Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 11l
The Quitman Reporter
M PimLISHKI) F.VF.ISY TItUMDAY nT
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All bills for advertising in this paper are
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money is needed.
Kate the Kleptomaniac.
Tllf. ROMANTIC CAREER OF A ONCE RICH AND
BEAUTIFUL WOMAN A SHOI’-I.IFTER
DRESSED IN- BROCADE, SILK AND
DIAMONDS HER STAY IN CIN
CINSATI—ARREST IN NEW
YORK, ST. LOUIS AND NEW
ORLEANS.
[Cincinnati Enquirer.]
Habitues of tho Grand Hotel may
remember among the feminine guests
thoro last fall a tall, elegant woman,
about thirty-five years of age, whose
striking face and figure and rich toi
let made her noticeable everywhere,
and whose sudden departure was 1.1
occasion of considerable go/Fff, - Che
time. Dame rumor coune -ed. her
aristocratic name with tho gentle ep
ithet of kleptomaniac, and certainly
her repeated, visits to fashionable dry
goods stores, which found themselves
heavy loosex-s, gave some ground to
the supposition. Ihe circumstance
would not he alluded to now, if an
Enquirer reporter had not learned
some facts which make these robber
ies mi '. r'i'-'od; o: VM "
manttc career ot a' remarkable and
gifted woman, and, as the informa
tion was gathered from on authentic
source, there -can bo no harm in relat
ing it to a Cincinnati public.
A short time after her sudden flight
from Cincinnati she appeared at St,
Louis, where she registered at the.
Everett House, under the name of
Miss Kate Cummings. In the gla
mour of wealth and aristocratic line
age that surrounded her she met with
nothing but servility aud obeisance
everywhere in her visits to the dry
goods places of the Mound City. No
suspicion attached to her when it was
discovered at a number of stores along
fourth aud fifth streets, that they
were daily suffering the loss of valua
ble articles of ladies' wear aud fancy
fabrics. No suspicion attached to her
when a dective from tho police de
partment was placed in a secure po
sition, where hi* could observe every
thing for the purpose of catching' the
thief. And the detective could hard
ly believe his eyes when at Scruggs,
Yandervoort A Barney's, a few days
later, he saw a piece of lace pocketed
by this woman, dressed in brocade
and silk and bedecked with diamonds.
But it turned out to bo so when she
was taken down to the’ police station
and locked up. The property was
found upon her, and a search of her
trunks at the Everett House showed
a stock of stolen goods amounting in
value to several hundred dollars. The
police threw a veil over the matter
when they found that she bad a
brother in-the city who was a promi
nent and influential lewer, and con
sented to accept her version of the
affair, ns a freak of Kleptomania, with
which she had been aliiicted from
childhood. In her extremity she
“spouted" her diamonds and other
valuables, and with the proceeds she
was able to purchase bonds lrom shy
ster attorneys in league with the po
lice, who let her “jump the town.”
It wouldn’t be worth while to pur
sue the story further, if the woman
was an ordinary shop-lifter, who was
running a race for the penitentiary.
But the heroine of this news item is
a veritable daughter of haughty Vir
ginia stock. Born and brought up
amid wealth and luxury, she married
a wealthy retired New Orleans mer
chant, who became her devoted slave.
