The Quitman reporter. (Quitman, Ga.) 1874-18??, January 20, 1876, Image 1

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VOL. II 'The Quitman Reporter IS PTTBT.IRIIED VVERY THURSDAY BY T. A. 2 5 ALL, Proprietor. Ono Yoar 00 Six Months. 1 ( ! Three Months 50 AllsuK o?lptions must ho p;iid inwmahly in advance no discrimination in favor of anybody. The paper will ho stopped in all instances nt the expiration (>♦’ rhe time paid for, unless iunseriptiona are previously renewed. ItATES OF ADVERTISING. Advert is 1 1 a sits is 1 :•! E- r ' ■ ■ *' 81.00 per Nipvuv o’, i11 <•!t or lir in • tion, aiul 75 cents for each i .ih’< pm and in sertion. All advertisements should !>•* marln-d for n. speeife-d time. < >t hr ' ; th • w•.! 1- charged under tin ru! ■ r • u. •• h t first iii-vrtion, and so muvh for >a -h suo - quout. insert ion. MarriieOhimaries nd Trihuh of Th speet will he charged .sane- rates ordinary advert issue nts. ;s?s- A liberal discount will h ■ allowed merchants for yearly a lvertis* ments. WHEN BILLS .t RE DUE. All bills for :e'fv. rFsins iu th: ; ]'*ap,-r m:-.* duo on the first appearsimo o! - sit ■ advert i: ment, exc ,s .. ■• m otlno a si iou .and 1 contrast, ami will h • p:vs. and viu-n tin: money is needed. How :i Johnny Hell sot out of (’amp Dons? ass. In conversation tin other day with a merchant of this city, who, during the war, was a member of the iisitnoi-- tal Stonewall brigade, he told llie bil lowing, of which ho was an eye wit ness: In April, 1864, lie was one union ■ the hire. muni, r of ( • ■;: derate prisoners confined al. Gamp Dougho prison, the commandant ol wineli we 001. B. J. Sve • t, a Kind-lie,ir: and offi cor and a Into gentlemen. When the news of the assassin.;:ion of t'i •side,it liincoln was received, the i’.._r lowered to half mast as a linn ' m r< Hiinct; but owin;:' (o the greet licu'lff of the staff, the banner, which was of the largest rixe, was blown so 1 oat that there was imimi: sin.::..; eof the lanyard giving way, win u it would come, down vath a run. To obviate thin it wit* iff ■'.•i-i..iinod_ to send a a ; s \ o i to: t 1 and remove the pe.a.y, ;.. ' ] replace 1 . and a volunhe r •••.; e l !r- :n among the guards to perform the pa triotic service. The dang: r was great and the commandant offered a . charge from the service to the man who would climb the giddy Ins .1. With thin iudiismism. ay ting man stepped forward and autumn id liis readiness to male the attempt. He was then ftr/nisls. 1 with a pah' of log-guards, e; ml.limit;: eiuail, riinrp projections, some: hing similar to lhose worn by telegraph ootwlrocK e.'si-s and with a stout belt buckled around liis waist and encircling the flagstaff, ho commenced the toilsome as..■ ut. Slowly lie proceeded, stopping at in tervals to tig;lit. :i th 1 win it '.Vs; rendered neee. s:ry by the gradually diminishing size of tin: mast. On ward uud upward he went, with the eyes of every man inside the walls fired upon him with an eagerness al most painful in its intensity. Still the daring man continued, growing smaller and smaller, until, from his lofty altitude, ho seemed not larger than a child. Ho had almost reached the top, and reached out, liis hand to seize the lanyard, which fluttered in roach just above liis head. In an in stant the cheers of thousands of anx ious spectotors would break forth in admiration and encouragement, when the cord eluded If ; clasp be lots Im balance and foil!