Newspaper Page Text
tluonicle & Sentinel.
>Bwwm niiiin 19.
Front ihr Aru Or leant Sunday TYraa.
The Biblical Texts.
To T ItE KF.V. on. LEWIS, CALVARY CHURCH. \
Clint to the Mighty One, Pa. Ixxxix, 19.
Cling in thy grief; lleb. xii, 11.
Clii g the Holy One, lleb. i, 12.
lie gives relict'; Ps. cxvi, 9.
Cling to the Gracious One, Ps. cxvi, 5.
< ling in thv pain ; Pk. Iv, 4.
Cli ■' to tin- Faithful One, 1 Then*, v, 24.
I <• will nustuin; Pa. xxviii, 8.
Cling to the Living One, iieb. vii. 25.
t ling in thv woe; Pa. lxxxvi. 7.
Cling to the Loving One, 1 John iv, 16.
9 hrough all below-; Rom. viii, 28, 3
Cling to the Pardon’g One, is. iv, 7.
liespeaketh peace; John xiv, 27.
Cling to the Healing One. Kxod. xv, 26.
Anguish shall eeaae; Pa. cxlvli, 3.
Cling to tin Bleeding One, 1 John t, 7.
• ling to His side; John xx, 27.
Cling to the Risen One, iioin. vi, 9.
In Him abide; John xv, 4.
Cling to the ( oining One, Rev. xxii, 20.
Hope shall arise; Titus ii, 13.
Cling to the Reigning One, Pa. xcxi, 1.
Joy lights thine eyea. Pa. xvi, 11.
The South-Laud.
MV OCTAVIUS.
Tlie west wind whistles keen and cold,
The stars are hid from sight;
The chilling rain in torrents fall,
Hark, dreary is the night.
J sit all alone by mv chamber fire,
And gaze in its ruddy blaze,
While crowds of forgotten scenes arise,
The memories of former days.
And e'en while I sit and steadfastly gaze,
Mv »-pir:i i- cariicd away to dream-land,
Sweet visions before me ari-o
I ilr-am of a country once happy and free,
A land gemmed o’er with sweet b were:
With its vine covered bids u, and blossom
ing da cs,
A land ol c.e.tr riils and bright flowers.
Lear L nd of the South, sweet clime of my
Wi iT" nature delights to unfold
Ail her be tuti iu ■ lei h . jud-enr
laios t nit V I 1 the li.ue sky
Are Iriu. ed wi ii purpl and gold.
jjrighf Land <>f enchantment, where every
'l’i p n usc of the roses bright hue—
Wi cre Hie flow.os that iiiUsti in the clear 1
in riling sight
Are Spangled ad over with dew; —
Where the hank* of the streams that flow
through im heart.
And arc covered w ith verdure so green.
Arc d"«*ed with a crown of primroses and
lilies
The fairest that ever was seen; —
Where the men were all brave —the women
all fair—
Where virtue and peace loved to dwell ;
Where now s thy beauty—where now is
tliy glory ?
Alas! have they withered and fell?
No! no! cherished land, though cruel foes
have nut spared thee,
And thy beauty has perished and fled ;
Still thv g ory will shine through the mist
of long ages,
Wherever thy history is read.
The bones of thy dead that aro all scattered
over
The country they all died to save,
Jf gathered together would reach to the
skies
And lorm a fit tomb for the bravo.
And as long as the i leavens above us shall
arch,
As long as the world shall know glory.
The fame of the South shall live through
it all
And be treasured in song and story.
From the Houston Daily Transcript.
The Mongrel Brotherhood.
MY lIIXIU.S.
My muse lias fled—l’m left to dream
Without her aid, because the theme
I fain would sing suits not her ken ;
For it combines both dogs and men.
One at a time she oft hath stood,
Hut ne’er the mongrel brotherhood,
Os little men and whining pup ;
Hence, without her, 1 must show them up,
As best I can when they agree,
And surely there is harmony
iietwoen them, which might woll invoke
A poet’s lay and painter’s stroke.
In (Ansar, of the martial art,
The mustilf finds his counterpart;
This growls at everything ho sees,
And that would die before he’d please;
That, what ho needs not, takes away,
'i bis, though he eats not, keeps the hay—
All times the (log his vigil keeps;
lint hero they diller—Oiesar sleeps—
Thu dog insults w hat he can iitid—
The man’s an insult to his kind.
Next to the spaniel ploughs my pen,
Whose nature mirrors certain moil—
The fawning race that ever licks
The foot that deals them hardest kicks,
Resemble men who hang around
Theskb ts ol pow’r, and ihough'it frowned
Nay, loathed, contemned, they still will
slick,
And love it better for each kick.
Wealth has its human spaniels too,
Who, ever to their nature true,
,Stand up to do great Dives’ best,.
And think it good to be oppressed,
li the hand that wields the galling lash
Is li liv ii with lucre's glittering trash.
Oi all the outline creatures born
Tin elass deserves the greatust scorn J
They’ll gladly feed a pampered king
And heedless pas tile starveling ;
Tin v see upon the vicious great
Itrigln virtues, and loudly of them prate.
Where we Jlli in tinsel is arrayed,
\\ heir pompous lank and pou r parade,
Where la-hion plumes her gaudy wing,
Alnl 111 Js lo glided ii.oes cling.
'flier , tin re, Hie lioot-liek e'eryou’ll And—
’l In- spaniel, less a tail henilKi.
At xt runic- I lie pel of ladies lair,
I lie lap dog. wild Ins siik hair;
T. r hu ’rue he of e\ < i y la-',
Though noted Lss tor brains than brass—
A 1\ | e ol I lie biped poodle he,
The pi mimed knight ol tlallery ;
\\ no, like a tortoise on Ins track,
Conveys bin all Upon Ills back ;
Disgusting to tlie good and wise,
\\ bom ne soon learns to W ell despise,
IL oause,'forsooth, they earn ot tiear
No omen good i-ias. and bruins in.t there.
Hul l'n soreea e mv eaume song
l'\u now o and -li aYo" comes along.
And pleads, its wrong Us to degrade,
Kind sir, with sued a vile parade.”
Rt slI, IVx s. Jail 12th, INiS.
The Pali-Har.
Comrade mine, as wo row along
11 y the t're>li green banks where the wil
lows grow,
Let the pulsu of our stroke bo true itml
strong
Brow the bent blades flicking tound fro.
Sharp the prow as it outs away
In a weitge-liko lurrow the level stream.
And the w t inkles run from the dropping
spray,
As our bright spruce pinions dart and
gleam.
Bubbles swell from the shining track
Os our keel and the oar strokes, flaring
And the wakeof foam sweeps merrily back
With it s tiny eddies on either side.
“Now, avast!” and we lightly float
Into shadow and coolness, where the
trees
Are a mighty arbor above our head :
And tbo oars bang gently and drift at
ease.
Then once more through the open strait
Os the lresh green banks where the wil
lows grow,
On the homeward stretch, with a glance
elate
At the bent blades llicking to and fro.
Comrade mine of the old pair-oar,
Are there days of a better joy than this,
W hen wo slip so swiftly beside the shore
Witli our stroke as true as our friend
ship is ?
Never long will the daylight last
Or the Sp. mg of the happy year endure—
Let us catch the pleasures' which liurrv
past
\\ bile our arms are strong and our
stroke is sure. [A’ounrf Tabic.
Boss's Dogs.
Did you ever hear of Jehosaphat Boggs,
A dealer ami raiser ol' al! sorts of dogs?
“No?” Then I'll endeavor in doggerel
verse.
To just the main points of the story
re hearse:
Boggs had a good wife, the joy of his life,
There was nothing between them inclining
to strife,
Except her dear J.’s dogmatic employ
ment,
And that, sue averred, did mar her enjoy -
meut.
She often had begged him to sell otf his
dogs.
And instead to raise turkeys, spring
chickens, or hogs.
Site made him half promise at no distant
day
lie would sell the whole lot, not excepting
old tray;
And, as good luck would have it, but few
days intervened
When, excepting old Tray's, every kennel
was cleaned.
Ah, how his dear Dolly, with a voice glad
and jolly.
Did solt -soap her dear for quilting his
folly.
“And now. my dear J., please don't say '
me nay.
But the first opportunity sell also old
Tray.”
“I will, my dear vrow, and I solemnly
vow,
I'll give you the money to buy a good
cow.”
And thus the case rested, till one summer
night.
Her dear ,1 came home with a heart happy
and tight,
Old Tray was not with him. “Ah, ha, my
good wi’e.
This « dt be tar the happiest duv of your
life”
“Oh, bless you, dear J.,how much did you
say,
Picas t'-il me at once what you got for old
Tray?”
“I got forty dollars; “you did?” quoth his
soouse,
“Why that is a certainty will buy me two
‘cows;
I’ll make butter and cheese "—“h Id on, if
you piease”
Says J . in a tone sounding much like a
tease;
“It's just as I told you, the price is all
right.
And the man is to p.iv me next Saturday
night;
But instead of the dollars in X’s and V’s,
lie gives nil' li- poppies at fen dollars
a piece."
Congressional.
HOUSE.
Washington, February 10, p. m.—
Under the regular call, the following bills
were introduced : Instructing the Recon
struction Committee to report what further
legislation way be necessary to enable the
late rebel States to resume their placesin
the Union; continuing Freed wen's Bureau
in Tennessee ; to allow respondents in U.
S. Courts to testify in their own behalf in
States where such testimony is permitted
io local courts.
A large number of private hills were in
troduced.
The Judiciary Committee was directed
to inquire into the expediency of amending
the Bankrupt Law so as to require a ma
jority of creditors to compel involuntary
bankruptcy.
The resolution that the Seat of Govern
ment should lie removed to the Mississippi
Valley was disagreed to by a strictly sec
tional vote —77 to 97.
The drawing for -eats created some con
fusion and much merriment.
A long (ti-ru-sion occurred regarding
the bridging of the Mississippi at Hock
1-land.
The hill authorizing bridging at the joint
expense of Government and Railroad Com
pany, i M ed.
lie hut ion calling on Grant fir a copy of
the (’resident s last letter, and relerring
the Judiciary < uumittee’s impeachment
evidcue: to thcllccoustiueiioii Committee,
with privilege to report at any time,
passed.
House went into Committee of the
Whole. Ti. discussion sh .wed increasing
pun; gin bitterness. Adjourned.
SENATE.
A’tf-r a number of private resolutions,
bids ad t in : oil.-, reconstruction was
re-uimd. o ••■( which it went into executive
se.*sou and a j turned.
