Newspaper Page Text
gj)t (f-irtjjtort Appeal
j. p. sawtell, ) Mlti _
T. J. PERRY, j £j(Utors ’
CUTHBERT:
FRIDAY, January 20, 1871.
We place in nomination the
names of Mftssi'S. Corn & Bacon as
baing iho most suitable candidates
of Peace and Plenty,
for the year Hope they will
be unanimously supported, especial
ly by our planting friends. Nomi
nation takes place in March next.
Visit to Calhoun County.
Last week we made a visit to,
Calhoun : County, in the interest
of the Appeal, and are glad to say
met with great encouragement from
our numerous friends there. Hav
ing now a large list of subscribers
in that county with abundant pros
pects for more we may confidently
expect to realize the establishment
of relations hitherto unknown, that
will be mutually profitable to both
our town and that section of coun
try. Calhoun is a fine field for ag
ricultural pursuits, and is offering
■inducements to energetic .and enter
prising farmers in search oif weaMi.
During our visit we saw many large
fields white with eoWon, more the
result of good land and proper til
lage than inefficient labor as might
be supposed. Labor, though scarce
in some few instances, is more plen
tiful than it has been heretofore,
and at rates just and equitable, both
to employer and employee.
We heard nothing from the ab
soondered ballot box.
The folio wing District Judges,
and Attorneys have been appointed
by Gov. Bullock, for this, and adja
cent Districts. Their term of office
is four years from Ist Jan. 1871.
Bth Diat., T. A. Swearengen of
Decatur Cos.; Attorney, J. J. Chris
tie of Miller 00.
9th I>ist., Jesse 11. Griffin of
Calhoun Cos.; Attorney, Theo. N.
Winn, of the same place.
10th Dist., Henry Morgan of
Dougherty Go.; Attorney Thos., R.
Lyons of the same place.
31 tlx Dist., Duncan Jordan of Ran
delph Cos.; Attorney Jos. 11. Tay
lor of the same place.
12th List., J. E. Blount, alias
(“ Spotted Horse”) of Stewart Cos.;
Attorney Josiali JL Harrell of Web
ster Cos.
13th Dist. Geo. W. Fish of Ma
con Go.; Attorney John D. Carter
pf Sumter Cos.
<iov. Bullock to cap the climax
lias appointed Jim Simms a negro of
Chatham Cos., Judge of the Ist Dis
trict. If he had raked the scum of
Snvaunah, he could not have found
more ignorance to preside over the
intelligence of the Ist District, than
is in this negro Simms. You may
make good use of your time Gov
Bullock, your career will soon close.
MB’ Foster Blodgett, has been
Superintendent of the State Road
for twelve months, during which
time the State never received more
than $25,000 for any month’s prof
its, and frequently nothing at all,
and closed his official capacity with
a debt of over $600,000 over the
road, incurred during his adminis
tration, was among the number
who offered a bid of $36,500 per
month for the lease of the road for
twenty years. Surely his stealage
must have been enormous.
Lease of the State Road.—
The Atlanta Constitution, speaking
of the lease of the State Road and
the controversy that has resulted
between the successful Brown-Cam
erou combination and the unsuc
oessful Blodgctt-Dobbins ring, says:
** It is charged that on both sides,
there is foul play behind the cur
•tigUr And the air is full of rumors
of a legal battle between the giants,
in which tho hidden truth is to come
out.
-*» - ■—~
A Scheme for a direct cable
from London and Liverpool to New
York has been brought out by
Messrs. Chadwick, Adamson & Cos.,
of London, under the best auspices.
The capital is to be f3,250,000,
three-fourths of which have been
subscribed for iu England already.
If one fourth be quickly taken up
in America the cable will be laid in
July.
Sxe wart’s Palace.— A New
York letter says : “Mr. A. T. Stew
art is soon to throw open for the
reception of his friends the stately'
mansion he has been so long con
strncfiug on Fifth avenue. Some
„ idea of the splendor of the appoint
ments may be inferred from the
fact that tjie carpet for the drawing
rpoiu was made expressly for that
apartment in Berlin, at a cosu of
$27 ,000. It is a single piece, and
w as woven upon a loom constructed
M expressly for its manufacture.”
HeAyy Army of Lawyers.—
Yesterday, in the Superior Court,
so we arc: told, a case was called
which iuvolvcd-S3TS. Twelve law
yers; among them some of the most
distinguished in the State, appear
for different parties, aud the claim
of each client was represented to be
superior to all others.— Col. Sun.
