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VOLUME XLV.]
MILL EDGE VILLE, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 16, 1874.
THE
Stition & l&ccorber,
IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY
IN MILLEDGEVILLE. GA.,
BY
Boughton, Barnes & Moore,
At $2 in Advance, or $3 at end of the year
S. N. BOUGHTON, Editor.
THE “FEDERAL UNION” and the “SOUTH
ERN RECORDER ” were consolidated August 1st*
1872, the Union being in its Forty-Third Volume and
the Recorder in it’e Fifty-Third Volume.
ADVERTISING.
Transient.—One Dollar jw*r square of ten line* for fir*t inser
tion, and seventy-five cent* for each subsequent continuance.
Liberal discount on these rate* will be allowed on advertise
ment* running three months, or longer.
Tributes ot Respect, Resolution* by Societies, Obituaries ex
ceeding six lines, Nominations for office and Communications
for individual benefit, charged as transient advertising.
LEGAL ADVERTISING.
Sheriff's Sales, per levy of ten lines, or less, $2 50
44 Mortgage fi fa sales, per square, 5 00
Citations f«»r Letter* of Administration, 3 00
»• 44 44 Utmrdiausbin, 3 00
from Administration, 3 00
44 Guardianship, 3 0O
44 *• Leave to sell Land, 5 00
44 for Homesteads, 2 00
Notice to Debtors and Creditors, 3 00
Sales of Land, &c., per square 5 00
** periihable property, 10 days, per square, 1 75
Estray Notices, 30 days 3 00
foreclosure of Mortgage, per square, each time I 00
CIVIL RIGHTS*
The result of the Measure too Horrible
for Contemplation.
Antagonism that Would Never be Recon
ciled.
Give the Democratic Party an overwhel
ming Majority.
To this End Icheerfully Contribute My
Humble Mate.
Ex-Gov. Joseph E. Brown on the Situa
tion.
Applic ation for Dismisslo
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
Sales of Laud, Ac., by Administrators, Executors or Guar
dians, are required by law to be held on the first Tuesday iu the
month, between the nours of lOiutbe forenoon and 3 in the af
ternoon, at the Court House iuthe county iu which the property
Is situated. Notice of these sales must be given in a public
gaaette 30 day* previous to the day of sale.
Notioe* for the sale of personal properly must ba given in
tike manner 10 day* previous to sale day
estate mast be pub-
will be made to the Court of Ordinary
Notice to the debtors and creditors of
tlshed 40 days.
Notice that applic^li*—
for leave to *ell Laud, Alc., must be published for one month.
Citations for letter* of Administration, Guardianship, Jtc.,
must be publish *d 30 days— for dismission from Administration
monthly three mouths—for dismission from Guardianship 40
Joules for foreclosure of Mortgage must be published monthly
far four months—for establishing lost papers lor the full space, o'
three months—for compelling titles from Executor# or Admin
istrators, where bond has been given by the deceased, the fall
•pace of three months.
Publications will always be continued according to these,
the legal requirements, unless otherwise ordered.
Book and Job Work, of all kinds,
PROMPTLY AND NEATLY EXECUTED
AT THIS OFFICE.
Georgia Elections.
The elections in Georgia within the
next six months, occur as follows.
First Wednesday in October next, elec
tion for members of the Legislature.
First Tuesday iu November, election
for members of Congress.
First Wednesday in January, 1875,
election for county officers.
The polls at the Court House will open
at 7 o’clock in the morning and close at
7 in the evening; and open at the pre
oincts at 8 o'clock in the morning and
close at 3 o’clock in the evening.
4> 01d Xossum the Bean.”
From the last issue of the Milledgeville
Recorder, we see an announcement follow
ing the letter of Col. W. H. Sparks to Mr.
W. H. Moore, published in the Herald
some time ago, in which the former gen
tleman gives a short history of the real
anthor of “Old Rossnm the Beauthat
a celebrated sport, who was well known
in Milledgeville a number of years ago,
was the author of that song.
While this is a matter of little impor
tance, it as nevertheless but justice to
Col. Sparks to say that there is no doubt
that he is the original tuithor of the song,
and that his friend Cox set it for the tune
by whioh it has become so familiar with
everybody. As Col. Sparks says, there
him been more than a hundred different
verses written and sung to the same air,
but when he wrote the verses we publish
ed in 1827, it was long before “Beau”
Wilson flourished, and there are living
witnesses to prove that the original words
and accompanying air were familiar to
the people of the Southwest nearly half
a century back.—Atlanta Herald.
I. O. O. F.
The Grand lodge of the United States
I. O. O. F, Meets in the city of At
lanta, on the 21 st inst.
We are authorized to say that the fol
lowing rates of fare will be charged by
the following railroads to those who
attend the meeting of the grand lodge :
Atlanta & New Orleans short line, for
round trip, one faro.
The Ivennesaw route will sell excursion
tickets from Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Washington, Norfolk, Petersburg, Burke-
▼ille and Lynchburg, which may be pro
cured at their office in either of said
cities.
Selma, Rome & Dalton railroad will
sell round trip tickets for one fare.
Memphis & Little Rock railroad one
fare.
All the roads in Georgia have gener-
erously offered to pass the brotherhood
on the occasion to and from Atlanta for
one fare.
L. J. Gleet,
Chairman Committee of Arrangements.
The Oxford edition of Gibbon cons
sists of eight volumes with four or five
hundred pages in each, the exact number
of pages in all being 3,860. An individ
ual who had been reading one of these
volumes had the curiosity to examine
sixty pages of it and found that the
deaths from violence recorded in them
amounted on an average to about nine
thousand per page. If the wounded in
the battle recorded by Gibbon bore the
same proportion to the slain that they
do in modem times, they would be suffi
cient if placed on bods three feet in width
to encircle the globe four times. And
yet these ugly wars go on for want of a
stronger public sentiment against them.
That Broposed Southern Radical
Covention.
The Atlanta Constitution had some
notice recently of a convention of South
ern Radicals in that city,* said to have
been proposed by Clayton, of Arkansas.
The Baltimore Sun, of Monday, however,
gives the following account of it:
During the recent visit to Washington
of Senator Chandler, Chairman of the
Republican National Congressional Com
aoittee, it was agreed to support a call
for a convention of Republicans in the
Southern States, to meet at Atlanta, Oc
tober 12. It is desired that the most
thoughtful, wise and fair-minded men
from each State be appointed as delegates
to this convention, the object being to
set forth to the nation the true condition
of the South, and show their needs and
suggest the reforms necessary to secure
a perfect reconstruction of these States.