As the wife of Col. John jYI. Carr, she
moved in the highest circles of New
Orleans society. In that, soft South
ern skv no star was more brilliant
than was Sallie K. Carr. Men fol
-1 >wod in her train and woi(Slipped at
her foot-stool, but woe to tho victim
ou whom her fascinating glances fell
with favor. Her control over men
was that of a queen, and a subject
once gained yielded to her the con
trol of Ins whole being. He was drawn
into a inaelstorm of intoxication and
fftoination until whirled into a black
abyss of disaster and despair. She
controled men by the power of a
mighty and subtle intellect and wit,
and these alone. Her passion was
not love, but gambling. Her victims
fell beneath her greed of gain. At
her cotnniaml, find often with her
money, they bucked against the "ti
ger” till till was lost. Once a year
she made a trip to her homo in Vir
ginia, but she took advantage of the
occasion to go on a gambling tour
through the watering places of the
East. She would stake, thousands ou
a single throw of cards. She was
wonderfully lucky, and frequently |
won immense sums. These were lav
ished on the moat costly laces, silks
and jewelry. These, again, on the
other hand, she would hand over to
her “uncle” when fortune went
against her, and more than one she
was compelled to resort to her klepto
maniac practices to replenish her ex
chequer. In the fall of 1866 she was
ariested in New York for shop-lifting
and thrown into the Tombs. A well
known New Oorleans merchant, ,f.
Pinckney Smith, happened to be in
New York at the time, bailed her out,
and had the matter quieted. In the
fall of 1868, during the progress of
the Louisaua State Fair tit, Now Or
leans, she was detected in the act of
purloining a set of jewelry on exhibi
tion belongiug to E. A Tyler, a .prom
inent jeweler in that city. Her wealth
and social position succeeded in pre
venting scandal. Enemies she had,!
of course, but she pursued them with !
the vindictiveness of a fiend. Ou the
other hand her generous charities
made her adored by thousands. She j
played men as she played cards, and
a mau in Iter hands beaaine a piece of;
pasteboard site could bend at her will.
Later she played for a $2,000,000 sil
ver mine aud lost. Her own home, 1
heavily mortgaged, fell at last under |
foreclosure, and her husband’s prince-1
ly fortune went with it. Then she be- j
came a wanderer, aud a wanderer she
is to-day.
Shareholders Wanted.
A COMPANY TO TAKE ALL OVU COLORED MEN
INTO AFRICA AND MAKE THEM ItICiI.
[From tlio N. Y. Hun. ]
Messrs. Ludlow Apjoues and B. AY.
Arnett have sent out a circular, in I
which thev invite attention to a cor- ■
porulyuqh.s, ,th “they propose to or- j
, ....'■f.n, “uder the laws of Kentucky !
and the constitution and laws of ihe
United States,” of which the object j
shall bo “to trade in Africa, to secure
trading ports and concessions, to open
new avenues of trade, establish steam
lines, build railroads, foster tho culti
vation of profitable products,” and to
get rich. The capital is to be "five
million dollars, divided into shaves of
one hnndre-.l dollars < tt.-li, e-teh .5, ir-.
to entitle the holler to a land war
rant for one hundred acres of land in
Africa; the holders of shares to have
tho preference in the employments
and nomination of officers under the
company.” It is not a “project of
colonization, but simply a business”
enterprise, to go into Africa, and try
on geneva! principles to make money
out of that peninsula..
The circular sots forth the reasons
that should make such an enterprise
wise and promising, about to the fol
lowing effect: Tho African continent
is very big, and there is plenty of un
occupied room on it. It yields grains,
fruits, vegetables, animals, the pre
cious stones and metals, and materi
als for making cloth, and it lots abun
dant water communication, internal
and lateral. Other nations are ac
quiring possessions there. There are
already 3,500,000 whites iu South Af
rica. The United States should not
be behind. Tho United States should
imitate England, which has colonies
everywhere. One especial reason for
such au enterprise ou the part of
Americans is that we have so many
colored men who can get no very
good or remunerative employment
here, and who would find the climate
aud other conditions of Africa well
suited to them, and in the undertak
ings of this proposed company would
have a good chance to make money.
Another reason why such an enterprise
should take its origin iu the United
States is that slavery of negro people
exists in Africa, which it would be
more becoming in the colored citizens
of the United States to extinguish
than in any other people. The circu
lar loaves the reader to imply that the
colored men had therefore, belter
come forward and take as many SI.OO
fib arcs in “Tho African Gompauy” as
they can plank down legal tender
notes for.