A Dangerous Theory.
The time has come when every
honest man, and the Press at large
should use all available means to
counteract the tendency of a great
many to contract debts, and then
assume the right to ignore and re
pudiate the same in the face of all
moral and divine obligation. The
law of the land now being more a
protector of wrong than the avenger
of it, is of but little value in adjust
ing the differences between man and
man incident to the workings of
trade. The consequences of this
have already been realized, and the
assertion that the provision, of the
law have ceased, in a measure, to be
the source of redress and adjust
raenf/, is a fact incontrovertible, and
easily discerned. Nothing being
left then upon which to build a
system of credit, bat the moral in
tegrity of the country, that too has
become yiciated by an inordinate
regard for it, and in many cases
made both debtor and creditor the
victims of humiliating and ruinous
consequences. Besides many who
are honest, and make honest failures,
there are others who wilfully and
maliciously lose sight of all moral ob
ligation, by an utter disregard of j us
tice and honest principles. To all
such we offer a word of warning,
and beg them in this hour of sore
trial not to sacrifice their all for the
sake of a little gain. Wo know
that times are hard, and the fluctu
ating tide of events has produced
grievous and afflicting embarrass
meats. Cotton is low, and provis
ions high ; and many other vexa
tious trials, common to life, sur
round us on every side. But for
all that, if we have contracted a
debt, we must pay it. We can, we
must be true to ourselves, our word,
our honor. The day of filching
with impunity from our fellow-man
the earnings of hie labor, has past;
and they, who longer attempt it,
will find themselves the miserable
subjects of public condemnation.
Therefore, honest men arise in your
might, and correct the evil that has
so long reg ted like an incubus up
on the prosperity and peace of the
country. Then may we hope to en
joy, notonly, national peace and qui
et; but, instead of sighings and
murrfiu rings, we can carry into our
homes a merry heart and a cheer
ful countenance, which will shed a
radiance of sunshine around our
hearthstones, and a halo of love and
joy around the lrearts of the family
circle. We can then fully realize
happiness; and these thoughts sug
gest to our mind the proverb of
the worlds wisest man, “A false
balance is abomination to the Lord ;
but a just weight is His delight.”
Our Colleges.
Already has the fame of Cuth
bert as an educational oasis spread
far and near, stretching even
north to the mountains of Tennes
see, and south to tho everglades of
Florida; going west, Alabama, and
Mississippi, have heard of its ce
lebrity, and in common with the
other sister State* of Georgia are
prepared to attest tho truth of the
superior advantages afforded in our
Colleges. The Baptist College so
famous prior to the war, has recent
ly been revived and is rapidly re
cuperating from the debris caused by
the use of the building for hospi
tal purposes during the war. Enough
money has been raised already to
do all necessary repairing, and
we are glad to learn has been expen
ded for that purpose. The college
has for its President, Prof. A. B.
Seals, a gentleman of polished man
ners, and renowned ability as a
teacher. Quito a number of young
ladies have already conic in from a
distance, and more constantly ex
pected. Although the College be
longs to the Baptist denomination,
and is intended to teach the daugh«.
ters of Baptiste particularly, still
others of a different faith, can be
instructed w ithout having the tenets
of their religion interfered with.—
We commend Prof. Seals and his
college to the patronage of the pub
lic; and sincerely hope that he will
he sustained.
Andrew College, like the Baptist,
BUtiered also from being used as a
hospital during the war. This col
lege belongs to the Methodist de
nomination, but was turned over to
itß President with the right to
make it a non-sectarian school, which
it is.
Dr. A. L. Hamilton, its worthy
President, took charge of this
school about five years ago, and by
almost superhuman efforts and in
domitable energy, has established a
reputation for the College second to
none in the State. He has passed
through the fiery trials and fluctu
ations so familiar to our Southern
people, and to-day, despite the low
price of cotton and scarcity of mon
ey, is being patronized beyond all
expectation. lie and his able fac
ulty are publishing the “ College
Bell,” which is proving a happy
auxiliary to the welfare of the insti
tution
Prof. Seals and Dr. Hamilton,
have our warmest endorsement, and
we trust their efforts in the cause
of education and the moral training
of the young, wall find a just appre
ciation in the hearts of our citizens.