It is expected the President, Vice Presi
dent and others of national reputation
will be present. Owing to the short
notice, it is agreed that the executive com
mittee of each Southern State, or their
chairman, appoint the delegates. This
movement has the entire indorsement
and co-operation of prominent Republi
cans in all sections.
Penfield, Green County, Ga., )
August 31, 1874.
Gov. Joseph F. Frown, Atlanta, Ga:
Dear Sir :—in this hour of political
trouble we would counsel your wisdom
and political experience. In our opinion
the passage by congress of the civil rights
bill would inaugurate a feeling of anta
gonism between the white and black races,
that could never be reconciled. To us it
does appear impossible for any southern
gentleman to identify himself with any
party who seek to impose this measure
upon onr people. But trusting in your
profound judgment and practical com
mon sense, we advise with you. We are
Governor,
Yours very respectfully,
James H. McWhorter,
R. L. McWhorter.
Atlanta, Ga., September 2, 1874.
Messrs. 11. L. Ale Whorter and James
H. McWhorter, Penfield, Ga :
Sydney Smith says: The greatest corse
that can be entailed on mankind is a state
of war. All the atrocious crimes com
mitted in years of peace, all that is spent
in peace by the secret corruptions or by
the thoughtless extravagance of nations,
•re mere trifles compared with the gigan
tic evils which stalk over the world in a
state of war. God is forgotten in war.
Every principle of Christianity is tram
pled upon.”
Gentlemen : In reply to your letter in
reference to the political situation, in
which I understand you to ask my opin
ion of the civil rights bill, pending before
congress, I have to state that I am not
engaged in political strife, nor do I intend
to be in future. I shall, however, main
tain the position of an independent citi
zen, and I shall not hesitate to express
any political opinions which I may enter
tain, and to act and vote in such manner
as, in my judgment, will best promote
the interest of the state of Georgia, and
of the whole people of the union.
As you are aware, I was one of the first
public men in Georgia to take position in
favor of acquiescence in the reconstruc
tion measures adopted by congress. I did
this because I clearly foresaw that the
south, as the conquered section, would
be compelled to submit to these mea
sures ; and if acquiescence was refused,
that more rigorous measures still would
be enforced. But I thought by acquies
cing at once and raising no issues with
the colored people of the state, we would
retain their confidence and keep them out
of the hands of carpet-baggers and de
signing men who would come among
them, for the purpose of misleading them
and exciting their prejudicis against our
native white population, who are in fact
their best friends.
Each of you took the same position
which I feltjit my duty to take upon these
issues, and we passed through a period
of persecution and ostracism seldom en
dured by those who have in view nothing
but the best interests of the state in the
course they pursue, and who labor day
and night to save those who revile them
from a fate, such as the white people of
South Carolina and Louisiana, who fol
lowed the advice of unwise leaders, and
made no effort to control the delibera
tions of their conventions are now com
pelled to endure.
The result of our labors, and of those
who co operated with us in and out of
the convention, gave to Georgia a consti
tution under which she is now living and
prospering, and to her native original
citizens the control of the management of
their own affairs.
In the other southern states, where the
whole mass of the white people, following
the advice of their excited leaders, gave
up their constitutional conventions to
negroes and carpet-baggers, and made no
effort to control them, constitutions have
been fixed upon them which vest the gov
ernment in the hands of their former
slaves, under the guidance and direction
of northern men who, bankrupt in charac
ter and fortune at home, came to the
south, and taking advantage of the folly
of our people, who were acting upon their
judgment and common sense, alienated
the negroes from their white neighbors
and friends and obtained complete con
trol over them.
It was the thirty to forty thousand
white men in Georgia who acted with us,
subordinating passion and prejudice to
judgment and reason, and who, contrary
to the advice of honored leaders, voted
in the election for delegates to the con
vention and sent such men as McCay,
Saflold, Miller, Parrott, Trammell, Wad
dell, McWhorter, Bell, Angier, Maddox,
Shropshire, and a number of others, all
able, honored white citizens of Goprgia,
who, with the aid of some influences out-
side, controlled the counsels of the con
vention, and secured our present consti
tution ; who saved Georgia from the sad
fate of some of her southern sisters.
Suppose the whole white population of
South Carolina immediately after the
passage of the Sherman Bill, had pro
claimed to the world that they acquiesced
in the measure, and each had gone to
work to influence and control as many
colored men as possible, making no issue
with them but informing them that their
right to vote was conceded; and suppose
every white voter in the state had gone
to the polls and voted for delegates to the
convention; who believes that they could
not have colored votes enough, with their
own to have carried controlled the conven
tion, and made their constitution as good
as that of Georgia 1 This could have been
done by them if they had acted prompt
ly, in defiance of all the efforts that car
pet-baggers could have made
If no issue had been made with the
colored people, probably each white vote
in the state could have influenced and
controled one colored vote, some could
have controled a much larger number.
But if only one in every five had con
trolled a colored vote, it would have given
the white people the control of the con
vention, and as a consequence would
have given them a good constitution.
The property, intellect and intelligence
of any state can govern it, when it unites
in a determined effort to do so. And if
they had made no issue with the govern
ment, or the colored people, on their
right to vote, there were strong reasons
why their former owners could have ex
ercised more influence and control over
the colored people, than the employer
can usually exercise over the employed,
owing to the kind relations which had
formerly existed between them, and the
dependance upon the white people which
the colored people had habitually felt dur
ing their past lives.
But so soon as the whole mass of the
white people proclaimed their eternal hos
tility to the reconstructioarxSts, and de
clared that they would never submit to
negro suffrage, they drove the negroes
from them, and, as any race who did not
feel competent to control their own af
fair^ would have done under like circum
stances, they naturally looked around for
somebody to lead them, and at this criti
cal moment the carpet-baggers came
sion was to see that the acts of congress
were carried into effect, and the right oi
suffrage secured to the colored race
Having no one else to lean upon, theii
former owners and neighbors haring, a. c
they considered it, turned against them
the colored people became willing sub
jects of those who came to them with
flattering promises, and were soon bound
to them by ties too strong to be easily
broken.
