The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, October 16, 1879, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

TIMBERLAKE & CHAPMAN, MACON, GEORGIA, id, near Campbell & Joues’. mm mb> liv- stir sums. guarantee the bpst attention to Block, ant will, be glad to, see our friends and the public generally. W. C. TIMBERLAKE, W. B. CHAPMAN, JOHN F. LEWIS* D. B. LEONARD. K* G. LEWIS, LEWIS, LEONARD & GO,, bankers and brokers, HAWKINSTOXE, - - - - - GEORGIA Boy »nd Sell Exchange, Bonds Stock, Etc.' CoLec- tions promptly attended to. ALSO MAKE MANS ON GOOD SEC DEITY. Advances mado on Cotton In store at lowest rates. Executor’s Sale of a Valuable Planta tion. GEORGIA.- -Houston . County: By virtue of an order from tbe Hon, Ordinaly of said County, I will sell to the highest bidder before the court house door in Perry on the first Tues- Jayin November next, 1879, during the legal hours of sole, the 'following property to-wit: That plantation situated about, five miles South of Perry, known as (be Henry Tooraer Flat Greek Place, con- taibing 1200 acres more or less, well improved and in ji goocT state of cultiva tion. Terms, b'nlf cash and balance in one nnd two years. F, A. TooMfid, •Executor Henry Toomer, dec’d, Oct, 2. 1879,—tils. GEORGIA —Houston County.- G. H. White, ad mini pirn tor. of V. B. D. H. Culler, lato of said comity deceased ."iSaa applied for leave to Boll all the wild , lands of said deceased at private ttle: This is therefore to cite all persons concerned to appear at the November term 1879 of the Court of l)»diuary of said county and show cause if any they have why rsairt application should not be granted: Witness my official signature this Oct. 2d, 1879. 4vr. A. S. GILES, Ordinary G. M. DAVIS, toccason to Chapiun& Davi3 andC, Mastehsox Boardiag, Livery And Food Stable, Third Street, between Walnut amt Mulbery Streets. Macon Ga. T. T. MARTIN MANUK ACTURES AND TJEA^JSE IN Hi PERRY, - GEORGIA. H as now cn hand i new and complete Stock of TIN WARE OF ALL KINDS. Txf Hick HE WILL SEIL CHEAPER. THAN f f ever before offered in Perry, At Wholesale, Macon Prices will be Duplicated. A3* Roofing, Guttering, etc., done to order in the most approved style. ... AplSIyr- THE P&BRI. AT MACON, Oct. 27th to Nov. 1st, 1879. Magnificent and Best Ap pointed Grounds in America. liberal cash premiums In all Classes, and the largest offered by lair in tbe United States. Trotting and Running Ra ces! _ Every cay, by some of the Most noted horses on the turf; Music win be furnished by a celebrated MILITARY BAND! ;the Most Promi nent Statesmen the public, will attend the Sat- Fair, as "Mors* and several will make addresses. Greatly Reduced Rates . on all the . railroads in the State! “lotion is“ extended to you to be an a S d T ou - re teqnested to write to the E5!P*T*t Macon for a Premium List and other THOS.HAEDEMAN.Jr,, President. L. F. LIVINGSTON, Geu’l Suu’t. MALCOLM JOHNSTON, Secretary. MAHSHAI.ljVII.IdG ITEMS. (Laid over from last week.) Editor Home Journal'. Religious meetings are, with ns now, tlie order of the day. Mr. Twitty, as sisted by other ministers, among them Mr. Branch and Mr. McGehee, col ducted a series of meetings through last week at the Methodist church. Mary able sermons were preached and much earnest work done, though the results do not seem proportionate to the effort. A few, however, were added to the church', mostly children. It is possible the meeting may continue through -this week, though that has not yet been de cided. A great religious event has just trans pired among the colored people here.— They have just closed their Association. A very large number of them came, and it is pleasant to relate that the dele gates were a fine looking body of men, and tbe crowd behaved admirably,— belter, indeed, to be candid, than large a number of whites generally do on such aa occasion. They were quiet, orderly and respectful. A gentleman of intelligence says that he heard from one of them on Sunday a very fine ser mon, full of original thought and reli gious fervor. The singing, at least at one of the churches (all the climchesin town were used by them), was grand beyond description. All of them sing, and when two or three hundred of them get at it together, they pour .out such a vast volume of sound that it fairly shakes the building. At a little distauee it is beautiful. Three or four car-loads of them embarked for borne Monday morn ing, the exercises having closed Sunday night, Oar town looks bran new. Two new brick warehouses, several new brick stores—I tell you it presents a fine ap pearance; and business is pretty good too, considering ihe low price of