Let both colleges be sustained. It
can be dune if those interested in
the prosperity and grov th of our
little city will lend a helping baud.
Editorial Brevities.
—A Western man is lecturing on
“The Devil.” Butler, it is said, will
sue him for libel.
l- is said that the President
wanted to send Dick Yates to San
Domingo, but his friend# couldn’t
get him sober enough to accept.
—An exchange says: “It is a
horrible thing to die rich.” We
should like to test it two or three
hundred years lienee.
The Pew rent of Henry Ward
Beecher’s church, amounted to $70,-
000 for the year 1871, an advance
of SIO,OOO over last year.
A man living in Kansas City
has a full set of furniture made of
the tree on which his father was
hanged ten years ago.
—A countryman living seven
miles from Columbus, went to that
city a few days since to buy eggs.
Wonder if be wanted to exchange
cotton for them ?
General Jubal Early indig
nantly contradicts the paragraph
which has lately been going the
rounds to the effect that he is dying
of consumption.
The Editor of the Southern
Farm Journal, is exposing the
speculating scheme of the Ordina
ry of Morgan County in refusing
to publish his advertisement in his
county paper.
The names of several subscri
bers from Calhoun came in too late
for the present issue. But their
paper will be mailed regularly to
them after this number. Thank
yon, send them in.
The Macon Telegraph says, the
late Henry N. Ells has filed an ap
plication for a SIO,OOO policy in
Gon Hood’s Company, and had lie
lived a few days longer he would
have been duly insured for that
amount.
We have received the Early
County News, and return thanks to
its Editor for his expression of
kindness toward us. We can as
sure him that we deal fairly with
every body, and in no case will we
attempt to “ undermine ” him.
Albany pays her Mayor SBOO,
her Marshal SI2OO, her Deputy
Marshal SIOOO, Clerk of Council
SSOO, Treasurer and Collector SSOO,
City Attorney S4OO, and her City
Physician SIBO per annum.
Hurah for Albany.
We are pleased to note the
fact, that Dr. W. T. Park, will
transmit all mail matter for the wes
tern portion of Calhoun county to
and from Cuthbert once week.—
All matter sent iu his care can be
got through his office at Parkeville.
So much for enterprise.
The lion. A. 11. Stephens lias
shown his nobleuess and purity of
soul, by refusing to affilliate with
the Brown and Cameron “ring” in
the State Road lease The love of
filthy lucre, has never yet tarnished
the character of Georgia’s greatest
Statesman, lie stands still uncon
taminated by the corruption of the
age, one among the brightest speci
mens of true moral greatness.
ln a list of grand jurors for
the U. S. District Court, published
in the Savannah Republican, we
notice the names of C. A. Harris,
H. A. Crittenden, and John B. Lee,
of this county. We notice also the
name of Henry Miller of Calhoun
Cos. We don’t know but one Hen
ry Miller in Calhoun, and he is a
half witted negro with not enough
sense to make a trnsty mill boy.
—The Woman's Journal and Wood
hull and Claofling Weekly have been
received. They are edited by la
dies of fine ability, and strong ad
vocates of female sufferage. Judg
ing from Victoria Wordhull’s me
morial to Congress, and the manner
of its disposal by that body, inclines
us to the opinion that a 16th Amend
ment to the Constitution is not far
distant. Wonder what other fanat
ical phantasm will next haunt the
dreams of New England free-think
ers ?
Albany News, of Tues
day, says, we learn by a telegram
from Hon. Nelson Tift, to his broth
er, Mr. Asa Tift, that Bullock with
held his certificate on the pretext
that no returns had been received
from the Milford (Baker county)
precinct, and the pretended suppo
sition that the vote at that precinct
might elect Whitely. Information
was desired as to whether any elec*
tion was held there, before the cer
tificate would be issued. The infor
mation was promptly obtained by
Mr. Asa Tift, in the form of certifi
cates of the managers at Newton
that no election was held at Milford,
and forwarded to Atlanta on Satur
day last. This, fact established, it
was supposed the certificate would
issue without further delay.
Apropos to this subject, the At
lanta Era of same date, says it is
not probable that Mr. Tift will be
seated “until after a searching in
vestigation into the election” m his
district, a» there were “glaring
frauds” perpetrated.
Chicago Republican
say's, there were no less than six
hundred and sixty-eight suits for
divorce entered in the courts of that
city during the past year.
