Newspaper Page Text
[jiHttHI'O** N1SBET & BARNES,
publishers an! Proprietors.
f f Jwftrnt /ffjtral Snion
I ,1 I( eddy, in Mill edge v <Ue, Ga.,
, ni , r iif IL/nc'jck and Wilkinson Sts.,
pj/uaift Court House.)
A; 82 a year in Advance,
: vLiis Advance, $3 Pee Annum.)
KATEM of ADVERTIUNe.
Prr s/’tnre if twelve tines.
■:i 81 Oil, and fifty cents for each subsequent
,t with >nt the specification of the numberof
will be published til! forbid and charged
... iv.fessioaal Curds, per year, where they
i d Six Lines - . . (|n 00
,t ,1, • will be made with those who wish to
v t y"ir 1 nrrvpying a specified space
: \l advertisements.
i.itndand Negroes, by Administrators, Ex-
,r riusmians, are required by law to be held
■ I’v ! iy in the month: between the hours of
* uud three in the afternoon, at the
:in county ill which the property is sit-
• •-ales must be given in a public ga-
ious to the day ol sale.
• . . -uc oi persquaf property must begiv-
omer to days previous to sale day.
o btors and creditors of an estate must
tat island 4!) days.
appiicaiiou will be made to the Courtof
u i'o inn’ll Laud or Negroes, must be
tor two mouths.
. r! ttyrsof Administration Guardianship,
■ published 30 days—for dismission from
o’ 1 mini'll’ll sir months—for dismission
oiiansliip, 40 days.
hrmre of Mortgage must be published
moml/ts—for establishing lost papers.
■ ire of th eee months—for compelling titles
- or administrators, where bond has been
tiji- deceased, the full space of three
will always be continued according to
requirements, unless otherwise ordered
i lowing
RATES:
i . 'i»tt m of administration, dtc. $2 75
dismissory trom Admr’n. 4 50
“ Guardianship. 3 00
.1 to sell Land or Negroes 4 00
r i- to leiitoi sand creditors. 3 00
- p ■, ons! projMWty, ten days, 1 sqr. I 50
■of! od or m-irroes by .Executors, Sec. pr sqr. 5 00
'.trays, two weeks 1 50
i man advertising his wife (in advance,) 5 00
KNERAI ADVERTISEMENTS.
I T
J. 1. A W. W. TURNER,
TORNEYS AT LAW,
. 1 a, 1*59.
Eatontoo, Ga*
21 tv-
COATES & WOOLFOLK
iobrtlioust anil Commission
- MERCHANTS,
■: i! ;to'v onen and prepared for the reception of
, i NEW EIRE PROOF WAREHOUSE.
Ili.nien.iui Sc fsjiaiks. We will endeavor to
,. i- worthy of the patronuge of those who
u with their business. Liberal advances
iiii-.itti’U when dusired.
fin.. S. pt. 21, 1853'. 18 tf.
JO-iS T. BOWDOIN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
r. VSOTtTOS, (it.
I ■ i f r m. Ga.. I’eb. 14, lstK). 33 tf.
S.S'S’TIulh’S
' i> u
i It
IHFUGE.
11.' RC Fj Bottles and Vials.
• * i*; ro’inIrM to relieve children of
nnd :»;•-;.?*»> ln*in7 one of the cheapest and
. cvr oCfrod to the public. Its fre-
. !..uiii - will save much trouble aud
v. a* the liv**s of inauy children—for
: c. . t: 5i gen»»n;lly require it.
A CARD.
.T F GOKMAN having: extensively nsed LIT-
i takes pl<astir* in rayiag it
: v .in 1 :*» remed/ |o cure rliiidrru of
ev«r knew. A dollar bottle is quite
LITTLE’S
AMOBYHE OQUSH DROPS.
rfii'ti curt; for CsAdx, Coughs. Bronrhitis,
.s'>. P.ritt in the Bnnst ; also Crvup,
Wtiooj'ing Gough.*, Ac., &r. t
amongst i’hihlren.
n i ’eft-ant tuedicioe to take, producing im-
r- .* f, ;*ud in uitrn out of ten cases a prompt
• x**ir tli • most controlling influence
• er.-i frritnti.nl of the Lungs of any re-
i.u, often stopping the most violent in a
at most in a day or two. Many cn*ea
• i*o d»-e : (hsi!y c«*usumpnve, Iihyo been
• ured by nsiaj; a few bottle*. As anodyne
v. • nt :t-tri:i>finjr the bowels, it btande
:it to all cough mixtures.
LITTLE’S **
FRENCH MIXTURE.
virrured from a French R.cipe Go the
. N *. i and ‘l: the first for the a^ute, aud
r ius • .ionic r-trtgc, and fr*.ru it.- uu-xhiupled
• y to Miper-.»de every other remedy
- ..'os *»f tiie Kidneys and Bladder,
' . i : uu rrtueal. aad Leachc* rb real or
tf etions. This extensirc cmifioand
' •lopertica totally diflerent in taste and
on any tiling to be found in the United
-uae *p<rvi; and in point of bafety and effl-
; :s Lot rivalled in America.
I.ITTLK’I
’.uWORM Sc, TETTER OINTMENT.
fortis, No. a.
*f ca-e.-* of Chronic Tetters, Scald Heads,
' the skin generally, Lave Wen cured
; and since the introduction of the
; *r . n bcieg stronger scarcely a case
* tiiHt it w»?l r**t effectually eradicate
' < rt time. For the cure «»f Cauceroas Sore*
s .i is applied in the form of plasters, and
W t Hi fallible.
i .au two hundred places in Georgia, and
eru Slates, they are to be had ; Mid as
-• tiiipa about ctio are counterfeiting his
- by palming off their own or something
- • nr -imilar tttflNl for no pa-
wai ted or secured amid the absurd patents of
nil I**? cautioned to look wc-ii for tft#
of the Proprietor, thus:—
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!• is and letters to be addressed to
LITTLE & 3R0., g-
WLjiatalfl DramdsU. Maoou. OS
ia by .all Druggists in Mill edge ville.
H EETY at HALL, Agvniii.
