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MORNING, Oct. k 8, 1869
Ear Corps of Contributors.
Tol. B. T. Harris
F. L. Little, M. Pendleton, Esq
Dr. E.
Col. C. W. Du Bosk,
J. T. Jordan, Esq. Jr. Esq
Geo. F. 1’ierce, v -
Pennsylvania mod Tennewee.
We have cheering news from these great
States. The republicans themselves in
Pennsylvania are becoming faint hearted,
1 and in private conversation admit that the
12th of this moDtfe will witness the tri¬
umph of Democracy. This conviction, it
is said, is so strong among the leaden of
the party, that they appeal to President
Grant for the vacant cabinet appointment
to be given to some one from thaWState,
to cheer their faltering hopes by that most
powerful of all party inspirations, the
spoils of office. Out of 656,000 votes casj
in the last election, the Radical majority
was less than 20,000. It will only be ne
eessary therefore to ehange three votes in
•very one hundred to redeem the Key*
•tone State from a miserable misrule, and
ydaco it in its true position before the
country.
In Tennessee, which more than any
other State has been ealled upon to endure
the bitterness of wrong, and the tyranny
of persecution, there comes the dawn of a
sure deliverance.
A dispatch to the Courier-Journal, the
leading paper of the West, btings the as
surance that when the Legislature con¬
venes early in tbfc present month, the fol¬
lowing events can be predicted with rea¬
sonable certainty:
“1st. That Andrew Johnson will be
elected 8cnator.
2d. That the 15th amendment will not
be ratified.
3d. A constitutional convention will be
ealled at an early day, which will effect
the enfranchisement of every disfranchised
citizen in the State at the earliest practi¬
cal moment. ,
4th. That the Bonds of the State will
not be repudiated.
5. The partisan Legislation of the past
few years will be repealed."
All will acknowledge that, the accom¬
plishment of these splendid results will
be glory enough for one campaign. The
election of Ex President Johnson to tbe
United States Senate, will be at onee the
conferring upon him of an honor due to
his powerful championship of the princi¬
ples of Democracy, and will be giving to
that degenerate body a mao of ripe expe¬
rience, of acknowledged intellectual abili¬
ties ; in short a statesman who knowing
his enemy's strength and weakness both,
will know how to grapple and overcome
him. His election therefore will not only
rejoice Tennesseeans, but it will rejoice
all who reverence the old Constitution and
love the Liberty which it once secured.
Among the conclusive symptoms af ra¬
dical decline in that State, is the fact that
tha last daily radical organ in the 8tate is
about callapsing, and Brownlow’s paper,
characterized hitherto by the violence of
its spirit and tone in advooaey of the most
proscriptive measures of its party, has be
oome intensely conservative.
We trust all these bright predictions of
Ihe dispatch referred to, will find a speedy
fulfilment. In common with all haters of
tyranny, we long to see the day ot Ten¬
nessee’s deliverance, and confidently be
Kevo it is at hand. *
The Hall Road Meeting at Athens
For the purpose of opening Rail Road
communication with North j&tft Georgia,
assembled in Athens on the 2d inst. A
committee was appointed to prepare mat¬
ter for the consideration of the body, oon
tfflting of W. L. Mitchell, A. R. Wright,
F^BPhinisy, J. P. King, and others.
report spoke “ of the ipealpulable
^fitoaceroi^ ***^§»»t Gdefgia, from a development desirableness of
com^og of the
offfiarly , road th i t her, of the
•ppoiniiiig of oo»»| ttM< ^ tbt Knnl
cotmttes through which yparato^i It ^
urge upon the people the w
portanoe of the undertaking, and tbe
bability of its being managed better by the
Geo^ia Rail Road, than as an independent
Crafty. j? \
Rptoohce ifei* made favoring the en¬
terprise by jjol- W. L.*Mitohelt, Gen. A.
’ RaWH gbt, and John P. King, and
urg
that immediate steps be token looking
to its early completion. rciid *
The prodnitaodfllte buildi ng q£ this would open
the a* the -bes t port ions of
lSe ^ Qeor g 11 R** 1
iod. lorkjMUIFJbtoke^l Imwould also develo£elNtWth ver^ East
a desirable
SOth ult. ^163 halos 8ee Island, and
Stock oo hand),
bn
Governor Bullock.
