Southern enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1867-1867, March 26, 1867, Image 2

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Shroifern lrntrrj)®f ~~ j semi-weekly. ) L. C. BRYAN, : : : : Editor. THOMASVILLE, GA.: FRIDAY, M AllCli 26, 1867. SABBATH SCHOOL. It affords us much pleasure to no< ticc the flourishing condition of the Methodist Sabbath School in Thomas ville, under the able superintendence, of Mr. R. 11. Hardaway. His chris. tian zeal, atd entire devotion to the cause, has been rewaided by a full school, a full corps of teachers and great prosperity in the objects ol the institution. We know of no man who has manifested more interest in the Sabbath School teaching of little chib dreD, and the energy, perseverance and success he has developed in his labor of love, entitles him so the deepest" gratitude of the parents whose chil. dren have bceh so happily advanced. We are pleased to learn that there 1 will be a joiut Sabbath School Cele. bratiou between tlie Methodist an’ Presbyterian Sabbath Schools, about the first of May; and it is hoped that the Baptists will unite with them,— Wc have not recently visited either of j the last named Schools, but from the well known ability and moral worth of the gentlemen superintending, we may confidently represent them in a like flourishing condition. PATENT LAMP CHIMNEYS. Messrs. A. & 11. Smith have just received a large lot of elegant Lamps, and also a good supply of the popular Patent Lamp Chimneys. The supe riority of these chimneys consists in the upper portion being metal and re movable at pleasure, which also occu pies the place of tiro greatest heat in .the chimney and not so easily broken as glass. The same gentlemen have added largely to their getierd stuck, and again notify the public that they have on hand another lot of those splendid Stoves. In fact, almost every thing needed on the plantation is to be found in their house, and at very moderate prices. RADICAL ETIQUETTE. In the Congressional House of Re presentatives on the 21st inst., the following thrusts pastel between two Radical statesmen. Spoon Duller, .it seems, is likely to encounter as rough handling among his Congressional friends, as he did among his Southern enemies. The House went into Committee of the Whole oti the. million relief bill. Mr. Dutler again opposed the bill in violent terms. The debate took a wide range, with a severe passage of invective between Dutler and Ding ham. Mr. Bingham said he repelled, with scorn, utterances affecting his in tegrity and honor, from any man, whe ther he be the hero of Fort Fisher Hi* \ ken or Fort Fisher not taken. Mr. Binuham proceeded in his denuncia. tions of Mr: Dutler amid roars of laughter and some excitement. Mr. Dutler rose to reply, but the Commit tee rose. Mr. Dutler appealed lor an opportunity to answer. Mr. Eldridgc hoped the House would not bottle up tbc gentleman from Massachusetts. Unanimous con sent was given, and Mr. Dutlor pro ceeded, defending himself for voting for Mr. Davis in the Charleston Com vention, saying he hoped thereby to save the country. lie did the beat ho •could during the war, but tlm only victim of the gentleman's (Bingham) prowess that W (Butler) knew of was an innocent woman hanged upon the scaffold. (Butler alludes to Mrs." Sur ratt, in whose prosecution Bingham was an active manager.) 4tay*“lt is of the first importance,” says the Macon Telegraph, “ that the Southern people make no mistake in the new and untried circumstances that have been forced upon them. They should take counsel of sober reason, and not of unworthy fear, ill timed prejudice, or unfounded appro hension.” Wc heartily endorse the sentiment and hope our people may show their wisdom, by acknowledging the facts of the situation, and earnestly setting about remedying the existing evils by the proper use of the pacific iceuutcc# still left in their hands. Soon we shall have a military coiumatidcp. A regis tration ol votes wffl be ordered, pro. paratory to the election of delegates to a State'Conventipu lor the framing of anew Constitution upon the ba-is of universal suffrage. The colored males will be registered and will participate , upon terms of equality with the whites in the clcethm. Whether we arc