Newspaper Page Text
(u!rr|f maiitort Visitor
THOS. ft. STTBWS, | -
D. W. D BOULLY. f ” EDrroßS *
FRIDAY SJORNIXG. NOV. 26, 1875
I>lxh- for IS7*.
This is tUfi season for laborers to
begin mating about, for homes for an
other year. What vi'l the great
surplus o( laborers Jo, is the question
\v • propound.
Nearly every farmer lias begun re
1-et ehtneau. by sowing larger areas
<-i hud i.. vu\;tU grain. Many are
dr-i ormiaed to employ fewer hand',
ii-1 wUilo this movement is clearly
advantageous to the farmer, it will
work no litthi hardship to the land
less and the farm laborer. They
oa-t be led while they remain with
in, am} but few of them will cmi
oe. Some will remain from choice
and many will be compelled to stay
f<*r want of funds for transportation
Wo. are not alarmists, nor given Jo
living from pbnr.ojps, but we believe
r the. wisdom so aptly illustrated l>y
.Til■•op'* sagacious boar, who whetteil
b‘J- tusks in the peaceful shadows of
! uie, which was the wisdom even of
j"uinet —“in time vf peace prepare
1 >r war.”
We are to have trouble, no doubt,
writ*i ihc clnss of people alluded to,
unless some steps are taken for them.
I i -Tore the new year has fairly dawned
there will bo some arrangement be*
1 pen land-holder* and hands for the
■ ".'Suing crop year, and the large
number who fail to secure homes,
w hat will they do? They will doubt
!-*., in most instances, turn to dep
redating upon the people who have
corn, meat, etc.
The prisons in a few months will
bo full of such persons incarcerated
for ihuffc of some kind. Many will
•perhaps be arrested as vagrants against
whom no specific charge of larceny is
found, but simply because they have
no visible means of support and do
not work—such as are tnado vagrants
by force of circumstances.
Wo only throw out these ideas
that the subject may assume tome
’angiblo shape and present itself to
<tbe thinking people.
Wo will in our next suggest at
least, a partial remedy.
Kkksatlonal.—The Atlanta Iler
nld publishes an anonymous letter,
recently received by Senator Gordon,
from Washington, in which it is sla
ted that a party of Northern fanatics
will assemble in that city on the 2d,
ostensibly to oelebrato tho martyr
dom of old John Brown, but really
to murder every member of congress
who has been eleoted by tho shed
ding of negro blood; and in this list
they i*. elude every member from the
Fouth who i* a Democrat.
The reader can believe just as
much of the above ns'ho pleases.
Goon yon tiij4 Farmers. — At a
recent meeting of tho manufacturers
of fcrtilixers in Baltimore, it was re
solved that fertiliser* should hereaf
ter be sold for cash or satisfactory
pnp/sr, and that barter for cotton and
other ftrodets should bo abandoned.
We hf>t e this resolution will bo
•carried < nt. Nothing would prove
ruoro beneficial to our farmers. And
if <*very provision house would adopt
the game rule, we should have more
Jiopo for tfce future.
T)rshs ioj Trihutk.-—The citizens
of Home -gave Mr. Willingham, late
editor of rtie Courier, a supper, on
Friday high), lost and presented him
with a •gold-headed eane. Mr. \Y.
•leaves Rome to take charge of the
Cartersvillc Standard, and this evi
dence of the. appreciation of his ser
vices waa given by the citizens on
(he eve ef his departure, and was a
graceful tribute to one of die best cd
•tows in tbe State.
BniKKT.Ev.—Brinkley, tho wifo
mnrderer, hat* been declared eano by
the board of phywi inn* appointed by
Gov. Smith to examine him, and un
less another jury is impaneled, and
they declare him insane, lie wilt be
huug at New nun today.
Tire Revivalists. —Moody and
Sanhey closed their meetings in
Brooklyn last Saturday night. The
conversions during their stay num
ber aeveral hundred. They went di
rect to Philadelphia, where they arc
draw inf large crowds.
Owing to continued bad
Judge Hopkins announces
his intention of retiring from the
bcuoh of Fulton superior coart.
Judge Hopkins is one of the best
judges in the State, and his place will
be hard to fill.
SSgf“ 001. Reese Craw foul has re-.
Mcned the aolicitorship ot Muscogee
county court, and Mr. Grigsby E.
■Thomas has been appointed his sue
saaor.
Vigilant Association.
