The Weekly news and advertiser. (Albany, Ga.) 1880-1???, November 19, 1881, Image 1

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* rr- • •*- ) 'SflfSOiv : ft • 7 - : I — — . ^^mkO^US^imLHR, |ConsolidatedSepi.^MS*. A Family and Political Journal Ok voted To the Interests of Southwest Georgia. - $2 a Year. yolume 2. ALBANY. GA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1881. Number 10. Ull TUB (in U ALWAYS THE CBIAS Etr IB TUB BBD. M. CRINE 1* AUEKT AT ALBANY VOB L. H. HART'S Buiiy anft Carriage IN • FAU3IINO. AU-Cotton Plan wf Farmlai and III* Credit Byalana—%M Am Deficiency of ICO,000,000 In Peed At BAWBON, CA. (<i.l | aolhorlwd la Ball Baffle* aad Carriacw, 'I nke Orders for all Kinds of Be- jmlrs on Fine Vehicles. Th- uuderMfaed to, la feet, the suthor'aed egnt till Hen’, Fneairy. end *111 keep Buretas on (a!* In Alban,. The Bert Buoy to well koowo to the |KO|4e of houlhveet ueonle, heetaf been OIV TRIAL IB THIS SECTION FOB A NUMBER OF YEARS. Wobavo but ONE PH IDE, and Warrant Every Vehicle which wo Mil. If you went a GOOD BUGGY Don't toll to eeU on bm before purebeeln*. M. Crine, MHO AD ST., ALBANY, OA. t'ot. avty MaoVeaob is now ont of th* Cabi net, sod Grant MJt Blaine most also RO- Attoixet-Geuxbal XacTuiYi resignation was accepted by Preaident Arthur on Monday. Taaax are forty cotton oil mi 11a is the State of Georgia, which are paying from 8 to 25 per cent net profit on the capital inreeted in them. Tut organized Democracy of Vir ginia was badly defeated in Virginia last Thursday, aad lfthnasiam sad Reaijusteriam "thus secure another four year’s lease of the government of that State. Atlanta is undergoing another spell of spasmodic morality. Whenever she wants to swell on morality she goes oat and arrests a faro bank. It la no trouble to find the material to work on -when Atlanta wants to become moral. i Hook & Moxais, a big dry goods i firm of Atlanta, has failed. Atlanta it . conspicuous for big failures, and we { are unable to tell the anxious creditors i w tote goods hare that been Hook-ed I how much Morris to come of the i same sort. Dcbimo the twelve months ended j ast June Ibe number of immigrants to | this country reached 700,000. The total number of the two years closing at that time reached 1,125,000. This was nearly 25 per cent more than the whole immigration for the precoding five years. A ban in Toledo named McPherson had been a hard drinker for many years when his wife, on her death-bed, made him solemnly pledge himself to total abstinence. After three days without alcohol he gave up tho struggle; yet he would not break his vow, snd sui cide became his desperate resort - . - 1 -urplus crop, grown upon soil and At last the pumpkin is to bo turned with labor not required for raising to some account As an article of hu- or the supplies consumed on the t. . in... failure farm. Thousands of tanners in cv- man diet it » a stnpenduona failure, j X6r|lierl . S(ate kcfp out 0 t debt whether made into pie or eaten dry , „ nd bankruptcy only by reason ol so.” A South Carolina man has dis- ; ; |,c fact that they ral-o on their ow« i lnml nearly everything they and ■ heir families eat and wear. The shipment East of cheap Vfettarn wheat slid corn, and of tat >e<eer- from Illinois, Kentucky, Texas nnd Virginia, shuts out the New Eng- Isnd farmer from the markets he had formerly profitably supplied. WHY PLANTERS ARE POOR. lagM Credit at SI Far Coat. Par Annum Advance ea Caah Prices. Atlanta rorreapoodeace New York Tea It haa been ao many times demon strated taat the Southern TYrn.er might become independently rich if bo would correct even one <ff the serious defect* of hie system of farm ing that one begin* to suspoct that i here is a mistake some where.' of writer* have proved oil that the beUar.ftliiliutitI soil, improved cnltivation, smaller farms, the raising of supplies at at home, and tha abolition of the credit system would, any one of them, put