pleased with this or not it is ordained by the Sherman bill, and is now the law of the land. Our protest is use -Icb9 while our arms ate powerlesa to prevent it. We must therefore, as the only alternative, acknowledge the situation. But wc should never de spair of doing good, we must not fold pur arms and eit down in despair. Up find doing , is the light motto. The white man is the friend ol the colored man, tbe colored man must bo the /riend of the white man, and he needs ;io persuasion iu this where left un< tampered with by renegade white men. But he Kill be tampered with and a ptrong effort made to turn him against Kis old friends, in order that others may profiy by bis ignoranoc. Apart of our duly is to prevent this, and Bhow tin? his true interests, and who are his f. i le, friends. He labored lor Ul wli«6 "lie wn« a slave, let him now learn that wc will rejoioe in and will protect him in the infancy of his free dom. Let him learn that we do not hate him, but that we would teach him to appreciate the blessings conferred by his new estate. Elevate him, in other words, that lie may understand us, and learn that we understand him. To accomplish this we must treat him kindly, speak to him cncourageingly and sensibly. Make him our ally in the accomplishment of political good, that in evil hand* l.e may not become our misguided master, lie could only gain the position speedily to lose it again, and we must guard his credul ity against corrupt influences, lie was our friend in a state of slavery, let ns now be more than‘his Irion'i in a eon ditiou ol freedom. If we do these things—if vve surround him with these influences we will have nothing to fear, lie will make no boast over his former master, no threat against his welfare, and will deport himself ns a law abiding cifizen at the ballot bow The mutual distrust will then disaf pcar, and his race iu this country dis appear also iu the great body ot Ame rican citizeus, and in a few years, drop from the polit cal arena as a dis turbing element. Is there nothing in this? Let us cousidci it well. Our welfare depends upon our getting rid entirely of all disturbing elements.— This course will neutralize the race, and, disarming, overthrow the cher ished hopes of the Radical-’. j ter 1 * TLc loyalty of the slave against his master lasted lrotn the beginning to the end, of the war without a soli tary revolt or interruption anywhere, thus confirming all that fbe So«tli ever claimed for the institution, and completely astounding the rq#t ol tho world. We, who knew the black man, felt no apprehension, Lut tni.-ted him with the management of our estates, and even the protection of our wives and our daughters. The confidence was well reposed, and for their fidelity the Southern people will .ever oWe them a debt of gratitude, and should never fail te give it a practical recog. nition. At a still Inter day, when | freedom was suddenly thrust upon : then?,.though wholly unprepared for ! the change, as a class- they comlue ' ted themselves in a manner deserving the highes praise, never rising above their station and showing every dis position to preserve the kindly rela tions that formerly.subsisted bvtwceu them and their masters. And this despite the machination* of wicked men and women who have been con stantly pouring poison into their minds and seeking to stir up bad blood be tween them and us ;—Maocu Tele tjrauh. Effect of the Reconstruction Act in Georgia. The fears of our people, it has oc curred to us, have bfceti needlessly aroused at what they suppose to be the effect of the Reconstruction act in placing the control of the legislation of the State in the hands of the negro population. We have examined into the United States census ot 1850— the last that has reaeh"d us—-and find that in Georgia there were then but twenty-seven counticr which had more negroes than whites. Those counties were, Baldwin, Bryan, Burke, Camden Chatham, Columbia, Crawford, Glynn, Greene, Hancock, Harris, .Jasper, Jef ferson, Jones, Mclntosh, Monroe, Morgan, Oglethorpe, I'ntmmi, Kcrivcn, Talbot, Taliaferro and Wilkes. In gome of these counties the ma jority of the black over the white population is very slight, and may have 'been lost entirely by the emigration of negroes after