The Quitman reporter. (Quitman, Ga.) 1874-18??, March 23, 1876, Image 1

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VOL. 111 The Qnitman Reporter IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY T. <Y. IIATiL, TKI One Year £ uu Six Months 1 0:1 Throo Months All subscriptions must be paid inv.ivinM;- in aih'finne no discrimination in D. . = : •nnvbody. Thu paper will be stopped in all instaner > Sit the expiration o r .he ti:.\ ■ piidt'e-. .1 Subscriptions are previously rein wed. It A V OF ADVERTISING. Advertisements inserted at th" ;• •! • of .SI.OO p**r square one inch for fird. inser tion, and 75 cents for each subse-pien! in sertion. All adverti aunts should 1 m ’ 1 • a Rpeeified time, otherwi- th *v will 1.. V'bur.ued under the rule of so much forte 1 first insertion, and so much for eachsuh • - fpien't insertion. Me-vria-res, Obituaries and Tributes of lh spect will he charged same rut s as ordinary A\\ veftiseihcnts. Wlll'X IULJ.S ,!/,'/*’ DUE. All bills for advertising in this procr duo on tile first !•>]>ear inee of tie :eh, inent, except wlmn >ll l •* — i- * ...tm• v coutract, and will he pre . nt. l when 1: money ne-'-D.I. 5s Iho I'iv.siiloiit ;i Fool ! Wo rend that the Prosiih-ut was i “astounded” when ho heard of the knaveries of Belknap—that the whole thing was “a surprise” to him, that! ho had never hoard a word ugai his Cabinet, officer, and that his ‘■.■mo tion,” win'll the diseov . . In • i , known, was ■‘.sonielhing tovrihlo.” Now if the Pros: loot, had r |!i New York Herald of February 10, i> 7(1, lie would have found a di pa ri: from Washington, a column in ]o:i p!i reciting certain fuels. ![■• would h t learned that his Secret ir.y of \V had farmed out trading stores m 1 posts. He would hue • i:. 1 th- 1 : store at. Camp Supply, Indian Toni t-ory, paid ten thousand doll ars a year, that the store at Fort Sill p: id .six llumsaml dollars ay. -.r p:,,i .'v as Bell;nap conft ssivs), th.-.t a or. I Kansas pays eighteen hnndi 1 ! ' Lars a year, while Fort 1) >dge ■};;;■ . two thousand. He would It tve 1- ..ru ed that, one of hie wife's re): I: u- a rcttl Dent—lets a store in No” Hi i eo, while a relative of Babroike u trols one at Fort Wa11... . . Hr i:: have gone over the whol ■ Id easily ciilculatetl that tile tiv . stores at the v.urh.n 5 **i p~l t . someone very nearliis person at j. .. : a lituilred thonsanil doll;.: v. He would h;.VC nail in tie . : col ; the very facts which Beikimp i ed. President Grout is not a fool. W>y w.is printed to the w -,: i 1 in a :,\ ,i died thousand newspapers was <ve tainlv within his leach. If he v.. nil honest President, seek; to ,i right, he would have inquired and > into these charges. We made tit because.wo knew theta to be trne, m>! to annoy tiio administration, when is far from our intent; not to dt General Belknap for whom we Ye! no feeling but kindness, but to e a crowning shame. Wg made Hi charges in the int. , The President in ignoring the e: in his duty. Now let the President having that a part of this news is e mtin ed by his own Secretary of \Y ••!• ref, to the tiles of the //era/,/ and r el further narratives. Lot him imp : , into the New Mexico store , :•.!•■ I how much money one of th. lias made out of the sHdier '. him ask Pabcock how mueh itio.is liis relatives make out of Port Wal lace. Then let him send for his < brother and question him ab u! 11., money that was made in the a\ country by starving squaws and chil dren. The President will fii.d it, tdl printed in the Hern'.! of la.-.; Juh. column after column, in great detail, from a.correspondent ■■ lit by u 1..;,, that country to suck out th - IV .; !.. Tim President is certainly no* a fool. His friends impeach his .•••, .!<■ when they sav gravely that he nomut of facts which, as we l:a ■ shown to-day, and might continue to show in even greater detail, have all been printed in the Herald.