millions of dollars In the IHickets of the farmer* of the Sotrth every year, and if thi* is true, it ap parently onght to bo true that by general reform in all these matters the South could in a few years have ■ he whole world deeply in its debt, a feat-which would be contrary to all commercial experience snd prac tically impossible. This sort of rea soning docs not disprove the state' menu of the advocates of more eco nomical and better methods iu farm' ing at the Sonlh, for the lowering of the prices as production increased would put an automatic check upon the sudden growth of wealth. There is one mistake, however, which most Southern farmers make that might be corrected without bringing about any diminution of prices of ti.c sta ple crops which the South lias to sell, while it would certainly and largely increase the value of the annual product of her soil. The raising of their own corn, bacon, wheat, hay, oats, mules, and dairy products would greatly reduce their out-go without diminishing their homes. Experience has already clearly demonstrated that cotton is moat profitable when raised aa.a bay (the figures ate for South par* the North mote than one bundled and fifty million did- lars annually. At least ten million dollars most be added to thia for liacoti and liams and other provis ions and live stock, tusking one hundred and sixty million iloliara • pretty heavy charge against the cot Inn crop which in 1378 brought fl8S.S54.r.ll, ami iu *1379 two hun dred and thirty-one milliou dollar-. The Aggregate of the amount, paid by tbe Son'heru farmers for stipplii * ia really very much more than <>ne hundred and sixty million dollars, for the credit system, rumea iu to covered that he can make quinine oat of pumpkin, and is nndor the impres sion that he haa struck a bonanza. gROWjfj IRON BROWN’S IRON BITTERS are certain mire lbe all disease* requiring a complete tonic: espe cially Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Inter mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite, law* or Strength. lack of Energy, etc. Enriches the Mood, strength ens the mnscles, and gtra new life to the nerve*. Acta like a charm on the digestive organa, removing all dyspeptic symptoms, such as tasting the fbod. Belching, Boat in the Stomach, Heartbnrn, etc. The only Iron Preparation that trill not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all Drag* gists at *1.00 a bottle, BROWN CHEMICAL CO. Baltimore, Md. SMUateS trs MueieieWtrtoeaCMMe iuv«iriBiima»w **4u—* —— Tf|M ■ (WARS OF IMITATION*. fUMTU M ill \ITlLLb* rratfd to th* hlgbml bidder. » tbc Court Hcose door of Dougherty « tbe Court _ ty. oo itoionny. lb* toh of Korasbtr next, to Xtotsarts SWAMP PLACE. Tbe plaafatlea la la Ilea trace Atbsay. ler wltk all weed. Avat Et ison, the great inventor, is very deaf. 3e says ofbimaelf. ”1 have never heard the voice of my inventions (the telephone and phonograph); I am like t ie artist who draws iu tbe darkness; b it I know the principle and the re sults have got to come out right.’’ This was the sad case of Bcthoven, the great musician. Mouz Cuba cigars are exported an nually from Cuba than the islend pro- dace- tobacco; more champagne from Franco then is produced in ile vine yards for homo and foreign consump tion; more olive oil from Italy than is manufactured from olive treef. The world is being humbugged more and - more, from year to year. Sbebnan and his staff were offered a box at an Atlanta theatre Monday night Different sort of a box from the one old Tecumpa offered the people of Atlanta seventeen yean ago, when he opened bis heart and gave each beauti- ful bouse in that city a box of matches. The old Torchbeerer will get his prop er box one of these fine daya. Mb. Edwaud Richardson, of Missis sippi, is tlio largest cotton raiser in the world, the Khedive of Egypt coming second. He owns some 52,000acres of cotton land, from which he raised last year more than 12,000 