Macon tri-weekly telegraph. ([Macon, Ga.]) 18??-18??, April 04, 1863, Image 1

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OTkSStvv \ By Joseph Cmsbt SATURDAY MORNING,’APRIL 4, 1863. gjtes of Subscription and Advertising. it a Conference between the proprietors of the eia Daily Press at the late Augusta Conven* If! die foiling subscription rates were agreed be adhered to so long as the price of *pa- spon r ^jl permit, but they will undoubtedly have to greased in a short time : Drily f»per one year »* six months three months.... one month.. •• • fri-veetij W" one year.- u " six months $12 00 . 7 00 ,. 4 00 . 1 50 -. 7 00 . . 4 GO . 4 00 ffeeldy pap® per year. ioniTiaMrirrs.—One dollar for first publlca- •bi of twelve lines or less; Fifty cents for every subsequent publication. Payment in advance in- „ 4uea Menjbants who claim a contract must Zibletoahowitin writing. No order for ad- teriing will he attended to without the money. Ohitusriet and all other private papers of the tad will be printed at ten cents per manuscript I -jje-caab accompanying the order. No- other orders attended to. ; - jf w ^_Kothing but bankable funds received. Printe scrip, county scrip, and ragged bills of all kinds refused. If sent will be retained subject to lie personal application of senders.! Karittmcu by Express.—Subscribers to the Telegraph who prefer it may remitmonev to us-by Eiprws without cost to them, enclosing the money is i sealed envelope, endorsed with the amount eoiuiued and directed to us, and taking the Ex- praa Company’s receipt therefor. STA TE ENDORSEMENT OF THE CONFED-1 such a proceeding in the future does a State ep.ate DEBT. ■ •' . .1 indorsement afford ? We say none whatever. MACON TELEGRAPH. FBIDAY MORNING, APRIL 3,1863. 0* See list of letters on foifrth page. Aocnou To day.—We are requested to say j thst the Auction sale of Crockery and other nlnable goods will be continued at Mr. De- Lache’s store to day, - Ho Fuost.—There was no frost in this vicin ity on Wednesday. The weather is still windy i udcool. .- Cotton Planting.—We publish to-day the I bill to limit cotton planting, reported by the yecud Committee en the Governor’s. recoin— I rendition in regard to that,matter. Our Mil- Itdprille correspondent says the bill will p* ’ • - r'r‘V . Jonesboro, Ga., March 31, 1863. I If the time ever comes when a majority of the Joseph CJisby, Esq.—Dear Sir : I see by people of Georgia become so lost to Jionor as 5? l n y est « da y’ s Telegraph that, you deliberately to repudiate a debt contracted for good reason why any man should take that no inclorsems,lt p y another set of agents will position, unless he is of the same mind of many help the matter. She can just as readily repn- people through all parts of our State, for re> 1 dials the guaranty as the original assumption pudiation aSRoon as the war shall have ended. And where is the remedy ? We say there is Did not tho State by her Delegates in Conven- , - • - * tion pass the Ordinance of Secession? Did I nono^under our system. States cannot be not the North declare war upon the States to l° rce n to pay. If honor does not bind, noth- bring her back to her allegiance ? Then was ing else can. Therefore the argument in favor not secession so. far as we can see the cause of of State indorsement, as a security against re- property of e»ei. individual in .ho Slate liable : . “ ' fcr “ ‘‘“olopment of oor to taxation for the redemption of his or her J V * e . ws as 0 a J us ^ an d equitable method of con- quota of this debt? 11 so, why not let the ] solidating and disposing of the public debt .State endorse her quota of a debt which she created by the war, and we do not mean to be is already as much hound in honor to pay, as drawn into it. It is enough to say that wo are js e ssesessss&'ffisi *-*■—»-r ^ it was a thiDg separate and independent of all and aro ln * avor °f ;a just, prompt and equitable States and people. We r tho people, formed it, provision for all the liabilities now being in- and we, the people, made Brown Governor, curred. We are also opposed to