C'ltmla and E lerslic districts have
adopted a plan tocatoh borse-ihieves,
which we think quite a good one, and
recommend it to the consideration of
others in the county at well as else
where. An organization has been
formed which is called “ Vigil mt As
sociation,” and is under the contiol
of Galaula and Eller rib* grange l .
Every nian c \vho w i.-he* to become a
member is required to give in the
number of horses or mules lie owns,
and if any member of the assoeia'iori
has a horse or mule stolen, each mem
ber is assessed a pro rat a part in or
der to arrest ami convict the thief.
The reward they offer for convic
tion ia case of a theft is ♦ 1 25. The
association controls 200 head of stock,
and’lho assessment is only 00 cents
per head. They have two standiu.r
committees, and each member of the
committee has his buit, and the re
ward is paid over to them as soon a*
n thief is convicted.
Eve y member knows how much,
and to whom ho must pay, and it. is
light upon all. The reward is mfii
cient to authorize a liberal advertise
ment, and is an inducement to him
self as well as for others to pursue.
Tills is a move in the light direc
tion, nod wo hope to hear of o'.hers
forming similar organUuiim.
(Juibord.
As many of our readers have no
doubt wondered who Gnibord was,
about w hom so much lias bc-n re
cently saul by the newspapers, we
publish the following from an ex
change;
Poor Joseph Guihnrd’s bones have
at last found peace, and the long con
troversy of six years is over. A prin
ter in his life-time,’and a man of no
note, his body has caused more dis
sension in Canada and England than
many a talented man, by the most
constant and vigorous use of hands
and brains, lias been able to effect.
Although ho died not under tho ana
thema of the Church, his body was
denied sepulture in holy ground, and
his friends considered it incumbent
on them to prosecute the case to the
hitter end. So they did; carried it
through every court of Canada, and
finally to the Queen’s Privy Council,
where an order w as ol mined for tlio
burial of the body in tho Catholic
Cemetery of Mt. Royal, The French
Canadians resisted tho order ns tar as
they dared, and without doubt, had
they imt been restrained, wouid have
carried their resistance to a more des
perate degree; but their ento i n- 1
wore cal mod by tho right of the long
files of loaded muskets, by the rumu
ling artillery, and the naked sabres;
their feelings were soothed by the re
membrance of the qurso which tho
Bishop of Montreal had pronounced
on the grave, and so they flocked to
gether in thousands, and the funeral
of the Canadian printer was more nu
merously attended than would have
been the obsequies of the Governor
General,
2:s?“The body of ('apt. Wo f, tl e
Galveston pilot, who went out on
hoard the ill-fated steamer City of
Waco, has been found near w here
the vessel went down. His remains
bear several marks which appear to
he burns. There is now no hope
that any of those on board the vessel
escaped.
-
Four Vali.ky, Ga., November 22.
—John Brown, c lored, was arrested i
for attempting to rape a highly re
spectable young lady. He knocked
out some of her teeth, and filled
her eves and month with dirt. He
was taken from tho custody of the
sheriff and hanged.
An Exthaouuinmiy Man. —Tito
Heine Courier says Mr. J, hn Aired,
of that ebunty, paid his State and
county tax to Capt. S. 0. Trout, the
tax collector, yesterday, and re
marked: “I- am fifty-two years old,
and don’t owe a dollar; haven’t
bought a bushel of corn or a pound
of meat since the war; never had a
cross word with a neighbor in my
life, anil never swore an oath; never
buy any clothing—have them spun,
wove and made at home; never had
a lawsuit with any one, and never
was a witness in court”
Tho Americas Republican
says that a man found a black snake
coiled up in a duck’s nest after hav
ing swallowed twelve of tho eggs.
The matt killed the snake, took out
the eggs, and placed them under the
! duck, when eleven of the eggs hatched
I out.
Be>“ Striped stockings are danger
ous. Some Chicago ladies have been
j p ds 'netl by the arsenic used in the
! coloring.
i-v ’ John \V. Snell, a young o-lcik
in Jonesboro, h'ew bi< brains o *
j with a pistol, last week, because he
i was uot invited to a ball.
Hon. John W. Wofford.
