Griffin semi-weekly star. (Griffin, Ga.) 1868-187?, October 04, 1870, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Griffin Smi-wrrfeti} Utatf. VOL. 5. The Gin Serai-Mly Star, Publication OwinTiuad*)* dt Fridays. Office —In Aimak Hall Building. JOB PRINTING! OFFICE, Is fitted up with entirely New Type, and suitable convenience for dispatching work. m BCLICIT OBDHB FOB Pamphlets, Circulars, Bill Heaps, Letteb Heaps, . Checks, Cards, u r Posters, Handbills, Visiting Cards, Wedding Cards, Labels, Programmes, AND EVERYTHING DONE IN A FIRST CLASS PRINTING OFFICE i H *r ; - UrlSc H«fcnlonal Card,. T Jut CAMPBELL, Attorney at Law, mST******-- "»■ OT<rO B - m-S A CLEVELAND & SON, Resident Jx. Denttets -Oi- . _ See over Jobss, A] A 7 Druinrtght k Oo.’s A \\\? lit NEW BANK, sign of the MOLAR TOOTH, \ 0 b« . pldttod to roceiTS . ■ —■— i calls from parties do- , ,CTA*b»PWTv siring work done in yy L our lino. Wo fool certain that we can u / -/A’ -<y? v give satisfaction, and -=>* . _ therefore warrant all work. Terms Cash. DR. M. J. DANIEL —Office at Harris’ Drug Store. Hill Street, Griffin, Georgia. Not. SI. lY PEEPLES & STEWART, Attorneys at Law, Griffin. Ga. Office on the corner of Hill Street and Broadway—Dp Staira—in the Moore Build laa. Prompt attention riven to business placed In our hands. Nov. 17-ly "OOYNTON &DISMUKE, Attorneys If at Law, Griffin Ga. Office in Alraah Hall, next door to the Stab OrncK. Will practioe in the Coun ties composing the Flint Circuit, and in the United States District Court Attention given to cases in Bankruptcy. Nov. 27-ly William M. Cline, Notary Public, (EX-OFFICIO JUSTICE OF THE PEACE) with Messrs. Boynton k Dismnke, Almah Hall, Solomon Street. I WILL HOLD a Regular Monthly Court lor the trial of OlvU Cases, at my Office, on the SECOND MONDAY In each month, and will try orimtnal cases at any time nocessary. April 16, 1869. TAQYAL, NUNNALLY & TURNER 1/ AWOESITS At Law, Atlanta, Ga.. (ayOffice In Clarke's Building, Whitehall Street,*e») and Dotal A Nusnai.lv, Griffin, Ga. May 24. 1870-ly A. BPKEB. !• W. BECK. SPEER &BECK, Attorneys at Law, Griffin, Ga. WiU practice in the State Courts, and In ths United States District Courts, at Atlanta. Office over Brawner k Son's Book Store. Dee. 1,1868-ly .*• DENTISTRY• B. A. MCDONALD, Dentist. Office over Patrick’s Shoe Store. ju,. 7 > 1870. ly TYOYAL & NUNNALLY, Attorneys I /at Law. *S»Offlce in Jones, Drnmrlght A Co.’s Bank Building, Hill Street, Griffin, Ga. WiU continue the practioe In the FUnt Circuit: will also attend any Court In tho State whore suiiolent Inducements are offered. Special attention given to tho practice tn the Unltod States Courts. March 22, 1870-ly Master Mason. Q B. ROOKS, contractor of Brick andStono work of all classes. Plastoring, plain or orn&mental. Stono cutting, to. Griffin, Ga., August 26, 1870. ly« TS. MoKEE, at “Ufford’s Old • Stand,” Wholesalo and Retail Manufactnr or and Dealer iu HARNESS, BADDLEB and SADDLE RY HARDWARE, WHIPS. BRIDLES, Ao. *J_A_LL WORK WARRANTED. Jett June 7, 1870-ly n&rnesvtlle Professional Cards. J. 7. REDDING * . .C. O. BEABCK. 13 ED DING & BEARCE, Attorneys Li at Law, BarnosviUe, Ga. Will practice in the eouutiea comprising tho Flint Circuit. Special at tention given to collections. 4grOfflco over Cham bers’ Store. May 24, 1870-3 m JA. HUNT, Attorney at Law, . Diruosvillo, Ga. Will practice iu the Superior Courts of the FUnt Circuit, and la tho Supreme Court of tho Stuto. jßS*Offioo over J. W. Hightow ev’s Drug Store. May 24, 1870-6 m .lonesboro’ Professional Cards. TAOYAL & BATTLE —Attorneys at XJ Lhw—J on^aboro’, Ga—Will practice in the Supe rior (tour t of Clayton and adjoining Counties, and in the Supremo Court of Georgia. Prompt attention to col ejtlonof Claims, and other business entrusted to tholr oiro. doc7»ly Especial Notice ! ■RANKING HOURS to be observed by the undersigned : Open at 8 o'clock, A. M. close at 6 o’clock, P. M. J. S. JONES, DRUMWRIGHT A CO. JOS. H. JOHNSON. Griffin. Ga., April 16, 1870. ts MACON & WESTERN R. R. •PASSKNQERS. Loaves Macon <SS A « Arrives in Oriffln 11 28 A u Leaves Oriffin Arrivos in Atlanta. 