devolving this and we, the people, contracted the Confederate debt upon posterity, as some recommend, nn- debt, and, now, if we, the people, refuse to en ,, , M dorse our own debt, thereby strengthening tho e p ea ’ 83 we s P cnd the blood, future confidence of the weak minded repudiationists, S enera tions should pay the money. That is we ought to “be turned into hell with all the an idea thrown out by the Charleston prints nations that forget God.” • and copied with apparent approbation into the I voted cheerfully .for Gov. Brown the last Savannah Republican. Here it is: two elections for Governor, against the notions ~ ^ * of the party I previously acted with, and I can Confederate FiNANCES.j-YYe concur with say with a clear conscience, that, his Message our C0 . ntem P°ra r y of the Mercury, in another upon the State endorsement is the weakest important matter, besides that of Con- thing that ever I saw from the pen of an Exe~ federate * undables. The burden of taxation, cutive. It is to my mind just like a man mak* I State and Confederate, should be laid, as light ing a lengthy talk in the way of ah argument, I ^ as ^ 95. ou ^. suffenng people of the to try to prove that he ought not to give his P r ? senl j. day. We of to-day are paying the notes for dehts he has contracted, for fear that P ri ? e °*i r n o“fe° u s^war of defence, in blood they will become more legally .binding in time I anc * ^ ? aD 4 death, in hearts wrung and than accounts, and so accumulate as-to in-1 an S uls hed.by'tho loss of fathers, -husbands,- duce him in time to throw them off by repu- son3an< ? brothers, auA in every sort of per- diation - sonal privation and suffering, and it is but just I can tell, vou' now, Mr. Clisby, that a ° d ri ? ht tbatposterity should pay, in money, there is now in embryo in GeoroO, a strong of freedom, prosper-, narty for repudiation of the whole Confedert g “d.gtory, which we will bequeath them, ate debt, and the recommendation of the Gov- successful prosecution of that war.- ernor against endorsement and the sanction ol P ost , of u ® 7* 11 P ass from . tho sta S e of exist- his position by the press, will bring forth the b ° ° r n e , w ® can any compensa- monster. I heard* an influential farmer in fortheblcmdvro are nowlav.shly expend- h. for he is a man of popularity, who has often | ^ thr ’ aldom> Lot our aut £ oritie?> the ^tate Siveet M ork.—The Confederate Government during the past three or four days has been m&king a general descent upon all the sugar, molasses and -rice in town, in the hands of wholesale dealers—that is to say, all which could be found. Up to yesterday the seizures of sugar had amounted to about200.'hogsheads, or about a million and a half in value, in cur rent rates, or fobrteen thousand dollars’ worth, old style. What has been done in molasses and rice wo do not know. No price is fixed upon -the seized goods, as they are to bo aps praised in the terms of ’ the impressment act. The impressees take it pretty coolly, consid ering what profitable speculations this sort of business spoils. I TOE THAYER MOVEMENT IN FLORIDA. We have been waiting for further light from I die Savannah Republican’s statement, that the I pepper and salt army which landed at Jackson Tttle, • few days ago, have decamped, bag and bgpge, after a patriotic and Union-loving eforttofire the town, -which was only'partial- lj successful. If this be true, can imbecility IP father than the Fedora’s have illustrated in I iH their movements upon our Atlantic coast ag the present-winter’s campaign? It is I»face—from Foster's expeditions into North I Carolina down to the attacks upon Genesi$’ -so feeble that even the enemy felt the rity of apologizing for them as mere at- | knptsat “gunnery practice.” bud lastly, this terrible Anglo-African de- jieeatupon Florida, which has been a year in lfaning, which has ^een tho fond theme of jwmeroua meetings of “radical abolitionists’ 1 I«Marlborough Chapel and the Tabernacle, jnd which was ushered into practical opera Ita by a flourish of trumpets from the -New I*oiTribune, as a grand crusade destined to I convoke South and turn all secessioridom mUve^ What a ridiculous conclusion H“nJ bat it is no worse than ail thereat. So lent Florida friends have lost their opportunity I* bap game which would have bean worth: patching. They were too slow. With speed in throwing up a battery to H these gunboats they would have bagged |fethousand prisoners worth the taking. Flour.