emancipation. The probability is, that at the prosontuiot wore tin n one fifth of the one hundred and thir ty,two counties of the Stato Could bo eentrolled by the black population, if it was arrayed in solid phalanx against, the white population ; and not more than one.sixth of tho representatives, and probably not a single Senator iu the State Legislature could, under any possibility of circumstances, be no. grocs. In this calculation wo bavo not ta ken into account tho disfranchising of a portion of the while population by the Reconstruction Acts ; and, pen baps, have not given sufficient weight to the emigration of negroes frojui the State. It is proper to state that since the eoiißus of ISfiO was taken several new counties have been laid out. Daugh erty, Glay, Calhoun, Miller, ami Quit man Imve pralmldy negro majority.s. Those being added to tiie twenty-seven enumerated above, would make one hundred counties with white majori ties, and t-hiftf.itwo with negro major, ities. This is the most that can be claimed.— Macon Messenger. A Monster Hotel to he. greeted in Asm t "ur/c. —Tho new hotel to he erected in New York city, opposite the Central Dark, by Mr. Orai*»ton, of “New York Hotel,"is thus described : This hotel is to be two hundred and one teet wide by four hundred and twenty feet in length, covering thirty, four lots, or eiglity-Tour thousand su perficial feet. It will be seven stories high, crowned with a mansanl, tr French roof, and will contain one hundred j?nd seventy.four private parlors, six hundred chambers, single and in suites, besides over quo hun dred ether rooms. The size and style of this immense building will exceed that of the Grand Hotel in I’aris, making it the finest structure of the kind in the world. The exterior of this building, rich with facades, pavilions, balconies, high roofs, etc , will bo truly beautiful im posing, contnuking wonderfully with the square masses of marble and stone known as the Astor House, and the Metropolitan and Fifth Avenue 110- j tcf-. The Great Freshet. . In our last week’sissue, we gave an account of the loss of our bridges and spoke of the destruction of property . generally. It is conceded that the j river at this point, and every whoro heard from, was higher than ever bo fore known by the oldest Inhabitants. In 1791, 79 years ago, wc learn from the oldest of our citizens, there was a great freshet, but not to be compared | to tho last—whioh was at least eight feet higher than that of ’9l, and Li higher than that of 1847. At Loudon it was a rise of 45 feet abor* low wa ter mark, and was ft? six fflet of tlie lower cord of the railroad bridge. It is utterly impossible at the pres, ent for auy writer to give any thing like an accurate account of tlie fle— tructlob donei)}' high vratcra. Many' of tbe largest and best islands an 1 river bottoms of the Holston uud French Broad have been washed to such an extent, that it will take years l><lore they can possibly be used to aa advantage. Houses, stables, hurtle#, cornicwbs, fences, and click o/all kinds on and near the river# wepe lost or injured beyond calculation. Wc learn trom Captaia llennegar, of the steamer “Bird,'' that the river at Kingston .was id feet above low water, mark. Among large drifts could La seen the Holding dead bodies of fcpri ( sc.-, mules, cattle, sheep, and stock of all kinds. Tho iliwassee, it is said, oovered the greater p:rtiou of Chat les ion. On Tuesday morning the fallowing telegram was received,from Presijkui Callaway, from Cleveland : "Have just heard from Chattanooga, Ragsdale dias saved "all our ears and freight. Nashville and Chattanooga road has lost two hundred car lundj of freight. 'Hie watef is up in the win dows of the depot ol the State road Water over the engine in the sTmiM Smith returned from Dalton and re ports the State road in bad condition. Telegraph lftie downs Pome flays bc fote passengers can go Syuth. BajfThe Griffin Star gives, as ap propiiato to the times, the following advice : In these times, public men, and some of tho newspapers, are voltun- ! teeiing a good deal of advice, Having been educated .to sell ours, we give it , away with a bal grace. But here is a small installment: Ist. All people who have not yet died a natural death, are advised not to get reared to death at this late stage ‘of the game. 2d. Those who were lucky enough to keep their carcasses out of range of Yankee leaden bullets during the war, j need not get unnecessarily alarmed at paper ones now. fid. If the Yankees do confiscate the Southern lands, they cannot move the land out of the country. 