HOUSE. *
Washington, February 11, p. m. —
Al’tei - on. personal exp'.inations the
ri 11 : -o: Aim ricaus abroad was resum
ed and wiidlj discussed.
'J . .. i’l -i lent’. response to Grant with
:s ti it ■. 11 ii i 1 in ; and icuiiients was read, and
i referred to’the Commute on correspond-
Ihd President is called on for Grant’s
response.
liiu-ewent into Committee on appro :
priatiuis. An amendment striking out
approp.-iiti ii tor. Assistant Secretary,
i pardon t ink and three fourth class clerks
employ 1 by the President, was adopted
I The President sent Grant’s response to
the House, which was referred to the
■ Committee on Reconstruction. Adjourn
ed.
SENATE.
Petitions were read from the Convention
of Georgia for a loan of thirty millions
dollars to planters, aid from Mississippi
for relief to the destitute.
Wilson presented petitions from sever
al citizens asking relief from political disa
bilities
Reconstruction was resumed and discussed
to Executive session. Adjourned.
HOUSE.
Washington, February 12, p. in. —
After unimportant business tlie question
of the rights of American citizens abroad
was resumed. Banks refusing all amend
ments and substitutes moved the previous
question, winch, not being seconded, sev
eral sub.-titutus and amendments were
rushed iu and the bill postponed.
The Appropriation Bill was resumed
and the House adjourned.
SENATE.
Sherman introduced a hill declaring
Alabama restored to her right to repre
sentation, which was referred to the Ju
diciary Committee.
The Senate discussed the refusal of rail
roads coming into the District giving equal
rights to negroes iu the cars.
Without further business the Senate
went into Executive session and adjourned.
Phillips’ Provision Exchange.
Cincinnati, February 7tb, 1868.
Editors Chronicle «fc .Sentinel:
The market for Provisions during the
past week hits gradually improved, not
only at this point, but at all others, ami a
growing conlid nee on the part of holders
lias done much to check trade on orders at
limited prices, though there lias been a
gradual advance, and the full prices de
manded have had to be paid, or no trade.
That the crop of hogs in pounds will be
lighter than last year, there can be net
doubt,and the foreign and homeoonsunip
tivu demand in the small way has been
large in the aggregate, yet the footing of
the packing and the stock on hand leaves
a large portion of tlie Fork interest uncer
tain as t<A tlie ultimate results of profits at
the prices paid for Hogs, and until the
linul statement of the total packing is fur
nished, much doubt will-exist as to the
future of the trade.
i lutis.— All ot our slaughtering concerts
nm \ be considered as closed and the season
fully over, and shortly the count of the
packing will lie made up. The receipts
T, ii- the season, according to tlie books of
the (Ham her of Commerce, amount to
36X42.1. The result may vary when pack
ers'* reiurnsare received.
Ai ess Fork.- Tliero 4iaa been no change
iu jirice (lining the week. Old is in de
mand at 821 and 50c. . more asked. New
( ity (an L>e sold lor 622— generally hold,
higher; Country 2ii;'(isoe. loss.
Humps si.>6' 10 uOas in quality.
Lakh -Owing lo the advance in till rope
mi tin advance in go and, lias improved m
demand, ami best city tit tne close is held
,i 14c. with buyer* io Its*, and ohoi-e
o mi v .ii country points, where freig.il-'
ai ■ ihGh :i.(T -than Imm beie, could tie
stud hi 10,. ; pi imo steam 13c, bead and
giu * caret* (J !’-,'(•.
cm. V'l-s—lit mat Wi. O;o for brown. 9J(®
idle Ibr \el low, and 10 <•; 11 ie lor white.
.ui.u M >■: v’l’s -quit- bm steady at BJ@
1(U. j l(u Ic, Uiom S’' -n ls, Rib Sides,
tv’.r Kill and Clear Smc~, or fe more
packed. Bulk Hams sen ret* at 12c for de
s ram ■ cuts, sweet pickled Hums at 13c
’"iV'u-Vin —fnrdom mil a’ 92(0 115, 12@12}c,
[Hi,-,,,,, iOi-siioHldeis. Hides, Clear Riband
Cicr -sides, .-sugar Cured Hums 15<g,Uio
cam used ami packed.
Pi.ati: Bi'.rr—scarce at 620 50@21 SO.
Rki;i-' . i AMs—j:!o per barrel.
Dhikd Hki f—l7@l7Jc uueanvased and
caucused and packed.
Lx ports—'l,9*o barrels and 746 kegs
lard, d-d liiul*, 062 tieiees and 1,007 boxes
buiK and itueon, 2,14' barrels pork, and
3.'1,6i'0 Ids loose meat. Imports 1,531 bar.
rels ami 671 kegs lard, S3 tierces bulk and
bacon. 409 barrels pork and 300,552 lbs
loose meats.
Freights—unchanged.
. Very respectfully,
Ckokile AY. Phillips, Jk.,
Provision and Produce Broker.
In Mf.mouiam. —Toe Montgomery Mail
offers tlie Inflowing inscription to be print
ed on the head-board of the grave of dead
Radicalism iu Alabama, with the hope
that it may do some good :
IN .MEMORY’ OF
RADICALISM IN ALABAMA,
Who dial in attempting to give birth to a
Hours CONSTITUTION,
After a Painful ii!ne*s office Days.
She leaves a family of carpet-baggers and
scalawags to mourn her loss.
“As Good Asa Nigger.”— By hook
or by crook, the editor of the Cleveland
(East Tennessee) Banner iuis obtained a
“tifieate to vote,” over which he crows in
the fallowing rampageous style :
Ai i. SirrriN.—"Rally round the flag
boys' —sound the fcugyg—beat the tin
pan —proclaim it from the house tops and
publish it through all the streets of “As
kalon,” that -we are as good as a nigger,
and want every bo. : y to know it. Aes sirs,
we have a 'titicate to worn,'—right bran
new at that, anil the way wo are going to
nop it against Radicalism, wiii be some.
We've I>«en occupying a “back seat,”
in tbeeoid, until we’ve got d—d mad, aud
we arc now hurting badly tor an election
to come ah insr so we can enjoy our "iude
pet.ey. ' “Who’s afraid?” Clear the
tnu h", here wo have eome with our ‘tifieate
and the single barrel.
XiUUMPU OF I'liE TeLEGRATU—I’rOM
California to Ireland and Back in
Two Minutes. —The New York Journal
of the Ttk.raph, of February Ist, says :
At an early hour this morning the wires
of the Western Union Telegraph Corn- 1
pany from can Francisco to Piaister Cove, ,
Cape Breton, and the wires of the New
York, Newfoundland and London Tele
graph Comp>any from Piaister Cove to
Hsait's Content, were connected, and a
brisk conversation commenced between
these two continental extremes. Compli
ments were then passed between San
Francisco aud Yalentia, Ireland, when
the latter anuoun and that a message was
just theu being rev ived from London di
rect. This was said at T.* A. M., \a- .
ieutia time. February Ist. At 7 JJ A. 31.,
Yaientia time, the London message was
started from Yaientia for San Francisco ;
pkssed through New York at 2 3b A. M.,
New York time ; received in San
Francisco at 11-1 P. M . San Francisco
time, January 31, and was at once ac
knowledge!—the whole proeess occupying
two minutes actual time, and the dts
tam e traversed about fourteen tbousa; and
miles! ...
Immediately utter the transmission of
the u ■ "age referred to. the operator at
can F i’cisco sent an eighty-word aie»-
>;,re to Hear, > Com . - litree minutes,
which the operator at If it’s Content re
peated buck in two inf ites and fifty
scenes. Distance about five thousand
miles.
Forney thinks that he is the instrument
with which the Radical party does his
work. Then the party, as the beaver is
said to do, works with .its tad.— Louisville
i Journal.
Forty-First Day'* Proceedings of the
Georgia I'nconstltntlonal Convention.
CONDENSED FROM THE ATLANTA DAILY
INTELLIGENCER.
Monday, Fetraary 10th, 1868.
The Convention opened with prayer
Parrott in the Chair.
The Journal was read.
The following communication from the
Postoffice Department was read :
PosTomcE Department, )
Contract Office, r
Washington, February 8, 186s. )
Sir: —A resolution of the Georgia Con
vention, recommending the re establish
ment of the tri-wcekly mail service between
Gainsville and Annerson Court House, S.
C., by way of Homer, Carnesville and
Hartwell, Ga., has been received at this
office.
In reply, I have the honor to inform yon
that Homer, a very small village, is now
supplied with mails on route No. 6032,
Harmony to Homer. Carnesville is on
route No. 6023, ElbertoD, Carnesville. and
also on routes Nos. 6060, Danieisville to
Carnesville, on 6031, Carnesville to Har
mony Grove. Hartwell is supplied twice
a week on route No. 6028, from Athens,
Ga., to Anderson Court House, 8. C.
This latter route ends at Anderson Court
House, one of the proposed termini of the
route recommended by tbe Convention,
and runs via Hartwell to Athens, where it
connects with a railroad, instead of turning
northeast to Gainsville, away from all
railroad connections, as asked in the peti
tion.
Such being the state of the cas?, the
Department necessarily declines increasing
the already heavy expense of the postal
service in Georgia by opening any addi
tional routes in the section indicated.
Very respectfully, Ac ,
' George w. McLeij.an.
Second Ass’r P. M. Gen.
T R Parrott, Esq,, President Georgia
Convention, Atlanta, Ga.
PER DiE.W OF MEMBERS.
P Martin moved a suspension of the
rules for the purpose of taking up the fol
lowing resolution :
On motion the ayes and nays were called,
when they stood —ayes 82, nays 29.
Resolution by P.Martin :
Resolved , That the per diem of the
mein hereof this Conven ion, from and af
ter the tw ntieth day of February, ius’ant,
shall be five dollars only.
The resolution was taken up.
N L Trammell moved, as an amenl
.mout, that “be live dollars” be stricken
out, and “cease” inserted.
R H Whiteley was very indignant that
such a proposition should be made. It was
an indirect insult to the sovereign people
of Georgia, and he could not permit such
art insult to he offered to that body.
G W Ashburn was never so mad in his
life. His number one was affected, and
that was the vital point. It wasn’t money
that he wanted at all, at all. Oh !no; he
wanted a Constitution, and he was willing
to stay there until they hadgot a good one.
Why, it was nonesense to suppose that
the people of Georgia would hesitate to
pay such a trifling sum for a Constitution
framed by him and his compeers—a Con
stitution that would be worthy of the
State, and, iu fact, worthy of such men.
