Newspaper Page Text
flntosfln Journal.
J. H. CH RIOT'S l», Editor.
» .1 P»\S O X, H
Thui'sdtey-, J'elH KWff 11, I H<iW,
g&~ Rfaihiig V nutlet \si ever#
Mr. I*.ice's well- ins and j ,‘nt resolu
tion, says the Atlanta lira, ; u regard
to the ef'giiui y of colored people hold
ing office, passed the Senate yesterday.
Yws 10, nnys 11. The matter will
now be settled by the Supreme Court.
Emisratioii.
Wo call the attention o( our readers
to the article up™ our fourth page, ud
tlresscd to tfce elitors of the Augusta
ChrtuHcfe tfc Sentinel, from Messrs. Lor
nog & Atkinson, Cotton Factors, Bos
ton. It contains much of general in
terest to the people of the South, and wo
trust they will respond at once, and im
part the necessary inf rmation requested.
Among other articles upon the first
page will be found also an article
upon the cost of a Cotton Factory. Ai
this more paiticularly interests our own
community at this particular time, we
urge upon our readers the propriety of
giving it n candid and cordial perusal.
The Ucoi'iiiii Air I ine 11. IC.
Contracts for the building ot this im
portant line of Railroad, for the first
twenty mil s, has been already let out.
This will bring into market the resour
ces of a portion of upper Georgia, here
tofore shut out from market, only as »f
--c'od by wag n transportation, which
inusi greatly enhance the price of lands
in that section of the country, and add
much to the produce market of At
iciEt.'., from whence it will radiate to ev
ery portion of Georgia.
What of ilie Future of the Jfc-
S*’o ?
Tn our former Issue, we attempted to
give an illustration of our views in re
lation to the status of the negro in
“freedom’s laud,” and the obligations
of their formor owners to them Now
we shall endeavor to pot tray before
the minds of our ‘'Northern-nigger
loving God-anilmorality” friends some
beautiful illustrations of what freedom
has done, and still doing for their col
ored brethren in this country,
in one town, in North Carolina, ex
clusively of negroes, where somo 10,-
000 of these ragged, miserable, starv
ing creatures were congregated to
gether, during the year of 18G7. one
undertaker furnished 2500 coffins in
that period. This was the evidence of
a Bishop, rent out from the North to
soo after the spiritual interest of these
people, and instill in their minds fed
iugs of enmity against their former
owners. What lie has recorJed in
this instance, nmy he truly paid of va
nous sections of tho entire South. Ar.d
it is a melancholy fact, that in the days
of slavery, plantations where hundreds
of coloied children were known, hap
py, cheerful, and cared for by those
who were their kind and humane own
ers, now very lew are seen, and these
liavo been cast upon the world, togeth
er with their homeless parents, who
will soon fill premature graves. And
what we have said of theue, may be
soon repeated of tho almost entire race
in this country in but a very few years.
The tread of the white man from other
climes, together with the improvements
in labor-saving implements, is sound
ing the death knell of the unfortunate
negro; and like the Red man of the
Forest,they will be driven to the Rocky
Mountains, or back to their mother
country, and soon, none will be lolt to
tell the sad talo of their demolition.
They are doomed to annihilation!—
TV bo is responsible? Let tho future
decide.
Thus wo have given our views upon
n subject, which is now engaging the
attention of Statesmen and chris'ian
Philosophers, who arc, by intuition
looking down the viola of time, and
foretelling coming events with a moral
certainty which but few can compre
hend. The Astronomer who under
stands the heavenly bodies, and who
makes it bis business to gaze night af
ter night upon the glittering stars
which bespangles the vaulted heavens
above him, with unerring certain
ty oi eclipses in Sun and Moon, and of
various other astronomical signs oc
curiiugin these heavenly bodies; with
mu ub precision, almost, can men ol
deep impenetrable minds, by Compaq
ing the present with the past, foretell
with equal certainty the rise and fall of
Governments, and the misfortunes and
destruction of a race of people.