This gentleman, senator of the 42d
district, ha- resign cd, f>r the reason
that his public duties conflict too
much v iili his legal practice. We
fiiuk him exactly right in that port
of his letter of resignation, in which
he says;
Tins approaching sessi n of tli -
legislature is wholly mi important, so
far a- I I now or believe. Several
years' experience in that body has
convinced me that there is no public
demand for annual sessions of the leg*
i-luturc, and that yearly sessions of
the genereal assembly, arc a yearly
waste of the public money. Jn a
time of peace and quiet, when th re
is nothing but “hard time.-” to break
the monotony of current events, an
annua! "-;pwiise of SIOO,OOO for legis
laiion i., 100 much to pay for it.
For a year or so after Governor
Bullock absconded, a good deal of
law-making and investigation was
necessary in older to readjust the
disjointed affairs of the State govern
ment. But all that has been done,
and for tho future, a session every
two years is quite as often as there
will be any call for legislation.
A little exatffinatiorl of the class of
work, with which the last two ses
sions have been engaged, will satisfy
any one, I am right in this.
I do hope to see a move made at
tlie next sc ston, to change the con
stitution in conformity to the sugges
tions here made.
A Tickkiiu.k Affair. —B’he Mid
dlcport (Ohio) News tells the follow
ing horrible story:
In Jackson county, W. Va., last
week, a grand house-raising took
place. As is customary on such occa
sions, chickens had been killed by
chopping off their heads. Two lit
tle sons of t ho owner of the hott-c to
lie raised saw the chickens thus guil
lotined, and during tho day conclu
ded to repeat the operation. It was
just at a time when the men were
lifting a heavy log into its place.
The father, who was holding one end
of* the log, easting his eyes towards
the little fellows, one of whom had
the av raised to sever the neck of his
go of the Fg to save tho
hoy, and it fo'd, killing six men, two
inshintly, tho others living only a
few hours. Tho nxe fell before the
father could reach the scene, cutting
off tho head of his son.
£Sr A train on the Alabama &
Chattanooga railroad ran into a large
rock on the 12th, which had fallen on
the track. The engine and three
cars were thrown forty feet down
an embankment into the Tennessee
liver. No passengers hurt.
C A?" Dr. Russel, the Glasgow
Medical Officer of I leal ill, reports
•that in seven recent outbreaks of ty
phoid fever in that city milk was
found to he the active agent in car
rying tlio contagion.
IT“ Business failures in New York
oontinue to accumulate, and promise
to rapidly increase under the policy
of contraction and resumption of spe
cie payments.
I TA NARUS,! Mr. Cyrus Dial, of Cherokee
county, lias discovered a rich gold
deposit on his place.
Bny* Tho steamship Pacific was
: wrecked recently on a sunken rook.
'■ Only two persons are known to have
i been saved. Capt. Howell, the com
j mander, was a brother of Mrs. Jeffer
• son Davis.
ry The Atlanta Constitution learns
from the Comptroller General that
the aggregate tax returns show a de
crease in the taxable property of the
State this year of §11,337,408, of
which $t,797,120 are credited to the
$75 exemption law passed by the leg
islature last winter.
2.1?/" Mr. li.* R. Goetchius died
in Columbus last Saturday.
£5?” Congress meets tho first
Monday in next month. The house
will have a democratic majority.
The senate sttll has a small republi
can majority.
Gkn. Bknnino. —The memorial ex
ercises of the bench and bar, last
Saturday, in Columbus, in respect to
the memory of the late Gen. Henning
cover nearly seven columns of the
city papers. Sotue of the speeches
were particularly appropriate and
touching.
JSfThe President and Secretary
Fish are at loggerheads regarding
the recognition of Cuba.
Whisky. —Joel R ass well, of X r
j cross, was Lund dead in liis bed, £
i few mornings since. Whiskv.
| | | *
* ??' Mr. X'. B. E. Mayor has es
tablished a factory for the manufuc
turn of his Celebrated soap in Col-m:
I bus.
H. 1. Kimball.
The Atlanta Commonwealth thus
speaks of the man whom some of the
Atlantians delight to honor:
Last week the “great developer”
had-his measure taken before .fudge
Woods of the United States Circuit
Court, sitting in At'atita. It was hi
tho ease of < lews A Go. agalbst the
Cherokee R ii!ros'd Company. Kim
ball had b -eu contractor and Presi
dent of the company, and finally
turned up c-* chief w imass for the
company against Clews A Cos. Mr.
L. N. Whittl , to whom (he case
h id been referred a? master in chan
cery, reported that the railroad com.
pair. ,*. indebted to Clews Cos.
for mot! vs advanced to build tiiCj
road, in the sum of $167,000.