CHEROKEE REMEDY!
ct
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YX UNFAILING CURE FOR
3 id si! Diseases of the Urinary Organs,
M ’)V frip'n xH7»*n ail otlier preparation* fail. It «
»-v. V other imumouim; o**uUiuiDg uoAlIN-
NAUSKOI S DRUG; as it is prepared solely
\RKS ard LRAV’FS. nun 1ms been handed
ratM>*i a;.other, by tliu ChEIDKEE IN-
• the pubue. on it* own intrinsic merit*,
k’v an.I thoroughly. The l T yFORTL-
- V VN .11 U; repaid by u-iut this RF.MKD V, iu-
• ■.at th«- ui*n'T of* urn- Quack or Profe*-
’ . wr rjk.-w ht the very ROOT of the disease; it*
■ i v t»» -*U'p4*nd the positk*u, but to REMOVE
1 it •!F11II rftrvifion.iii s>li»niph!i-t
c i'ii.- mini p^ruiaufitt rvli. I af-
V i; nil eases of GONORRHOEA GLEET
:n rnr.. flcor albus (whites in
■ M'.ui, ol tiui Urinary ()rs»u«. iuumuon-
in,•« o! tlianji- l'ii» Rn.H'dr not ouly
vim rrmntii.SYSTEM but INVIG'ORATES
<■ i: .nt.it itf i< *U.
• XFKEUT Hntr.HEATHw INTERFERE
BUSINESS, or tvqnim «iy dovimtiou from
iMihii. trom othor iri,"VHlif-.
NUANCES it- VALUE, u* tin-ENTIRE
SE XUS TASTE, 1- iug. PLEASANT
IGUSS/RUP.
■ irtiimo bottlv. lor ^5.
!'< TTERac M ERWIN, Sole ^' T '^'; n ^ 0
r*.-! !.V HERTT L HALL, *U DrunDte
1 1 : AND BRASS FOUNERT!
! ) 1 H.r.Y & FEHROWS would respectfully ln-
• G,e public that they nrenow prepared to
.V Work in their line with neatnen« and de«
w SUGAR MILL BOLLS, turned or un
■'f n11v-i7.e, trnm 20 to 120 dollar* per sett,
’ K K n i.KN fnmn .30 to 120gallons ; Saw and
M „ Uiuery; Gin Gear of any size.
ra ' ia R lor House, Garden, Balconies,
,;n l Cemeteries, at Eastern Prices.
n i M-k Weighta, Window Sillff and Cap^,
1 *s, aud Fanning Mill Irons of all desenp-
I860. Fall and Winter, 1860.
TINSLEY AND NICHOLS
DEALERS IX
— - anumg L
""[•he best materials,
jj 1 "rk Warranted.
‘‘-•''Seville, Jan. 24,1859.
35 tf
ill! L*l ill LL Ulil UUV1?U|
ihliDva* aiDDins* hats, & caps.
H1V.XE STREET, NILLEDCiEVILLE, 6A.J
Have received their SPRING AND SUMMER SUPPLIES, and respectfully solic : t, uot only
their former customers, but the public generally, to call and examine their LARGE and VA
RIED STOCK.
THIS DEPARTMENT is complete, embracing all the I nlet etylra of 8II.KR. MERINOR. Dc
LAINE8, POPLINS, French. Fnglit.b and American PRISTS, Ac., &c.
luace Ca'oods aud ICinbroidcries
IN ENDLESS VARIETY,
Hosiery and Gloves of every quality
FOR MEN, BOYS, LADIES. MISSES AND CHILDREN.
VELVET and CLOTH CLOAKS, cf various styles and prices.
HOUSE-KEEPING ■
AND
PLANTATION GOODS.
In this department tliev have everything usually kept in their line
at prices a little less than can be had elsewhere.
HATS AND CAPS, OF TnE LATEST STILES, for Men and Boys.
BOOT?? AKT) SHOES,
OF ALL QUALITIES, for Men, Ladies, Eoys, Misses and Children, at low prices.
CARPETINGS and RIGS, of ail kinds.
CLOTHS, CASSXaXZRES and VESTSSeS, «f all Colors and Qualities.
liilA AMI' 61 Ail W.41S,
A LARGE LOT, AND CHEAP. 20 tf.
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SANFORD'S
LIVER INVIGORATO R
r
Nrrer Debilitates.
T IS COMPOUNDED ENTIRELY from GUMS
and has beeinne an established fntt, a Standard
Medieinc, known andap-i
used it, ana is now resor-| "
all tiie diseases for winch >—
It has cured thousands,Q
who had given up all j_
numerous unsolicited cer- v
show. <Sj
The dose m jst be g.
meat of tiie individual,
such quantities as to act Q
Let tiie dictates ot g
in the use of the Livei „
cure Liver Complaints.
proved by ail that have |
ted to with confidence in j
it is recommended,
within the last two years
hopes of lelief, as the
tmeates iu my possess.on
adapted to the tempera-
taking it, and used in ,
gently outhe Bowels,
vourjudgment guide you
Iuvigorator, and it will
Billions Attacks. Dyspep-
m MANHOOD,
jar— 0 Off LOST, HOW R EH'ORCD,
%F»>' Just Published in a Sealed Enrelnpe,
IS THE NATURE, TREATMENT. AND RADICAL
URK OF SfERMATORRHIEA, or Setidlla] Wrakneu.
St-xtiai Lhb'l.tv, NurvuutUii'KH aud luvoluiilary Eiuitisious,
iuducmg Ini potency, aud Munta! and Physical Incapacity.
By ROB. J. CULVERWELL, M. D.,
Author of tin* “Gifii B«»ok,” i.r.
Tiip world-rtn« w ned aCtLor, in tliin adniiral 1« Lrcturrelpar-
!y previa irnui hi* c w u « *|« ri« nr.< that the awful coum quen-
c«> <.f rfulf-abuHe n ay be * 11* ctueliy r< moved without
and without t.anger* us surgii al« pe
ring* or eordiain. pf»intii<g «>ut a n’<
and t.-lfet timl, by
tv,n«J
This ltctuie
euro b.
will pr
iufrtTumt nts
of < tire at once eeitain
u*> matter what bis eou-
i:p y, pr.\auiy and rad-
i to thonbana* and tin u-
nt under seeito any addrt
pontage st by add
oht paid, on
r .. Dr. CHAS
1J7 Bowerv. New York; Pont Box 4-586.