This man has certainly achieved an un
cffvtablc notoriety, and has doubtless
learned ere this how it is a man oan be¬
come famous without its adding to his
crefiit in society.
Only a few weeks since hifllelfupon he was soundly
berated for obtruding the
gentlemen “ of the fourth estate," whom
Col. Hnibcrt had invited upon an exeur
sion up the the State Road. In this af¬
fair he was certainfttn here be was not
expected.
He manages to keep in a perpetual
warfare with Dr. N. L. Augier, the late
Treasurer, because tint officer has been an
obstacle between his Excellence and the
public purse, in all of which g£ has the
misfortune to find his antagonist sustained
by the Legislature and the honest people
of the State. Not content with the re¬
buke administered to him last winter by
the Legislature for his unauthorized
drafts upon the Treasury, to pay the Kim¬
ball’s various Bills amounting to sfitne
830,000; and still deluded bv the mis¬
take that the money of the* people of
Georgia belongs to her Governor, he con
tinucs these expenditures in a manner
which should provoke the thunders of
their just indignation.'"Hear what the
Doctor says in a recent' 4 !ejtter to the Fed¬
eral Union, about bis practice in employ¬
ing and paying attorneys:
“ Independent of the large amount paid
the State's Attorney, the Governor has
already paid this year, other attorneys as
retainers only—out of the State Treasury,
over twelve thousand dollars, nine thous¬
and of which was on Executive warrants
drawn and paid within the last 30 days."
Now it should be remembered that
Henry P. Farrow is the Attorney General
of this State, charged by the Constitution
with the duty of aoting “ as legal adviser
to the Executive Department, to represent
the State in civil and criminal cases in the
Supreme and Superior Courts, when re¬
quired to do so by the Governor." If the
State is cither a party to a case or inter¬
ested in its issue, here an attorney has
been appointed with a competent salary to
represent the State in all her courts,
“when required to do so by the Governor."
And yet in the faoe of this tho Tax payers,
already heavily burdened by pecuniary
losses and embarrassments, are ealled upon
to pay nine thousand dollars as attorneys
fees in thirty days. This matter should
be investigated closely befor£* the courts,
and if these payments be found unauthor¬
ized by law, the guilty Executive should
reoeive suoh punishment as can only be
inflicted by an outraged people. Let the
Legislature keep its eye on this enemy of
the publio purse.
But be stops not here. Desirous of
contributing his mite toward making the
State Fair at Macon a sort of National
“ thing," he proposes to send out a train
of cars to Lynchburg, Va., and bring, at
the expense of the people of this State,
all the invited guests from Washington
City to Macon, whioh list, if we are cor¬
rectly informed, will embrace a motley
crew.
When the Executive Committee ex>
tended its invitations so generally as to
embrace men exceedingly obnoxious to
stretched, our people, we thought they had greatlv
thehr prerogative ; but for 1 ^ a ‘*
lock to propose to go after them W bring
them from Lynchburg at our cX pense, is
too muoh; it is hardly |s be eredited if
we hud not had the n*«t conclusive evi¬
dence furnished by Al8 public oareeri of
how impossible ^ * 8 for him when the
public utoner ‘ 8 involved, to distinguish
betweeu^fie “ meum” and tbs “truem.”
And this man, by the votes of soala
wags and negroes, is the Governor of
Georgia!
Affairs In TenneMiee.
The following was a special dispatch to
the Courier Journal.
Nasuville, September 28. —The Leg¬
islature convenes next Monday, and early
in the succeeding week will elect a Uni¬
ted States Senator. At this early day the
followiug reasonable eve certainty vents oan of their be predicted fulfilment: with
1. Andrew Sohnson will be elected Son¬
,
ator.
2. The fifteenth amendment will be rat¬
ified.
