Newspaper Page Text
■
j
*«*
ill ^"‘. tillable' remininconees, some
lS ° rafting ‘teDll* oi ,h ! £ orei 8 n rul »:
^rco^^raoy. and l,o 7 near U
i-l*> »[“" "L.lie Ulan." Ia 1863, alter
: ‘ ; b‘ t “.“b"he>l_letters of_Plua IX
[ j!ie T ration of peace in the United
! °])avis deemed it proper
•"‘’..ftohtaHolinesB by letter his own
i*"”*a that of the Southern people for
*** ami sympathy displayed in that
THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 5,1886.—TWELVE PAGES.
DAVIS.
PHIKFTAIN REVIEWS many
c» ir *_ HISTORY.
jtfTANT
POINTS OK HISTORY.
..That w.re Slade to Assaui-
»t" I " p .J.vii-Ttie ro|M> »od tne
,_DoubteD..II..«.
1 \( Loot* Napoeoe.
veranda in wi view of the
Jelferson D.tvis gave me,
neptomber 7. - Sitting
^^timeTto recognition by both
!eI ! W i France. He apoke in the
* td ^iof l>ope Piua «. vrho, he
,^t tfirBlH 01 1 .y™ it luni
of New Orleana
r York
^r^ifnavia wrete hia letter on Sep-
1863, and aent It ovor to A.
lW \tann the Confederate cotnmiaaion-
in Brttaeola, with inatrnctiona to
*2 to the Holy See and deliver it in
yTlhinn^eoeFved the letter on the 30th
and on the 4th of November
°fl2d with an audience of Pina IX,
Rented the letter of Mr. Davia. AE
“ rv agreeable interview th» Pop.
1 'twillwrite a letter for you to con
Davia of anch a character that it
9 1 ? “„i.|iahed for general p-rnsaL” On
»fJf P f December Cardinal Antonelli
“ „ itted to Mr. Mann the Pope'a an-
■"T t| r pavif, in which he aaid he waa
“At to find Mr. Davia bo peaceful hi
inarr and expressed a wish that other
1 with the Miruo feeling*,
a?,. Wen said that by this letter hia
, recognized the Southern Confed-
,it there is nothing in it to support
lvai unless it is the introduction,
Jjrj, u follows: "To the lllnatnona
S Honorable J.Uaraou Davia, President
... Confederate nu»te» of America.’
..(he decease i f the great and nobly
i ;vi Sono,” Mr. Davia thus wrote of
' -When our war had closed in the de
cut 'lie South, and I was incarcerated,
iih tieatment the most needlessly rigor.
’ ,j not designedly cruel; when the in-
alien of malignant* was taxed to lta ut.
1 to fabricate stories to defame and
in the estimation of mankind;
and that he aent them at the time to Mr.
Davis, den. Bradley T. Johnson, of Balti
more, who harassed the rear of Dahlgren'a
troopers with sixty Marylanders until they
reached the line of the defenses of Rich
mond, has a photograph copy of Kilpat
rick s order to Dahlgren.
At this time Richmond was full of spies,
who kept np constant commnnication with
Washington. However true they may
have been individually, It is not surprising
that in the number of government employes
to whom the Confederate government gave
position (hailing from every part of tho
world, and especially from the North,) that
there Bhonld have been a liberal quota of
spies in the departments, who furnished to
the Northern papers accurate reports of the
official hsppeniDgs in Richmond. That this
was the case is evidenced by theexcitement
occasioned in Richmond on Angnst 7, 1861,
by the receipt of a New York Herald con
taining an account of the military forces of
the Confederacy, so detailed and so accu
rate that Congress proposed to order an in
vestigation >n the gonnd that "no one in a
subordinate position, without assistance
from higher authority, could have prepared
snch a paper as that published in the Her
ald.” Always ready to asBiBt the Federal
army, the so-called “Union men” of Rich
mond were valuable auxiliaries as spies and
as secret enemies to the Confederate cause.
The habeas corpus was never suspended by
President Davis, but only by act of Con-
ItreeB, and then only for a limited time and
for specific circumstances. On one occa
sion a department commander did suspend
a writ, but his conduct was disapproved
and he was relieved.