To one born and reared among
them, and who saw them in by gone
dtjs, when they wero a happy people,
the dissolving view of this dark phan
tom is curiously interesting and in
structive. It shows how heuven some
tiiiies iuiiuiioai zeal and philati
tbropy for a people, for the purpose id'
email eying them. Assuming the form
of friendship, the work of uetnolitionis
made the more easy and certain; and
the poor victim only wakes up in eter
oky to a full realization of the means,
which coipmepcirg with his moral, was
quickly followed l»y hw bodily death.
‘"Wo sit, ns it were, watching a pana
rama which lias elicited the attention
«T the 'A«rl l, and of whit li tho world
has grown weary, rolling away, arm
repioly pass from the stage. To.rrtny,
it is u mournful sight; To others it Is
curious, while the philosopher only
sees in it effect following cause,
and is neither shocked nor aAmishud
but sees only the solutit.n of a rj-oMem,
whose every figure he Uy'* udied and
understands.”
Darin" the yew of 18(18 of the mint
her of c'-evicts received into the (leor- J
ffta Fenitentinrj, 177 were colored out
of 205. Thus they are annually bil
ling our prisons as tho result of crime,
and our grave yards from disease and
starvation ! Who is responsible V
State Agricultural Society.
This body met at lbe City Mull yes
terduj in -ruing, mid we venture tho
prediction that a more intelligent as
semblage never took place in tnis State.
It was composed of men from nil parts
of the State, who came heie to pro
mote measure* looking to the riuterial
progiess of Georgia. Some two him
died delegates were in attendance.—
Col. B. C. Yancey was unanimously
elected President, and ho makes a su
perior j; residing officer.
The Secretaries are energetic and
prompt.
We copy tho above from the Atlan
ta Constitution, and cheerfully coincide
with that paper, in repeating tiiat we
do not believe an abler body over as
sembled in the State. This was a
move in the proper direction; and tho
results of that body will tell upon the
future of Guoigi.-i in various ways'to
the interest of the people and tho fu
ture prospects of the country. We
should have been pleased to have pub
lishocMbe entire proceedings ; but our
space will not permit. Doubtles pam
pliltts will be published by that body
for circulation among the people con
turning their proceedings entire. It is j
to bo regretted that Ter rail county i
was not represented in that body. Wo
hope at the next Convention, that bur!
Terrell friends will make amends lor!
past delinquencies.
Prospect oft Var with Jdii^luutl
The manifest disposition ol the New
England Radicals to bring oil a war
with England is beginning to cause
some uneiis.ness in commuicial circles.J
The New York Tunes in its approheii-l
sion of trouble racoimaenda that
amendments te made to the proposed
Alat >i«ma claims treaty, to remedy its]
defects, if we are in earnest in pro |
tending a with to preserve the peace. |
‘•lf we want war, let us have ii; if we
want peace, let us embrace this oppor
tunity of securing it; but let us dooue|
thing or the other—not keep this quo* |
iiv.n op-n to exasperate the people of
both countries, w ithout doing any pos
sible good to either.”
If New England is allowed to have
her own way in this matter, as ineveiy
.hing else, the country will soon be
placed in a position where it will have
to choose between inglorious and hu
miliating retreat, or a bloody and per
haps disastrous war, in which our pol
ilieians will do the wind work and
leave others to do the fighting.
£3T The Chronicle aud Seminelj
says “of all tiio twenty-eight hundred
so called citizeas of Augusta, who
petitioned to put Georgia
back under military government, aud
whom pot.tioo Mr. Summer lately pre
sented to the Senate. Nearly all the
names were signed with a , aud the
list did not contain the Laima of the
prominent weito Radicals of Augusta.
Very few if the petitioners wore known
the Chronicle, expresses the opinion that
less than two hundred of the twenty,
six or twenty-seven hundred negroes,
whose urines appear on the petition,
arc re.-idents of Augustaurknowu there.
The whole thing appears to have been
a fraud of the most infamous character
such a one as only the “Little IVr
jurer” could have conceived and caricd
out.
DistkuctiveToknauo —The Allan
ta lutttligeuccr, of Friday, learns that
there was a toruble tornado in Camp
bell Cuuuty ou last Saturday night. It
extended for about, ten miles, and wat
about four hundred yards io width.
