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VOL. II
The Quitman Reporter
IS PUBLISHED EVER? THURSDAY BY
r r. A. IIA IX, I’uoprlotol*.
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THE TREASURY TROUBLES.
What Capt Jones has to Say.
Tin: late trf,asurer’s reply to gov
ernor SMITH —CONFLICTING STATE
MENTS —SEVERE STRICTURES
THE COMP YF DEEPENS —THE
FUN GROWS FAST AND
FURIOUS.
To the People of Georgia :
It is with some reluctance that I
make response to that portion of the
Governor’s message in which de
tailed reference is made to the trans
actions of myself as late Treasurer,
and I do so now in deference to the
request of my friends, and to meet at
the threshold the sugffonteil, rather
than declared, imputation upon my
conduct as a public officer.
If I have postponed a response un
til now, it was not owing to my want
of material to vindicate myself, but
rather arising from my natural detes
tation of the. practice of appealing to
the public prejudices through the
press, and gorging, public opinion
with oOe-sided statements in advance
of a full and manly hearing upon the
merits.
I may, too, have placed some rcli
a nee not. onlv in my own conscious
ness of right, but on my past public
record as mi old public servant, whose
guard over nearly half a million of
public funds in 18(18, not even bayo
nets threatened into surrendering,
and who could as honestly say as any
man in (Teorgia to my enemies .
“ (Jonlempsd Catnlina glarliti * non per
linoveant tans,” I despised the bayo
nets of Catiline nor will I now fear
rours.
Ilis Excellency omits in his roes- :
Bnjje to say that at his own special
mid persistent request I assumed the ;
duties of the office almost immedi
ately after my election, in the midst
of a legislative session and in a sea
of confusion. He also omits to say
that when I assumed the duties of
the position, the credit of tlm State j
of Georgia was weak and fluttering!
in the markets. Georgia bonds ac j
knowledged by the State, bearing 0 ;
tier cent, interest, was selling at 60
cents ; and 7 per cent, bonds at 70
cents ; and even at these prices the
sales were slow and purchasers timid.
When, by edict of 15th day of No
vember last, I was removed, the cred
it, of the State under my administra
tion had been elevated, and our six
per cents were near par, sevens called
for dollar for dollar, and the eights
commanded a handsome premium.
These facts his Excellency omitted to
lint, before the people. But I lay
them down, as facts strong and stub
born, to meet some of the insinuating
assaults made upon the aduiimstra-
tion of the late Treasurer.
His Excellency, with commendable
candor, admits that, in the latter part
of the,vear 1874, I obtained warrants
in my favor for the amount of alleged
payments of bonds which had been
previously redeemed by Henry Clews
Ji Cos., nnd by my predecessor, and
gives in detail the amount of the
bonds alleged to have been redeemed
bv Mr. Clews. But the Governor
omits to state how, when or where
any notice was ever brought, home to
the late Treasurer of the number,
character, denomination or identity ot
these bonds, or any evidence that they
were paid. The law of 18 1 4, prescri
bing the duties of the late treasurer,
was explicit that the bonds to bo is
sued under the act were to pay all
past due bonds and interest. How
con'd I know that any particular past,
due bond was not to be paid? Ifhis Ex
cellency knew it, he was certainly act
ing in strange inconsistency with his
professions not to have given the
Treasurer not.ee of the fact, and if
he did not know, why overwhelm the
Treasurer with assaults upon his in
telligence and his integrity for not
possessing more knowledge than
himself? Why enter upon argument
to show that an Executive warrant
for those payments was still liable to
be ooened against the treasurer on
Liu settlement with the State, and at
the same time confess that this hap
pened when no cloud of suspicion
rested upon the transaction. In de
velopments of what transpired a year
after in theexamination of Mr. Clews’
books, these bonds were for the first
time ascertained, and I am held up
as paying money out improperly upon
bonds previously redeemed, when it
is confessed by the facts, I knew noth
ing of what bonds were alleged to
have been redeemed, and to say the
least, was certainly as ignorant in the
promises as his Excellency states that
I cannot give the names of the par
ties, and that I have no written entry
or memorandum throwing light upon
the subject, and I profess to bo unable
'.o recall any fact which would serve
as a clue to the persons who presented
the bonds for payment. Adding with
a seeming climax of doubt upon the
subject that “h : s possession of them
seems to be the only evidence within
his knowledge showing that he re
deemed them.” After the recitation
of facts by his excellency and in which
ho might have added that Messrs
Clews A Cos. claimed an amount duo
them of the State, and refused to let
the bonds get out of their possession
even for the inspection of the Gover-
nor, and what the Governor presents
by them selling them, and buying
them in, even at the small sum stated
by his Excellency of $18,525, a reason
able presumption would arise in any
fair mind that the possession of these
bonds by the late Treasurer was the
most complete, not undoubted and
most conclusive evidence that he had
paid them, and possession of them
would “seem to he,” to any unpreju
diced man, proof strong as Holy
Writ, for to suppose Clews A Cos.