- Y Yurt Herald. The line Of conduct chosen by boy during the live years from (if:ceil to twenty will, in - almost every in stance, determine his ehaneb r !’■ life. As he is then careful or car, Jess, prudent or imprudent, in,;.; rious or indolent, truthful or di,- pimulatiug, iulelligent or ignoranl. tpinperate or dissolute, so will lie b< Ju after years, and it needs no pro phot to cast his horoscope or calettab his chances. —A young woman, ID years old, living near San Jose, Cal, correspon ded with a young man attending the University of the Pacific. Ho always addressed her by an endearing epithet. One day ho wrote a letter that con tained nothing of the sort. Tin ro ll pon the young woman, with a pistol, blew her few brains out. A narrow escape for the young man -—Three brothers McNoal married three sisters Perry in lies Arc, Ark, and there was left unmarried another Miss Perry but a male cousin having gained Miss Parry’s love McNoal summarily killed him. Whether that will secure him the girl remain to be seen. |fy|| ! 111 fjj|j ; The Dovelopinont Theory. Historic Art Arrayed Against Science. Now York Time's Iteport of AY. 0. Prime’s Lecture. The study of art also teaches af firmatively that the theories of mod ern s-'h nee are false. Bunsen’s well known argument, that man existed F1,700 years in Egypt, based on bor ings in the Nile. and. posit m ar old Mem phis. is a ease where scientists should have asked the aid of art .stu dents. The boring was made under the Hatnto t*f l!aiu; bos, and pottery found at the depth of thirty-two feet; the deposit being three and one-half inches to the century. The art st.u lent won! ! ask first, how the statute came there, an .1 knowing that nvnnal and lake were dug to float it there, audits foundations laid deep in the sand muler the alluvium, the art stu dent, says the polit ry was that of the workmen who erected the statue, only 3,000 vea rs ago. The lecturer then laid down the proposition that the study of ancient | art indicates that, le-.s than 5,000 years ! ago the human race was eon lined ton small family ros'dieg in Western Asia. Tic proceeded to show this by tracing backward the histories of va rious arts, such as the the art of mak ing of btombs, which disappeared in Europe less than -1.000 years ago, in Egypt goes buck to the date of the Pyramid of Cheops, about -1,300 years ago. The question of Egypti m chronology was discussed, and the weigh! of authority declared to ill fa vor of this dale. ill is suppose, | that E vpl Was colonized from Babylonia, and the recent, discoveries of Marietta Bey confirm this. The oldest tombs in Babylonia date about 2,3000 years ago. The art of coinage was (raced from the Macedonian and Sicilian splendor back to its lonian or Lydian origin. Then money used bv v.. ight was traced back to the origin in barter and t •mhaiege of animals, the Hebrew Kcuhila. a lamb giving name to mon ey in that language, and Few's, tlie flock. givin fin' Latin /■'•oh tin. and the E;cd! L ye. a din-'!. The :.rt- of writ ten la:: pi : • w a (fa • I I to th two alphabets of Egypt an i 8.-.bohm The art of spoken laie'ii ’go was rap idly t rat- and to a similar origin. of pottcry was declared to be lb. i I ! -t of art -of -dli. :t ions'* and on this the left : rer dwelt, at some length, vdvmg •: ‘id: of the Li-tory of :or" e and : i t • .! .■ < :ig n, its origin In I .1 as ear' -as th. pva• and ' of Cii" .anl of uteri an and no: ter;, i : its ri -k: in Cue Em hrut.