The Difference Between a Brother
and a 'Wife. — Mr. Marsh traded
with Mrs. Belknap for a post trader
ship. Mrs. Belknap is the wife of the
Secretary of War. Air. Belknap is
forced to resign his office. A guard
is placed over his house. Ho is sub
jected to the ignominy of a criminal
arrest, aud is uowfiout of jail only be
cause ho has given heavy bail.
Other parties traded for post i
traderships with Mr. Ohvil Grant. |
He is the brother of the President. !
The President notified him in advance J
when there were to be vacancies, j
This afforded Brother Ohvit, a chance j
to speculate out of them. The Pres- !
ident must have given the notices on
purpose to afford Brother O'.tvtn a
chance to speculate out of the ap
pointments, because there is no other
object ho could have had in furnish
ing this information to Orvu,.
Yet the President remains in the
White House at twice the salary paid
to Gi!orb Washington.* Ho does
not resign; ho is not arrested; he is
not molested.
It would seem to bo much safer for
speculators and dealers in offices and
appointments to deal with a broth,. r|
than with a wife. —.V. Y. Sun.
(JIJTMYN, GA., THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 187(5.
Mrs. Whistler's Case Why She
(’hanged Her Church.
From (lie Philadelphia bulletin.]
The facts in Mrs. Whistler’s case
seem to have been tlieso: Mrs.
Whisler has singular absence of mind,
and on the last Sunday she attended
her own church, Dr. llumlerly began
to read from the scriptures the ac
count of the deluge. Mrs. Whistler
was deeply attentive, and when the
doctor ctuue to the story of how it
rained for so many days and nights,
site was so much absorbed in the uar
rative and so strongly impressed with
it, that she involuntarily put up her
umbrella and held it over her head as
she sat in the pew. ft appears that
Mrs. Moody, who sits in the next pew
in front, frequently brings her lap
dqg to church with her, and when
Mrs. Whistler raised’ her umbrella
•suddenly, the action affected the sen
sibilities of Mrs. Moody’s dog in such
a manner that he began to bark fu
riously.
Of course, the sexton cams in for
the purpose of removing the animal,
but it dodged into a vacant pew on
the other side of the aisle and defied
him, barking vociferously all the time.
Then the sexton became warm and
indignant, aud he (lung a hymn
book at the dog, whereupon the dog
tlew out and bit his leg. The excite
ment in the church by (his time, of
course, was dreadful. Not only was
the story of the deluge interrupted,
but the nnrogoncrate Sunday-school
scholars in the gallery actually hissed
the dog at the sexton, and seemed to
enjoy the contest exceedingly.
Then Elder Medina came after the
dog with his cane, and as he pursued
tl-.e animal it dashed toward the pul
pit and ran up the steps in such a
fierce manner that tha doctor quickly
mounted a chair and remarked, with
anger flashing through his spectacles,!
that if this disgraceful scene did no! j
come to nil end be should dismiss the |
congregation. Then tho elder crept j
softly up tho stairs, and after a short!
struggle, he sue.’cede 1 in grasping
the dog bv one of his hind legs. Then i
he walked down the aisle with it, the!
dog meantime yelling with supernat
ural energy, and the Sunday-school,
boys making fractious remarks.
Mrs V iisikr turned around, with '
other members of tno congregation,
to watch tho retreating elder, and as
she did so site permitted her uncon-j
scions umbrella to drop over so that j
the end, of one of tile ribs caught Mrs.
Moody’s bonnet'. A moment later,
when she was straightening up the’
umbrella, the bonnet was wrenched
off and hung dangling from the uni-;
brolla. Airs. Moody had become ex
ceedingly warm, at any rate, ovi r the
onslaught made upon her dog; bid
when Airs. Whistler removed her bon
net she fairly boiled over, and turn
ing around, white with rage, slmj
screamed:
“What'd yon grab that bonnet for,
you catamount V Haven't you made |
enough fuss in this sanctuary to-day. I
sheering a poor, innocent dog, with
out snatching off such bonnets as the j
likes of you can’t afford to wear, \u> i
matter Low moan yon livo at homo, j
von red-heiuloded lunatic, you ? You
let my bonnets alone, or (’ll warm I
you with thin parasol, if it is in moot-!
ing; now mind tno!”