made them a present to the Treasurer
would he too foolish to assert as a
fact, and too fanciful for a child’s
speculation. His Excellency with
great gravity presents that in addi
tion to the principal the Treasurer!
claims to have paid interest accruing ;
after maturity, and states, “this a!- j
legod payment of interest is not veri
fied by proper vouchers,” etc. I ufor
tnnately for the Governor’s memory,
the net of 1873, created the Nutting
bonds to pay “all past due bonds and j
interest." When the Treasurer pro- j
sented the past due bond its very
possession verified with the highest
and most authentic attestation that
the interest due thereon had been
paid. Ittfwould boa violation of all
reasonable presumption to say that
the holder of a past due bond, enti
tled by Hie law to interest, gave pos
nonoioti of tlie bumf to the Treasurer
without receiving what ibe law
granted. And in every sense of pre
sumptive justice, the Treasurer, when
he presented the past due bond, was,
entitled to the belief of every fair
minded man that he got possession
of it by paying what, the law declared
was due upon it. Any other pre
sumption would be a farce.
His Excellency again refers to some
bonds redeemed during the term of 1
mv predecessor, which he says Mr. !
Angior states he brought from New’
York and placed in the vaults of the
Treasury. He says no entry of the j
redemption was made oil the records j
of the Treasury ; that the Treasurer;
went out, of office shortly afterwards, j
j etc. In his statement of the matter |
the Governor says that my predeees- 1
sor failed to take any receipt showing
the delivery of these bonds to his suc
cessor. Now the mode of presenting
this matter is ingeniously offensive to
i mf >. It implies without asserting
that the bonds were delivered to me,
: and the fact of there being no receipt
i was ft failure of proper caution ut.-
! tribntable to his so soon leaving of-
ficc. His Excellency does say I de
ny receiving them, but adds as weak
ening mv denial that “he (meaning,
myself) does not remember from;
whom they were redeemed, nor door;
he recall any circumstance from which
the fact of their redemption by him
self can be ascertained, and 1m also
claims that he paid interest on them.”
His Excellency strangely omits to
present the facts of this matter with
the light held over both sides. But
we propose to meet that which more
especially attacks the verity and in
tegrity of ourselves. There are
many'more iu Georgia who have had
.lose intimacy with tl ela'e Treasurer
for many years, and who will believe us
when we say that any insinuation
east upon our honor in this matter,
come from whatever source it may,
we repeal with all the earnestness of
our nature as not only unjust but
cnluminous. In reading over the
message of his Excellency on the
question of coupons, the Governor s
presumptions are even more elabor
ately unreasonable than his statement
of facts are out of place, fie says
after the year 1808 the State paid
the interest on her old bonds. The
people of Georgia are not unaware of
the fact that the State has not been
regularly paying the interest on her
bonded debt. It would be a tedious
exhaustion of facts to prove this, and
as a matter of pure presumption, on!
of thirty thousand coupons a year of
various denominations, running since
1868, Is it natural that four or five
hundred Gi mPf have been scattering
ly neglected, or that some cancelled
in New York and sonm at tlm Treas
ury, some in envelopes and some in
bulk that the punch should not in
ovory instance, with mathematical
precision, make its puncture in the
exact location where his Excellency
may have deemed it best, to make the
mark upon a dead paper, worthless
after the punch went through it as
the mark of its cancellation.
QUITMAN, GA., THURSDAY, FEBIIUARY 3, 1870.
The small amount gathered from
the mass of coupons paid, referred to
in the message, bears too strongly in
favor of the whole to need any tres
pass on the public, with the apologies
of explanation. The overridden en
tries of a. former Treasurer, in pencil,
by second entries made by himself,
arising from what all know as the
difficulty of distinguishing the cou
pons of old bonds, many of which ap
pear in duplicate and triplicate of
numbers, and which fell into place by
one letter placed in a hurry oil or
over another, exhibits in its very
statement the intention which gov
erened the act, for if desire existed to
commit fraud, the opportunity of do
ing so would have invited a rubbing
out of the letter, and not the placing
of one with the other, leaving both as
the indexes of what had been done.