-s Valiev. ' • 1. ctnr, r then : l'utb 1 t-; tie. hist'u v of ureiiilee; nre. of work in tut ttilts, and other . rls. He then sum med :*.;> to • argument by saving* that anv one of :':*, e of art would not. be. of itself. <■ . , In ive proof that tin race did not . ;NI before the art exist ed; biU th and tlie converging lives of , teh '-and arv art toward the saw points of time and place amount, and to a convincing tit yn I rat ion. Tubing the groatt rt spread of each art as the widest distant between the lines which include it on a chart, and bringing them together through the divisions of time on tin. same chart, it appears that whatever be the rapidity or slow ness .of their convergence they nil point to t.ho same date and geograph ical origin. Therefore, about five thousand years ago, the race of man began to exl-t. or Abet s wrott iirtth and r.muc great, deluge bad swept away the ancestral hosts, aad until was beginning again. The lecturer then said no man need meet this argument with tlm develop ed nt, theory, for if a man was devel oped at that time ho was developed a giant, in the image of a god. His works Were as great, or greater than ours. VTe must, not judge the civili zation oft th. r time-*, by our standards and ideas. The invention of a wheel was a greater inv. ntion than that of a steam engine. The invention of a written language is greater than that of the printing press. Inventions are great in proportion to the necessities of a people. A wheelbarrow is worth more to people in some circumstances than a r.tilroa !. A thousand years hence civilization, its Listen ami em ployments, mdy boas different from ours as oms from the Egyptian, and then mt'n wonder what craziness pos sessed the people who loved to ride at forty miles an hour and talk to each othc’* by lighter g, So, 100, in taste. The . ireeks were as refined and lux urious a ; we, and had brilliant glass, but pieferrcd to drink their Samian wiea out of black ie. lives, as heavy as modern basins. Wo have no right to judge their tastes by onr standards. But even by onr own standard the men of early ages wore our equals, and in many respects our superiors. They made as fine fabrics of linen as we. The architect has not lived for three thousand years who could build Karnak. It, was in the ancient days that vast, walls in Babylon gleamed with enamel. The die-cutter has not worked for twenty centuries who could equal the engraver of ancient gems. Wo men of the nineteenth century are pigmies in comparison with those who built the pyramids and reared the monolithic obelisk pointing to the (rod from whom they were proud to claim their origin. “Tlow do yon keep your .wife from finding you out asked one old col lege friend of another, after they had both been married a few months. “By always being at home at proper hours,” was the reply. QUITMAN, GA., THURSDAY, MARCH Si, 1876- (jVorgiim Hruvo Enoiis*:li. M now m-:x iiii.Tj won a coxfkdfuate hat- TLB I’LA.O I*lloll A NOIITUEIiN WOM \N*. Since Mr. Hill delivered his great spyecli, his daily receipts of Liters, complimentary, curious and con demnatory, has been something won derful. One of th”. most interesting of these letters came frotp a Mrs. Kimball, of Philadelphia, accompanied by a “Hebei battle flag: Hon. Mb. Hill— Dear Sir i for ward to you the flag captured by the soldiers of the Union when they took ! possession of the cupitol of your State. It was given to me as a to : ken of gratitude for kindness shown ! to the sick and wounded while in Savannah, and sent to mo bv the 1. sit ; in the return from up the river where she landed the troops. It gives me pleasure to return it to a worthy son |of Georgia, with tlio hope that, the | past may bo forgotten, t never fail to appreciate a brave mail. The no ble sentiments express,al by you in your speech in reply to Mr. Blaine, nrove yon such. Mr. Blaine is from : Maine, niv native State, and I have always admired him. May (Tod bless j mi, and give you wisdom and thought 'to continue in the way you have 'started, thus bringing about an era: > of good feeling and prosperity to our rouble,! land. Your speech, the first from the ! South since its restoration to power ■ in Congress, is worthy of her. May our united strength cause our “Father’s Hoiiseo” to become the light of the civilized world. Your Yankee Sister, Ala-.. H. s. Kimball. AY. Philadelphia, Jan. 13, 187 ti. 1t- o.*sr OF lb CUK I NT\ 11VKs, Washington. D. Jan. 15, I STB. Mrs. 11. ,V. Kin.', a.'