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IJMCERTAINTY of fife.
by BISHOP HEBER.
Beneath our feet and o’er our head,
Is equal warning given; ;
Beneath us lie the countless dead, L E3.
Above is the haven.
Death rides on every passing breeze,
He lurks on every flower;
Each season has its own disease.
Its peril, every hour.
Our eyes have seen the rosy light
Os youth’s soft cheek decay,
And fate descend in sudden night
On manhood’s middle day.
Our eyes have seen the steps of age
Halt feebly towards the tomb;
And yet shall earth our hearts engage
And dream of days to come?
Turn, mortal turn! thy danger know,
Where’er thy foot can tread,
The earth rings hollow from below,
And warns thee of her dead!
Turn, Christian turn! thy soul apply
To truths divinely given;
The bones that underneath thee lie,
Shall live for hell or heaven!
NEW WAY TO DETECT A THIEF.
The father of the great American statesman
Mr. Webster,) was a very humorous, jocose
personage. Innumerable are the anecdotes that
are related of him. As he was once journey,
ing in Massachusetts, and far from his native
town, he stopped rather late one night, at an
mn in the village of . In the bar room
were about twenty different persons, who as
he entered called out to him to discover a thief.
One of the company it appeared, had a few
minutes before a watch taken from his pocket,
and he knew the offender must bo in the room
with them.
‘Come Mr. Almanac maker! you know the
signs of the limes, the bidden things of the sea
son; tell who is the theif! ’
‘Fasten all the doors of the room, and let no
one leave it; and here landlord go and bring
your wife’s brass kettle.’
<Wh—ew? want to know' my stars? my
wife’s—wh —ew!” quoth Boniface.
‘Why you would’nt be more struck up, if I
told you to get a pot.’
Boniface did as commanded. The great
brass kettle was placed in the middle of the
floor, its bottom up—as black, sooty, and smo
icy as a chimney back’ The landlord got in
to' his bar and looked on with eyes as big as
saucers.
‘You don’t want any hot water or nothin,
to take off the bristles'of no critter, do you
squire?’ said the landlord, the preparations loo
king too much like hog killing—‘the old wo
man’s gone to bed and the well’s dry.
‘No go into the barn and bring the biggest
cockerell you’ve got.
Whew! you won't bite him, will you?—he’s
a tough one. I can swear squire, ho did’nt
steal the watch. The old rooster knows when
it’s time to crow without looking at a watch!’
‘Go along, or I won’t detect the theif.’
Boniface went to the barn, and soon return
ed with a tremenduous great rooster, cackling
all the way like mad.
‘Now put him under the kettle; and blow
the light out.’
•Now gentleman, I don’t suppose the thief
is in company, but if ho is, the old rooster will
crow when the offender touches the bottom of
the kettle with his hands. Walk round in a
circle, and the cock will make known the
watch stealer. The innocent need not to be
afraid you know.’
Tho company then, to humor him, and carry
out tho joke, walked around tho kettle in the
dark for three or four minutes.
‘All done, gentlemen?’
‘All done!’ was tho cry—‘where’s your
crowing—wo heard no cockadoodledoo?’
‘Bring us n light.’
A light was brought as ordered.
‘Now hold up your hands good folks.’
Ono held up his hand alter another. They
were of course black, from coming in contact
•with the soot of the kettle.
‘All up?’
‘All up!’ was tho response.
‘All black?’
»A—ll —don’t know, here's one fellow who
hes'nt held up his hand!’
‘Ah, ha, my old boy; let’s tnko a peep at
your paws!’
They were examined, and were not black,
like those of the rest of the company.
‘You’!-find your watch about him—now
search.’ W 1 *
And so it proved. This fellow not being
aware any more than the rest, of the trap that
was set for tho discovery of tho thief, had kept
aloof from tho kettle, lest when he touched it,
the crowing of tho rooster should proclaim him
as tho thief.
As the hands of all the others were black
ened the whiteness of one showed of course
that he dared not touch the old brass kettle,
rnd that he was the offender. He jumped out
oftho frying pan into the fire, nnd was soon
lodged in as comfortable a place as either, to
wit, the jail.
/’iow customs of the Siriss. his the cus
tom, in the valleys of the canton of Berne,
whenever the father ofa family builds a house,
and the walls are raised to their full height, to
request the minister o| the parish to pray to
trod insiUe. Pho workmen, and such as are
to assist in finishing the house, meet together,
and unite in thanking the Lord for his care
hitherto, and entreat a continuance of it,
through the more dangerous part that remains.