His Excellency, however, makes a
serious ocjection when coupons to the
amount of $93,570 are swept out of
my vouchers, and it. is declared to be
within the personal knowledge of the
Governor that a large amount of the
bonds upon which they matured was
not disposed of until after maturity
j of the coupon for the semi-annual in
terest. A brief glance at the law of
1873 will call to memory the labors of
the Finance Committee. Before it
! came into existence $900,000 was de
manded by the public exigence to
take up overdue bonds and coupons'
and pay interests maturing. The
finale of conferences upon the subject,
culminated in the Nutting bill, or
dering the issue of $1,200,000 of eight
per cent, lion-taxable bonds. Ti e
| best hopes of all did not in the then
depressed state of our acknowledged
liabilities look for more than the \
$900,000 as the result of the sale of
i $1,200,000 of bonds, and if they had j
: been placed in the hands of brokers ,
at the time, ninety cents would have
been the highest market, and this
warn'd have been reduced by the com- j
• missions and espouses ; in fact, many
know' that it was prophesied that they
would not bring oil the market the ;
75 cents necessary to raise the $909,-
000. Inspired with confidence in the
patriotic purpose of our own people, j
I determined to shun the‘Wall street I
! jobbers, and appeal to them. The np- j
. plications came in too slowly for
: present and pressing uses and I per-;
suaded the hanks at Atlanta to buy]
some $200,000. From then until late I
in the Fall they went off gradually
at par; the old bonds were presented
for exchange; had interest paid on
them at their own rale to the Isi of
April l li/. I except m a Tew ::: nances,
and the new bonds dating from that
day were given in exchange with all j
the coupons attached. To keep the
bonds at par, I sold with the coupons
attached. I let none who cam/' to
buy go off with the money. The
State needed the money, and I did
not let a maturing coupon prevent
the sale. The bonds were kept nom
inally at par, and it was as w ise nr- :
proper to keep the price where I did.
j The first, decline would soon have |
: been followed by others, and that
! these coupons should have been paid
| subsequently, neither invites the ob
| jection made, or justifies the presump
j lion so unreasonably invoked.
Time prevents my further examina
j tioji of the message of his Excellency,
and, ns lam notified through same
the some which I have lar.r. o 1 a; r at
! deni of the causes and charges against
me, the public press, that suits have
| been instituted against myself and
i securities, I will not detail through |
! the same source my defenses and
i dication, but leave to the Courts the
I adjudication of my acts as late Treas
urer, assuring my friends, whose con
fidence in mv official integrity has
not been shaken, that I am amply
. able to show a record before which
I the Governor’s attenuated presump
! lions will be as feathers in the fire.
Respectfully, -John Jones,
Late Treasurer.
Adam Grium, of Jefferson, Wis
consin, is one of the largest honey
raisers in the world. Ills apiary
consists of 1.15S colonies which pro
duced 26,910 pounds of honey last j
year. Think of that ye Georgia far-,
iiners. If men gro v rich by the cul
ture of bees in a climate which re
quires these valuable little workers
to be closely housed nearly if not
quite half the months in the year,
and the utmost care to be exerted to
keep them alive at all during the
winter, how profitable they would be
if properly cultivated in Georgia,
where the climate is so mild the year
round as scarcely to prevent the
working of bees even in winter. AVe
hope our farmers will encourage their
wives and children to engage more
extensively in this pleasant and re
munerative industry. W lion han
dled by kind and intelligent bands
bees become perfectly barnrle. s, and
there is no necessity to ever destroy
them to procure the honey. Water
is essential to them and should bo
convenient. — Farmer'x Friend.
. >m •
A smart looking boy about 12 years
old, called in a Detroit book store
yesterday and Haiti liis mother wanted
some cards. The clerk supposed lie
meant playing cards, and accordingly
| wrapped up a pack.
The boy came back in the course of
j half an hour, tiling the cards down,
and said :
“Mother don’t want that kind—
she’s got five or six packs in the
house now. Mho wants some with
marked bucks, so she can deal
lone hands and warm it to dad.”—
Free 1 ’rest.
(Correspondence of t!i" boston Journal.)
A CURE FOR FOLLY.
ONE OF THE ROMANCES IN REAL METRO
POLITAN LIFE —A HUSBAND RECLAIMED.