3 A constitutional convention will
called at an early day, which disfran
feet the enfranchisement
chised personuLAiireww»‘« at the earliest
ticttbhj tnomentfbut will not interfere
HMto civil and political rights of the
neg 'The Wnda tiWState
4 of will not be K,
pudiated, alth^gk 5a rue st advocates for
B “ c ’ h », mcaiiure wanting.
few •T5 lhe will partiean be leph^n of the last
These vears thorns generallyfu^a in led.
before the are Legislature questioto to come
and the eonvunriun
growing out of it. The fight over tbe S«o
atorship will be fierce, but Ute result enn
he told in advance. The new Legislature
al Assembly before.
The Press and Times, the Radical or*
gan of this city, will suspend in a day or
*waCOT£i. is effectual that of i. mammoth t.dqm
sec aa as a
baloon bunting from over-inflation.
Matters are quiet throughout the State.
4
Take a Lesson.
We see that the Savannah Republican
copies and commends Geo. Forrest’s speech
at Wills Valley, and directs the attention
of the Northern people to it. Well—but
suppose the Republican also takes the les¬
son. It is much needed, all around. Gen.
Forrest says:
“ The men of the North and the men of
the South. And I am proud of the op¬
portunity offered by this occasion of meet¬
ing and greeting you and your guests, all.
friends together on common ground in re¬
stored friendship As you all know, I am
no speaker, but I am glad to be able to
welcome to our Southern land Northern
men and capitolto aid us iu building up
our fallen fortunes."
And again:
“ I feel to-day that I, as well as these
Northern friends, am*a citizen of the
United States; everybody here feels
and I doubt not it is tbe desire of all to
remain so. Let us act as such ; that more
money and skilled labor may come among
us from the abundance of the North.—
With these aids no bounds can be set to
our And prosperity."
again:
the “Hence, to-day, burying and forgetting
past, I gladly meet these Northern
gentlemen, your guests, laboring for your
good, as brothers; with you I aeeept their
efforts to develop our section, and uniting
mine with theirs, exhort you ter the same
course, to be followed anc crowned with
prosperity, That, peace and unity."
says the Republican, is ail right,
and so we think. But it differs vastly
from the indiscriminate and bitter male¬
diction in which the Republican loves to
indulge, and which docs no good in any
event. We can never have a better state
of seetiona! feeling untl the press, North
and South, stops tbe practice of treating
each other to these balmy toddies of gall,
wormwood and sulphuric acid; and one
side must quit before the other will. Edi¬
votion tors fancy that they show a wonderful de¬
to the South and a noble spirit of
these independence bitter and dignity in dealing out
equally doses, but we think they are
valueless and mischievous. Take
a lesson from the temper displayed by
such men as Gen. Lee and Gen. Forrest.
Iitoraatlig Caban lateillgeuce
—If True.
From A floriated Prcu Dispatches,
.
Washington, Oct/1.-The steamer
Lnterpe, line, of the New York and Galveston
is under surveiiance, pending in¬
structions from Wa-bington. She had a
cargo of huge parrot guns, tons upon tons
of solid shot and shell. The authorities
suvpeet this cargo is intended to aim the
Spanish gun bouts oow ready for sea. The
aecouDt says there are just thirty of these
gunboats, and singularly enough there
were found in the hold of the Enterpe
just thirty of these hundred pound parrot
guns. There were also three thousand
solid shot and shell, whioh had been east
for these same parrots. The Tribune aays
The editorially authorities of the Enterpc's detention
have just laid haads umn
a vessel which, by all accounts, appears to
have beeo destined to supply with arrna
meots the Spanish gun boats at Mystic.—
The possibility that great harm might bars
beeo and may be done thereby to the cause
of struggling patriotism, naturally provokes
almost earnest desire that no waot of vi
gilanoe shall permit a wrong to a neighbor
whose comparative weak*ess and whose
noble aspirations hare our hearty sympa¬
thies. The plea of the Cubans, that they
should have the same right to purchase
arm6 as their savage antagonists, must be
admitted in the light of menacing events
to have unusual force. *
Tbe steamer Nk*h«t is off New York,
supposed *k« r ® watching gunboats
and expected d** 40 intercept the Enterpe, which
w*» to sail with supplies for the
Spaniards. The Hornet is daily receiving
supplies. City, Her Captain is ifi New York
and well posted regarding the Span¬
ish Government. The Captaiu's name it
withheld, bat it is understood that he is
n noted Confederate. The Hornet has
been fitted out by parties in New‘York
and Boston, who have no connection with
the Cuban Junta that has been operating
here. The Hornet is formidable and very
fast.