—down with light ning rapidity, tin belt tightening ev ery inch of the way, until the tension so great the faithless bund, worn by rapid friction and the mo mentum of descent, gave way. The unfortunate fell headlong, striking the platform at tlio boltoi i of the flag-stuff, and crushing I brouglt the heavy planking of which it was com posed. His horrified comrades at once ran to bis assistance and picked up the mangled form, but the injuries the •unfortunate man bad sustained were fatal, and lie died in a short time. The commanant, though deeply re gretting the accident, still wished the. position of the flag changed, but the tempting offer of five hundred, dollars in greenbacks and a discharge from tlio service could not. induce any of the .garrison to make the attempt, with the fate of their comrade si ill fresh in their minds. Col. Sweet then made the same offer to tlio Confederate prisoners, and one daring fellow, a young ar tilervman, announced his willingness to try the dangerous feat. The prop er equipments wi re furnished, and with steadfast nerve, lm slowly made his way upward till bo reached the top. The lanyard was removed from the end of staff and secured properly lower down,- when the Unshaken Johnnie safely descended to terra liriiia once more, when, with tlio com mondati ms of the soldiers on duty as well as of liis comrades, lie received his discharge from prison and five crisp §IOO greenbacks-—more than sufficient to pay liis traveling expen ses homo, while the flag floated at half-mast in honor of the dead Presi dent fanned by the bronzes from the great Northern lakes. -Knoxville Press and lim'd. 0m to +■£ 4 !#f||s ’ llilllllllilll rilT g ' J : S-' * AVaitted to lm titt Editor, “Have you had any exporicnco in i tlio business?” wo asked of a verdant, looking youth who applied for an ed ! itorial position the other day. “Haven’t I though?” ho replied, as lio shoved ono foot under liis chair to : hide the unskillful patching of a back - woods cobbler, “1 should say I’d had some experience-.haven’t I eorros ! ponded with the Tumpkiuville Screa | mer for six weeks? llain’t that ex i perienco enough ?” “That will do very well,” wo re plied, “but when wo take young men | on our editorial staff we generally put, [them through an oxtuni nation. How much are twelve times one?” "'Twelve ’. why any little hoy ought to an”— ‘•Hold on please—don’t ho too fast ( —who discovered. America?” ‘•Klambus! Pshaw, them questions : is just as easy as”- - “Who was the first man?" j “Adam ! why, Mister, I know all” “What wa i his oi ter name?” “His other name? why, he didn’t have none.” “Yes lie did. You see that’s where . we’ve got yon. His other name was ; Ebcnoezer-- Ebeneez.er Adam, Esq., ■ Kite of Bara;live. Nobody knows ibis but editors, and see to it that you don’t tell anybody.” lie said bo wouldn’t. “How many bones arc there in the ! human body?’ “Well, 1 forget now, but I did know I wunst.” “What! don’t yon know that? Why there’s 7,452.f*ij>21,41 i bones in an ordinary man. A man that snores has ! one more bone than other people.” “Wind bone is that, V ' “The trombone. It's situated sotno i where in the nose. You won’t forget 1 that, will you ? He said he wouldn’t. “How long would it take a mud tur tle to cross the desert of Sahara with 1 a small orphan boy to touch him up ■ behold with a ivffliot pole r . J “Well, loo!: here, mister, iff had a ...lai and pen al I could figger that nut, but dep.; t.iv skin if I'm much on oe ntnl Tilhim-ti:-.” “51;..: and pencil. Did you ever : see a slate aud pencil about a sanc tum? Nonsense. Well, we’ll let lha! question slip. Have you a good con si it iiii-m r" “Put: v tolerable " ■'ibev i", : yof .n: ' you couid 3 1 vi on raw cs.-rn aiul iaith and ’do the work of a dot.: .“s. 1 muted ele phant ?” “Lord ! i don’t lx licve I could live more’ll a week.” -Well, that’s about long as you’d ; wan;: to live if von got an editorial position on tin ; ps.j -r. ion appear : to bo pretty w< 1! posted; wo sir all tusk ; you one more question, and it you ve equal to it you can take off your ! coat itnil sail iu.” “Let’s have ’or, squire. T didn’t correspond for IhePumpkinYiih; Screa mer six weeks fnothin. Let e: i come—l’m on deck, J am.” _ ell sir, if two diametrical circles . with octagonal peripheries should col lide with a centrifugal idiosyncrasy j or, to put it plainer, we’ll say a di eu franchised nonentity—what effect would the catastrophe exert on a ! crystallized cod-fisll suspended by j the tail from the homogeneous rafters ; j of the empyrean?” As the full force of this ponderous I problem broke upon Ins