The Quitman reporter. (Quitman, Ga.) 1874-18??, January 13, 1876, Image 1

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VOL. I I The Quitman Reporter IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY HALL Al McINTOSII. TERMS: One Year $2 00 Six Months 1 00 Three Months fiO All subscriptions must be paid invariably in advance no discrimination in favor of anybody. The paper will be stopped in all instances at the expiration o f ‘ die time paid for, unless inbscriptions are previously renewed. RATES OF ADVERTISING. Advertisements ins rb and at the lv.to of SI.OO per square -one inch for first inser tion. and 75 cents for each subsequent in sertion. All advertisements should be marie 1 for a specified time, otherwise they will be charged under the rule of so much lor tl\ first insertion, and so much for each subsi rpient insertion. Marriages, Obituaries and Tributes of lb speet will be charged same rates as ordinary ! advertisements. A liberal discount will be allowed merchants for yearly advert e emeuts. I VJIEX BILLS A I!E DUE. All bills for advertisin-'; in this paper are due on the first upp- crane" of the adw H jv ment, except v.iim otlmrwi.ee arranged by contract, and will be. present ' when tie money is needed. Tlio Lawrence 'Cotton Jlillw. Apropos of the recent important j announcement .of < 1 1< • propo&G re duction of the wuero/t of tile employes of the Pacific Mills in Ijawrenee, a i correspondent of the Herald furnishes florae interesting facts and figures going to show the necessity of such a move. The matter becomes of unu sual interest when it. is realized that- j within the walls of this vast establish ment nearly one-sixth of the ’popula tion of Lawrence finds emplovuieix while it would be difficult to ealciilan the many interests whose sources of vitality radiate from the wealth and industry afforded by this mammoth corporation. More than s,(KK)jcm ployos alone draw upon the resources of the corporation at th ■ rate 000 per day often hours. During the i present financial depression Layrence lias*!well favored in a great* r meas ure than most New England manu facturing cities. The Atlantic Mills nn.l .'ij.-h-Aii . :.n for u'i’ew ‘V, eel..-; last summer, but with this exception all of the cotton manufactories have rim on full time, wi&out-reduetioii of! ’help, aud with but slight reduction of pay in one or two instances. "With out doubt this activity in manufact uring has been largely due to the de cided stand taken by the Pacific Mills, which has not only kept wages and product up, but has also built anew mill, giving employment to six Inin- j dred additional hands, and has on- j larged the capacity of several of its buildings. The .schedule for reduc tion has not. been made known, but it is said that the rate will be about ten per cent., beginning, probably, on the next monthly pay day. it is learned from good authority that nearly the j entire $250,000 or more earned du-j ring the past six months by the Pa- j and which allows the usu-! at ten per cent, dividends, was earned i in the first four of the six mouths, | and that the mills during the past two months have barely cleared run ning expenses. The shrinkage in the price of goods in the past three j months lias been fully twelve per ; cent. An Him; to Mii.i.ions That Hi: CKn hot Touch. Probi bly the w< altbiest young man in this city is Joshua Montgomery Sears, son cl the late ."Joshua Sears, who died ]• ebrunry 7, 1857, leaving his son heir to his large estate. The heir reached his majority on Christinas, but by the terms of the will, which left the property in trust, lio now receives but. a small fraction of the estate. The elder, Sears left property to the estimated • valno’of $1,500,000, Alpbeus Ilurduy, j Horatio Harris and Hugh Moutgoin-, cry being named in the will as trus tees. Under their management the property lias increased in v alue until it amounts, according to the asses sors’returns of may, 1875, to $1,020,- 400 in real estate in Poston, in addi tion to investments in mortgages, etc., of a like value. Young Hears is at present a student in Yale, and lias been educated under the guardian ship of the Hon. Alphous Hardy. He is a young man of intelligence, and is said to be poscssed of many of the characteristics of his father. By the terms of the will the son was to re ceive. $50,000 when lie was 21, SI,OOO annually from that age to 25, SO,OOO annually from 25 to iiO, and 810,000 per year subsequently. There seems to be no provision in the will thajfc receive other J’anEhio above, save in thenWRWT his education. Who will inherit this vast property in the event of the soil’s d< eoiißO is a (pies-. tion of the courts. —Boston Herald. The Missouri State Lottery long maintained itself ns a legalized busi ness, because it. had a contract with the State in which it agreed to de vote a percentage of its receipts to certain public purposes. This theory has been overthrown bv a trial, and the police of St. Louis have been or dered to stop the sale of tickets in that city. Incidentally it was shown that the lottery made a clear profit of SO,OOO a mouth. 