4th. If anybody has done anything extra mean that he can’t get forgive ness for., and fears that the local laws of the country will get hold of him, I Ill’ll# make his peace with the rado 1 cals at once, and lie will be protected j in his rascality. fit It. Let him who has always acted honestly, and endeavored to do his | duty to his fellow man, go about his ; business fearlessly, whatever that J business may be. i 6th. Good wives, who desire to re. ; tain the affections of their husbands, I should always meet them with a smile, and try to have their cukes and coffee i hot when they come home at night, 1 tired'and fretted with the day's trou bles and vexations, 7tli. Husbands, sould hold them | selves in readiness to “mind the baby’’ on all reasonable occa ions—und hap py is ho that has a baby to mind. Bth. (On the pious order) —The ! Bi rd sendeth rain upon ll e evil and the good, and cansoth tho sun to stiinu i upon tho just and the unjust—. avi/o, the industrious man shall reap his re ward. • Theso compriso all the Law and the Prophets applicable to the times. A French editor has given the fol lowing sensible description of tbo ef | Igct of an advert moment : The first 1 time a mau sees an advertisement he I takes no notice of it; the second time i he looks ot the name ; the third time he looks at the price ; the fourth time | he reads it; the fifth time bo speaks j of it to his wile j tho sixth tiiuo lie l buys. A Western editor must be in a bad ! fix Having dunnfd a subscriber for I his subscription, be rtof only refused to pay, but threatened to flog the edb 1 tor it ho shipped tho | nper. Uuitod States Presidents. j Great Washington was number one, i Then Senior. Adams next cauie on, Jefferson made the number threo— Then Mmjtson the fourth was he, Monroe the fifth to him succeeds ; Aud sixth, the junior Adams leads. Then seventh, Andrew Jackson came ; And eight we count Van Btiren’s name Then Harrison madg number nine—. And tenth. John Tylor filled the lino. Bulk was t lip eleventh, as wo know, Tho twelfth was Taylor in the row. Bill more, the thirteenth, took his place Aud Dioree was fourteenth in the race, liuohnnun, tho fifteenth is aeon ; Then Lincoln as sixteenth came in. Johnson the seventeenth and last, Still lives to close the illustrious past. Now let us stop until we see Who our next President will be. Try It. —An exchange, in suggest ing u lot of amusing trick# to be per- , formed ill the family circle, sm ng others, mentions, “ The printer's de. light” Take a shoot, of note paper, fold it carefully, and inclose a bank noto sufficiently largo to pay up ar rearages. Keep your eye on tho prin ter, tho nejtt time you sec him, and if j you can detect a smile, th# trick is a suaeeess. Anxiety for Party Success as an Element of Reconstruction. —A desire to provide for the future of the Re publican party has unquestionably con tributed nut a little to the difficulties that surround the reconstruction policy of Fong ress.' The fact has been espe cially noticeable in the tedious passage of the Supplementary Bill through the Fenatc. 'jfhere has been a sufficient wuutpf not only iu th# temper of tint Southern white'#, but in the sufficiency of any conceivable means to prevent some accidental dis advantage* so that portions of the Southern people on whom the Radi ctfls rest their hope of tho future.— Certain of our extremist coternporaries have not digested their views mi the, subject. They have made no secret of their anxiety so to work die ma< chine that,it shall turn out majorities .of tßepublican lallets win n the time for voting comes. And though the inventor# of the many amendments which have been heard of nt Various stages of the measure have discreetly avoided committals of this sort, their roallijtctjtip icarccly open to doubf The i XttUordhiary anxiety to multb ply oatlis, iml> extend them beyond the range of swearing, could have pro ceeded only fmu this feeling. * * If the object »erg to popularize per jutv'arrd hyp <ris> nothing Could be better. Or if it wove to disfranchise the greatest possible number it would be exj«? 