Great damage was done to tcuiber and
fencing.
The hnuseof Mr. Miller was destroy
ed, and Mrs. Miller aud her children
were very much injured. Mrs. Duke’s
house was destroyed; also, Antioch
Church. Mr. Patterson’s house was
destroyed. Mr. Walker's house was
al-o blown down.
Ou Friday night—the night before
—the LaGrange Reporter says a severe
wiud aud hailstorm passed throught the
lover portion of Troup county TreiS,
fences, freedmen’s cabins, and lumber,
were prostrated indiscriminately. The
gin houses of .Mrs. McCaliey and Mr.
Joseph Rutledge were blown to atoms,
scattering the fragments all around
It has not beeD heard from further
we»t than Mr. M. P. Johnson’s, and
east than Mrs. Sledge’s ouly a few
miles apart.
Advice from fiosloit.
The following sound advice come to
us, says the Macon Telegraph without
date, all the way from Boston. J,et
tho writers come on and bring otbeis
along with him, to hdp fill the South
with a white population iu a hurry.
lIosTON. Mass.
Fill your Southern States with a
WUt'iE population as soon as possible
and the D’gger party are dead in this
country. Let the South have the tome
preportion of whites to blacks, that
Massachusetts has, and the Nigger will
share the fate cf the Indian on this
continent. Again let mi say flood the
South with white population and ycu
arc all right.
A 14 iik lii \ Ri'liop.
In some parts of-Gcorfit
have hern uiueh cxercW'd Do l y or» tm
subject of tho Kuklll'- j huy fa up
that- every fores* *nd swamp swarßt
with them; they believe that grave
yard are the especial abodo of the Klan.
roc eenserpicricis is, that much as the
poor superstitious new voters have al
way? dreaded to pass ' by a graveyard’
they will now never go with'n a mile
;f ooe for fear of ihe Kuklux.
Bishop JLieokwitb, ol ibe Episcopal
chu:oh, ibe m w diocesan of Georgia,
some months ngo made ao Episcopal
visitation tr a remote' por ion if his
diocese. There were not many Epi?-
oopaliaus iu that region of Georgia ;
but few of tho whiles had over scon a
successor of the Apr trios, and the ne
groes di 1 nor know ffl at sort ol a crea
ture a bishop was.
It scon became nohod about that on
a certain evening the bishop wnwld ar
rive and hold services in a church of
acer aio village of (be above district,
arid Iho while neighborhood was filled
wi'b curiosity tog) and see the qtiobr
animal that read prayes out of a bock,
and to listen to what he had to preach
ob;u!
Ol all the population the negroes
were more excited than my ethers, and
wey determined to attend the church
in mass, thinking that however dan
gerous might be a grave.yard generally,
there rv"ii-d be no peril from Kuklux
where so large a oongr- gatiou would be
assembled
! The house of worship war situated in
tho outskirts of the little village, but it
was not an Episcopal church , conse
quently it nad no vestry-room in which
the bishop could put on his vestment.
This difficulty was; however, remedied
by some one’s suggesting that the bish
op should n be himself behind the church
j and come round and enter at the front
j door.
I 80 he sent a friend with his surplice,
i who places it behind a ti mbstonc,
where it would be at hand when he
) should n quire it.
Long before the time designated for
1 tho opening services the church bad be
come fi led with the whites of the viciu
; ity, and the negroes, finding that there
was no room for them inside, stood
packed before the door.
I The Bi-hop. at tho appointed time,
j entered the graveyard by the back
j ga'e, went up to the tombstone, and
1 donned his EpKe pa! vestures. The
wind was biowing rather freab, and
j just as he t’JVurii the corner of the
j church k flaw spread out his white rubes.
| Some negroes spi-d him, and bawled
out Kuklux ! Kuklux ! They all
looked round and beheld the flaunting
white garments approaching, when the
whole croud took to their heels, shriek
ing Kuklux ! In* ten seconds not a
single darkey could be seen, but the
sound of their footstep* in tho distant
f. 11 upon the ea-, aid for half an hour
afterwards could b- heard tho terrible
words, Kuklux ! Kuklux ! far off in
tin country as t'- e affrighted crowd
were making for their homes. —Nur
/oik J nr.