—The compositor yesterday in the market report put down flour to $27 00 a hun dred. It was a good idea in him, but would not stick. . Dealers are asking $37 00 in spite of his quotation; and yesterday tho public were offered a chance to buy it at first hands from a producer’s wagon at $40 00. The rush to close a contract was not great Wo think there is a largo quantity of flour somewhere about. meal. All the bacon I have bought has been rasas>•>* sxtmtsts So “'° ,ciib8 - Having heard so much of this, I do not like \^ rlesion to see anything but a disposition to continual- F* ow i wlth a “ “ ue deierence to the superior ly bolster up the Confederate debt f° r it is a wisdom of our contemporaries, that idea strikes debt-of our own creation; and as I said be-1 U3 as meanly as repudiation, and it will be fore, weo^gh^to W^ng^all times to_s_ay [ about ag t0 ‘ a public credit already “ stretched?' to an extremity which compels us to contract a debbnow at the rate of seven dol lars for one, which wo would devolve upon our , unlucky posterity to pay “in gold or its equiv- his opposition and arguments were tho ciuse ; , ~ ■ . , . . : of all the armed-opposition to tho act in I alent > wlth interest at ■ tho rate of eight per Cherokee Georgia. I am no prophet, but 11 centum per annum.” ; Posterity will have now predict that there' are men now in high I their own revolutions to attend to and pay for position in Georgia, and demagogues yet alive, and therefore let us pay for ours and adjust it who alter this war shall have closed, will |„ i L1 , head a party far the repudiation of-the C. S. I r 1 *■?' \P r , . , - • debt, and amraber of the press who will ad- Now, for; the sake of argument, let us as vocate it, and this move against State en- sume wfaa t our correspondent takes for grant- dorsement developes' the'thing- plain to my ed, to wit: that the State endorsement will mind. I add to the value of tho Confederate - indebted and do everything in our power to advance the cause of the Confederacy - the Govern ment of our choice yid creation. See what harm Gov. Brown did by oppos ing the conscript act. I havo no doubt but You will of course think, after what I 'have I ness _ we have, it is reasonably to bo hoped, id, that I am a creditor to a large extent of 1 , f..-,,.-. rf., , ,, ,. f e Confederacy, but not so. Iam but an I contracted two thirds of the debt which it said, the Ak Old Friend Tursed up Again.—Dr. D. "•Strader, who hasjustTeturned from a long made his welcome appearance quite un- upectediy in our sanctum yesterday, bringing V * of Northern papers, from the 2d to .,ih mst, the contents of which wo shall 'Meivor to digest for the benefit of the readers w theEegister. /. f- reports a Yankee force at Carthage, , “^wiginally was 5,000, but desertions re- ac Mit to four thousand, and subsequently “ Be Wgiment was. withdrawn, leaving but “'te thousand there. These were so much dc- , Wiiited, that the radical ’abolitionists bad to p* put on the Southern side of tho river to y the others from running away. A Puty of these invaders who went to War- r* 58 to steal a lot of w"hcat which belonged to '"^JOTernment, were met by Major Hamilton * * 0r fesn’s command, who drove them back, hi o a number, with no casualties on our ; 6 *cept three slightly wounded. tj>7 Per Ajottjm. W A subscription list has boon left at ouri office for the purpose of receiving loans to a Purveyor’s establishment to purchase for and sell provisions and other necessaries to the soldier’s families aud poor of Bibb county. - We hope it will be only necessary for us to call attention to this benevolent entei prise to sod cure a sum sufficient for all the purposes need ed. ..... . Council Chamber, Mar. 81, 1803.' Present—The Mayor, Aid. Clayton, Powers, Cherry, Ross, Groce, Goodall, Collins. Absent—Aid. Adams. ■*>-•* • 5 Tho Minutes of the lost meeting were read and confirmed. v . -‘ < The Bridge-keeper reported tolls:.