It is a fact not generally known that two
attempts were made during.tho war to as
sassinate Jefferson Davis, while riding out
in the suburbs of itichmoud. The first
time ha was fired upon, at dusk,'rom some
bushes. The second time his would-bo
assassin fired from a house, which was
surrounded, and the culprit was captnred
while hiding between the ceiling and fioor
of an upper story. He proved to be a Ger
man apy in the pav of the Federal govern-
i.' : 1... *l.„ —
M tare, t*" 11 .“SuTmeil--Tm?ehtbeam- meat' He was imprisoned, but by the aid
,»d people in Amertca might be ant- of the writ of habt £„ corpus he was soon
released, his counsel being paid in gold,
He was again arrested undor the conscript
law and sent to Gen. Lee's army, where all
trace of him is lost. It is believed by Mr.
Davis and otbera that his attempted assas
sination wiia incited by those in authority
at Washington.
Mr. Davis referred to tho circumstance.,
attending General Lee’s crossing the Poto
mac during the Gettysburg campaign and
the march into Pennsylvania. Ho assumed
the responsibility for that movoniont of the
Confederate army. He Bays; “The enemy
had long been concentrating his force, and
it waa evident that if they continued their
steady progress tho Confederacy would be
would advance because of its intrinsic value
in the production of staple articles of com
merce.
Mr. Davis says the only disturbing ele
ments to be discerned now were the efforts
of the extremists of the North to keep alive
the animosities and hatreds of the past If
Congress wonld pursue a moderate oourse
and attend to its legitimate duties of general
legislation for the good of the whole country,
all the great social ami industrial questions
which are the sources of so much contention
would soon settle themselves and the coun
try wonld be at peace.
A story is going the rounds of the conn-
try that Mr. Davis is writing a book.
There is about as mnoh truth and probabil
ity in thia story as there is in the many oth
er lies that have been circulated about him.
Mr. Duvis is not writing any book, and has
no inclination nor tho strength to under
take any literary work. His "lliso and
Fall of the Confederate government" was
singularly unsuccessful as a peonnia-y ven
ture. Published in a very expensive shape,
it found fow purchasers. The elaborate
care with wbich it was prepared and the
tremendous research on which its smallest
facts were based consumed several years.
He was compelled to ask advances from the
Messrs. Appleton while engaged in this
work,and Mr. Davis informed me the amount
paid him for his labors did not exceed $7,-
000. It stands, however, an unanswerable
defense of the Southern canso—a monu
ment to tho Southern love of constitution,
ai liberty —and in this it meets the utmost
ambition of its anthor.
Mr. Davis has beenNorth only once since
the war. He went to Canaria jnst before
his book appeared, that he might register it
there in season, and thus secure the Eng
lish copyright. His trip tbroogh the Norl
was tjuiet and ulmcst uneventful, thou;
tome small indignities were put on him.
He and hia family were deeply touched by
the grand ov&tiona accorded him at Mont
gomery, Atlanta, Savannah, etc., last
spring, and I assnred him if he came to
Richmond at the laying of the corner-stone
of the Lee monument next month and
wonld extend bis visit to Baltimore, ottr
citizens wonld give nim a warm welcome.
He will uot promise what he will do, in
view of his declining years and uncertain
health, but said: “There are no places I
wonld rather visit than Richmond and Bal
timore."
Mr. Davis is by no means a wealthy man.
His plantations yield him but little income,
and the iudicutiuus are that the great Con
KEILEY’-t SUCCESSOR.
Tho President at lot Drtcrmlned to Flit tho
Aut'iks Vacancy.
Courier Journal tpectel.
Washington, September 29. —Tho Presi
dent has at last opened his month in regard
to the muoh-discussed -Austrian mission.
Ho thinks i*. is now time that this country
should bo fopreseuted at the court of Vien
na, and it is predicted that a plenipotentia
ry will be started across the seas before
Congress cuhy.-u>-s. Secretary Bayard felt
very sore ovtr tbs double rejection of Mr.
K iley, and bus stood in the way of an ap
pointment up to this time. _ Now
tlmt his much-esteemed Richmond
friend hat been provided for the Si cretary
may molliiysii 1 unite with the President in
tho selection of a more acceptable person to
the Austrians. The portfolio will bo much
sought after ss the climate and society are
charming and the pay _ captivating.. 11
Macon, W ednesday, Oct. V
A.t Central City Park.
BARNUM AND LONDON
TUnited Shows!
lion.