Fatal Affray on Dunn's Lakh
A loug standing feud between two
familii s, named liraddock aud Turner
residing on Dunn's Lake, and which
arose out of a depute about some laud,
rosulted last we k in a deadly encounter
between monikers of (he respective fam
ilies. From such information as has
readied us, it appears that on Tuesday
Ist throe of the Brauduek? and three of
the Turners, armed with gut.s and pis
tols, met and engaged in a general
fight Oae of the .Craddocks was in
stantly killed, and tho other two mor
tally wounded, so that they did the
nest day. Oue of tho Turners was
kiliod, and another mortally wounded
leaving but one survivor out of the six
engaged. It is reported that both par
ties have received reinforcements, and
that hostilities are activolv progressing.
—Jacks nvUte\ F(u ) Union
A set of dirty digs from Vermont,
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and oth
er parts if the Nocth, who no doult
make their headquirt'rs at negro cab
ins, are petitioning Congress as “Un
i-in men of Georgia.” We learn from
the N. Y. liny Look that these scoun
diels, before they left tho North, weie
next door to punuers—many of them
petiy thieves. Dow long, oh how long,
is the South to be cursed wi'b these
miseratlo off-. Louts of perdition! 1 The
heart sickens wuen it cuuietupiaies the
fiendish malignity these duvils Lave
(or us, and the seeds of discord and
hatred for the whites they are engen
dering and sowing broadcast among
the blacks of the South.
Ibe Legislature of West Virgiuia
is considering a bill classing all stom
ach bitters as liquors and exacting a
license tax of one hundred dollars from
all druggists aud dealers offering them
for sale.
The Petersburg Times is informed
that au entire towu in oae of the south
ern counties in Virgiuia, to gethcr with
several thousand, acres of land around
it, has recently been purchased by col
onists from the West.
General Lee's College in Virginia is
to have a school of ogiiculture, one of
commerce, oae ( f applied chemistry and
others of miehaLical engineering, in
addition to the previously existing
schools for civil aud mining engineering.
Failures among merchants in Miuis- 5
sota are daily reported.
Spanish republicans request tho ab
solute separation of Church and Slate.
A though iful observer is puzzled by
finding that, for a burhtijue to be com
pletely successful it must have a break
down.
The Newton cotton factory
near Covington, Georgia, was horned a
few days ago, throwing many operatives
out of employment.
The Western pork packers estimate
l,Cf*o,t/00 hrqs as the numbex of the
present sias.n.
pspeclal to the Journal li Messenger.
G iORG.IA LEGISLATURE.
AiC'a.ntA, Ga . Fkimahy 9.
I.tyj jnatk.-pfnt thf vhme day'in
diW'Us-Jfljg VlotjSkn'B moti n.to recousid
kite House rc.-olution to refer tie
question of negro eligibility to otfi:e, to
the Bupre no Gout. VVoottn, Burns
and IliuCon, favoring the reconsider* •
lion, and Gaudier and Brock, oppo ing.
The former contending that this reso
lution was a fare". Nj cliodder had
any rlgbtlO drciilb'who w' eligible to
seats mi the 11 mrofthe Senate.. Every
1 '0 tutor hop*- “Worn to support the Con
. slitulinn, which declurtd the Senate ibe
1 “life Judge of the q-j ifHiifatli ns bf it#
j own member*. The State had fully
| couipli and wit.li the.eondi ifco imposed Ay'
Congress. To submit the eligibility of
Senator* toi he Supreme C vurt, would bo
I trampling tho C m.-lituii -n under foot.
Congress had not dc until ad this addi
tional compreinise.
I ho t wo latter opposed reconsideration,
for dill, tent ruu-ous. Gaudier thinking
it bad p-dicy to do nothing. Ho thought
Congress demanded that sotnothii g he
done. He was fjllowei inpie ty much
| tho s»ra.c line of argument by Wellborn
who spoke in a very excited manner,
; favoring the House resolution. Brock
; opposed recou *truo:iju because C ingress
demanded action on our part, c ii tending
that Congress hail a rigii t to demand this
of us, as jt was the supteme power.