1v in order. Dot as a# agency lo be retied upon for promoting heai fby reconstruction and the genuine reconciliation of sections, this compli cated aoj vexations xweariag would bo wots' than ffitfle. The fact that jealous lea (lie L rely upon it, util jn. terps-e it everywhere, seems to gire sureng'h re tbe’-uppossliotr that they fear the loss ol party domination as a Jesuit if regon-tructiort, unless they me allowed to shape legislation with a view to partisan rather than patriotic trrds.—-Yn y./r/t Tunis, 185/A. Stevens’ Confiscation Bill. A- a matter of Curious information, We give to our reader* the following obstruct of the leading feature# of tins favprite bantling of tho “ old dragon:’’ “It confiscates all the public finds belonging to the ten robel States and nl l the lands and other property for feited by the act of Congress of July 17, 1862—a1l which is to be seized, condemned ands Id. Out of the pro ceeds each adplt male freed slave is to receive forty acre#, and each one, who is head of a faintly foity more. Out; <ff the balance a sum of fifty dollars for each household is to be appropria. ted to the election of buildings so s the use of the late slaves $200,000, ! 000 is to be invested in IJ. Btates six ! per cent bonds'and tho interest added to the pension of Union soldiers, and 300,000,000 is to he appropriated to pay damages done to loyal citizens by tho civil or military government of the rebel Confederacy, under which clause Mr. Stevens would be reimbursed fit his property destroyed by the rebel in vasion of Qhatubersbnrg, Pennsylvania. The reisaiuu<g.Bections of the bill pre scribe the methods and machinery by which it is to-be carried into effect.’’ /h ide A jihcrory in Acic Orh'un*. —Tho Cresecn't publishes the remarks of this eccentric writer orator, at the Mechanic's Institute in that city. It, is a medley of clever" hits—in which he rau very strong on spoOns —and mnthe very large promises of what the northern and western democracy in, tend to do, in all of which wo bid them God speed lie aavi.tcs the southern poop] • to cultivate, their lands and dcvclopc their mpiiuffictnring in toreftts. Ou this head, the following fxtoact is sensible and to the point; Were | possessed of the akJtaiay4° lr#*slq| a poor man of tbe West into the rich man ot the East, I would tale "all the jewels Os the ladies, and build cotton mills. 1 would leave the ladies without any attractions than their pure hearts and beautiful faces, and with tho proceeds of their unnecessary gew-gaws could put up woolen mills, cotton mills, mul no longer be dspem dent ou people so far away, who care nothing for yon, except for your dol lars. Put up a cotton mill with a thousand spindles, and they will be better weapons than ten thousand glistening bayonets. .Strike New Kug laod in tho head with a cannon ball and it is nothing, for the foreign ment is constantly pouring iu to re place those whom she tnny fear at war; but strike at her pocket, and you in« flict a terrible wound. Could I see factories hero, I would -#av that the day of freedom and liberty bud come. Fnvorod Papers in the South. Washington, March 20. The t«|. bwirg papers have been selected to publish the laws and statutes: Virginia—Now Natiou at Rieht?t#nd, 11 mini cut, editor. North Casollk#— Raleigh Standard, and Henderson l’loncer. Georgia—Savannah Republican,and Loyal Standard (jeiyul Georgian ?) in Augusta. Alabama—Nationalist at Mobile, artd sblvoeato .at Huntsville. Arkansas—. Fort Smith New Em. Texas -Austin iutsUigenosr. It is somi-effieially announced that tho remaining Selections will he made from the same class of papers. Radical Orator a Coming South. —-We perceive thtft Senator Wilson, of Massachusetts,- and several other Radical orators, are coming Fouth to make speeches and enlighten our peo ple on the matter of their political wel fare We think wo can guarantee that they will he resjicotfully beard and kindly treated, whatever else they may despive. Wc hone, however, that our SoutLc.n orators will meet them iu debate, and discuss in a friendly spirit , tbe policy of rhe North toward our people.