A Constitution, “ah ! there’s the rub”—
to last forever, and to give, in all coming
time, honor and glory to its framers.
A W Holcombe proceeded to investi
gate the case, and the action of the Con
vention since its commencement. He
thought that the per diem was a burthen
on the already impoverished people of
Georgia, and he did not believe that mem
bers could not have lived as well on three
dollars as nine dollars a day. They could
get as good board for a dollar and a half a
day as most, of them were accustomed to
getting at home—just as good as he had—
and he thought he lived as well as any of
them—and then they would have a dollar
and a half a dey to buy liquor and tobacco.
The remarks of the speaker didn’t suit,
and J E Bryant jumped up to a point of
order.
Mr Holcombe said that a man was al
ways out of order wbeu he said anything
that did not please the party on the other
side of the house.
Bryant had no objection to a discussion
of any subject before the house.
Mr Holcombe—Your answer is satisfac
tory as you always confine yourself to the
business before the Convention yourself.
(Laughter.)
R II Whiteley moved to lay the matter
on the table.
This was a mere repetition of the old
dodge to which White’ey and his compeers
always resort, knowing that they have the
power to stifle the explanation which some
delegates attempt at times.
The ayes and nays were taken, and stood
ayes 67, nays 51. Carried.
We would here suggest lo the members
of the Convention that they all go home
and leave the framing of a Constitution,
and everything' they nepd, to Bryant,
Whiteley, and a few others. This Would
save a great deal of expense to the
people, and a groat deal ol trouble to
themselves, and it would amount to the
same thing because they, and they only,
make the laws for that body.
W C Supple offered the following reso
lution :
Resolved. That it is the duty of this
Convention to inquire'how many of the
members are absent, and how long.
The rules were suspended and the reso
lution taken up.
R H Whiteley moved to amend to the
following effect: “That a committee of
five be appointed to investigate into and
report upon the number of delegates ab
sent without leave, the period of their ab
sericq, and the eduse thereof.”
The amendment was accepted and the
resolution adopted.
FRANCHISE.
,1 D Waddell ruse to move a rc-consid
erution of the second section adopted ou
Saturday, and proceeded to make an ex
tended speech, which Coster (colored) in
terrupted the speaker to ask who invented
the “problem of Euclid "
Mr. Waddell said if he understood the
question intended to be a ked, lie would
answer, Pythagoras, who had straight
hair, prominent nose, thin lips—a Grecian
face.
Mr. Turner (colored) asked who carried
letters into Greece ?
Mr. Waddell answered, Cadmus, a
whiter man than you are.
Mr. Bradley (colored) inquired if St.
Luke was not black ?
Mr. Waddell said that Luke was a
Jewish doctor ; he had never seen a black
Jew, but could not say whether Luke was
black or not ? He asked Bradley if he
(Bradley) knew ?
Mr. Bradley—Yes.
The extreme horseness of Mr. Waddell
prevented him from proceeding further,
and he resumed his seat, stating that he
intended to resume his remarks at another
time.
A T Akerman spoke in favor of negro
suti’iage, and commented on the remarks
of the last speaker with much iorce. He
dr,.-w many a laugh from the “other side”
of the bouse. Africa was all in smiles,
and we don’t see why he would not make
a good Governor for them.
A W Holcombe did not desire to argue
what should be the status of the colored
people in the future with any view to be
ing supported by the majority of the house.
He expressed his desire to give to the
colored man every right and every protec
tion to which ha was by law entitled, but
he did not think that the race had .yet
arrived at that state of education or civili
zation which entitled it to make laws for
the people of Georgia- He believed that
a brand of inferiority bad been set upon
them by Divine Providence, and he did
not think it in the power of law or of man
to remove that brand. Tip had been the
iriend of the colored race. He was born
amongst them, and was nursed by a colored
woman, and it was not natural to suppose
that he should be their natural enemy.
He had had them living near him since
thpir emancipation, and bad given them
homes, and land, and mules to till
that land, and he did not think that any
person, even their most particular friends,
had done much more for them. He did
not want to leave this Convention with the
stain upon his uame that he struck such a
bluff at the welfare and happiness of the
State as to give his sanction to so sweeping
a measure. It was his opinion that pos
terity, in future years, would curse those
who had framed such a law, and even their
own ckildreu would, forty years hence, be
changing their names in order to shake off
the odium which their ancestors had drawn
upon them.
During the remarks of Mr Holcombe \
several attempts were made as usual to gag 1
him, mostly by J E Bryant—the person !
to whom the whole colored race is bound t
to look as their greatest champion. When !
Mr Holcombe had concluded, J E Bryant
moved the previous question to the utter ;
discomfiture of his good brother, G W '
Askbura, who had been waiting a whoie
twenty minutes to get the floor and give |
“fits” to the last speaker, as well as, per- i
haps, to J D \> addell.
Tbe motion to reconsider was then put, '
and the ayes and nays called for, when the
vote stood ; ayes 20; nays 97. Lost.
Section .3 was then taken up.
J 11 Parrott moved to strike from the
9th aud 10:h hues thereof, the words “as
an elector.’ 1
He spoke at some length in support of
the amiulajeut, aud favored universal
white suffrage.
11 \ M Hiller offered the following sub
stitute fir the entire section ;
The General Assembly may provide
from time to time tor the regulation of all
electors, but the following classes of per
sons shall not be permitted to register,
vote, or Lola office :
Ist. Those who shall have been convict
ed of treason, embezzlement of public
funds, malfca-amse in office, crime punisha
ble by law with imprisonment in the peoi
tentiary. or bribery.
2d. Those who are idiots or insane.
He spoke at some length on tbe substi-
tute, and stated Urn the laws of Congress
did not desire that all men who were lately
engaged in rebellion against the Govern
ment should be disfranchised.
J E Bryant handed in the following;
“From the first line str.ke out ‘it shall be
the duty of,' and also in said line, alter the
word ‘Aseemhly,' strike out ‘to and insert
in lieu of the last word etriken out the
word ‘may,’ so it will read ‘the General
As-embly may.’”
He made some remarks concerning loyal
ty to the United States, and some other
matters which perhaps he understood
himself very well.
J H Caldwell delivered one of his peri
odical speeches, in which he favored suf
frage universal and unreserved to the
negro, with all other rights; but we ean’t
tell how long it took him to prepare it as
we don’t think he read it this time.
T G Campbell (negro), also made a
speech in which he with a most
magnanimous condescension toward the
“white folks.” He had had a loDg ex
perience in deliberative bodies, and he was
Killing that the white people should have
a vote. This negro sits next A AJpeoria
Bradley (negro), and receives a good deal
of instruction from his classmate, hut he
became very wrothy when some individual
moved to adjourn before he had finished a
most eloquent and refreshing spontaneous
effusion; and said if he was not allowed to
proceed, he would move the previous ques
tion.
J E Bryant asked the Chair if a motion
to adjourn was not always in order.
There was a considerable amount of ex
citement at this time, and a general cry of
“No! no!” and while the entire crowd
was in a state of confusion a friend, we
know very well, gave the negro a whisper,
and lie immediately withdrew hi> motion.
We were proud to see him yield to the
instructions ot that zealous supporter of
tlie colored race, whom we may have oc
caj.ii.in to notice more particularly in a very
short time.
Tue convention, on motion, adjourned.
FORTY-SECOND DAY.
Tuesday, Feb. 11,1868.
The Convention opened with prayer
Parrott in tbe Chair.
The journal was read.
THE PER DIEM OF MEMBERS.
P Martin moved a re-consideration of
the action of the Convention yesterday, in
relation to the per diem of members.
R fl Whiteley objected, as he did
yesterday, to the indirect insult offered to
the body.
P Martin thought that five dollars a
day would be sufficient for the members.
Alter some discussion the motion to re
consider was lost.
A ALPEORIA BRADLY (NEGRQ).
The investigation of the charges prefer
red agaiitst this negro occupied the entire
day.
A motion to recommend the matter to
the Committee for further investigation,
to be reported on, on or before Friday
next, was carried.
On motion, A T Akerman was added to
the Committee.
The Convention, on motion, adjourned.
FItOM VVASHISGTON.
Special Corretpojidencc of the Baltimore Gazette.
The Impeachment of President Johnson
Revived —Grant and others to be Sum
moned as Witnesses—A Defence of
Pi esident Johnson’s Course—The Mili
tary in a Muster—New States to be
Carved out of 1 exits.
Washington, Feb. 9.—The impeach
ment project is assuming quite a serious
aspect. It was not until yesterday morn
ing that the Reconstruction Committee
resolved to test the matter gravely, when
the sub committee, increased by the addi
tion of Mr. Beck, of Kentucky, substi
tuted for Mr. Brooks, ofN. Y., was instruct
ed to investigate the circumstances connect
ed with the Johnson-Stanton Grant embro
glio—to send for persons and papers, and
report the evidence to the committee at
large. It was lound by the Chase men that
the “correspondence” had not quite immo
lated Grant; that there was yet some
sparks of vitality in him, and, therefore,
they design to show him up in anew light.
He has, as yet, appeared merely as a de
tective and spy of Stanton. It was thought
necessary and advisable to exhibit him iri
a more degraded position. Under the
manipulation of Stanton, Ashley and
Holt, he is to be made a witness and put
upon the stand to testify against his rival
candidate for the Presidency. “To what
baseness may we return, Horatio!
Why may not imagination trace the noble
dust of Ulysses till we find it stopping a
bunghole?” Besides General Grant, cer
tain members of the Cabinet, aud Stanton
himself, have been summoned to testify.
Also, J. B. Stillson, Washington corre
spondent of the World, and one or two
members of Grant’s Staff. The sub-com
mittee met at two o’clock yesterday, and
began their labors by the examination of
Ml Stillson. They meet again to
morrow.
The President had not, as late as last
night, consented to the publication of his
response to Grant’s last letter (although I
think it will soon see the light), nor has he
taken any measures to oust Stanton from
the War Department. The Conservatives
should, nevertheless, be charitable. They
should recubect, that he is beset by the
most unscrupulous and reckless party that
ever held power in this or any other
country. Disposition certainly is not safe
if.it stand in the way of the onward revo
lution! Could he, ought lie , in the un
selfish consideration of the public good,
risk the installation of Wade as Civil Dic
tator, at a time like this, when so fearful a
snuggle is pending and rapidly approach
ing ? No mau doubts that if the Presi
dent, intent only upon his own advarice
u ent, should even exercise only the pow
ers justly pertaining to his office, impeach
ment, and suspension of his functions
would certainly follow, when he must per
force become the standard-bearer of the
opposition, lie, nevertheless, deals with
his infamous antagonists with tbe prudence
of a far-seeing statesman and with a
patriotism and singleness of purpose with
out a parallel, lie feels that tlie country
can. ot just now do without him, and seems
disposed to sacrifice ail personal consider
atious to the certain prevention, atthcpio
pitious moment, of the triumph of the
petty tyrants that rule Congress. What
ever his short-coining heretofore may have
been, recent events, and those foreshadow
ed, warn us to be chary of censuring his
present conduct.
