Newspaper Page Text
^TELEGRAPH.
fB IDAY, APRIL 24,1808
( fl0S OF Agriculture and Com -
^"were happy to see in our city,
pV Col. Sam. C. Reid, of Louisiana,
been addressing the people
AUlwma, and Columbus, in our
. sitli great success, on the present
tbc South and the means of re-
^ agricultural and commercial pros-
'^bigHU l mvc <^ 0 ' - Reid’s efforts been
",j [,y °ur neighbors and so highly
' “,,j l,y the Press, that we would sug-
• r merchants offer inducements for
iu our city a few days and ad-
[ people of Macon on this intcrest-
. ^portant subject, and make ar-
‘ a for tbc same.
The Greorgia ATeelcly Telegraph.
Terrible Accident on the Erie Railroad.
A TRAIN PRECIPITATED ONE HUNDRED FEET.
THIRTEEN BODIES CONSUMED IN THE BURN
ING CARS.
„ Question for Colored Cm-
• X t i; : ue has been distinctly made up
,i e Xorthern Radicals and your
r .friend and neighbors, and manyof
deliberately determined to side
» ivliom wc consider our enemies,
jj should bo defeated in the elec
tilit then t To whom will you look
-v:friendship and protection? Will
■ . ;Le lace to look to the white men of
,-isgainst whom you have made war
. lilotbox? Can you look to the
.lose bands you have tried to
' (3 j D order that they might oppress
X; 3 t of these things, you who have
-.posit your votes.
. ..Doits,” of the Baltimore Sun, says
r .,-:s mule 3Ir. Butler and his friends
r - 3fr. Stanton out and Mr. Butler in the
. ; n even on tho week succeeding
• , of Mr. Lincoln, will be fully proved
ipabUcatton, ia a few days, of letters
...fd to President Johnson.
orusn ok IIcuiERfs Tricks.—We are
v informed that up to a late hour of
L day of the election, tbc Registrar at
.Monroe county, refused, under or-
headquarters, to number and name
. This was the day when the votes
trora other counties were crowded
boxes, and the refusal to number
nlv contrary to law, hut prevented
rt into questions of fraud. This is
•ii/piecc of business, indeed. One
Zink that giving negroes from all
■ the State the right to vote upon their
tfidarit—which not one in ten com-
■i or cares a snap ol his finger for—
*! tbc door to fraud sufficiently wide,
insists of slamming the door
Ciinst the wall and keeping it there.
ike honest men of Monroe will see
a! this matter is brought to the atten-
! Guard Meade.
New York, April 1(5.—A train on the
Erie Railruad, which left Buffalo twenty
minutes past two yesterday, p. m., in chnrge
of Conductor Judd and Chas. Douglass,
Superintendent division—consisting of an
engine and tender, three sleeping, two first
and one second-class, two bnggage and one
postal car, proceeding on time, making
usual stoppage until in the evening, when
the passengers went into the sleeping cars for
tho night.
About 3 a. m. Mr. Ames nnd Mr. Horton,
of the general postoffice, in chnrge of the
postal car, saw the bell rope straighten out
and break in two, when Mr. Judd remarked
that he had lost his rear cars. They ran to
the platform of the car, where the four rear
cars were seen running down a precipice from
70 to 100 feet high. The scene of the acci
dent is thirteen miles beyond Port Jarvis, on
the Delaware division of the road. The sides
oi tho precipice are formed of jagged rocks.
In the descent the cars were broken to pieces.
At the bottom is a culvert, through which
flows a stream of water emptying into the
Delaware river. The impression prevails that
the disaster was caused by a broken rail
which threw the rear car from tho track.—
This displaced three cars running in front,
and the connections breaking, the whole were
precipitated down the embankment.
Conductor Judd and Superintendent Doug
lass were slightly injured. The cars, in go
ing over the embankment, turned several
times before the bottom was reached, and
were nearly demolished. The sleeping car
wa3 entirely consumed by fire. The passen
gers aboard of the cars left standing on tlfe
track immediately began to rescue the wound
ed and remove the bodies of the killed.—
Many of the latter coold not be recognized.
Seven persons were burned to dcatb, nnd six
others were killed by coming in contact
with jagged rocks. The wounded persons
were placed on a train and brought to Port
Jarvis, which place was reached at 9 o’clock
this morning. Several surgeons were imme
diately summoned, and everything done that
would in any way relieve the sufferers.
The bodies of persons killed were left on
the ground. A Port Jarvis dispatch states
that there were about thirty wounded and
twenty lives lost. The people at Port Jar
vis threw open their houses/and the ladies
of the town rendered all the assistance in
their power. Mr. Blakely, of Oleon, New
York, who was on one ol the cars that went
down the embankment, states that the train
was the Cincinnati express, due in New York
at eight o’clock this morning. All four of
the cars that went over the embankment were
completely smashed, and I think twenty-fire
to thirty killed outright. I saw five or six
ladies taken from the ruins quite dead nnd a
number wounded.
The rear car took (ire from the stove a short
time after the living were removed from it,
Dave Eongsliore’s dairies and Gravities ! j
Vulcania, Near Lithonia, )
April 20, ISOS. \
Mr. Editor: Did you know that my name
was before the White Men’s Congressional
Convention, as a candidate for Congress in
this District ? Well, it were, and I’ve the
best and most obliging sec of friends in the
Satrapies, perhaps I I told them that I
didn’t want the nomination, nor didn’t care
[For the Telegraph.
TITE SOUTHERN FOREST FLOWER.
The Immorality of New York.
Sweet fragile flower, deep in thy clear blue eye
And trusting face, wo trace the smilo of Heaven.
What hast thou felt of sorrow's night? what known
Of that black grief by which our souls ore riven?
No wintry showers, or white-winged tempests leave
Their icy tributes on thy perfumed check;
But softest zephyrs print the amorous kiss.
On thy fair blushing brow, so pure and meek.
t Cherokee.—'The Atlanta Intelli-
i ot yesterday says: “The news from
it is cost cheering. Wo learn that
-atabera of the Union League have
Lad it, and are working hard with the
ADmocr&cy of that good old county
Mi We have the most cheering
lie iron the Cherokee and Mountain
The skies are bright—the people
j-ite victory will be ours!”
mrocHEK.—We learn from a gne
'inked from Chattahoochee Wed-
tittraooD, lays the Columbus Enqui-
itiit Democrats were f^; ahead in the
M'hps three hundred votes), large
iff the negroes haying voted tho
Stic ticket. We regard this as a “set
'.Lc Smatoriai election in lliisDis
and I should judge there were about seven
lmd' no Knrn/wl nn TIwipa wapa in nrl
for the office, and they believed me andI fl -T ct> ia ft* fV* homc, 1 ,
_ *i J u I Rock d by tho mighty ocean's ceaseless Ewell,
u oulun t take tlie bint 1 If they’d ODly stand i Thou art not sad or lonely, for thou hast
' No piteous talo of hopeless love to tell.