With all the Freshness of Spring and tho
1 Odor and Fragmnce ot New Mown Hay.
In its Vast Entirety and Royal Magnificence,
J With all the Pom}) and Spleudor Surrounding
'Jminin theater I the Greatest of Earthly Amusement Enterprise^ mgair^
the position. Hon. Albert Gallatin Talbot, by tllG King of SllOWmon aild the 11 tiler Ol the AMU6K VI &N 1
of Kentucky, ami on© hundred other^diatin- |
J/N To create a New Era in Amusements in the
South, and provide the people with what they
never saw before.
gnished applicants are crowdiug dose on
tho heela of the gentleman from the Old
Dominion, and the trip belong** to tho man
that gets it
A TRULY MONSTER SHOW.
AiiRx
„ w ,... ognbroad 1 overwhelmed. Our only hope was to drive
i pav o-ith which the ignoble I bint tbo defense ot bin own capital, and
,1 m the cry with which the ignoble | ^ Ka . n „ ,,,,.4,1,.,; in Dk- meantime to reiu-
po;#ne the victim, a voice
““me from we being enabled in the meantime to rein-
!t "^iss«CiRl5S
■ejftaajWsisAws.
u h u.l. the c intoning Was obtained, If other things had
•« >" ■>» , who tt,e " iteT/ favored“to reinforei the army. Dufing tho
■rt: •'« >>"!>!'. 1 ■ Th Jtlhi war.” Mr. Davis says, “Gen. Lee was ever
''' 1 Int liranhlc ^waa^ attested conscious of the U equality of the moans at
iattpaon.was autographic waa atte ltd I is cout rol; bxxt it was never his to com
bi ‘AiCardinal Barnubo, December, 18 -h, ^ or |0 utu . r R doubt—it was always his
Is his seal. , . I to do” When in the last campaign ho was
a member of tho Episcopal ««1 no. ue . . L * , )fti _.
federate leader is poorer now than ho has
•ver been before. Steps were onco taken
raise a fund for him, bnt he kindly but
firmly averted the hands of those engaged
in it us hoou as he became aware of what
was bting done. Ho held that as long as
tho widowB and orphans of the Confederate
soldiers were in want, he it td neither right
or the wish to take one dollar from tho
bounty that onght to find its way to them. |
He has preferred to live in retirment. In
nothing he has done or said has ho lowered
the slightest degree the dignity of his
high position. Accepting the reverses ot
life with uncotnpllining fortitude, be has
held bis convictions unchanged and un
modified. In defeat, as in victory, his
great nature and his golden heart have
been equal to all demands. In peace or in
war he stands the unchallenged and be
loved chief among his people. J. T. S.
beleaguered at Petersburg, and was pain
fully aware of the straits to which lie was
Ht.P»vis is - .
tai-sud received on Sunday, April 2.
;ZTnBt.piuri £?«*£“wuhmm the
by a
tlgmjitom General Lee announLing hi c »ih-M him to Anticipate tho move-
t;»ij»ithdrawai from letersbnrg, and the and the army of Northern Virginia
ioue;Mt necessity for evacuating Rich- “whfltr-^ “Gen. Leo was charge-1
Mr. Davis says: “I quietly rose and h„vs Mr. Davis, “S- d
i*fta,church Thn occurrence probably I -
I kitti.church. Tito occurrence pro >»my j-Wish toimt on record the fact that I nev-
I attracted attention, but tho people ot Bjcb-1 I {alter to utteiapt anything
I need had been too long beleagured, had I or knew^uiui^to ratio (( j
J bora me too often in tree ive uotteeof A{ ,er spenkim'in the most exalted term;
I «;“teo rehnll to mske u^ene at I <>t Lee and Jackson, their mutual contt
. . w a. J. dotice iu each other, and their prompt co-
“ d .* n S er - - 1 W -*“ t -nmenu and operation, he said: “They supplemented
sads of departments ana ^ <0 ther _ with wiy fair op ,
It-MM, and gave the need!nl l ‘ ll '‘ rnclio “ po n U mty, tiaby were absolntely invincible.'