bales. He gins, spins and weaves it and has oil mills as well. Mr. Richardson has amassed a fortune variously estimated at from *15,000.000 to 150,000,000. Tnx seven batteries of tho 6th Ar tillery, U, S. A., which, for the past three years, has been stationed at At lanta, left that city Monday for New York. This effectually breaks up Mc Pherson's Barracks at Atlanta. Now let Atlanta come to the front with a beautiful park on the ground that has, since the war, been glistening with Yankee bayonets, and Sooth Georgia will halo (?) her better than ever. • Gditac's trial was commenced on Monday morning. Tho lawyers ap pearing in tho case were Judge Porter, of New York, aod Walter D. Oavldge, of Washington, for tha prosecution, at d Mr. Scoville and Hugh Robinson for the defense. Robinaou moved for a continuance, when Gniteau arose, and, addressing the Court, said he was ready for trial, and desired no post ponement The motion to postpone was overruled, and the court at once proceeded with the task of getting a jury. Five jurors were sworn up to the time the Conrt adjourned for the day. The Boston Post says: ‘•Tho Atlan ta Exposition is a splendid educator, but it ie doing as much for the North ern men who attend it as the South, under whose au-piccs il ia held. No good business man can examine the many suggestive features of the Expo sition without becoming convinced that the Sooth ia entering upon a new and promising industrial era, the develop ment of which no man can now esti mate. The South is not to he limply a feeder of Northern manufacture, bat U rather to bo iu rival if tha aigna are not deceptive. Tho industrial possi bilities of that section have bean on- derrated. There are ambition aod shrewdness and thrift that are very so- tively manifested when once awaken- •J, ai d the signs of awakening seem unmiilakabia.’’ aud left him with nothing _ but wooTaiiaa few minor crops; but he lias never toanr considerable extent become a' buyer of corn, flour and beet. Ho still produce' enough of these lor his own use, besides pork, oats, barley, hay, ap ples, and maple sugar. Having so little to buy, he can still live com fortably, even when lie bae almost nothing to sell. He illustrates in a striking mauner the independence of hi* occupation. Tbe amount or hit annual money dealings with tradespeople, either in.buying or selling, ia often surprisingly small, considering tbe value of what he produces and consumes, yet i« hap py and comfortable, and perhaps •ays by something every year. The condition of the Southern planter who farina on tbe all-cotton plan is very different He sells everything he produces and haa to buy every thing he consumes. It is fortunate for hitn if the exchange balances; rarely is there any surplus left in his hands. When a hale of cotton is paid* for less than a ton of hay, or for 40 bushels of coin, it is only ne cessary to kuow that the cotton cost the farmer about $40 to understand tho impossibility of his getting ahead iu the world. So lung a* this exchange or his cotton agniust the supplies required to raise it is even and both ends are to meet, and the planter’s condition Is not so mocb worse than that a very large per centage of the rest of bis fellow-be ings, but everybody -eet at oncethat so long as he does no more than this be is guilty of a gross neglect of bis opportunities. Favored as he is by climate and soil and in the nature nf his product, which is always salablo on sight, he onght to make money. It is only by the must blamable management that be ran help it, for with a reasonable exer cise of that faculty which the Yan kee farmer calls ‘‘calculation.’’ he would become rich in spite of him self. There is uo excuse for pover ty among the farmers of tho South. Their extravagant and wasteful management ia the cause of the hard times of which they complain so much. Tho question whether supplies shall be raised or bought is un doubtedly one of prime importance to farmers throughout th* South ern States. The actual practice of nearly all the poorer farmers is to buy them. Tbe subject is being much discussed in the newspapers and among planters, and proofs of the bad policy of buying instead of raising have been so plentifully ad vanced that in many States there is a marked tendency toward an increase of home production of grain and meat. This Is notsbly so in Louisi ana, where the planters are buying less and less every year from the merchants of St. Louis and New Orleans. In Georgia and Florida not much change is yet perceptible, but in the Carolina* the question of raising supplies is on the increase. From thirty to forty per cent, ot the grain and meat eaten on Georgia plantations comes from the North and Wist. In the ten Southern States tie annual consumption of wheat is e-timaW by President Morehead, of the National Cotton Tlautera’ Association, at 68.844.924 bushels, and tho annual prmltic'iou is 26£92£80, a deficit ot 42,252244 bushels; the consumption <>f corn Is 340,063.329 bushels, and the pro duction 223,404 050, a deficit of 166,- 684,179; ot oats, 104,1 038 bushels are consumed nnd ouly 26.421,980 430 a ton, or much bight • if on credit. For these 286,698,6.3 bush els of grain and ftOlLUO tons of Southern industry*!* one"o| J tCe fac tors which go to make the cost of producing a pound of cotton eight oT bine cents, when it ought to be not more than four or five cents. The South can raise its own supplies without trenching upon' the cotton acreage. If the growing of cotton were three times as profitable aa it now is, and the- demand were al ways in excess of the supply, it is extremely probabln that the Month- e.’tt planter would find il to hi* ad vantage to raise nothing but cottou aud bay ail his supplies. A purely eenliniental preference for home productions and local independence is no sufficient reason tor planting roru and sowing wheat on laud that would yield cotton euough to buy twire as much grain as could be raised on it. But (5,000,000 bales ot cotton, which is about the present Annual yield, as quite are lunch aa ihe world need* or will buy at pres ent rates which pay the cost ol raising. An increase to 7,000,000 or 8000,000 bales would he followed by a tall in price from ten cents per pontid to five or six cents. Tbe ua tural increase in demand arising front the expansion of trade; tne opening up of uew markets and the growth of population can be and will be met by higher cnltivation, giving tw|ce aa many pounds to the acre estate at present obtained. The Stul6 fit Mi-aissl. pi alone, with im proved cultivation, coaid produce the entire cotton crop of 5,000,000 bales, now produced by tbe United Slat ex. There will Jtcvt& therefui bo infijeeMly • ofexjsndibg't cage orer all tho anil the South to the exclusion of other crops. There is no plantation too siflalVfo- hav*: its corn snd potato and no farmer tilling a hun dred acres or more ought to depeud upon remote resources of provisions which Hi “ fourth of tbs' cost on hi* o' So long us cotton coat no tv dors per pound to raise, tbe Southern farmer cannot afford to pay tbs Wextcrn farmer his price f-iri corn and wheat, and in addition to this the cost of transportation and ihe profits of half* dozen middle men, ammiutipg in,ail .to an increase of from 12 to 20' per .cent With fair cultivation the soil of tit* South will yield as many ou'rhelt to the acre as that of Illinois. Twelve bushels of wheat to the acre, fifteen of corn, and twelve or fifteen of oats are not uncommon yields in Geor gia, snd these figures might easily be raised. Those farmers who Taise °yp rapfrfrjgysVkftsfrs mosi prosperous, ana pJiuKrupccy and ruitkbav*. been most froqnenl among those farmers who foolishly believed that the all-cotton plan was the sure road to wealth. There are cotton factors and merchants In ev ery Southern city snd village who owns from five to forty