This report Judge Wools siP
mins in an able and elaborate opin
ion, which is published at length in
a morning contemporary. In the
course of his lodgement, this R. tdi— !
cal Judge presents a striking photo
graph of the prince of carpet baggers.
He says Kimball’s evidence is incred
ible, and shows with a master hand
that his statements, though made
under oath, were conscious false
hoods.
Such, let the reader remember, is j
the sehtcmCe of a Radical United
Stales Judge. And yet there are
Democrats and Democratic journals,
so-called, who are ever ready with
an apology Fol" the brazen impostor.
Rogue and peijurer! Twice a
lumknij-t since the war, and yet the
builder and owner of palatial resi
dences, the adroit manipulator of
impecunious Southern newspapers,
and the President of an Atlanta Man
ufacturing Company 1 Mo do not
wonder that the very groun 1 on
which the city stands was shaken by
an earthquake last night. Even the
surrounding hills, dyed in tlie blood
of brave men and scorched by fire
and battle *hake their angry heads in
protest against this shame.
The city and State now stagger
under the load of debt which this
man piled on their suffering people,
and yet the bankiupt, the thief and
ihe perjurer is preferred to positions
of honor and profit, and daily dashes
along our streets, casting the dust
from his living wheels on the Mayor
of Atlanta and the Governor of Geor
gia—men the latchet of whose shoes
he is unfit to loosen. Brass and mam
moil! Mammon and brass ! 1
Transfer Pictures. —The decora
tions on carriage-,' buggies, sleighs,
furniture, boxes, etc., and other pain- j
ted surfaces, often show the most del
icato skill, and the question arises,
how are such views and ornaments
placed there without great expense?
The cheapest articles are frequently
covered with hits of laud.-c q>e or 11 )-
ral decoration.that could not be pain
ted by hand without increasing tho
value of the articles. The secret is,
those paintings are transferred to the
articles adorned hy a process called
“Decalcomanie.” When tho method
was first discovered high prices were
charged for the transfer pictures, and
also for teaching the art, so that few
could afford to purchase. Recently,
however, dealers have reduced the
rates so that now these pictures may
be obi aired at comparatively low
cost. J. L. Patten & Cos., U>2 Wil
liam Street, New Yoik, are larp>
dealers in these goods. For the
small sum often cents they will send
complete instructions, with catalogue
and ten specimen pictures, to any
one who wishes to learn this beauti
ful art.
llenuy Wilson, vice president of
the United States, died suddenly in
Washington, on the morning of the
22d. lie rested well, and awoke %t
7 o’clock expressing himself as bright
and better. Ho sat up to take his
1 medicine, and lying down upon his
; left, side, expired in a few moments
without a struggle, lie had been in
| bad health for some time.
Haruey Richard.
One of the, most- infamous tD Up
many oat rage's perpetrated by tty-‘
Radicals, is set,foVtib in the ualse <4
Harney Richard, which is thus allu
ded to by the Monticvllo (Fla.) Con
stitution :
It is needless to sav that in t*
iqenidn a mdfo flifjffln't judi- ill ™-
r.-ige was never‘'■perJirtTnt'cfl In' fits
courts of any Stale. Richard dn
onstraied, beyond the possibility of a
doubt, at tlyr committal trial, that he
w&a innocent of the murder of John
son; the grind-jury of Nasssu boun
ty, after carefully conUeiHng the ev
idence in the case presented by the
State-, on tbeir oaths affirmed the in
noeenre of the man, and were after
wards, by threats of persecution and
imprisonment from the judge presid
ing-, forced to render a “ true bi:l.”
Comment is unnecessary. If the ju
diciary is tints to be ntudfe the instru
ment of personal and political vent
geance, it is high time the people
arose in the majesty of their might
and swept From place and power the
vile miscreants, who, in defiance ot
every principle of justice, drag an
innocent citizen before a politico-ju
dicial tribunal, directed to convict.
If Harney Richard can thus be arres
ted, tried, convicted, and, perhaps,
sentenced to the gibbet,-who among
the thousands in this State is safe
from a similar fate ?
272F* The Democrats were victori
ous at the recent municipal election
in Chattanooga, Tenn.
13?*’Two Atlanta yonths were ar
rested in Palmetto, on the 18th, for
stealing.
UF'A stranger c wimitted, suicide
in Macon, last week, by taking arse
nic.
GEORGIA— HARIIIS COUNTY.
Court or Ordinary, Nov. 2-1, 1875.