“This prayer,” observes M. Paulet, the pas
tor of Contelary, “when made in faith, redou
bles one’s strength, and removes all fear of
danger.” “If God be for us, who can be a
gainst us?” observed an old carpenter to the
same minister, when he advised him not to ex
pose himself too incautiously. A blessing ter
minates this pious ceremony: the workmen re
turn to their labors, and the noise of hammei s
begins to be heard again. How pleasing it is
to see a practical acknowledgement of the
truth, “Except the Lord build the house, they
labor in vain that build it?”
The following pious custom is also general
among the inhabitants of the Alps. The shep
herd’s horn in the Alpine regions is the sig
nal for a solemn and religious duty, and is us
ed for a much nobler purpose than the mere re
turn ofthe cattle from their pasturage. When
the sun has quitted the valley, and his lingering
beams still cast a glow of fading light on the
snowy summits of the mountains, the shepherd,
whose hut is placed on the highest Alp, grasps
his horn, and pronounces, through his speak
ing trumpet, the solemn injunction to the world
below, “Praise ye the Lord.” Every shep
herd in the neighborhood, who catches this
sound in succession, repeats the same sentence
at the door of his cabin. Thus, perhaps, for a
quarter of an hour, the cliffs and rocky preci
pices fling to each other oft-repeated echoes of
the sublime, “Praise ye the Lord!” A solemn
stillness succeeds the'last reverberation; and
all kneel bare-headed and in silent devotion, till
darkness rests upon the earth, and veils the
towering mountains. Again the horn sounds,
and the peaceful, social “good night! once
more awakens the echoes. Hills, vales, and
rocky cliffs, and all sink to rest:—Oriental hey
to the Scriptures.
Folly of Discontent. The following little
anecdote of a person who had contemplated
self-destruction, is very beautiful and touch
ing-
“I was weary of life, and, after a day, such
as some have known, and none would wish to
remember, was hurrying along the street to
the river, when I felt a sudden check. I turn
ed and beheld a little boy, who had caught
hold of the skirt of my cloak in his anxiety to
solicit my notice, llis look was irresistable.
Not less so was the lesson he had learnt;
“There arc six of us, and we are dying for the
want of food.” Why should I not, said I to
myself, relieve this wretched family! I have
the means, and it will not delay me many min
utes. But what if it does?—The scene of mis
ery he conducted mo to, I cannot describe.
I threw them my purse, and their burst of gra
titude overcame mo. It filled my eyes—it
went nn n tn my heart. I will nail to
morrow, I cried. Fool that I was, to think of
leaving a world where such pleasure was to be
had, and so cheap.”— Kogers’ Itally.
WOMAN—HER SPHERE.
A beautiful woman and her husband were
once lost in a wood, in the middle of a very
dark night. On all sides they heard nothing
but the shrill whistle of robbers, or the loud
cries of wolves; the sky too was tempestuous.
The female became at once motionless through
fear.
“What will become of us?” cried sho cling
ing to her husband.
“Let us continue our journey, my love,” he
replied.
“But, good heavens! the robbers’”
“Well, then let us return.”
“Oh, that’s worse! the wild beasts’”
“What would you have, then?”
“Leave this place.”
“We can only do that my love, by going
forward or returning—choose which.”
Tho female then shut her eyes, stopped her
ears, and suffered herself to be conducted by
her husband.
Such is the lot of woman. Nature has poin
ted out our respective distinctions, and the dif
ference of our employments by the difference
of our conformation. A taller stature, a more
solid and a less flexible organization, indicate
the honorable duties of man. Here the laws
of nature and society accord.
“Woman and man,” says, Rousseau, “are
made for each other, but their mutual depend
encc is not equal. Men depend upon women
by their desires; women upon men by their de.
sires and their wants.
Woman was created to be the companion of
man; to please him, to solace him in his sor
rows, and not to partake with him the fatigues
of war, of the sciences, and of government.
Warlike women, learned women and women
who are politicians, equally abandon the cir
cle which nature and institutions have traced
around their sex; they convey themselves in
to men; they renounce the empire which they
inevitably exercised by their weakness, to run
vainly after the more equivocal empire offeree.
We hear of women who have fought, written
A governed with success. What does this prove*
The exception does not destroy the rule. And
besides, where is the feeling and amiable wo
man, who would exchange the ineffable happi.
ness of being loved, for the unsubstantial plea
sures of fame? —where is the man, who would
have preferred Joan of Are, to the mild and
timid Agnes Sorel? We admire the mascu
line mind of Elizabeth; but we love Mary
Queen of Scots.