Pending discussion Soitattnujj iurncd %
The geucral opinion is that the Home
resolution will he defeated. In the
House the bill to allow any ratfc of m
| terest agreed upon was lost. Also the
bill to reduce the tux on circuses.
Tde Bmate bills to amend the cbarac
ter of the Cotton States Insurance Corn
pauy, and to exempt members of
Savannah fire compauics from jury
duty, w"re passed. Also, the bill reg
ulating the issuoiog of subpoenas f>r
witness in Chatham > Superior and Sa
vannah City Courts, I'otidiog the con
sideration of ttie bill to organize a Lind
and Immigration Butcau, the House
adjourned.
Various opinions are held as to the
probable action of Congress- Many
think ’h t the test oath will be applied
to members. Otiurs say that the ne
groes will be resented. Other* that
the Btate will be remanded to military
rule in less than thirty days.
G £00(11 A.
JT-«fTt is said that the proprietors'
of the celebrated I’laxtatio.m Bnreit"
rent no less than nine pews from the
diffvont deniom 1 nations in New Yo.rk
ci-y for all .those of: their employees
who wi 1 occupy them rrgularly, free,
of charge. This is certainly {raise-f
worthy, and it is to he hep -d that, oth
ers who employ a large number of peo
ple, will tollow the example. The
abovo fact, accompanied wi'h tho belief
that a firm who would took so dost ly
after the morals and wt.Ka.e of then
employees, would cot undertake in im
pose upon the public, has induced u
to give the I’r.AhtTATtox Bitters a trial,
and having found them to be all is rep
resented, we cordially recommend them
a» a tor.ie of rare m.rit.— Observer,
July Ut.
Magnolia Water—Superior to the
best imported G irnan Cologne and sold
at half the price.
From the Huntsville, Ala., Independent.
‘Thf. “Great Southern Preparations”
are not patent medicines, composed
of mysterious root a and herbs found in
remote and obscure corners of the earth,
but arc made of pure and fre.-h drugs,
the efficacy of which have been thorough
ly t' a tod by tho medical faculty.' The
rapid sale and curative properties ot
these medicines are the best guarantees
that uan be offered in their favor. Their
English Female Bitters is Laving a
tremendous sale in this country and nil
are delighted with its rfleets.” C. F
Morgand, editor of Ko.-tiu-ko, [Miss.)
Chronicle, says: * * The E gush
Female Billets is highly reooiumended
by the Me iy»id fratetuity at this, ; inee
and surrounding country.” Sou adrer
i i se'mTn f.
• Yew •lUverliseisiesils.
THE SKTV HOTEL
BAI&OW" HOUSE,
AMERICAS, GA.
W. .1. B4KMGV, Proprietor.
J. Ur. S. SMITH,
GUNSMITH
rf.l’ll JfMVHrJTMST
DA UNO A, ; ; ; Georgia.
Keeps constantly on baud a well selected
s'oek of Gun#, Pistols, Caps, Cartridge® and
Amuniiou oi all description.
Also Repairs all kinds of Guns, ristols, sew
ing J/ucliiues, etc., etu. Feb 11 ’6b ly.
STRAYED OR STOLEN
ON the 3rd day of February, from the
town of Dawson, a small black mare
Mute. Tho right hiud leg has a scar about
three inches long, just above the bock. About
four years old. Anv person returning Said
mule, if strayed, or if stolen, with testimony
to convict the thief, will be suitably reward
ed. My residence is 7 miles south of Dawson.
Feb. 11, *BS. E. B. BEAUCHAMP.
FOSTPOSED
Administrator's Sale.