How many tempest tossed hearts, sweet flower,
That feel tlio pain without tho peace of death.
Sigh for thy forest homo!—thy peaceful hours!
Thy ocean music! thy sweet zephyr’s breath.
up for me as true as they obeyed my instruc
tions ! Being a good Democrat, I thought it
but right to give the nomination to a young
man, if I couldn’t get it myself. If he gets j
beat I have the satisfaction of knowing that [
it aint me, nnd if he gets elected, why most When weary hear Is send to a smiling faco
anybody could whip the fight audit
useless for me to run through with such a
slight resistance ! So I wrote the following
letter: (Private—Please touch up its noble,
manly and patriotic spirit.)
Vulcania, near Lithonia, Ga. )
3Iarch 30.1808. {
To the Congressional Nominating Convention
Assembling at CartenoilU on the 31st inst.
Gents : Reasons of a private character (the
promise of the choice of a county office from!
We translate the following from the Courie
des Etats Unis of the 4th inst., which we sub
mit without comment:
Thu Sanitary Committee has published a second
annual report upon the mortality of the cities ol
New York and the causes thereof, which contains
some 250 pages of printed matter, full of informa
tion of great interest, both as regards health as well
as general statistics. It embraces the period from
the 1st October, 1S06, to tho 3lst December, 1SG7;
the last three months beingadded to the preced
ing twelve, in order that lieuce'orward tho annual
report may cemprise the regular year frrom the
1st of January to the last of December.
We first find in the work which we are about to
analyze a thorough revision of the last census ot
1865, and the confirmation of the criticisms pub
lished at that time upon the results thereof. Thus
It appears certain that the population of New York
approaches a million, whereas by the census it
hardly reached seven hundred and flftv thousand.
For example, it appears from a partial census
JIB taken for a special object, in May, 1867, in- the
Tho warm lifo-blood, how sweet to them t’wonld be seventeenth distriet, that it contained 95,691 iu-
lub.tanU—whereas, in the i revious census i: ap
pears only to have contained 79,568 souls. The
j number of children over five years of age were
set down at 12,122, whereas their number
reaches 14,012. The following statement shows
the increase of population since 1790:
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL
Macon Cotton IVIarket.
OFFICE DAILY TELERGAPH. t
Maco.v. April 22. 1867. ,
(our quotations include government TAX.'
Cotton.—Our market was dull and iuactive toj-day,
owing to the election and other causes. Holders are
not anxious sellers, and the offering stock being very
light, but few sales took p’.aco. Wo quote Middlings
at 2Sf£ cents.
New Orleans Cotton Statement.
New Orleans, April 17.
Stock Sept. 1, 1867 15,256
Received since yesterday 1.275
Received previously 626,972-627,247
Total .637^63
Shipped since yesterday
Shipped previously 5S0.219-550.219
Stock on hand and on shipboard
Tho birth-place of undying melody.
Macon, April 16,1S6S.
to viow
Eppik B. C.
APRIL A IRS.
57,254
Savannah Cotton Statement.
Savannah, April 15.
STOCK.
S. Island. Upl’nd
Stock on hand Sept. 1, 1867.......... 122 511
Received since April 1, 186S- 37 5.601
Received-previously 9,680 45-5,16:
The sweet south wind, so long
Sleeping in other climes, or sunny seas,
Or dallying with the orange tree3
11, tho bright I in 1 "tV-n-r,
Wakes rhto us, nnd laughingly sweeps by
Like a glad spirit of the sunlit sky.'
1790..
1800..
1810..
1814
33.131
60.4S9
-9\519
1335
1840
ISto.
1850
..2363.089
...312,710
371,223
.2)15.547
1820..
123,706
1S55
...629,810
182o..
166.0S6
1800
...705,358
1830..
197,112
1863
...726,386
. Tho laborer at his toil
Sheriff to Baliff) compel* me, like Richard i Hh'open’brow^catch h7s y fragr'ant silts—
3 rs,to decline the proffered crown of the j Bnrnefrom thcbl^omiSggardeua of the South.
Congressional nomination in this District. j "bile iu faint sweetness lingers round his mouth.
Don’t, for goodness sake, force the nomination j Tho bursting bud looks up
on me, for the. “milk of human kindness" Mb?d^nd th^'S T#l
Opens its azure sky
There were 7513 marriages in New York in
tho 12 months preceding the 3Cth of September,
I embracing, of course, 15026 persons,or about 2
| per cent, of tho whole population, whereas in
Brooklyn there were but 1319 marriages, em
bracing 2698 persons, or a little Jes3 than 1 per
cent of the whole population. The report
Total... 9,839
EXPORTS.
Exported this week 313
Exported previously 9.S02
Total 9,615
Stock on hand April I5_™ 224
W. C. Watts
401L274
4.121
427,310
431.469
& Co.’s Weekly Market
Report.
Liverpool, April 3,1865,
. . -, In our issue of th 27th ultimo wo reported about
affirms, however, that effective marriages are an average weok’s business, and quoted middling
more numerous in Brooklyn than in New York. American firm at lOVfd to 101Zd for Uplands and Or-
flowing in my veins might induce me to ac
cept it, and thus disappoint my friends who
are anxious that I shall have an office, and
are determined that I shall liaveone even if I
have to be a candidate for all! I
am induced to write thus plainly to
you from the fact that you might not believe
that my friends wero so zealous in pressing
my claims were I not to do so. I am op
posed to the Radical faction and their plat
form, which they call a Constitution! And
belong to the great unwashed, unterrified and
Iron-ribbed Democracy, ready at all times
to battle in behalf of its principles, or shoe
horses and make plows at the shortest notice.
Yours, in the Democratic faith,
Dave Longshore, Black Smith.
P. S. My friend Col. Alston assures me that
thep«ni3 migliter than the sword, for it took
him nnd Ty Smith three days to raise one of
the former in his lot, while he could draw the
latter in les3 than so many minutes in defence
of Truth and Right 1 I’ll wager one to ten
that my hydrostatic plow eclipses both for
point and penetration 1
H ■D.S-.B.S.
Shumate is not electioneering with his col-
ored friends 1 I overheard a conversation
dead bodies burned up. There were in ad- ' tiie other day between him and a ragged
r.-y— Wc «re still without mails
• Seville, but parties who came
idauday report the election as pro-
; sr a manner entirely satisfactory to
wmts.
A friend writes us that in spite
everything is progessing well in
; !t, L soil with an honest count of the
■ Democrats will carry it by from 150
ntjoritj.