Tt appearing to the Court by. the petition
of I. i’ Hopkins, that William Hopkins, <le
ceased hue of said county, did jn his lifetime
execute to said 1. i' Hopkins his bond condi
tioned to execute titles in fee simple to said
L l’ Hopkins for pirt of lot of land No 287
in the 20ib district of raid County, contain
ing 150 acres moro or less.
And it further appearing that eajd William
Hopkins 'deputed this life without executing
titles to raid land, or by will, or otherwise
providing therefor.
And it 'further appearing that said, I. U
Hopkins has paid the full amount of the pur
chase plire of said land. And sni IX. i’.Hpp
kios bavins petitioned this ’Court to direct I’
Lllopkias Executor of live last Will arid Tea
funor.t of s dd William II > ,kmx deceased, to
execute to him titles to said land in confor
mity with raid Bond.
Therefore all pip-sops.concerned am hereby
notified and required to file theiv objections,
if any tbev h ive, io mv office bv the first
Monde.', in January next, why rai l Executor
should not he ordered to execute titles to
said land in conformity withs fid Bond.
Given under mv hand and official signa
lure, November 24, '1875.
J b C. WILLIAMS, Ord’y.
GEOaGIA-HARIUS COUNTY.
Court or Ordinary, Nov 24, 1875.
It appeal 1 , to the court by the petition
• f l’L llopki 'S Unit William Hopkins, de
cease I, hit" of raid countv, did in his lifetime
• .cute to saiil (’ L Hopkins.his Bond -condi
tioned to execute tilles in fee simple tosaid P L
Hopkins, for the south half' of lot of land
N > 802, in the 20ih district of said county.
And it further appearing that sa‘d Wil
lie.a Ho 'kins deputed this life without exe
cuting titles (o Baal half lot of land, or by
will, or otherwise providing therefor.
And it further appearing that raid T L
Hopkins has paid the full amount of purchase
money of said half lot of land. And said L’
L Hepkins having petitioned this Ciiurt to
direct L‘ L Hopkins, Executor,of the last Will
and Testament of said William Hopkins, de
ceased, to execute to him titles to said half lot
ot land iu conformity with said I'mi.
Therefore all pci sons concerned are hereby
notified and required to file tlu ir objections,
if any they have, in my office by the first
Monday in January next, why said executor
should not he "id red to esffcouttv titles to
said half lot of land in conformity with said
Bond
Given under my hand ana official signa
ture, November 24 1875
J F 0 WILLIAMS, Ord’y.
GEORGIA. —Harris County. •
Joseph 0 Harrison applies for exemption
o' personalty and setting apart and valuation
of homestead, and I will pass upon the same
on the Bth day of December, at my office.
novlfi-td J. F, C. M ILT.I A MS, Ord’y.
"iiAHiiis'SHElUFf’S SALES.
■\Vill be soli before the court house door in
the town of Hamilton, Harris county, tra ,
between the legal hours of t*ale, on the lirst
Tuesday in December next, the following
property:
Lots of land Nos 171, 172 and also lots
202 arid 203, all being and lying in the 920
d.sfrici. to satisfy a tr fa in my hands in favor
of Euclid Waterhouse vs W. r i\ Godwin —
making in all 710 acres.
40 acres* of land lot No. 171 south east cor
ner, lying ani being in 717 district G. M. to
satisfy a ti fa in favor of J. R. Scott vs. W.
*’ >rd. Levy made and returned to
T. M ore, L0..,--
J D KOIIiNSON, Sheriff.
illlS SHERIFF’S SALE.
i s>l t before the courthouse door in
of Hamilton. Harris county, Ga.,
the leiral hours of sale, on the first
iu January next, the follow. n^'
indreef and forty acres of land off of
1 side of lot No MS. in the lyth dis-
H.ut's county. levied on as the
of ,j 0 Harrison, Rebecca Ladd arid
Htrrison, to satisfy a uiortaage lira
no .Harris Superior Court in favor of
'rs against said defendants,
and .11) hOBINSON, Sheriff.
A-—Harris Coi xtt.
is it I’.a; lieen represented to me that
to of Nathan H 1! at. late of said
deceased, is unteff.sented and not
bo represtnted—
rsoiw concerned are hereby notified
COise,' if any they have, by the first
in Hecoinber netit. why the Clerk of
prior Court, or some .o,llier fit and
lersop, should uot be appointed ad
.t..r upon the estate of sa.i ; decease;!,
ndbc rnv hand oflHallr. Nov. 1.H76.
td .! 1. C. WILLIAMS. Ord’s.