Oct. 2. —It seems certain that new Cus
ban unknown, expeditions are engineered by persons
but much more potent than the
old Cuban Junta.
Advices from Canada and details from
New York, especially as supported by th$
Herald’s dispateh from Key West, indi¬
cate formidable demonstrations. ' ’
In the correspondents between agents
in Europe and tbe State Department ra
gardiog that he the Hornet, Fish takes the ground
cannot, upon rumor, grant a con¬
voy ; but should a vessel bearing the na¬
tional flag, be unlawfully molested, prompt
aotion will be taken to prevent a repeti¬
tion of the outrage and punish offenders.
The speci al parrisang of the Cespedes
gove jpmOfithave nterior of Cuba unfavorable which advices from
of the Havana seem confirms
tory reports of Jordan's de¬
sire to abandoo tbe struggle.
FIllbvMerlmg Rampant,
New Yobk, Ootober 2.—The Herald’s
four Key hundred West special says a Caban expedition
oral Cristo, stroog, commanded by Gen
escaped from New York bar.
tor on Mondav, and reaehed*the Florida
otsft, where she was joined by the Caban
privateers Sicilian and Teaser, with six
teen N od red men under Gen. Goiaarra.
The Sttlian fleet is freighted with ten
th« Tifies five thousand sabres and
twenty four poundey, gua ranging from six to tweoty
der Steadman^ Another body of men un¬
barkiag from 0 d Magruder is about em
rendeivous off SQalf tl| port for the common
edian Caban oomL The Si.
and Teaser ^ last night and will
Jf Hornet J«ned and at Cuba, sea bythe mrrying Cuban each privateers fifteen
gues, some of whiok ^ one hundred
pounders.
entire Volunteering Gulf is very Liis^ along the
ooast, five thousand men are
waiting Marshall transportation. T
Barlow denies that the
tr Alabama it a Caban privateer. She is
a regular steamer between New York and
Fernandina. Barlow has withdrawn •ur
villanee.
The Dictator and Severn has been
equipped and eoaled order in momentary ex*
pectation New Orleans,O of an ctober for Cuha.
2—Thesteam¬
ship Sicilian left Pass a’T/ontra at 4:30
this morning for Florida ports. The
steamship Teaser is still here with no prep¬
aration for sea. As these vessels figured
most conspicuously there in the H«rr»T«F#
Key West speeia) of this morning it i a Ic .
garded here as a fabrication throughout.
The Filibusters Iu Court
Wilmington, N. Q,, October 5, p. m.
—'I his morning the case of the Cuban
privateer was carried before General Al¬
len Rutherford, United States Commis¬
sioner for the District of Cape Fear.-—
Judges Person and French appeared lor
the Government, and George Davis, Esq.,
and Judge O. P. Mears for defendants —
The parties were arraigned on the charge
that “they did accept and exercise a com,
mission to servo a foreign people in war,
to-wit: the people of Cuba against the
people of Spain, a country with which the
United States is at peace and did fit out
and arm, and did procure to be fitted out
and armed within the limits of the United
States, a certain ship that or vessel call the Cu¬
ba with intent said vessel shall be
employed in the hostilities service of Cuba to cruise
and o mmit against the people
of Spain, a country with which the Uni¬
ted States is at peace and did enlist and
serve on board of said vessel with intent to
cruise and commit hostilities tgai inst the
of people toe of United Spain, States in violation and of of the Congress statutes
act
of 20th April, 1818 " The Government,
not pressing the matter, the parties were
not requiied the to give bonds for their ap
peara£ ce *t time specified, but were
placed in CJ!*tody of the United States
Marshal Neff, who released them on pa¬
role on their personal a?Bu. ran cc that they
would not attempt to leave.