Mxo.-~The Griffin Star of Wednesday
-' d accounts from Pike and Fayette,
s of Spalding:
fc< ol the poll so far in tbi3 County,
uncounted, give signs of abundant
Oar people are buoyant and hope-
IccJ, n e have heard expressions on
by those well informed, tbut wc arc
r; • JjeUerthau we could have rea-
JHpceted.
- -g but stuffing, ora fraudulent count,
I tav .° radicalism from an igno-
, rocte our country. Wc have
•ttson to hope and believe that the
/j, one. All is going on in
!,? offered that Gordon will
- = county by 300 majority. Many of
-au are voting straight conscrva-
^■i-fltlicrs voting “scratch” tickets
•2 Conservative—“and the' colored
nobly." Hurrah for negro suf-
l-> Hacks arc voting with their
- to I1u,lt Jugged.—A Radical ne-
4 Ci&rd to threaten another Wednesday
I y°ted tho^ Democratic ticket. A
etng near, took possession of the
tpui and at last accounts he wasen
te weets of solitude in lho guard
Radical negroes will soon find
a losing game.
ditioa three dead bodies taken out before the
fire reached them. The car ahead of the one
in which I was sleeping also took fire, but
the flames were speedily extinguished. The
catastrophe, of course, took place in the dark
ness of the night, and the confusion and ter
ror was appalling, and the horror was greatly
increased by the agonizing shrieks and groans
of the wounded and dying.
B. Phillips, President of the 3Iichigan
Southern Railroad, and Charles M. Gray
General Freight Agent of the same road, were
on the ill fated Erie train yesterday.
The killed and most of the wounded are
at the depot at Port Jarvis. Half a dozen
physicians are there from this city. The en
gineer of train says the accident occurred
fourteen miles west of Port Javis, at Carr’s
Point, a rugged bluff, along the side of which,
one hundred and fifty feet above the Delaware,
the track was excavated. The story is that a
rail broke about four hundred feet west of
Carr’s Point, the engine and fivecars passing
ovsr the fracture safely; the forward track of
the sixth then got off, the coupling parted,
and this car, followed by the remaining three,
went on four hundred feet, wllen, coming in
contact w ith some obstacle, it was thrown
down the precipice, dragging the others with
it to the river’s edge.
Tho train was going at the rate of twenty
to twenty-five miles per hour. The cars
which t soaped were three passenger cars, one
postal car and one freight car. Those thrown
over tho cjiff were all passenger cars, three
being s epingcars. It was intensely dark.—
On reaching the foot of the bluff, two cars
wero found to be in the river, and one, the
last car, on fire. There were over two hun
dred persons in the se7en cars.
A Port Jarvis dispatch late last night says
it is stated there that thirteen persons were
consumed in the burning cars; six bodies
were recovered last night. Among the
wounded are Turney Lnughom, editor of the
Syracuse Courier; A. Sturtevant, of the Bing-
humptou Standard, and James It. HcenaD, of
Louisville. C. C. Dyke, ofJBrookly’n was com
ing from the West in company with a young
lady, who, by strenuous exertions, saved him.
His* legs are badly crushed, nnd he would
have burned to death 5vitbout her aid.
Port Jarvis, April 15, p. si.—The scene
of the disaster on the Eric railroad baffles de
scription. The immense height of the cm
bankment nnd the character of tho ground
rendered the calamity terribly fatal. The
wounded aro horribly mutilated—tho broken
limbs asd gashes forming a fearful sight.—
Several will die of their wounds. The loss of
life will not be less than forty or fifty. The
names of the Southerners do not appear
among the list of killed and wounded,
hungry looking darkey, whiqh I give in full
RAD.
TVronffed African! Hoir art thou faring?
Of tho cruelties and outrage, most flaring.
Perpetrated on theo by thy late owner most daring?
Tell mo! your friend, and more than brother!
Bleak blows the blast—yonr hat has got a hole in it,
And so has your breeches I
Have you not read our Atlanta Constitution,
Which metes out to tho whito slavo stern retribution 1
And relief for you in yonr utmost destitution,
Drops of compassion tromblo on my cyo-lids
Ready t» fall soon as you toll yonr pitiful story I
To say nothin;: of close and moat!
T used to Ii.iVo plenty to cat and wear—well-cared for,
By wassa and missns who’d never lot mo suffer: _
But now dey ore poorer than me. or Job’s mrkey, ah
And I’d keep ’em if I could I
Dey never boat and kicked mo—nor lot mo die with
out the doctor’s aid,
Eber kind to mo! would I could with dem have staid l|
And now of starving I’d not bo so much afraid!
Ah, haopy days gone forever more!
I can no good in your great ’terstution see.
Will rctributing mazsa giv bread nnd meat to me?
Is givin you tho offices tho jewel of my great liberteo?
1 want oldmassa and missus back home again.
So deu ore free I’ll bocontcntthcir sarvent to remain!
rad. (Indignant.)
Go miserable wretch! you’re not worth clothes or
cash 1
Nothing can arc use in theo a sense of wrongs but the
lash I
Sorry, poor, pitiful, degraded, worse than mean white
trash!
In Ike Anderson’s mill-pond we’ll drown you!
I have received the following cards which
show the stringency of the times and what is
in market!
'^—The election in this State comes
'•frit, 5th and Cth days of May. The
‘j snd Conservatives arc making a
/r l » w frb a good prospect of carry-
* 4te - The following is the general
Rfnor—Col, Geo. W. Scott, of Lcqn
tenant Govornor-
' ; - ;j county.
•James W. Hall,
-a«ss—non, John Friend, of Nas-
I -. P 00 ? 8 INTTIE 3IrDDLE Agf.s.—
•"j° u » in the fifteenth century,
two hundred sheep, five
ud tiie sum quality of
L-i,; 11: and in early times tire loan
I -j considered to bo an affair of
^ncethat in 1 290 the Bishop of
n ^.Wowing n Bible from a
^’hs ®“J« obliged to give a
’’istoration, drawn up in the,
Hancock Gaining Ground at the North.
Tho New York Times (Rep.) says:
Quito a number of Democratic papers arc
still advocating Gen. Hancock as tLo Tamma
ny nominee for tbe Presidency. The Boston
Post of yesterday comes out in a strong article
urging him as the man forthe crisis—basing
his claims on his militnry services bisadmin-
istrtttivc.ca»acity, hil intellectual ability and
his personal character.
It believes that lie would draw largo num
bers of voters from tho Republican ranks,
and ra!ly round his standard the Conserva
tive sediment of the country. For our part
wc have no doubt that Gen. Hancock would
be the strongest man the Democrats could
nominite. It would not suit the Copper
head element of tho party, nor the Repuclia-
tors; but wc imagine that, after all, even
these would rather come in than stay out.—
Hancock’s personal relations with Grant are
not such as would prevent his taking tho field
against him.