Kt brua-y 3 t litffl. (p>
the i
Chronic Diarrhoea, j Summer Complainl*,Dy
sentcry, Dropsy, Sour ,g j Stomach. Habitual Cos-
tiveness,Cholic, Cholera, j Cholera Morbus. Cholera
Infantum, Flatul e nce.j*“ ‘.Jaundice. FenialcWeak-
nesses, and may lie used ' 1 successfully as n:i Ordina
ry Kaniily Medicine, It g. will cure Sick Headache,
(asthousandscau testify,) in twenty minutes, if two
or three tear-poonsfui lire W tuken at the commence
ment of attack. > j
All wbo use it arc giv-| M ing their testimony in its
favor
Mix water in the| | month with, the In-
vigor at or, and swallow both together.
Price one dollar per bottle.
—ALSO—
SANFORD’S
FAMILY
WASHINGTON HALL.
This House is still open to the public.
S PECIAL arrangement will be made for
the accommodation of the Alembert* to
the approaching STATE CONVENTION,
and the future Srt-yiona of the Legislature. t
The rates and terms at this House, will
those of the other Public Houses in this city.
N. C. BARNETT.
Milledgeville, Ga. Dec. 15th, I860. 30 dw.
Cathartic Pills
COMPOUNDED FltOM
Pure Vegetable Extracts, and put up in
Glass Cases, Air Tight, and will keep in
any climate-
The Family Cathartic
Cathartic, which the pro
practice more than twen-
The constantly increns-
who have long used the
which all express in re
duced me to place them
The Profession well
tharties act on different
The Family Cathartic
ence to this well estab-
ded fronts variety of the
tracts, which act alikeon
tary canal, and are good
where a Cathartic is
meuts of the Stomach,
Back and D'ins. Costix'c-^ ,y ,
over the whole bodv from sudden cold, which
frequently, if neglected. S end in a long course ot
fever Lo'ss of Appetite, l, in Creeping Sensation ol
Cold over the body, Rest-£ lessncss. Headache, or
weight in the Head, all'< Inflamaiory I) is ea se s,
^ i -i , — - a .1..!*.. Dlwiumtilum n
Pill is a gentle but active
prietor has used in hi
ry years.
ing demand from those
Piila, and the satisfaction
gard t<» their n^e, 1ms in
within the reach of all.
know that different Ca-
jK»rtio;:s of the bow tie.
Pill lias, with due refer-
lished tact,been coin poun
ce'purest Vegetable Ex-
jevery part of the a.imen-
and safe iu all cases
j needed, such as Derange-
CS j Sleepiness, Pains in tiie
ness. Pain and soreness
LUMPKIN LAW SCHOOL.
r I ■’ll E next term of tlii.s Institution will begin on the
J first day of MARCH, 1SCI-
January 18th, IRfil. 35 4t..
IUEIW HOTEL !
PLANTER’S HOUSE.
Cherry Street, Macon Ga.
T HIS HOUSE is Two Blocks from
the Rail R«iad Pepnt. IN THE BUS
INESS PART OF THE C ITY, and
near the Ware Houses and Wholesale
Stores. A Porter will be in attendance
at the Depot. J. O. GOOD ALE, Proprietor.
January 21st, Ps31. 33 3m*.
BOARDING.
TTssi
ill
M
Y HOUSE will be open for transient and regu
lar boarders. JAMES E. HAYGOOD.
Milledgex'ille, Jan. ISth. ISfil. 35 tf.
4 1 Y HOUSE will tie open for the re-
1>I cvpfiou of MEMBEHS TO THE
CONVENTION. ALL WHO CALL ON jSSiag
5IE will be made comfortable.
E. S. CANDLER.
Mill edge ville, January, 4th, 1S6J. 33 tf.
Adults, Rheumatism,
blood, and many diseases
to, too numerous
Worms in Children orjQ
great Purifier of the
to whirl flesh is heir
to mention in this advertisement, Dose, 1 to 3.
Price Three Dimes.
Toe Liverlnvigorator and Family Cathartic Pills
are retailed by Pruggi-ts generally, and sold wholesale
bv the Ttedein all the large towns.
y 8. T. W. SANFORD, M D-,
50 j- Manufacturer and Proprietor
208, corner of Fulton st , Broadway, N. Y.
PILE MAI. VE! E¥* If y° u ha , ve the Piles, get a
Dr. Cavanaugh's IBox ofthis truly wonderlnlSsi.vE
GENUINE and by using it two days >ts magi-
PII.E Ml.TE! calinfluenee will be felt, and a per-
feet cure will follow. For sale by Herty Hall.
TREATMENT OF CANCER,
BY DU. G. EDWARDS,
Miluedgevili’.e, Ga.
H AVING had much practice in the treatment of
this dangerous and loathsome disease, he offers
his services to the a flic ted. He feels satisfi'd that
he can cure any cancer that is curable. To thoseat
a dista’ice, he can give good testimonials of his
success.
Feb. 4, 1861. 58 3m.
^IXTY days after date application will be made to
^ the Ordinary of Wilkinson County, tor leave to sell
a negro man Charles, property of the children of John
Underwood, deceased.
T. B. UNDERWOOD,
Guardian & Agent.
January 8th, 1861. 38 9t.
DR, J. BOYEE DODS’
IMPERIAL
WINE BITTERS
A RE COMPOSED OF A PURE and unadultcred
.A. Wine, combined with Barberry. Solomons Seal
Comfrey. Wild Cherry Tiee Bmk.Spikenard.Cammo-
mile Fh'Weis and Gentian. They arc manufactured
by Dr. I)ods himself, who is au experienced and suc
cessful Physician, aud hence, should nol be classed
among tln-'quack nostrums, whic h flood the country,
and against vrtiich the Medical profession are so jn.-4.iy
prejudiced. These trnlv valuable Bitters have not
been fairly before the public for one year, and yet
there is a heavy demand for them from all parts oi
the Union.
Dr. Frink, No. 30 West 35th Street, New York,
sax s:
1 have been greatly benefitted by using Dr. Pods’
Wine Bitters, arc! am now neing them freely and suc
cessfully m my practice. As a medicine for Females
1 consiuer tln-m nnequaled.”