/, i'udadel-' r l,; n : I): VU M.-o.AM-- Your noble letter oi the l.’ith instant was received this morning. By express 1 have reci ived tlio (big “captured by the soldi: rs of tlio Union when timv t■ ■ Ac posses ;.i;. of the capital of my Elate.’ 1 I cannot adeqnati ly express tli ■ • feelings awakened in nu bv this gift and by the touching and patriotic 'words w hi.-.h aecoiiqiany the gift. The tlag itself is a sad remainder of i. * / it'. .*.. t, ;t. vo.;r b. ..r.iii. I (\- . . ad votiou to*our coiintrv, !’i , ling as they certainly do, a sin ■;re r: poira: ill n.t* own be. om, ■i .si:.*•: lively liop-es that we “si: ill - have v*.*.rs no more.” For vour most grateful app.i*oval of inv own 1 ••. bit e:k a*ts to tiii i cud, picas,' accept my warmest thanks. lean truly say I have r. ;mission in public li(g but to aid, as far as I may tie able, in restoring public peace and ,In promoting ihe public good. Tin* I people of the North cannot afford to ask the people of the South to yield their manhood, for that would ’prov, tln-ms, Ives of the North unmanly. The people of the- South cannot afford to yield their niauhood, for that would be to confess themselves uu worthy. Let. the people of each section ad mit the great truth, which will dem - onstrate tlio manhood and worth of belli: Tliat we differed honestly; that wo ionglit bravely, and that, our dif ferences are settled in good faith, on the basis of the Constitution as it is. And now, with our people all f av, oar State:: all sovereign, and our c miityy all one, let us all “unite our sLvngth to cans: onr “Father's house’ to become the light of the civ - ilized world. . Your Southern brother, Beni. H. I her,. Mr. Hill then determined to pr> - sent the flag to the Young Men's Ei-j lirary. of Atlanta, and addri ssed the following letter to Mr. Mallon, Presi dent of the Instil ntion: >+ HorsS OV UI.I'SINEXTATIVES, AYasliington, I). C., Feb. 11,1870. Mr. li. te '■ — I’rceircdl Ve'mj Mru's l. brajr/ . I. Allunia , (la: Sin; -I desire to present to ihe Li brary Association, through you, the’, nag captured by the .Army of General Sherman at Milledgeville, tlio Capitol of onr State. This flag was recently presented to me by the noble lady, to whom it was given by the Union soldiers, ns a testi monial of appreciation, by a Northern lady, of my humble utterances in the late Amnesty debate in vindication of] the manhood of onr Southern people, and in promotion of the mutual good j will of the people of our common conn- ] try. Let the flag be preserved as a' memento of a people who ware brave enough to fight while the battle lasted, and who were brave enough also to make peace when the battle ended, j It requires a higher courage to forget than to indulge in animosities. With high regard, f am yours very truly. Iji.n’t. H. Hill. A young gentleman lately attended the circus for the first time, and on the Sunday following he was taken by Lia grandmother to church. He • I gazed around in wonderment for a few moments. When tho organist began to play, he turned to his grand mother and said “Grandma,‘will there jbe a circus, sol can see the lion ?” “Why, no Eddy, this is church.” i “Weil,” replied tlie little fellow, “it’s ■ areas music, anyway.” All Pin is the Chinese Minister to the United States but it’s not stated what kind of an Ah Pin lie is. A Big Game ol‘ Draw. : An Inti* red hi a* Incident of Life im the Mississippi Daring the War. They were sitting around the table in a Fifteenth ward faro bank that is ; temporarily cl'Mcd through some mi - : understanding with tho police, and having tired of short-curds foil to tell j ing stories. “You may have heard this one,” said a square-jawed, firm-faced gray | whiskered man, “for it was printed ] briefly at, the time; but L was there: | “In the latter part of (11 I took a ; trip down the river. Them eanni on board at Cairo a young paymaster who was on bis way to pay a brigade : of troops somewhere iu