2 10 P if Leaves Atlanta • ■ 7 65 A H Arrives in Griffin 10 05 A N Lesvsa Griffin .'. . „ Arrives in Macon.. . 1 40 PH NIGHT PASSENGER. Leaves Atlanta • ■■J JJJ* Arrives at Griffin. 10 *4 Leaves Griffin... Arrives at Macon 8 23 “ LeavesMaoon 8 60 pm Arrives at Griffin 1 32 " Leaves Griffin Arrives at Atlanta The Passenger Train stops in Griffin from Bto 5 minutes. Savannah, Griffin & North Ala. Railroad. of the Savannah, Grif fin & North Alabama Railroad, to take effect Monday, July 25th, 1870:. ■ » ? Stations. | Arrive | Leave | Stations | Arrive-Leave Griffin... I II put Senoia... I .... I 7 80 am BrooksTe 2p x 210 BrooksTe Bax 810... Senate.;,! 245 |...... |Griffin...-49am| ...... July 2fJ, 1870-ts L. KENDRICK, SnpX. 6AXNfiSfIUg BOTBIi. T »t Fslrbuni, Os.) would* infornMila friends, and tha public generally, that he has taken charge of the gainksvillk hotel. and that the same U now being thoroughly renovated and »“PPV,IL^i!L N f* House will bo opOR for tuo reception of visitor* on tne First of June. «o sßerfc wflt be wanting, on his part, to render aatlatactton to aU who imyteTor him with their patronage. ‘ pS^tir. June 24,1870, > The The Gdi Serai-Weekly Star, Li. 1 ., E - ■■ ■ ■ F. S. FITCH) EDITOR.. »’ q RTF’'FIN. OEOBOtA. Tuesday, October 4, 1870. From tho Anti-Slavery Standard. Weadell Phillips oaihe War. It took a revolution to unseat Louis Phillippe in 1848. Now Napoleon only leaves Paris a fortnight and they be gin to ignore him. His first reverse swept away his throne. Had he achieved success afterward he would have had to conquered his way into Paris after crashing tho Germans. Nei ther Louis Phillippe nor this Napoleon dare call themselves Kings of Franee— they are King and emperior of the French. Bismark himself the ablest, most unscrupulous aud imperious of State managers has to conciliate popu lar suffrage and constitutional legisla tors before he can get space to act.— Warwick, the old king-maker, was forced to create the House of Com mons to fortify his own power. Our modern king-maker must oven borrow leave of the German masses to play despot. Frederic William began in trying to crush an empire. It vanish es like a mist when he attempts to grapple with it, and, aghast, lie finds himself face to face with a Republic. He puts the crown back on his prison er’s head in the desperate oftort to save his own crown from a worse foe. The victory of Sedan has only puthim into Napoleon’s place. The Frenchmen stood between a German despot in front of him and Republican Paris be hind. Jules Favre was the upper millstone and Prussia the lower. Be tween them we thought to find the dust of the Napoleonic dynasty. But it proved such a mere shadow that the stones grind each other. To-day Fred eric stands with an armed Republic in Paris before him, and the possibility of finding another when he returns to Berlin. The Greek fool who sawed off the limb on which he sat content to fall.— This German descendant of that cau tious person is trying hard to splice to gether again the divisions which threa tens to let him down. Since the last soldier left Rome the Pope has spent his anxious hours in deciding where he shall run; Victor Emanuel assures him that Italy’s moving on Rome is only to save it from the Red Republicans.