I tor our removal that meht simnltafceoualy
vifll0n.nl Leo's withdrawal Irom Peters- He gave me some interesting incidents
I teg. rheeveatwas not unforeseen, and concerning the fight h« witnnsed at ira-
■ preparation hod been made for it, zier s farm, erne of the Seven Days battles
Ik rill -e sooner than was exiiected. at Richmond. Early in d« Ml
|M J.i and stall xrcre occupied mriilUta in I Geu. Lee Dear he trout, and at ouce m-
It't .t'.etLoon, arranging my papers ior re- costetlliim with “Why, General, wnut are
Krai. Being idGiJrii Richmond, my fam- you doing here? You Mu ln t °o dargerous
1 fjbring 1-, eU .ent Somh some days bo- a position for the oommandSTottbeuinj.
| in. the few arrangements needful for my “I am trying, was the reply, ‘“find nut
I pound wants were Boon made after reach- something about the plans of
lug home. Then, leaving all else in the But yon most excuse nte, Mr. 1 resident tor
Me ot the housekeeper, 1 watte J until no- asking what you ate doing here, and for sag
Mel Of the time when the train would de- ge-tingthatjtht.is nojroperpl.eefor the
| at; then, goiug to tho stution, started for commamlor-in-ehiHf of all our armies.
KriSK I supposed General Lee “Oh. I am here on tb. aame missmn that
< Jala proi-ncd with Ids 1 army.' . . | you srs,' nplied1 Me, Dav«. »^tbey were
Entire, Complete, Whole ami Undivided, Transported lrom
Place to Place upon Fifty two Enormously Litrgo
Railroad Cars, each Car Sixty to
Sevouty-live Feet Long,
A9*C<>inlnft precUelr •» it exhibl ml before eiithualuttc tbouit*i:d« in th® gr®*t oltle® of New York,
!*delphu, lioaioo. U.mmorn, WamiiiiKtu». »*L>Muioa»S, ClnriassJ* Ntahvllle. PltUbar^
LouUvlUe and K*M«ns Olty. and wher»» it w®» visited and extrtvugantly Indoried by l-adina HUtestnen,
Judges, Ltwyern, Doouum. llstprtweuUtivet ot Natiou*!, HUto *n<l Foreign OovernmonU, and eren by the
Clergy.
raact^
ill NATURAL n»T .
WS FLAVORS I
^ I HUB II ~l I ^
u- % • •: A
"’H'iC
.V
A DESPERATE MINISTER.
MOST PERFECT MADE
Prepared with ctrict regard to Purity, Strength, and
H«!!tMulne.a. Dr. Price'. Kowdercouudn*
no Ammonia, Lime or Alum. Dr. 1 rif'" J ctB ’
VanillA, Lemon, orange, etc- llavor deliciously.
PRICE HMdtlQ POWER GO., Chicago and Su Louis.
FOR SHERIFF.
I hereby annonnoe myself a candidate for
sheriff of Bibb county, subject to the Dem
ocrats) nomination October 23.
octhwtd J. H. 8HINHOLSEB.
FOR SHERIFF.
The many friend* of Mr. B. P. OIL*
BERT, by Me o^nnent. ennonreo him m a
caodlrtato for the ofllueof ehcr.fl of Bibb
county, eubioot to thtvDemocratic nominn-
tion. oct. r iwt<l*
A It inker **«! e 1*r«iMclif>r Have A Duel
About Kent Money,
St. Lnnia Globe*D»tnitcret Hpecial.
Ai.dio\, III., September 29.—Intense cx-
citemeut was occasioned this morning at
Grayville, sixteen niilos of this place, over
a seDaational shooting affair that narrowly
escaped terminating in an awful tragedy.
The partios concerned were W. W. Gray,
who is n banker and n prominent business
man of Grayvilie, and Rev. Saywell I’er-
kios, a 'Congregational minister of the
neighborhood and ex sheriff of the county.
For months past a most bitter fend
has existed between thorn,
which probably bad its origin
in a disagreement over the rent of a farm
which lVrkins occupied as a tenant aud
controlled as administrator of the estate of
the deceased proprietor. Threats of vio
lence had been made aud etch, it is said,
went armed when .xpecting to meet. See
ing Perkins drive through town this morn
ing in a wagon going toward the farm. Gray
obtaiued his revolver, mounted * hone and
started in pursuit. When ho came np with
bis antagonist Gray soon dismounted I W« will mil before Ilia Court Hon., door In niti
behind his horse and fired three “>0.tenmcouuty Qeorjt..onBntTtu.jAyin No-
_a --i.. » vetuber, IHHfl.et 12o'clock, tn.,tb« following UotU
shot* at 1 erkiDH, none of whnb iltlia d j„ WelUc* dutrut, of »*1<1 count/, to wit:
took ( ffect. 1’erklDH then geizwl I Ive buudml end Av© aem, wor© or leer.Vuotn m
there le «o much to eee no one could do the metter juetlce la lees time." llENUY'WARD BKKOHKB.