plantations, snd they have bean acquired almost without exception from farmers who have been stripped of their all by exclusive cotton growing. The tennut system and the credit system are both serious obstacles to the growth of supply raising. It is next to impossible to persuade a ne gro tenaut to plant anything bnt cotton, ile thinks of only immedi ate profits, and looks upon corn and oats just as he does upon commer cial fertilizers as something which represents an outlay of which he is too abort sighted to“see the corres- jonding return. On many farms the andlora furnishes the supplies, and the tenants become so accustomed to dependingon him that they come to believe Southern soli will pro duce nothing bpt cotton. The cred it system works against supply- railing, because it is based on cot ton. No merchant will make ad vances on tbe security of a com or wheat crop, and tbe planter who is without means must perforce plant cotton and not much else in order to otain credit In some recent years the cotton crop of tbe State of Georgia has cost more to produce than il' Was sold for in the local market. A year like one of these of wheat, and the rest to cotton. This not only makes tbe tenant in dependent of the dealers in sup plies, but is far less exbansting to tho land than n constant cropping with cotton. The credit system ia an evil of perhaps greater dimensions than the all-cotton dtlurion. Aside from tha demoralizing influences which debt always and everywhere have over those who incur it, the system of farm credits in the Sooth has some mischievous tendencies popu lar to ilaelf. Its effect is to maks tbe planter the aerl of the merchant with whom be deal*. Ail Us gains are bia master’s; ho cannot sell ex cept to that master nor bny of any other, and he must always pey the price demanded of him, but is com pelled to accept what he can get for his crop. A farmer who is wit bent capital goes to his factor in the spring snd pie Iges to Mm by chat tel mortgage or otherwise the cot ton crop he intends to raise during the coming season as security for bis merchandise he will consume while fie crqu-is growing. Oil this rity.itke merchant advances money! fromVtimo to_ time to pile*. It most not bo supposed that these goods era charged to the far mer at caah price. If this were. the • oh!paratirely innocent In gener al argument cod discussion it is customary to speek of tha credit larlrb as being from 25 to 40 per .rent liiiihcr than tbe cash price. Tho difference is reslly much great er. The Georgia Department of Agriculture haa carefully investi gated thia matter, and its published statements that in North Georgia baou-srll. .<n an average, al 9 cents per pound, ra-h, aud 11 rente on time, an ailvanrr, whirb. If we take into couslderatiuu the tiiur tur which, the credit ia granted— that l* from the dale of purchase un til Ihe let of November—amounts «o an average of 4i4 per cent per tntnrtfi on the cash price. Corn •ells et 64 cents per bnshel for cash and 9U conte on time, an adrance on t-ssh price of 81 2 per cent per an- ithiu. For the whole Statu the av ••rage advance on caah prices is, for par ceur per annum, and for corn, 61 4 per cent. To buy on •■retlii in October a bnshel of corn worth 64 ceots and pay 90 cents Is oquivelant to borrowing money at 10 per cent per month, or 480 per cent per annum. There is no oceu- jiatiou in tba world, except, per haps Miccevtful bauk burglary, or diamond digging, which can be •niatte to pay a espital borrowed at stlch a ruinous rate. How can it be possible for the planters of the Sonth to raise cotton at eight or u(ne cents a pound, sell . It lor ten, ,nly tlioirexborbltaht provision bill, still hnve anything left? Asa mat ter of tact, rew of them do have njy thing left. The factor, the buy er. the owner of gins, presses mid .r.mipreaees, the shipper and the manufacturer levy their toll on tbe cotton crop aud all get rich. The pdor farmer