An unfortunate married man was very ill
used by his Xantippe; he was even treated with
an occasional thrashing. His friends rallied
him upon this, and at last spurred him on to
declare that he would make an effort to be mas
'ter- One day not long after, his better half
: was so furious that he found himself compelled
to seek shelter uider the table. Just at this
moment the voices of his friends were heard
in the passage. “Come out, come out,” cried
the wife, fearful of an exposure. “No, no,”
cried|the husband in triumph;“come out indeed,
not I, I'll show for once that I am master!”
Murray S!ieriffs-Sales for May.
WILL be sold on the first Tuesday in May next,
at the Court House in Spring-place, Mur
ray county, within the usual hours of sale, the fol
lowing property, to wit:
Lot No. 296, 8 District, 3rd Section, of
originally Cherokee, now Murray County; levied on
!as the property of Thomas S. Hunt, to satisfy a fi.
• ia. issued from a Justices Court of Bibb County, in
I favor of Bryan and Kelton, vs. said Hunt. Levy
made and returned to me by a Constable.
Lot No. 260, 9 District, 3rd Section, of
' originally Cherokee, now Murray County; levied on
as the pronerty of John Nicholson, to satisfy a fi. fa.
i issued from a Justices Court of Bibb County, in favor
:of Spencer Riley, vs. said Nicholson. Levy made
and returned to me by a Constable.
Lot No. 136,10th District, 3rd Section, of
originally Cherekee, now Murray County; levied on
to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from the Superior Court oi
I Murray County, in favor of William Harden, vs.
i William S. Oats, Adm’r, and Tamer Barnett Adm’rx
ion the Estate of James C. Barnett, deceased. Prop
• erty pointed out by Plaintiff.
Lot No- 214, 12th District, 3d Section; le
vied on as the property of Emsley Beeles, to satisfy a
fi. fa. issqed from a Justices Court of De Kalb county,
in favor of Willaim Edwards, vs, said Beels. Levy
1 made and returned to me by a Constable.
Lot No. 29, 7th District, 3d Section; levied
on as the property of Mathew M. Petty, to satisfy a
fi. fa. issued from a Juatices Court of Clark county, in
favor of John Whitlow, vs. said Petty. Levy made
and returned to me by a Constable.
Lot No. 279, 12 District, 3rd Section, of
originaily Cherokee, now Murray County; levied
on as the property of Peter Wylie, to satisfy four fi.
fas. issued from a Justices Court ot Houston County,
two in favor of E. Graves and Son, one in favor of
Robert C. Duncan, and one in favor of James Brax
ton, vs. said Wilie. Levied and returned tome by a
Constable.
STEPHEN JONES, Sh’ff.
March 31.
NOTICE.
renllE the Sheriffs Sales of Lumpkin county,
will in future, be advertised in the Wes
tern Georgian.
SAMUEL KING, Sh’fF.
April 7.—12.
GEORGIA, Walker County.
ANDREW L BARRY of Captain Smith’s Dis
trict, tolled before me a dark Bay Horse, five
or six years old; fourteen hands high; curled tail,
and both hind feet white; no other mark perceivable.
Appraised to Thirty-five Dollars October Ist, 1837.
LEMUEL HOGE, J. P.
Tho above is a true Copy from the Estray Book-
JNO. CALDWELL, D. C. I. C.
April 7—l2—3t.
A<inimisiraior’s Sale.
A GREEABLY to an order of the Inferior Court
of Coweta county, while witting for ordinary pur
poses, will be sold on the first Tuesday in May next,
within tlie legal hours of sale, at the Court house in
the Town of Rome, Floyd county, Lot No. 144, 16th
District, 4th Section, of originally Cherokee now
Floyd county. Sold as a part of the Real Estate of
Willard Fisher, deceased, for the benefit of the heirs
of said deceased. Terms made known on the day.
THOMAS S. GRACE, Adm’r.
March 10. 8 tds.
GEORGIA, FLOYD COUNTY.
PKY AKEN up and posted by John L.
-uml HL Russeau, living near Barnett’s
-A Mills, one Bay Horse; both hind feet
'CsTp/W white up to the footlock joint; the left
fore-foot white; some white hairs on
his right thigh; five feet two inches high. Appraised
to thirty dollars. January 24, 1838.
A. PATTERSON, Clk.
G. L. Huggins, j. f.
March 3. 7 4t
Administrators Sale.