Mcicogee.—The canvass yesterday was as
active ns on Monday, and qqitc a number of
colore 1 votera supported the Democratic
ticket. Tho continued crowd ot negroes
around the county box indicated that tbe
Radio .Is were making an effort to block up
that b>x against the whites. 3Inny whites,
after nmaining for a longtime seeking an
oppor unity to vole in the county box, had
to ietiro without depositing their votes.—
Wc trust that the way will bo cleared to-day
so as 13 give all voters a fair chance. Our
friend:i continue to work with a will. If
they o ily knew how many nnmes have been
surreptitiously stricken from the registry,
they could make a more reliable estimate of
what lliey have to do and can do. As it is,
they a - e active and hopeful, aud that’s tbe
spirit that >yins success.— Col. Enq., 221.
COLLABD SEED 1
Seed of the famous coll&rd five stories high,
in which birds and beasts assemble, can be
had by applying at my root-erv. Also, one
bob tail Bull.
Joseph Eclipsed Brown.
’ FOR SALE,
The Radical party, with its Bullock born at
Capo C. O. D., below cost.
Henry Pluto Farro.
wanted !
All persons having ten dollars, or less, to
invest in puffs and personal notices, will find
it to their advantage to call on me. Refer to
Sheibley, Bullock & Co.
Samivel Pickwick Bard.
gourds!
Having just received a fresh invoice of
Gourds, those having soft soap, or wishing
heads will call early, before the widow ar
rives, on
Berry Dry Shumate.
*. The London Star announces the scri-
ou illuess ot the Pope and Victor Emanuel.
^ zuzzwD ti[> -in | Hi^’Boliness is suff ring from an intestinal
••• —ucr, and Louis XI, iu 1471 J comp aint, and His Majesty from apoplectic
Q u . ‘ u a large quantity of j git. *
• • oiaeofliis nobles to join »
It i= said t!.at Gen. GUlem Ignores the gang
at little Rock, Arkansas, culling themselves
'“1C Ol ni
under a hea
. , - ..eavy penalty, to re
l .‘ v l '- uM procure the loan of
>1 from the faculty
'*Pirii
I- ’ 1 Ibince Imperial is soon j
/ ■' -n IV to accustom the
"Mticidca. I
Li gtslature. Ik
1 they m
JEWELRY AND CLOTniNQ 1
The attention of freedmen is called to my
choice assortment of watches and clothing,
secured in Cincinnati and other places, and
offered low for cash.
JonN Wesley Puettyman.
fifty colored men wanted.
The Express Company will give steady
employment and good rations, (carefully se
lected from goods in store) to fifty black
men, to serve in tbe Legislature. Brown’s
cotton cards given away to those applying
early. Apply to •
Rueful Brindlih Bullock.
The above presents a spicy variety for all
classes.
Yours, out of coal,
Dave Longshore, Black-Smith.
P. 8. Ask Judge Lochrane if it is right,
legally nnd religiously, to discharge white
men from office for not voting, t.nd wrong to
discharge colored men for voting the Radical
ticket ? The Blarney Stone, tell him, is now
in the Era office. D. L., B. 8.
The Election In Monroe.
Forsyth, April 22,1808.
Editors Telegraph: The negroes have ex
pended their force in this county—bnt few
voting to-day.
The Democratic vote will be largely in the
majority. At the two precincts, up to yes
terday evening, the Democratic majority was
about 220—will be increased to-day and to
morrow.
Wo arc still sanguine of carrying this county,
notwithstanding the heavy ccgro rote of
Slonday and Tuesday. Hero it is a contest
between the whites and blacks, no white men
are aiding the negroes or working for them,
except two of their candidatca by the name
of Potts.
We are hopeful «f controlling enough of
tiie negro votes to secure the election of our
candidates. About 1700 votes polled at this
an urm ai xv'^a 10 ior upianus ana ur-
Effective in this sense means irregular, which I *<£
reflects a kind of left handed honor upon tho Saturday the strong statistical position of the market
City of Churches, which many people (who are seemed to be the main cause of the firmness of hold-
as superficial as they aro sentimental, basing e "- Monday the^receipts at the Americani ports for
thoir faith nnnn thr. nnmW nf itc hoifrLaV tho wcck ending 27th ultimo were reported at 44.0u0
r n nYu belfries > con " bales and fhipmentsto Great Britain 34.000 balef.-
sider the asylum of all the virtues. The receipts were about what had been previously an-
The number of births, according to tho com- I ticipated, hat tho shipments showed a falling off, as
K ilers, for tho period.ending the 31st December, I compared with tho previous week, of 9000 bale?, and
ardly reaches the half of what should have led to an increased demand.. Tuesday, Manchester
been recording to the normal laws of reproduc
U< J?' , 1 from America indicated a further material falling off
To what causes are we to attribute this relative ia receipts at the ports this week, which kept up the
sterility? The report does not say; but we may excitement until the close of business last evenieg..—
find a logical explanation in two lamentable I 'F»-dny 'jo have had “a wild” market, and in some ia-
ss StSSSCSS
pro\ed by the reports of our tribunals, and yet ] tioninstoeks thisweek, bytheemallstocknowajcom-
inore by those of the press. pared with this date last year,and by later and im-
A fact of great gravity follows frqui the above I portantadvices from Brazil (Riode Janeiro 9th alt.),
observation; we will set it forth by means of the ^hich indicate an early termination of the war with
official licures • I Paraguay. These advices caused a very large demand
nf ti,o i-.no YT v .1- o >»oo f ,ir 0o °d3 for shipments to portson and tributaiyto
, l ‘° infan s born in New York, 2.78S I t £e Rio do la Plata, and the Slanchhster market is
r ? °* -American parentage, the remainder I reported to havo been nearly swept. The sales to-day
12,024 bc:ng the offspring of foreigners. Now, I aro estimated at 30.000 bales, and prices close very
according to the census ot 1860, New York con- firm at our Quotations as given below, which indicate
tained 429,952 native Americans, and only 388,717 an . advance during tho week of about Usd on all des-
foreigners; that is to say 333,717 foreigners gave I —..v i<m«nl.i..
b i rth n t °li 3 hfd 4 U CUl i dr fp’-<S he | r -'ld a 429,952 Amuri ' 10O.780 wcret.kcn by tho trade. Ulho derived for ex-
cans ouly had issue of 2,7S8 children. I port, and 48,640 on speculation. It will be observed
We will allow ourselves one comment upon this | the trade have this week taken nearly two weeks’
subject. ’Tis this: When the immorality of the supply, and that tho business done in speculation is
city of New York is in question, nations never fail by tar the largest for many months past,
to attribute to the presence in this city of an , In Cotton to arrive we have again to report a very
t e hns^vit U h%h’TreL 0li nnbl?c 0 f^akcr"s a £
thus with the press, public speakers and with all out the week been sold at about l A't to Ad dearer
tbose whose ideas influence public opinion, when | than shipments near at hand or on the spot. The
Tf nnnfxirs from n cnmirmnienfinn nnhlislied it occurs to them to discuss the morality of torelgn closing quotations are for American Uplands, basis
Mdol France in particular? The.eis
Meekly, and countless young flowers wako to fling
Their carlies'. incenso on the gales ot Spring.