aloue crow* poorer, md his own lolly b the cause of hia poverty. Atlanta handles every yehr 120,000 bales of cotton. On ev ery bale she levies various toll* aud commissions amounting in the ag gregate to 4158,000 or 1180.000 a yinr for the city on its whole cotton ndaiuem exdnsivo of manufactur ing ana speculating. This money goes into tho pockets of a limited uuniber of men—a few hundred at moat—in sums varyiug from one hundred and fifteen thousand dol lars or more. The two hundred thousand cotton farmers of the .State do not average more than ful ly dollars apiece as their annual sltaro ot the profits 'for the jest'* work. If they raise seven hundred and fifty thousand bales, selling for thirty-seron' million fivo hundred tlioutaud dollars, their share of the profile at tbe liberal estimate of ten cehts per pound would amount to seven million and five hundred tlionrfud dollars, or thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents each. By ‘cubing their owu supplies and buying for cash whatever was need ed to supplement home their expen ses could bo easily diminished ton degree which would rednee the oost or cotton low enough to allow a profit of six cents per pound, or one hundred and twelve dollars and fif ty-nine cent* annual profit for each planter in Georgia—a very large average net gain on a single pro duct Tho remedy for the evils which have grown op under the credit system is obviously tbe introduction and use among the farming com munity of an adequate supply of capitat. To bay for cash rsqulre* money, and money is lacking among tho .clast who now bny on credit. Northern espital is already comiug in' for farm loso's, and it is from this source that the mack needed relief must come. There has been estab lished iu Atlanta a loan business, which ha* already grown in dimen sions, aud promise* to be the fore- raqner of other similar enterprise*. Tbe firm of Notion, Barker & Co., wh i represent a rapiui ot $2,000,- 000, supplied by Northern bunkers and moueyrd men. ore Ihe pioneers in thi* part ol me South of a move ment which will ultimately destroy tbe credit system. They loan mon ey in autnt of1250 and upward* on tbe ssenrlty of farm mortgages at 7 percent. Commissions and other charges increase the cost to the tor rower of about 9 per cent Tbe loan* are for five years, and never exceed one-third or the value of the land on which the mortgage was They haveagents in every in tho State, who examine apon the security offer- • !• BMto ftova » Wrap If Tropical Leaf ol RwVa'K, and Is a Positive Brmedrta all tbo dtaettes that eun pams in UMiowor part of tin heir forTo-p'd U «r-lIoodacbM-Jiuo- det— DUs1dm«.CirAVel, MaJatIa.*nd Rlldtficul- Ui* of too Kldncft. Lira nnd Urlsarr Oipm* For Female Dtneanen*. Monthly Meowoo U hm, Md torlog Pngunc r. it baa aa equal. It isnores the omul that enb the blood.sad hence n to the heat Blood Partner. It to the eot? hnoaa nmtij ihetcur-s ft right's Disease. Fo- DUhetea, see Wsracrtelalh Diabetes Core. For Salat hr Drantoto aad Dealers It $1,9* ^er bottle. Lsrfeetbo.ll, laths aurfcct. lrj H. H. WARNLB A CO, Eoebreter. N. V. 2’vofcssfonal (Cards. G- ^WEIGHT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, A Lit AXY, OA. iri!.L Irtft praapt ’ * uroBoatrottad to Ma aue liKooth««t •sfiortlaaMrbevhen.bf ocelli “ “ CB Air bought «ad mU, or * * * uctS-dtwavlm. mT*Office over the Street Central B. B. William E. Smith, Attorney at ALBANY, OA. ( \FFICS: la frost of the Coen IS stairs,everTetofraphONoe. >hM7 BUST PBOOF SEED OATS. I OFFER tor sale ton thon-aail bushels of Uenulne Texas Bed Boat Proof Oats so- loctrd by a parts on tho e.-ot with a view to fit ila* nothin* but tbe sen nine article. Thor a nr tho earns quality that I so d eo maav of last season, which (are eoch genera! rattoiac- tl'-n; In feet 1 hare not heart of a single In- u *nce la whi.