bewildered brain, lie slowly dragged his inurtisti ! etdiy-cobbled shoe from under hisi I chair and started from the room. V, o ; heard him descend the stair, go out, . and close the door. We then placidly I resumed our duties, regretting that! ■so promising a youth should have been weighed in the balance and found wanting. -Franklin Palin l. A. YaxkkkFaioier axi> His Fat Cat i-t.k. — Franklin county has long been famous for its fat cattle, but the forty - seven head now standing in the sta ; bios of George W. Jones, at Deerfield, : Mass., go a little ahead of anything! ; vet seen in the county. They are all ] Durhams, great fellows, so large they leant hardly move themselves, the: I heaviest yoke weighing 4.,G00 pounds, ! the next, 1,400, and the whole av-; .’raging over 1,000 pel' yoke. They! L.. 1 right, tiuarhi a. day etu-li ol meal and bran, and till the liay ttiey want; water is supplied to their man gers in pipes. Those that wore in stalls were sent to Boston .about Christmas, when Mr. Jones stocked up for tile winter, his usual supply being eighty or ninety cattle, GOO or 700 sheep, and about a dozen horses. Last year ho cut about 350 tons of hay, all of which lie fed out, and some seventy-five tons more. The cattle are kept ill a sub-base ment of the barn, which has to be well ventilated during the winter, else it would become oppressively warm from the number of cattle con fined there. Jones puts upon liis own land, which lies along the west bank of the Connecticut river for half a mile, all the manure from his stock raising twelve or fourteen acres of heavy tobacco every year, for which he gets prices considerably above that paid for tobacco grown by patent fer tilizers. In fact, lie is one fanner who has found out how to “make far ming pay.”!— !>prin'jjidd (Mass.) lin publican. To TAKE GaKAKK FIIOM WaU, PaPEU. —Lav several folds of blotting pa per on the spot, and hold a hot iron near it till all the grease is ab sorbed. QUITMAN, (M., THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1870. Sottlh Carolina’s Hope. “Will you please toll us what we can do ?” writes a white citizen and ; tax-paver of South Carolina, since the | election of Mosc.s and \\ liippcr to tho ! bench. “Wo cannot loavo tho State or we would do so in a body. IV o I have nothing to subsist upon but our | lauds, and wo cannot sell them, for i purchasers shun South Carolina as | they would a pestilence. Tell us ! what wo till.-ill do ?” Well, what an | swer shall wo make? Wo know aomc -1 thing of the political history of South Carolina for the past tan years. It i lias been of so unique a character that i there are few intelligent persons in the country who have not observed it with interest as tlio development of a j new political experiment. Wo have seen a powerful political party which ! controlled all departments of tlio Gen eral Government and a large majori ty of all the States devoting its ut i most energies to—what? lo pro tecting the. property and lives of tlio citizens of South Carolina who were notoriously at tho mercy of a band of thieves? By no means. Devoting ivery of ca ses in other Southern States wncrc the class of people who have govern ed and plundered South Carolina were intimidated or bitutered iroin the exercise of the privileges enjoyed in that State. Ties party and its leading statesmen have never given South Caroliua a thought, ii Ma under Republican rule and a “safe State.” But they have plunged with tlu ir marshals and deputy marshals, their investigating committees, their hors ~ foot and dragoons into every ! other Southern State whence came ! the most shadowy rumor that some poor ignorant black man iiad been intimidated from putting into the i ballot-box a ticket which ho could 1 not readjimt. which some Federal of fice-holder gave him. And now from ! South Carolina, prostrate under the • rule of a worse lot of thieves and highwaymen than ever got justioo j from a vigilance committee, tuere I comes the cry, “W hat shad wo do ? Listen to it, Mr. Oliver P. Morton, lof Indiana.. Listen to it, Republican I leaders in Senate and House, and Re publican Administration. Can you do nothing to save the citizens of South Caivlb-a froth being trampled ii.i.l. r foot, outraged, and robbed by ; men of your party holding offices u ,; -. - or Administration, strong for I evil-doing only D < m your i partv and recognized by you ? ILit : Mr. 