A lady about fifty years of age, the
wife of a well-known New York mer
chant, was invited by a distinguished
physician to call at his office at 11
o’clock on a given day. Sho w'ent
down and found the doctor with her
husband. He was the physician of
the family. Ho informed her that
ho had a very disagreeable duty to
perform. It was that her husband
was entirely alienated from her, and
would live with her no more. He
would provide for her, give her a
comfortable home and maintenance,
and with that she must be content.
The blow felled her to the floor. She
was taken homo a maniac, and woek9
passed before she recovered her rea- j
sou. Her home was broken up, and ,
she moved into the new quarters pro- j
vided for her. It was evident that j
the husband had formed an attach
ment to another woman. }Te bought
the house that he proposed to give
her, and furnished it elegantly from
saloon to attic, lie promised to give
| her a bill of sale of all the personal
effectn in the mansion. The man
lavished on this woman heavy sums
of money. He bought her the best
silks and satins, sable furs, and sacks,
ami footed nil the bills she rail up at
; Stewart’s. She passed as a rich widow
j from Virginia, received letters from
pretended relatives about a fortune
she was coining into by and by, and
with these papers secured large sums
of money. The merchant drew heav
ily on this firm, and was threatened
with bankruptcy.
Getting an inkling of what was go
ing on, the wife consulted a detec
tive. Ho mlvised her to commence
a suit against her husband., which she
refused to do. “I don’t want money,”
she said. “I want my husband. If
ho could know what I know, the
charm would be broken, and he would
return to his homo a penitent man.”
The detective visited the house and
had an interview with the woman,
and secured one of the best rooms
for a lodger. That lodger was the
detective’s own man, who was to
gather up the little Lie’s that would
ai'pcar in the management of the
concern.
He visited the merchant in his
store, and made an appointment, to
vl.lo myt with him the .next.chiv slipni
jive nnles, to look ut a tine coupe
horse, which he was desirous of pur
chasing for his female companion.
Instead of finding the horse, he was
brought face to face with his wife,
whom he had not scon for months.
The interview could not be averted.
The black record of the woman’s
ohurach r and crime was laid before
him. He saw how his money went,
and what sort of an establishment he
was supporting, and how he was the
laughing stock of his associates. His
infatuation ended, and be resolved to
return to town, denounce the woman
and forsake her. He proposed to get
nacK a.,, m-onerty that the woman
claimed as her own. \ imp; scheme
was laid that turned out to n n nin
ja on t success. The woman wauten a
few hundred dollars for her sister, to
be paid through her sister’s husband.
She wanted a set of diamonds for
Christmas and a coupe for lady’s day
at New Year’s. A note was dis-
patched, under direction of the de-;
i tootives, asking her to meet her friend ;
: itt a wUI-kuown try sting-place the j
next day at 11, t. decide upon those;
I gifts desired. She was to remain)
j f r om 11 to 1, in ease business should ;
: detain tlm merchant. Promptly on i
i l ime she left in her coach, and had j
hardly turned the corner before wag-1
j oris drove up, and in an hour the j
j house was stripped from the base-1
j meat to the upper story. Pictures,
! vases, statuary, damask curtains, sil- j
ver, wines, all disa]ipeaied. At 2
I o’clock the woman of the mansion
! drove up. The colored woman wrung j
her hands in despair, the shield oi
i the detective having kept her quiet.
; He ordered the woman off the steps ;
and turned the key, oaying, as lie
j walked away: “Don't annoy that.]
man ; don’t go near his store; write
him no notes. If you do I will arrest
you for your past crimes and send
you to the island.” The merchant,
and his wife are now living cosily in
their old homestead.
Pn.MOKAitT Consumption. —Professor
Hosier, of Germany, is now successful
ly treating phthisis or pulmonary
consumption, by making an incision
through the wall of Hie chest and
drawing off the pus with a syringe,
and afterwards washing out the ulcers
with weak carbolic acid. No difficulty
appears to have been experienced
in' the operation, and the con
dition of the patient was im
proved, the cough becoming less
troublesome,anil the febrile symptoms
apparently moderate. One point, at
least., is regarded as settled —and if is
certainly one of great importance so
far as could lie by a few experiments
of this character, namely, that the
local treatment of pulmonary eivitios
is undoubtedly practicable, and that
the lung is really nr r 1 h Grant o! ex
ternal inferfi rouce than has been
generally believed. The r of car
bolic acid are rapidly extending, and
it bids fair to become one of the most
valuable articles of the materia medic;;.