cotton I hope some of oar merchants will- tell the people what they are doing through your columns—they certainly must know it will pay. I was at your elegant conuty fair, and as I looked upon the many beautiful dis plays from’ the farm, orchard and vine yard, on exhibition iu the agricultural department, the thought occurred to me that I would tell your readers, with your peimission, something of some grapesl bad seen a day cr two before that. I speak of the Flo’ino grape, cultivated by Col. Ww. M. Haslam,—a grape that I have not sein anywhere else. It re sembles ibe ordinary muscadine very much in color, only It is of a richer pur ple. The flavor is equal to that of the scuppernoug,- and it makes most excel lent wine. The skin or rind is tough, but instead of detracting from its value, it really adds to it, because of tb's pecu liarity it is free from the depredations of birds. But wlu-t I most desire to call attention to is that i i is prolific. It would astonish one to see what an abundance of fruit was on tbe vine I saw. They grew in largo bunches, and the whole vine seemed to be one great cluster of these, so close together that you could uot distinguish the bunches. I may, however, have had my judgment somewhat biased in their favor by tile fact that Col. H. forced on me a couple of bottles of wino- that he had made from them. So you see, when . I said above that they make excellent wine, I was not speaking at random, but had something to base an opinion upon.— And how let me say to the Colonel, that I hope his shadow may never grow less, and that his grapes may prosper so that he. may do so again every now and. then. Quite a number of persons: went to the Savannah Centennial from here: Among cithers, Misses Evlyn, Fannie, Gertrude and Floilne Rice, Miss Buck ner, Messrs. George and Ned Rice, Guss Sperry and Rowan Evans. Mr, A. C. Riley was admitted to the legal profession at Crawford court, and has had some business already. He is w rthy of success, and will very likely achieve it, Abe. The Thomasville Times says that per. haps the only red fox ever captured in that county was caught oil Thursday last by Mr. Tom Hall and others. The varmint was first seen in the Spring Hill swamp last February, aud- has of ten been run since, but with no success until Tuesday. He was captured alive, having gone into the ground. Mr. Hall hoped to save.him alive for the fair but owing perhaps to the string tied around his month, to prevent his biting being too tight, he soon died. The Detroit Free Press.says "the chances of an editor’s catching fish, labile trying to do so, are ten in fifty, teind those of the unknown small boy with straw hat and broken and one broken suspender, he’ll only discover that attempts at deception never prosper. lie palm. AN ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY A correspondent has sent ns a start" ling letter from Miss M. Eethnm-Ed- wards, from which we give an extract: “I send you the following particulars of a recent scientific invention, just pat ented. and destined without doubt to play an important part in' our econom ic history. I think it must be regard ed for once and for all as a solution of the great coal question, not only among ourselves, but abroad. M. Beurbonnel, of Dijon, the celebrated lion and pan ther slayer, lighted upon the following discovery by hazard, and, after six years persistent investigation, brought it to entire workable perfection. He discovered, by means of two natural substances, inexhaustible in nature, the means of lighting and maintaining a fire without wood or coal; a fire instan taneously lighted and extinguished; a fire causing no smoke, dust or trouble; a fire costing utmost one-tenth of ordi nary fuel; and, what is more wondeiful still, a fire, I he portion of which an swering to our fuel is everlasting—that is to say, would last a lifetime. M. Bouibonnel’s invention comprehends both stove and fuel. The fires could be od tli6 minutest scale or the lai-gest. They would be used for heating a ba by’s food, or for roasting an ox. Being lighted instantaneously they will be a great economy of time. M. Bourbon- nel at 01 ce pateutedihis invention, and a body of engineers and savants from Paris visited him and prorianced hiscUs- covery one of tbe most remarkable of the age. He has had several offers for the purchase of the patent in France, but wants *o sell it in England, bis own occupation being in anotber line. Any English gentleman or firm vishing to see his fires or stoves could do so by writing to him a day or two beforehand: Hir address is M. Bourbonnel, Dijon. I have seen these fires and stoves. There is.no mistake about the matter. It is as clear as possible that here we have a perpetual and economical source of fu el. Two hundred years, ago the discov erer would have been burned as a wiz ard.