$ 83 80 “ Clerk of market “ fees.... 5 10 “ Guard House Keeper........ 4 80 S. W. R. R. bill, $10, passed. The Treasurer’s^ .first quarter’s report, and Geo. S. Obear’s bill, referred to the Finance Committee: Petition of the Police for an increase of sal aries was received and read, and, on motion, Council fixed upon tho following rates of sal aries for the present, viz: Lieutenants, $70 : Police, $60 per month; Principal Marshal, $1850; Deputy Marshals, $1000; Guardhouse keeper, $500; Clerk, $1350 per annum,-and the bridge keeper’s -salary was raised $200, with an understanding that $150 of that amount to be paid to his assistant. • ’ 1 Aid. Cherry moved that tho Mayor’s salary be increased to $1400. Carried. Aid. Ross moved that the Sextqn be entitled to charge the following lees: For digging a grave and making interment oT a white per son, $51 for a hogro, $4. Carried. Council then adjourned. -. Richard Curd, 0. C. A CARD. My Planting Friends: I desire to say to you through this medium, to save answering let ters, that I am not buying provisions, lard, bacon, syrup, meal, corn or flour. I havo not made profits on corn, meal or flour for months. Since prices have been high, what I have sold has been sold at less than fair commissions, as I did not desire, or do I now, profits on the absolute necessaries of life, to-wit: Corn; meal, flour and bacon. ’ I have, as is well known, bought flour at cost—$23, and sold it to families at $25, when $35 to $40 could have been gotton for it—same profits in rolation to every man buy his provisions from first hands as far as I am concerned. The reason I do this is, that many of our citizens complain daily that our merchants charge high prices for provisions, forgetting that they cost merchants high, as my planting friends know; and as I was dealing moderately in such articles, being my legitimate business, at little or no profits, I do not feel disposed to be complained at un justly, and therefore retire. Among those who recently complained at high prices of provisions in our midst, are a few of our wealthy pro ducers, and I can point them out who have large quantities of corn and peas, and perhaps bacon, and no doubt : can spare considerable quantities—they are the last men to complain at high prices when they do not sell their own product^ at more reasonable rates; at any event if they do not desire to sell their surplus at reasonable prices, they ought to bo silent in complaining. This proposition I will make those who say prices aro too high, and who have corn to sell, that if they will sell me corn at $1 a bushel, and it cost 10c -to lay it down that L will furnish clerks and house room, and sell to those who are needing the advantage of low rates at one dollar and ten cents, or if you cannot afford it under one dollar and twenty- five cents, cost of transportation ten cents, I will take it at that and sell at $1 35—same withbacon, if you can furnish it at 50 cents I in my humble individual in every respect; have but I W *H He necessary to incur. The evidence of little of this world’s .goods, and that mostly in tfiat indebtedness is already in'the * hands of land. I could take a few Confederate bonds, the government creditors, having been receiv- and intended doing so if the State makes the I ed without State endorsement, and received at endorsement, but if not, I shall invest in land, C0rreS p 0ndiD g depreciation. It has bought believing that, if they refuse to endorse, that b r . _ , , . ° repudiation will be finally accomplished. supplies at enormous prices, founded in a de- I hope, Mr. Olisby, that you will excuse me 1 predation of the money which the State en- for intruding upon your attention such a | dorsement,(as our correspondent thinksjwill go lengthy letter, when your time is so much ta— | f ar to cure. Now