-fe they felled ftregaJtar uttofac- tlon. If reports from the eon crops oat West are to be credited, the price of oor i willr : Ie much higher next ee.ton than It til I the past, hra-e tha necessity of sowing mom onto aad earlier than last season, la order to secure a at rod before'he freetes come on then. I am prepared lo All orders for • arly sowing. The deman i for Seed Oats will be unprecedented. Ir heavy this season, aad I hare advices from T-xaa of a marked advance in tba price of the r, aad I th nk it advisable for those Bred of seed Oats to teenre the t. at once. 1 will excharge Oats for cot'oa Seed, or will bay all tha Cotton read I can act, at the highest market price, for themonr^. Albany, ae„ August mib/jSSI. wtf. rO‘•fob'llV m.js-ogfinf wnoH ooxo.i ot eeop ‘toons petuu •sssso ft -veoariH fXFna •i*et9 1* toe eprm puvq poeSv joj iO'OM ■tptm-pann oearaeg •sixsiMinba OKU nia oxiaiu xi uaivxa Tvaxxao ‘saippus ‘saiPHff SS2HHYH 30VW-QNVH 0009 -ISO OX' they advertise that they wish i 150.000 * county and report and the. to place $50,000 in every county in Georgia. Nino per cent would seem a very high rate to a Northern farmer, bnt is a mere trifle compar ed with what tho farmers of the South have boon paying under the With o credit system. dent ordinary pru- ment a farmer borrow' msnagemt ing of this firm onght to be able to the interest promptly and the 2rK&&ssss& eii~ ik. ,«*WS •ris's.(?»rl>af£i;‘Sk3i?i£KS!£ and fifty-acre holding* compel their hnraftsr^Thnasit tenants to plant a certain number maMOt COrn ’ ‘ ° erUi ° " U " ber mn •*£££& 5?ri£ in th* market price, while th* slave of the credit system mutt sell at the date agreed npon regardless or price. . As soon ss Northern capi talists, satisfy themselves that mon ey can be safely loaned here on a farm security at rates wMch it is Impotiiblt to get in the North, thore will naturally be a flow of capital in this direction and this will bo an inimitable blessing to the8ooth. Of coarse an tinincninhered farm is al- preferable—other things together . ^jPJB J _ being eqoiMo one with a moft- gage on it, hot there can hardly be two Opinions as to the advisability of a cotton planter’s borrowing money at 9 par cent on the security of hi* land rather than at 61 per cent on a chattel mortgage of his crop. Tbxkx is a spee>al statute which says: “The term of the Postmaster- General shall be for and daring the term of the President by whom he is appointed, and for one month thereafter.’* This statute does not apply to tho terms of the other Cab inet officers, which last until they removed. _ has' been talking of hi* for the Jews” and his “respect for the laws protect- tem.’T Recent events in Bis k's bailiwick hero shown that iendship” is but an empty namo and that this ‘‘proUction” does sat protsoL (ll 93 SEE WHAT HUP CAN AND WILL DO! Wammoeo. Msramhw I. ISM. Mr. J. A. FclhttL Wayasaharo : ftoarStr— Idaatrata expma, tirouth yam to ttsareaitotstawr thanks tor tha hanadto 1 hats Ssriradfroa BILL'S HEPATIC PANACEA 1 hm Mttotd. m joa hw*. for to put Bln* jnntfoaOTTpepaUtadllnr trocMev, tad to nckufixtnuiiiotardMtbvoaUbito te- utotof nnH. I bm ben mdag IL IL P. tor •U VMkt. mod (run tbo tta • I eoaoncN taklac tt I looad mjKlf rtlietid, tad 1 would not bow ho wlihootltforany coasidentloo. A. E. MOBLEY. ffOB BALE BY T A CO. e&AEi£figSlk1SSZ2S22 ftareato tha A«4smf tt Mr. SwUkia C. that. HON. FERNANDO WOOD. E C., SMS (IMS,: T r(asrfally coaasat to tba aas al rawmr If ■ My bora will r) mftor tti«lr ■(IibnIwM SIIOBTLIDGK, ally ci rad note, ■ ffcilaastrbla. o.A. VASOX. A.H.AUMIEXD FA SON at ALtfBIEND Attorneys at Law, ALBANY, GA. Actlro and prompt attention ft row to oot- u-ctiuc* <tml Ml general boolaeaa. Practice u all tho court*. <>flieo ora South* a Txpr— office, oopo* ♦It* Court IIoom. luMtf v. T. JOXE8, JESSE W. WAL‘ J0NE8 ft WALTERS, Attorneys at Law, ALBANY, OA. Ofle* ora CMtn* Ballrotd Book, fcslft-ly TESTIMONY OF BBtCCISTS. Vfitmbm nlllBf •‘SwlXf* SyphUUie Sc” tor rant, mod ncud it mprttarU. anythlas known tor dlMMco