E®, The Columbus negroes are
going to eontest the election for
county officers in Muscogee county.
Labor Economy—No. 5.
Popular ignorance is apt to sup
pose that a machine, if it has mer
it, can be managed and operated at
once, without previous instruction
or experience, and almost by any
one. And if this erroneous and
extravagant expectation be not re
alized, the machine is unceremoni
ously discarded as .a worthless hum
bug, patented perhaps by some un
principled yankee trickster tor the
sole object of swindling the public
for purposes of private gain.
On the contrary, experience and
practice are indispensable to ex
pertness and skill in the use and
management of even a simple ma
chine. Much more so, where the
machine is complicated. Much pa
tience and much perseverance and
long practice are often necessary in
order to effect the best results with
even the simplest machine, A
knowledge of the mechanical con
struction and the principle of ope
ration by the operator, though not
always indispensable to success, is
in all eases attended by important
advantages, as the mac-bine may
thus be kept in constant order and
working condition. When such is
not the case, ignorance is liable to
blunder, and to burden oven a good
machine with the cause and conse
qences of a failure, which is wholly
due to itself.
Fertilizers may also be advan
tageously substituted for human la
bor. Money invested in a good
fertilizer may be made to pay a
larger dividend than the same
amount laid out in augmenting the
number of mules and laborers, and
their concomitants. A single hand
can cnltivate twenty-five acres
equally divided between cotton and
corn, which will yield three bags of
cotton and one hundred bushels of
corn. To double the product by
cultivating fifty acres would require
an additional hand and mule. The
hire and rations of the hand would
cost S2OO. That sum would pur
chase five thousand pounds of am
moniated superphosphate, which
would give two hundred pounds to
the acre on the twenty-five acres ol
corn and edttcn, and double the
yield. This result would be equiv
alent to the hire of an additional
hand, with the difi'erence in favor
of the fertilizer. That the use or
hire of an additional mule, worth
$25, or more, together with its feed,
worth $75, would be saved, as
would also the rent of twemy-five
acres of land, (one third of corn and
one-fourth of cotton,) which, ac
cording to the hypothesis upon
which we are proceeding, would be
w r orth $lO8 —thus making S2OB dif
ference in favor of the fertilizer. —
There are other minor advantages
in favor of the fertilizer, which will
readily suggest themselves to the
mind of the intelligent and experi
enced planter, but which we shall
not now stop to enumerate.
It Can be readily demonstrated
by a simple calculation, that if the
fertilizer increased the yield only
fifty per cent, instead of one hun
dred, it would still be more profita
ble to purchase the fertilizer than
to hire the additional hand. Thus,
it is obvious that fertilizers may be
profitably substituted for at least
one-half of the human labor required
(without them) to produce a given
result. Hence it follows, that the
productive quantity and quality of
human labor might be reduced fifty
per cent, without any diminution of
the aggregate crop result, whereas
the net income would be very ma
terially increased. We think it
therefore safe to conclude from the
premises, that by the substitution
of fertililizers for labor, the net
profit* of planting may be maintain
ed at their present standard with a
much smaller amount of labor than
is now, or has heretofore been ob
tainable in the market.
Doxa.
Paris Under Fire. —The Prus
sian siege guns have got the range
of the city of Paris, and the last
horror of the long investment is
rapidly sitting down upon the
French capital. With churches,
hospitals, museums and school
houses demolished, women and
children killed in the outlying
streets, the gilded dome of the In
valided shattered, and worshippers
in St. Sulpice slain as they knelt at
their devotions, it is indeed a brave
and steadfast patriotism which caus
es the citizens to maintain their
resolution of resisting to the utmost
and to receive with satisfaction the
announcement of the military au
thorities that surrender will not be
thought of.— Bos. Post.
The Lee Monument Fund.—The
following extract from a letter writ
ten by a member of the Central
Committee at Richmond, will be of
interest to our readers:
“I received a letter last evening
from Mrs. Lee in which she says
that it is her intention to have the
General’s remains removed taßicli
mond should she ever leave Lexing
ton; and if not, that she wishes
them at her death to be placed in
Hollywood, and that she buried be
beside him there. This settles the
question that Richmond is to be
their final resting place, and makes
it appropriate that here his grateful
and loving countrymen should rear
their greatest monument to his
memory.” ?
In the Union.