"More cad be leerned In en hour from your tent* then In e mouth from booki."
WILLIAM CULLEN DRTANT.
"The circue presented by Mr. Uernntu really merit* lta pretentloue title, end Is of more actual value ea
an educational Inatltution for tbe youth of the country thau even he claims for it."
HENRY W. LONGFELLOW.
FIR8T AND ONLY bUOW TO VISIT THE SOUTH WITHOUT CUTTING IT8
PROGRAM VfE.
Head the voucher® from railroad meu and doubt© will be diapailed like the dew t*for© th© morning
Of Kontucky Univermlty, LEXIHuTON, Kf.
ThaChcaoeat »«*iBe«tBuaiaa»aC©lla«a ia tha world.
1. Mm v-r b :*v "t’.’L-jJ?."
Tuition. ©MUM?
vjbO?*its &
bale of Valuable Lands.
■The I'ennaylvanla Hallroad contract** to and did tranaport over It* road from New York to Waahlng*
ton fifty'-two oara of tbo Uannini and London Otmia, and baa contracted on October UAib. IHNtl, to recotvn
at Alcxaudrla, Va., ou tbe coucluaion of your Houtberu trip, the avue number of cara, vlx: Ofty-eight."
JOHN n Wilson. General Frtlghk Agent.
■ The Txike Hhoro and MlchUmn Kontbrni ReUtoad tranaported Hfty-two of your cara over lta road, d©-
dWerlng aaiue at <Jhicat«o." 4. O. JAM EH, Aaemiant General Freight Agent.
I The Mtxxourl FaclAc Railroad aaya: "Yee, air, we are to tranapsrt flftv-two of Ilaruum'i cara to Kan*
City." L. A EMERSON, General F*-loM Agent.
The Union Pacific Ha'1 road aa; »t "We are to take fifty-two of your cara out of Kama© City."
A. 8. HTEUD1NH, General Ticket Agent.
J Tbe KaneaeUlty, Opriogfleld and Memphis R-Gtroad aaya: ‘ We are U> receive from the Missouri
[Pacific, at Fort 8.n»tt, fifty-two of Rarnutii'a Cara rvtober lat. to be trana|iorled by ua to Memphis, and
then delivered to tbe Loulaville and Naahville Railroad
October 4th *’
W. L. HARO KANT, General Freight AgaoL
Wo have contracted to trxnaitort fifty-two of Rarnum a oars from
~ oulavtlla to Naah ville In June last." *
A- BROADU8, Assistant General Freight Agent,
. * Cherbourg, and
I would be no obetaole to their going JdUoUy yow * h bat I t L « J
•I siteraanls, went snnare back on his they fell back a short jthj fire
I (becAniw of return repreaenUtioni grew hotter, and presently^ A. I. liiU gw ,
Dayton, the United SuL minister.) Foned up to them again and exclaimed.
I Ui Mused to allow them to go ont. Whon “Did I not tell yon to 8°1
k*»«in France, alter the war, the Empe- And did yon over yo"! 1
I Wsent him word that "if he desired an W by, one shell from that battery ov« yon
Ukrview wi*h him he wonld bo Rl»d to der may preoently deprive tho Confederacy f
I fit it." ••Bnt." said Mr. Davis, “I wont* of the Brosidont and the Army of
I no interview wit^m** it* commander. And wit^wj
1 j jyt-l us fulse, and
I did nut desire n. —■ . - .
|‘*n« «n)t emharrawed, in i haxardona I fi more secure plac . ...... . ..