— Russia shrinks back, hoping to hide from the age amid her solitudes. Aus tria is only asking how soon the storm dreams, she can spars no waking mo ment from watch over Ireland and her own radicals. So bJi© yields her place at the first table of States, and con tentedly takes her seat with the pages —Belgium, Denmark and Switzerland —at the second board. The whole of Europe is honeycomb, and the seeth ing waves toss and moan beneath the thin crust. Like Holmes’s “One-horse Chay,” all the thrones drop to pieces at once.. They remind one of the cab horse in Pickwick, which could stand while in motion—stop him and he fell at once. Meanwhile Madrid, Paris, Florence, Berlin and the rest crystal ize into republics if you take off the suprincumbent weight but a single moment. The hour of the people has come. Everything helps them. The incompetence of England and that an gry pride whioh cheats the intellect of Bismark, both serve the good cause equally well. The first shows the inasesthat, once marshaled, their claims strike aristocracy into dum and help less confusion of counsel; fearing to do anything in its uncertainty what to do. Bismark had it in his power to have planted peace between rebub lican France and Prussia for the next two generations, moanwhilo delaying the advance of democracy for many a year. A magnanimous Prince at Se dan, yes, simply a selfish cunning Prinoo there, might have insured the Prussian throne to his grandchild. The victory had humbled his only foe. Be hind was the nation which had never made war on him. He had only to encamp at Sedan and offer peace. The world would have recognized his pow er to go to Paris; woula have seen al so the magnanimity that disdained to hnmble a nation betrayed by its lea ders. By the sphndor of soon an act, Prussia would have led Europe for many a year. Selfish instinct cried out for it, even if honor was silent— The first step that Prussia made from Sedan to Paris destroyed forever all Bismark’s claim to be thought a states man. Ignorantly or angrily he flung away such an opportunity of strength ening his own land in the gratitude of France and the admiration of the world. Instead of this he did all that in him lies to insure that immortal hate and undying purpose of revenge which will breed up the next generation of Frenchmen for nothing else but to put the tricolor some dayover Berlin. The next generation of Prussia will have cause to weep that at this hour, so great in possibilities, Prussia had no statesman to reap the harvest which her greatest of captains—Moliko—had got for her. The man whom we all thought a Sully, an Oxenstiern, turns out only an adroit manager, second lieutenant to Molike, and the willing tool of a bigot king; no breadth, no foresight, no largo instinct of humanity, t always the highest wisdom. Prussia armed in order to vindicate her right to own affairs. She marches to pans to invade France’s right to do the same. Her path lies over the capital of the world, the home of two millions of men, as well as of science, art, litor ature, and civilization; the capitol of a great military nation whose swift de feat shows that, dragooned as she was to the field, it was only a seeming war she irtged, ’He neve* conquered France. He only triumphed over the The Past fs’Past} tot u* watoh the Present anil the Future. slavish refuse which could be bought or whipped in counterfeiting her. “Yon have broken my award, not my power— Yoa Hemeon with long yellow heir I , I will lend out • thought Olid the mUlioua. And tho Kings, and not L. shall despair." Now in this insolent attempt to dis play his power and parade a sham vic tory, he subjects this.greal city to the horrors of war. Humanity itsoif would hardly weep if the pestilence delivered Paris, leaving neither peasant nor princeling to tell the tale at Berlin.