Oar yesterday’s edition ought
perhaps to have contained a sol
emn address of felicitation to the
people of Georgia upon being once
more in the American Union of
States. Four Representatives, on
that day, from Georgia, were sworn
in and took their seats in the Amer
ican Congress—a fact from which
we assume that Georgia is in the
Union once more. But a very lit
tle consideration satisfies us we
ought not to shout. This being in
the Union is a condition of extreme
peril—it is not being “out of the
woods” by any manner of meaus.—
We have now been reconstructed
four times in six years, and have
been dodging in and out of that
concern like the Harlequin in Punch
and Judy. In and out—up and
down—here we are and here we
arn’t—now you see us, and now
you don’t, in short, Georgia has
had as uneasy a time of it in the
American Union as a toad under a
harrow.
The Southern States generally
have fared no better ever since we
knew anything about that contriv
ance—partly their own fault, but
more the fault of the other erring
sisters. We know how it is in
school when a little crowd get* in
from a country neighborhood, feel
ing very naturally as good as the
rest, but meeting with a decided
disposition to invidious treatment.
The girls laugh at their dresses—
pull their hair and stick pins in
them. The boys cheat them iu mar
ble—crack their shins in hockey,
chalk their backs and play all man
ner of town tricks cn them in wrest
ling. This makes the country mi
nority snappish and ungracious,
ami then, likely enough, the others
will turn to and whale them for be
ing quarrelsome.
Just so, on a larger scale, has the
school of the American Union been
to the Southern States. We have
been sorely rub upon all that time,
iu almost every conceivable way.—
The Southern love and reveieuce
for the Union thirty years ago was
wonderfully stroDg. It is true,
that all the evidence of its power
and greatuess in most of our region
did not go beyond a postage stamp
or a mail coach ; but the South felt
she had made the concern and re
joiced in it in all the pride of au
thorship. Washington planned its
battles and presided at the birth of
the Federal organization. Jeffer
son drew up the declaration aDd
Madison elaborated, explained and
defended the grand political struct
ure, while Monroe and Jackson
guided it safely through its baptism
of fire and blood.
So we say, the South then far ex
celled the North in devotion to the
American Union, and it took a very
long system of abuse, perversion
and sectional domineering to break
down that devotion, just as now it
will require a generation of fair and
considerate treatment to reinstate
the government in its old position
in the Southern heart. It must
spring up and grow from a sense
of beuiticence, and it cannot be
cudgelled or scolded, bullied or in
sulted into the Southern people.—
But quite aware that here is our
manifest destiny and our future for
weal or woe must be worked out
in the Union, Georgia will do her
best, if out of mere self-interest
alone, to re-establish order, justice,
liberty and tranquility under the
star-spangled banner, no matter
what may bo her precise political
status in the course of her rapid and
periodical gyrations in and out of
the Union of the States.— Telegraph
and Messenger. .
SdHU A correspondent in tho Ma
con Telegraph and Messenger from
Jones county, tells of two hogs
slaughtered in that county on the
24th of December. The first a
Chester not two years old weighed
661 pounds, was raised by Capt.
Ridley, of that county. The sec
ond —a cross of the Berkshire and
large Guineas, three years old
weighed 642 pounds raised by a
Mr. Hammonds, of Jasper county.
The same correspondent makes
some suggestions to the planters of
that section which we think will ap
ply equally well to those of this.
He says:
If the farmers of Middle Georgia
would procure an improved breed
of hogs, cattle and sheep, and give
them proper attention, and then
plant more corn, and sow more
wheat, and use less Peruvian and
more Simon Short’s “guano gratis,”
there would not be such a “hue and
cry” as we now have about the low
price of cotton and the scarcity of
money, but, in a little while, every
farmer could sit under his own
pines, “vines and fig trees,” and eat
of bacon, beef, and bread, mutton,
beans, and greens of his own raising,
with none to “molest or make him
afraid.” Then his mind would not
be disturbed by day, and bis dreams
made frightful by nightj for having
given mortgages and drawn drafts
running at the ruinous rates of
thirty per cent, per annum to be
paid out of a short eotton erop,
forced upon a market made strin
gent by the manipulations and col
lusions of interested speculators.
Let the policy indicated be pur
sued, and, ere long, every frugal
farmer in Middle Georgia can snap
his finger in the faces of speculators,
and bow respectfully to the Middle
and Northwestern States, and say,
“I am a true laborer—l earn that I
eat, get that I wear, owe no man
hate, envy no man’s goods, and my
greatest pride is- to see my corn and
wheat grow, and my sheep, cattle
and swine graze, and my lambs,
calves and pigs suck.”