the neighbor- I hood of Vicksburg. It was very qui ; i t oil the boat, and on the first, night below Cairo (lie paymaster spent a good deal of bis time after supper I walking up and and >*.vn the saloon. There was also walking up and down the saloon a trim, square-shouldered man who seetno 1 to be suffering from the same tedionsness; and when they bad met, a few times the stranger smiled a little at tho paymaster and sai i: ‘•Hull.” “D dull’’ said the paymaster. “Suppose we have a l.ttlo game of draw, ” said the stranger. “Good ill,’ said the paymaster, and they sat down and v ent at it. “Both of them were playing merely i to pass time, at least the paymaster f and the other man seemed to lie. “They had ons way and tho other for ar. hour or two playing about 35 for a top bet, neither of them winning or losing much, but still getting more and more interested. Finally each teemed to get a big* band, and th y b s gan betting heavy in the most natural sort of wav. The fire bad been smouldering, yon sec, and it broke cut : appureutly wit bout their knowing if . “Neither of them s, enird disposed to Itv down, and they’ kept on raising and raising till they were making bets of two, three, five hundred del-, lars, and they got the pot up to about seven thousand. Then She stranger rested his eye on the pay master for n moment, and unde an es timate of the amount of his pluck and the probable size of his pile, and the result of his observations seemed to be a In L f that lie could bluff or ha him out; f<>v he threw • his Laud down ” f , !he b>hb>, ami ie.ot I: ,ve: i.w 1 pa: ■ , 1 a ho ais h, ;, out, of his boot, and i'i oiv the pos.d < ~fir, down through the cards into the table. Then ho took out of his breast pod .t, and counted out twenty-one fi*.. bunas, i dollar notes. He saw flic payni: stes’s last bet of five hun dred, am! lie hanh .1 a revolver off his hip, pushed tho twenty other bills in to the pot arid said : “Iv: i-o von ton thousand dollars.”' ‘ Tho paymaster looked at. the gam bler about two seconds. Then lie is oki.ned to bis colored hov, a bright young fellow who bad taken the tiling in from the start, and who would have given his master tin: wink if he had ; ever happened to la,ok in his direo-' tion, which he hadn’t. But he bright-.: ennl up when lie hoard the word, and walked straight off for tin: paymas ter's state room. He disappeared a moment, and then showed up again, backing through the door, dragging; a trunk after him; and ho came down \ the saloon roiling that trunk, along; on its end, just: as handy as though he had smashed baggage on a through 1 lino all his life. Tim paymaster took , a key out of his vest, pocket, thru”' up iho lid of the trunk, arid took off a shoot of soln leather that, seemed to am .: as a ' >rt of a binder to the bun dles of bills underneath. He took ] two big packages out of tlio end and laid them tip on one side of the table. Then he began faking out tho other bundles and stacking them up on the table in front of him. He kept taking out and stacking up till he h.M built a big triangle shaped pile, like two pair of stairs meeting at the top and all filled in solid -underneath. “Then he threw his hand down on ] the table and pulled a ho wie knife out of hi si.not ami spiked it down through tlm cards, anil while tho handle’ was I still shivering he handed tho two bun- ] dies to tlie wiJdle of ihe table and said: ‘I sec your ten thousand dollars’—] hero he braces back against the pine and began shoving it lip the table, i continuing to talk all the time—‘and! ; raised you a hundred and seventy-five ! thousand !’ and thou (ho did it so] quick I conld’nt see it when it was • done) ho had a pistol off of each hip and was resting an elbow half way up on each side of the green back stairs, both shooters covering the gambler, and holding them very straight and steady, too. “Now, the gambler was an older! man and of much more experience than tho paymaster, and under any! sort of circumstance, ho could have] handled him ten to one, and he knew ] it, and had no thought of laying down ’ even then arid he seemed to revolve the things in his mind for about a quarter of a minute, and when lie had settled what to do lie looked up i ready to act, but one glance at, the 1 layinastev made him change his mind : for ho could see shining through the yong man’s face all the accumulated unused grit of years, and a man with | half an eye could have seen tliat lie meant business. “The gambler realized that fact. Ho pulled bis knife out of the table, stuck his pistol in bis pocket, and walked off down the saloon, whistling 'Hosa Lee’ just as soft and pleasant as though he was going for a cigar after dinner. ‘Then tho paymaster booted his knife, slung his shooters and packed liis trunk, putting along with the rest the thirteen thousand odd of the gam bler's money; and ho didn’t take any more draw that, trip. “And tam told that he was so much impressed by the iv.vi kn 1 : to himself of his own backbone and nerve that he made up bis mind then was something better for him to do than wasting his time in gambling, and lie hasn’t handled a card since. ('nun bs. Great talkers don't frighten me—it is the listeners lam afraid of. The history of mankind proves that while they can rise at times far above the brutes, tin y can sank at other j times far below them. About as mean a position ns any man can put himself into is to work all I the time for the devil, and look all the time to the Lord for pay. Honesty first, next to that comes wisdom, and after that politeness. Thero is no man who can tall what ;he can do until he has triad; and there are a good many who can’t tell ! even after they have tried, j Surfeit has mined more people Ilian starvation lias. The safest place in any ladder is half i ! wa v up. It, is easy to mistako laziness for j patience -laziness is the cheapest kind ’of patience. Thero are no weeds that wilt so j ! quick as widow’s Heroes aro scarce, but the man I i who can make poverty respectable is ; one of them. Mankind love to be cheated, but they want it done by an artist. Young man, don’t forget that tlio 1 world are all watching you, and most : of them are more ready to change your account with something bad; than something good. Tnere seems to be two kinds of ab sence of mind—one is the result of too i much thought, and the other of no ; tmnigbl at all. I have known men so stubborn that ! ; It was just about as hard work to con vince them that they* were right as it I was that they were wrong. The m n whos ■ only ambition is to : . make, folks 1 in sh will never get above , die if riming a first class , monkey. The man who desires to please oth- ] ers won’t amount to much in this; world. I never knew a man to brag of Lis’ : money or ills pedigree who had any-: j tiling else to brag of.- -Josh Bit- 1 iiii'J TTow B.a cot Axotiteu Twlxty Tit h ind. — The following statement which lias recently been laid before ] ns, would appear to be a proper sub jeet for investigation at the hands of your honorable body. Shorllv after the first inauguration j of I’rcsident Grant, in 18(1'.), a certain | New Yorker addressed a letter to an j offiei l* who had h Id a high rank in the ! army during the war, saying in sub- j : Gance; “If you will procure tnv ap-1 p . . . nt to the posit ion of T will pay , you the sum of 320,000.” The officer in ! question was not engaged in that line j of business, and felt justly indignant ;at becoming i lie recipient of such a scandalous offer. He made no reply • to the letter, which was soon followed ! an bv unavailing personal appeal. But chancing to be in Washington shortly j after, ho met Orville E. Babcock, and j j thinking that it was proper that the] President should know what efforts had been made to procure a Incut afire I office through purchased influence, lie laid bt fore Babcock the facts in the 1 case. Babcock appear* -1 more inter ested than surprised. He wanted to j ! see the letter. It was Shown to him, and lie said after reading it- carefully: i “Give me this letter. You don’t want ] it, atnd I do,” Thinking that Babcock desired to sho\V it to the President, j the army office readily complied with the request. Ho went away satisfied ; that the would bo briber would be made to feel the power of the Chief j Magistrate’s wrath. Six* weeks later ho was overwheltn led with surprise at finding that the 1 man who had offered .