AGREEABLE to au order of the Court oi
Ordinary ot 'Ferrell county, will be sold
before the Pourt House door in Dawson, on
the first Tuesday in April next, between
the legal honrs of sale, the following prop
erty, to-wit: Lot of land, No. f>3, in the 17th
district, and east half lot of laud, No. 62, iu
the 17th di-trict of Terrell oouuty, known as
the Ford place, belonging to estate of Sarah
lord, dec’d. Abort 120 acres of cleared land
—ordinary iniprovenn nts. Possession given
the first of January, lS7p. Terms cash,
febdtds till Alt I*3 FORD, Adm’r
/ t EOKUIA, Ti‘rri‘ll Comity:
VJ Whereas, Eli Cocnras, Kxeuutor ol Dir.
ling Sikes, ajiptfe* for letters of dismission
f rom raid estate.
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all persons concerned, to be and appear at m v
office within the lime prescribed by law, anil
show cause, if any, why said letters should
not be granted. Given under my hand, aud
official signature, this Nov. ]2th, 1868. 1 ’
uuvltftiiu T. M. JONES, Ord’y.
T J TIICP] LIST
& UF « j
Assorted Crates of Crockeiy,
I.MFORTE!) BY
13. w. wisii:,
MACON, - - GA.
Clemofitson's Best White Granite
Ware.
■ < duzoii \v. ttrtmti'Jßpuch I‘l.itcß, pit no *r. m
3110 110 !l (111 ' 170 11 HI
ri-c dozen (In UlindUit T'-ns, I lit 1C
t do do . do Cotr.vs, a'*l li 111
Hit do do linkers, *s') 1 S.l
1-0 do . do do 7 ft) C.io
l.edo do Mn. Hut IMidirs, VSO TA
l-tido do 10 do do ft ft I HI
Milo <lO J'Cdn do HMI , ISO
IMi do 'dn 1-1 do do 12!)') alO
l-ft |W do I’ltrln-rs, s ft 1 1 fto
l-tdo do do (i (HI 2 00
lyiilo do do sou 207
.'lpnirH do KWitb * Riikins, 1 fto I .V)
1-1 dozi-u do i-ov'd idmmlii-rz, la 00 3 00.
I-*' do do do l)i»h««, 13 00 230
1-ti do do do do Isoo a 00
I*o do do Hotter*, Him ifto
1-0 do do i t-u I’otH, sno 1:o
1-0 do do Sug.irs, n n 133
1-0 do do I'rnln, 3 ftft fts
I*2 do do 1 Jowls, 100 so
1-2 do do do 21*1 1 00
1-2 do ‘ do ' do 2 50 1 2ft
1-2 do' do' firary I'iontu, 400 1 3.3
Cleraontsoii’B Best C. C. Ware.
3 dozen CC 7 iucfi Plans, |OS 30
and do do 8 do 70 4 20
6 do do SJ do 8.5 510
i do do Bdo Fl„t dirties, 1 80 46
i do do 12 do do 400 1 OO
i do do 14 do do 700 1 75
i do do li 1 tsyrs, 250 60
f do do do 400 100
1 do do do ’5 00 ]25
do do Pitchers, 2no 67
If do do do HSO 1 17
If do do do 6UO 167
3 do do Bowh, go 240
21 do (io do 1 10 275
2 do do do 1 fto 8 00
if do do Cli imbcrs, 400 1 33
it do do do 500 167
j do do ’do 700 233
3 pairs do Kvvers & Basins, 80 2 40
18 sets do Teas, 25 4 60
1 i* ac.7.. do Mugs, ]OS 156
i do do do Ito
Hie 57
Crate and Cartage, 2 50
.Dkar Sir : —Please End above Price List
of Cit-ckcry, to which I invite jour especial
attention. Yours verv trufv,
A-W,SE
sl'i.l.Ni, i.UFOKTAIION
IS6O.
Ribbons. Millinery, Straw Goods.
ARMSTRONG, CATOR & CO.,
257 anti 239 Baltimore St,
BALTIMORE, MB.
IMPORTERS and Jobbers of Bonnet and
Tiimming Ribbons, Velvet and Sitsh Rib*-
bons, Bdiihc' Crapes, Silk? and Satin.*, Illu
sion#*, Biond«, Lice?, Rachc?, Nets and Vel
vet°, Frguch Flowers and Feathers, Straw
Bonnets and Lidfcb* Hats, trimmed and un
triimoed Sundovne nrid S u»ker iioodn.