0 : i~ 4 y x An Irish’DueHst. Pat Power, of Dnragle, was a fat ro bust man, much distinguished for his interwerand, and generally seen with a glowing red face. He on one occa sion fought with a fire-eating com panion named Bill Briscoe. When taking aim at him ho said lio still had a friendship for him, and would show it. So ho only shot off his whisker and top of his ear. When traveling in England Power had many encounters with persons who were attracted by his brogue and clumsy appearance. On one occasion a group of gentlemen were sitting in a box at one end of a coffee-room when | lie entered at the other. The repre j sentative of Irish manners at this time lon the English stage was a tissue of ignorance, blunders, and absurdities; ! and when a real Irishman appears off the stage ho was always supposed to ; have the characteristics of liis class, and to be a fair butt for ridicule, i When Power took his seat in one of i t ho boxes the waiter came to him with i a gold watch with a gentleman's i compliments, and a request to know what o’clock it was by it. Power took the watch, and then directed the waiter to let him know the person who sent it. He pointed out one of (he group. Power rang the bell for his servant, and directed him to bring his pistols and follow him. He put them under his arm, and with the; watch in his hand walked up to the ; box; presenting' the watch, lie begged to know to whom it belonged. "When no one was willing to own it, he drew j his own silver one from his fob, and j presenting it to his servant desired him to keep it; and putting up tlio j gold one, he gave his name and ad dress, and assured the company ho i would keep it safely till called for. It was never elained. On another occasion ho ordered ■supper, and while waiting for it ho lend the newspapers. After some time the waiter laid two covered dish es oil the table; and when Power ex- : arniued their contents he found they I were two dishes of smoking potatoes. He asked the waiter to whom he was i iiidelted for such a good fare, and lie pointed to two gentlemen in the op posite, box. Power desired his servant to attend him, and directing him in Irish what to do, quietly made his supper off the potatoes, to the great .amnscniciit -, fll • ViigKehcu';]. Pro::- eutly his servant appeared with two 1 more covered dishes, one of which he j laid down before his master, and the other before the person jn the box. : When the covers were removed there! was a loaded pistol in each. -Power ' took up his and docket it, telling one I of the other to take up the second, j assuring him “they were at a very j proper distance for a close shot, and; if one fell he wus ready to give satis- j faction to the other.” The parties; immediately rushed out, without! waiting for a second invitation, and with them several persons in the ad-! joining box. An they were all in too j great a hurry (o pay tlieir reckoning, j Power paid it for them along with his I own. The lliir-lJirids’ Uooil Fortune. London, December 11. — It is not ! often that a pretty bar-maid falls in- j to a fortune of 4180,000., as a very pretty bar-maid at the Harp, Jerniyn street, lias just done;but then probu-! bly few pretty bar-maids deserve sucii I luck as well as this one did. Tluvc , vears ago a very well known man was ; Mr. Ti.omn,; Alexander Mitchell, member of parliament Brideport, and senior member of the firm of Mitch ell A Cos., of Loudon and Riga. He had represented Brideport for thirty years. His business was extremely ! profitable; he had accumulated a for-; tune of about .