I>r. Guernsey, No. t8 West 23d Street, says:
‘•I iiax e used I>r. Pods’ Wine Birtere in my practice,
and in all cases where a tonic is required, I consider
them unsurpassed, aid cheerfully recommend them lu
ll valuable Family Medicine.”
Dr. Meaeham,of Florida, says:
‘‘For several vcars 1 suffered ail the horrors of Cron-
ie Dyspepsia. 1 used all other remedies without uvaii.
I disc arded prejudice and used Dr. Pods' Wine bitters
which have greatly benefitted me, and I believe wiil
cure me.”
Mr. (i- S. Weaver, of Albany, N. Y.. says:
“My xvife xvcis sinking rapidly with Cciisumytiori; the
best physicianain Albany and New York eity pronounc
ed her ease hopeless. Sic used Dr. Doris' Wine Bit
ters; and is cured.”
Mr. J. B. Stoats,of Xewaik, N. J .snys:
“Mv daughter was extremely ill; she "hail been at-
tr-nded bv four erf ottr best ]ihysicir.ns; her disease was
Inflaniatfon of the Bowels, which had produced ex
treme eiehiiitv. Her case wus considered hopeless by I
nil who saw tier. A friend cecotcuic-ndect Dr. Pods'
Wine Bitters: she used the in and is well.” -
Mr. Britluin, editor of the Banner vf Eight, in Boston
“Dr. J. Bovee Dods’ Wine Bitters have cured me of
Piles of the worst and obstinate character.”
A distingnishi d lady of Mobile, Ala., writing to a
female friend says:
”1 would advise you to use Dr. J. Bovee Deals' Im
perial Wine Bitters. I have used them, aud consider
them a blessing to our sex.”
We might write a small volume, and then would not
gix-c one fourth of the Testimonials ill our possession, as
to the virtue of these Valuable Bitters, but we will on
ly say that they are approved of by our best Physicians,
lire cfoing much good in all parts of the country, and
eamestlventreat the afflicted to try them.
Sold by the proprietors. CHARLES WIDDIFIELD
& CO .’78 William St New York, and by Druggists
generally. 25 if.
For sale by GRIEVE A: CLARK, Mffledgeville.
FOR SALE.
M Y plantation, containing 1400
acres. 3( 0 of which is heavy
"timbere d oak and hickory. Said land
adjoins the lands of Eli Baxter, on the
East, the Beaver Dam creek, on the
Sooth, West by the lands of Mrs Terrell, and
North by the lands of Messrs. Allen and Bmver.
On the place are Gin house and cotton press. Over
seer’s house. Barn. Negro housc-s, aud all other
necessary out buildings.
Also, in the Village of Monnt Zion, a large two-
story dwelling house, with barns, stables, carriage
house, kitchens, and other necessary buildings, a
large garden, and Blacksmith shop, and thirty-five
acres of heavy oak. and hickory laud, to go with
the place.
In the Village is a flourishing Male School. The
land xvill be sold seperately, or with the house to
suit the purchaser. Tern s easy. Kefer to Hen
ry K Gumming, Augusta, or to G Bryan, Sneed
Post Office, Lee cm, or Jos. Bryan, Mt. Z’on.
Feb. I I, 1861. 38 dm.
American Agriculturist.
For the Form Gordon, and IEooar hold.
A ThoroUCh going, RELIABLE, and PRACTI
CAL Journal, devoted to the different departments
of SOIL CULTURE, such n» growing Fisld
CROPS; orchard and garden FRUITS; garden
VEGETABLES and FLOWERS; Trees, Plants,
and Fioxvers for the LAWN or YARD; care ot Do
mestic Animals, Ac , Ac., and to Household Labors.
It lias also an iutciestiug and instructive department
for children and youth.
TERMS—INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
One copy, one year f i ( 0
Six Copies, one year 5 fifl
Tcii or more copies one year 80 cents each.
lY^Acid to the above rate.-: Postage to Canada 6
cents to England, France or Germany, 24 cents per
annum:
Postage anywhere in trie United States and Terri
tories must be paid by the subscriber, and is only six
cents a year, if paid in adx anco, at the office xviiei e
received.
All business and other communications should be ad
dressed to tlic Editor and Proprietor.
ORANGE JUDD, It Park-Row,
New York City.
SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR.
FRUS Id! EOM FOR THE SOFTH.
We have note ready for distribution the following
Seeds which will be mailed free to any of our sub
scribers for IHnl, who will send us the necessary
stamps for postage:
Cotton Herd—Dickson's Improved—1 oz. package;
6 cents.
litre—Premium, from Atlanta Fair—1 oz. package;
poi lage ti cents.
Wheat—Premium white—I oz. package; postage
6 cts.
IIyt—1 oz. package; postage 0 cents.
Oats—Black ai ‘
aud while winter—Premium at Atlanta
Fan — 1 oz. package; 6 cts. postage. [State which
kind is desired.]
I.nerrnr—1-2 oz. pkge: 5 cts. postage.
White Clovei—do. <lo.
Red Clover— do. do.
Orchard Grass-do. do.
KrtUvcky Blue.-do. do.
Red Top— —do. do.
Hungarian Grass seed—1 oz. package—6 cts.
postage.
Htarforti's Wild Grass—1-2 oz. papers; 3 cents
postage.
Egyptian Millet—l-2oz. papers; 3 cents postage.
pjTEach subscriber, for lfclil, who sends stamps, is
enuiled to oue or two papers of seed, as above; anu
thoee xvlio get up ciubs, may draw tiie same propor
tion lor eucii name sent.
Otheroceus wiil be constantly added to this list;
ami we cheeilully send them outlie above terms.
We shall l avi-u large assortment of vegetable unu
Flower Seeds, especially adapt'd to the Hvtt'h, ready
for distribution by the middle of January. These
littie packets of seed, scattered l'&r and wide, through
remote sections of tiie Souiliein Slates, may be the
means ot effecting much good; and v.i. i probably save
many readers the expenditure of money lor articles
not adapted to their wants. This will be found a very
cheap mode of testing the value, ol the different Veg
etables, Grasses, Ac , Ac.; and short reports of either
the success or failure of these experiments will be
highly interesting to our readeis The more widely
the Cultivator is cireulaled, the greater will tie the
distribution of seed and agricultural information; and
ns the agriculture of the bouth is the basis of all pros
perity, no true patriot < an do his section or people a
greater service than by aiding ns in successfully car
rying out of this enterprise.