A GREEABLY to an order of the honorable the
711 Inferior Court or Butts county, when sitting for
ordinary purposes, will be sold, before the court-house
door, on the first Tuesday in June next, between the
lawful hours of sale,in the town of Rome, Floyd coun
ty, Lot No. 33, 23d district, 3d Section, of originally
Cherckee, now Floyd county.
And at Paulding Court House, Panlding county,
on the same day. Lot No. 22, 17th district, 4th Sec
tion, of originally Charokee, now Paulding county.
Both said tracts sold subject to the widow’s dower, as
the property of Dennis McCarthy, deceased.
DAVID MARTIN, admr.
March 10.—8—tds,
NOTICE.
I.IOUR month after da’e application will be made
to the Honorable the Inferior Court of Gil.
mcr County, when sitting for ordinary purposes, for
leave to sell Lot No. 261, inthe 11th District, 2nd
Section, formerly Cherokee, now Gilmer County;
being a part of the Real Estate of William Ellingten,
late of said county deceased.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, 10. w4nu
NOTICE.
I'XOUR months after date application will be made
to the Honorable the Inferior Court of Gi’mer
County, when sitting for ordinary purposes, for leave
to sell two Negroes, being the Estate of Priscrlia
Ellington late of said County deceased, sold for the
purpose of division.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, 10, w4m.
NOTICE.
FOUR months after date application will be made
to the honorable the Inferior Court of W alker
county, when sitting for ordinary purposes, for leave to
sell Two Lots of Land, No. 132, inthe 13fh District of
the 4th Section: and No. 116, in the 16th District of
the 3d Section, it being a part of the Real Estate of
John Gilbert, late of Jackson county deceased.
ROBERT ALLEN, Admr.
March 17, 9 w4m
; NOTICE.
FOUR msntlis afterdate application will be made
to the honorable the Inferior Court of Walker
count v, when sitting as a court of Ordinary, for leave
to sell all the Real Estate of Harris Sprayberry, late
of sa d county, deceased-
fl ARVEY J. SPRAYBERRY, Adm’r.
March 17, 3 w4m
Administrators Sale.
WILL be sold on the first Tuesday in May next,
at the Court House door in Cass County, a
negro girl named Eveline, about seventeen years of
age; sold for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of
Solomon Walleck, late of said County, deceased.
Terms cash.
WILLIAM HARDIN, Adm’r.
March 31—11—tds.
Administrators Sale.
WILL be sold on the first Tuesday in May next
at the Court house in Gilmer County, all
the perishable property belonging to the Estate of
Priscilla Ellington, late of said County deceased,
consisting of one Two-horse Wagon, two Horses,
Cattle, Hogs, Household and Kitchen Furniture, and
Plantation Tools, together with other articles too te.
dious to mention.
L. D. ELLINGTON, Ad’m’r.
March 24, 10, tds.
GEORGIA, GILMER COUNTY.
WHEREAS L. D. Ellington applies to me for
Letters of administration on the Estate of
Pricilla Ellington, late of said county, deceased :
These are therefore to cite and admonish,
all and singufar the kindred and creditors of said de
ceased, to be and appear at my office within the time
prescribed by law, to shew cause if any they have,
why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office thia sth day of March
1838.
LARKIN SMITH, c. o. o.
March 17, 9 30d.
GEORGIA, GILMER COUNTY.
WHEREAS B. B. Quillain, Coke A. Ellington
and Lewis D. Ellington, apply tome for Let
ters of Guardianship, for Salinah H. Ellington, Jerome
F. Ellington and William B. Ellington, orphans of
William Ellington, late of said county, deceased.
These are therefore to cite and admonish,
all and singular the kindred and creditors of said de
ceased, to be and appear at my office within the time
prescribed by law, to shew cause if any exist, why
said letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand at office this sth March 1838.
LARKIN SMITH, c. c. o.
March 17, 9 30d.
Guardians Sale.
WILL be sold at the Court House door in Mur.
ray county, on the first Tuesday in April next,
between the usual hours ofsale, Loi of Lana No. 96,
in the 10th District of the 3d Section, of originally
Cherokee, now Murray county. Sold as the property
ofthe Orphans of James Stewart, deceased, and sold
for their benefit.
ROBERT CORRY, Guard.
March 17, 9 tds.
NOTICE.
FWNHE Sheriff’s Sales of Paulding county, will in
JL future, be published in the Western Georgian.
Also, the business of the Clerks of said county.
BARNABAS PACE.c. o. o.