'Morton, leading Republican Si n : a tor —possible Presidential candidate I--has heard that down in Mbsissip !pi a number of black persons were ; hindered from putting into the bal lot-boxes pieces of paper they could not road, in order to help into power the sort of liie.n who have plundered j 'South Carolina. Mr. Morton must, j alt-end to that. That must he inqmr-; o<l into. A Republican Senate has no j eves or cars for South Carolina. ' It iooks with all its eyes and listens with all its ears in tlio direction 111. Morton’s index linger points. “What shall we do?’ calls out South Caio- . linn from under the heel of the op-1 pressor, and these moil who have now : and have had all tho time tho power j to offer some help at leas t, are silent. | They are thinking about Mississippi j —and the next Presidential election, j The appeal to them is nsolcss. What: then ? * There is but one course left, ! and that calls for itidurance and pa- j tient waiting. Appeal to the whole; people, and if in November of next year the people shall approve the ei e el and brutal no-policy policy which ; not only looks on calmly wliilo tlio i robberies go on, but adds govern- ! incut patronage to the plunder why then what is there to be done but to ! charge all up to profit and loss, move j away and leave the negro, tho seals-; wag and tho carpet-bagger to quar- j i el over tho spoils ! | But this will not bo. Tho people o r the whole country know tlio wrongs of South Carolina, and whatever tho political complexion of the next, ad ministration, wo may ho certain that it will nof divide government patron age among her oppressors. And wo are confident that, the taking of Fed eral patronage and the loss of the prestige of administration influence and support will not only cripple but destroy them. Meantime, patience, and let Mr. Morton continue to de vote his energies t.o Mississippi inves tigations.—N. Y. Tribune. Tiiamps Cattube a Jeksey Village. —Five of a gang of eighteen tramps have just been lodged in the belvidere (New Jersey) jail. Last week they visited in bands of four and five each the houses of the laboring population, and finding only women at home, made themselves masters of the situ ation. Houses were broken into, and every portable article they could lay their hands on t-licv carried away with them. Many of tlio women were grossly insulted by the rowdies. They approached a saloon in the town, but found the doors barred against them. The proprietors discharged a gun at the marauders, and they next sur rounded tlm house of Justice Temple, where they demanded ‘■'blood or mon ey.” A tarty of the vilngers armed them lv. mid started out to put an end to tl :■ raid. They captured five of tin in, mid the feeling they aroused was so bitter that it was only with difficulty that-tho outraged villagers were prevented from laying violent j hands on 'hem and banging them to the acarcti U eo. A Morton and Bayard. [Coiroßpomleneo nf tlic World. 1 Tlio general dreariness was never more completely exemplified than in tho Senate during tho delivery of Morrill’s speech on the currency ques tion. The whole thing looked like a solemn farco. The speaker stooped l over a manuscript spread out on liis ! desk and read with due emphasis and | earnestness his carefully prepared es say, to which liis colleagues paid no ; more attention than they might to the whistling of the east wind. Conkliug sat back on a sofa chatting with a friend and paring liis nails; Ivernan busied himself with a book; Morton left liis seat, where, by the aid of a sort of stationary crutch, he is now enabled to rise when lie addresses the Senate; a