Council for the Government made the
point the that United the States, vessel is had ohsrged been in fitted the out in¬
in
dictment to crime and commit hostilities
againat a Government with which the
United Slates is at peaoe, and to make if
a prima facie case they asked foi contin¬
uance to allow time to secure the presence
of witnesses for the Government from New
York and Washington.
Coancil for .he defend.... oppo^d .h.
motion for continuance, conteudmg that
the United States bad not the right to
hold them, as the vessel was commission
mLUrIR the republic of Cuba, rfT? that she put in
dinubville in distress, and that it was con
trary to the laws of nations to detain her.
Commissioner Rutherford decided it
Government was a prima facie oa»e, and granted the
until Monday, lltb inst. at
11 o’olook, to produce witnesses.
Judoe Lippitt-- The Intelligeneer
reports in full the speech of Judge Lip
pitt, of ulfc Connecticut, at Wills Valley the
25tb Tbe Judge talks well and pays
us handsome compliments. He is also
vejy My friendly. Says be;
“ friends, I beg you think of us—
your countrymen and brotbera—of the
North, no more as enemies. We are not.
We are your friends, and we desire
greatest prosperity and &<***■ " We are
seeking opportunities to promote both.”
That is home right, call Judge, and oow when
jon get off the doge. Hegpect
oiir needlessly motives—respect our feelings. Don’t
wound even what you think to
be our prejudices. Leave the South to
work out her own destiny and abandon
the ridicu lous idea of controlling her by
. Wuo is to be There?— -The Editor
of the Nashville Christian Advocate puts
iu print a letter ot invitation from the
Hon. David W. Lewis, Secretary of the
8tate Agricultural Association, whioh
saya: “The President and Viee President
of the United States, the Ex-Presidents
and Vice Presidents, Heads of Depart¬
ments, members of both Houses of Con
gress, the principal Generals of the two
late hostile armies, the Governors of the
several States, distinguish'd Editors , •uc
uessful writers on agriculture and eminent
practical agriculturists from all seetiona of
the Union, have been invited to attend.”
Well, did you ever ?— Chron dc Sentinel.
■ ........... .. % » -------- -
The Cuban News. -The dispatches
indicate such i’ formidable crusade of the
Fillibustere as will make the Dons howl
more especially has, as tbe United 8tato« Gov
eminent in reaped to the saored ob¬
ligations of neutrality (of ooune,) looked
every one of the new Spanish gunboats,
built !n Conoeotiout, but now fitting out
in New York, with tbslr armaments on
shipboard, and likewise lying in outside custody* of Sandy tbs United Hook,
States Government 1 ‘ Spain will have a
merry time of it holding on to Cuba this
wfafv. i . M nil -U- T '. L<
‘ J A terrible abeident, It seems, happened
at the Indiana Stole Fair yesterday, *hj
which nineteen persons were killed by the
®°^ a P se # *t®aiaboIler, and many were
Th ' 8 one of ths most dread
aoc ‘^ ents » ^ roni » •imilar cause, on re
lo w k°l® history of mechanism,
ft ** «*pUo*blo on the hypothesis that the
°. rowd around the engines at the
t,noe ' w,fort8 »og the contest of speed ana
wer * -
Right Side Up—A New York special
to l he Mobile Advertiser says : “ The
house of lloyt A Gardner^ wo well known
by many Southerners, stood pluekily all
day Friday. They have passed the crisis
clear, and stood better than ever."
The City Counsel of Rome has passed
Abe following resolution : f /T “
j Be.ohrrf, farther, That Ut „ pita | and
machinery employed in the manufacture
of cotton and woolen goods, or agricultural
implements, in city the limits ofthe oity shall
be freo from taxation for the period
of ten years from the 1st of January next •
provided the same shall be so employed
wUW. the spM, „f two rer. fro. (hi.;
*
VEGETABLE LlV£R BILLS
Cures Liver Diseases, Dyspepsia, &c.
XUTT’S EXPECTORANT
Curos Coughs, Asthma, Ac.
Tutt’s Sarsaparilla and Queen’s Delirh
The great Alterative and Blood Purifier
Tutt’s Improved Hair Bye,
Warranted the best in nsc.