£250,000. He was; however, in the habit of drinking a great deal, and ho liked best to do , his drinking at tiro Harp, Jenriyn | street, where he was served by the pretty Miss Helen. In 1872 to the . surprise and amazement of all his ac-: quaiutauces, he walked <;ii with Miss; Helen ono morning and married her. ! She made him an excellent wife, and to a great extent cured him of Lis in temperate passion for drink. Last | March, however, Mr. Mitchell was Li ken ill anil died. A few days before his death he made a will by which lie I left £BO,OOO to his wife; gave legacies j of a £I,OOO each to his old servants and acquaintances, provided an annu ity of £IOO a year for some old ladies, his cousins; aud left another £BO,OOO in the firm of which he was the lead ing partner, on condition that it should remain for 25 years, and that, then his wife should have one-half of it, while the other half should be re tained by the firm. The rest of his property —that is, about £75,000 — he bequeathed to tlio Metropolitan j Board of Works, leaving them to do j what they like with it. Mr. Mitch j ell’s relations were greatly displeased I when they learned of this will, and J they resolved to dispute it. Tlioir ! grounds of dispute wterc that the will | was not properly executed,‘that it I had been obtained by undue influ ' cnee, and that the testator was not of | sound mind when lie made it. The I case has just been tried in the pf>- j bate division of the high court, and tlio will has been sustained —it being shown that the pleas setup by the relations were wholly aud absurdly false. So the young widow gets her £8 JOuO down, and £IO,OOO more in expectancy; while the board of works comes iu for its £75,000 or £BO,OOO. (JUITMAN, <iA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 1:1. IS7. Jlunler. Information was brought to town on Thursday of a negro having been found dead on tlio roadside, a few miles from town. A jury was sum moned, who hastened to the scene of the tragedy, which was iu a lano on the plantation of Air. K. McKinnon, about eight miles from town on the rroupville road. The body was that of a stout negro man, giwgrr bread color, about 25 or ; 80 years of age, named Elbert Tliom ! son. M.o was lying on his back iu a j deep ditch on the right side of the llano, opposite some negro quarters and 1 or 8 hundred yards beyond the residence of Mr. McKinnon. A deep j cut or stab was found in his left, breast, which, after making a thor ough examination, l)r. Hopkins pro nounced the cause of his death, the j knife having penetrated the heart. Tlio facts, as wo gathered thorn, from one or two witnesses w re briefly I as follows: Elbert Thompson went to Florida a week ago to get a place with a view jof moving. 110 left his family at a 1 Mr. Woods, ten miles below Quitman, and secured tlio services of two v;.,ite men to come back and move his things. Late nu the evening of the sth, Elbert was Keen driving a wagon, in which wore two white men. -The team consisted of two old cream or mouse colored mules. Subsequently, about Ban ilou'-i tW wagon was sum, tiy a colored woman standing iu the i road near tho sceiK) of tho murder. Tho colored woman, Amnio Tillman, while i aasing by was stopped by ono of (he white men, and asked some questions in relation to the colored mini. Elbert, who lived iu one oi" the shanties. The woman was unac quainted with any of the parties. The negro and one of tho white men, the taller of the two, wore quarrelling about moving the things. Tho white men having boon disappointed in there being so few things to move. Tlio woman noticed only a table and stool iu tho wagon. The negro be came very angry and refused to let. the things be moved, at the same time cursing the white men. using very opprobrious language. A tight en sued and the woman becoming 1 frightened ran off", as she left heard some blows struck, and on : looking back, saw a man in tho road. This was thought', by the jury to Inn*' bel li the negro, Libert, u i'lO after re ceiving' the wound, walked or ran about thirty steps and fell, rolling in ' the ditch as described. liis hat and knife were found a short distance be yond the bodv. The were last seen oh tho road to B istou. They are described as a se.nt aUt,„i; ny uian with dark thin moustache and llorid complexion, and a tall slim young! man with no heard. The chunkei man was drunk. Their names were not ascertained. Tho jury found a : verdict in accordance with the above facts. Thome rdic. Timer. The Suu a Bubble. Sir AY. Hcrschell regarded the sun as a large, solid, opaque globe, sur rounded with aluminous atmosphere, aud most probably habitable. His soil, Sir John Hcrschell, went even ; farther, and considering the huge I ihikes of the sun as living organisms. | prefored to believe that wo derive tho j whole of our light and heat from the j life that is iu tho sun. But the latter • discoveries, and cspecia.ly tho obser-j rations with the spectroscope, have 1 definitely settled tho question. Thu I sun must be a huge mass of molten j matter, at a heat of which we can | form no adequate idea. Iron and all j other substances with which wo are I acquainted coukl exist there only ill a' state of vapor. Besides litis, the