But the reconstruction contest is
the past, and to-day we see the whole
people of Georgia coming up to the posi
tion of acquiescence which we took in
1867, and indeed going far beyond it.
We then acquiesced in the fourteenth
amendment and the Sherman bill. They
have since acquiesced in these measures
with the fifteenth amendment added,
which might have been avoided if the
whole south had promptly acquiesced in
the fourteenth amendment and the res
construction act known as the Sherman
bill.
But at this period we are met with a
much more dangerous issue than any
that was presented in 1867, and it be
comes ns to meet it fairly and squarely,
and to do all in our power to avert the en
actment of a measure which will be pro
ductive of the most ruinous consequences
throughout the entire south.
It was a hard enough fate upon us for
our conquerors to abolish slaveiy, and
wrest from us without a dollar of com
pensation the billions of dollars invested
in that property which had descended
from generation to generation, as the
patrimony of several ages; and then to
compel us to stand upon terms of legal
equality with onr former slaves, and
meet them as equals at the ballot box.
This, however, the conqueror dictated,
and compelled submission to his dicta
tion; and those who were most fiery and
denunciatory in their warfare against it
accomplished nothing of good for our
people.
AJ1 parties have now united in acquies
cence in these measures, and all the states
have been readmitted into the union, as
the northern states must now admit upon
terms of legal equality. Here then the
reconstruction measures should cease,
and all parties should agree that the war
is at an end; that we have suffered its dis
astrous consequences, and that no furth
er wrongs should be inflicted upon us.
At this stage, however, with a view, no
doubt, to the next presidential campaign,
and for the purpose of making the color
ed voters more enthusiastic in their sup
port of the republican party, certain lead
ers of that powerful organization bring
forward what is termed the civil rights
bill, which is now- pending on the calen
dar of congress, and which, in fact, is
intended, not as a civil rights bill, but
as a social rights measure, for the purpose
of compelling social equality between the
white and colored people of the south. This
can never be done, and if attempted should
not, and will not, be submitted to be the
consequences what they may. God has
created the two races different, with dif
ferent tastes, capacity and instincts for
social enjoyment, and no human legisla
tion can ever compel them to unite as so
cial equals.
Those who urge this measure in con
gress with a view of bringing up the col
ored voters to a more enthusiastic sup
port of their party ate putting themselves
in a position to do the greatest possible
injury to the colored race. Suppose this
bill should pass at the next congress,
what will be the result? The legislature
of each southern state, as soon as it is
HUMBER g
called together, will at once repeal all g^use.—The shrewd and sharp-sighted
try, or any section of it, will meet with
overwhelming defeat in every issue.
I have no hesitation, therefore, m
agreeing with you that the passage by
congress of the civil rights bill would in
augurate a feeling of antagonism between
the white and black races that conld
never be reconciled, and in saying most
uneqnivocably that no southern gentle
man, I care not whether he be republi
can or democrat, ought, in my opinion, to
identify himself or continue longer to
act with the party, who seek to impose
this measure upon our people.
In my judgment, there are but two con
tingencies which can avert the evil; one
is the overwhelming defeat of the repub
lican party, in the elections this fall, up
on tins issue. They are determined to
make the issue, as already announced by
some of their leaders upon the stump;
and my sincere hope is, that every state,
county, city, town, village and hamlet,
throughout the entire union, where an
election may be held, will give the demo
cratic party an overwhelming majority.
To this end, I shall cheerfully contribute
my humble mite. This would check the
passage of this most iniquitous measure,
and relieve the country of the horrors con
sequent upon its passage.
If this should fail, and I trust it may
not, the only remaining hope is in the
exercise of the veto power by the presi
dent of the United States. I know noth
ing of the intentions of the president on
this question; but I trust a sense of pa
triotic duty may compel him, if the meas
ure should ever come before him for ac
tion, to save the country from anarchy
and min, by the use of this great conser
vative power which is wisely placed in
his hands, by the constitution.
If it should come to that point, and
General Grant should veto the measure,
and throw the vast weight of hisexecutive
power and personal influence, in the scale
of peace and harmony; he would be enti
tied to, and I believe would receive the
thanks and the applause of the entire
white population of the south, and of i
vast majority of the people of the union.
I have no wish to thrust my opinions
before the public on any political issue;
but, on account of the magnitude of this
question, and the fearful results which
may follow, I think it the duty of every
citizen to speak out and state his posi
tion, in terms too unequivocal to be mis
understood. I therefore authorize you,
to make such use of this letter, as you
may think proper. Very respectfully,
your obedient servant,
Joseph E. Brown.
cherish and practice the ceriinal precepts
of our Order in every detail of life, and
we, under the guidance of the ever-mer-
eifnl Husbandman above, shall confident
ly anticipate for onr distressed and dis
pirited class the bright era of prosperity,
plenty and contentment
Yours fraternally, etc.,
T. J. SMITH, Master of G. S. G.
P. S.—Will the press of Georgia, not
hostile to us, contribute as much as the
publication of the above ?
T. J. S., M. G. S. G.
BALDWIN COUNTY.
ATLANTA ADVERTISEMENTS.
Holmes 1 Liuiment,
Georgia Patrons of Husbandry.
Addnn of the Master.
Georgia State Grange, Patrons of H., 4
Office of T. J. Smith, Master, >
Oconee, Ga., Aug. 28, 1874.)
Brother Patrons:—It becomes my du
ty, being so prominently identified with
the great farmers’ movement in Georgia,
to invite your serious attention to the de
mands of the time upon our noble order.
Our efforts as producers of the soil un
der a protecting Providence, to render
our farms self-sustaining, have, to a great
measure, proven successful.
Our good Lord and Master has sent
us early and late rains, and fruitful sea
sons, and our so long empty granaries
will soon groan with more cheering abun
dance than they have since the unfortu
nate war. The excessive hot and dry
weather, curtailing our cotton crop, is to
be hoped will prove a blessing in dis-
T HIS LINIMENT WHEN USED DAILY for
two or three week before confinement, produces a
wonderful effect—censing a very easy and quick labor
with comparatively little pain, and leaves the mother
iu a condition to recover quicklv, or in other words to
have a good getting np. Under its use labor will not
ordinarily occupy one fourth of the usual time, and the
lady will not suffer one-tenth part of the pain usually
felt. It is prepared by Dr. J.S. HOLMES, who has
used it witli great success in a large practice for thirty
years. It has been used by many ladies in this State,
and has given satisfaction in all coses. For sale by
C. S. NEWTON,
No. 7 Decatur street, Kimball House Block,
ATLANTA GA.