There is a lull in the news market to
day. The Senate did not sit on Saturday,
and a few members only of the House as
sembled in the llall to hear prosy speeches.
Some fluttering among the epauietted
gentry was observable this afternoon iu
consequence of an implied insult to the
whole army, contained in the Chronicle of
this morning. Forney, writing under the
signature of “Occasional,” thus overtops
all truth aud dectney :
“When we recollect that, without the
soldier thus assailed (Grant), the rebellion
would have triumphed, and the Govern
ment of the United States would have been
destroyed and superseded by that of the
slave conspirators, we have the reason for
this savage malevolence.
Thus neither the Attila of the Union
army, Sherman, nor the thunderbolt of
liberty, Little Phil—nor yet the “Sword of
Gideon, ’ the soubriquet by which the
venerable Thomas is distinguished, con
tribute anything to "save the life of the
nation.” Neither did the dead soldiers,
whose slumbers are disturbed at Antielam
by the proximity of dead Confederates,
help to keep life iu the country’s carcass.
Nor did the maimed patriots, who infest
the Departments, tire a shot to stimulate
the languishing nationality—to Grant and
to Grant alone be all the glory !
The bill to carve out of Texas two more
Statfs will be passed shortly. One of the
sovereignties is, I hear, to be called Congo
—the name of the other has not been de
termined upon. The object of this bill is
to get tour more Senators and four n\ore
electors.
A Remarkable Death.—A few days
siuce a couple of youths were out in
the neighborhood of the city, practic
ing with a bow and arrow. One of
the boys discovered a snake, and killed
it by shooting the reptile through
and through with his arrow. Soon after
ward, one of the boys placed himself be
hind a tree, and, exposing one of his hands,
challenged the other to “shoot at the tar
get.” The banter was accepted, and, with
the same arrow which had just pierced the
snake, fired at the exposed hand and struck
it nearly in the centre, inflicting a slight
wound. In a few hours the hand and arm
of the lad began to swell, showing that
poison from the snake had been communi
cated by means of the arrow. The youth
suffered intense agony, and, after lingering
in this horrible condition for three days,
expired yesterday.
The boy who lost his life in this playful
and remarkable maimer was named Bailey,
and his innocent oomp>tnion_ wa3 named
Carroll. Let this sad affair serve as a
warning to youths. —Montgomery Mail.
Cutting off the Supplies.— The Eng
lish papers are very much disgusted by a
new manifestation of Feniau ingenuity in
Ireland, which takes even a more ques
tionable shape than the harassments of
police and soldiery that form the burden of
cable dispatches. It appears that the Fe
nians ate actually objecting to pay rent for
land, and that their organization is so per
teet that it is impossible to carry out the
ordinary processes of law in such cases.
Bailiffs are hunted like wolves, and if
offenders are arrested they are promptly
acquitted by Fenian juries. As for saiec
of seized property, no man bids for his
neighbors’ goods. The landlords are nat
urally much alarmed at this new phase of
popular discontent, and are almost in tie
spair at the prospects. They are touched
at last in the most tender point. The only
wonder, however, is that they have been
so long able to collect their rents—and vac*
rents!
Social Equality.
The preposterous claim set up by the
negroes and mean whites for the establish
ment, bylaw, of the social equality of the
black race in the Souths is thoroughly ex
ploded by tbe New Orleans Times, in a
recent article on this subject:
That paper, in commenting upon the
efforts which are being made in 'he
Louisiana negro Convention, and, indeed,
in all the so-called Constitutional Conven
tions now in session in theexcluded States,
to fix and establish by Constitutional
guarantees, the social equality of the races,
) says:
“It is amusingly absurd to see our
Black and Tan Convention grappling with
a question that the wisdom of ages has
failed to solve. This social power that
seems so little, and yet is so great, that
acts through a thousand mysterious chan
nels and by a thousand impalpable noth
ings, is yet a power in the land that can no
more he overcome than the affinities and
antagonisms in the crude matters of in
organic nature.
“Whatever maybe the equality of po
litical rights which gives to each citizen,
whether he be rich, or poor, ignorant or
learned, the common benefits of a common
government, the doctrine of social rights is
buiit upon an entirely different foundation.
It requires unity of feeling and harmony
of tastes. It is not a league for the pro
tection of men and their benefit, but for
tbeir enjoyment.
“The sans culbttes and poissardes bat
tered down the kingdom of France, drown
ed it iu royal and noble blood, forced
their way into palaces, and gave the law
from tribunes. But there was a power in
the “haute noblesse” that defied torture
and death itself. The French gentleman
bent coolly to the right of the butchers to
take his bead, but would not surrender
one single social right to the canaille of
the gutters. He looked down upon them
from the guillotine with precisely the same
feeling he had looked down upon them in
the courtly circles of Versailles.
“This same social life always implies per
fect equality to those who beldrig to it,
and its ostracisms are sometimes as thor
ough lor those who, by some accident,
have been torced into the charmed circle as
the outsiders. We have seen in our life
an. unlucky wight as completely tabooed iu
a large, social gathering to which we did
not belong, as if ho had been a branded
gabey slave, or had come iu to rob the
room.
“We certainly don’t pretend to say that
society is always right in its exactions or
conclusions, but as a general rule it is
seldom far wrong. Affinities will cer
tainly seek their like, and antagonism
repel, aud the laws that they make tor
themselves are beyond all power but their
own.
“Amidst all our political and national
ruin, our social rights are about all that
are left of our past prosperity. They have
always been jealously guarded down hero
in Louisiana, for the savor of the “ancien
regime” is among them. But we think
now they will be hedged in with a ten old
barrier. The Black and Tan Convention
will not gain for their people a footing be
yond the precincts of a bar-room, and if
they force themselves into places where
they have no business, this same silent, re
sistless, social power, which is unconquer
able, will soon show them barriers they can
never overpass.
“We are viewing this question enphiloso
phe, and rather like to see it agitated. It
amuses us among much, that is very se
rious, and not at all amusing to see an old
battle, that has been fought thousands of
times before, and always with the same
result. We are free to confess, however,
that there is a freshness and simplicity in
the manner with which our Convention
deals with it that is novel and surprising.
It is grasping all things at once, like the
greedy prince in the enchanted garden.
Although he was heavily loaded with the
silver water, the singing stones and the
talking fish, ho woulel climb for the roe’s
egg, aud fell down and broke his luckless
neck-
“So we advise ourdusky compatriots not
to go nesting for the roc’s egg. It would
be too heavy for them, even if they got it,
and perfectly useless for any of their tastes
and enjoyments.”
The way the Georgia State Treasury was
Fobbed. I
General Meade, having removed the
Governor, proceeded to the Treasurer’s
office, arid demanded the key of the vault.
Mr. Jones, the State Treasurer, produced
a combination key, and, after some ex
planation, succeeded in making the General
understand its manipulations.
"Now, sir, your vault?’ said the im
perious General.
Mr. Jones —“There is the State vault,
sir.”
The General proceeded to test the ac
curacy of his newly acquired knowledge of
the combination key, and succeeded in
turning the heavy iron door upon its
hinges, but the State treasure, where was
it ?”
General Meade—“ This vault looks
rather empty, Mr. Jones.”
“Rather empty,” dryly Asponded the
Treasurer-
General Meade—“ Do I understand you
to say, Mr. Jones, the State of Georgia
has no money?”
“I did say so, General,” again replied
the iiupeturbable Jones.
“Then, sir, where is that treasure?”
shouted the exasperated hero of Gettys
burg, as he turned upon-the State official.
The latter, with a somewhat malicious
smile playing about bis luce, answered:
“It has taken wings, General, and left for
parts unknown.” This IS late official was
immediately placed under arrest. What
lias since been done in his case Governor
Jenkins has not heard. — Washington. Let
ter. •
We have reason to believe that the con
versation detailed above is a very correct
version of what occurred when Treasurer
Jones was called upon to surrender the
State Treasury, except that the officer who
was making the examination was General
Roger and not General Meade.
General 11. also inquired about the sys
tem of book-keeping adopted by Treasurer
Jones, when the latter called to a clerk to
show the General one ol the old books and
explain the entries, Ac. General R., in
some astonishment, asked if there w : ere no
later books—where are the last year’s
books? Captain Jones, with the same
bland and gracious smile, replied : “Gone
with the money, General. *
Funeral of the Rev. Mr. Leeser.—
The funeral of the Rev. Isaac Leeser, the
Hebrew Rabbi, who died in Philadelphia
a few days ago, took place in that city on
Tuesday. The North American, says:
Every Jewish clergyman in the city,
without exception, was present, and a
number from New York and Baltimore.
Rev. J. Lyons and Rev.. Dr. Isaacs were
among the chief mourners. The order of
the B’ Nai Rerith, to the number of five
hundred, followed in the funeral train.
This is a Jewish benevolent society, in
cluding in its numbers many of the wealthi
est merchants of Philadelphia. The^ Jew
ish Hospital Association, the United
Hewbrew Beneficent Society, and other
kindred institutions, swelled the mournful
procession to great length.
There were, besides, ruaDy Christian
clergymen present, whose evident object
was'to testify their regard for a gentleman
who, though differing from them in
religious belief, could yet appreciate him
as a scholar and a gentleman. There were
some sixty carriages in the sad procession.
Many besides those who attended his
funeral will miss the departed Dr. Leeser.
His life was wholly devoted to literature.
Alone and unaided, he made a translation
of the Old Testament from the original
Hebrew. To members of the press, and
to all who consulted him upon matters of
oriental literature, he was an oracle no !
less reliable than willing. His sermons !
were models of learning, erudition and
scholarly attainments.
Curious Revelations in the Judici
ary Committee’s Investigations.— lt
appears that the House Judiciary Commit
tee, in investigating the matter of Mr.