Tiie Southern Cultivator is published in Augusta,
Ga., at$l per year in advance.
A drain istra tor's Sale.
B Y virtue of ail order ot the Court of Ordinary
of Twiggs county, will be sold before the
Court House door in Marion said county within
sale hours on the tiisl Tuesday in MAY next the
following tract of land belonging to The estate of
Hartwell A. Epps, deceased, to wit: Lot No.
sixty-seven (67) in the 271st Dist., originally
Wilkinson, now said countv of Twiggs, adjoin
ing lands of lion. E. S. Griffin, Daniel T Epps
and others, to be sold for the purpose of a division.
Terms on the day of sale.
ELIAS F CHAMPION, Adm’r.
Marion, Feb. 13tb, 1861. (I., s.) 39 tds.
LAW CA&D.
The undersigned have associated themselves to
gether iu the practice of Law, under the firm name of
CLARK, IRVIN A TAYLOR,
and will gix e prompt s.ttention to all business entrust
ed to their care in the counties of
DoroHERTT. Lkk, Sumter,
Terrell, Worth, Mitchell,
Calhoun, Early, Decatur,
Miller,
and by special contract, in anv county in South-West
ern Ueuigia. RICH’D. H. CLARK,
SAM’L D IRVIN,
WM. TAYLOR.
Albany, Feb, 14, 1861.39 tf.
SEWELL k WELLB0M.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Miliedgeviilc, Ga.
"1TTILL PRACTICE in the Counties of the
IT Ocmuigee Circuit.
Milledgtvihe, Ga , Feb. Hi, I860. 39 ly.
J. (. COflPTOff,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
S£XI.LXI3>&£V:XJiX!, a a.
{Office in the Court House, opposite the Ordinary’s
Office.)
W ILL practice in the
Ocmuigee Circuit.
February 19, 1861.
Counties composing the
39 tf.
GEORGIA, WiikiBsoa County.
Fix WO moot ns after date appHeat ion will be mane to
1 the Court ot Ordinary of said County, for leave to
sell tiie negroes belonging to tbe estate of Timothy
Sears, deceased, fertile benefit of tho heirs aud credi
tors of said decease d.
SAMUEL B. METHVIN, Adm’r.
February 8th, 1861. 38 9t.
A King dtnrn in the Hatchway.—One
day, when the flag ship of an Americai
Commodore was lying in the bay of N; -
pies," she was Honored by a visit from thi
KJng and royal family, witIi suite, xvL.
came out in gilded barges and full pa rad •
of royalty. The ship was dressed from
deck to trunk in holiday attire; side boys
xrere mustered at the ropes, the marine*
presented arms, tho guns thundered forth
a royal salute, and the Commodore wel
comed his guest to the quarter-deck with
tbe politeness befitting an officer ot rank.
- fine of the suite, a spindled-shanked and
gaudily-attired Neapolitan, strayed from
tbe party, and cruising about midships,
espied a windsail, an object lie bad never
seen before. It was fully expanded by the
air; lie took it for a pillar, and folding hi*
aims, leaned against it, when it yielded to
his weight, and he disappeard below, heels
over head, xvith a velocity that was actu
ally marvellous, as was escape from injury.
'1 iiis mishap chanced to have only one
witness, this was a veteran tar, who ap
proaching tiie quarter deck, and touching
Iiis hat, said respectfully, “I beg pardon.
Commodore, but otic of them kings has fell
down the hatchway.
The Great “Salve” Certificate —
Hall's Journal of Health lias tho following
xvbicb “speaks for itsell:”
Dear Doctor'. I xvll! be one hundred end
seventy-live years old next October. For
nine’y-four years I have been an invalid,
unable, to move except when stirred xvith
a lever. But a year ago last Thursday I
heard of the Grauicular Sirup. I bought j
a bottle, smelt of the cork, and found my- \
sely a new man 1 can now run twelve '
and a half miles an hour, and throw nine- j
teen double somersets without stopping.
P. S.—A little of your Alicumstone j
Salve, applied to a wooden leg, reduced a
compand fracture in nineteen minutes,
and is now covering tbe limb with a fresh
cuticle of white gum pine bark.
Hordes of degrees t owing.
Hordes of free negroes are every day
coming North, the Slave States not being
xvilling to harbor any longer such adjuncts
of Black Republicanism. Last week,
eighteen of these “citizens,” (as the Re
publicans call them) arrived in Columbus,
and seventy-five in Zauesville. 1 lie le
gitimate effect of this immigration will be
to degrade and prostrate white labor at the
Notili, reduce the wages of our mechanics
and all kinds of opeiatives to the standard
of the “pauper labor” of Europe. Labor
ing men who voted for Lincoln, how do
you like these “first fruits” of tbe great
Republican Victory?—Cambridge ( Ohio)
Jerjfrsonian.
Tbe Chicago Times dose not appear to
be very proud of Mr Lincoln,s travliug
speeches. It says—“We confess that we
can augur little good from the first speech
of Mr Liucoln, delivered at Indianapolis.
Mr Lincoln is doubtless a respectable jury
lawyer and a man of talent; but he is not a
statesman. He has never uttered one word
or line that indicated that breadth of
comprehension and power of generalization
necessary to a statesman. He exhibits
humor, tact, and the ingenuity of a special
pleader. We read this first speech of Mr.
Lincoln, and longed to find somthing in it
savoring of tbe lofty feeling and patriotic
utterances of Douglas and Seward. We
\x ere sadly disappointed. Not one noble
thought rises above the level of thin con
ceits and diluted anil special pleading.—
Mr. Lincoln does not come out in a hold
and manly way, and grapple with the diffi
culties which surround him, hut quitks,
and hints, and suggests. He tells the
people that the words coercion and inva
sion are much used tn these days,’ and
then asks them what these words mean,
lie then quibbles at length upon the
meaning of these words, and attempts fee
bly to ridicule his adversaries in His ver
bal criticism. After tkroxving forth a va
riety of hints in an interrogative form, he
concludes by saying: ‘Fellow-citizens, I
am not asserting anything; I am merely
asking questions for you to consider. ‘Oh,
no! of course not. I his ‘honest old Abe’
would by no means assert anything. There
is no need of asserting anything; t lie
country is not at all in dangei; there is not
tbe slightest necessity for taking position.