It appears to be speedy death to dis
cus, and genus and fungi u growths.
A Pair ol‘ Suomi's.
He Turned Out Ohl .Man Bullard ami
then Turned in Himself.
[Virginia (Nev.) KuterprisA ]
After the fire old mini Bullard found
lodgings on South <’. street. Ho is a
I huge, fat, good-natured, and very en
tertaining man. The proprietor of
the lodging house was much pleased
' with Bullard, and laughed at his jokes
the first evening of his arrival at his
! place till tears ran down his cheek.
The men who were to be Bullard’s
room mates also thought well of him
| —that evening. The next morning,
I however, they went to the landlord
' and told him that he must find some
other place for Mr. Bullard, as he was
I such a terrific snorer they couldn’t j
| stand him.
The landlord’s rooms were all ocen- J
pied, and he had no place for Ballard j
but just where he was. The com- j
plaining lodgers left, and in two or ;
three days two other men were put ■
into the vacant bed. Bullard made !
short work of them; one night let I
them out. The landlord sought an j
interview .with Bullard, and lemon- j
strafed. Bullard stoutly asserted that j
he did not snore—had never been ;
known to snore. The landlord found |
men to take the beds, but again Bui- |
lard Jfclcaueil them out iu a single j
night.
j Growing desperate, the landlord
i again went to Bullard. Ho told him
he must either leave the house or pav
rent for all the beds in the room—sls
j per month. Bullard said a bargain
was a bargain, he had r“ ; - 1 $ 1 "’ f° 1 ’
his bed, and In* -mended keeping it,
until his month was up, and he didn’t
propone to pay for beds he had no
: use for; he didn’t .snore, and the man i
who asserted to the contrary was a !
liar and a horse thief. The landlord;
felt very much depressed after this
last interview with Bullard, as lie saw
ho was determined not to be removed
from his quarters. A morning or two !
after, asßullavd's landlord was going I
down town, ho saw standing in the
. door a brother lodging house man.
“Thank heaven, lie’s gone!” said !
the man, as B illard’s landlord came
up. “Thank heaven, I’m rid of him !
at last !”
“Rid of whom ?”
“Why, of the Liig fat man yon seci
yonder waddling down the ut/a-ot.”
“What of him T’
“Enough of him ! Ho drove near- j
ly every man out of my house Wore i
’•A" l ' *'• “’i, . v wouldn't stop in the'
same block with snortin'" Fills- ’
taffian por poise, sir.” D
“lie’s a good one. is he ?”
“A good one i lie’s a perfect res- :
ror! He's more different kinds of a j
snorer than any man I ever heard, and .
every time he changes his key it is for I
the worse. While I laid him here
crowds were gathering in front of the]
house nightly, wondering what was I
the mutter within, and tiie police j
can ci'.i one night, tl.i iking someone '
was being murdered. My dog ran j
away, and all the cats left the house, j
S ; vl" i
“And the roan you pointed out to
is this snorer V"
“Yes, sir, he is.”
“Good day,sir!” and Bullard's land- j
iv>rd hastened down the street.
The next morning, with the first I
peep of day, Bullard rushed into the j
presence ot tne lamiiuni.
“What are you trying to play on
me ?” cried he. ‘ I never slept a wink
all night. Of all the infernal noises J
I ever heard, that man in my room got
| off the worst. Is he going to stay
there ?”
“Stay ?of course he is. Haiu’t he j
got the bed iVn* a month ?
“Then I leave!” anil Dullard was
as good as his word.
An hour afterward, the man who j
had ontstod Bullard arose and wad- I
died serenely into the presence of the !
landlord.
“You’ve cleaned him out,” said the j
landlord. “Yon raised him; he’s gone I
for good !” and the landlord rubbed
liis hands gleefully. “Now,” contin
ued the landlord, “I’ll give you a good
square breakfast and then you can
i go.”
“Go,” said the fat man; “not much
11 don’t. Didn’t, you say last evening
I in the presence of Bullard and a half
| dozens others, that I was to stay here
a month ?”
“But that, yon know, was only to —”
“I know nothing of the kind, and T
shall stay here! lam human, I must
have some place in which to repese.”
The landlord is now trying to got
some man to set up some kind of ma
chine in his house that will roust, this
i snoror, who has the whole place to
j himself, except a small room in the
i corner of tlm third story, where lie
1 and liis wife spend their nights in a
miserable way.