Justice Field's alleged expressions with
regard to the unconstiuitionality of the Re
construction acts, found more than they
expected, or perhaps desired. The chair
nan of the committee, Mr. Wilson, of
lowa, a thorough Radical, was called to
the stand as a witness, and he testiGed
that not only Mr. Field, but Mr. Justice
Davies, and, what is more astounding,
Chief Justice Chase, had pronounced the
pending Reconstruction Bill unconstitu
tional. The great High Priest of the
Radical Church, the Radical candidate for
the Presidency, the Chief Justice h rasc-lf,
declared in private conversation the bill
unconstitutional! What a bombshell this
w : ’il prove in tbe Republican camp ! What
a surprise to the mousing politicians who
thought to make a case against Mr. Jus
tice Field ! The Washington correspond
ent say- Mr. Wilson’s testimony created a
commotion at the capital, and we are not
surprised' at it. Let Mr. Chase be im
peached at once, by all means, and that
will improve bis chances for the White
i House.— -V. F. Herald.
The “World's” attack Lpon Vallaadig
bam.
The New York World has made a sav
age onslaught upon tho Hon. C. L. Yal- ;
landingbam, of Ohio, who, the World as- ;
serfs, is responsible for the defeat of Col. :
Burns, late Democratic candidate for Con- 1
gress in the Sth Ohio district. Even ad- j
mitting that Mr. Y’s friends refused to j
vote for Burns, and that they acted under |
the influence of Mr. V.t we fail to per- !
ceiveany good which can be accomplished ;
by making such a fierce and defamatory [
attack upon that gentleman. We notice i
that the Cincinnati Gazette , an ultra |
| Radical sheet, republishes the World's ar
; tide, with flattering comments. If the
Worlds party is able to defeat Radicalism
throughout tho North and West, and es
pecially in Ohio, without the assistance of
] \ allandigham or his friends, there may be
some excuse for this wanton and gross at
tack. If, however, the Democratic party
needs all the aid it can get (and which we
believe is true), it is worse than folly for
! the World to be driving from that party
any man, however small his influence, who
, is opposed to the designs and principles of
! the Radical Jacobins.
This is no time to be quarrelling over
minor side issues. The great stakes for
which the opposing parties are now con
tending, are no less than constitutional
liberty ou one side, and an absolute des
potism on the other. Those who agree in
the common purpose of overthrowing Rad
ical despotism, may well afford to eschew,
for a time at least, less important issues.
Moke Work for the Convention.—
The Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser of the
11th inst. has the following paragraph:
Another Case for Expulsion.—The
Georgia Convention will to day discuss the
resolution for the expulsion of Aaron A.
Bradley, he having been for over two years
in the penitentiary of New York. We
would cull the attention of the Convention
to one George Chatters, a negro, who pre
tends to represent Stewart county. Said
George was pardoned out of the Alabama
Penitentiary by Governor Patton in May
last lor horse stealing.
General Grant and the Jews. —The
Richmond Dispatch reproduces ftom the
war records the following order from
General Grant. It shows that General
Grant, while sustaining the ‘'best Govern
ment the world ever saw”—the ‘‘Model
Republic” of modern times—was not ex
empt from the proscriptive spirit of the
“dark ages”—as they used to be called —
though the present is about as dark as any
that we read of:
Headq’rs 13th Army Corps, )
Department of Tennessee, Y
Oxford, Miss., Dec. 17, 1862. )
General Orders , No. 11.
The Jews, as a class, violating every
regulation of trade established by the
Treasury Department ciders, are hereby
expelled from the Department within
twenty-four hours from the receipt of this
order by post commanders. They will see
that all this class of people are furnished
with passes and required to leave, and any
one returning after such notification wiil be
arrested and held in confinement until an
opportunity occurs of sending them out as
prisoners, unless furnished with permits
from these headquarters. No passes will
be given these people to visit headquarters
for the purpose of making personal appli
cation for trade permits.
By order of
Major General Grant.
Awful Disclosures—Life in New 7
York. —A New York correspondent of
the Milwaukie Sentinel writes : The es
tablishment of the ballet in this country
has brought with it one or two other
French features. The theatre is being
run down by fast young men who hang
around the green room and wings, wealthy
scions who boast of triumphs among ballet
girls, and keep the price of boquots up by
their constant purchases. A few nights
ago the members of a fashionable club (I
might as well say it was the Manhattan)
took the stage door at Niblo’s by storm.
They came in coaches with hampers of wine
and sandwiches, and, in spite of stage
manager and carpeuter, took possession
of the dressing rooms and commenced a
lively saturnalia, which wound up in some
thing very much like the Sabine scene so
familiar to our classic memories. It would
not do to kick these young gentlemen out.
Their patronage and boquets are immense.
They are formidable in money, and in
fluence and numbers.
Disclaims Aiseilism. —The venerable
and learned Dr. Lovick Fierce, the nestor
of Methodism in the South, has, in reply
to a letter written to him by a friend, dis
claimed any belief in or sympathy with the
startling doctrines so plausibly and so ably
promulgated in, a recent publication called
Ariel, in relation to the original creation of
man, and the status us the African, in which
he says:
“I believe Adam was a real man, just as
I am ; that Eve was a real woman, just as
my mother was. I beiieve in the unity of
the human race —do not believe there was
but one original parentage of all humanity.
I believe the incidental mention of the fact
by St. Paul, that of one blood God had
made all the nations of men, &c. —was to
the end that original truth might be trans
mitted to all men, in all nations, through
out all time —that whatever type or phase
of humanity God might see good to pro
duce, still they were ail of one stock, which
is meant by one blood.”
Trade with China.— The tax on lux
uries, such as teas and silks, operates very
sensibly to check trade with the East, as
appears in the decline in the amount of
American shipping employed in that
quarter. In this change Boston, which
for many years engrossed a large propor
tion of the trade with China and India, is
the principal sufferer. The effect in Chi
nese ports is noticed by a correspondent,
who writes from Hong Kong November
27, as follows :
_ Trade in this quarter languishes, and
although there seems to be an indication
at this moment of a revival, many years
must elapse ere the princely firms which
have lately gone into bankruptcy will be
replaced by houses which will secure such
large credits with the European as well as
Chinese mercantile community. vVhiie
speaking of this subject one is reminded of
the scarcity of American vessels now in
port. Once upon a time the Stars and
Stripes outnumbered any other of the
flags in the harbor of Shanghai. But
since 1861 it has not been as it was in
earlier times. Scarcely a score of New
York or Boston ships are out in the
stream. Unwise legislation in Congress j
has struck a blow at our merchant marine j
which should be remedied as speedily as
possible-
Curious. —The St. Louis Republican
is a Democratic organ and the St. Louis
Democrat is a Republican organ. What’s
in a name ? The Republican is a capital
paper, and being Democratic is, .of eourse,
truly Republican, arid therefore entitled to
the name, while the Democrat , being a
Radical journal, is enjoying a misnomer.
Routes,
Errors of Youth.—A gentle-
W" mail who buffered ft>r years from X.r«ai De
bility, Fremiti re Decay, and all tie effects of youthful in
discretion, will, for tbe i>ake of buffering humanity, send, free
to all who nee l it, the receipt aDd directions lot maiang the
simple remedy bv which he w = cured. Sufferers within*
to pr-flt by the advertiser’s experience ca - do so by address
iwr. in perfect confluence. JOH N B. OGDEN,
daly27-w No. 42 Cedar Street, New York.
KKALLY GIiBAT PIASTER,
ALCOCK’S PoKOUS, Lave the compactness ol
; kid, and the flexibility of a sAk jriove.
DR. I. T. HENDEION’S LETTER.
FAaavii • e, Loiusa*ia. March B,IST*)
Db. T. AiA-Cock— H*r : 1 Lave been differing under a*e
vere att-ek of neuralgic disease ts my bowels with
hypertrophy of the heart, and h-ve tried everything known
to the pract.ce of medici-.e from the veiy beat M. 1 .'t» but
rath pro npta me to say that your Piasters have g ven me
more permanent relief than anything use 1 Lave used, ar.d I
bel fev; will produce a perec.t cure.
The caul r-i.ritant tsf c ct of your Plasters is produced in
src~ a mild and gradual vray, they so Invigorate the ernik
tion around the parts to wnich they are apphed, and exert
upon &H nervous and a-:ases su'h a great seoaiive influence,
mat I place iLem cunfliicntly at toe head of every piaster
Yours, very truly, I T. Uexdebsoh. M. D.
Priucipa Ag-may, Brandretk House, New York. Sold by
ail L’rugfc. *te. ft 112—dAw2 v
*DK. S. I.^OBIib 5 PILMOXIC
life Si kup. for THE CUKE OF le
cipieut Consumption, Coughs, Coils, Croup, Asthma* Li/er
Cuaiplalnt, Dyspepsia, and Geaemi Debility. For several
years I h*ve been urged ’ y kind friends, who have and
b.-v r. bent filed by my Liie Syrup, tn put it up for jreneraj
Si ■ ; ■„ t few know th- ; :or*e exp rue.r.ow that the country
L fin ded wi:h Latent Medicines, which attend the ?ame.
F r y rur? post i w g r luctanUG do so.aatne capitai required
-e and I did uot wish to curtail toperations
fmy Venetian Liniment tu-one-a But, thank* to the
t’is puo ic. who have appreciated my Ven r an I.ini
:r.eut. lam now able to do so w.tnout anv detr n tut *o m '
large b’n.r:e-s in teat mtcic no. 'ice wdiidati nos my tuc
ce*j I alt lbute to the moLUta lure of avtry drop ir.yseif.arid
ak&il do the same in regard ta my Pulmonic Lire syrup. The
In:red:e:.’s >re per'ec iy h >rn..e.«. but act on the and
Liver wi? h usti>uis i- g effect.
Prc 75 eniß Depot No 56 Cortland: street, »w York
near Jersey City Feny. bold by the Druggists and Store
keepers, |
MAHKIKI),
On Tucalvy ni*ht, tie 23; h ult., by R«». J. c. .lananl. Ur.
W\ P. KiMBsET.Jr., cf Clayton, Ga .and M n Hawii \
daughter ~i £,. N. Jrmea, Eat;., o t Kabitrj eout ty, o*.
NOTU’K.—AI iiINT i, liA., OKI.
aiamSo7.-..'To thesio ckholdera
of the itlilled«evi!le« or Macon 1 &- Auvama
itailroad Compuny.—Call* for pAytoiuUon fruikorip- j
tions to the capital stock of this Company jxave been made j
up to flf y-ftve per cent. Stock n*on whicl this amount has -
not been paid will be forfeited to the Company.
A further call is uow made tor twenty -flve per cent.. pay- .
ab.e on or before February 20th, iScg, at which Cate eighty
per cent. wiil be due, and stock forfeited if not pa ; d.