—London Athenaeum. HOGD’s MARCH ON NASHVILLE- The ” average Northern citizens has learned much.to underrate the soldeir- ly qualities of the late ex-Confedevate Gen, John B. Hood. To most peo ple north of the old slavery line he is re garded as the rash aud improvident leader who left Sherman to bis own de vices at Atlanta and filing himself north ward on the impregnable position of Thomas at NashV’le. Doubriess he was all that has been conceded to lrim as a daring soldier. His previous record shows that conclu sively. But history will eventually clear him of lie chargeof desperation and iu- judiciousness. He took his first great command when the cause of the Confed eracy was hopeless, add succeeded the really greatest military mind of the re belling South,: General Johnson, under very much the same kind of popular pressure—only more desperate—which afflicted McClellan under the idiotic shout of “on to Richmond.” The movement on Nashville, had it eucceeded, would have placed Sherman in a very awkward position, with his northward lines cut aud all open to Hood to ¥Le Ohio and beyond. There would have been no march to the sea, but a grand scramble to get back to, the threatened States of the Northwest. The disaster at Nashville was the end oi the Confederacy. It needed no smashing of Lee’s lines at Petersburg, nor any surrender at Appomattox to complete it-. Hood was an infantry Hurra t who was -in badTucIr, He,had only one chance, and that in almost the very death strug gle of tlie rellion. It is. bad teste to call him a rash leads er when he was never-called upon to lead but in the last grand emergency of his people.. Had he whiped Thomas he would have been one of the greatest of the South instead of being foolishly characterized as the man who ruined the cause of liis friends.—From ihe TirnoJclyit Eagle. FORT VALLEY DOTS. (Laid over from last week.) Editor Home Journal.- Your correspondent failed to put in appearance at the fair, very much to her disappointment. Sickness prevent ed. News .items are scarce vide Mirror and Advertiser. Mr. William Potts of Dooly county was joined in matrimony last evening by Rev. 1. B. Ruasell to Miss Fannie Fiue of this place. Emancipation acts can do her no good as she is Free no more. Mr. George Maddox’i little son, who was bitten by a ground rattle snake on the 30th ultimo, is getting over it slow ly. His foot ik very sore. One place in which whisky did good. The cross way over Mossy Creek at Grays’ mill is completed. The heavy rains Monday and Tues day have washed the public roads worse than they have been in' a long while. Overseers will have .to get out their hands and put their respective roads in order soon, as Superior court is not far off and the Grand Jury will get after somvbod.y Colton is coming in pretty briskly, selling this morning at 8$ to 9 cents, showing a little itee. Planters are beginning to discharge their Guano indebtedness at 13 to 15 cents. Our merchants are not doing their us ual amount of business, probably be cause they don’t make a free use of printers ink. ' Considerable sickness, particularly among children, but none serious. Adieu » PAETHER, A. Fort Yalley, Ga- -Oct 8-1879. WORDS SENTIMENT AND SENSE. Deeds tell what you are. Candid thoughts are always valuable. Humility is the mother of contents ment. The end of man is an action, not a thought. Keep good principles and they will keep yc u. MW—IBMWBh——- -r«afta*iK'jBn He knows enough who knows how to be silent. The secret of prolonging life is not to abridge it •Nothing is more ea^y than irreproach able conduct forty-nine in,fifty.” it might add that . if the editor assumes an old straw hat i None gare so old as they who have outlived enthusiasm. We cannot do evil. to others without doing it to ourselves. Time will do much for sorrow—pride, perhaps, much more. It is. a.good thing to be deaf when a slanderer begins to talk. - GRANT HAS SAID. NEVER Neit her during bis electioneering jour ney around the world, nor since Ills ar rival in California, has Ggn. Grant said a single word that will stand in the way of his becoming a candidate for Pi esi- dent, if the republican Convention nom inates bim. On the contrary, every declaration lie has made when approached on Ibis subject has been shaped to help bring about his nomination. When the peo ple have said that the office should seek the man, not the man tbe office, he has professed weariness of public life and an incliuation to spend the