Continual songs arise
From universal nature—birds and streams
Mingle their voices, and the glad earth seems
A second paradise I
Sunshine and song, and fragrance, all are thine.
Thrice blessed Spring!—thou bringest gifts divine.
Not unto earth alone—
Thou hosts blessing from the human heart.
Balm for its wounds, and healing for its smarts,
Teltingof Winter flown
And bring upon thy rainbow wing.
Type of Eternal Light—thrice blessed Spring.
1VHO SHALL HE GREATESTi
"Who shall bo greatest in thy kingdom. Lord ?”
Thus the disciples—grave, gray-bcanled men—
A child stood by—the Master called him then—
Wondering they waited for His gentle word!
The pity of His look their spirits stirredl
“Ere ye shall cross tho vestibule of heaven,
Oh, men 1” said Christ, ”yo needs must bo forgiven
Much pride—your heart mustthritl to sorrow’sehord 11
The greatest there must here bo'like this child—
Tender and trustful, true, and meek and mild 1”
On tho fair head He calmly laid His hand:
Tho brave young eyes sought His in sweet surprise:
A truant sunbeam of tho better land,
Seemed sifted down from for above the skies.
Progress of Anarchy In the South-- War of |
Races.
average will beat lcsmnMntalned. It riinuld also be
romemberei th::t the available stocks in this country
last year at this time were aimoEt ilouole what they now
a-e. We -ivc the above table not to nrove that Liv
erpool will not have a bale on the first of January ,
next, but to show that consumption must be stopped
by p.-i.-'.. S nt-r or later that point must be reached,
and a decline must follow. Wo would warn our plant
er frienfa against entertaining the hopo thai their
next cr. ; uiil realize present prices, f r unless wc
have a very unpropicious season wo will have a fair-
lized crop, and increased Indian exports to be sold in
competition with it. We hear some instances of plant
er? plowii.g up their corn and putting in Cotton instead
but we trait this will be tho exception and not the role,
for the experience »f three years has proved beyond
a peradventure that no profit can be made in selling
free labor Cotton to buy corn with. As we have urged
in previous circular*. 12 J sterling will have more affect
oa i t ,"°. ?*.Ports than on our own. for it is a
well established fact that the amount of Cotton year
ly grown in India is about the same, and the amount
exported vanes with the price—if quotations aro
h:gh, it is shipped: if they are low, the Cotton is
kept at home., -the shipments of Lrazil, Egypt and
the >\ eft Indies wm also be stimulated to a marked
extent. >» e mention all these points in support of our
theory that every planter should raise more provis
ions than enough for his own use, nnd that Cotton
should not be male an exclusive crop. In theprcScL-
Ini pirucioQs condition of the South, me planter has to
sell whetherthe prices suits him or not, and althouga
Cotton is now worth ovcr30c._itis only four months
ago when it was barely bringing 15c. It is scarcely
within the ranga of possibility that prices may de
cline to that point again, but planters should bear
the experience of this season in mind in estimating
the probable profits of exclusive Cotton culture, lo
what point Cotton may go between now and another
crop it i« impossible to say, but it is almost absolutely
certain that 12.1 will not be tho current rate next Jan
uary, unless some unforeseen contingencies arise.
VALUE OF COTTOX IN NEW YORK, APR. 17.
Cpland.
Good Middling 31! 4
Middling 30 *
Low Middling.. 29
Good Ordinary 27!^
Ordinary 26
Gulf.
me
2S<f
m
RECEIPTS FOH THE WEEK.
New Orleans, ApriI10.„
Mobile, “ 10.
Charleston *' 10
Savannah “ 10
Texas •• 10 .
N ow Y ork, dire’t * ‘ 10
Other Pons ** 10
Texas.
32
28$'
26*1
10.878 bales
8,S3>
5,456.
9,905
3,190
5.064
2^63
Total 45,743
FOBEtOX EXPOBTS SINCE SEPT 1.
i i\ex7 uricans
Mobile
— 40M>yo bales
... 205,942
Charleston
..... 92,415
Savannah
..... 22S.467
against
■ 386,780
bales, and an apparent excess at the commencement
fkio rnnw n f linlns
society with the strange name— the foregoiug official figures show (also published i i« s TrejTort we remarked was “apparent stronger than
the Ku-Klux Klan—19 not a shadowy appa— ky the American papers and Which have been I at any time this j'car,” has again increased in strength
ritmn hnf n onlwtnntml ©nr? wirlpQnrpnH nr- from the official report of the Sanitary Com- forthe maintenance of prices. From our tables oe-
ntion, but a substantial ana widespread or- l mltteo) JlS the public moralitv. Why low it will be seen the estimated-stock is now 3*6.912,
ganiz at ion. Our correspondent, uabricl, simply that in New York the fecundity of Ameri-1 8n< * L^ e Cotton reported st*ea from America and Jn
G. G. T. and V.”—whatever this portentous can women compared with that of
name of the avenging angel and .these cab- cign birth m»y be figured down to
alistic letters may mean—assures us that the A° f a i >0 ?{ v 2 ? P« r f . cent * .. . ,— —rmru-r
A—cotron hnnrlfnri 1 he total number of deaths in fifteen months in of this year of 4690 bales,
organization patnbera over^ seven hundred J York has been 2$,7tiS. and in Brooklyn during For some weeks past the receipts at the Amercan
thousand members, and that it is spread over the same period 10,700. In the number of deaths p 0 * 13 have so largely and steadily declined a? to lead
the whole country, from Maine to the Gulf of are comprised four centenarians—all women; the I?