Ali stuck ho leers la arrears will at Often correspond with
lire Treatfuier.
The'Koad is now lr. operation to rtlle, and is doing
»large busiuesa. It is believed th .t arrangements will be j
made by which further calls will be avoided, if prompt pay
meet is now made.
Ly order 01 the Board of Directors.
K. B. BULLOCK, Fresident. ’
J. A. S. Mim.iOA.jr, Secretary and Travn rer.
dec£l—ddrwSm
Banking Iloase
JAY, COOJLE A CO„
No. 20 Wall Street.
Comer cf Nassau St. NSW YORK.
We bny and seil at the most liberal ci.rre ct price?, and keep j
on hand lull supply of GOVERN MEN'S , IONDS OF ALL :
ISSUES, SEVEN-THIRTIES, a 'at cbJiFOEND IN. !
TRUEST NOTES, »nc erocateopdvo for EordiMe*.idSAe !
! of STOCKS. RONDS amluOLD.
CONVERSIONS.
We convert the several i**ues of Seven- 'iilrtlea at the most
! favorable market rates into iive-Ywe:. iea, which, at the
| present price of gold, yield the holder ab ut one per cant .
1 more Interest per annum. Circulars with full particular* fur
! Lbhed upon application.
I naylO—d&wty JAY, COUKE A, CO. |
DEBILITY AMD EIACIATIOM.-
Both from the lack of a ulity to convert the
food into nutrlmeut. How necessary, th »n, tor those suffer
ing from these alarming symptoms to immediately resort to a
remedy that will strߔgthen the stomach and digestive or
gans. For. as so mas this desirable ob ict has b* cn accom
plished, the heath improves, and the .atiest resumes his
u ual personal appeanir.ee. HOSTETCER’S STOMACH
BITTERS have attained a world wiee popularity in such
cases, and have be> n proven the best an i sa’est means of re
moving cobstipat.on, toning the stomath, giving energy to
the Ever. and relieving every symptom cf»n rvousneaa and
depres ion of spirits. Its ciieciitu ami beneficial effect* are
highly spoken of by thousands, who oHa i to it their restora
i tiou to health. No lesi- raUve in the annals of medicine has
attained the tame popularity in the sbor space of time it has
| been before the public, or has won the high endorsements sc
! corded to this excellent tonic, id an 3 other preparations,
| purporting to be correctives and rest on tiv s. Lave been iu
i t reduced. and have per shed one by one, while the popularity
of il STE'i TEH’S ST MACH Bl'i TEKS continues to
iscrease, and is now recognized as a standard household
medicine The succois which attends he use f the Bitters
evinces at 01.ee its vi iues in ail cases o> debility and disea.-'vs
of the stomach, Ceitificat* *••, aln o:t w' thout. number, have
been published, attesting it a truly mir: culous power in re
moving those painful and fearful di-ea: es And at this time
it seems idle to do more thin call attention to the gieut
remedy of the age, in order to awaken mbUO attention to Us
exc lienee.. It is the only preparation the kind that is re
liable in all case3, and it is therefore worthy of the considers
j lion of the afflicted. feb7—v2&d!2
EDUCATIONAL.
A LADY OF VIRGINIA, OF EX
r\ PEiiJENCL as a feacber. ands res an engagemcm in
a private family, or College, to instinct in the usual Eng
lish branches, French and Music.
References given and required.
Address, stating terms.
Mrs. NANNIE L. BUFORD,
febll—-dA"w2w Dcver Mines. G jochlandcountv. Va.
AUGUSTA FOUNDRY
AND
Machine YVorks.
WEIGHT & ALLUMIB IMPROVED
VV OOIToN SOKiIWS. OIN Ot.AU, SUGAR
BOILERS, SUGAR MILLS, U JDGEUNS, ALARM
BELLS, and all knitis ol
C.A. STXUsTO-S,
done at short, not’oe.
sarHlgiieit price paid for OLD MACHINERY, IRON
BRALS and COPPER. PHILIP MALONE.
nov!7—suwft Mtw
Grafted Apple Trees for Sale.
T HAVE A FEW THOUSAND
0 FTED API’LE Tit EES for s-kle len varieties—
Summer, May, Yillow June, lie*: June, Horse, Winter
Mangum, Lady Finger,Limbertwig, English Cralb, Sbockly •
1 wi ldo up in cloth aud straw tho-«e nine kind* mentioned,
and deliver i.t the Jonesboro Depol, Mfcon and Western
Railroad, at |9 per hundred, on rec< pt otthe money. 1 have
also the celebrated Winter Yates Apple, at 20 cents each.
Address me at McDonough, Ga.
feb2—w4 MARY B. DAILEY.
TO MILL OWNERS,
jpRENCH BURR, IISOPUS AND
COLOGNE MILE STONES,
BOLTING CLOTHS,
SMUT MACHINES,
And al! kinds of Mil.L FURNISHING WARE,
FOR SALE AT THE
LOWEST CASH PRICE,
By W H. BRENNF.R,
10" Bruad Street,
nov22— 14w6m Augusta, Ga.
SOaRGO joubnal,
gORGO HAND BOOK and
SUGAII-CANE HEED tIRCULARH,
Sent free to applicants. Address
BLYMYE % NORTON & CO.,
lar 25—wlm 116 Main at. Cincinnati, Ohio.
Ncticje.
WHEREAS APPL CATIO HAS
V? this day been made to ti e Court of Ordinary of
Scriven county for Letters Dismiwory from the
Estat of Richard M. Herrington, < eceased; this is to notify
all interested parties to be and appear b fore the C< urt of
Ordinary of said county, on cr befo e the SECOND MON
DAY in APRIL next, ig show cuu »e why said letters should
not be granted. JUf.IA A. HERRINGTON,
Administratrix of Kich’d M. Ilerri gton.dec’d.
Soriven co’u.t\, Ga October 14 1867, ncU6-v/8m
Horse Reward,
ON THE NIGHT O F THE lOtii OF
i ebrmuy. a SriKIiEL iiOßStu was s-oien from
Ti-omas L. Clary, In Columbia county, on the Witeh'sbdro’
Road, near White O kP. O. The horse has two white spots
ou his shoulders, cursed by the wi siring of the coder, and a
knot on his back, caused by the sulUlle. He had or>; shoe on
one of Lis tore feet when stolen, th i other th’ee shoes being
tiff. He p icch 6lowl>, moved well holds hia head l.'gh, and
is about 15 t>r 18 hand.’ hi* h.
A reward of twenty -five dollars will be paid for hii delivery
to th- uadersigned; aho lweiit>-fl> edoil.irs for the . hies with
proof to convict him. Tl! UMAfc L. (JLI UY
White Oak P.O. Colu übia Coou.sty Ga.
feblS—dl&w2f
HARPER G.
WAREU:OUSE
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
AUGUSTA, GA.
pUSTOMERS SUPPLIED WITH
\_y BAGGING. ROPE and FAMILY SUPPLIES.
Prompt attention paid to the SALS of, and CASH AD
VANCES or, COTTON aud Other PRODUCE.
No. 158 REYNOLDB STREET.
Vv'. BRYSON, CHARTER CAMPBELL,
Augusta, Ga. Late of Madison, Ga.
sep2l—d.twtim
Pollard, Gok & Cos.,
Cotton Factors,
YVarebouse A- Commission Merchants,
’ Corner Reynolds and Campbell Streets,
AUGUSTA, Ci .V
pONTINUE THEIR BUSINESS AT
\J tl ein-ld Stand and wiilgiv; their strict personal atten
tion to 'he STORAGE AND SuLE OF COTTON AND
ALL OTHER PRODUCE. O/t u-r.-for Bagging ard !tO{ie
promptly attended to. Consignments respecifully solicited.
Azentsfor Reed’c Phosphate an i Georgia Factory.
au3U—.liw'f
A P. STOVALL, D. E. BUT LEU,
Ot Augusta, Ga. Os Madison, Morgair co., Ga.
STOYALL^iBUTLER,
COTTON WARjCUOUSE
AND
General Commissitm Merchants,
Corner Jackson and Rj e j nolds-wf rertß,
AUGUSTA, GA.
auiln—(i&wtf
JAB. T. GARDINER & CO.,
WAREHOUSE AND
COMMISSION juItRCHANTS,
Mclntosh street, augusta, ga.
V/ill give THEIR PERSONAL ATTENTION to the
Storage and Save of OOTTON. tnd such other Produce -•
may be tent to them.
Cash Advance** Made on Produce in Store.
JAS. T. GARDINER. P.. B. MORRlS
sepl—d&w 6m
S. B. Heiard,
WAREH OUSE
AND
commission Merchant,
AUGUSTA OA.
WILL GIVE HIS PERSONAL AT
»T TEATIOU to, the KTdI’.AUE SALE o>
GoTTONakd OTHER CUSSI3KMENT9, whict Lfere
ipectfaliy sohcitl.
Tho USUAL AOCOMIIODA TIOSS WILL BE EX
TLX LED oa I'KODUCE in sior i. sepJO -dtv6m
r. At Fleming;
WABEH! O U 8 £
AX'D j
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
WILL COX'TIX'UE BUSINESS,
Corner Reynolds and Campbell Streets)
AUuUSf A, GA.
aepG—diw€m
Pollard, Gox & Cos,,
GENERAL
Grocery fiEommisaion Merchanls,
No. 297 BROAi- STREET,
(A few doors below l ’alters’ Hotel.)
AUGUSTA, GA.
Keep constancy on hand
s LARGE AX'D WELL StLECTXD STOCK OF
GROCERIES. OF EVERY E ESCRIPTIoN, iiiclnliDt
. Lix aMorUtent of WHISKEYS, BRANDIES, WINES;
ic .030—diwtf
YSAAO T. HEARD, O. M. STONE. ~
ISAAC T. HEART) & CO.,
& ° le ’ 4C " Pr °“ P: ' y * ttentol ‘- 0 ' Llbeml Cmh Aa '“« *«D Un.« ou Produce In Store.
medical.
Etr. De LACEE,
oculist asd mimsiij
PHYSICIAN AND MItGKON,
I FORMERLY OF EUROPE, LATE;
of the West Indies,
LOCATED OCTOBER 15TH, 1867,
IN
AL GUS TA, G A.,
I
OFFICE ROOMS AT THE
AUGUSTA H OTE L,
Ladies’ Eotrantc, «litre be can be eon
suited Ui'on diseases o(' tbe
EYE,
EAR,
CANCER,
CANCEROUS TUMOURS,
AXD ALL CUKOMC COMPLAINTS.