$20,000 for an i office had been appointed by Ulys ] ses S. Grant to that very position. Four months later, this excellent representative of civil service reform i was overtaken in corrupt prac tices and forced to resign his place. To protect cabbages and' other plants from cut worms, make a ring nt'salt around each plant about air inch from it. Tho woi ins will not pass j over this, and when the rain dis ; solves it the savor in the soil will ; drive them off. Another, pour strong tobacco water around the roots. To keep bugs from tlio vines sim ply hollow out the holes for cnemn jl; r, squash,* melon and pumpkin vines ami put in* a pint or so of lien manure. ( over with earth and plant the seed. While the vines growTux uriatly it will be too unpalatable for : the bugs. Another is to sow a few radish seed with the above mentioned seed. Bugs are so fond of radish plants, that they will eat them in preference to the young vines, and thus enable them to get a good start* and out of danger from the insects. Miscellaneous Advertisements. W. E. BARNES, PRACTICAL JEWELER AND DL.U.FU IN .11 IC W E FiU V, CLOCKS, GOLD AND STLVEM Vf i I t HE? GOLD AND SILVER CHAINS, GOLD RINGS LADIES’ SET’S, LOCKETS ’ NECKLACES, BRACELETS GOLD TOOTH PICKS, GOLD PENS PENCILS. SLEEVE BUTTONS; STUD BUTTONS, HANDKERCHIEF RINGS WATCH KEYS, GOLD SPECTACLES EYE GLASSES, WALKING CANES,’ S \ L V E R W A R E . CASTORS, ICE PITCHERS, SYRUP PITCHERS. BUTTER DISHES CUPS & (JO BLETS, YA SES. K NIV ES A FOR KS, S ALT CELLARS, Ad, Has just received his Fall and Winter Stock, embracing everythin" to bo found in a First-Class Jewelry Establishment. 1 have a gene ral assortment of Pistols, Cartridges, Game Bags Shot Belts, Powder Flasks, Animation, Ac., at pries che aper than ever offered in this market before. ItEPAilllXi Oil Watches, Clocks. Jewelry, Guns and Pistols done with neatness and dispatch, and satisfaction guaranteed. Quitman, Ga., September 7th, 1875. IV. E. BARNES, 3 in -■* 1 - r - || |w| W| IIUOOKN < >I'JX r r Y Manufacturing Association! Having Mattel! thoii Mill with u. w in whinery. nn- new r.-mly to mauufaetro wool into’ JLRin.i mid riiiins lor (’asli or on MlirtTus. 00l ion Y'iss-itJSj Mewing; r lTiairs.M*cl, XsTsaitting; YV.iP’ai liopc and Twine and lor .sale at reasonable prices* on A> cl *nt o*i r l.s V. it (J, 11. It t 6 be c.tr.l* -1 will be p;tid hero, and added to cost of curding. Goods Exchanged for Cotton or Wool* ‘Dealers :u’<> rcspoctfully invilcd t* cull and exr.min'i our goods. Z‘’T‘ Wool Curded nt 10 cents per Pound. n. rru . ! ~ AV' H(>L ESA ! PRODUCE MERCHANT, M ACON, GA. Corn, liacon,, Floui', Hay, Oats, 0 r T'ie, < l oJlee. * ilioe, - I'obacooy ETC., ETC., ETC. TEEMS CASH! Sept. M-tf. Ill’ll. MCCONNELL’S EUROPEAN HOUSE -AND RESTAURANT! 21G and 118 BEfSAN ST., SAVANNAH - -- GA. 7.'1~ Opposite Screven House "tVv BoarI) with Room, £2 per day. Rooliih, without board, Toe. to fl per night. Liberal discount by the Week or Month. A. FERNANDEZ, (■27-Gui) Manager. NEWS DEPOT. Al 7 E would inform the citizens of South ▼ ? west. (L-orgm that we have opened in Savannah a lirst class News Depot AND—- Literary EjijPG&ium* And will always ke*p a supply of the best' and latest Newspapers, Magazines, Novels, Ac., both Domestic and Foreign. Subscription received for any paper iir'i America. Orders by mail will receive. ; prompt attention. Atldifess, JAS. A. DOYLE & BRO., f27-Gni] Savannah. (la.. No. 4,