how will you defend a policy Aca op tfainit which artotoioA to go behind those contracts wuu uac0I1 > “ * ou cau IuruiB “ 1L ai ou 1 more important, but 1 ask you, wu l already compieicu;-iu--w^.. - will sell to tho needy at 50 cents—put urc to read ,t and lay it away ; for if we live from a want of endorsement was a to see this war ended, and repudiation snau 1 . .... , ,, , take place I shall call for this letter. material consideration, and add by cndoisc- The foregoing is a private letter from a high- merit to the already enormous compensation ly intelligent source. As it is a .pithy aridl paid? Does any private individual do busi- „„v„ us statement, t the case ****** State endorsement is, in dorsement, and me .....J’l," Lrnth, nnly ^ to time. We wonld mak.it preservmg old tmeomen . « pa ,t on recorf consolidating tUe for both the reader and the writer. UarMU-i -- ,5 ... ,, , ledgcville correspondent, a, highly intelligent pabho debt and putting it in manageable shape gentleman, on the spot. and' with every oppor- after the war is over. Meanwhile we would tunity to kho’w, say.S the i’ , nc«rsfSii-u; b,li will ™ public credit, as far as possible, by pass If S o, well and good; • We-sbaH'acqui- taxation and by funding the currency. Vf c esce cheerfully, and have lived long enough to were not indebted to the Governor s message know that oSwhjfidggt and opinion.™ kgtf ^^7^ very fallible. But nevertheless these are de j q'hcy were thrown out in thc l’clegraph .a long cidedly against the policy of indorsement at j ^; mo a g 0 We want it deferred to the not afair proposition, then it is unjust and unfair tor a few of our wealthy planting friends to complain, and excite public opinion against merchants. I stand ready now, and never have refused to do as much for the needy as any man, as far as my moans enable me. Respectfully, J. W. Fears. jui. Pcgram’s command had passed safely *0 Kentucky, killing and capturing a number l'Somerse^j^y 8 ' -b e last heard of him was I The Yankees are fortifying Str^^ « t -b n „ J Green and Glasgow, which indicates "iri-J I S;ranz contemplates tuiiing : .back upon t j' points. The abolitionists arc all m-king ***' northwards in’anticipation of the’ritl ^f our forces. Tnc Union men of Ken- I , ; c JFegin to concede .that the State must go -l “ le South.—Knoxville Register. ItiyuRN.—Joe, a'servant of a gentle I^ofrhis city* who has boen an absentee froir J-jtaLter’a premises about eighteen months, anc lime employed by the Aboiitioniatfl on U v . j: *■ Jo-l . roinmorl on aoi th e \(3j ace nt islands. * his master. He reports the ne- the islanl in a destitute condition, and ^,/. wlx ‘ 0a3 to rc-urn. had they the facilities ^7 n S 80. He is .very much emaciated, but recover under home influence.—Char. the present time. n« ««“>■ w “ w I Timely Enquiry.—Commend us to our active end of .the war. If it is worth anything wc I of ^ Atlanta c , mrn n nW eilth for a dis- wantthe.pubhc,creditors to pay^ a reasonable I ^ take hol(] of lhings in time. Ills compensation for it in the Ie< uc op 0 - ie ra-e leader of tfao lst ; s ; n answer to tho inquiry of interest, and 1 ; '<>r u ia , a w ho is to have the District of Columbia and Should it be tendered g^iluitonsly? the public buildings?” As Lincoln, has got What crotchet has got .into our correspond j atuJ possession is nine points of tho law, J head about repudiation ? Is a State in- Commonwealth should address his-cogent dorsement w« Confederate debt any guar- 3 ment3 and eloquent appeals to old Abe, antec against repurliatm., ■> ■ Wc. have not so **- . •TeOared it—-history' does npt mitea: From the Coast,—Twenty-two block-ders pearly all the reivadiatiori in America has been l the Charleston bar at sunset on .dyn amic by the State governments. None has ^nour'own coast ».U wa been perpetrated by the Federal government. I the booming of a cannon Besides what the States and .Territories have j accomplished in this business, now and then a city or some other corporation have tried their hand at it, but the porformauc.e has been in considerable. It is