— The tears and curses of the civilized World blast the German laurels. Na poleon’s fall was speedy, in less than thirty days, Prussia’s quicker still. She entered Sedan bom on the wonder, al most the loving admiration of the world. She left it followed by the loathing and the contempt of both con tinents. She baulked the hopes of the age. Anew power, born within the memory of of living men, we supposed W bluest was tnorbloort ot this centu ry. Her fall insults our civilization, bloodthirsty and greedy, unscrupulous and overbearing beyond the Bourbons and Hapsburgs, the Philips and Char leses of bygone days. She is not a na tion—only an overgrown army’ a horde of brigands too strong for their civil ized neighbors. Our barbarioos South, flaunting Libby Prison and Anderson ville in the faco of Christendom, may justly call anross the ocean to the black Eagle “Art thou too become as one with us.” We rejoice that Providence thus buries under its own folly this new and dreaded military power, and robs it of the moans to cripple the ris ing democracy, as it might have done had it retained the respect of the world. Wo sympathise with Germany thus disgraced by he princes as France has been by Napoleon. Let her have the same pity extended to her that the world gave to Paris under the usurp- heel. But Paris could claim one point of superiority over Berlin. She was beguiled and deluded with at least the words of liberty. Napoleon paid her so much respect as to seem to ask leave to reign; with insolent bluntness Frederick tells Germany, as he snatch es his crown, that he reigns “by the grace of God.” Napoleon could not safely leave Paris. During this Prus sian marauder’s absencence Berlin is as submissive as under his heel. Our government should utter the verdict of civilization and liberty on this bald barbarism. It should at least protest agaist this vengeance on unoffending IVance—this insult to the spirit of the age. Tho oldest republic, the master power of the next century, should speak for humanity amid this breathless and cowardly silence of Kings. Wendell PniLLips. -i-’.V.1.'1V:".-..'. and Gentlemen —I still receive your val uable paper regularly. It comes fraught with useful information, and is read with much interest by me. It has been some time since I nave intruded on you a communication. I concluded this morning to write you one, as yon are the organ of the Stato Agricultur al Society, and have the largest circu lation of any other paper in the State —feeling, as I do, an abiding interest in the prosperity of agriculture, know ing that all the money that all classes of men realize has to be produced from mother earth, and that no other im plement or fertilizer used by the plant er can produce such valuable results as the plow. And as the time for our State Fair will soon roll round, I want, through your paper, to call attention to tke fact, that last year the test and examination of toe plows was a farce, a signal failure. All the valuable time during the continuation of the Fair was appropriated to tournaments, rinks, bear fights, etc., such things as never did benefit any one, or cause a single blade of grass or any other valuable thing to grow; and the most impor tant of all things on exhibition—toe plow, and other agricultural imple ments —almost passed unnotioed. It may be thought presumption in me to make the following suggestions. Be that as it may, J shall make the suggestions that the proper authorities see to it, that, at our coming Fair, a day be set apart—at least the third day of the Fair—as a general day for test ing plows, and that a committee of practical farmer* be selected to test the plows of the various kinds, and that they make awards and designate the meritorious ones by some proper bodge at least two days before the Fair closes. In this way the planter’s attention will be called to the various plows, and oth er farming implements adjudged by the committee to be most valuable.