Then Mrs. Whistler first seomod to j
realize that her umbrella made her
conspicuous; so she furled it tyid con-1
eluded to escape from an embarrass- :
ing position by going home. And as
she stopped into the aislo her enomy ;
gave Let a parting salute;
“.Sneaking off before the collection ;
too! You’d better spent less for
breast-pins and give more to the poor
lien then if you don't want to ketch it!
hereafter!”
Then she began to fan herselt tn- j
rionsly, and its Airs. W histler emerged
from the front door and things be
came calmer, the doctor rusuniod tho j
story of the flood. But Airs Whistler j
has given up her pew and gono over j
to the Presbyterians, and there are
rumors that Mrs. Aloofly is going to
secede also, because Elder McGinn
insists that she shall leave her dog at
home.
"Restoration of the Jews.— The
prophecies regarding the restoration |
of tho Jews to Jerusalem are some- i
what curiously illustrated by the re
cent movement of Sir Moses Mont ;li
ore in behalf of purchasing land for
his countrymen there, and for improv
ing the material condition of the resi
dent Jews. He found that recently a
lot of laud, fifty yards by one hun
dred,, or five thousand square yards,
outside of the walls of the Holy City,
had been sold for 25,000 piastaees or
about $1,035. Near by, a lot measu
ring nineteen thousand square yards,
with trees aud vines, with small
buildings and a large cistern, was
offered for SB,OOO A whole village
could be bought at a moderate [trice,
and the Turkish Government profess
ed to be friendly to tho plan of improv
ing the industry of the country by set
tlements and buildings. A company
has purchased a track of land near
Jerusalem, with tho intention of buil
ding; upon it fifty houses. So it is
that business aud education are work
ing together with religion upon the
future of civilization.
—A story is told of a Gloucester
shire peasent’s remarkable curse. He
had been wrestling for a long time
with a very tough piece of oak, which
ho was endeavoring to split and at last,
unable to make any impression upon
it, burst out, “Dorn th' pigs that didn't
eat thee when thou want an
acorn.”
Gpu. W. Vi. Luring,
m* a ex. i. ir. M
(From tho Richmond Whig.]
j The decisive victory which was won
last, week by the army of tho khodivo
of Egypt from tho forces of the king of
Abyssinia is of more than usual iuter
j est to our peoplo, because of the dis
tinguished part which our Confeder
ate General Luring bore in the buttle.
Lot ing was born a soldier, and be
gan his career befovo he was sixteen
years old. It is probable he lFis seen
more of actual war than any man iu
America.
His first military experience in the
field was against tho Seminole Indians
!of Florida, his own state. Soon after
wards tie went over—still a boy—to
help the Texans, and tool; active part
in the operations which terminated in
the independence of Texas.
In 1816 Loring was appointed sen
i ior captain of the Mounted Bilk’s.
The r situation of the major of
that regiment and the pro-
I motion of its colonel,Pevifer F. Smith,
and the cashiering 'of its lieutenant
colonel. Fremont, all occurred in rap
id succession, and made Loring the
actual commander of tho regiment
from the day it entered Mexico till lie
; rcsignod in 1861. Ho was tho voting-,
! ost cavalry colonel iu tho United :
' States army, being only 26 when lie j
I first took command of “the Hides. ’
1 His conduct throughout- tho Mexi-i
; can war was marked by conspicuous
! gallantry. He was with his regiment
in every battle, to tho very last strug
| glo of the war at tho Bolen Gate of
Mexico, where Loving was shot down
! and lost his arm.
Ill’s restless, ambitious spirit would
! not permit him to lose, one day uunee
(oss-irily because of his wounds. He
very soon resumed personal command
| of tho Rifles again, and no officer of
; his rank in tho services was so “ory
actively engaged in the ’field as Col.