Making Butter. —To make but
ter in cold weather, to one quart of
thick.cream put one or two quarts
of cold water, and churn as usual
for about the same length of time,
and you will have good, bard, yel
low butter. The colder the water
the better the butter will be. Try
it.
The Georgia Senvtors. —The
Washington Patriot thus speaks of
the appearance of the Georgia Sen
atorial claimants before the Senate
Judiciary Committee on Wednes
day last:
Mr. Farrow made a long argu
ment, or rather speech, in support
of his claims, which failed to make
much impression. He rested his
case, so far as the law was concern
ed, upon the ineligibility of certain
members who had voted for Mr.
Hill, though he did not deny that
a quorum of the Legislature existed
without them. ‘When pressed by
a member of the committee to an
swer whether he considered the el
ection would be vitiated by the
presence of a siugle ineligible mem
ber, he replied affirmatively. After
that declaration it was quite clear
that he relied lather upon partisan
claims than law for his pretensions.
Mr. Farrow himselt and the other
contestant both hold offices and ex
ercise. functions derived from the
authority of the very Legislature
whose acts they are now seeking to
upset as illegal!
The argument of Dr. Miller was
listened to with much attention and
respect. It is well understood that
he came here only to vindicate a
principle, and is indifferent to the
brief honor of a six weeks’ session
in the Senate. Besides, his majori
ty was so large as to leave no loop
hole of escape, if the Senate be dis
posed to observe the practice here
tofore established. As lawyers, the
committee must report for him.—
As partisans, they may seek to
avoid this necessity.
Officers of the Western and
Atlantic Railroad Company.—
At the meeting of the lessees of this
Company, on Tuesday, the follow
ing officers were elected:
President—Ex-Governor Joseph
E. Brown.
Superintendent—E. W. Cole.
Asst. Superintendent- (Appoint
ed) A. L. Harris.
Auditor—E. G. Cabaniss.
Treasurer—R. W. Smith, of
Pennsylvania.
Ticket Agent—B. W. Wrenn. •
The Republican headquar
ters in Kelly’s Building, on Broad
street, has played out, cut, stick,
absquatulated, skedaddled, defunct
ed. The people having wiped out
the Republican party, the headquar
ters is now properly the people’s
headqn art era.— Const itutio n.
New Advertisements.
Powell’s HalTl
R DORSEY, Director and Manager—Also,
Manager and Director of the Richmond,
Va , and Southern Theut»; s.
For One Night Only !
Tlie
“Sapplif EiM Ojera Troupe!
Will open for One Night Only, on
SATURDAY NIGHT, Jan. 21st.
Admission, sl.
D J MURPHY, Ager.t.
Lumber! Lumber! Lumber!
J AM PREPARED to furnish all kiuds of
Lumber, at Short Notice.
Auy amount, less than a c-ir load, can he sup
plied from my Lumber Yard in town. Prices
reasonable.
For lull particulars apply at my store.
jau-20 3m J. A. FOSTER.
Buggies! Baggies!! Baggies!!!
I Have a lot of New BUGGIES and IIAR
.NES3, that I will sell at unprecedented
low p'iccs Call and see them.
I am still prepaied to do all kiud of work
and ne iu a first Class Carriage Manumactory.
Pri es suitable to the timss
Harness made and repaired, aud ail kiuds of
Vehicle repairing aone.
jan3o 3t» J A. FOSTER.
FRENCH
Cognac Bitters,
W FIRST PRIZE
Paris Exhibition 1867.
Purify the blood and
strengthen the system,
eradicating the effect of
dissipation, maintain the
human frame in condition
of healthfulness, dispel the
EHues and aii mental dis
tempers, and relieve those
whose sedentary habits lay
them open to depression.
They prevent and cure bili
ous and other Fevers, Fever and
rLgue, Chills, Diarrhoea, Dysen~
tery, Dyspepsia, Sea - Sickness,
Colic, Cholera, Cholera Morbus,
and every complaint Inci
dental to diet or atmos
phere. Ladies will find
them a sovereign boon, as
they eradicate all traces
of Debility, Nervousness,
Inertness, and Diseases
peculiar to the sex.
of Testimo
nials can be seen at the
office of
M. JACOBSON, Sole Proprietor
64 & 66 Water Street, N. Y.