sur i face of the sun is exposed to such con-! vulsivo explosions as arc perfectly iu- j conceivable to ns. Professor Young, j of Dartmouth, was once observing a ! cloud-lay*•)' on tho sun’s surface about 400,000 miles long and 50,000 miles j high. Chancing to leave, ho return- j ed in a few minutes, and to his sur- j prise found the cloud completely shattered by an explosion from be-1 ucath. A rounded cloud, before visi ble immediately beneath, had been changed in shape us though an ex plosion had taken place through it, and all that remained of tlio large cloud was a stream of ascending frag ments, each about three thousand miles long by three hundred broad. They Hew up at the rate of five hun dred miles a second, and before cool ing and beginning to return attained ; a height of more than two hundred ; miles, lie now concluded that there could be no explosion where there was no repression. As there were manifestly terrific explosions, lie judged that tlie interior of the suu was filled with burning gases, and the crust slowly cooling caused tremen dous compression and consequently explosions. The explanation whicii scums most probable to the author is that the clouds are really clouds of vaporous methods, and the condensa tion of this produces rains of molten metal which floats over the sun like a sea. This naturally acts as a repres sive force, and various gases generat ed underneath cause the explosions, while tlio sun spots and other distur bances are caused probably by the falling to the suu of large meteoric bodies. — l’rodur. The simplicity of the Sioux maiden is something wonderful. She runs away in the greatest confusion upon an opera glass being levelled at her thinking Unit it renders her clothing diaphanous. —Boston Bud. lira Wc Don’t Want to .Ucct. The mail who grunts and gasps as ho gobbles up tho soup, and at every other mouthful seems threatened with a choking fit. The man who, having by accident been onco thrown in your company, makes bold to bawl your name out, and to shako your hand profusely when you pass him in the street. The man who artfnlh" -provokes you to play a game of billiards with j him, and though he feigns to he a | novice, produces his own chalk. Tho man who can’t sit at your table on any set occasion without get | ting on his legs to propose some stu ; pid toast. The man why., thinking you are I musical, bores you with his notions !on the music of the future, of which j you know as little as the music of the i spheres. Tlio man who weais a whit" hat in ; winter and . ’ ml; a pipe when walk ing, and accosts you as “old fellow,” just ns you are hoj a ■ to make a good ; impression on sour’ ■■ '.l-dressed lady | friends. The man who, knowing that your doctor faces him at the table, turns tho talk: so as to set him talking “and c tor shop.” . Th in" n v, ! ■ W 1 V hi: ■, win .a.if 'l'i^B"a b.. * :ir- L'v. la’ a ; you by t.tu> btrt ton-hole 1 nil rou a’bad joke. The man who, sitting just behind you at tho opera, and troys half your j enjoyment by tlie humming of tho air. Thu man who makes remarks on j your personal adornment, asks you j where you buy your waistcoats, and | what you paid for your dress boots. The man who lards his talk with little scraps of French and German 1 after his return from a Continental fimr. In discussing a communication on the subject of negro emigration, the Columbus Times says: Who are the negro emigrants now leaving Georgia for the west? Are they the vagrant and plundering class who are a pest wherever they may be? If so, joy for our deliverance should overcome sorrow for the niis (Rrtmio of those who have to receive them. But we believe that it will be found that at least four-iiflhs of ne grocM now going VA st are of tho la i.'.ving class, arid ik"/'. many who ur. left behind are tho very sort that would benefit Georgia by emigration. Thus vve lose the working negroes, but retain tho idle and vicious. Is not. this bo? As to the vagrant, and thieving Gass of negroes of which our correspondent makes such heavy and just complaint,, Lie -.