— They can examine for themselves and purchase if they choose. If the awards are not known until read out the last day of the Fair, and then repeated in the newspapers after wards, not one planter in ten will re member the plow or other article that reoeived the premium. One suggestion I beg leave to make: That the Executive Committee furnish their committees they appoint upon all samples of field crops, os well as all es says, the samples and essays in num bers, withholding all competitors’ names from the awarding committee. In this way the awards will be made alone upon the merits of the article, without any reference to the writer or producer. My only object in making these sug gestions is that our State Fair may prove a sneoess, leaving no cause for a complaint in reference to awards.— Having much experience in connection with fairs, I feel that my sggestiohfl pro made advisedly. Hoping they may be duly apprecia ted and acted upon, I beg leave to sub scribe myself, as ever, truly yours, &c., S. W. Bloodwobth. IfT Misprints will present them selves in other colnmns besides those of newspapers. The author of o tem perance novel, who wrote "Drunken _ ness is folly,” was horrified to read ’ “Drunkenness is jolly.” GRIFFIN, GA., OCTOBER 4, 1870. The Han who Bathes the Girls at Iflng Branch. From*Long Br»noh Letter. There is only one man I have envied daring toe summer—the man who bathes the girls at Long Branch, tho merman of the hotel. He takes his place about tea yards from shore, and os the vestals and dames come into the water, he does totally emerge them. He is brawny and ugly, and yot he is the most populav man wito the punc tilious half of our species that I have ever seen. Avery scrawny and un tompting maiden lady,, who probably never bad a genuine pair of mail’s arms around her in her life, was the bane of this bather's existence. She went on every day of the season’ to take her bath, and under the pretext of learn ing to swim, she mode the devoted child of Adam duck her for two hours. The the sighs, tbo interjec tions and the noise this female used were agony to this bather. Said he: “She ketches me as if I was a hoss or hitching post, and lives back all of what might hcv been in them two hours. And tho more she enjoys her self, the colder she gels. Ibe on tho beach five years; but if they don’t trot out some livelier females, I shall re sign. I ain’t no undertaker of drown ed folk.” Quito otherwise is tho demeanor ot this guitly merman when more tempt ing graces oome to swim. He placed them lengthwise across his two arms, face upward to the sky, and gently floats them in toe surface, looking down, meanwhile, at the streaming tresses, the closed eyes, the exhaling nostrils, and the little shod feet, with tho min gled piety, resignation and tenderness of a Mormon Bishop baptising a con vert Occasionally ho agitates the wa ter in a guilty way, os if he wished to be presumed to be earning his salt, bat he earns his salt easier than any per son of my acquaintance. Millions of his species would pay for his position. I saw him onco shock the feelings of a bashful young gentleman’s lady love. The bashml man had probably never done as much as to give the lady his arm. The other took her from him at once, and swinging her under water, hoisted her in his arms, dipped her again and again, and to facilitate div ing, held her nose with one hand nnd her toe with the other, submerged her absolutely. The young man felt for his weapons to immolate this uncivil vorlet, but the ungrateful young wo man jnst then, getting breath, crid: “Gustavus, it's