It is only necessary to play upon the words
‘coercion’and ‘invasion,’ and quiz the peo
ple a little upon abstract questions aud the
definition of words.”
Sweet Almond.—It is a matter of
much astonishment that the easy culture
of this tree has been neglected. It
xvill bear abundant crops in any State south
of tbe Potomac. It flourishes in ordinary
light soils, sandy or otherwise. The trees
should be planted in orcliatds, at the dis
tance of eight to ten feet each way. r l lie
same cultuie as is given to the peach is all
that 16 required for the almond There
are four principal varities that are articles
of commerce: Oval Hardshell, Long
Hardshell, Softsliell, and Ladies Thinshell
The climate of California is found to be
very suitable for this tree, as well as for
the Fig, Olive, Pomgranate, Pistachio
Nut, &c.
Georgia Stale (oafration.
Mr. Varnadoe. offered the following pre
amble and resolution, which after being
amend by Mr. Alexander by tbe addition
of the second and third resolutions, were
unanimously dopted:
Whereas, Gen. David E. Twiggs, late
of the United States at my, actuated by a
sense of duty and patriotism, aud iu obe
dience to the allegiance due his native
State, delivered, upon demand, to tlie reg
ular constituted authorities of the State of
Texas, all the property of tlic late United
States Government under his contiol, aud
ordered his troops beyond the border of
said State:
Resolved, That this Convention endorse
approve and ratify his conduct in the
premises, and recognise him a brave
and honorable soldier, and a worthy and
patriotic son of Georgia.
Resolved, That neither Gen. Twiggs nor
Col. Hardee require any vindication among
their old friends and neighbors in Georgia;
their defence may be found written by tbe
jioint of the sword upon the battle fields of
their country and upon the scarred forms
of her enemies, yet this Convention but
yields to s natural impulse when it expres
ses the scorn with which the people ol
Georgia look upon all attempts of an Abo
lition press and a venal and fanatical Gov
ernment to tarnish their fame and to filch
from them the rewards of long lives of glo
nous and heroic actions.
A wealthy widow, from North Alabama
is reported by the Memphis Enquirer to
have arrived in that city on the Sth, for
the purpose of orderiug a lot of cotton,
previously consigned to Memphis, to be
re-shipped to N ew Orleans on account of
tbe action of Tennessee in tbe late election.
If yon wish memory to be a source of pleas
ure do all tbe goo J you can m tbe irieaeut, which
xvill soon be tbe Past, and lost, save as it lives in
memory, a source of pleasure or of pain.
Sew Discovering a Thief.
After Lorenzo Dow had retired to his mom,
after n hard day's travel, in the western part of
\ irgiaia, a number of persons collected in the
oar-room to enjoy their usual revelries, as wag the
custom in that part of the country. At a late
our in the night, the alaiui was given that one ot
company bod lost his pocket-book and a search
proposed. Whereupon the landlord remarked,
rhat Lorenzo Dow was in the house, and that it
* lie moucy via# there lie knew that Lorenzo cettld
find it. The suggestion was instantly received
wi 1 bap:.rotation, and accordingly Mr, Dow was
trouseti from iiis slumber, and brought forth to find
he money. As he entered the room, his eyes ran
.hrongh the company xvith searching inquiry, hui
nothing appeared tiiat could fix guilt upon any one
I'ht- loser appeared with a countenance expressive
of great concern, and besought Mr. Dow, foi
heaven's soke, to find the money.
“Lave any left the company since you lost youi
money?” said Mr. Dow.
“None," said the loser, “none.”
“Then." said Lorenzo, turning to the landlord
‘go and bring me a large dinner pot ’’
This created no little surprise. But as super
natural powers were universally conceded, his
directions were unhesitatingly obeyed. Accord
mgiy the pot was brought forward, and set iu the
middle of the room
“Now,9 said Lorenzo, “go and bring the old
chic ken-cock from the roost.”
'1 his was also done, and at Lorenzo's directions,
the cock was placed iu the pot, and covered over
with a board or lid.
“Let the doors noxv be fastened and tbe lights
extinguished,” said Mr. Dow, xvhich was a.so done.
“Noxv,” said lie, “every person in the room must
rub his hands hard against the pot, and when tin
guilty hand touches, the cock xvill crow.”
Accordingly, all came forward, and rubbed, o:
pretended to rub agaiust tiie pot. But no cock
crowed.
“Let the candles now be lighted,” said Lo
renzo, “there is no guilty person here. If the
man had any money , he must have lost it some
place else. But s op,” said Lorenzo, when al
things were prepared, “let us now examine the
hands ”
This was the important part of his arrange
ment. For on exaniinat on, it was found thatoni
man had not rubbed agaiust the pot. The others'
hands being black wi ii the aoot from the pot, was
a proof ot their inaoct nee.
“ I here,” s id Lorenzo, pointing to the man with
clean bauds, “there is the man wbo picked youi
pocket.”
The culprit, seeing his detection, at once ac-
knoxvledged his guilt, and gave up tbe money.
Astronomical Phenomena for 1861.—The
American Almanac for 1861, published this week at
Boston by Crosby, Nichols, Lee and Company,
contains a variety «>f astronomical and meteorolgi
ca! intelligence The eclipses there recorded have
already been noticed in our columns, aud we find
nothing especially new or original in an astro
nomical pniut of view in this issue of the Al
manac except the tide table, tables ot tbe passage
by the planets of Meridian (mean time) and thr-ii
of transit; also all articles are derived from other
sources;
In reference to the tides, it is computed in this
Almanac by the formula of La Place that the
highest tides of 1861, according to the Washing
ton mean-time of new or full Moon, will bo those
i>f February 21!, March 26. April 24, Oct. 4, and
Nov. 2. The actual rise, however depends npon
the strength and direction of the wind; so that the
above estimates area very uncertain approxima
tion for tlic coast of the United States.