ltferecoamecdad to cure. •ajebemfetwbo will find, on Regular Star rr- Ui.illr, and small ie quantity, frit e TM^atnFT sractFic ooxFArr.tFrejai. eSyofirooB*X. * - James Callaway. Attorney at Law CAMILLA, GA. f«b2£ W. A. FORT, fasenenro P87SKUV ud SU&fiEOS, ALAPAHA, OA.. ((SENDERS hb pmSmtanil Barrie ss t* tha (as X pta of Barren aad adjaialas caadhx par. •toalartr along tballneof tha B A a BaUraad. Katas on ham a hall Ha. or Fawny aad IMaat Mtdjdeas. Phyaidaas’ prescriptions promjSly Delta & Dsta, BEXTI8T8, Albany, O' Georgia. FK1CE—OVER POSr OFFICE, WA8HIHG 1 TON STREET. Trowbridge & Hollinshed DENTISTS, •VAYCROS3, .... GEORGIA. Tfsth extracted without pals. AB work smutted. Terms moderate. Will so aay* here on B. A A. and S. F. A W. Ballroada apis-11m vV.A. STROTHER, II.D. ALBANY, GEORGIA. Ice over Gilbert's Drug Store 42 order* left to th* Drag Stor* will rotoCr* »r>mpt anntloa. Ju7«ly Or. E. W. AliFRIENDs aAESFECTFULLY tondow hto MTfflto*. fa th* 1% »*doq* btooch— ol hto iriOtow, to to iUsaai Vlbxny and aarroaDdlngcoantxj. Of* icooppotlto rtMrl Hotb*. oo.Plattoroto. HOTELS. L’HE JOHNSON HOUSE, HUTHVHXM. OA. is the place to stop and gets GOOD SQUARE MEAL. THE ALBANY HOUSE I Merrick Barnes,Proprietor Albany, Georgia. TShis Hooae ia wall fonstahad and in er- L cry way prepared for the aecommo- iation of the traveling pnblic. Entire eat- .faction xnaxanteed. Tbs table is sop- plied with th* beat tha country affords, tnd tha aerranti are unsurpassed in po- iteneas and -**—»*— to the wants of tnosta. Omnibuses convey pssMngam to md from tho different railroads prompt- f, free of charge. Charges to soft tho men. aep29tf $11 DOORS! BLIMDSI Central & Southwestern E E Ol SavaxasH, G*., March 5,1881. , aad after SURDAT, March Sth, fsui — ' mi*c*r train* oa Us* CmusI dad ft Esllmddsaad broach** will raa ddfl us* towi. hosL Mu a a Lv« ifftpm Ar~ 4:45 p B kr Mi Ato a m Ar«._AU*nid..^...^e^Ar. l«J0p m Z2SOB Av Coluabo* Ar. L*40pm MUda Lt. Jttfpa Ar 5-4* pm Ar. *d>am Ar. _ d u Ar Color ..Mbcop,. -F- AaAa _raapw -Sr. 7:13 a n ' At. 7d0aw ;7 JU d m Ua. MS p a Ar MMM .BdTddddh«. iMpm m .. 1 Ar isiidi A4 •tod 7:iftd Ar- i Ar , iltodr-^.. Ar bf lltodpoTitl* . . Ar bil AV—i tmmg b Mdcon. Alta uwdj oa Tto p a tsdla. I KlMpIng Uua *a all Night 7 feYoaaoh dad Aog—ta BdAUanl . MtaBtrort Tdltoy for Perry dolly (dxnp* ttoaddjx cad aft Oftbbwt tor fhr Qtoam dmfy. «mc*p> Q«ddy4. _ wsss; i sept bund*?) from Albany io Arllug ly (except Monday) from Arlington .. At Odvaondh with H*T*nuau, Florida aad Wmltta Hallway, to mtgtnui w.tii all liaeaio ->, Auaaia wl*h Air Ua* aad toaU potato E—th,ftha aad ArUugttp^SriS. Gan can bo aeuid to agi—• atfwfts WILLIAM BOtfEBfl, (toa. BopftwU JL E, Haraaaah W P HHFTTVAM ** BOptaBaWeAe'ErallMMI Ol Burmimun's Oirioi, •' * SATAMMAM, UA n NOV. M*SL| AND AFTEB SUNDAY, Nor. 6, ISO, follows: FAST MAIL. A4TI Saraaaad at Lear* Joaap •* Leave Wayentd M Anita at Callahan 44 Arrive at Jacksonville M Leave Jacksonville « Leave Callahan M Arris* to Waycroaa ** Arilve to J«r 44 Arriv* at tiavaanah 44 tJftJ _ 434? CUSP TtoF 9:01A VASA 11: T A Faaaanseta trow aaraasah (or Bniarwlch ikathtstnla.arriTtwgatBraaawiek at (ua r. M. Psssenfcrs leava Brunswick at 10:17 A. M. arrivins at Savaaash 1:40 r. M. PuMsswataavtssMareo altsi * .M.((talty - iw6r* iroa sxonaa TdSFM. bbs-i Waycroaa, vllie. .• j JACKSONVILLE EXPBEB8. Leave Savannah daily at 11:00 P BS tap .IMA M l_ arcroaa “ .4X1A ■ Arriv* at Callahan « S37AM Arrive a:Jacksonville “ MAII Arrive at Lire Oak dally (as- iSaSBfSL drily except LcareJackaoavtlle S t Lean CaUahan “ Leave Watcroaa “ Arrive at Jaeap “ Arrive at Savannah “ ££S&5!K£i?m and JackaoaviUa aad Macon aad ...U*»AM mi (...SMSFM. .. .11:40 P M ...IMAM. I :*1 r ' fob sale bt GEO. S. GREENWOOD. FASHIONABLE TAILOR, TTST RECEIVED, A LABOX LOT OF SA! “ FUS at tha Latest styles! Fill AND WINTER SUITS! SHIRT CUTTING Good Work! Perfect Fit and Reasonable Prices Guaranteed I INDSTINCT PRINT