perfectly splendid 1” Refuses to be Comforted. —Donn Piatt has heard that Colfax is about to retire from public life.aad lilfoto up “I am pained to hoar through rumor that reaches these lonely wilds, that my friend and model Christian Statesman, Schuyler, is about to retire from active life. Schuyler ought not to retire I protest against his retirement. What in the old scratch will become of me without the Christian Stateman to con template and write about ? • Asa Cath olic keeps his cross and scoll to remind him of the awful uncertainties of this life, so have I held the Christian States man before my eyes as a warning againtst political ambition. I note him sitting serene, in a perpetual state of grin, high in official greatness, while men of brain and implnso have gone down in cruel disappointment, to be heard of no more. The wicked and irreverent Gath tolls me that Schuyler retires from politics to become the President of tbo Young Men’s Chris tian Sewing Machine Association at a salary of twenty thousand dollars a year. This is well. The sowing rnn chince is to be made a high moral in strument. This is a high mission, but not so high as the one lately held by Sohuyler in demonstrating an econom ical government. As brain is expensive, a great luxury, in fact Schuyler has shown us how we may dispense with the article. Vive le Scuhylcr! Let him reconsider.” Defalcation. —One of the clerks in tho Macon & Western Bailroad office in this city—a man between sixty and seventy years of age, and who has hith erto borne an irreproachable character, was detected, on Saturday last, in pur loining tho funds of the company and placed under arrest. It was his duty to receive the reports of Conductors and any money they might toko in on the road and make returns of the money to the Treasurer, Mr. Milo S. Free man, and recently one of the Conduc tors had reason to believe that said clerk was making false returns and a trap was set to catch him, and it was successful The President called the clerk ap for an explanation, and he ac knowledged the crime, we are told. After returning all the money he had on hand, ho was still short about $3, 000. For certain reasons we suppress his name, and but far the fact that it was the subject of general conversation on the streets yesterday, we should not have heard what is above related, nor would we have made it public. We give the afiair as we heard it.— Macon Telegraph. A Nut tor Physiologists. —The New Orleans Times says: “A nut for phys iologists to crack mav be found in the statement of a gentleman of unques tionable veracity, to the effect that a woman in St Landry recently gave birth to triplets, in all respects repre senting the voting element under the -ates of reconstruction; that is, one white, one mulatto, and one black child, all of the male persuasion, and none of the Woman’s right kind. After that who would not say that the black man is not ‘a auto aud brother ?’ This wo man's; husband, it is just to remark, has left" the parish for Europe to con sult with the most eminent physicians there upon this physological phenome non. was woman who first prompt ed man to eat, but he took to drink on hirfown amount afterward. Cox Ac Hill, m- PEACHTREE STREET, nit ATLANTA. GEORGIA, WHOLESALE DEALERS IX Brandies, Whiskies, Wines, AND all kinds of I* xx r© Liiquors. ’respectfully solicited. August 2,1870 k Snl *S“IiLOOD WILL TELL in* IF YOU DON’T BELIEVE IT, -CALL AT— THE LIVE STORE —of— Alexander & Weems, YOU WILL FIND AN ABUNDANCE OF— BACON, LARD, FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE, MOLASSES, SYRUPS, CHEESE, BAGGING, ROPE, AND TIES, Staple DQoods, AMD A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF FBIBH Groceries Jtsrso cheap It would make you head awlm.