Jot sale by A , W. BERRY f ,
Dee 25—ly SPARTA.
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST
U‘>i± ■:
■f it
IN GEORGI A, AT glEDNAfi’8.
Strayed or Stolen,
i BOUT the first af September, 1869 owe
small HlNt-E MULE, light bay, wbits
mouth When he war taken he Wke in
wot king order; a little lame in woe t ewt loot—
about t or 7 years old. A suitebe rrWard wilt
be paid for either hit delivery nr any notion
in r» ference to his wberetalnwts,
Sparta, Hancock county. G*
DAVID B. DICKSON.
M. P. STOVALL
warehouse:
AND
Commision Merchant,
• JACKSON STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
^/ONTINUES the and to and give sale his pe sonal COTTON attention and
to storage of
other produce.
Orders for Plantation and Family supplies
prom ptly andcarefully filled
l&r'He is prepared to make iibetal CASH
ADVANCES July 28d, on all consignments.
3m,
Hybrid Cotton Seed.
T> _D EATA DICKSON’S Prolific both hi tp<an
*i*y sad quality of lint
having produced a Hybrid
ThU cotton sold in Augu«t&. oo t'<« soih of
Septembi-r, for 28} cents, tbwmHw# when New- ¥»»rk mid*
jtfSfiws " 0f * wortl » *tt'.*t .
f thi* Mi-d bo had ts&Stt&c sppi
w can except oa eatioa di*
root to the producer
* * L. G MQRt.Js.
Oct 5th 1869 if. >p*r:a,G«.
Hancock Sheriff Sale. *
FOR NOVEMBER.
•Wflbli BK COLD ou fi • Tuesday <u No*
If vember nest, before theeuuit huu»«door
•a the tewa of Sparta, between th» Ivjfal houra
of *ul«. tbe following property to wit
Will bo 4 aold 449} acreso! land Jtm* ty¬
more or
ing iu Hancock oouuty,belonging to VV<M«in W.
Dovaroanx deo. and oi Anna
P«vereaui, Jaa. E. jumoihors, L< yn-d
on to ••tiafo' —v uspettor Courj fi fa, In f «vor
^r ® Salinior, a«sign-«, v*u William W.
Aadgaeo. Pewraw, tha WritU above property p-dtitod out by tho
u milim giwii to the oooupaut
JAS. H UOIERS, Sh’ff.
ALSO
At tbe Him time and place, will be void, 1 .' 00
pounds of seed cotton two hundr- d bnxhol* oorn
twelve hundred p 'und* fodder, la-vi -d ou a* the
property of Hubbard Horton, and*-b)d to aatoiy
one Hancock Superior Court, fi fa, in favor of
Win, Archer, va. Hubbard H<rtou, the above
property pointed out by Wm. A-cher
JA8. H. ROGERS, Sh'ff.
ALSO.
Will be auM one hnndred«iid fifty acres of land
more or leas lyieg in Hancoc < county Levied
on aa the prop riy ol W. Thomas Grace, to *nti«
fy on«Suporior Court fl fa, iu favor of Eli (1 Rax.
ter, va W. Thoma* Grace, the above property
painted out by the Defendant.
JAS. H. ROGERS, Sh’ff
ALSO.
At the same time and place will be aold 4380
acras of lafid more or I ere n„v h«dd in gr-pa
rate poswweiona by Jeremiah C. Peursoo, Step¬
hen E. l’eareon and Plaviu-t J. Pearaoa, a'l ly¬
ing iu the couuty of Hancock and all levied ua
as the property of Stephen Pearson deceased
fey virtlH* of littfieD fi fa’g from (be Superior
Court of said county held hy John B. Latimer,
aaaigue*; in tho following parcels, or order of
sale arranged by the said occupants, who cl im
title to hta own poweeaion after the aalit-faction
Of said fi fa’s.