the Stale* which havo fig' ured principally and conspicuously in dishon oring their own contracts upon one pretence or another. Now what real security against —All accounts from Middle Tennessee con firm the impression that notwithstanding the recent movements of Rosencranz, ho will be compelled to fight our army in its present Alra position. .He cannot turu our flanks nor can he retreat, for lear of.encountering that fire in the roar that has been so fatal to Federal Gem eral REGULAR MEETING, > ©bitnarg. . . ^ cttjr - oa 3ai ^- 1 for nearly twelve luonttw SnrH?S^>r?h 1 “; r doath—conttaeU to eer bed a greater uncam 0 ut lJlB yet «he bore her saffjriu-'i vviu Elsctions m Lincolndom.—The elections of members of Congress takes place in Rhode Island and Connecticut on the let of April; in Kentucky on tho first Monday in August, and in Vermont and California on the first Tuesday in September. wssssgsiwaBBafflwa passed many hoars with her. when her disea«/'JP ■ ltS 11 but ; BMBMBP. In this City, on the 1st instant, by the Rev. E. War- ren, Hr. J. W.Lemh and Miea Sarah A. Hibbee. . waawa* *AtiA W UUIO UHISIQ W«i4 ractfid Witil pBin t "Oat never did a murmur eacapo iier Lioi hor scarcely an allmion to her own triala. vai ever ready to eympaihiso with her friend*, and see^d tc forg-.t her own afflictions, while BttdmYttdog r.t rhuS those Who had auy claims upouheesmaa^f. . badorn haa death borne away a gentler, nobie> oe ing—n devoted wile, a faithful irieud, a kind and eon- sUieratemisttessj-thevoid the has left ln tut- Lean, of those she loved can never be filled. » -Where shau we find another friend solaithim. Torn, iutereaied, so true to the confidence reposed :n her' Very few were aware of her worth—lor lue tl: true women, ehe shrank from notice and did not covei lUe w< *“- Only those-who were ad mitted into the lpner circle of her affections, left tno Influence 01 her attractions and can speak kne wlnv.y of her acquirements. _ Although a German, sho was well versed m out jwi. language, and expressed her tnoughts with greet aro pnety. Bho had been highly educated and possessed many accomplishments—domestic xlfu were nerk also: ohe made home peculiarly attractive to her family. uno * 1 inmates were dependent on her lor their barm “ e;S - lney cared little lor society, sopleasaut to tie 1 was the cheerful cottage over which she presided er disease fa$tcnv.(l its relentless grasp upon net. - The tear of sympathy freely flows tor most noxne lias been mavie desolate oy her deatn: ->ui ir-- calmness with which she met tho King or Tea ere, ujl resignation with .which she bore her loa^ offliciioa' the wuiingnetts to depart which sue so oi'tea,oxu;ea.-*-1 snualu comtort their moarmne hearts. - .Farewell, dear Friend l ho more shall oui Ceut. C t!, an nu? Vfith the thrill ln^ strains of thine eatluiy aa« =lc. Those skilful flng£?woixu»t now swwi- •£'\ ol gold aud swell tue melody of Heaven 1 ’ Yes in Heaven, There will be no more death, . No pule disease, no dying farewell spoke.. No parting hour—no agony of pain, lucre win be endless joy; There golden harps ate tuned foreverme-v there Jesus is tue suu And fight of that glad shore— Ou 1 there we’ll mutt a-au I april 3—dlt Advertisements must be Dre-naao Post Office Notice- on an alter Monday, March 23rd, 1S63, tho"following hours will be in force at the Maeon Post Office , Open from 8.00 a. m. to 1.00 p. m., • “ •* 3.00 p. m. to 4.30 p. m., “ “ 6.00p.m. to7.00 p.m. All mails lor Atlanta, and the Macon & Western Rail Rood.wiil Close at 7.80 a. in. All Mails for Muscogee Rail Road, Perry, Port Val ley, Columbus andbeyond will close at 4.30 p. m. All Malls for Savannah, Augusta and beyond will close at 6 p. m. All malls for Americas, Albany and Eufaula, Ala., and beyond wfllclose at 7 p. m. A11 malls closo on Sunday at 12 m. Sunday hours from 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. mar 24-dtf WASHINGTON POE, P. Jl- 10 Doz- English Cotton Cards, F or sale by ■j April 3rd, 1863. J . W. PEARS. d3t 10 Hhds. Sugar, Not Seized Left for Retailing— When sold it is the last— F