rest of bis days in the capacity of a private citizen. When the people have said that two terms should fill the measure of- any man’s ambition, he has replied, in effect, that it was at a. sacrifice of his personal wishes that he held the office even as as long as lie did, And liis friends have added for lrim that' nothing short of a great national emergency, one which should appeal to liis patriotism in the strongest manner, could over come Lis reluctance to be again a candi date. If the man is ready, the emergency will not belong in making. There is no time since the fourth of March, 1872, when (he simple announce- ment from Gen. Grant, “I shall not run again for President.” would have been worth hundreds of thousands of votes to: the republican party. Every possible influence has been brought to bear to wring that annouD cement from his lips. He has remained dumb. Does any sensible man doubt tliat Gen. Grant'; is still a candidate for a th*rd term? Timely Aviee to Farmers. Now is the time for farmers to plant their small graio, and sow in quantity, for sale as well as use, It is a sad mis take for planters to utilize all their gooff land for cotton, and sow enough grain in on. of the way places to do their stock or for home use. When our peo. pie team to sow grain for sale, as well as for use, they will be prosperous. It will pay as well as cotton if good land is used, instead of the usual waste land given to the cereal crop, and indeed wffl pay better, because it Deeds no in termediate attention—the sowing and reaping being all tbe trouble and ex. pense. Grain, too, brings money to the farmer just when he needs it—in the middle of the summer. What faimer, who sold his grain last summer, did not make money? And what .fanner who, as soon as he thr.shes his grain and sells it, will not Jo it again? * It is an other mistake to raise grain and keep it for the weevils’ Sell as soon as gather ed in summer, when it commands £ high price, and buyfl.nr fromtLemills, and farmers wiil make money without risk. Ali.cereals are now looking (o the ground, aud the sooner they are laid under the sod tlie better for next year’s crop and for the lucky farmers. Oats, wheat and other gram, and a larger quantity of each, are now in older for the fall sowing.—Augusta .Evening Hews. THE USE OF PAIN. . GAMBLING HELLS All cities have .them, and Atlanta is not exempt. On alihcst every s'reet in the business part of the city a gambling house of some kind may be found. From the lowest negro lottery set up in one corner of a dirty ; bar-room to the. most tastefully furnished establishment, car ried on in open day light under tbe pro. tection of the law, they are to be found of all grades Yet in this respect the legalized gambling houses have very ht- advantage over the unlawful farobanks, for the latter- are : operated nnder an undisturbed violation of the law, clan destinely it may be, but only secretly enough that’ the officers of the law can not apprehend the violators without leaving Ihe. sidewalks or entering some back room. Here night after Dight hundreds of dollars flowintothe coffers of faro bankers and hazard dealers and making poorer and more hopelessly wretched the wretched victim who has bean allured into one of these places in the vain hope of recovering in one night all his former loses. Still tLe business go^s on. 'Now and then a low negro den is broken into, but the more respectable!?) houses remain' unmolest ed.— The Post. A precocious youth in North Wheel ing prompted by an unpleasant recol lection of the last term, says that school teachers are like dogs because “they lick vonr liand.” This carries off The defects of the mind increase iu j spend all t old age, rko those of the face. I work. Truth is violated.by falsehood, and it may be equally onLraged by silence. It was Carlyle who said.* “Make yourself an honest, man, and then yon may be sure there is one less rascal the world. The people—these who wi •An Isolated’City, • No passenger or sleeping coaches are allowed to approach nearer Memphis than 100 miles, and no box freight cars nearer than 50 miles, and persons leav ing Memphis must be free of every symptom of the fever. Their baggage musl be sent to the de pot fully six hours before tbe departnve of the train, for which period the tranks and their contents are shot up in close room and exposed to the fumes of sulphuric acid gas, after which they are repacked and a certificate of their thor ough disinfection passed on them. The passenger must ride for ten miles on the tender of a locomotive to a place where a transfer is made. Here in the open country near no habitation, the passenger