One parcel is to consist of that part of Jereroi
ata c. Fearsoti’s po-session which lies outside of
the Homestead tuat has boon set apart for his
Another paroel to oMiaist of what is estimated
at 29(1 aero*, to be out off from the main body of
aeid Mrs. Stephen’s possession, ou the side next to
stake Georgia the Ann line of Thomas Jatnea by Thoma* a l<u , starting fiom
a on deceased aud
lUuning it 88° E 9 2 chains to a pine ou the line
of suit) Jeremiah, it being andemood that this par¬
cel leaves ont a small piece of about 19 acres sold
by said Stephen to Jam-s Tho mint* i U his
life time. Auother parcel to consist W what
is estimated at 999 acras to be cut off f «m the
mam body uf said Mephen’a passes.-ivu on the oide
next to T. J. Smith’ by a line starting from a big
pius which forma a corner tree between said Ste¬
phen and James Thomas dee d, and running A
1}° W. )8 chains and fifty links to a pine, thence
n- 3° E- 16} chain* to a red-oak, thence 8. Jl®
W, fi? chain* to Bafialo creek - it being under¬
stood that this parcel leaves ont a small piece of
about seven aerea heretofore sold by said Bt phea
to T. J. Smith. Another parcel to conswt of a
small piece including the .saw-mill, supposed to
«adUm abaut 15 or 20 acre* to be cu off from
the main body of said Stephen's possession a
earner said
SS 5 fHS 5 asSi
Another paroel to conaiat »f the residence ofsaid
Stephen’s which pomearios antrile hia of Jamiiy. tka
baa been •ftbawiijSStaphanWBtol.gJ^i fat ajnurtto rjr»,o«her
PStohltP consist HonMMStwrf!
and another of the said Jeremiah’s Domrol
Another pared (if neetowry) la Uw entire
woo of amid Flavins J. and to eatimated at 1625
---- 11 T * ' T U " ?
•
OrdinarysAd
------
Admin
A LL persons indebted t* the c
,/ V, J Lawrence Ute of lla-io mil
ceased, are he eby required to ™
payment, and alt holding claims
ceased will render them in to the Mi
terms of the iaw.
JAMES J. LAWRENCE!
JKFFR LUaRENJK,
October 4th 1869.
Roorglu, Hancock county*
ORDINARY’S OFFICE, f
Sparta, G*.
AIlJL TV4TRS. Tht-nie Dudley for htmlf and the m.‘*
»or children of Thomas Dudly cece sed,
applies for exemption of persoiiahty and sett ng
apart and valuation of home lead from the laud'
aud per. entity. uie<gtbgto the estate of said'
d-eeao-d, ock and 1 will pass 2l«i upon the same at 10
o e A. M. on the day of October J869*.
at thy office- * *»* %
THOMAS I. LITTLE, Ord’y.
Hancock Umds ml Afianlnlstra*
<or» Bale.
YT7TLI. BE SOLD on tbe ftnt T atmtsf fe
Sfrie if Pecmber Ife* Cohii next w thin the
bflbife 1 im do t iq lit*, town ♦*!f
8*ma, by Virtue of an ord* t.i the H n« of l *r
dinar; of Hancock fbonly lb** f * ow $ ■«••• 1
. „
patceki o! bad- lelMigtog to fhrsr m \ J m a
Thrnmf, dec i all mfuMed, ly >ttg and being in
*>w> ewanly fo wit: lot No. I,adjoining 'he laud#
tri Mrs. 1 bomnii, Jm M L ry, tun) i liters ron^
raining by recent «orvey,320 acres wore or l»>#
i.ad ki o» n m -b« Afford place L.oi No. 2, ad
j mg iuiyriPo 65 » acres da ,.f mure Harrb, Beiry lew, and others, c nt »iit-
1 or end known as the
Barkfdala place. Lot No 3 , udj >t„i»r lota No*,
» * 4 uflfttfttiajfg 9,9) acres moi a or le** find h|§®v 0
•* ***• >!**» Ls» No. 4 a> ioini. a
kind*of Wf ur« Hey, J tfrmotmm and wM iwy
rantatmag 740 «-r»'» me or and b*>w*a#
me Homut' ud plac—Paid several iraijfct <>v h>t#
sflw *f?g r T rv,@ miking up the entire t'act «f
ocr< s, and known us the luie rr ?id •fee of
swd destroeerd Terms, ewe ball enth, me wh* r
w*f» r>#to psyibkr twelve Wnat|n after date with'
■iMerest from date reenrcdlvf mo ijp.sv vn tftw
ptsHHXS Favchmers psust pay tor stomps am#
J R. JOHNSON, Adm'r Ac ot
>A$. THOMAS, dee’d.