— .Vacon Tt/rgrojih. A General Convention of the Alt thodft Protestant Church. — In the Maryland Annual Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church, now be* ing held in Baltimore, the following report was on Saturday submitted and adopted : “Whereas, the unsettled condition at tbe time for meeting of the General Conven'ion subsequent to the orre held at Ly ifehburg, Virginia, in 1858, prevented tho representatives of the annual conferences from assembling in a general church council since 1858 ; and whereas, the conferences in the Southern States have been so weak ened and discouraged by the disasters iueid :nt to the war that they need the sympatjiy, a«d, euvourrgement ©f the more .prosperous and influential conferences , and hoping that the Gen eral Couveutiou will by cslijbiting the real strength and purpose of . the church, have a tendency to build tip tho waste places of our Zion and stroogthen the bonds of our ecelcsias. tical organization ; therefore “ Resolved, That the Maryland An nual Conference unite ivirtj her sister annual conferences in the call of .a general Convention .< f the .Methodist Drotestnot Church, to be held at Mont gomery, Alabama, on the first Tuesday in May, 1867.’’ The report was adopted. Webster on Military Republics. — Tbe following' is-an extract from Web ster’s oration on the completion of’ the Bunker Hill monument, June 17th, 1813 : A military republic, a government fouuded on mock elections and sap ported only by the sword, is a move ment indeed, hut a rt trograde and dis astrous movement trow? the regular aud old fa-1 boned .Juonarehial system. If men "would enjoy tire Lksslngi of republican government, they nrust govprn themselves by reason, by mu tual counsel anil consultation, by a sense ot feefi'ig and general interest, and by tbc acquiescence of tbe minor ity in tbe will o! tbc majority proper ly expressed ; and wbuvo all, the mili tary must be kept, ace aiding' to the language op our bill of rights, in strict subordination to thcfaivii an hiwitics. Wherever this lesson is not both learned and practiced, (bore can be no political f'reedpm. Al surd, preposter ous it is, a scoff and a satire upon tYc« forms of coa-titutiomd liberty, Ibr forms of government to be prescribed by military leaders, ami tbe right ol suffrage to be exercised at the point ol the sword.— 'Works, vole 1, page 98. If “Black Dan” were alive, wouldn’t lie thunder and lightning at tho bill of abominations passed by the infamous two-thirds. .V. V. World. Fortieth Congress. feENATK. Washington, March 2J. —Mr. Wil son introduced a concurrent resolution regarding Mr, Davis. It concludes thus : “Common justice, sonnd | üb lic policy and notional honor unite in recommending his speedy trial w re lease ou bail ” It was laid over. Mr. Wilson wdl endeavor to got a vote qu it before adjournment. DISSOLUTION. fl’Mllh hoivtofoie cxftfl iaif!»o I lw««utti« nn4crsi£it<*d, in tlie Hhictice ol * M*t<Rcine hidl Urn# l>tixinw*H, nrxtcr ilm* >4ylc Uni«i Al l>v*V\ tH Hint U#-ni, IVWitt At Ohh Mels, are tlii.s div tlidAolyeti. Dr. .1* U *><-id fc S. J. i’foHHDIB hfoVUl.tr jllircllHMMl fhr IT. trlV.sf ot pr. \V. l’\ iV-Wild, mi liio tirii*/ liflutu*#***. WinliHi*? nil h<’ivuiilfl elorte.l at ftitce. peiwitH indebted will find mir books iu the hwmto MckHiTt llauikkM’iiii A: D evi* for Collcctiou, .T U IMd. vr. v Tv\v*rtt,. J. r.uxK-.u.. Miortlff. Ot. . rilitE iimliTrigusd will o.iitimi* tb«- Ui'"l J ; l>n*ii I SN It tiuf*M»re foruicrlv o. oui eit l>v ■infcoWkt J IfEI • r T t 'a -sTf;. Mar. 3S *t r..v ivri:n\ii. iti:u:\n: Tax Noficc. (Have received order* to commence immo Uintely ukinflr ll*® iHui iih of Inetuue Tax for IHGT>, tliekiiuc f r tbe com{)lcti*m of \v<*rk in short and L liO|>e |>eo|*(o will ediuo ami make tvlum# proimitly. i’«milty fop failure to make retnniH. Fifty (’i|m •. OuartlimiH, Kxeeutors, Adniinb«lnitori« ami 'l'lUHteftt, make ifturus for minors. T K liOPKINS Ahh'C. Am*r ‘J.’dH Dir. Ism Din t (Ja. MTftr ts liKOßfa IA —Mitchell ( Auiir# ON Lh*» Aw** Monday in nexf, npfdiet tion will be made to tbe Onliuary '* (kuart ot mid Countv, fyr l«nv## t«» •*.)]] n portion »»f tb# Ditndtt u» tin- of 4 \ M. .loiien. Into of Buid (fouutv d< All per sons having objectjouß Will Hlo them by that duT Marcrnfett J<>iu*h Mu” \ FERTILIZERS. T E \ TON S sWWS’ fsl.AVr? fSt’ANt* EIGHT TONS RAW BON E ITlOSriiyfK Tlvc bt of Kertnlirei f»k; wdi* b\ # * E in vtxrtTox ,v BAv Mar go ts TO LUMBKIt BOYERS. 