or sale by April 3rd, 1803. J. W. PEARS. ' d3t Rice, Rice. 1 A CASKS RICE, for sale at Retail. As Govcrn- iU ment has aU the Rice, now is the tlmctosupply your Pantry. April 3rd, 1SC3. F 12 Bales Osnaburgs. lOR SALE BY J. W. PEARS. April 3rd, 1803. . d8t A-TJOTionsr. J. B. SMITH & CO., ^yiLL sell on TUESDAY next, tno 7th Instant,' at One splendid HARNES3 HORSE, very stylish. Sold for no fault. april 3—dtds J. B. SMITH 3b CO.,. Auctioneers. Acution Sale of Tobacco. IMPORTANT AND PEREMPTORY SAL E OF 350 Boxes of €lioice Tobacco. PUBLIC SALE Of a handsome House & Grounds- W ILL bo gold in lront of the Court House, fcacou. Georgia, ou first Tuesday in April, uuu elegant house and grounds known as the late residence o: lit M. A. Praulilln; the situation Is a beauttlul emmenc overlooking the city, river and surrounding country the House is large and commodious, with all: out houses; and the grounds, nearly f< , „ .bur acres, terraceu. well lain oat and planted with a largo variety o: rare flowers and shrubbery. It is seldom that earn an e. lablishmeni is odered lor sale. Terms, either Cash, or such credit as the peennr. may desire. L. N. WHITTLE, March 17th, 1863. Por Adminieuatrlk Savannah Republican, Charleston Courier, Anemia Conatituilonalia and Columbus Suu, will pleace coia 3 times. mar 17—diau LANDS, LANDS, LANDS, i»,»50 ACRES. House door In the City 01 Macon, on the first Tuesday In April next, the following described Lands, locates m Ware County, Georgia, ncionglngto the estate 01 the fate Kobt. Collins, deceased, LOT NO. SBC ., EST. LOT NO., EEC., LSI 31 2 .11 499 52 1 11 101 1 11 4m 51 l 11 4Dc 100 1 11 499 49 1 11 4Xk 89 1 11 499 43 1 11 IS*. 93 1 11 '490 45 1 11 4510 97 1 11 490 46 1 11 07 1 11 490 47 1 11 68 1 11 490 29 X 11 69 X 11 490 23 1 11 4 Du 70 1 11 490 27 1 11 43:. 71 1 11 490 20 1 11 4X 64 1 11 490 24 1 13 41K- 63 1 n 490 - . GJ25 The above Lands are lGcated fa the Counties ol War. and Charlton, m this State near the Central & F'crlu K. R. - Parties wishing to make profitable Investment* no doubt be amply rewarded by attending this sale. Terms Cash. B. B. LEWIS. Executor of R. C. Collins, decease Macon, Ga., March 16, 1863. iltdr White Corn and Peas F OR BALE, at $2 00 per Bushel, at the sub * .. residence, 14 miles from Macon, on tie T tt ^ .. tU .'u and 6 miles eouth of Crawiord Station MacSil & W. K. Road. .aprll3-dSt*JAMES THWEAT'r Valuable Plantation For Sait T HE subscriber offers for- sale his Plantation son- 1 _ taining one thou sand acres, situated en Big Indian Creek, In Houston County, adjoining the lands of Ns- J. B. SMITH & GO. TXTILL sell on MONDAY, April 6lh, at Gaines & Co.’s y V Ware House; opposite the Market House, at 10 A rare o’clock,' 850 Bozos of Choico Grades of Tobacco, chance for Investment. mum : . - - - Also. 50 Ecus Macc-tbov and Scotch Snuff. of our needy citizens. TntSntlSilon^&Ts^ ~ & * co - auctioneers. ■y^riLI*sell THIS DAY^at 10 o’clock, THE SITUATION IN KENTUCKY. The war seems to have broken out afresh in the West. The Northern papers report active movements by our men in Kentucky, and the whole State is ablaze again with excitement of a “ rebel invasion.” Our troops aro reported moving towards the border, and the revolu tion in the gallant old State seems to be re-, vived in good earnest So rapid has been the advance of onr men that the Union .men have become- greatly alarmed,.and the Washington Government has been appealed to for inline diato aid. Skirmishing has commenced be tween the two lines, and it was feared in the North that our forces would push on before re inforcements could be got there. ExsSecre- tary Guthrie, the leader of the Union party of Kentucky, has appealed to Lincoln for troops to be immediately sent out, and the news we get from the North shows that the whole .Yankee concern at Washington is in great fears of an uprising of the people of that §wie, so long overawed and held in submis sion by the bayonet at the cannon’s mouth This is a new movement on the part of our irto—Jj. itFTSoiktjjcky, and if not cru-heil by overpowering numoera-of the enemy before it shall gather strength, it may bo tno means of redeeming and disenthralling that unhappy State from the grasp of the Yankees.