Mexiso, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific, followins ore their names: Rebecca Ward 100, bSS(fotton to come forwari from now uaril the
Onlv white citizens of the United States ? cotc “’ Margaret Harty, 100, Irish; Emily C. close of August than there was last year. And :nas-
, „ | , -j ■ j- . Lorenz, 103, German, and Julia Green, 109, New much as tbe stock in the American ports is now some
can becoqie members, and Radicals, negroes y ork> 200,000 bales less than at this date fast year, and the
and infidels cannot. The meaning given to I One can thus see that if the women of New American trade consuming some 3000 bales per week
tbe term Ku-Klux Klan is a “circle of friends,” York do not carry off the palm for fecundity, they
and tbe object of tbe society is to checkmate hive good claim to the first prize for longevity. alarmingly smML In our last report we referred par-
'* ■ - ... . « » | tieularlyto the decreased shipments Irom India in
„„ . January and February of this year, as compared with
Hayu and tlie Negro. I corresponding months of last year. Up to latest tele-
—— 1 graphic dates the shipments have continued small,
A n-onUenmn whn i« thni-niTcrJi! v ron-ror- I and as tbc season for the setting in cf the monsoon—
a gentleman wno_w tnorougoiy center- | u3ual | ya b out t h e middle of June-is near at hand,
Texas 39,260 •
New York 305.153
Other Ports 11,773
Total.. _1,350,705
RECEIPTS SISCE SEPT. L
At New Orleans 53fi,265bales
Mobile 337,503
Charleston 230,128
Savannah i 454.130
Texas 68,482
Now York 196,813
101,592 ' •
Other Port:
To
..1.924,913
, STOCKS.
In New Orleans 61.816 bales’
Mobile 34.730
Charleston 10,755
Savannah 29,647
Texas - 9,290
New York 100,600
Other Ports 30,259
Total
, 278.488
and to act as a counterpoise to the Radical
secret societies of the Loyal League and the
Grand Army of theRepublic, for the purpose
of perpetuating constitutional liberty. So
says “Gabriel, G. G. T. and V.” _ _
, ■ i ... C1 *2 BU ' J , ■ j 5 i nlace yesterday and the day btforc.
i they please, provided th^y keep their hands 1 ,!U ' _ - J
Tri acr.ry and foot their own bills. \ ours, etc.,
PROF. If. :>■ KAYTON, Savannah, Ga., Pro. I KA1 TON'M
>rieto ■ of Kayton’s popular remedies.
the
X.
MAGIC CURE—Cares Diarrhoea
and Cramp Cholics.
their own negro Loyal Leaguers started up
like ghosts and made them tremble when these
mysterious documents, pictured with coffins,
skulls and dead men’s bones, met their eyes.
Bnt whatever the Ku Klux Klan may be or
whatever its object, it is only the natural off
spring of tbe Radical secret societies, and
ijarticularly tho negro Loyal Leagues of tbe
South.
We called attention tbe other day to tbe
murder of a one-armed ex Confederate white
soldier m Alabama, and of the murder of four
otbr white men in tbe same locality since the
war, and to the fact that no one had been
arrested for these murders. Indeed, these are
only examples of what is occurring every
where in the South. How can it be other
wise when a brutal and barbarous race has
been placed over the white people? The
Jacobin Radicals of Congress have dis
franchised and humiliated the whites and
have made the ignorant blacks tbc masters of
tho country. The organization of secret
Loyal Leagues among these benighted bar
barians, together with the incendiary con
duct of Northern Radical emissaries, have
made the South a hell upon earth.
All secret societies are an evil and danger
ous, but iftbe negroes are organized into Loyal
Leagues need we be surprised if tho white
people have their Ku-Klux-Klan or any other
organization to protect themselves ? What
ever may be the consequences—and wc ap
prehend a great deal of trouble—tbe Radi
cals, and particularly tho Radicals in Con
gress, arc to blame. They are tbe authors of
the evil. It is evident we are rapidly ap
proaching in the South a state of anarchy
and a war of races more dreadful than that
which existed in St. Domingo soon after the
French revolution commenced.
The Jacobin cry of “liberty, equality and
fraternity” in France, deluged with blood
an J utterly ruined that magnificent colony,
and it is the some cry of our Jacobins that
will produco similar or worse results in the
South. We are on the eve of a terrible war
of races, and in this war tho blacks must go
to the wall. Tho negroes in St. Domingo
were far more numerous than the whites, but
in the South tbe whites jre the most numer
ous. Besides, their vast superiority, mental
and physical, must lend to the subjugation
and destruction of the negroes. Talk of re
ducing the expenses of the War Department!
Why, it will require a hundred thousand
soldiers or more to prevent even wholesalo
massacres in the South.
Two hundred thousand would not be able
to preserve peace if that war of races which
* now threatening should commence.^ This
the legacy of Radical legislation which we
now have to contemplate. The atrocious at
tempt to subvert the laws of God and nature
by establishing the supremacy of a barbarous
race over tbe white people of our own blood
can only end in the most frightful scenes.—
The cost of governing the South will bo
enormous, and tbc people of the North will
either have to bear a far heavier burden of
taxation or repudiate the national debt. This
is tbe alternative wc arc coining to; and as it
is diffiult to see liow the people can bear a
greater weight of taxation, the national cred
itors would probably bo tbe greatest sufterera.
The Radical party in power lias brought us
to this terrible dilemma, aud nothing can
save tho country but its defeat at the polls in
tho approaching election. .
Judge Garnett Andrews.—This distin
guished gentleman was in our city yesterday.
The Judgo is for the Constitution and Bul
lock.—Atlanta paper.
Have you known tho Judge to bo for any
thing in the last twenty years that didn’t fall
through ?
grTvro prisoners, under tbe sentence of
death at’ Sing Sing, have brought suits for
false imprisonment against tbe warden be
cause they were not hanged on tho day ap
pointed.
Sant with affairs in Qayti, assures US that the I nnd as shipments made" after the monsoon.ivill not be
. . . . following article from the Richmond DIs- j doe here before thecloseoftheyear.theindicatior.saro
It is not at all surprising, then, that For- patch correctly portrays the condition of the j Briwin.Vui ^rfollewnemooi to^OTO balra
ney quaked aud that the knees of Radical negro on that island: short of last year, and sas• 400,000 bales short of 1666.
Congressmen smote together when they re- The scenes in Hayti make it more than SgJ£ r t u h Vuffi“d n Khl$S£, Vf^earwaw
ceived the other day the terrible Ku-Klux I probable that order and law will never here- I bales per week for the remainder of this year,
missive. They were like the ghost of Banquo I stored to the black inhabitants of that island. 5?Sn|?anTL ? o 8 ods a^d 8 Ya?ns V have
to Macbeth. The outrages and murders of They have overthrown tlieir late government, I advanced in ab< ' . .
which was itself built on the ruins of its pre- material. . . . .,
nnf i nrp thp no-m-flvitwl New lork advices1 to last evening report niuLLmg
ueces-o,, ana are amidst tne aggravated I Uplands 2Se, with Gold at 137% Stock m Amercan
horrors of that state of anarchy and barbar- ports. 27th ultimo, 292,000 bales, against 499,000 last
ism which has long prevailed. Tet these ne- 3 ' e £’ ndon _ Stock last ovening <34.5*5 bales . against
groes succeeded to the possession of the most | 43,200.
fertile spot of earth on tbe globe, in a high
state of cultivation and teeming with the
fruits of tillage.