For saie in Milledgeville by J. M. CLARK and
B. R. HERTY. feb25 31 ly
laws by which public schools are main
tained at the public expense, and leave
each man to educate his own children as
best he can. This will leave the colored
people who are without property to grope
their way in ignorance with no means of
educating their offspring, and it will ne-
essarily leave a great many white people
in the same unfortunate situation.—But
be this as it may, we will never submit to
mixed schools where our children shall
be compelled to unite with those of the
colored race, upon terms of social equali
ty.
I have been president of the board of
education in Atlanta, since the organiza
tion of our system which is now work
ing most admirably; under which we have
separate schools, open to white and to
colored children, and every child belong
ing to either race can find its way into a
good school, if the parent thinks proper
to send it These schools are maintain
ed by taxation of the whole people, and
the burden Mis mainly upon those who
have most wealth, and who often have no
children to educate. I am proud of the
system, and of the great benefits whioh
are resulting from it. And I feel as our
white people generally do, that since the
colored people are made citizens, if they
act in their proper social sphere, it is
our duty, as well as our pleasure, to aid
them in the education of their children.
But I do not hesitate to say that I should
favor the immediate repeal of all laws on
this subject, and the disbandoning of the
schools, as soon as the civil rights bill
shall become a law.
It cannot be said that we violate any
provision of the constitution of the Uni
ted States, when we repeal our school
laws, as that constitution requires no
state to maintain any public school; and
we make no discrimination on account of
race, color, or previous condition of ser
vitude, when we refuse to maintain any
public school, at the public expense, for
the children of. either race.
Bnt this is not all. The attempt to
force equality* between the races, on rail
road cars, steamboats, and especially in
hotels and churches, will produce con
stant strife, and very frequent blood
shed, that will probably soon lead to a
war of races, and produce a horrible state
of things, throughout the entire south,
terminating in general anarchy, which
will end in the extermination of the ne
gro race. Much as I deprecate and op
pose all mob law, and desire the faithful
execution of the laws, I cannot doubt
that in the excited state of the popular
mind, which would follow the attempt to
enforce such a measure, it would soon be
found that white juries wonld not convict
white men for killing negroes who under
took to intrude themselves upon them,
as social equals.
And if the Government of the United
States attempted to coerce the white peo
ple of the south into submission to negro
social equality, they would find that the
white troops who might be called into
the field against us, to fight for such ne
gro equality, would generally lay down
their arms before they would perform the
tysk. In a word, if they drove us to sub
mission at the point of the bayonet, the
bayonet would generally have to be in
the hand of the negro, and onr people
would have to defend themselves against
it as best they could. The result would
not be doubtful All prosperity wonld
be destroyed, and general confusion,
bankruptcy and ruin wonld prevail until
the struggle between the races termina
ted, which wonld, as I have already said,
in the end result in the extinction of the
weaker race.
But I do not care to pursue this theme.
The consequence of this measure would
be too horrible for contemplation, and we
can only hope that the evil will be avert
ed by the good practical common sense
of the Amaracn people; and that the po
litical organization which attempts to
junoag them, announcing that their mi*-]force thisstate ef things upon the com
speculator, who has been so vigilant in
heralding through the press the crop of
four and a half millions of bales, will be
hushed, and the cotton ring; true to their
instincts, were forging chains to fetter
us—let us prepare to rend asunder, and
true to ourselves, families, and country,
rally under our bright and floating col
ors, the only promise to the tillers of the
soil. We should take time by the fore
lock, using our utmost influence with
our friends who have so kindly come for
ward and contributed to onr necessities,
furnishing food, etc., to hold our cotton
until developments are made that are sat
isfactory as to the extent of the growing
crop.
Heartily congratulating yon upon the
spirit of self-reliance and fortitude which
you have so nobly manifested upder pri
vations and disappointments, grievous
to be endured, and for which we were to
tally unprepared, let me earnestly and
affectionately entreat you not to abandon
the policy of making an abundance of
supplies for home, and heed earnestly the
resolution as passed by the Cotton
States Convention of November last
year, and impressively reiterated in its
session of July last, of planting one-third
of our arable land in small grain, one-
third in com and one-third in cotton.
Hearken the warning voice of the past
whose syren song of planting all cotton,
hurling us into bankruptcy of property
and well near of credit and character.
Soon the season of sowing of fall and
winter crops—turnips, wheat, oats, rye,
etc., will be upon ns, and remember earn
estly that the judicious and prudent farm
er, the good and faithful Patron will
gather into their granaries, that them
selves, families and animals may have
feed in winter. Our brother Patrons of
all the cotton growing States, pledging
to ns their hearty concurrence in the
one-third system, and, therefore, while
our cotton production will be diminished,
you may yet hope to realize a greater
amount of profit by the advance price of
the same.—Efforts are being made
through established agencies to secure
supplies of grain for seed at reduced cost;
and can’t I ask, with some confidence,
where are the good and true Patrons who
have a surplus and will refuse to open
their hearts and granaries in furnishing
seed to promote the laudable end we
have in view ?
Though the hardships, privations and
disappointments of the farm are galling,
let us bear it with Christian fortitude,
promising ourselves by such sacrifices a
better day will soon dawn, and to hasten
that better time we will do all in our pow
er to promote the interest of onr noble
undertaking. We propose soon to di
vide our State into districts, over which
put wise and discreet deputies of our or
der, whose duty will be to canvass, lec
hiring and organizing Granges. In this
I invoke the free and hearty co-operation
of every Patron in Georgia. Believing
the weal or woe of the Sonth, yes, of the
whole country, is depending upon the
success or failure of the Grange move
ment, I propose, in addition to the depu
ty movement, to devote my entire tune
to the work of our order, and will visit,
a; I have been doing, all parts of Geor
gia where duty and my good brothers
have called me. Brothers, we have
great work to do. Let us set about it in
earnest, and kindle a flame of brotherly
love throughout onr proud old State,
and not be content until we enlist under
our bright and flying colors every tiller
of the soil in our midst
The political parties of the country
will soon be arrayed, and the sagacious
politicians attempting to allure us into
the entangling alliances of party. Let
us prove to them we are true to our pro
fession and faith in adhering strictly to
our fundamental law, doing nothing that
will savor in the least of committing onr
Order to politics.