1A -Harris Cointy.
Hunt a] plies for exemption of person
al 1 will piss upon the same on toe
v ot Noveru'oor, at mv office.
Lid- J. 1\ C. WILL'.CMS, Ord y.
A FIRST-CLASS SOUTHERN INSTITUTION,
.t. • ISf y* /' ■
•stseie:
LA-A. JL
MOBIIE LIFE ttMTK €O.
i *; ; ;
! • ■ ..
OP j
M©Mle, Ala.
:M. McCAIITHY, Phesidknt. 11. M. FRIEND, Secretary. SHEPPARD
HOMAN?, Actuary.
Patronize Home institutions, insure in this Sterling,
Sound, Reliable Company.
The Mobile Life can give you as good profect'on for jour money as any Northern company
The Mobile Lifewas organized by well-known merchants ami bankers of Mobile, in Jane
1871, and has issued 3,. 100 Policies, and paid over
One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Collars Death Losses
Every loss has been promptly paid without a day’s delay.
INSURE YOUR LIF-B I INSURE YOUR WIFE’S LIFE
INSURE YOUR LIFE | INSURE YOUR WIFE'S LIFE
In tla© MOEILE] LIFE.
Live, active, enterprising men wanted in every county in Georgia to work for the Mobile!
j Life. Apply to R. O. RANDALL, Gen’l Agent, Gvd-den, Ala.
J, H. HAMILTON,
WHOLESALE & RETAIL GROCER
Junction Fwuiilin, ViTaruen and Oglethorpe Sts., CeauMßUs, Ga.
MY LARGE STOCK OF
GROCERIES AND PROYISIONSr
is now full'and sold"at ’.2ie lowest posiil.de prtess for Cash t
Ragging, good and heavy, at 12£.
Iron cotton,Ties of different patterns at 3-.
Large stock Flopr of all grades. Badon and brilk meats.*
Large lot best Black Seed- Oats. Corn ami Meal.
Lard—choice leaf in tierces, kegs and buckets.
Molasses and Syrup in variety; • --
Sugars ami Coffees .of. every grad e # Choice Teas.
Domestic Dry Goods, including Osnaburgs, Sheetings, Checks, Stripes,
Cotton Yarns, &c. Wines'and Liquors, Shoes, Tinware, &<5., &c.
I guarantee satisfaction in all things. 11. C. Farley and Rollin' Jeffer
son, are with me, and 'cordially invite their friends'to call on them.
My stock will always be kept full and complete. No charge for tfrayage
Respectfully, j. 11. HAMILTON.
FALL AND WINTER CLOTHING.
Thorotom & Acee,
ISTO- 78 BROADJSTs COLUMBUS, GA.,
Have just received n larsre and well-selected stock of Clothing and Furnishing Goods for
men, boys imd.childrtn, embracing all of the newest and most desirable styles, both in ma
te, i:il asr-manufacture. Also a ft no'assortment of Overcoats, Underwear, Hut; and Caps,
Trunks, Valises, Umbrellas end Walking Canes.
We call attention to ’our Excelsior Shirt, which is ahead of all rivals. No I—six fina
Linen-bosom shirts, unlaundried, for S@; No 2, r six fine Linen-bosom shirts, for $7 50.
We are constantly receiving additional shipments of new goods direct from our manufac
turer, which we guarantee to be well made, and at prices that willalefy com petition.
oef'22 T liaUNTONI & ACEE, 78 Broad st, Columbus, Ga.
200 COOKING STOVES
FOR SALE AT PRICES TO SUIT HARD TIMES, BY
W. H. RGBART3 & CO.,
who invite the attention of the public to their large and complete stock,
consisting of
Coo Mug and. Iloatin® STO VS®
- t - - |„\ f r - . > | if j
(Charter Oak and other first-class patterns), i. ■ '
Grates, Hollow Ware. Wood and Willow Ware, Silver, Plated and Britannia Goods,
Crockery and Glass Ware, racket and Table Cutlery, of our own importation.
Manufacturers of Tin , Copper and Sheet Iron Ware of every description-
Prices as low as the lowest. [Columbus, Ga., Nov. 28, ISiL
A. SI. ALLEN. A. <5. BEDELL. J- M. O’BBUtf*
ALLEN, BEDELL fife CO.
Cotton Faotorsand Comifiission Merchants,
FCITTAIKTH WAREHOUSE,
Columbus, - - Georgia*