tall, thin gentleman, with an empty sleeve, whom wo took for Powell Clayton, fitted to and fro rest lessly; and General Burnside, in the most exquisitely fitting and most ! closely buttoned coat that ever left a ; tailor's fingers, promenaded tho floor, the cynosure of the ladies’ gallery, notwithstanding the fact that his once gorgeous whiskers arc now grayer j than the uniform of the man he met at Fredericksburg. "When you look j down at such a scene youinvoluntari-! !y whisper to tho friend at your el- ( bow: “Is this Senatorial oratory ?" I ’When I put the question it was an- j swered with the remark: “You should have heard Bayard’s speech in answer to Morton. The tilt between those j champions is talked of us one briliiant episode iu a prosy session. There! seems to be a natural antagonism be tween the two men, and it is not j strange that they have often clashed ! since the former came into the Sen-! ate. It would be difficult to find a j more complete contrast, mentally and ; physically, than they form. Bayard is frank, generous, eloquent. His form is tlio perfection of manly grace, and liis face suggests stuffy, pure mo tives, great designs. There is not the ; trace of a mean sentiment in it. In [ a word, ho looks as noble as his name ; and is one of tho few who carry with them the idea of g-vnt goodness and ' power. Mortau is narrow, selfish, able, t : i scrupulous. His body is like a scab bard worn out by t.lie bLuV, ' in liis lace suffering is less h .■ j than courage, tenacity ami I . t , > ri ~.f it.) poiil iciuii it. tho count', has vri. ldeff uuj-e •'••solute p- : • • power than he. In liis o ... - ; lias I•■•.(. 1! a despot whose v . • ■ law, but it ir; rumored that hi .. '"•’ is “failing from the sceptre i It, a..w I bat a coalition ha>' been forme l in j Indiana among leading Republicans !to shake off liis influence. Ben Har : rison, who has a fair war record and a good reputation as a lawyer, but is ' chiefly noted as tho grandson of his ! grandfather, fs said to be the coming man. Tkaditioxs of the Deaths of the Aiosit.es. —Matthew is supposed to have suffered mutyrdom, or was slain with tlio sword in a city of Ethiopia. Mark was dragged through the streets of Alexandria in Egypt, till lie expir ed. Luke was hanged on an olive tree in Greece. John was put into a cauldron of burning’ oil at Rome and i escaped death. Ho afterwards died j a natural death at Ephesus in Asia, j James the Groat was beheaded in j Jerusalem. James tho Loss was j thrown from a pinaele or wing of a ; temple, and then beaten to death with ; u fuller’s club. Philip was hanged up ; against a pillar, at Hierapolis, a city j of Phrygia. Bartholomew was flayed alive by the command of a barbarous j king. Andrew was bound to a cross j whence ho preached to the pooplo till j ho expired. Thomas was run through j tho body with a lance at Coromandel, j in tho East Indies. Jude was shot to j dcatii with arrows. Simon Zolotes 1 was crucified in Persia. Mathias was j first stoned and then beheaded. - ♦ A New Foon foh lli- "tsEB axd E'u;.e i is coining into use, which is composed i of two quarts of oats, one of bran ; and half pint of flaxseed. The oats | are first placed in the stable bucket, over which is placed t.lio linseed, boiling water is added, thou the bran; covering the mixture with an old rug mid allowing it to rest for live hours; then tho mass is. stirred up. The bran absorbs while retaining the va por, and tlio linseed binds tho oats and bran together. A greater quan tity of flaxseed would make the prep aration too oily and less relished. One food poi-flny is sufficient. It is easily digestible, and is especially adapted to young animals, adding 1 rat her to their volume than to their ! height, giving substance to the! frames. A correspondent enquires: “How can I prevent my iillle boy from wearing out the knees of liis pants?” \Ve only know three sure ways. You can kill the boy, or you can make liis pants without any knees; or perhaps the best way would bo to got some