Bakun’s rare CMcnlrtK* PMi
conclusion, cohort jottto *y w. a. Robert*, at Uw n«w* Depot.
The Best Investment!
TOUNTG- MPITV
Who wish to obtain a thorough
Practical Business Education
And prepare themselves for the duties of
ACTUAL BUSINESS LIFE,
Under the instruction and advice of
EXPERIENCED ACCOUNTANTS,
Should attend
A Standard Institution
and leading
BUSINESS SCHOOL IN THE SOUTH,
Conducted on
Actual Business Principles,
Supplied with Backing and other offices, combining
every known facility for i oil*-ting a thorough, prac
tical and systematic knowledge uT the Science of Ac
counts, in the shortest possible time and at the least
expense.
No vacation. Students admitted at any time.
Circular containing terms, Ac., mailed on application.
Address
B. F. MOORE, A. M., Pres’t.
Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 2, 1874. 28 ly
—OR—
THE MOTHER’S RELIEF.
Administrator’8 Sale.
B Y VIRTUE (of an order of the Ordinary ot Bald
win county, state of Georgia, will be sold before
the door of tbe place in the city of Mi-ledgevUle for
holding public sales, on tbe first Tuesday in OC FOBER
next, within the legal hour* of sale, the following
tracts or parcel* of land In the Fifth District of origin
ally Wilkinson, now Baldwin county, in said State, to
wtt: Thirteen acres in No. 148; one hundred acres
more or leas of Lot No. 146; one hundred acres more
or less of Lot No. 144; adjoining lands ot Stevens,
Etheridge, Nolan and others;—also, one hundred acres
more or less, adjoining lands of B. T. Stevens, C.
Matthews and J. Whitehurst, lying on the line of
Jones and Baldwin eonnties and known as the Reedy
place. Sold as tbe property of John A. Breedlove,
late deceased of Baldwin county, for the benefit of
heirs and creditors. Terms on the day of sale.
W. B. BREEDLOVE, Adm’r.
September 1st, 1874. 6 tds.
Baldwin County Sheriff Sales.
W ILL be sold at the legal place for holding Sher
iff’s sales, in Baldwin County, before Masonic
Hall, id Milledgeville, on the First Tneaday
OCTOBER next, within the lawful hours of sale,
the following property to- wit: .
The house aud one acre lot, on which it stands, viz
Lot No. in Block immediately opposite and
South of the lot of Joe Choice, and near the land of
Judge White in Milledgeville. Also, one bouse aud lot,
being in square number 39, and lot number 2, in the
city of Milledgeville, having a front of eighteen feet
on Wayne Street and running back from said street
thirty tour feet. Levied on as the property of Thomas
Brown,to satisfy a fifain favor of Daniel Caraker.
Levy made by J. E. Hagood, Constable, and return
ed to me. _ .
JOHN B. WALL, Shenff.
Sep.1,1874. 6 tds
Baldwin Postponed Sheriff’s Sale
INFILL be sold at the legal place for holding Sber-
TV ifFs Sales in Baldwin county, before tbe Mason
ic Hall, in Milledgeville, on the first Tuesday in OC
TOBER next, within the legal hoars of sale, the fol
lowing property, to-wit:
Eight hundred acres of land belonging to the estate
of William A. Roberson, deceased, lying east of the
Oconee river in Baldwin county, and bounded as fol
lows, to-wit: On the north by Mrs. Lnciuda Cham
pion and the old Bivins tract, east by John Amos,
South by L. N. Callaway and E. S. Vinson, and west
by Mrs. Moran and Thomas Moran, being the Home
tract on which Mrs. E. A, Robson new resides and
sold subject to her dower interest of five hundred acres
in said tract of eight hundred acres, levied oo by O.
Ai nold, Deputy Sheriff, to satisfy a fi fa issued from
the County Court of Baldwin county, iasned in Novem
ber 1867, in favor of Joseph Miller vs. E. A Roberson,
Administratrix of W. A. Roberson, deceased. Levy
returned to me by O. A mod, Deputy Sheriff, and
Mrs. Roberson notified by mail this day.
Also at the same time and place: Thirty acres of
land, more or leas, with tbe improvements thereon,
adjoining lands of Chandler, Sanford and others, and
known as the Arnold place. Sold as the property of
Jacob Dntenhofer to satisfy a fi fa issued from the 8u-
rior Court ot said county in favor of Enoch E.
enfroe vs. Jacob Dutenhofer. Propeity pointed out
by Plaintiff and notice given to defendant by mail
this day.
J. B. WALL, Sheriff Baldwin County.
7th, 1874. 7 tds
Citation.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Baldwin County,
To all Concerned.
W HEREAS, MARCUS H. McCOMB has this
day made application to me for letters of ad
ministration on the estate of his father, Robert A.
McComb, late of said county deceased. These aiw
to cite and admonish all parties concerned, wbothm
heirs or creditors, to be and appear at my offioo oo
the first Monday in October next. (1874.) to show
cause, if any, why such application should not bo
granted, and ietters issued to applicant.
„ , . D. B. SANFORD, Ordiamy.
September 1st, 1874. fi l»,
GEORGIA, Baldwin Connty,
To all whom it may concern.
\yilEUEAS, L. Carrington, has applied to me bf
* ” letters of administration, cum testamento sasoo
on tbe estate ot Abner Hammond, Senior, late of Sal*
connty deceased. These are therefore to cite and ad*
monish all parties interested, whether kindred or otodfc
tore, to show cause on or by the first Monday in OW
tober next, why said letters should not be granted tn
said applicant. *
Witness my hand this August 3lst, 1874.
6 *“>• DANIEL B. SANFORD, Ordinary.
To all whom it may Concern.
GEORGIA. Baldwin County.
Offiee of Ordinary in and for said Connty.
V^TIEREAS. W illiam S. McComb, administrator
V V upon the estate of Georgia Phillips, lata of -n 1 - 1
county deceased, has applied to me for leave to sell n
house and lot belonging to said estate.
These are therefore to cite and admonish all portion
interested, whether kindred or creditors to show onnso
on or by th{ first Monday in October next, why leave
to sell said i -al estate should not be granted to aaid
-•jplieant
Witness my band this August the 31st. 1874
6 Im.) DANIEL B. SANFORD, Ordinary
Baldwin Sheriff’s Sules.