The lurjjest stoclt of .WUinery (io)ds in
Uiis country, and uncqualed in choice varie
ty, which we offer at, p. ices that will defy
competition. dTOrifrrd Solicited.
fcbl i;6c
BOOKS! BOOKS!! lOKS!!!
AT PUBLISHERS PRICES.
xjm.Ji io cu.m Tit igio.
And ?ent b}' d/,vil, free of Tostage.
ttOOJKS of Games, Tricks, Riddles and
Puzzles.
it 00 as on Etiquette and Canges of So
ciety.
BOOK* i on Love, Courtship, aed A/urri
age.
BOOHS on FOl tunc Telling, Dreams and
Afigte.
BOOH S on Letter Writing, Talking and
Debating.
Kovel*, Prize Romances, Song and Joke
Books.
ANY BOOK that is asked for, no matter
what kind, where published, whr re you per
it advertised, or if not advertised at a!h The
Books arc arranged in Lists. Give the kind
of Book you want, and a list with prices, will
be sent by return mail. Address C. H. WIL
CON, General Agent, No. 11 Peachtree St.,
Ailauta, Ga.
Arrangements have been made with hous
es in every branch of Trade and Business in
the United Stat s.
Importers, Manufacturers, Inventors,
Publishers, Stealers, file.
By which Anything, Everything, that
can be found A A Y II HERE, can be
/ annulled.
In an Agency of this kind, whete the waned
ol so muiy different person* are to be sup
plied (here mast necessarily be many thing?
required that cannot be advertised, and
which are not furnished except on spocial
application. No person, mule or female,
need have the least hesiutiou ia writing for
JIiHT WHAT THLY WANT.
Descriptive circulars of nkw and usevul
inventions. Patent Medicines, Books, En
gravings, Photograpes, Music, Ac., SUNT vhee
to any address. feblljly
GIVE lEACUAiNCE
TO SERVE YOU WITH
FRESH GROUND FLOUR,
OF ALL QUALITIES,
SHORTS,
BRAN,
MEAL,
GRITS,
STOCK FEED, &e.
jsiftws if. si ice
\\! ould respectfully inform his old friends
T T and the public in central, that, having
leased ilr. T. C. .N'ltSßEf’B
MACON MILLS,
(Better known as the “Rock Mills,”)
! He hug put the same in complete and thor
ough running orrier, and is now prepared to
furnish the merchants and loom keonera of
I/.eon, Middle and Southwestern Georgia,
with everythin? in his line, in any quantity
desired, oh the most reasonable terms.
Ilis experience in the J/illing Business, to
gether with tho satisfaction with which he
( has served them iu the past, be thinks enti.
j ties him to a share of public patronage, which
j he solicits, and which 1m will use every exer
tion ta serve. A trial is ass he asks.
1 fcbll;Bm I
New Cheap Jew Store
AT BALDWIN’S OLD STAND,
Main Street, - - - DyVVVSOISJ", GA.
'mmmSsi
HAS JUST JMTUIINED FROM .veil' YORK,
AND is receiving daily, the most MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF
iPlil©
Ever before t-tfered in a Southern Market, consi'tiug of LROICjB GOODS
embracing all the now stylo* of
I. »IDIBS' I)BBSS HOODS, VBOTIIS,
VOSM.JtBUBS, f'HSTMXGS, (r ft ,
READY-MADE CLOTHING,
11, ITS, tV/ f*S, BOOTS X SIS O US, in every variety of Price and excellence.
Al*b, for the accommodation of onr Agricultural friend*, wo have and shall keep on hand
a large assortment of
GROCERIES OF ALL
Which we intend to sell on the lowest and most accommodating terms for CASH. Our
manner of business will he conducted upon the CV/.S /f principle. We shall endeavor to
make '‘QUICK SA LKS'' and be satisfied with "SHALL PROFITS.” Under these cir.
oumstances, we invite onr friends and customers to call and examine our slock before pur
chasing elsewhere—assuring them that, they shall ho fully saiisfied before leaving.
lrg"“Ilill” JttlillMoil Sllttl (Irt eu it. Tliompwoll will always be os hand,
aud will be pleased to wait on their oid friends and customers. fcbl 1,186-3 —3m
HAVE lIWIyS G3n HAUL
FJLOVR, of oil drentes!