-. ill h.w.lly find any dissent from liis views by honest peo ple. \Yu have “cried out and spared not” for the ridding of tho country from this class. AYo make no objec tion to their emigration, but would rather see them in the chain-gangs for life. Lot tlio laws against this class be rigidly enforced; if they tiro not now .stringent enough, let them be made so without delay. AYhat we need is the elimination of this dishonest and vagrant class of people from !he com munity. If other communities can make them profitable, good. But they havo had a sufficient trial iu Georgia and Alabama, and wo find thorn in the main incubus anil obstacles to our prosperity. Lot tlioni go, aud our farmers will then havo a fairer chance to work out the problem of negro la bor iu; an auxiliary iu the Restoration of (lie prosperity of the South. Sin: Meant Business. —They have some queer girls over iu Colorado. One of them who resides in the Cache la Boiulre Valley, has been receiving the attentions of a young mail for about a year,.but, becoming impa tient at liis failure to bring matters to a crisis, she resolved to ascertain his intentions. AYheit ho next called she took him gently by the ear, led him to a seat, and said: “Nobby, you’ve bill foolin’ ’round this claim fur mighty near a year, an’ hev never yit shot off yer mouth on the liiavryin’ biz. Ivu cottoned to yer on tlie square clean through, and hev stood off every other galoot that has tried ter chip in; nu’ now I want yer tu come down In business or leave, the raiiCiie. i.l yer oil the ui.iiiy m. want a pul'd thet’ll stick rite to yo till yo pass in yer checks an’ the good land ealls yo over the range, jisl squeal an’we’ll hitch; but cl that ain’t yer game, draw out ail’ give soiuo other feller a show lur lus pile. Now sing yer song or skip out. ’ lie sang.— Laramie San. Christopher Vail Slylce, of ('lr.rk villo, N. Yfi, shot and killed his daughter Emma at 1 o’ocloek Satur day morning. He claims the shoot ing was accidental, lie was firing a centennial salute, and pointed the gun in the direction of the room where his daughter was sitting. \an Slyke was arrested. A western correspondent has inter viewed young Joe Smith, son of the moruion prophet. Young Joe is de scribed as broad shouldered, good looking, and forty three. He is op posed to polygamy, but says the mor mons of l'tail will not give it up with out a fight. A mother took her baby out riding on a cold day in Rochester, N. A., and smothered it to death in her mis guided effort to keep it warm. Tin* Kye. Tlio eye shows character. The eye of great warriors have almost al ways been gray, their brows lowering j like thunder-clouds. | Inventors have largo eyes, very : full. .Philosophers, tho most industri >ms, havo had large and deop-set ' eyhs. i Tho poets all have largo, full oves. | The musicians’ eyes lire largo aud I'lustri ms. Pillion considers licit the most ! beautiful eyes arc the black and the j blue. Byron says the gazelle will weep at I the sound of music. Tho gazell’s j eyes have been called the most beau tiful 3n th, world, and the greatest compliment an Arab can pay his niisfics., is to compare her eyes dh j a gazcll’s. Cleopatra had black ev< **. Alary, Queen of Scot-,' had liquid j gray eyes. j Dari: eyev show power, light eyes g-e/ideiie.e.x, aud gray eyes sweet ! ness. There is great Magnetic power in the eyes of oine of the lower animals ! Theiijn s, (h. , g-vr ; and [’ m • erpciit’s ei i .< ...v all magnetic. w O I 1 A.i’iig I’acliiva: i and Forward. Having passed Christinas day, says the Baltimore Sun, and looking for ward to the new year and back at the i year gone, it cannot be said other wise than that we have very much to bo thankful for. AYo havo passed through probably one of the most | trying years, financially, that this: country lias over seen. AYo believe ! j that though tho process lias been ; painful it lias been salutary, and will ■ serve ns a means to restrain the cx-! travagaiice of speculation and bring • us down to tlie more sober, real and healthy modes of life that existed be-; fore the war. Tho American Grocer j on this subject says: “Having touch- I ed bottom or thereabouts, with heavy i crops, with the real wealth of tho | country continually augmenting, willi our exports increasing and the mar- i ketsof the world opening lo our iu-; dustrics growing loss and loss—is it extravagant to hope that a prosper-1 ous future, a time such as wo have: never yet ••■■, •••••i i from the iulluenccs of tlio hour, is j this not enough to make Christmas ! happy and the new year one of hope and promise ?” Auvirn !f> Gir!A , AA"e bog all the girls in the land to ' read the following sensible thoughts ; from an exchange: “Men who arc worth having, want women for wives. A bnndlo of gew gaws, bound with a string of and ips quavers, sprinkled with cologne and sot in a carmine saucer --this is no help for a man who expects to raise a 1 family of boys on bread and meat. The piano and lace frames are good ■ in their places, and so arc the fi i!i>j and tiuses; but you cannot make a dinner of the former, nor a hod blanket of the latter; and awful as such an idea may seem to you, both tho dinner and tho bed-blankets