W ILL be sold at the legal place for holding Sheriff's
sales in Baldwin oouaty, before the Masonic Hall
in Milledgeville, on the first Tuesday iu OCTOBER ^ „ . „ .
next, within the lawful hours of sale, the following *- vell to call and examine my
property to-wit j ing elsewhere. I also keep on h
One hundred and eighty acres of land, more or less.
To all whom it may Concern•
GEORGIA, Baldwin Connty.
Office of Ordinary in and for said oounty,
VETHEREAS, J. F. Rogers and R. W. Hall. i ’
VV istrators upon the estate <i Hezekiah E .
late of said connty deceased, have applied to me for
leave to sell all of the lands belonging to said salats.
These are therefore, to cite and admonish all parties
interested, whether kindred or creditors, tosboweaaaa
on or by the first Monday in October, next, why leave
to sell said real estate should not be granted to aaid
applicant.
Witness my hand this August 31st, 1874.
6 lrn. DANIEL B. SANFORD, Ordinary.
Contracting and Building.
fJNHE undersigned is prepared to contract for tbe
SaiMiai sal Repairing of Rsatni
—ALSO—
ALL KINDS OF WORK usually dons
by a first-class House-Carpenter.
Work solicited and satifaction guaranteed.
J. A. MAGILL.
Milledgeville, Ga., Aug. 26, 1874. fi Jai
Tobacco I Tobacco! Tobacco I
THE BRITISH
QUARTERLY REVIEWS,
EDINBURGH REVIEW, (Whig.)
LONDON QUARTERLY REVIEW, [Conservative,)
WESTMINSTER REVIEW, (Liberal.)
BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW, (Evangelical.J
AND
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine,
Reprinted by
The Leonard Scott Publishing Co.,
140 FULTON ST., N. 7.,
By arrangement with the English Publishers, who
receive a liberal compensation.
These periodicals constitute a wonderful miscellany
of modern thought, research, and criticism. The
cream of all European books worth reviewing is
found here, aud they treat of the leading events of the
world in masterly articles written by men who have
special knowledge of the matters treated. The Amer
ican Publishers urge upon all intelligent readers in this
country a liberal support Of the Reprints which they
have so long and so cheaply furnished, feeliDg snre
that no expenditure for literary matter will yield so
rich a return as that required for a subscription to
these tbe
LEADING PERIODICALS OF GREAT BRITAIN
TERMS:
About one third the price of the originals.
For say one of the Reviews.... $4 00 per annnir
For any two of the Reviews....7 00 “
For any three of the Reviews.... 10 00 “
For all fonrof the Reviews.... 12 00 “
For Blackwood’s Magazine ....4 00 “
For Blackwood and one Review 7 00 “
For Blackwood and any two of
the Reviews... 10 00 “
For Blackwood and three of
tbe Reviews.... 13 00 “
For Blackwood and the four
Reviews...... » 15 00 “
Postage, two cents a number, to be prepaid by
tbe quarter at the office of delivery
CLUBS.
A discount of twenty per cent, will be allowed to
clubs of four or more persons. Thus : four copies
of Blackwood or of one Review will be sent to
one address for $12.80; four copies of the four
Reviews and Blackwood for $48, and so on.
To clubs of ten or more, in addition to tbe above
discount, a copy gratis will be allowed to the get*
ter-cp of the club.
PREMIUMS.
New subscribers (applying early) for the year
1874 may have, without charge, the last volume for
1873 of such periodicals as they may subscribe lor.
Or instead, new subscribers to any two, three
or four of the above periodicals, may have one of
the “Four Reviews” for 1873 ; subscribers to al'
five may have two of the .“Four Reviews” or
one set of Blackwood’s Magazine for 1873.
Neither premiums to subscribers nor discount to
clubs can be allowed unless tbe money is remit,
ted direct to tbe publishers. No premiums given
to clubs.
Circulars with further particulars may be had
on application.
She Leonard Scott Publishing Co,
41 Blocker Street, New York.
Feb. 17,1874. 30 tf
lying and being in the connty of Baldwin and State of
Georgia, adjoining lands of Eliza A. Roberson, E
Chandler, Joseph Leonard, Thomas Arnold ami others,
levied on by virtue of a fi fa, issued from the County
Court of Baldwin county, in favor of Annie E. Harris
vs. 8. S. Turner, levied on as the property of Mrs. 8.
S. Turner, and tenants in possession notified by mail
this day-
Also, at the same time and place, the following pro
perty of Thoe Brown: one lot consisting of one.eighth
of an acre, more or lees, in square number sixty, in
the city of Milledgeville. with the houses and appur
tenances thereto belonging, the said lot having a north
front of forty feet on Hancock street and running
back to the lands of Wiedenman and Mrs. Camilla
McComb on too sonth, bounded east by lot of Chloe
Watts’ estate and west by lot of Pleasant Taylor.—
Levied on to satisfy a fi fa from Baldwin Superior
Court in favor of Wm. Barnes, assignee of the orig
inal owners Mortimer, Walton Sc. Debost. Tenants
notified. Property pointed out by plaintiff, this
September 8th, 1874.
Also, at the same time and place, the interest of
Theodore G. Sanford, one of the dqfendanla- in * (nu-i
of land of fourteen hundred ana eighty-seven acres,
more or less, on east bonk of Oconee river, in Bald
win county,adjoining Sam’!. Whitaker and others, his
interest being one undivided half of said tract in re
mainder after tbe life estate of bis mother, Mary A nn R.
Sanford. Sold to satisfy a fi fa in favor of G. T.
Wiedenman vs. John W. A. Sanford, maker, and
Theodore O. Sanford, indorser, and written notice
given to defendant, said Theodore G. Sanford, person
ally, and to J. P. Sweany, tenant in possession, this
September 5th, 1874.
Also, At the same time place, two hundred acres of
land more or less lying and being on the waters of
Island creek, in Baldwin county, State of Georgia, ad
joining lands of J. R. Collins on the South and West,
A.H. Coats on the North andB. I. Bass on the East;
levied on by virtue of fi fa issued from Baldwin Supe
rior Court in favor of William Grimes vs. E. C. Wor
sham. Property pointed out by plaintiff and defend
ant notified by mail this day.
J. B. WALL, Sheriff Baldwin County.
September 7th. i874. 7 tds.
Baldwin Mortgage Sheriffs Sale.