There is a sect in Scotland calling
themselves Christum Israelites, who
claim to have received a revelation
from God that they are descendants of
Israel, whom the Lord is thus gather- 1
ing from among the nations, accor- j
ding to His promise by His prophets.
They keep sixth-day night, and also
the hour from 10 to 11 a. m. of first day
as sacred lime, by special revelation.
They practice circumcision, and will
not use mixed clothing, food and
seed.
As Lavender, the other day at
dinner, gazed intently into lr.s ) 1 lie,
hero untried! “Only a woman’s hair !
It's very sentimental, no doubt, bill
j sotfiehow it gets away with my p
- i--
Miscollnnoous Advertisements.
W. E. BARNES,
PRACTICAL JEWELER
AND DEALER IN
• b raw ra Wj ra, y,
CLOCKS, COLD AND SILVER, WATCHES,
GOLD AND SILVER CHAINS, GOLD RINGS,
LADIES’ SETS, LOCIvETS,
N E( Tv LAC MS, RR A CELETS,
GOLD TOOTH PICKS, GOLD PENS,
PENCILS, SLEEVE BUTTONS,
S'J’l D BUTTONS, HANDKERCHIEF RINGS,
WATCH KEYS, GOLD SPECTACLES,
EY E (i! ASSES, WALKING CAN
S 1 L V E E W A R E,
i CASTORS, ICE PITCHERS, *
SYRUP PITCHERS. BUTTER DISHES,
CUPS A GOBLETS, VASILS.
KNIVES ,£)FORKS, SALT CELLARS, Ac.,
i Has just received his Full and AVinter Stock, embracing everythin" to bo
found in a First-Glass Jewelry Establishment.
I have a general assortment of Pistols, Cartridges, Game Bags Shot Belts,
Powder Flasks, Amuniliou, Ac., at prices cheaper than ever offered in this
market before.
i osim;
r O n audio. l :, ( forks, Jowolry, Onus ami Pistols clone with neatness and
dispatch, and satisfaction guaranteed.
Quitman, Ga., September 7th, 1875. \r BAIIXES.
Bin
BKOOI Ci >X TIVT 'V
Manufacturing Association!
Having rcfi.lttc il their Mill with r. -.v machinery. ; i now ready to manufacture wool into
Jeans anti -Plains lor Cash or on shares.
< 'Otton ""Vni’Eifsj*
Hewisi’ TSarefial,
'a c3i e ai I l-opc .in<l Twine
711 LC l :oP i ‘■ex I■< • cv b ivuj > vvj .v J flvj pfvlv_ v* ’•
All freight %. Wool sent over the A. k G. Ih R. to be curd oil will be paid here, and
added to cost of carding.
Goods Exdianged for Cotton or Woo!.
jzSt Dealers r.re respect!ally invited to c all and examine our goods,
ib' Wool Carded at 10 cents per Pound.
Sept. 2i!-tf If. .1! GIGGS, I > ItFSI!)EXT.
W* & i!§ sr r
1 fa 4 111 i
o rin ou ii n 5
WHOLESA LE
PRODUCE MERCHANT,
MACON, GA.
Corn, llacoii,
'I sa£gg;'iii££9 Ties,
Collbe,
1! fil'd,
Salt, I ® £<*c,
I dme, Tobacco,
ETC., ETC., ETC.
TERMS CASH:!
„ , irtr W. -V. HUMA
Sept. IG-tf.
I'TIWITUKK. ITitMTI sir.
a. 11. MILLER, A-J
SUCCESSOR TO
S. 3IILLKU’,
109 anti 171 Ilroßtfliton street,
SAVANNAH, GA.
citeaPFon ('Asu. no credii.
Miinufnclti’ os Sofas, Mattrasses, ALt*
A ’cuo Styles Furniture always on hand and
arriving.
Particular attention given to packing
goods. Cash orders or orders through Far -
tors solicited and given immediate attention.
28-3 m
Tl would inform ike citizens of South
t v \\\ ;t Georgia that we have opened in
Savannah a first class
aS?" ews Depot
—AND —
Lit er ary Emporium,
An<l will always keep a Fupplv.of Th<Lboat
and latest Newspapers, Magazines, Novels
Ac., both Domestic an^Foreign.
Subscription received for any paper in
America. Orders by mail will receive
prompt attention.
Address,
JAS. A. DOYLE & BKO.,
[ 27-Gin] S-* —iuh, Ga.
No. 10.