Call at office and be referred to
those that have been afflicted for years
with Blindness, Deafness, aud Cancer
(residents of this city and vicinity), that
have been healed of their sufferings aud
restored to health.
CANCER,
OF CURABLE CLASS, AND DIATHESIS, WILL HE
TAKEN OUT, ROOT AND BRA*KCH. IN' SEVEN
TO TWENTY-ONE DAYS,
WIIHOUT SURGERY,
BY THE CELEBRATED FKEYCH PASTES AS»
lATERYAI. REMEDIES,
Ys"dia the French Uoupltald for tlie past forty yeara.
One application ia ull that in iisua’ly ' tcewary, even IN
FOUL EATING CANULK OF THE FACE, to Complete
an ENTIRE AND PERMANENT CURE.
Under this treatment the cancer DROPS OUT WHOLE
the seventh to the twenty-Urst day. The parts quickly heal,
with a eimple droning of lard.
All who suffer with this much dreaded disease, by’ calling
at Dr. DjsLAOEK’S office, will tc referred witn plea&ure to
many persona residing in this city and v cinity. who have
suffered with Cancer for years, who have had their Cancers
t ken out in the above stated tme and now aie healed of
Cancer and restored to health.
Dr. DuLACEE would have published the above facts
last October, when he first located l ore, but preferred to
furnish abundant proof from persona residing here, and wall
known In this community, who have been cured, and
thereby have the above tacts go before this community and
the suffering AS FACTS, and NOT BOLD ASSERTIONS.
THE REMEDIES ARE HARMLESS
TO HEALTHY FLESH.
No Gases Received Under Treat
meut Unless Curable.
Another Hem ark able Cure of Deaf
ness and Ulceration or Discharges
from the Ears. —This is to certify that
my little daughter, aged 13 years, who has
been guttering from dearness and dis
charges from her ears, from cold con
tracted in tier infancy, has completely re
covered her hearing, and has been en
tirely relieved from all symptoms of
disease' under Dr. DeLacee’s treatment,
without any jiainful surgical operation,
after all other treatment had failed to give
relief. It. E. Gamble.
Augusta, January 11, 1868.
Still Another Citizen of Augusta
Cured of Eating Cancer op Seven
Years Standing.—l certify to the facts in
iny case lor the benetit of those that ;.ie
atilicUrd witheaiicer, I havesutiered with
eating cancer upon my face and nose for
the past sever, years. I was prostrated in
general health, was weak as a child and
was unable to walk to see tbe doctor; my
sou took me in a carriage. My cancer at
that time was eating away anil spreading
faster every cay. 1 applied to Dr. De-
Lacce, at the Augusta Hotel, four weeks
ago last Saturday, and now I am healed of
cancer, restored to health and strength,
and have an excellent appetite, and am
gaining more strength daily. I cannot ex
press my gratitude for my deliverance.
My cancer was taken out by one appli
cation, and dropped out the seventh uay.
I am sixty-seven years of age, and have
been a resident of Augusta nineteen years,
and my health is as good now as it was
twenty years ago. Hundreds ol citizens
of Augusta all attest to the above.
Mrs. Margaret DuVall.
Augusta, Ga., Jan. EOtli, 1808.
REMARKABLE CURE OF CANCER ON THE FACE
OF FOURTEEN YEARS’ STANDING.
This will certify that I bnve suffered with cancer on my
fs.ee I>T the past fourteen years. I hah reni .ted uiltn-a
merit, until I applied t« Dr. 1.. DeLauee at me Augusta
Hotel, the 10 h tav of :wt month- He tooa tin eancer out,
ro-ts and til;, the Bth dav. b> luedicmes. Jt hea ed of <u o» u
ftcco.d, aud now 1 iq entirely cured ot cancer and ale to
soy to an ti.st n.ay be hiliictcd with tlii*»n>o*t terrible disease
that, if you a p y mt me while your c su. 1* curable, you
will be curt»d. The iu c'or has cored rrtht rs n t e fame
time, some tli »t I am acquainted with, who uve In this city.
1 am sixty years ot age, and have leaided In Auguaia four
years.
Mkh. F. PKICJS.
Augusta, Ga., J-nua r y 2,18C7-
MORE EXTRAORDINARY CURES.
Augusta Ga. November 21,18C7.
This will certify '-hat 1 have been efflic»eU witb can;« r m
the 1 oof of my mouth. It was so painful tuat ! .uula na
rust uignt or day. it was wi.li great d.filcul y that I could
g«t food enough t»y it to supi-orl life. It re* s’ed ali medical
treatment, and final y tai et.tirely through tne roof of my
mouth in io my n se. lapplied to Dr. DjsLacee jut bur :
wi eks ago tiwlay. and am iiowrble to annom.ee, tor tl.e
benefit of those thet mav l>e suffering front this te r.hle
disease, tliat I am entirely cuted ol cancer, aud restored to j
perfect heal h, and am as well as I was before b». ■/ affict- '
ed. iiisb BLLLAii GLLLLAiiiU J
NO CASES RECEIVED TO TREATMENT
UNLESS CURABLE.
ALL THOSE THAT SUFFER WITH
DISEASES OF A PRIVATE NATURE,
CAN AVAIL THEMfcELVES OF THE LATE IM
PROVED
FXIENCII PRACTICE,
AND A
SAFE, CERTAIN AND PEBMANENT CURE
OF THEIR AFI LICXIoKS.
By calling upon
Dr. De L.ACEJ2,
AT THE AUGUSTA HOTEL,
derfl—dAwtf Janl7—
ONION SETS,
FOARD M HIDES TOMATO,
Real Buncombe Cabbage,
and rveRT VAEnTY cr
WARRENTED FRESH
GARDEN SEEDS
FROM
PLUMB &L LEITNER,
NO. 2X2 URO A D HTIIII .
AUGUSTA, GA.
J»LYI-tatb»6Awß '
A Fine Farm to Rent,
SITUATED ON THE SAND EAR
FKKBY kGAD. ».«*!« » V*** « » nu:e of tte dty
of wd contoioin* 1» ot trr qumllty LAND.
*ll ao(ter cultivation, » portion of it now plan. 6 ■ in cotton,
and will yield aba e totheOTe. About the centre of the
tract U alar** and comlorteUe DWELLING, funoundul
by a fine ORCHARD ; all r.ece--sary outbuildings oad tw
large BA KNS, w th ample stable room and sheds for cattle.
The plane tan he divided into traci. of I<* ano 02 acrea,
(dv'ijga barn and out-houses and a well of fine water to
each tract Asa grain and grass farm It Is equal to any In
the Stale. Any one renting could go to worn immediately.
ApplTto GLO.O. McW.iOKTEk,
oct3—UAwtf over Boot office.
Ppl
RICHMOND COUNTVk
Q.EORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
STEPHEN I>. HEARD, l js.l, & c . f in R .l.moud
THE M2CHANTC6’BANK, ) Jjiuiuy
The fctockholuess c f Hie thove named Me baidcs' Bank,
will Ukt* i oticeth -t the above suit ban Wen commenced
.-t said Term of &a!d Court for the recovery of Thbty
Thbotei and ipd Twentj-Five Dcliara (#38(85 GO; In Gold,
for end upou the bills of said B ins, and that they will t e
held liable, under the Statnte.npon the iudement oWa’.nf-.d.
STEPHEN D. HEARD.
Jan ary Ifrh, IsAS. A. K. WEIGHT,
Du 19—1:dv4w Attorney for Pi*tff.
RICHMOND COUNTY.
\ J Whcrew, Winiumskiuu ■ und.l. iin ski- : ,r. fs.iu
t ors of J..hu tkißuer.sr., deceased, apply to me for Letters ot
Dismission :
Thesp MO therefore to cits aud aiimoclsh .il* nix! eiukular.
ire kindred and creditors of said deceasi and to be a; and ar'p-ur at
my office °u or betmv the fir»; MOAi AY in March uest 10
stMTO CHUSC, lluny they have, why said Letters should not be
Given under luy hand aud official signature, at office in Au
«G*ta. Hit-. Hi day cf August Ist,;.
*’ ui DAVID L. ROATH. Ordinary.
(GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
V 1 ereas, Mci'.- :,us « a '.alter. :.dm'niisin-.tur ] .»• U
wiih tin- Will Uitnexed, ou ,hc e-.-atato < f IRurv Caiviu.
dfi eftj-nl, applies te me tor L< tters of lusnvss-ion :
xhese are therefore t > elte amt admonish all a id eing’dar,
the K’liured and cr«'itor# of sai«l deceased.lto be and appear at
my office on n r Lct.»> e the first M < \ DaY in M Arch next, to
Cause, if any they have, why said J.etterbshould not W
granted.
Giveii uiiflor my hand and official signature at office in Au
gusta. this Sth day of August, I^7.
, j DAVID L. K<) TH,
b'-’N—wirf Ordinary.
1 4 EOUGiA, luT ilMONI) COUNTY:
’V X V> hereas, Maurc- Wilkins-•«, Kxecutor >iW 11 m
Rob.rj-mi. •>»’uMfs- .1 applies to me for Lott i> f isnux- n,
i tie.'-e are therefore tt» cite and adntonisii all and cin-
Rd’tr, the kindred ami creditors of said Ce •.<J. t-> be
a 1 .a|.i-ear at my office, on t-r before the first M< >NDAY in
\*rcn next to show cause, if any they have, win
sain letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office iff
Augusta, thistth day of Au* r >
■*> t VII) L. ROATH,
huh -wtd Ordinary.
( 4EORGIA, RICHMOND COl “viT.
* T Wherca-s Kniw K. i*i hnenl"r and G-orge Evers IC\-
e< ulors of Henry H. lloops, decM, apply to me for Letters of
Disui saion:
Theae are t herefore to cite an 5 admomsb. al 1 and dnt’u'ar
the kindred and creditors of said di ce;ised, to be ana appear
«i mr office ou or b sere the fl-st MON DA V \ 1 Marcii 1 ext,
to show cause, if any tluv have, why said Letters fciiouhl not
Given my hand and official signature at office In Au
usia, thisGlh day of August, ISII7.
DAVID L. ROATH,
an«—wAm Ord nary.
JEFFERSON COUNTY.