! Loring was from 18-16 to 1861, when
he resigned tho colonelcy of the Rifles
I (now tho third United States cavalry
and enle vd tho army of the Southern
Confederacy.
Daring tho summer, full and winter
of 1859, Colonel Loring marched with
a column of the rifles from south
western Texas to tho posts of tiie up
per Rio Grande, made a campaign into
Arizona, and another daring tho bit
(.crest winter season almost over j
known up into L T ! ih an 1 back to Santo ,
' .Hid F. vl v mon’, b: Vmg murened j
5,000 miles during the three expedi
tions.
While Loring commanded “the Ri- ■
fins, that regiment, or detachment of j
it engaged the Mexicans during the
Mexican war in eighteen combats.
And from the close of tho Mexican
war to the opening of the war be I ween ’
the states hud more than fifty lights
with the Indians of Oregon, Arizona,
Texas aud New Mexico, losing in ac
tion more than thirty commissioned:
officers, and several hundred men.
And though generally opposed by su- j
pat h-r numbers, the Rifles, except oueo i
in Mexico and once in Texas, iuvariub j
boat the enemy.
V> il'l General Loring’s history dur I
ing the war between tlm states the
whole cotintiy is fajuilliar; it was four
years of incessant action, and of brill
iant services.
He is not only an morgetic, daring,
ambitious and skillful commander,
but he is a warm In arteA, hospitable
and chivalrousgeutlman.
Although a bachelor, no man D the
old United .States army was more ra:v.
ked iu iiis respect for women, aud in
his cave for the comfort of la
dies who followed theitf husbands out
to tho front posts under his command.
Colonel Loring always announced
that in Lis command tho comfort of
the ladies of his garrisons should be
paramount to the privileges of rank,
and would at any time vacate his own
quarters to tho wife of the youngest
lieutenant of the post.
His handsome income as colonel of
cavalry, aud au ample private fortune,
were freely dispensed iu the hospitali
ties of his headquarters, and it is a
sonreo of much pleasure to his old
comrades that a soldier so accomplish
ed, and a gentleman so generous, has
found in the muuificient monarch of
Egypt a sovereign who appreciates his
value and can reward his services.
Cohn for Cows.—Some scorn to feel j
that grain fed to cows is thrown away.
The horses and hogs must have all
the grain and leave the cows to take
care of themselves. These are, in my
opinion, very mistaken notions. In
deed, it costs only a little more to i
keep a cow on grain than hay. Ex
ample: It wiij take one acre of good
grass to furnish winter fodder for a
cow. The same acre, if planted in
corn and cultivated well, will not only
furnish grain enough, if fed with the j
stalks in winter and the pasturage in
summer, to give us a good flow of milk
during the entire milking season,
while the hay would have done little I
more than sustained the animal life.
The difference of cost, then, in the
two methods of feeding is the differ
ence of expenses in raising an acre of
grass and an acre of corn. We have
the same investment for land, audit
is the only difference in labor, and
when we strike the balance between
the cost and profit we shall find a
balance in favor of the grain. —Ex.
An English revivalist slid down the
bum-tors of his pulpit in order to show
bow people went ou backsliding.
(grant’s Uudidden Guest.
Curious Scene at the White House
'Washington, Mnroh 19. —A few days
ago the President wished to talk over,
iu an informal manner, with the ring
men of tho District aud their Congres
sional barkers, some matters of impor
tance to his household’ The Pres
ident’s real estate speculations, Gen
eral Babcock’s connections with the
improvements of certain public reser
vations, and Halle! t Kilbourues im
prisonment for not producing his
private books and expressing Grant’s
J connection with the real estato pool,
all required friendly conversation,
j Tho pr.vate secretary of the I resident,
Ulysc i-s S., Jiiwr, was handed by
his father a list of the parties to be
j summoned to the Presidential dinner
I table. During the day he repaired to
j the Capitol and personally presen
ted the President’s compliments with
tho request that *eaeh partv waited
upon would beat the White House to
dinner that evening. General Gar
field was among the first called upon.