'pin: fiotr vnr I fared to Liiimber, of »tt kinds, si liis S»w Mdt, ibr.-* mil#* south of ThomasTitte, JT $15,111 PH TDRIII HIT Terms cash or Thinjc per rent. «,M,d jf not paid wilinn thirty days from deliver; # IMIS «. DRKI.I.. February Ist . j| OUR HOUSE. PHILADELPHIA ALE! I*.-,-- ' f . ~f . Three Glasses for 25 Cents OK, TWELVE TICKETS FOR BBEBOUAR Mm •< 3 U , DR. N. A. PRATT. (Successor to l‘rutt 4' Ititiu Ucor \ WHOLES AIJ<: DRUGGIST Aitnlriicnl ami fouvnlting l'hrmi.l, No. i t HAYNK STKICKT, CH.fm.ESTOS, .S', c. DK.U.EIts is Driiss, Chnnlrah, Paints, OlassA Druggists’Snntlrfrs. Ait»lyo>i«of Ores, Soils, Kertiliners, 6cr . mints with the ureiitest cure ami accurucy. Clieiui cut advice ffivuu in all branches of the sci ence, 011 moiWutc terms. J»r. V. «?.?> S» A WIU.I.V Jute of Coorgia, uu't*cxf» i.»rvely known tlirtmjihont the .State, is in lliis House, and solicits from Ins lrienil* :utd uei{(utiiit:iiices a lilrernl slinre of patronairc. * nmr Si-18? TO BRICK MAKERS. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, or YOUIIG’S FEMALE COLLEGE, * ixvrn-: PropOfitils, for Thirty Days, l or fhr llflivprj , nt tlie Bnildiug Hit* in ThommYilKr, ol' JlLNDlii:j> ITIOUSAXD HARD DHIGK, O by 4 1-2, and 3 Inches Thick. Tin: liUICK SITIJKOT TO INSPECTION nv THU BUIIAHNO COMMITTEE. Tbc -ize niMitioncd i« preferred, but other ni/.e» muy be BpeciWed. will alio mention the time of delivery. A ddrem A. i'i. IIANSKLD,Sd*c‘y, Thomaeville, Ga. Match Ilth., 1867. Vl-dGd Snvaimub New# und 1 Ini aid, and Mu eon Telegraph ctjjiy threo times, Mini wend bill to ! thin Office. To Ooutraptor© AND BUILDERS. OlfAl.lill VItOIM>M*I.S wilt be re It esived by the Clerk of Interior Court of Uitvlo ll county, until tho First Tuesday in April Next, to tin-nish Materia) and build A Brick Court House, IN CAMII.J.A, M'ITCIIELLCOrSTV, i fojls % plaw.- BOM OP HOUSE ID JIK ftc'i ts cjqqiv ip)) ZTWe STORIES HIGH. m r j Jni-Ht Story h n feet and Second twelve feet in j the dear,*Wullh two mat a half feet for First | SfiM-y and lwo for Second, to be lu]d iu Lime Mortnr. Six I’foiniff Firnt Floor with ciyhl 1 fo«4 l*iiHJ*a*e— Petit ion Wallsto beef Brick— ! I hree Khuiiim on Second Floor-C’om t * to hr twenty ritAt by forty feet, so be fihunli 1 edwitli s«s«ts. Bar, Jurv mid .!u<lue> StjHnl—Two Jury'Kooifih. t wclre by twenty * feet- Hoof to project, len feet in front, with Ibn ie. ( ’ofiimn to sup|wrf—Steps and for n on thenntpido to enter the o>nrt Boom—Thir | t.y six WiiTrlows, twelve li/fhu, tun by nixtrenri i -One Doable D«w»r with »i«ic io Okurt ! K«mn|«- Likfht SiiiLffe l>oor#», thro<S bv m v*x\ Ih.W will also be received forhuildnig Friinu llsrhs on mmiiio I*lnn. Py order t»f the Court. f W. PKARCK, Clerk Mnorti Gttf. O. H. W IJL.LCOX, Supermtendcnt T. H. WILLINGHAM, WHOLESALE Orooers, • M r«M,*rr.» g .?} -I. .lul.ru UVAKUII, <IA, K»<q> ronstanily on hand. nnJ roveiriag per every Steamer, all kin.U of mid n f 1 ' r,J Id<■) »H. AU« rOßitC*. Ser . Atr. Prompt attentiuß to Order- aeeom panwd with remMUßoe. tpr 11 I2m fltOßfili- OuutT 11 EKE AS Mr». Nanny I.ewi* AJmin # f Strawti <>» the estate 0 f As* LewS deceased appl.es ter Utters of Usmission from Slid Administration. AH persona inf ores) e 1 are hereby notified hi take due notimi thereof aful file' ibe.r objections m 1 OHri.wn or iielore Hie first Monday in J»ne next, otherwise letters of adtuime- U'wtiou will be giaafpil (ho applicant. tfiven uud of my o®eial signature this ■iih Jay of To*.' P» \ U'e tRI TO-v Y ‘r- -s Or and NOTICE. VL L p.