other little boy, about the sumo size, to wear tho knees out, if you have such objections to your own boys do ing it. To wash G0t0;.,-:. — The Scientific American advises ladies for washing fine and elegant colors to boil some bran in rain water, and use tlio liquor cold. Nothing can equal it for ease 1 upon colors and for cleaning cloth. Lunched Ashes. The theory of your correspondent on leached ashes, does not ngreo with my experience (I have reference to j wood ashes only.) I am no chemist, j hut have lmd some experience with lashes, both touched and uidcached, ns a fertilizer. I will simply give it as !my opinion that there is something j besides potash that gives leached ' ashes value as n fertilize; and my ron j son for my opinion is that I have j found leached ashes so nearly equal as a fertilizer to those unleaclied, and that ago and exposure d<i not increase the value of leached ashes. Sixteen yours ago I used a pile of leached ashes that had lain over thirty years, j having been leached for black salts by : my father when ho first cleared the fane. I applied them as a top dress- j ing for wheat, and seeded with (into- i thy and clover in March following the • field was used for a meadow a few i years, and lias been used as a past lire | ever since. mi /v* i nil V 1....... 1 The effect of the ashes was beyond my expectation, both for the wheat ’ and grass, and is notice able yet in tho linn sward mid the closeness with ! which it is grazed by the stock. My success with leached ashes induced I mo to make some experiments with ! nuleached. Supposing as J. L. C. j does, that potash was all that gave I them value, I reasoned that one bush el of unleaclied would lie equal to ten or fifteen of leached, and top dressed my wheat accordingly. Iu this, liow j ever, I was mistaken; tlio result did 1 not prove as satisfactory, and al though I consider them valuable if properly used, 1 have never received ! so satisfactory a result from their use as from the use of leached ashes. For ! the past six years 1 have used about 1,000 bushels a year of leached ashes ■ou ray farm for various crops, and can recommend it as ono of tlio best ! fertilizers that, I have ever used. It sbow.-i its rimels longer than any oth er iiifiliviiv 1 have ever tried.— L. C. I,’urn’, in Ohio Farmer. Chunks oi' Window. Go trio young man; if yn tap both ends of vure cider barrel at once and ; draw out of the bung liolo besides, ..:i]•,• eider ain’t a goiu to hold opt long. If had a great deal rather bo told at a n’.-oi is Yort.uous and honest than a hear that hiz filth' r iz a member of < imgresu, or even that hiz grand fa me r fit it. ;ht revolushtin. Men sumtiexs Lev doubt about rirtui .i.iigeu, and e ven honesty, but I never met wuu who dented hiz siirild- Li*.'SX. j Lazy men and black ants are alwusr lintil.itigfor a job. Yu kant hire a man to be bonest; if iyn dew lie will want his wages razed j eyery morning. I Thare iz a great deal Av religun in I this world that is fcbo a life-preserver, j only put on nt tho moment ov extreme i danger, and then huf the time put on : hind-side before. Stiff and hang, yung man; it is the ; last six inches in a rase that aiwuz ! ! winz the mnnny. If yu want tew find out. just how j ; mean and dishonest yn tu-.v aiwuz bin, ■ git a nominashun and run for some of- ; | list!. Those who are tu prond tow inkuire what a thing hosts when they buy it, are tho fust olios to find fault when they cum tow pay fur it.