THOMAS A. CHISLOMN, c. a. c.
THOMAS DUNLAP, Shff.
Feb. 24. 6. 4t.
Kj-I Will Sue I'oil.ZT]
fILTOW let me tell all those that are indebted to me
I.N this is the last time I will ask them for money.
For if they do not call on N. Yarbrough of this place,
by the 10th day of March next, and settle my demands
they may expect to pay cost.
WILLIAM K. BRYERS.
Rome, Feb. 17 5 ts.
L A W.
THE Subscribers will attend the Superior Courts
of the Cherokee Circuit, Georgia, and the Courts
of Cherokee and Benton, tn Alabama. AH business
entrusted to their care, will be promptly attended to.
LUMPKIN & WRIGHT.
Rome, Feb. 2. 3. ts,
NOTICE.
PHI HE Sheriffs of Murray county, will in future ad
lL verfiso in the Western Georgian. Letters ou
business connected with their office, must coma Post
Paid,otherwise they will not ho attended to.
STEPHEN JONES, Sh’ff.
February 2.34 t.
GEORGIA, FLO YD COUNTY.
W'HEREAS Stacy Wheeler nnd Margarctt
Wheeler, apply to me for Letters of guardi
anship.
These are therefore to cite and admonish all per
sons interested, to be and appear at my office within
the time prescribed by law, to shew cause if any exist
why said fetters should not be granted .
Given under my hand at office this sth March,lß3B.
B. F. SMITH, d. c. c. o.
March 10, 8 30d.
Arrival and Departure of .Hails.
PHTHE Milledgeville Mail, carried by Stage,
-A from Decatur to 1 his office arrrives eve
ry Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at 5 o’-
clock, P. M., and leaves on every Tuesday,
Thursday and Sunday mornings, at 5 o’clock.
The Stages from Carrollton & Spring Place
meets at this office on every Monday, Wed
nesday and Friday, at 6 o’clock P. M., and
leaves on every Tuesday, Thursday and Sat
urday mornings at 4 o’clock. The mail for
the above routes is invariably closed at 9
o’clock, on the night previous to their depar
ture.
The mail from this office to La Faveite,
Walker county, leaves on every Tuesday
morning, and returns on every Saturday eve
ning at 5 o’clock.
The mail from Jacksonville, Alabama, car
ried by Stage, arrives at this office on every
Tuesday and Saturday, at 12 o’clock, and
leaves in an hour after its arrival on each day.
The mail conveyed on horse-back from
Fayetteville to this office, arrives on every
Wednesday at 6 o’clock, P. M., and departs on
every Thursday, at 6 o’clock, A. M.
Rome, Geo., Feb. 5, 1838.
NOTICE.
P®XIIE Sheriff* Sales of Forsyth county, will in
-■L future, be published in the Western Georgian.
Feb. 24. 6 4t. JAMES ROBERTS, Shff.
COURT CALENDAR.
SUPERIOR COURTS-
January.
Ist Monday, Richmond, 1
2d “ Chatham,
February.
Ist Monday, Stewart, 1
“ Floyd,
Paulding,Thursday before J
2d Monday, Clark,
“ Bibb,
“ Macon,
“ Randolph,
“ Cass, '
3d “ Walton,
•• Crawford,
•• Early,
•• Cherokee, i
4th “ Baker,
“ Jackson,
“ Meriwether,
“ Forsyth,
“ Upson,
Lee, Thursday after,
March.
Ist Monday, Cowetaa,
“ Lumpkin,
“ Pike,
Sumpter,
“ Taliaferro,
2d Columbia, :
“ Fayette,
Greene,
“ Laurens,
“ Madison,
•• Marion,
“ Monroe,
“ Morgan,
“ Gwinnett,
Union,
Gilmer, Wednesday after,
3d Monday. Butts,
•• Elbert,
•• DeKalb,
“ Hall,
“ Putnam,
•• Talbot,
• “ Murray,
4th “ Bullock,
•• Cobb,
“ Dooly,
«• Newton,
“ Walker,
“ Washington,
•• Wilkes,
Effingham,Thursday after
April.