-m'ns arc hefovb? fr^*n tnuiintr with «»r mv \v »|« femlt Ann Hodxtorti »»f Thotuas rciulr, oQ mv «•* ‘'•nnt lit vino left mv bod ami Umril. aod so fused to fx* controlled 1»t mo, I *m dclerusmed IM ftl : r ' - v | M )HN - M F ISBL’S Metallic Burial Case's THE undersigned hits now on hand and for sale iu Thomasvilh-. n Inrsre number Fi»k’n rlrgaal Pnteal .nolullic Burial C’nsVs. of nil sires—nlso, ’ wood iomvs Os all descripiionr. Terms ensb uiididiecrT ISAIAH DKKKLE Aet. an# to om APQTHECARY WILLIAM PrCLOWER, DIUHiOlS'l.', Has venerated ond refilled (he Slore neat to Young'* Hole), for the purpose of es tnfiHshing a First Class Drug Store. lie respectfully asks a share of patron ape, and invites the attention of the citi zens to his well selected sleek of Mwilclictt, Fancy and Toilet Articles, Soups and Perfumery. Fine Green mill Bluek Teas, lici'Ottine l.unips and Oil, " DYE STITT'S, Together with every other article usually kept in a well appointed Drug Store. VST. I’hj/sicim**’ I’retcriylions carefully . prepared -I-if Jan I Smallwood, Hodgkiss & Co s, COTTON Factors AND g j : y eu a I, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 1%«. to Heaver St,, New York. J. !j. Small worm, formerly Smallwood, Kacl« Ac. Cos., and .1. I*. Smallwood Al Cos. Timm. H. lIoiM-K is.%Gfeoight, ) Late Ilodgkinn, U, W Scot r, Florida, > Scott & Cos., 1). 11. Fool k, GeorKiß. ) New York. \V> arc jpn< par#*d Hirolij»h RusinrN* AutuTl U) AtlniiHT oit niml Moll i Allot* in all ifo* Moirifierai Pert*, or forward from l*erfH to Krtv. I'ork f>r Llirrpeel IMrrcl, iiiiour fiicudri may | reief. f)tir coiinoctioiiH in fiiYrr|*«®l nrc until a* wilT give our cuelfwicts »H the tbaf market dfolv 4 »-ly Land# lor> Sale. 1750 ACRES OK KXCEU.KNT LANDS. GREAT BARGAINS OFFERED. INf)\V oiler for Hale my t\?o plantation*, om the niokU retiMouihle Wrim*. tOOU acrcH of Tfno and fftmunm k mile* front w depot on tho Fcrmtndiim Ac Cedar Key* Railroad, in Marion (’unity, Kant Flo rida. $1H() acres oft hi* land arc cleared. t)ecafur County, Gil, five mile* from a selected d»*pot on tbe liin- of the Atlan tic A. CtiM Rail Road Tlics* huuU are fine— urntposed of oyk. hickory, and pine mixed. On till. l ' place there hit* rjoh mwe* under * Punjab slate of cullik iilioii— b r fem e— o«kh1 MU«rr, and a oood dwelling and m*eert‘s:Try 6nt hnibl The wlude etmVcnient to water inills r ehnivlicH, find good society. I will sell these lands at extremely low pti ?s»*s. If you don't believe if, make me an offer. Auy person wishing to piirehase, may address me at S<»fka. Deeatur County, Ca , or fa C. Bryan, ThoiiuiHvilfe, f#a., who is authori/.ed to represent me. Imlulgenct* may be •rrven in inns «? 1 CONNFLL. jitwcfi / - : ui TIN SHOP! BF. FUDGE l> : >a now opcneil » , wholWftbb- anil reiair .Shop, ojipo biU' llic l'oat, Otiov, on Jackson Street. Itu la now pi-vnnrea to ilo all kimlnof TIN AND SHEET IKON WORK, KE PAIjUNO, *«. and Roofing Jon* in »h<- bcsl style by B. F. FI DOK. ' Apr II ■ 13-Ijr FAMILY aiiOOKIUES. UK undersigned are now offering I'nmilr I (.rorri ie# Cheap for Cush, at tbe stand rtf David Harrell. Yk*-y art* ul*o V« rev five x folk,'* lot ot GROCERIES Os nil Hi the same place, wbieb they-intend oUering to the pnlillc upon tbe most reasonable t#wjii. for Cash or Country JYndure .IOKIICA TAYLOB. J.VS. A. BROOKS. K ' 7 i bin Anew pfrr.rrMrr railed swear OffICiHAJ Enrtttt Mkxioo, manufac. j tureJ by K. T Smith & < 0., New York, is making a sensation wherever H f* t«Mn ; is very delicate, and its frnjrrance remains jon (lie handkerchief for days.— A-Venmy flntl hn, Philadelphia SWEPT OPOPONAX! The only ele gant Perfume. Is found on art toilets, * and never stains the handkerchief. SWEET OPOPONAX! Is the sweetest Extract made. Supercede* all others. Try it unite ; will use no other. SWEET OPOPONAX! New Perfume from Metrtee. The only fashionable ’ and Ladies’ Delight. SWEET I>VOEOSAX FROM MEXICO! Nature could net produce a richer Gem or Choicer Perfume. Trr it and be emtviaaed. E. T. SMITH & <'o„ N. V. SWEET oPOPftSAN FROM MEXICO! New. very rare, rich and fashionable perfume. The finest eter imported or man iifaeturi din the Vniietl Staler Try it an 1 he e»H»inhcd SWEET OPOPON AX FROM MEXICO ' The uoiet elegant and essential per sonal r«']tii»!tn for a Indy, •* Extract of Sweet Opoponax " K. T. SMITH & Cos., New York -o*l3 , (iKSSCIt Tineas re*o*»- Oastrt of Ordsßar} . Jan KW>, l*l - J K Dronks hwnntl b* Pett. Hwn made .n,di,-a»»»a as rk.a Coart foe Le’«-r. of C aardtawsi) >r> f*raj» ess*"" • frupswty and efforts ..f Jeswpntec t tarle. a artHM real 1- a of Mid t' .Msot s AM jwraen- mini anted sra notified to file skew oW-unn. a Coart <wh . rwiee said Iwtteia a lit ha ousted and iw-wd lo said «ind>c**t in 'ertne of the law. n tt fooiir Jan T* >sl* Ordinary