W ILL be sold at the legal place for holding Sher
iff’s Sales, in Baldwin county, before the Ma
sonic Hall in Milledgeville on the first Tuesday in NO
VEMBER next, within the legal hours of sale, the
following property, to-wit:
One Blandy’s patent portable Steam Saw Mill and
appnrtenancee, one dark mare mule named Beck, one
dark mare mule named Kit, one dark horse male nam
ed Rowley, one light bay horse named Charley Brook,
one log wagon, two two-horse wagons, one hundred
and twenty-five thousand feet of first class lumber,
oue hundred and twenty-five thousand feet of second
class lumber, levied on by virtue of a Mortgage Fi Fa
issued from Baldwin 8aperior Coart in favor of H. St.
F. Blandy vs. Natale and Abroee Cormanny, levied
on os the property of Defendants and they notified in
person of said levy, this September 7tb, 1874.
J. B. WALL,
7 tds Sheriff Baldwin County.
Baldwin Sheriff’s Sale.
W ILL be sold on the first Tuesday in October
1874, between the legal hoars of sale—before
the Masonic Hall, in tbe city of Milledgeville, the fol
lowing city property to-wit: Lots numbers, one—two
—three and foar, (1—2—3 and 4) iu square Twenty-
four according to the plan of said city. Lot num
ber tine has the following improvements on it, to-wit:
Two dwelling bouse*, one containing six rooms and a
basement, and in rear tnereof, a kitchen and stable or
barn, enclosed by a substantial plank fence, and now
occupied by Hamp. Brown and known as bis place.
Tbe other dwelling on said lot, number (3.) lying next
TEA. AOBXTT8 WANTED.
TEA AGENTS wanted in town and country to sell
TEA, or get up club orders, for the largest Tea Com
pany in America. Importers’ prices and inducements
to Agents. Send for Circular. Address, ROBERT
WELLS, 43 VeeeySt-.N. Y. P. O. Box 1287.
The Christian Urios, Hennr Ward Beecher, Editor, ot
Oct. 25th last, aays: Parties wishing to get np ciuba, aud all who
can get orders for TEA, should write him for a circular."
Thr New Yo»xWeerly Tkibuhe, of Sept, 3d, aays: “All
'Granges' should write Eobt. Wells for circular."
The Scythe, of Sept. 20 aavs: "Roht. Wells is thoroughly
reliable.” | March 30, 1871-36 6ms
to and South of the Hamp. Brown place, has six rooms
2 > and down stain, and is now occupied by Lacy
ix, Moriah Riven, Wiley Durden and Wm. Ba
win, (all colored) with a good well of water in tbe yat.
This lot No. (3,) will be sold in two parcels of a bolt
acre each, the Hamp. Brown place in one lot, and the
Lucy Hix place in one lot. Lot number four, (4) will
be sold in two parcels of a half acre each; on the
Northern half is the building ot the Colored Baptist
Church, sold with the privilege reserved to them of
removing said building, tbe South half of said lot,
has a large yellow house on it, containing six rooms,
now occupied by Frank Ford. The other two lots,
numbers one (1) and two (2.) in square 24, lying im
mediately East of lots 3 and 4, are withont improve
ments, but are in cultivation, and under the same in-
closore as No's. 3 and 4, and sold in parcels of one acre
each. Also, lot three (3) in square fourteen, in said city,
containing one ecre, more or less, without buildings
thereon, bat under a substantial plank fence—and ly
ing immediately East and adjoining the place of Al
fred Hall, (colored); all ot said property levied on by
virtue of one Mortgage fi fa, issued from Baldwiu
Superior Court in flavor of W. G- Lonterman vs. Ham
ilton Brown and said Iota, for tbe purchase money ot
the same. Levied on as the property of Hamp. Brown,
ho was this day notified in writingof said le
JOHN B. WALL, Sheriff Bald
Sept. }tb, 1874.
Qro boxes tobacco for sale cheap
wwU FOR CASH. Farmers and merchants wi*
stock before purcGVf
hand a full stock o, —
FAMILY
GROCER I
AND
’• SUP
heap foi
1st Door North of Miller’s Jewelry Store.
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 28,1874.
27 ly
HBW
TOBACCO WAREHOUSE!
M. J. BAER & CO.,
Commission Merchants & Dealors
Virginia Plug Tobacco, North Carolina Leaf and
SjnokingTphaeeo.Imported and Domestic Cigar*- •“*
Pipes, Prices guaranteed. 11 Cherry StTMacon,
Ga. pd m’oh31 36 3m
WASHINGTON
TOBACCO at WHOLESALE.
Lowest Market Rates GuraiteeL
pww? aw jypmpf?
Cheap for Cash.
J. P. SWEANY.
Milledgeville, Ga., March 31,1874. 36 1
BIXBY’S
BEST
BLACKHTd;
Admitted by professional Bootblacks and Hotel
Porters to be the
Best Shoe Blacking ia the WtrM*
S. M. BIXBY & CO.,
Z 73 and 173 Washington 3t>, M. T.
MANUFACTURERS 07
Fine Shoe Blackings, Laundry Bine, Stove Poliak,
(Ink, Mucilage, Sic.
SOLD BY ALL DEALERS.
July 21,1374. 52 2m.
Maleie, Williigkaa k €#*9
DEALERS IS
A gricultural hardware, steam kn-
gines, Screw Pressee, Cotton Gins, Belting, he
Proprietors of “Wright’s Anti Friction Hone Power-”
Agents for tbe Gullett Light Draft Gin, the Brawn
Gin and the American Needle Gin with Condenser at-
AOVBD
Remington Sewing Machine.
AWARDED
The <# Medal for Progress,”
AT TIBNNA, 1873.
The Highest Order of “Medal” Awarded at tbe
Exposition.
No Sewing Machine Received a Higher
Prize.
A raw 0009 REASONS:
1.—A New Invention Tfaoroghly Tested and seem
ed by Letters Patent. .
3,—Mokes a perfect lock stich, alike on both sides,
on all kinds of goods.
3. —Bans Light, Smooth, Noiseless and Rapid-
best combination of qualities.
4. —Durable—Bans far years without Repairs.
5. —Will do all varieties of Work and Fancy Stitch
ing in a superior manner.
•.—Is most easily Managed by tbe operator. Length
of stitch may be altered while running, and machine
can be threaded without passing thread through holes.