—Rich, miner. JUMuU IJAW AW W GlV/Vik, - A very fine dark B^y Horae, 5 year 3 old—well broke to single and double Harness. . A fine Vermont Buegy, . , '4 Very fine, now, Cooking Stoves, with all rlcn shs complete, f. ■ „• 2> Boxes very, choico Tobacco, 50 Gross Matches, ■■ . •4 Gold Watcnes, <1 Large Water Cooler*, 5 22 pound Caddes of Green Tea, - * J 4 Barrels Malaga Wine, „ . 4 *•; 'CVDlt Boap; r T • V “ j. B. & filTH & CO., -Auctloneera. .Mobile, YfarcbtSfl.—The steamer Alice ar rived this morning from Havana on the 25th. | with an assorted cargo. j.^hsmSh & do. good settlements on the place. This is conslnere- of 1 ho best ElanUtions in the connty. For lurther information adBress me at navnevi-. Georgia. CBAS.o. WiNN. April 3rd,lSG3. - eW LAND FOR SALE. „„ . Ay County, aeu 3l r . in the EihDUtrlct,oi'same Counn; No. rim tec unr . !ii*'rlctol foimcrlv Baker,-now iUtchelt; No 1 lib Ssth District ot Early. _ 'V <51 said Lots are either watered by Oi aaiuctm • . mg or lasting water, and of either of them < /oo» Facmor UKXHSitrcs can be made. , Also. 610 acres on Camp Creek, Dale City, .uaoau.... Pine . and, m'xed with Oak and Hickory, Buckeye; Sassafras, stool ITffckory and Runners, The soil a of aerey. thocco’aio and black color. Oh the place ir a double-peo Log Cabln. There la 15 acres cleared ana fenced. Anew Rail Road is permanently iocatel witn- tnonemilsoMt find the Montgomery autt Mariaom Haillt09d runs thr ough It. - ^ • These Lands w ill be sold low for Cash, be mie. rnatiom-respecting the Georgia Lands, address S-nit Davenport,‘Po* ers.Torrrell iHREE PLANTATIONS, composing 5253 acres ol ^ choice Cotton Lands, viz: One place of lfttO acres; one of 1750 acres; undone of 2000 acres, all situated In Southwestern Georgia, for safe. Address, . ^pril 3 —d2w HARDEMAN & SPARKS. NEGROES FOR SALE. A Mulatto Woman, good Cook, Washer, Ironer. and Seamstress, 39 years old, and her chud, a gtrl, ~>S yefitrMd. ■ ■ , A Girl, 10 years old. 8 years old A Girl, 14 years old.. “Boy, 10 •* “ . AU chUdreu of Mulatoes, likely and well grown.— Pnll nt J* W. From 8 o’clock, A. M. tojo’dacs, P. M„ today. April8rd,.1563. - . y.‘>. - “It ArcIIoh. J. H. CHEEKY & CO., WILL sell, on TUESDAY, April 7th Instant, before W the Court House door, fa tins o.ty, Twenty-five Lots of Land, situated in the counties or Ware and Cherleton. .urn.iw5 aiivcrilso.i 1 ‘Y U.-B. Lewis. The at- fenrion of those wishing to buy Lauds aro particularly in Iismat sametimaaud pktv, two Negro Women. J. 11. CHERRY & CO., Auctioneers. Macon, April 3-d, 1862 - * , - . - • LANDS FOB TEJfOA ! II apifl3-^-9'-* ' Plains of Dura, Sumter Comity. U.<„ ' list of Letters REMAINING fa the Post Office, at Albany, i Abbott, HtsU D S April 1st, 1863. | Abbat, Dr J Atford, Mrs A Beall, JB . • Bellamy. Mies E W Bikes, W Barwiok, N . Cohn,S • Cbristiau, IT ', Cook, Solomon Davis, Mrs T B ' Eaton, Mis E Glen, Mrs M E llireor, John M Barits, MraMT Hengrovo, R T Howell, Missonri Jones, Polly .Mil ■ Brow Britwell, Mrs a Browning, Mrs o -• Calhoun, C Coopor, J W Darnel,B- Fears, Amanoa Grier, J Harris, Mrs V T Hays, Johnson, Mlts M J Knight, Jane Kendall, IH Confederate Bonds. TANTED, $25,000, ol the 100 million Loan, pay- ’Vl/- . _ W able fa 1875 aud 1831,'. And $10,010 of the 15 - . million Loan Bonds, for which the will be paid, by • Macon, Ga., April 3rd, 1S£3. ,ghe=t premium I. C. PLANT. d3t Manley, J P . Mathews/M *- Mims, \V H J McCorkle, Miss H Nobles, G : .- Peitiwcrz, J W 2 Poster, MiS3 M B Rice,-B O HaSqfi, Oorpl Sibly.Miss G Turner. Mrs E H Tyal, Mrs B \V atkins, B P Johnson, Mrs Miuy ■ Johnson, Miner'.’. King, Miss L Kendall, Miss U M Clairs, -Mrs K Mathews, J W Murphy. Mies H Miley, Miss I. v ultver, MissN Pyles, R S M. Pago, Mrs M 2 Robinson, Mies 1. Robinson, MlcsMaktes 8a;>p, Henry, Tlron.Mrs ri Thai), W WUkrusou, Jarr.c:- i'.-rron* halting for any of the above lettc please say “Advertised.” april 3 > .. V E. RICHARDSON, i-. M.