and his baggage are depos ited to await the coming of the connect ing train arrives fifteen minutes after the engine bringing him out has left for Memphis. In this train he tides 90 miles in an open stock car wheie the motion of the engine insures the fullest oil ula- tioq. of the air. At’ a point 100 miles distant from the plague-stricken city lie finds the regular trains, and re alizes that during the remainder of bis jonruey, no matter what direction he lakes, be is au object to be shunned by his*follow passengers, and of grave so licitude to the .health officers of every city through which he may pass. Mrs. Sprague says she feels grateful to the people of-the South for the kind ness shown her in her recent troubles. Said she, when a reporter asked her if sympathy had been wanting: “On the contrary, tlie kind feelings manifested by my friends has touched me deeply. Especially has this 'kindness been ex hibited in tbe South. _ The papers there, with a chivalry that is natural, have with one accord taken my part beef use I wasja woman and defenceless. This I particularly appreciate Because 1 have no right to expect anything of the kind from the South. Some of these days t'heuliivalry .of the North will grant me the same fairness, and I hope to show that it is not unmerited.” The yield of lumber from the forests of the gieat lakes in the northwest, will be this year 3,300,000,000 feet. Never theless it will fall about 800,000,000 be low the expected amount. A new style of boys trowsers has been te. vented in Boston, with a ccipperseaf, sheet iron knees, riveted down the seams, and water proof pockets to hold broken eggs. “Debt,” says Josh Billings, “iz a I rap which a mr.n seis and ba'es Limself and then deliberately gets into.” , A bill has been passed in Legislature furnishing limbs and arms te disabled Confederates. The power which roles the universe, j this great tender power, uses pain asaj signal of dangsr, Just, generous, beau tiful nature never strikes a foul blow; never attacks ns behind our hacks; nev er digs pitfalls or lays ambuscades; nev er wears a smile on her face when there is vengemce in her heart. Patiently she teaches us her laws, plainly she writes her warnings, tenderly she g ri ^" hates their force. Long before the fierce, red danger light of pain is flash ed, she pleads with us—as though foi her rake, nofconrs—to be merciful to ourselves and to each other. She mokes the over-worked brain to wander from the subject-of its labors. Sue turns the over-indulged body- against the delights of yesterday. These are her caution signals: “Go slow.” She stands in the filthy courts aud alleys that we pass daily, and beckons us to enter and real ize with our senses what we allow to exist in the midst of the culture of which we brag. And what do we do for ourselves? We ply whip and spur on the jaded brain as .though it were a jibing horse—force it back into the road which leads io madness and go in full gallon. We drag the rebcl iou3 body with stimulants, we hide the orig- inaLrnd think we have escaped the dan ger, and are very festive before uight. We turn aside, as the Pharisee did, and pass on the other side with our hand kerchief to our nose. At last, having broken Nature's laws, and dieregarded her warnings, forth she comes--drums healing, colors flying—right in front! to pnuish us. Then we go down on ous knees and whimper about it pleas ing God Almighty to send this affliction on us, and prav him to work a miracle in order to prevent- the natural conse quences of our disobedience, or to save ns from tbe trouble of doing our duty. In othor words, we put onr fingers in the fire and beg that it may not hurt.— Temple. Bar. ] NEW DRY GOODS IN MACON, HOUSE Mr. N. G. Rice, of Wilkes county, died on Saturday of last week, at the advanced age cf 88 years. Fifty-two years ago he went into the woods and selected some nice walnut timber, which he had sawed into planks, and said he wanted his coffia mile of it. On Sat. urdavlast it was made into a coffin for Mr. R., and in it he was consigned to mollur emill. The cotton factories in and aronnd Augustas Ga., use $1,500,000 worth of raw cotton per annum. Savannah has raised §2,318,28 for Uer centennial; and for the Jasper monu ment §706,50 have been secured It is reported in Atlanta that Dr. H. V, M. Miller will run as an' Independ ent candidate for Governor. • Lightning recently killed fifteen out of eighteen hogs for Mr. John Crews, of Walton countv. To date. Sept 25, twenty military signified their intention of visiting the the Savannah centennial, THE GENUINE DR. C. McLANE’S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC OR VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. T HE countenance is pale and leaden- colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pu* pils dilate; an azure semicircle rung along the lower eye-lid; the nose is ir ritated, swells,.and sometimes bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stom ach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels ir regular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfrequently tinged with blood; belly swollen and hard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied: by hiccough; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but gener ally irritable, &c. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES HOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form; it is an innocent prepara tion, not capable of doing the slightest, injury to the most tender infant. The genuine Dr. McLane’s Ver mifuge bears the signatures of C. Mg- Lane and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. :o: DR. C. McLANE’S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy “for all the ills that flesh is heir to,” bnt in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. A.GUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be nsed preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. As a simple purgative they are unequaled. BEWAKE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with At Mrs. Clicdoin’s Old Slaiki, Second Hmt J. C. BANNON & CO., Respectfully nunonnee to the people of Houston and. adjoining counties, tha ladies especially, that they have opened and are daily adding to their new and very handsome stock of DRY GOODS, They make a specialty of DRESS GOODS, In all the latest shades and styles. Tlie Cheapest Black Cash meres Ever sold iu Macon, as well as the PRETTIEST CALICOES. ©Sy- Call and see onr goods, and ws will guarantee the mest courteous atten tion by gentlemanly and experienced salesmen. J. C. BANNON & CO. Mbs. W. F. Ekown, 1 f FkANk B. BevhxB, Formerly Brown House J (Formcriy Lanier Hon*. PROPRIETORS. milQUkL &<aTi(L* MACON, - GEORGIA. BATHS FREEOFCHARGE Gas and Water throughout the House. Commodious Rooms Fitted up with New Furni ture, Etc. HAWKINSVILLE, CA MOTTO—PEACE AND PLENTY. THE SCARBOROUGH HOUSE has recently been refurnished. Everything new, clean and comfort* able. Table furnished with the best the market of* fords, Servants polite and pccommodating, Com modious sample room and special attention paid to commercial tourists. A hack will meet every tram and convey passengers and baggage to and from the Hotel gratis. B. F. & \V. J. BOON, Proprietors; General •ONES & &00K, Merchants, Commission AND DEALERS IN Produce, Provisions and Staple Groceries, LIME, CEMENT, LATHES AND PLASTERING HAIR, CORNER COTTON AVENUE and CHERRY ST. MACON, CA. W E AGATX present our card fc> the people of Houston, Macon and Dooly counties, and return onr thanks for the patronage heretofore ex- tended to ns. and ask a continuance of the same, and solicit new customers, Guaranteeing to a?* Satisfaction. . "FAJEIM: BBECDiSv WHEAT, R E OATS, AND BARLEY JONES & COOK, MACON, GA. FIRST NATIONAL BANK. Tvr^oonxr, GrA. Bank of Deposit, Discount mul Exchan ges. W WWRIGLEY, Cashier. I C PLANT. President. Administrator’s Sale. W ill be sold on "-e first TnesdXy In Decombernetf, before the court bouse door in Perry, Houston County, Georgia, lots cf lands numoe -s 222 and 223, and forty (4 ) acres on tbe Couth side of num ber 221, a'l containing four hundred and lorty (440) acres, ai! in the Upper 11th District of said County—we” improved—containing three hundred (3JO) acres in cultivation—good dwelling lionss, gin house and pres-:—nitiiall necessary out hon es. Thepe lands wl" be sold as the property of Jo) t .C. Rnmph, nnderan order of the court of Ordina ry of said county for -adivison :n rag t ,e heirs of said John C Rnmph, and to pay his debts. Terms o ■ sale, one-third cash, one third on a credit of one year, and the other third on » credit of two years, and titles to be made when the pnrchaaa money is all paid—as it fall due. LEW 13 D. HUMPH, Administrator of Johh C. Rnmph, decVL i. Ga., Oct. C—1879—tus. Pi.CATION" FOE DISMISSION. Geoegia. Itousrt it Coox it: S.A.&L. S. Tonbsiey, executors of Mrs. Sarah Tonnsley, of said county, deceased, have applied for dismis3*on from trust: Thir is therefor ' - “ appear at the J: Ordinary of they have, g WitoeL the impression Dr. McLane’s Liver Pills. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. cf McLane and Fleming Bros. O i to sell ail —Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. Me. T 1- V TS |jy. jq em j n g market being ■