7. —Design Simple, ingenious, Elegant, forming the
stitch without the use ot Cog Wheel Gears, Rotary
Cams or Lever Arms. Has the Automatic Drop Feed
which insures uniform length ot stitch at any speed.
Has our new Thread Controller, which allows easy
movement of needle-bar and prevents injury to thread
8. —Construction most careful and finished. It i*
manufactured by the moat skillful and experienced
mechanics, at tbe celebrated Remington Armory,
Ilioa, N. Y. Now York Office No. 6, Madison Square,
(Karta’s Building.)
July 1,1874. 492m.
Pernefe for sole
ached, also for the Buck Eye Reaper
The “Farmers Friend Plow,” and toe Thurmond Ad
aptable Plow. Send for Circular and Price List.
MALONE, WILLINGHAM A Cffiw,
July 6th, 1874. 50 3m. "lartn. #n
; of said levy,
iwin County.
7 tds.
NEW BLACKSMITH SHOP.
THE under-
signed bos putm'N*
up a Biack-ff If
smith Shop onl\ U
ths corner of a w
Hancock and Wilkiaaow
streets, opposite the old
Court House Bqsar*.
where he is prepared to
do ALL KIND ON
WORK IN IRON in
the best manner.
Special attention given to form and plantation work.
Patronage solicited.
If. HI. CBOMWILL
Milledgeville, June 2, 1874.45 tf
Baldwin Sheriff’s Sale.
W ILL be sold on the first Tneaday in OCTOBER,
next, between the legal hoars ot safe, before
tbe Masonic Hall, ia the city of Milledgeville:
One hundred one and one-fourth acres of land, more
or lees, in Baldwin county, adjoining lands of the es
tate of William A. Robson, deoeased, T J. Crowley
and others, being a one-half undivided interest of tbe
same tract of land conveyed to defendant (J. A. P.
Robson,) by Tboa. Brookins, administrator ot Benia
min Brookins, deceased-said tract was advertized
for May sale, 1874, and claim interposed by John A.
Kay and verdict of tbe Jary finding one hundred one
and one-fourth acres of aaid tract nibject to the fi to ot
Mis. P. A. Lind rum, Amigoee of Mrs. K. A. Robson.
Also, a tract of land as property of defendant J. A.
P Robson, in said county, containing two hundred
and fitty-five acre* more or lees, known as the J. H-
Lawrence plantation, adjoining lands of Rogers, J. H.
Lawrence, estate of William Fields, Gilmore and
Others. Also, one iron-gray bone mole, two bay mare
mules, one sorrel hone and ona boggy, and one act
buggy harness, all in possession of defendant J. A. P.
Robson. The first tract of land above described was
levied on by Obadiah Arnold, Sheriff of said coanty,
on the 2nd of November, 1871, and the second de
scribed tract, levied on by him November 18, 1871,
and defendant duly notified ot both levies, and per
«onal property, above described, levied on by tbe said
Arnold, on November 15,1871; tbe property was all
levied cn to satisfy an execution in tavor of Mrs. p.
A. Liu drum, Assignee of E. A. Robson ve. J. A. P.
Robson and duly advertised for sale at that time, but
tbe sale was postponed on aeoonnt of legal proceed
ings undertaken at the instance .of defendant in fi fa,
and the same having resulted in favor of Mrs. I .in-
drum, the property was sgain advertised for sale at
the May sale, 1874, when claim was interposed to the
Brookins tract, with the result as above set forth, and
claim interposed to the Lawreoe* tract, by Otto Mil
ter and others, which was found subject to Mrs. Lin
dram’s fi to, ot August Term of Baldwin Superior
Court, 1874.
JOHN B. WALL, Sheriff Baldwin County.
Sept. 5th, 1874. 7 tds.
DR. C. OT. ROBROS’I
Seariiaaviai Bind Pariflcr, Pre
pared from Swedish Herts.
AN INFALLABLE REMEMY FOB
NERVOUS COMPLAINTS.
and all diseases having their origin in an impure state
of the blood. Its operation on the liver is not equal
ed by any medicine of tbe present day. It earns
disease by removing the cause. It is adapted to al
ages and conditions of the system
AdmbMrafrix’s Sale*
B Y virtue of an order from the Court of Ordinary
of Baldwin coanty wifi be sold, daring tbe legal
aeon of sale, on lb* first Tassday in OCTOBER, next,
oefore the Masonic Hail iaMHiedfcyille: A certain lot
Jt parcel of land containing two scree, with the honses
thereon, being n portion of square Me.— - in the
plan of the city of Mibedgcsille, ndjuininfi the lot of
Mia. Deles. Terms cash,
o *,.V MBKF.a.HERTY,Adm’x.
8*pt 7tb, 1874- 7 td
For sale in MiUedgetrille 1
2 tf.)
?V. H. ROBERTS,
At the News Depot
JEWELL’S MILLS.
Ptttaflee, Jewell’g, 6a.;
If ANUFACTURE Sheetings, Shirtings, OtMbargs,
. "A Yarns, Jeans and Kerseys. At onr store and
warehouse we keep constantly on hand and for sale
Bagging and Ties, Groceries, Dry Goods, Hats, Hard
ware, Tinware, Boots and Shoea, Medicine, Crockery,
Glassware, and all other articles needed for plantation
or family nee. Please give us n call. Wert, Cotton,
Wheat, Corn and other produce wanted in nrcbergs
or goods or cash.
D. A. JEWELL.
Oct. 1,1873. 1* ly
LANIER HOUSE.
Mulberry Street,
Maeoi, Georgia.
The above named Hotel boa been recently rate
rushed and fitted np for the accommodation of tsan
■font as wall as permanent Boarders. Fusm win
find it to their interest to stop at this Hsnaa, as its
central Vocation makes it a very desirable place toe
merchants and families coming to the city tor MsiassK
or lor n sojourn ot pleasure. An ELEGANT SAM
PLE ROOM has been fitted op for the apaetof as* of
commercial travelers. , , .
The table always supplied with a*lb*bsxnrieaof
the season, from first markets, and ana ba sgrpaase*
by boss in the Booth- ..
Omnibas to convey paaesrgaH to asm tram tan
Hotel and all traias, fitoo s( efcarao: _
B. DUB, Ttopnmer.
April 18. 1872.
Sgfi raated.attb* News Depot
TEA BL ~ Oo1«a*aai^
Jastnative*and fermli ibw*at(MEwW.PW*