-E* ALEXANDER & WEEMS, Hill Street, Griffin, Ga., Cunningham’* Old Stud. September 16, 1870. am PHILADELPHIA —AND— BALTI MORE, COME TO ATLANTA ! H. K. SHACKLEFORD WHOLESALE Liquor Healer, NO. 8 SOUTH BROAD STREET, ATLANTA GEORGIA OOLB AOBMTB FOB TITO CBUBBATED Tobias B ij T e f^s. JpiNE WINES, Brandies, Whiskies, Gin*, Ao., Ao. Also, the OHXAPEST AND BEST CHAMPAGNES In thl* market IJ Bead tor Price List and aae for youraelvea that I can dnpltoate you New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore bills. Ordors promptly filled. H. K. SHACKLEFORD. Jon* f, 1870. 8m Doty’s Washing;Maohine. LATELY MUCH IMPROVED—AND THE NEW WUniversal Clothes Wringer.’"Tß* Improved with Rowell's Patent Dovbli Coo- wheels rod tho Patent Stop, art now nnqneitionablly tar ro pe rior to any appertua for washing olothas over Inven ted, rod will sava their oovt twloo » year, by wring te bor rod clothe*. Southern people who bare need them testify aa fol low*: They save three-fourths of the labor end ooet, and pay for themaolvea both in money and oontentmenb Let every young tedy lean tone them, end evoy married ono koep them to her hone.—new Orleans Picayune. ■■An exoallant Waahlng Machine. We have Mad it. The Clothea Wringer i« very superior. A good band Will vraah a large number of pieoee In a few Injure."— Raleigh (N. 0.) Eplaoopal Methodist. ■■We have one of Doty'a Cloahee Waehera, and our houeehold arc in ecetactea over it They are great economizers of time rod labor."—Edgefield (S, a) Ad vert leer. ••After over two yuan’esperienoo with a Doty, wu an assured that ills the greatest help and eoono. miser of time, tabor and money we have yet had tn trodnoed Into our honahold. ,r —WlffiaaMOß Stotth. New Orleans. •T have had a Doty Washer In mytamily fbr soma time. It gives entire aattataettoo. and I take pleasure in commending it to the head of every household.*’— R. Towers, Jefferson. Texas. ••I have had one of Doty'a Clothes Washers la naa for a year, and am porfootty satisfied with it My family have triad It faithfully aud ban never known it to fall toaocompltah all that thprotesa to."-Prof. J. S. Stevens, Ooneeed Ibmatafliltao.Btatatrini, N. J. August 30,1870. tm DR BLAKELY’S T INIMENTis a never failing cure RHEUMATIC ■ntmrlatt a Godsend 1 mrnlna. Bralee*. Strains, Tumors. Clapped Hands, Tetter. Neuralgic Headache. aUaro inamnMy owed by tho aae of this LINIMENT Anomalous Paine. Bruises. Sting* of Insect*, Glan dular Swellings. Old Sorea. Diseases of tho Spine—all these the nae of Dr. Blakely'a Liniment ALWAYS CURES avaoldby Dr. N. B. DRKWRY. Griffin; Dr.L. H . inunriKU). Atlanta; Mr. J. W. Hiootowkb. "—it »lUe: Mr. J. L ButMt, Fayetteville; Mr. Kockwood CUMHUMS. Palmetto, Ga; We. Boor A Sena, Marietta, Ga; J. O. lißAshell A 00.. Senna, tie; Kwm, Pmrou ss srnr Ttm : *a.Prtoci£jl Office Manon*finn,SS!ir^' May 2U. 187 U. tJania-’TI R. J. ANDREWS, (GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,) F. M. FARLEY Sc CO., Oo 11 on Factors —AND— Comir\issior\ Merct\ar\ts, iiay Street, Siivaimah, Ga. —AGENT! VOX— .Superphosphates. REFEUKNCKS: Messrs. Walsh, Patrich k 00., 70 Wall Street, Now York; Messrs. Epplng k Haneerd, Columbus, Ga; Messrs. Flemiater k Brooke ami Joe. U. Johnson, Griffin, Ga. September 6,1870-3 m A. M. Stout. J. H. Slows. A. M. Sloar\ Sc Cos., Cotton Factors, Qsnsral Commission MerrlissntS And Agents for toe ETIWAN AND SOLUBLE SEA IS LAND GUANOS, Glagkarn and CaaaftagUKm's Range. ' Bay Street, Savannah, Ga. AGOING and ROPE or IRON TtE3 advanced on crops. Liberal oaeh advanoee made on ofmelgn monte far eels In Savannah or on shipments to reliable cor. 11 iIJ IWn I. T , Trtj »»i n i n or Baltimore. August 23.1870. Cm Lawton & Lawton, FOUBTH ST MEET, MACON, GEORGIA, WARE-HOUSE, COTTON