It may be useful to sum up from other sources,
intelligence in reference to this period of the as
tronomieal year. On tiie 20th ot March the Bun
cnteisthe constellation Aries; the planes of the
equator aud tbe ecliptic become coincident; the
centre of tbe sun is directly opposite the centre ot
the earth, and the Astronomical Spring com
niencrs. the day and the night being equal. As
the Earth advances to the East, the great stars
which have adorned the North and the East dur
ing the brilliancy of winter evenings, seem ad
vancing further to the West; Altaiie, Vega and
Denib appear no longer iu tiie evening horizon, but
w ill couie again in tiie East; Oriuo with his belt
and I’ieiads with their sweet influences, seek
earlier repose behind the Western horizon. There
are: therefore, now portions of starless space in
the celesiiri vault toxvmds the East at certaiu
periods of the night, and the glories of the firma
ne nt seem to concentrate near w here the Sun sets,
and iu the frequent company of the Moon decended
to the Horizon. The grert circumpolar coustella
lions do not go below the horizou; Perseu*.
Andromeda and ihe gn at Regains, have all passed
the meridian; Cassiopeia nestles close to the Little
Bear, and the North btar stands on a lino horizontal
with the pointers of the Dipper, at mid-night. It
ia one of the proofs of tin translation of theSolai
system through space, tli.it four thousand years
ago, a star in Draco was the Polestar. while it is
ascertained that in some thirteen thousand years
Vega xvill be tbe point at which the maguetic
needle will be directed.
As to the iilaneis visible. Jupiter and Saturn al
about 5 P. Al., rise near each other. The Earth
moves in a narrower orbit and with a swittei
motion, which causes them to appear earlier night
hy ingot, both having passed tiie meridian on ilit
i’.ith of February, witbiu about an hour of each
other. Venus wiil be the evening star aft* r May
11 tli, for the rest of the year: from August 27tit.
Mais will bea mortiig star. It is said that Mercmy
may be seen soon alter sunset about Februaiy 24.
June 22, October 17, and just before sunrise about
April 15. August 13, aud December 2 Wepiecc
ittie reliance ou this promise, ter the nearness ot
this iuienof planet, to the Nuu and the obscurity ot
tiie-horizon at the periods mentioned, render it
almost impossible to detect him. Half a dozen
sharp eyis last November straiued their vision
hrough a clear atmosphere on the horizon to sec
the promised stranger, and saw him not. Coper
nicus himxell diet 1 , mourning that he had new r seen
Tilts swift rnes-enger of the Heavens. There will
be a transit o* Mercury over the Sun's disc. No
vember 12, invisible in America, and an occnlta-
tion ot Mars, beginning on May 12th at 7.30 aud
ending at 8 42. in ihe evening
The two most recent asirnnomical discoveries
announced are i.escarbault’s tapoor French physi
cian) planet called Vulcan, anil which he saw and
ralculatid ns it passed the Bun's disc: also the
titty -seventh Asteroid between the orbits of Mars
and Jupiter. It was discovered by Biek, and
christened Mnemosyne. Last summer there was
a littie Comet in ihe West, soon after sunset; but
he carried iu* tailoft' and left an incomplete recoid
Five great Comet* Biela’s which sweeps around
tbe Hi.n in 6j years, D’ Arrest’s in flj. Borsen’s in
54, Winnecke’s in 5, and Eucke's in 31 will re-ap-
prar within the next five years.
Much might be said of meteorology and its
development through ttiesrtiales of friend Meriam.
and the weather reports SPnt to the Smithsonian
Institution by ihe telegraph Storms can be dis
covered before they come and their p. th quiet cor
rectly ascertained in advance. The American Al
manac has an excellent paper on Meteorology, in
which Hie various theoriea of the earth’s tempera
ture are disc-ueeed; ii is writren by Prolessor Lorer-
ing. of Harvard University, if Humboldt still
lived, under recent discoveries and investigation
he might solve the infinite problem of the weather.
Family Vicissitude.
Tbe Templcliousc estates of tlic late
Colonel Perceval, iu the county of Sligo
with the family demesne, purchased some
years since l>y Mr. Hall Dare, have been
rrpurchaed by a member of the family,
Mr. Alex Perceval, of the great house of
Jardine, Matheson & Son, of Hong Kong,
a younger son of the late Colonel Perceval.
The late Col. Perceval, as is known, was
one of the principal gentry of the county
of Sligo, but, like many others of his class
change of circumstances occurred, and his
estates had to be sold. The Colonel’s
eldest son had a commission in the Guards
and another son was placed in the count
ing house ot an eminent London firm.—
Very likely some of the Colonel’s aristo
cratic friends in the country considored it
a “great fall” when his son entered npon
his duties in the counting house; but years
rolled on, and we now find this man of bus
iness in a position to step forward and re
purchase the estates, giving some <£120,-
000 as the purchase money. So much for
industry aud a legitimate euterprise, at
xvhich a certain cla'86 of nobility of na
ture xvonld turn up their aristocratic noses.
Well may the Sligo Champion, to which I
am indebted for the interesting particulars
exclaim, “All honor to Alexander Per
ceval.”
r I he iron has been laid on the Sontbem
railroad, from Vieksburg to Meridian,
Luuuerdale county, M16S , where it inter
sects with the Mobile and Ohio railroad be
By the 4th of next month this road will.—
open for business.
Shun tbe company of those who speak lightly
of the Bible and holy things.
VV a gross better or worse daily as oar hearts are
inclined to good or evil.
Mgger W irsbip ia4 I
In the midst of • momentous crisis like
the present, when there is no knowing,
what calamity a day may bring forth, or
bow soon the grand fabric of our constitu
tion wiil be swept away, and the arm of
brother be raised against brother in dead
ly strife, it becomes 11s to ponder gravely
over the dangers that surround ns, and,
as men and patriots, to combine in the en
deavor to avert the worst of those evils by
which our conntry is menaced. To the
anti-slavery propagandism which forty
years ago swayed so violently tbe people
of England, and thence found its way
into New England and the Congress of
the United States, aud was years after
wards nurtured so warmly by societies
and a portion of the press, we may traee
all the causes that distract the United
States. It has ever been a prolific source
of disturbance^ riots, family feuds and
national discord. It has led to scenes
which have disgraced our halls of Con
gress. It has caused the proper objects of
legislation to be neglected, and tbe gener
al irteiestsof the country to be injured
and mismanaged, and by its pernicious ag
itation has ei grossed the public mind
to an extent that is positively lament
able.