'^XOTIGE —Mrs. Sarah Dubose, wi r e of
Sidney Dubose has applied for exemp
tion of Personalty, rtud valuation of Home
stead, aud I will pass upon the same at 10
o’clock, A. M.. oft the 28th day of Jantnry
1871, at my office. M. GOKMLEY,
janSO 2t OrdiDaiy.
NOTICE.— George P. Hart has applied for
exemption of P rsonSlty, andl will pas.
, upon the same at I<l o’clock, A M-, cn the 28th
dav of January 1871, at my office.
jiju2o-2t M. GORMLEY, O.di ary.
New Advertisements.
The ~
EUREKA
AHHQNUTEB 101
SIPER-PHOSfIIATE
‘V OF
Is for sale at
All Points of Importance
IN GEORGIA.
WE HAVE SOLD IT
FIVE SUCCESSIVE YEARS,
AND KNOW
It is the very Article
FOB
PLANTERS TO USE.
DAVID DICKSON, Esq.,
Os Oxford, says
It is superior to any
COMMERCIAL
FERTILIZER
He lia* ever applied, and
RECOMMENDS IT
TO EVERYBODY.
WE SOLD OYER
Two Thousand Tons
IN GEORGIA
LAST
IT HAS BEEN TRIED
AND ALWAYS
PAID
TUB
PLANTKH,
Send for a Pamphlet. An Agent
may be found at almost every De
pot, but information can always be
had of
f. w. sms & co,<
Savannah, Ga.
Agent at Outhbert, Ga.,
H. KB. JOIKES.
Agent at Fort Gaines, Ga.,
SUTLIVE & GRAHAM.
jan2o-3m
50 Barrels and half Barrels of that Fine SYRUP, like I had
last season, just received, and two Car Loads Best FLOUR.
Buy something good for Christmas from
J. McK. GUNN.
TO SHOEMAKERS.
WHITE Oak and Hemlock Sole Leather,-
French Calf, Kip end Lining Skins,-
Eyelets, Eyelet Q)ts, Punches, Shoe Nails',-
Pegg, etc., etc., ... v ,
F6V Sale by ALLISON & SIMPSON.
Farmers’ Warehouse
Dissolution.
THE Firm of J M. Redding dt Cos., is thir
day dissolved by mutual consent, by ihe
withdrawal of Samuel A McNiel. The new
firm being liable for all indebtedness, and an ;
thoriztd to collect ail claims dne the old firm'.-
THE WAREHOUSE
AND
COMMISSION BUSINESS,
Will be continued by J. M. REDDING A B--
C. MITCHELL, under the name and ttyle «f
J. M. REDDING & CO.
We are thankful to our customers for past
favors, and iutend to merit their patronage
for the future, by looking to their every in
terest in the
WARE HO USE B USINESS,
We entreat onr friend* who still owe ns. to
come forward andsettla up at once. We will
continue the
Produce and Commission
Business.
In the Jake Davis House, and if oar frieedf
will pay ns we hope to be able to supply
them with the Staff of Life again.
ty Consignments solicited.
jan6-ly J M. REDDING Sc CO.
For Sale!
80,000 Best BRICK
Ever Made in Cuthbert
ALSO a supply of Shaker GARDEN
SEEDS—a Southern production, war
ranted OK. .- • r ...
Fresh Tennessee Hams, Built fiteaf,
Bure Leaf Lard, Etc.
ffine, -finer anti the very finest
EL O UR, m Sacks an Jin Barpgls,
Meat, Sugars, Coffee, ami a g«o««aV
stock ot‘ FAMIDY GROCERIES.
'I EE W CO UHTR T S YR Ul\
ALSO AT COST^i
Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Hard «rd
Hollow Ware, by
jaul3,t A A. WfLKIN.
Hardware !
BUTTS, Hinges, Screws, Iron Chest, Iron
and Brass Wardrobe. Brass .Till. Trunk,
Pad, Rim Dead, Stock and Store Door Locks,
Brace and Bits, Angers Chisels, Files, Saws,
Hammers, Wrenches, Hooks and Staples, Lap
Links, M>W Rods.B. W. Collin’s Axes, Pock'
et and Table Cutlery, etc., etc..
For Sale by ALLISON & SIMPSON.
LOOK, LOOK, LOOK !
Fulton Market Beef,
At ALLISON A SIMPSON &