Having massacred the white Inhabitants,
they took possession of their comfortable and °Giod r do nd Middling,
elegant mansions, and their lands and tehe- Uplands...ii>>i <&Ui4 11%
meuts of all kinds. Besides, they found A,n I Mo bil e- AOM ||ik| j?„
immense foreign commerce, whose prosecu- Tex:Sf.”'.'ie§J @lij| 12;
tion was rapidly increasing the wealth of the Sealaiand 23 @— * 27'
Bombay telegrams to 24th ultimo report Cot’on ac
tive at 220rs for Dhollerah, equal toShjdsoId hi-re.
, Shipments for tho week onding 21st ultimo 84.IJU0
i bales.
QUOTATIONS FOR COTTON Tills OAT.
Fair and Good and
Good Fair Fine
PLEADElfniS PaiVELEGE AS AN M. C.—A short
time i£_) a suit was entered iu the Supreme Court
of this District against Hon. William Sprague,
United States Senator, by his late gardener Ac
tion of debt on contract.* The defendant to-day by
his attorney, moved to dismiss the suit on the
ground that at the time ot the issuing and serving - -
of the writ, he (the defendant) was iu attendance
on the Congress of the United States, of which he
was a member. Spragneis said to he worth several
million* of dollars.— Washington Chronicle.
KAYTON’S MAGIC CURE—Cures Coughs,
Colds sad Sore Throat
A Ghastly Spectacle.—6t. Louis, April
19.—A ghastly spectacle was presented iu the
river below this city yesterday. During the
prevalence of the cholera last summer a large
number «f the bodies of victims of the epi
demic were buried by the city on Arsenal
Island a short distance below the city. The
river has been for sometime gradually wear
ing tbe island away, and yesterday the water
reached the trenches in which the bodies
were buried, and washed some fifty or more
coffins out, which floated down the stream.—
Twenty-four corpses have been recovered,
and measures have been taken to secure the
remainder. Those still on the island will also
be protected or removed to a place of salety.
Special Notices.
— & —
3S & 66
aud order, and comfort and abundance, 1 ^port^of tho week 36.350 bales, of which 15.471 are
blessed tbe land. Alter fifty years of posses- American. „
sion of sucha spot of earth, especially favored American tko "' ook 163-130 b ale - 5 . which 81.2.0 are
by nature, what is the condition of affairs ?— Exports of the week 14,789 bales, of which 5,363 are
The large annual production is diminished American. ... ,
to an aggregate wtich is contemptible cbm- I toth ° trad ° 0l " A ° f
Bullion in the bank of England up to last Wednes
day, £21,164,012. Decrease £333,971.
Present rate of discount. 2 per cent.
pared with that under the rule of white men
—the commerce has been reduced in like man
ner—dilapidation and ruin have been the
fate of all the works of art and mechanical
industry—disorder, and indolence prevail—
there is* no safety, no peace, ho comtort any
where—revolution after revolution have fol
Bryce <Si Co.’s Weekly Cotton Circular.
New York, April 17.1S68.
Our Owe Market bns been irregular stub* c ur List
circular; a sharp advance was made early in the week
lowed in rapid succession—and Hayti, one of and lost at the close—there seems no good reason for
the brightest gems ot the Antilles, has become
an abomination on tbe face of tbe eartb. spinners buying to any extent. Speculation .at the
This is tho sort of self-government which present pjices is naturally nervous, and a good deal
,, , . , . ® lf . , , r 1 of speculative buying has been transferred to Liver-
the negro lias proved himself capable Of after p90 {; owing to that market being so much below the
the fairest test which was ever afforded a parity of our own. In like manner, however, uur
community. The black. Haytiens were not ^thern^d’f^de^fcflTrt-time^ot-
liko colonists struggling in a wilderness, rnc- ton has been taken UP by our leading Commission
naccd day and night by tribes of savages -
They were heirs to a lovely and turiity do- this grade is pretty well swept from the boards, qn l is
main, provided amply with houses nnd every I relatively higher than theinferior kinds ; of fine Cot-
known mechanical appliance and conveyance
adapted to their wants and the uses of labor tations arc nominal. Low Cottons have likewise been
as breseenteri thru and there Thcv had ) slow of sale and have moved onb at a concession,
as prosccuieu men nuu mere, xuty uau y or extra staiilo Cottons there has been a rpasoraJte
everything their own way. I hey were so I demand, and prices have been irregular in the ex-
jcalous of the white man that they allowed demerge.
him HO place to rest tho sole of his foot* Ife I C yUy selling goods on a basis of ovor30c. for Mid*
was not allowed to own one rood of land in I dling Cottons. Biliigcnt inquiry as regards the stocks
f i *„ JoinMii *EV^n tlio mulatto tciu nnf I held by our spinners leads us to believe that almost
their island* X4YCn tne mulatto was put| a j| t | 10 j ar g e corporations haveetocksto August 1.
under tho ban, and driven into obscurity, I and the amount of Cotton our spinners have to^ buy
often fleeing to fastnesses to escape parsecu-
tion and death. tent of their purchases will be measured by the activ-
■ Such is tho notorious example—tho living ity of the goods market and the promise of the grow
and daily familiar ill ustratiou-of negro rule. KV?d"&^
Hayti is near our coast. Our own people are days. Middling Cotton at sellers’ option thirty days
frequently spectators of the desolation and
barbarism which have there succeeded to | spmo purchasers, but speculators seem to prefer quick
thrift, refinement, virtue, order, security and terms on spot C°“ons. Tho tightness in money has
1 • * a’ a a - t * * a.„,i - a 1... not much affected Cotton, neither has tho iirame^ in
happiness. And yet a besotted party^in the I 8 t or |j n ff bills. Gold has been very steady, not varying
control of the Government at Washington, more than a point during tho week,
are seeking now-in order to secure the pro-
longed enjoyment of the offices and emolu- I tho heavy shipments from Bombay (70.0(0 bales for
meats they hold-to bring a similar fate upon
ten Southern States of tho Luton by making • ■ — - 1 *— —
the negro the ruling class of society.
A 9Ii«eraI>le Slialzer
Is tbe victim to Fever and Ague. This tedions and
enervating disease is, unfortunately, too well known
to need a description. It is strictly a malarious dis
ease, caused by exhalations from tbe soil, especially
from marshes, swamps and newly cleared lands en
cumbered with decomposing vegetable matter. The
chills is one of tbe most troublesome maladies, as tho
patient, tbongh he may not be confined to his bed. is,
incapable of action. The experience of years has de
monstrated the fact that HOSTETTER’S STOMACH
BITTERS is a snre means of fortifying tbe system
against all atmospheric poison, breaking up tbe par
oxysms and rapidly restoring tho strength. Quinine,
which has so long been the great remedy for chills,
has been superseded by this powerful and harmless
agent; while as a preventive it is unequalled, as iu
use will certainly exempt all who may live in un
healthy localities from the ravages of this disease.
HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTER’S is now
among the most popular, and, at the same time, val
uable specifics in the medical world. In recommend
ing it to the public, we are fully conscious of .doing
them a great service, knowing, as we do, their many
excellent qualities, and snre and speedy action in all
cases where the disesseis caused by irregularity of the
digestive organs. •
As a tonic it is both mild and agreeable to the taste,
and stimulating in its action upon the system. -
KAYION’S OIL OF LIFE—Cares Sprains
Bruise;, Swellings and Corns. .
£3-DR. SIMMONS’ LIVER REGULATOR,
which is so highly esteemed by all who use it for Liver
Disease. Dyspepsia, Headaches, Cholics^ Sour Stom
ach. Sickness of Children and the many aches and
pains of ladies, is still on sale in Macon, in any
quantity desired, by J. II. ZEILIN £ CO., L. AV
nUNT A- CO., THEO. W ELLIS and Dr. P. II.
WRIGHT.
Inducement# offered to ‘persons buying to sell
again, by
marobfo-uiwtf
C. A. SIMMONS,
General Agent, Barnosville, (la.
Struck by Lightning.—The Coart-bouEe
here was struck by lightning last Wednesday
night, in three places, and damaged to a con
siderable extent. The chimney directly over
tbe office of the County Court, was demol
ished, aud tho fluid passed into that office,
tore out a window and split the wall in seve
ral places. On tbB opposite corner it struck
a window in tho Ordinary’s office, and passed
through to the lower floor, doing some dam-
ngo to windows, plastering and the floor. A
tree South of tho building was also badly
used by the lightning. From the signs on the
moulding near the eaves of the roof, the
building was set on fire by the lightning, but
the heavy rain that succeeded it extinguished
tho fire. If any of the Court-house officers
had been in their rooms, they could not have
survived that terrible thunderbolt.—Forsyth
Advertiser, 21st.
Imteaciiment Illustrated.—The New-
bnryport Herald asks a question that happi
ly illustrates tho fairness and justice of the
impeachment trial. 'It says:
Why not adopt the old plan of trying
witches; tic his hands behind his back aud
throw tho President overboard ; if ho sinks
declare him innocent; if ho swims hang him
as guilty.”
been rondent the expense of the interior town*.—
Messrs. Easton A Co., Brokers of the City, telegraphed
to the leading interior places last week, and the total
stocks reportod was 35,060 bales. From this it is fair
to infer wo will bavo a perpendicular falling off in tho
receipts for the week ending tho25th inst. At all events,
such is the general impression, and wo doubt if any
material advanco could bo provoked by tho receipts in
this countrv for tho balanco of tho season. As we
havo stated in previous circulars, there is a serious
deficiency in supply, if tho present rate of cor.-rump-
tion be maintained, and prices must go to a point
where spinners will run short time. Many versons
predicted that 101 nnd a still greater number that 12d
would bo the cheeking point, but, although tbeim-
mensc consumption of January and February has
been reduced two or three thousand bales per week,
wc do not hear of short time as a concerted movement,
and private advioes report Manchester well under
contract. Tho present consumption of Great BritAin
is estimated by ono of tho host authorities. Mr. rmm-
uol Smith, of Liverpool, at 52,000 bales .per week.
The following table shows the relation cf supply and
consumption at its present rate:
Estimated import from March
2StoDec.31aamoasla3tycar2,47S,C00 bales
Less tho deficiency now known
to bo at soq — 120,(30
KAYTON’S DYSPEPTIC PJLLS-Cures 8ick
Headache and all Bilious Disorders.
RAILROAD SCIIKDULKS.
The following is a corrected schedule of the
various roads leading out of Macon :
CENTRAL—DAY TRAIN.
Leaves Macon -
Arrives ftt Savannah
7.05 a. v.
keaves Savannah
S:00 a, a.
Arrives at Macon
7:50 p. u.
NIGHT TRAIN.
Leaves Macon
S:*5 r. V.
Arrives at Savannah
*. 6:45 A. 11.
Leaves Savannah
Arrives at Macon
3.-00 P. M.
2:35 A. H.
CENTRAL TO AUGUSTA-
—DAY TRAIN.
Lrjivpj Mavon
7K» A. 11.
3:42 P. IT.
S:45 A. it.
Arrives at Macon -
— 7:30 p. u.
CENTRAL TO AUGUSTA—
NIGHT TRAIN.
8:45 p. ir
T.A.rne a vcmfA 4:25 P. M
2:35 A. M
MACON AND EATONTON—THROUGH TRAIN.
Leaves Macon
4:15 P. N.
Stock in port March 23
Total supply from March 28 to
D6e. 31...,.
Present rate of consumption,
52,060 bales weskly lor 39 o
Average wcekiy export of lSSk
19,506 bales weekly for ^
weeks
2,743.630 bales.
760,50)
2,788:50) bales.
Deficiency, Jan. 1.1867— l v - l hales.
In the above table wehavo taken the avers.- ■ week-
ly export of 1867, and judging from the low.-: rSs.in
tne leading continental ports therowill bo a very brvjc
export demand during tho summer, and last years
Arrives at Eatoaton .10:00 P. sr.
Leaves Eatonton
Arrives at -Macon
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD—COLUMBUS TRAIN.
2:50 a.m.
8:55 A. M.
2:20 r. M.
80)5 r. m.
•EUFAULA TRAIN.
Leaves Macon — &00.i. M
Arrives at Kufauia 6:301\ w.
Leaves Eufaula 7:20 a. m.
Arrives at Macon 4:50 r. x.
ConnoMing with Albany trains at Smithvlllc. ar.d
Fort Gains trains at Cutbbort.
Leaves Macon -
Arrives nt Columbus
Leaves Columbus...,
Arrivcsiat Macon
SOUTHWESTERN RAILROAD-
MACON * WESTERN
Day Train leaves Macon
Day Train arrives at Macon
Night Train leaves Macon
Night Train arrive- at Macon....
Day Train leaves Atlanta
RAILROAD.
7:4 > v. X.
1:3- p. M.
8:40 v .-4.
7:15 M.
Dey Train arrives at Atlanta
7.7.7. 2:0*) P. M.
Night Train loaves Atlsnt)
(jh'Op.M.
Night Train arrive- ,tt Atlanta.
i:l i.M.
No Day Train on Sunday.
MA.-.i;; i BRUNSWICK
RAILROAD.
■p.'r- Macon..
•
Passenger Train arrives at Maoon*.-...—i* n 9
•/