From its inception to the present time
the question has undergone three phases.
In the first instance it was a moral one,
provoked by discussion and prejudice iu
England; iu the next it was a social one,
induced by the Northern States finding
slave labor unprofitable, and, therefore,
wishing to abolish it; and. in the third, it
was a politico-religious one, which we
may call “nigger worship.” In this last
phase xve find it now. It has become a
pulpit theme, and diverted the stream of
religion from its course heax r enwaid to th©
stormy sea of politics. We have a prom
inent example of it in the case of Ward
Beecher. It has mined churches, mined
parties, and now it is ruining the whole
country. Anti-slavery fanaticism has
stamped its charader upon our Northern
literature, and led away the minds of
those who had not philosophy enough to
withstanditssubtleinfluer.ee; which, for
thirty years of the forty it has been in
agitation, has been gradually undermining
the constitution of tbe republic and
the best interests and liberties of our
people.
With the secession of seven States, and
the prospect of the eighth border State
adding to the number, it may be said to
have reached its culminating point. ~What
will foil >w is uncertain as the wind, and
it xvonld be rash to hazard a conjecture on
the subject, It may be tbe secession of
the remaining slave States and mayhap
civil war. But the worst consequences
staring abolitionists in the face would not
turn one out of a thousand of th em from
their fatal purpose; for fanatics are deaf to
reason, and, like the English Crm-aders to
the Holy Land, have only a single object
to accomplish, and that whatever may be
the sacrifice. The disruption of the
Union is not enough for these men, they
want blood, and they would callously ex
terminate every slaveholder, from Virgin
ia to Florida, in order to realize their fa
vorite, and we may add fiendish, purpose.
And what is the actual condition of the
slaves over which these rampart Aboli
tionists are howling so insanely? Let
them go down to the Southern States and
look at the four millions of negroes they
will find there, and see whether they are
the ill cared lor, abject creatures that they
would make the Northeners believe. Let
them remember that, at the time of tbe
Revolution, the colored population of the
same Mates amounted to less than an
eighth part of xvhat it is at present. The
very fact of the immense increase of mim.
bers within so short a time speaks for the
good treatment and happy, contented lot
of the slave. They are ?omfortably fed,
housed and clothed,and st ldom or never
overworked. They present in their
condition a favorable contrast to the white
slaves of Evrape, who live i.1 the utmost
squalor, and aie at once lialfstarved and
overxxorked, and who only find rest in
premature graves. Their condition iB a
far happier one than that of the xvhite poor
of tiie North, who are driven to seek refuge
from want in the workhous, oryet of many
even outside of their walls, who vegetate
in filth and hunger in the obscure parts of
our cities. The heartrending occasionally
given to the English public of the miseries
endured by the London poor show afar
more deplorable state of things than could
ever exist under slavery in America; and
English travellers who have taken the
Double, of inquiry,by persona! observation
into the state of the slaves in the South,
have acknowledged in print the superior
comforts enjoyed by the latter over the
w hite slaves of England. What the Gar
rison and l’bilipses, who pronouuce the
constitution “an agreement with death
aud a covenant with hell” may do next is
more than man can tell; but they may
rest assured that their fanaticism, al
though it may destroy the Union, will de
stroy them. All that xxe pray for is that we
may be spared the horrors cf civil war.
AN ACT
To establish and organize a Bureau in connection
with the Department of the Treasury to be
kuowu aa ihe Light House Bureau.
SEC. 1. The Congress of the Confederate Slates
do enact, That there shall be established in con
nection with tbe department of tiie treasury a
Bureau, to be known as tbe Light House Bureau.
Tbe cliief officer of such Bun au slutll be a cap
tain or commander of the navy, detailed for this
service by order of tbe President of the Confed
erate States, who shall receive as bis compensation
tbe same pay allowed to officers of tbe same rank
in tbe navy. There shall be appointed also a
chief clerk, with a salary of twelve hundred dol
lars. and au accounting clerk with a saiary of one
thousand dollars.
Sec. 2. All light houses, light vessels, buoys,
aud other aids to navigation, all the officers con-
11 ec ed therewith, aud all matters connect eel with
the construction, repair, illumination, inspection
and government thereof, and all duties appertain
ing to the administration of light house affairs,
shall be under the direction and control of the
Light House Bureau hereby established, subject at
all times to the superintendence of the Secretary
of the Treasury.
Sec. 3 Tbe chief of the bureau shall, as soon
as possible, divide tbe sea coasts of tbe Confed
erate States iuto districts not exceeding five in
number, ss tbe Secretary of the Treasury may
deem expedient, and over each of these districts
tbe President shall appoint an Inspector, to be
selected fiom the lieutenants in tbe navy, who
shall discharge all the duties of inspection, survey
or otherwise which may be required of him by
the chief ot the bureau. For these services tbe
Inspectors shall receive only their regular pay in
the Navy.
Sec. 4. The President of the Confederate States
may, from time to time at ihe request of tbe Sec
retary of tbe Treasury, detail one or more of the
officers of the Engineer Corps of the Army, to
be employed under the direction of tbe Light
House Bureau, in superintending tbe construc
tion or repair of light houses or other necessary
structures in coimrctiou with the light house es
tablishment, or ether similar duly as.-igned by tbe
Light House Bureau, in connection therewith.
5>ec 5. The chief of the bureau shall at least
once every.) ear make a full report to the Secretary
of the Treasury, giving a full statement of the op
erations, of the Light House establishment. He
shall also, from time to time, give such informa
tion to the Srcretaiy of tbe Treasury, as lie may
require in reference to bis Bureau.
Sec 6. All laws and parts of laws contra
vening the provisions of this act are hereby re
pealed.
Wvfecl in Iron Ship*.
Eminent iron shipbuilder say that in some in
stance* “a thousand decapitated revets may be
found in the bottom of au iron bull after one or
mote voyages,” aud that a smart kick of the foot ia
often sufficient to shake out the rivets so be head-
ded, and open au inlet for the sea.—Many persons
suppose that iron ships will, alter a time cease to
be boiit.
Andy Johnson, of Tennessee, endorses Lin
coln’s inaugural, without qualification. Tbe Re
publicans serenaded Lincoln first and Andy
next.