Then looking over the list he saw the
prefix “Sen., ’’which he thought meant
Senator, and the angular writing of
the President lead him to read the
line as Senator Salsbnry. To the
venerable and gentlo Senator front
Delawafe young Ulysses presented
his father's compliments and reques
ted him to bo at tho White House
promptly at seven o'clock that even
ing. At the appointed time the guests
.were all iu attendance. No one was
so bland and polite as Senator Sauls
burv. Tho President saw the mistake,
but it was useless to attempt to cor
rect it thou. General Garfield was
I consulted, and having had large ex
! perienco iu “sitting out” intruders at
i late hours, ho recommended that the
invited guests except Salsbnrv bo re
quested to linger at the tab'e and per
i haps the Democratic Senator would
| discover his awkward presence amid
!an assemblage of Republican Con
| gressmon and Senators. But ho did
i not, and remained until tin hour that
the President gave up in despair aud
1 intimated that he wished to retire.
Now, the Senator who should have
1 been invited instead of Mr. Saulsbury,
: everybody knows, was Senator .Sar
gent, of California. Garfield in tho
House aud Sargent in the Senate are
the defenders of Boss Shepard, tho
real estate pool, and all the other
profitable rascality which has cursed
Hie District for six years past. Young
Ulvsses was to,l y-si! 1<• ■] for having
made the mistake, and defended his
notion on the ground that ho was riot
familiar with his father’s handwriting,
and did not know who his ring friends
were. During tho last Congress
Mr. Wood was placed in a similar
awkward position by mistake. Con
gressman Parker, of Missouri, a Re
publican, was invited to the feast, in-
Joad of Parker, Democrat, of New
Hampshire, and this one uncongenial
party spoiled the evening’s entertain
ment.—Ba’liin ire Gazette.
_ I
Aii Artificial llntluT-
Mr. T. B. Rogers, tho famous poal- 1
try breeder at Wethersfield, hasl
“sensed tho precise tiling” and lias in-;
vented wlmt ho calls an artificial I
mother for the rearing of young
chickens. Ho estimates that at least
fifty per cent, of chickens hatched are
lost by suffering from cold, by being
stepped on by their mother, by cats
and other animals, and in various oth
er ways. Ho also finds that chickens,
to be profitable, should bo hatched in
tho winter. He has hatched three
broods in nine weeks with ono hen—
that is, he takes away the chickens as j
soom aa hatched and places fresh eggs;
undet the hen, and in this way keeps
her busy propagating chickens. Mr.
Rogers’ ne.o move was to get up
somo invention that would take care
of tho chickens when hatched, and be
has constructed what he calls an “ar
tificial mother.” This is a box with
two compartments, and about three
feet long by two and a half wide. In
the rear is a lid covered with wool,
which shuts within three inches of the
bottom; this is cut off from the front
part by a strip that can be raised on
hinges. The front is protected by lat
tice work, giving plenty of air and
light, and on tho outside are tin
troughs, in which gravel, food and wa
ter are placed. The chickens can ea-
sily get tlioir bills into these, and
when they have got their fill they can
run under the wool covered lid, which
is so soft and comfortable that they
imagine they are under the old lien’s
wings. Mr. Rogers had iu ono of those
boxes yesterday a brood of twenty-one
chickens, thirteen of which’ were
hatched last Thursday and five on
Sunday. They were all as lively as
crickets and seemed perfectly at ease.
He took them to the Springfield poul
try show on the noon train, whore they
will undoubtedly attract a good deal
of attention. —llartfurd Cent rant.
Sour: Shoulders.— Out a piece of
smooth leather into such a shape as to j
lie snugly between the shoulders of
the horse and the collar. This fiends!
off all the friction as the collar slips
and moves on the leather, and not on '
the shoulders of the horse. This is j
better than padsof sheep-skin under j
the collar.