arc necessary to domestic happiness. Life has its realities as well as fan cies but you make all decoration, re membering the tassels and the cur-j tains, but forgetting tho bcil-stcaffs. I Suppose a man of good sense and ; prospects to he looking for a wife j what chances would you havo? You may catch him or you may trip him, i but how union better to make it an : object for him to catch you. Ken- j dor yourself worth catching, and you ! will not need a shrewd mother or I brother to help you find a market.” Pm;m-up Ri ei'ii, or the Scecif. Re sl’mition Act. The Richmond 11 h i<j j says: “We have it from high author- j ily that the Chairman of the commit- j tec on Banking, the Hen. S. H. Cox, I of New Yolk, will at an early day re- ] port a bill proposing the repeal of I lie ! specie resumption act, though affirm ing the principle without fixing the j date (this wilt bo judicious). The | proposition will be ma le, it is assert ed, in the intei'eat of harmony and reconciliation of ihc Eastern and Western Democracy. Tho previous question will bo called, debate cutoff", j and the same tactics under which the Senate resumption act was carried} through the House last January will ; bo observed in sending the adverse I bill hack to the Senate. Tho move- 1 mout too, we are assured, will be sol- j idly in the interest of legal tenders, j and not iu favor of national batik i notes.” A Novel/ Conden e;. —Moonlight night -shady grove--two lovers - eternal fidelity young lady rich young man poor great obstacle young mail proud very handsome very smart sure to make aforlunc— young lady’s father angry—won’t' consent—mother intercedes- no go -- rich rival very ug'ft -very hard hearted -lovers in a bad lix --won’t part—die first. — moonlight again iiight -pursuit—too late- - marriage —old man in a rage -won’t forgiv# them—disown them- -old man gt/s sick sends for his daughter - all Jr- . give—all made up old man die tin' young couple gets all tho lu/iey j -live iu the mansion—quite coi/ort ublo have lots of young outs -ynuch happiness. J l Atlvoi’li .('incuts. W. E. BARNES, PRACTICAL JEWELER a t J AND DEALER IN 15‘W e.L( K’KS, GOBI) AND SILVER CHAINS, LADIES’ SETS NECKIOv KS, Ge.'iO TOOTH PICKS, PENCILS, 4 STUD BUTTONS, WATCH KEYS, EYE GLASSES, j 81L,V EII W A 11E, CASTORS. *' ICE PITCHERS, •SAT! I’l * PITCH KBS. BUTTER DISHES, CITS A GOBLETS, VASES, KNIVES A FORKS, SALT CELLARS, Ac., ' ffns just received liis Full and AVimi r Stock, embracing everythin" to bo found in a I irst-t ’lass !fe weiry E. !ablishin- id. i 1 lmve a general assortment of Pistols, Cartridges, Game Bags Rliot Belts, I Powder flasks, Aumnitiou, Ac., at prices cheaper than ever offered in this : market before. On \\ illdios, ( !fids, rlo\v( lry, (J tins aiul 1\ -(. '.i done with neatness and dispatch, and satisfaction guaranteed. Quitman, (la., ►September 7th, 1875. \\. E. BA EXES. 3 in 1 SLICK COii WaTIT Manufacturing Association! Having reliiited their Mill with 11 * ■. in .o’hi;.. ry, an. now ready to manufacture wool into Jeans and Plains iur ('ash or on shares. t" -41 1 ii.”- iI j ? o’m „ ® liee tiai £>>4, 1 >s11• *>’S4 * < 'oi!k>n ATrs.iS'iif^u E'hiii ii In’ * lu’saa’ia Hope suicl Twine cilit L ioi' Mi!fi nlt i*c*arsoiinl >lt' ] >i*ices. All freight on Wo 1 sent over the A. A G. R. R. tt bo carJctl will bo paid here, and added to cost ot carding. Good!! ExiMiigcd for fotou or Woo!. W Dealers art' n‘sj>ctfully invited to cell and examine our poods. SjCS- Wool Carded at 10 cents per Round. ?i , BRIGGS, IPItIkSIDENT. 'i ' ’ WHOLESALE M A.CON, G A. C V>i s ie 3.8a< o oii ? 'Floni*, I'lny, € i Tic®, 5% Cdoilcc, Ud yn 1 1 ><, i: , O' -ii. fi 7 Tobacco, ( ETC., FTC., ETC. TERMS C.A.SIII! Bcptio.tr. w. ,V. rntSHTRE. FURNITURE. |Q. H; MILLER, A S t., SUCCESSOR TO :-C S. AIILLEH, 105) and 171 stvootr, SAVANNAH, CJA. ('HEAPFOR CASK NO CIiEDFI. iilaujifaduits Sofas, Matlrassos, Xcio Sly leu Furniture always on hand and arriving. Particular attention given to packing k'oods. Cash orders or orders through Fac tors solicited and given immediate attention. GOLD AND SIGN illl WATCHES, GOLD KINGS, L< X’KETS, BRACELETS, GOLD BENS, SLEEVE Bl’TTi>¥S, HANDKERCHIEF KINGS, GOLD SPECTACLES, WALKING CANES, j \\ r would inform the citizens of Sonth vT west Georgia that wc havo opened in ! Savannah a first class News Depot —AND— Lite ra ry Emporium, And will always keep a supply of the beat and latest Newspapers, Magazines, Novels, Are., both Domestic and Foreign. Subscription received for any paper in America. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention. Address, JAS. A. DOYLE A BRO., [27-GuiJ *■' ’ nub, Ga. No. 4b.