— UUlimjs. An Essay on Girl. Gill is very vice. Everybody who , has not the misfortune to be girl will allow this. Nice girl will allow it al so as far as itself is concerned. Strange girl is objectionable iu tho eyes of girl generally. Powder improves girl sometimes, but it seldom finds this out until it is suggested to it by one of experience. Healthy git! costs its parents lets money for doctor’s bill, but persons who write romantic talcs for circulat ing libraries choose unhealthy and pasty-faced girl to write about—the swooning kind preferred. Lately I bought sixpenny worth of illustrated journals and I found there in ten pictures illustrative of girl in a swooning state. I hope it was all real, or else there ought to have been a lot of smacking all around. If I were hot boy I think I should like to bo girl. It’s best fun to be boy when thore’s plenty of girl about. --| Judy. Cliiuigoil His Mind. A strapping big stranger entered a stove ou Woodward avenue yesterday nr.d leaning too heavily on tho show case, broke ono of the panes of glass. “That will cost you two dollars,” said the proprietor. “Haven’t got the money,” replied tho stranger. “Well you can’t go otu of this store until you pay for that glass,” said tlio storekeeper in a determined voice. “I’m sorry but I’m willing to bo licked, if that will do any good,” re plied tlio stranger, rapidly getting out of two coats and a vest and showing arms like joints of stove-pipes. “Oil, I guess it was purely acciden tal,” said the shopkeeper iu ail alter ed tone, as ho got he,hind the counter in a lmrry, “and you needn’t mind about waiting around here any long er. Here’s a car ticket if you’re go ing up the ‘avenue. An economical Japanese family can live on six cents a day at homo, hut to get, the six cents is what causes tip. suffering. 31 is(*(‘lliui(‘()iis A<l vt'ri isnnents. JEWELER .'.Nil DEALER IN ,i is 'w ih: lh v, CLOCKS, GOLD AND HILYEU WATCHES, GOLD AND SILVER CHAINS, GOLD BINGS, LA 1 >TKS* SETS,. I,< K: K DTK, NECKLACES, BRACELETS, GOLD TOOTH RICKS, GOLD I’l-.NS, BENCHjS, SLEEVE BUTTONS, STUD BUTTONS. HANDKERCHIEF RINGS, WATCH KEYS, GOLD SPECTACLES, EYE GLASSES, WALKIN'(I CANES, SIL V E K W A K E, | CASTORS, ICE PITCHERS, SYRUP PITCHERS. BUTTER DISHES, CUPS & GOBLETS, VASES, KNIVES A FORKS, SALT CELLARS, Ac., Has just received liis Fall and Winter Stock, embracing everything to bo found in a First-Class Jewelry Establishment. I have a general assortment of Pistols, Cartridge::, Game Bags Shot Belts, Powder Flasks, Amnnitiou, Ac., at prices cheaper than ever offered in this market before. On Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Guns and Pistols done with neatness and dispatch, and satisfaction guaranteed. Quitman, Ga., September 7th, 3 575. W. E. BARNES. 3m :b ixx o 01£>4 cor NX" xw SflaniiflciAf'i irin-T hidl 111 iGAji U III!£d, Ho Mi usa isJi t ■ .* Having refiitaal thoir Jliil •. ith i<v. m icliim*y, are now nndy to inmufattare wool into Joans'ami riains for Cash or on slums. Mill!*! I* 5 , £s*ll.eei < l Oili.Oll A Sewing TClieeaiGU XAaiitiiiigs,* IkToii*!! 1 lope aiwl r rwioc and jf >i? sale at seasonal )le prices. All freight on Wool sent over the A. A O. It. lv. to !>• curded will be paid here, and added to cost of carding. Goods Exciiangcd for Cotton or Wool. aW Dealers are ronpoctfully invited to call and examine our goods. jyg' ' Wool Carded at 10 cents per Pound. ***.< ir. UIIIGGS, iw iihihiii ii i m inrii . M~n "Him —r~rr:nr>i — run — iti~ r ~~t nr it - ~i —nTi-Tyrr tttt • r-tstr. :•• r * : "- - W> a f ■ r C i% S If y taJ Si I 5 AW Id O LE 8 A LE MACON, GA. Oonij Oaeoii, X.S lOsai’e IlisV, CXwitSj XSaywin™;, Tie®, OofFee, ®yi*nj>, X utli’iH, call, IXice, IA a e ae, r RA >bacco^ ETC., ETC., ETC. TERMS CASITs! sopt. io-tr. A. I-ITTXTF\ FLT’NIT IRil. ITT. N IT UR Ik (j. k ; i. MI IjTjER i agt., SUCCESSOR TO M. MILLKU, 109 and 171' llrovißhion street, SAYANXAII, GA. CHEAP FOR CASH. SO CREDEL Manufactures Sofas, Mill trusses, &c* X' to Styles L\irnitnre always on hand and arriving. Fiirticular attention given to packing goods, (’-ash ordurs or ort.i is through Fac tors solicited mid given iiiiiu idiatoattention* 2&*3w ■TTTE would inform the citizens of South v V west Georgia that we have opened in Savannah n first class ISTews Depot —AND — Literary Emporium, & And will always keep a supply of t-lie boat and latent Ncwspnpers, Magazines, Novels, Ac., both Domestic and Foreign. Subscription received for any paper in America. Orders by mail will Joeeivu prompt attention. Address, JAS. A. DOYLE <fc BRO., [27vGm] U-t-.mob, Ga. No. 47.