eaucothatiimi*. Sold and used thronghont the werld. TRAVELERS AND TOURISTS FIND GREAT BENEFIT IN HAYING A BOTTLE WITH THEM. JOHN DUN CAN”! : *-• CMLorMI t&J&Ssgt febt51awly NKWYOEE. I have now on hand the fineststockof COFFINS AND CASKETS CASKETS, For which I am SOLE AGENT in Macon. Iam also prepared to f ornish Hearse and Carriages, for Funerals at very reduced prices. Personal I attention given to all orders. Arthur L. Wood. NEXT TO LANIER HOUSE. doy23 2tawlm Macon.Ga, CHINA PAINTING. ache, or diseases of that character, they j -jtyrisg WILLY, at the residence of Dr.O. H. stand without a rival* I JjlL I John Clark Jr., & AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used prepar atory to, or after taking Quinine. - As a simple purgative they are un equaled. , BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red -wax seal on the lid, with the impression Dr. McLane’s Liver Pills. Each crapper bears the signatures of C. McL^nr and Fleming Bros. Insist upon having the genuine Dp C. McLane’s Liver Pills, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of tbe name AIcLane, spelled differently but same pronunciation. Hall, will give instruction in tho beautiful artof“Oh'naDeeoration” to ary persona who may desire to leam. Her stay in Macon ia lim ited. nor!9 sat tue.? >t Best SIX CORD Lanest Stoct Id tFe City. HAND OR MACHINE SE WI WO. FOE SALE BY | J. C, Bannon & Co tepSO tf FIRST NATIONAL BANK, MACON, 6A. I BANK OF DEPOSIT. DISGGUKT AND EXCHAKSi fTlHB beat and cheapest fuel in the market, X poeseniig tbe good qialitie* of both bar! and softcoal without thecis&drantages of either. - The splendid stock ef choice Perfumery erhlb ted bymelast week at the State Fair and which I received the premium, is now for sale my j Offlcei HOUR—9 3, m. tO 1 p. J Drugstore. Those in need of anything in this hue can >«• cure bargains by calling on me. NO SMOKE, NO SOOT, qVICK SMT, -- MEAT! ASH, —U»ei by tbe beat cook* for— BB0IUN6,- BOASTING. - BAKINS, u STS WINS. Can be bad at the Ga* Work* In any tun ties at little ooat. A B BOA BOHAN. Jos. Scemonelii, MERCHANT TAILOR. Fine suit* made to order and fit* gnaran . No J Brown Hou*e, Macon, Ga.; tndKB BOL AKD B. HALL, DruggiBt, Oct5tt 17 COTTON AYENUB Pools & Stewart. Practical Honse and Siorn Painters. IN ALL 1TB BRANCHES. I GRAINING, GILDING, GLAZING, PAPKB-HANGING, KALSOKINING, FBAMK GILDING, AND WOODS AND MARBLES IMITATED. JAPANING A SPECIALTY. Fourth Street, (Between Poplar and Chcirv itreeta.) Macon G* W W WRIGL1T, Cashier, ianllpd Wanted. Sherman A Co, Mamba!!. Mich, wart an went I in this county at once a a silary of 1100 per month and expenses paid. Fcr full particular* ddre*a as above. novis dawiy m. greenbehgT Merchant Tailor. Damour’s Block, Second Sf*. Macon, 6a, SUITS MADE TO ORDER CHSAPKB THAN ANI OTHER merchant tailor in tho itate: also cheater tha New York price*. AUIask is an eiam:r.at:oa rad you wifi be convinced, A perfect nit K B,r * anteed *ep»i »a