•tffcVffa, GRITS, Blioi.V,
SBEfrltTS, <tml CO W*MWEn..
also, the famous
SELF-RAISING FLOUR.
r l' , o OUR PATRONS* and all others wc would say that we arc*mjnuGactupng our Fl ft nr
L from tlic best quality ol Wheat, and that all the Flour we fi ll is lre«h. W e make all
grades, aud have Flour as low as the lowest and aa good as the best. Our motto is,
WE STRIVE TO PLEASE,
And guarantee sitT*fic’ion in all cases. Afl Flour sold by us iei guaranteed to pleasa, nr
money refunded. To all dealer*, and the balance ol mankind, tve would say, try us, and we
feel assured that you will call again.
NOTICE. B,t(*BB .(DLLS. — We have purchased of Bledsoe k Cos., their
entire stoek in the above Flour Mills, sr listed rear the Mi con & Brunswick Depot.. The
Milling business will hereafter be ca-ned on by 11s, under tho firm name of T. li. Cheek A Cos.
We have proiured the services of Mr. I. Bkdsoe, who will be happy to wait on the former
patrons of Bledsoe & Cos. D. It. COOlv.
T. If. CKBEK.
Having sold our stock to Messrs. Cook & C heek, we take great pleasure in recommeading:
them to our old customers. [lt-bl l'bitti n] BLEDSOE & CO.
Aud be convinced Hint we still keep on hand the
UAKOEST AHI) BUST fcIHfoECTUD,
And cheapest stock of Goods in
jyCIIDIDXaE] GKEOZEtCKEoA-
And are ever ready, as heretofore, to prove what we say, by our
who have been dealing with ÜB. All Goods shipped promptly and guaran
teed to
COME UP TO REPRESENTATION !
Don’t take our word for it, but TRY US yourselves. Always on band
BACON, CORN. PORK,
SOAP, FLOUR, MEAL,
MACKEREL, STARCH, LARD,
RICE, HERRINGS, CANDLES.
4:50 BOX® T033-^CCO.
CHEESE, WHISKEY, OSNARURGS,
SNUFF, POWDER, SHOT,
COFFEE, SARDINES, BRANDY,
YEARNS, CIGARS, SUGAR,
CRACKERS, CASE LIQUORS,
SHEETINGS, PICKLES, CAPS,
TEA, &c , &c.
SEYMOUR, TINSLEY & Cos.„
Jas Seymour, i
A, R Tinsley, > Macon, G n-
T. D Tinsley, ) janl4;3m
HOW TO KILL UIjR BIRDS WITII ONE STONE
WIi. F SLINK BKfpjIUJANf,
ONE of thp bc=t injffie Putc, ,Ins taken charge of my Mill, and will
(hieg*irr good order, to that e\fervf>Oify mnv be of getting tlood »W tttl
they cerac to Mill. The Mill is all fined np new wbh
IST K W MA.OPIIN Fi Ry >
and anew pair of the best IHiKrOILkS SIULSk. Ev»r\thing will be done to ma * 1 '
a flit ST <L L.ISS JIM Til..
ANIAKRSON, known already bv the people a® a good
Plantation, or Wagon work, lias a Sjwp close bj th# Millfl&i ilo lanta •
or any work in Iris line, aud will do hi beat to give satialacuou. Laving to pay
for everything butil five for w'rk. it,,lstOld*'
If you wuut an* Plantation W< o l-Vvork riouo, or Tables, JUUreuus, "[“v'jjjii)-
tie., call on JKtssrs. PHlS'fiLf. X .t.VnStt: U'S, Occupying bbop
lngtheM.il. , , iD .f,t.c»ll *
If your Watcli„Clo,k, Music Box, or Accordeon does not do ug
"tihscribcr at his old stand, where you cau bo accouiuioua e
JOHN I*.
Dawson, Ga., Feb. 11, IB6o—mly