AND Con\n\issior\ Merchants, —AND— Guano Dealers. KO-Advance* made on Ootton In itpre, when de sired. September 2, 1870dm Clark & Wilson, Cotton Factors —AND— Commission Merchants, NO. ISVODAJUNS LOWER HAN 08, BAr STREET. SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, OALL toe attention of Cotton Deal ers of Griffin and vicinity, to our EXTRA FACILI TIES far handling tholr Ootton. *WRefer to ou pail (source aa guarantee of tutors action. GLARE A WILSON. July 22, 1870. |m New Town! NEW IF I R M . NEW GOODS, —AT— Lowest Cash Prices! Jas. E. Stallings 4 Jas. P. Moore TTAYE farmed a partnership for the AJL purpose of doing a general MercluurtUe Bwiaen in SENOIA. JW-We are now roost ring New Goods, Mid will ha constantly replenishing our (took. We w« be* on band— Dry-Ckjodt, Ladies’ * Gents' Drew Goods, Ready-Made Clothing, Hate, Boots A Show, Hard .< | ware, Tin, Stoves, Dag- J ! ' gink, Ties, Rope, Ovoolcery, In tact almost everything the people need. Woare determined to merit a liberal patronage by striei at tuiMirn to hmiaota and hftiwt dealing. mpOar terms are casta oa delivery of lll J? ** Sft.We will boy Country Produoe upon the tarsi, and sail yon Goods upon the square. STALLINGS & MOORE Baptetobw 22,1870. ts NO. 92. W. Ee H. SEARCY, —DEALER XV— FQhocihies, AWBTORE TWO DOORS BXLOW.BV “Jones, Dmmwright A Co.'a Bank,” B*.On Let Side of Hill Streets* Whether yon live to eat, or eat to live, give mo a call, and satisfy the wants of nature. WE H SEABCY. September 8. 1870. Un DIRECT Greei Uie Ooaieetien —WITH— ST. LOUIS. Wwtebk k Atlantic ILll&iud, ) Omcm or Gntrau. Fekioht Aokmt, > Atlanta. Ga., Sept 6. 1870. ) rpHE Merchants of Southern Cities are respectfully Informed that by the DIRECT CONNECTION made without transfer, with the ST. LOUIS k IRON MOUNTAIN RAILROAD, at Columbus, Ky., and that Road becoming a member of the "GREEN LINE." Freights are transported to all principal Southern Ci ties from St Louis without TRANSFER or BREAK of BULK. dW*For tariffs, and further Information, apply to A. POPE, Genonl Freight Agent September IS, 1870. 2w W. G. DEWBERRY, WITH Benj. P. Blanton & Cos., Corammisslon Merchants, AND Wholesale and Retail BlltlM XN BACON, LABD, > CORN, WHEAT, OATS, RYE, HAY, FLOUR, SALT, SUGAR, AND COFFEF. *a-WecaU speoial attention to the above SUPER!. OR STOCK, with tbs assurance that we soil as obuai BROOKS*’ WROUGHT IRON SCREW —-WITH THE LATE— IMPROVEMENTS. FOR SALE HERE »*Atslßo oash.-®» Or 30 Days’ Warehouse Aooeptanoo. Every Screw Warranted. o. A. CUNNINGHAM, Bole owner for Spalding and surrounding counties. August 26, 1870. g m . WI NSHIP’S IMPROVED GUST. f J IRIS OOTTON GIN cannot bo ex- JL celled for fiat work, making about 26 per cent, more Unt per day than other Gin* of the same vise, with the seme speed. IT WILL GIN A BALE PER DAY POE EVERY TENJSAWB, "With Proper Speed ! It tank* with the beat Otaa WORTH OR SOUTH, and its general excellence is due to its Superior Workn\ai\st\ip. All parts mads of Iron, where the tome la essential to durahUita. , ~, ; . r .,.0 . A MIMHM BSE la used on the Qln, which poaaeaSM.many advantages orerany other, keeping Ml grit sad dirt from tha Journals, and only requires to baatlsd onoe oc twioa during tho ginning aeason, every small quantity be tng consumed. TOR LIGHT DRAFT, PAST GINNING AMD GOOD TURNOUT, IT HAS NO EOO ALI •©“Directions for setting up and op erating aooompany each Gin.-©* THIS GIN IS MANUFAOTtTRED IN ATLANTAy GA., BY Wi|i»H<r A Biothen, And under their person*! anperrisioa. Order* should * "*****+« *** h* dMvto. ed in thus tor the crop. ■very St. Warranted. OLD GINS tEPAOBD. ■ liKiv butt fl H. O. BURR, Agtoit. August as, 1870, Q £^ A SAFE theownercan get by ealSagtotfctauMßeo wd payteg tor *ta MV If. MNP ™ *»•«■***'•*• m