Mail in Foot. —As soon as the nail |
is extracted apply to the wound, bruis-'
.•■1 peach leaves. Confine with a ;
bandage and the cure is ns if by mag- j
ic. Renew the application twice a
j day if necessary. One is generally |
sufficient.
Miscellaneous Advertisements',
W. E. BARNES, .
PRACTICAL JEWELER
AND DEALER IN
.0 1C W iC 1C ifc v,
CLOCKS, GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES.
GOLD AND SILVER CHAINS, COLD BINGS,
LADIES' SETS, LOCKETS,
NECK LACES, BRACELETS,
GOLD TOOTH PICKS, GOLD PENS,
PEN <' ILS, SLEEVE BUTTONS,.
S TUD BUTTONS, HANDKERCHIEF KINGS,
WATCH KEYS, GOLD SPECTACLES,
EYE (iLASSES, WALKING CANES,
SILVER W A R E,
CASTORS, ICE PITCHERS,
SYRUP PITCHERS. BUTTER DISHES,
CUPS & GOBLETS, VASES,
KNIVES a FORKS, SALT CELLARS, Ac:,
Has just received his Full aud Winter Stock, embracing everything to be
found in a First-Class Jewelry Establishment.
I have a general ass-rtinent of Pistols, Cartridges, Game Bags Shot Belts,
Powder Flasks, Amunition, Ac., at prices cheaper than ever offered iu this
market before.
On "Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Guns finl Pistols done with neatness and
dispatch, aml satisfaction guaranteed.
Quitman, Ga., September 7th, 1875. VC R BARNES,
dm
i S UU >< VfifTK O< >HIS r r V
Manufacturing Association!
i lr • in,!j ivLitt L tii*i r Mill with now Machinery, arc now r *ndy to manufacture wool into’
deans and Plains for Cush or ou shares.
£s£lieeting>>s ?
< < ’oUon
Showings M''!ii , esi<l, I£uitt ino*
’Vm*Ei Hope and r IT wine
and fdi* .sale at iXMi.soiLablo prices.
AU ir ;,!it <>u Wool sent over A. AO. R. R to be nnr.loil wilt hS mid here, and
added to cost of cardiny. *
Goods I’ldiiiisgod for Cotton or Wool.
Dealers aro respectfully invited f> cull and examine our goods.
\Vool Carded at 10 cents pur Pound.
- !,t 11. BRIGGS, President
aCT%-'—- ■- ..-.rjin-wuv - •
W. A. HUFF,
W HOLES A EE
PRODUCE MERCHANT,
MACON, CIA.
Corn, Is*ieoii,
Flour, 3 leal,
May 9 Oats-*,
Mjio-o-iiEo-, r rie,
Nugsa.iv Ooilee,,
Walt, fiSioe,
Lime, Lobficco,,
EJC, ETC., ETC.
TERMS CASK!
, So,,t. ir.il AV. A. HUFF.
McCOXXELL'S
EUROPEAN HOUSE
-AND
RESTAURANT!
216 and 118 BRYAN ST.,
SAVANNAH, - - GA.
;■ Opposite Screven House -Sfcj
Board with Room, 82 per day.
Rooms, without board, 7tie. to 81
per night.
Liberal discount by the Week or
Month.
A. FERN AN DEZ,
(27 6m) Manager.
NEWS DEPOT.
\\JT wM inform the citizens ofSoutk
▼ \ west Georgia that we hare opened ii**
Savannah a first class
News Depot
—AND—
Literary Emporium*
And will always keep a supply Qf the best
and latest Newspapers, Magazines, TSovels,
Ac., both Domestic and foreign.
Subscription received fer any paper in
America. Orders by mail rfeoeivo
prompt attention.
Address,
JAS. A. HOYLE & BRO.,
(27-Gm) Ssavuß*'.*!:. Ga.
No. 5.