»itb detection and discontent. Bnt. Speaking ^n tone ofth e Tut
I iti k. AiA ,.-k Mr. Davis ssid: "I w»* but one or tne vast
his musket, lying rea-ly loaded jn th<;
wag m, and emptied its contents toward
Gray. The charge strack Gray's horse in
tbe neck, intlictiog a probably ‘fatal wound,
and knocking down both the animal and the
man. Having no more ammunition, Per
kins then ded under fire. Gray returned
homo and immediately he and hi* son se
cured guns with the avowed determination
of making game of tbe minister. Perkins
avoided an encounter, and later in tbe day
swore ont a warrant for Gray’s arest. Rota
men are noted for their plnck and nerve,
and it ia feared blood will bo split betore a
reconciliation ia effected.
’with th. man who had Virginia of its —d.ri” And witho^
and so I promptly replied er earnest '^SliL^oTIbsck to
-ain it.” Lika Washington, President and General Lee to move nacx xo
Maude Howe,the novelist, ia occasionally
resplendent. She adopts the classic style
for evening drees, and appears in flowing
Greek draperies, with an ivy wreath on her
beantifnl head.
FSSSWt'KiSJSW:
wonld have taken place without me
. ... -..t — .. one of
come in the
solving the great
upon thia conti-
•inion that tbe
• p -- ——■Ulriui, L-X|l';tlltlUU VW ...vre—
, ^hruary, 1861, "»m niulefUkcn solely i muw ~ " .yf _ roTe ^ u i ti .
^ the captive Union prisoners’ ftb o, Utio “ eonntw it^wM a
C0 Vi-rp i»nr>Hna.1 in tk- PnnfiuIkrilA pan- I lUUta UOO<1 tO tUB CO O* .. , _ t.
■ as vj tlt|)imj « UI'IU ji.wwn-— .
•M re," < '," D “ nwl '“ lhe ConfedM »‘ e c ‘ p ; m^ljlfiiri'ad vantage to the Vnite race, for itl
s-Si.r'j-£,A w aa.'S SjiSsnsirsst
-vsai^arsr^lig<s»*.“i.
s|»ecial order© and inatrnc- tunng and w . «i 0 ne he thooght the
and one‘giving hia itinerary, the advanWgreMcUtn^alone h^honRUX res
I ,hB nnaoldierly means and future of UtelSo „ a
I , of 1,10 raid, .nch as disguising that of “J . d , aalion M ,|«cided by
‘ r “re, in uniform, carrying anxpliea of I aaja he accop^.^ 1 , ._.. t .,h n the is very
i “tiirerm, carrying supplies or of the aword; that he i. very
ilr .? “. d ittn<«ntine to burn Rich- the arb trement or «e . DQt
«.* r- ssl-**• -r saa?jssis»*«.-!-<* tt
kkatit
tedjj; No^nlhq^Stten was teen matte. I tee people j^d (or ‘their own
Su&a 1 .?!?P^^^.c^nettrad|®k •-.‘g
vl^^TedthaiuSy are aUU 'W D 8 tee mechanical
Urn*??. *UI testify to the genuine- »»“*? n ^ueJn£I5onbe remark*!tea,
* Cot do vfintente temnd on tee body , ^.t dearth of moneyjn
wJ^Kren. (ten. Fitxhngh Lee, thTyaln-- tf re.1 eetsts In
t 0 *;!tee When l petted through teettonte *od ^ ln »
tku h. bi.1 ^ ,-n tbs DitJsiir 1,11 -'' i” " -^,prie**f landed property
«rat he had o*. n the pxp«. ““•^‘ISete.i
^ *P*n the perMn of CoL Dahlgren, very short tune tne |
Via Plvtm piAcr, sod edjoliitug Umla
Nawton Ktlieriilrf©, eatete of LjrdU
Cboatea and others, and all<Mt©<t on Uom
tulesion©v creek, with a fiu© cattle ranne.
Lauda productiv©, and the dwelling hou«© recently
put in firet-clsaa condition, aud altogether one of
tha moat dealrnbl© plnroa lu Jones connty. One-
aevantb lotaraxt In aald land I© ©old under the order
of the t'onrt of Ordinary of Houston county. Geor-
KlA, u tbe property of Ida Beck, a minor, and th©
remaining ©U-©«ventbe la sold ©a th© prope.ty of H.
V. Hardeman. Termacaab.
«. 8. WELLON8,
Guardian of Ida Beck, a minor.
R. V. HARDEMAN.
oct fi-w-IL
Heptomber 8U, Ihttti.-Wharoaa. William Jacka«>n
appliea to ma for administration ou aaut© of Malls*
Jackson, dscfaaed.