Ist Monday, Warren,
“ Wilkinson,
•• Campbell,
2d “ Carroll,
“ Dade,
“ Camden,
" Hancock,
“ Harris,
“ henry,
•• Franklin,
“ Montgomery
w Twiggs,
Tatnall, Thursday after,
Wayne, “ “
3d Monday, Emanuel,
“ Habersham,
•« Heard,
" Glynn,
“ Jones,
•• Muscogee,
“ Oglethorpe,
“ Pulaski,
Mclntosh,Thursday after,
4th Monday, Scliven,
“ Lincoln,
“ Rabun,
•• Jasper,
“ Telfair,
•• Houston,
•• Troup,
“ Liberty,
Irwin, Thursday after,
Bryau, Wednesday after,
Mat,
Ist Monday, Burke,
„ Appling,
Ware, Thursday after, ;
2d Monday, Chaiham, ;
“ Lowndes, ;
3d “ Jefferson,
•• Thomas,
4th “ Decatur, !
UNITED STATES COURT,
Sixth Circuit for the district of Georgia—James M
Wayne, Circuit Judge—At Savannah, Thursday after
the Ist Monday 3d May—Milledgeville, Thursday
after the Ist Monday Bth November—Rules day. the
Ist Mondays in each month, upon which days all writs
are returnable to tho Clerk’s office in Savannah.
District Court—JrauMtMt Cuyleh, Judge—ln Sa
vannah 2d Tuesday 13th February—2d Tuesday Bih
May—2d Tuesday 14th August—2d Tuesday 13th No
vember.
_____ ■
THE undersigned will attend the Courts in all the
Counties of the Cherokee Circuit Habersham
and Raburn of the Western, nnd Cobb of the Coweta
Circuit, and also the Counties of Benton nnd Chero
kee Ala. All business directed to their address Cass
ville, Ga. will receive prompt nnd punctual attention-
WILLIAM 11. STEELMAN,
JOHN W. H. UNDERWOOD.
Feb, 10, 4. w. 6mo.
GEORGIA, WALKER COUNTY.
WHEREAS Robert Allen applies to me for
Letters of Administration on the Estate of
John Gilbert, late of Jackson county, deceased.
These are therefore to cite and admonish nil and
singular, the kindred and creditors, to be and appear
ai rny office within the time prescribed by law,to shew
cause, if any exist, why said letters should not be
granted.
Given under my hand at office, this 22d day of Jan
uary, 1838.
JOHN CALDWELL, o. c. c. o.
Jan. 26. 2 30d.
State Kights Hotel,
iiuO? CANTON, CEO-
| Pta VIE subscriber respectfully informs his friends
JL and the public, that he has removed from his old
stand upon the west part of the public square to the
house formerly occupied by B. F Johnson. He as.
sures those who ma; favor bim with a call, that noth
ing will be wanting on his part to render them com—
comfortable. His Table and Stables will be furnished
with the best the country affords.
B. F. DANIEL.
Canton, Jan, 19—1—w6w.
June.
Ist Monday, Baldwin,
“ Richmond,
August.
Ist Monday, Stewart,
»• Floyd,
2d “ Clark,
•• Bibb,
“ Randolph,
“ Cass,
-• Macon,
3d •• Walton,
•• Crawford,
•• Early,
“ Cherokee,
4th “ Baker,
•» Jackson,
“ Emanuel,
“ Upson,
•• Meriwether,
•• Forsyth,
Lee, Thursday after,
ri
September.
Ist Monday, Pike,
“ Gilmer,
“ Taliaferro,
“ Coweta,
“ Lumpkin,
2d “ Columbia
“ Madison
“ Morgan
•• Laurens
“ Monroe
“ Fayette
“ Greene
“ Marion
Gwinnstt
M Union
3d >. Elbert
«, Butts
.. DeKalb
*. Hall
‘‘ Talbot
’• Murray
’’ Putnam
* Newton
Cobb
„ Walker
*, Bulloch
u Dooly
Washington
•• Wilkes
October.
Ist Monday, Warren
“ Wilkinson
’’ Campbell
Montgomery
2d *« Hancock
« Franklin
“ Catnden
„ Twiggs'
Dade
M Henry
„ Carrol
Harris
3d Emanuel
, Oglethorpe
Habersham
• Jones
» Pulaski
Heard
’, Muscogee
4th « Seri ven
•• Lincoln
“ Rabun
“ Jasper
" Telfair
„ Houston
Troup
November.
Bulloch, Wednesday be
fore the Ist Monday
Effingham, Friday after,
the Ist Monday,
2d Monday, Jefferson
3d “ Burke
*• Applying
Ware, Thursday after
Lowrrdes, Monday after,
Thomae, Mon. thereafter,
Dccattfl’, “ “
4th Monday, Camden
Wayne, Thursday after
Glynn, Monday thereafter
Mclntosh, Thursday “
Liberty, Monday, ••
Bryan, Wednesday “