\ DM 1N ISTRATOR’ri sdLE —BY
Xa. Virtue of an or, cr vi ilie Court .> i irduiary of .leOer
sou Conuty, wilt l e wold, nt the .Mar Vet llouic intietowu
ofLouisvbli, on the first TUE.>DA Yin March next, within
the. legal hours of sul», the f/» lowing tract of land, to wit:
Situate, lying and being in the County of deffVr.-o: . • n the
wa ersof Reedy Creek, adjoining lands of Be.J. Hadden.
Thomas lladdcn and Willis H--ward, r,d containing lbO
acres, more or 1 •?**. Sold as the propeity of Samuel Hadden,
deceased, and hr tL-e benefit of tuc heirs and creditors of
said dece Ted. Terms cash.
Jan. IS, IS‘S. JOHN F. RIVERS,
Jan24—w and Ad str.ucr.
DM IN IbTIIATOR’S SALE.—ON
u.e FIR St MONDAY in March ne.\ applicution
will be made to the f ’otirt of Ordinary of Jefferson County
for leave to sell the laud belong! 1 g to the estate of Susan J
Robbins, late of said county, dcceYwed.
LINDSEY C. WARREN,
L-:. «TT. Admin tor.
S —W'Jlli
/GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY.
VT Whereas, Edward H. V\ . Hunter, Administrator on
the estate of Jacob W. Gcodowns, dec sed, applies for let
ter -of Administration:
These fire, therefore, to cite and admonish, all and sin
gular, the kindrid and creJitorsof said d<“ceased, lobe
and appear at my office, on or before tin* first Monday in
March next, to show cause, if any they have, why said
letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in
Louisvil e, this day of Fehrmuy, DCS.
fcb2—wo NICHOLAS DIEHL, Oid.r.ary.
IVTOTICE.—TWO MONTHS AFTER
dive applcitien will tie id a w t.. th„ (Jour - cf < ‘idmary
of Jefiereon County for leave lo bell the lands of Oe> 1g: L.
Stapleton, deceased.
JEREMIAH HOWARD, Adm r.
February Blh, 186S. fcl B—w 8
G EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY.
WhereaN Mi. b.'i* 1 Vi iggn.s appl es to me for Letters
of Dismi s et. ir- in the estate 01 Elm* \V igg-ns, late of said
count'.,ueceised :
These are therefore to cite and require all concerned to be
and ippeur at my office within the time pi escribed by law, and
show muse, if any they have, why muu letters should iml be
granted
Given under my band and official signature at office in
Louisville, this sth day of August. ISG7.
NICHOLAS DIEHL,
auf—wJfi Grdinarv.
/ 'i county:
IT WI.I-I-U-.G .!■•II. fc.i-Mi-e.tv uwllft- i.i uiM'ur Lrt
teraof Dipinisßi'-n imm 11 e e?tatc us Lli D. i . Chtathain,
la!e of sum. county, dtcen.-cd :
These are llie>Ci'ore to cite ;.nd require nil concerned to be
and appear at my ofUeu wdihin tl.a tin.e mesciibed Uv law,
and sin I>v cause, >f any they have, why said letters should not.
be era’ ted.
Given under my hand and official signature at office in
Louis /ille.thia sth day of August, l s, i .
NICHOLAS IHJSHL,
arP—'w?r. (military
PO6TPOHXD.
[Copjed from Ohristiun Messenger
JEFFERSON SIIF RIFF’S SALE.—
fjl Will be sold in the tiir.t TUEt'DAY hi March next.,
between the usual houre of Fa’e. a. the Market 11« use in the
Town of Lo -, isville, in Jefferson County the lolUvr'i’c
property to-wlt: Five thousand acres of land, mere or
known as the Cherry Hill !*!:•< e, on the West side of Rocky
Com.'ort Creek, in sa’d county, udioinirg the lauds of Wil
kins, Muffing, Telfair aud others. Also, one hundred and
twenty ucits, more or less, line land, adjoining lands of
Dsxon, Lerry and otlieis. .Said pvperty levied upon by
virtue of afi fa upon foreclosure of moi\iV in favor ol John
Phinizy, Jr., Trustee, vs. Jane M. Sttpiu ns, issued from the
fcuibeu il fcuiu fi. fu
JESJSE T. MI’LLING.
dee—wid D.puty Sheriff
SCRIVEN COUNTY.
J ' EORGIA, SOIUVEN COUNTY.—
VT Wbiirea., John 11. Mercpr, Oatrdi.u of Anthony
L. Conner applies to me for Letters of Dismission r
These are. therefore,*o cite and admoni.-h, all and sin
gular, the kindred and creditor- to show cause, if any
they have, why said letters should not be granted.
S) Ivan 11 February 8t:-, 18C8.
(Pby_wOrr. - I*. E. ROB^RT y .Ordfrarv.
LINCOLN COUNTY.
<P EORGIA: ~ LINCC)EN T COU NTY.
a, T Wliere.is, Ben,' uriln K. Beiuhy, i \ cuV . f -1." <■-
talc- of •J.ircl 1- wulU. ropresunfo ti; tiie < i. iiisputl
ition, duly filed and eub-rud on roc< ;•<], iu *t hbhatt fully
nd:mni3t< i V' , d Jared I nluV Estate:
Tf.i« Ik tberclort*. uire all perwua concerned, kindreil
and creditors, t«» fiiiuw cause, if any they can, w ?rv said
txiintor should not. lw (iiKcharaed irom iiN cv.; ; U it,
and -.voeivu Letters of ou the find MnNDAY
nil -b, 186 k. If.F.TATOM,
aid*—wt(i i»r»l»n-i‘i'
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
QIXTY DAYS AFTER I>ATE ARPLI
Y 5 CATION will lie made P» the Court of O.ii.n.jy of
Oolumbia Gomrty, .for leave to i-eil ‘ lie mil estate of John
Collins, late of sai.l county. <ie u:u. U, lor the bcrrehi of the
heirs and trediiois < f said dtc«*;:sod.
F. 1.. COLLI.VB, )
MI SE. V. *:()!-• INS, [ E.\’r3.
tvM a. AIAKIIN. )
Dncf-'nlier 9th, 18fi7. 10—w*2rri
6S A II •
..<*.«
CASH OR CREDIT FOR APPROVED
CITY ACCEPTANCES.
A S WE ARE CONSTANTLY RE
GEIVjNG (rI’ANO hid, can l e .1.1:d w tl, , u t
Uiu expense ot Btor;*ge md other « xr entfP. anu in order to
Increase our naies for cat’ll, to net i.e v. pavn put.-,, wu
havcde’errniiied to reduce otr ?»ric- a «avn- nuh and An
kVLA% 55 (M TK- to- . *<>r an ‘>KPLRS ACW p • > JEl>
W ITH TH V. MONE s’. Our piiuei wi.i ihe es .«
uniform, tu. follows:
PHCENIZ GUANO!
Imported direct 1 1 Sivat. iab from'’fcKoari’n l land price
per M, or LMibd ib- a S v-.-nab pc-1,, * IDS «-t
N vernier ;at Au> u a ta, *65 Lath cr *.C pxyai.h; a;'.Nov* n.-
| ber.
WILCCX, GI&8S Cm CO.’S
MANIPULATED GUASO,
I A rnixiur of PlHE.NlXariri PERUVIAN, pu’ver
izud and mixed oihh r «.m ji* w>ua ?uperv I'l’cna'
! r:::ii <65 ».-er « f 2,000 ,•. I. c,.- *:•/> naytr-o i-t
j .\..ve:ul> r ; ..! Augu.ta, t.Q uubfi, or *SS pay ml • id N >-
j vemb -r.
IT'UK \O. 1 IMtIVIAN CIA NO,
direct from Pctivi-n atb we-t m ri c* pr c 1 h i
. vannait . and J% u cuata, i>r (JAMi.
He would J.o-e who w ! eh *o b-iv , V AN A ,»;»
I time, f. apply at ot-ce, tm u:.n n.u.t tx.it- < .1. a • up
! prov.-d or -r «rirhctwy amogeraentx c.r--.c and t. . .«
< ortiere to .eked and promptly tiled. Address
| WILGGX, GiBBS & £0„
IMPORTERS O r AM) DEA » IN GUANO.
No, 97 Bay « Savannah, or No. 241 ti.oau it, A g ’ ‘.a.
augiß—dacw)»m i7_.
) iVIPc > - Ul'sklS T.
Plantern and <*ar<i<‘nerw
WILL FIND
ELERBE’S
PLAXT TRANSPLANTER,
(rATtNrKD OCTOBSR IfTH :sr.>
.;. a. an -*:, v,v e.v ,
DY Wli LCri SURPLUS i’JsANTS QF
D GOT : N. e-iKN.oiofm.y PLANT 1.. h/ he lrais.
Die-l in tbe seme time that the so : can be rr planted
I WITHOUT Dl-TL'ItUING TILE FIBitOUs KOOTS.
I JanlS—
| NOTICE! NOTICE!!
NOTICE!!!
| IJHFOETAST TO HI E MEECHAMTS OF THE
SO 17 TBH
LOOK TO YOIR INTEREST!
THK UNDERSIGNED, agent for
X the r.MTED MJBUw ./IAN V*’ C > OPLKITI VE
A.SSiK’IA lIOX. hereby give n -t.ee to all tm rc ianta
throe ghoul the south, < f the of Ihl- impotaet
raid beneficial enterprise. It offers In (lumrrerD sad ac.van
tavea i ever hefom enf< yeu by any rnercur.M cgujhu ity !n
th!s country, and securing to It- members benefits known to
no niercaai.t cut-:de of this A dado . It cp-'eal- directly
to ths pers- .aai mterrst of ait lnieres»fefi It tbe object it haa in
view, and ;hut w, •he making aud yav'iig of aymej. We
therefore, coupon th" ir.-rvha- * of our impoverished
tiriA ou the import nee of loiuing wUtus and etcuxlng the
benefits we propose.
For ißforma ion in detail, call upon our local Agent at
ALguaU, Mr. V.\ O. NomubJ-o, or ad ire«
NOKKEIL A OOn Agent,
91 W. Lombard street,
lUilfi—dAw2m Baltimor., Md.
ROBERT TOOMBS. I D. M. DuBOSE
TCCMBS & BuBOSE,
ATTORNEYSITLAW,
WASHINGTON, GA.,
WILL PRACTICE IN THE COUN
> T TlEfe of Tu -'em , Eibert, Hart, Wilkes, Warren
Han dock, Oglethorpe and Lincoln, of the Northern, and
. Cafombia, of tbe Mid.ile Circuit, the Supreme Court o
Gv laui.tni United States District and Circuit Courts
Special attention will be givnu to ali Case*in Bankruptcy
sc*pl9—