Those are to aim aud admonish all persona eon
ceruad to ah >w cause at thia c file©. If any thay have
to th© contrary, on tha flr»t Mouday In No'
next. Witness my band officially.
oct 5-ur It.
R. T. ROHM, Ordinary.
JOHNSON & LANE,
Macon, On.
HARDWARE, WAGON MATERIAL, Et<
P. T. BARNUM’S
Grcntoist S41»o\v on TCn-i-tlt
COMBINED WITH TUUt—
Oreat London. Four Hi no; Circus.
S te' U dJ? tee*"hateS
“Iweiten ,'1" * U u WB * ‘“Pretaefi the smci-4 „ » B p, c tate>r reviewing things
Mk”^- irDa“u ± . di^-. in which be bad neither
^Mksunu'y Of Col. Utelgren and other part uoMoL on]i wte|1> he h „
t k »t ts *ntere have endenvo'ed to prove *» 1 * 1 —Lcirations for btmaelf, but
’■rere forgeries, "bnt pU- or th. welfare «»d
reptes of the papers were taken and eeems deeply «o«m»w nn ,„. He said
•Stej-f. witr&trncUona tocom. | pr«p«*y of °war already ap-
»°- Imported and Domestic Guns and Pistols.
l 'J hi, government, and afao to say SJ^LT^Sd Mb the great Maples
'‘Mirationws. raised as to theTi PP .ii« ss before.
We have in stt-re a complete line of
Ammunition of all sorts -Cartridges and Sporting Hoods,
CLAY PIGEONS,
and Chamberlin cartridges loaded for shotguns. We guar-
MONSTER ROMAN HIPPODROME.
Making Nino United Shows.
CAPITAL $4,000,000. DAILY EXPENSES, $7,000.
Lergeat and Richest Amiuemsnt Enterprise on tee Earth.
Triple Circus Company in Three Rings. Huge Etevsted Stage for Olympian Garnet.
Two immense Doable Menage-rue of Wild and Trained Beast*.
Mammoth Marram of Living Human Wonders.
Grand Reman Hippodrome with Glorious Races.
Dtuirs at I *•!::«> and Gp. hi. 1‘erlorniuncea ut 1:3() and 7 p. in.
JUMBO—As large a* Life and quito as Natural,
The polished Ivory Boned, Articulated SKELETON,
Only Elephant Skeleton on Exhibition Anywhere.
GIANTS—International Congress of the Bigjt st M -n Alive.
The most Marvelous Troupe of Semi-Barbaric AKAB3
In Wonderful Performance.
ALICE—The AlUctionate and distressed companion of Jumbo,
GREAT MIRAMBA BAND.
Mjrrij.l. of IntMatljr iDlmUo* sad MarUlaa (Mtura* collMSad at an norawaa (IDWH; Train.d
Uoimo. Dufa Ha*. PoBiM. Llona ru.ro, PuitXrta. Bren, Hyreu. laopanl.. Cornu, tl< i.tiaau.
Moakara. Blnte, and ,t«d BipUJu.
100 Margins Art, and Owrioii. nrre. .100 PhaMMaal and Darias Artntn.
11 Art. aoias on at tb« mm tlm*. 1,000 X.w Fretarre and Won-tcrfut *---1-11-0.
GREAT FREE STREET PARADE!
iBff oTcramltoef rlA* o%Jrrt» xad ns© faeturs© Will lx*v© th© frnnn/* at »©vlocka m.
teveryb©6y ©botOdae© U, aatt«m jr. ar%.fhu«i a.*4fir© . ,j. >t * t©t>ay a
©xLioioca of >aim©l©a©6emhtlm© la tr©tails© 1© Ik© mi f a> i wHmt^Mr.
\r*.LN OtLS I EM M «lM a.~.ia.aU. •iti © la^gar iu » ■ *.. ! • * • *. —.vL ln
aa4 Fk^haula kan—a©4 to rhanufe A tic - aklmfiaof u.u . u. millury
■ and myrkaSa of vai© f
• uhintf to avoid th!
Jar th© Laoiar Boom, vmn
a fiifcli at th© ©aaai ififkla
antee to meet any prices on above good
EXCURSION
WiU exhibit Angnata Oe
RATfcS OX ALL RAILROADS.
ob- r 14; AilxaU October li oct 3, L, 7, in. u . ,