On ftb imp
LcOPgiit —Hancock
Dr-iDUNJ Jbv’is CTFFIC&, :
Oct .twr 7th 1869
/CHARLES CALDWELL' has applied foV
\J oxen i pi ion of Persmsdity, mid » will pas#
upon the same at 10 oVfsefc A. id, os- the 21aS
day of October, 1869, at my OlRbe:
THOsl. 1. UrPh*,
~**r
(tor*!*, Hancock County—
rrivU'J MONTHS mftef dare agplict>* v.f
| be nu.de to the Coufl ef Ordinary i f Haw
code County, k'*’ leave lw e*-R all the Imuis few
longing to the estate of KfimemA A Rut ».'ec W,
late of Hancock vonnly.
ARTHUR r CUfTN, A<!*r.
O t. J-t 1869
GEORGIA-//' 4 "^ ('ovnfy —
lu all whom it may Conccnit
\\/ W -Irslor nERBAfi, ofthe William II, Ito Gruen, io »V. Adminfs- Slovene,
e«ute of
l»«e or a id county dnoenaml. naii'lmoa to be
tiont Itia s.»I.| mlmkiiafintioti,
sewing i|i»i he its* fujly ntlmiiuatert-tl the e*.
isle of hi* said InleaiHto. ««<1 applies for I -t.
Mrs of dismission iVoiwjh# funker admlitixtre.
rton of said »'«lHte,
Those are tiaarefove »o cite nil persona into*,
esfed canso-dm or before, ih c g, N
Mo»d-y In Niivomb‘ , r ifext. why said WillUlu
rf. Green shouh' W“t be di -missed fr< m hi*
said adniiniaWorion.
Given under my hand and ofiltdn) j-tojuUu.»
this Ibe 21 h* day of J Jy I860,
TIIO.M.-ib I. LITTLB, l.< r 4 y.
POLLARD, COX & CO.
COTTON FACTORS
W.UltellOUSK AM)
Con mission Merchants.
l-uruct IVeyivrAtRjr/n.,,bc!J Smut!*,
/^lO.VPI.NUK I *i their
*o«.ar VjjU Sl.et.tl4 stand and to will the ghe Storage tbvir atiict per
Lottou and all am] Sale of
other produce. Order* for
CofiwgnnieniB Bug^tag and rcapcctfitlly Ropo promptly attended to__
t consigned *e!ieiic«l
ottoH r 0 m in deliv« red from tha
care—a oonsiderabl* Having to plautyra.
Factory. 8 f ° r llC#d “ VI * Q “ pl ' ,Uo “ nt J O^gls
The IntorextN o/ the firm will ha reprinted
by Judge Henry II. FBlpatriek, of Warren
conn, '>'• mnyil—Om
WILBERFORCE DANIEL,
arehouse
—A N D—
Commission Merchant,
No. 3 Wirrcn Block, Opposite Globe
Hotel. HJGlSTA, CM.
All buaim*. 'Wrarted ,o h,m will heve rrict
pr.-onal afirutiea Older# for B« K gi|,g. T„«
ur ato Faintly Bu|>plie» promp.iy fiii< d
(JO MM L» loN 1-4 PER CENT
i
iiie Pudlali, Eeo D rector Ga, R R. * ! 1 A t. Co p >.- '
, ^
M Hi3, itr«etor Ga. R R i:
LAWER C. BRYSON,
WAREHOUSE
A N.D lit its;
uB.Sr~ofi qwsrjfcfiwias. X'SO ?.’' “
OFFICE : 158 UntUU 8TEEET.
WM BKVSON, CHARTER q^MPBELL
A Ci» G ^ V-te of Madieeo, Of,
CiitiwA r- /- jml_ W w^o
Bxjvv ”
, . - hepositobt. j
JiMEs* 8cuw)AY k „ >*-mm
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Alton
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