Newspaper Page Text
&garimlteS-L
ASHES POl 77EEAT.
Ashes as a fertilizer are almost
wholly neglected and allowed to go
lo waste by our farmers. In many
instances indeed they seem to be
ignorant of their value, or if not
ignorant too careless to take the
necessary pains, to secure any of
them. During the winter, ashes can
be selected in large quantities, and
farmers should do this for the pur
pose of sowing them on wheat soil.
In my experience with ashes, 1 have
found them of great value on differ
ent grains, but most valuable when
used on wheat. Ashes are an act
ive fertilizer on wheat, and even
five bushels per acre will push it tor-
word two days ahead of that upon
which none is applied. In some
seasons, when hot and sultry weath- 1
er prevails about the lime wheat is
ripening, a few days gained is worth
half a crop of grain.
The ashes strengthen the wheat
stem, giving it substance and solidi
ty ; and developes the berry quicker
and better. Ashes are also a pre
ventive against rust, and I have seen
the wheat upon which ashes were
sown free from rust while that upon
which none had been sown was
rusted close to the drill row. Save
your ashes and try the experiment
next season. You will find it to pay
you well to collect all the ashes you
can get. Farmers can afford to pay
as high as twenty cents per bushel
for good unleached, hard wood ashes
for farm use, not only to put on
wheat hut on corn, oats and clover
as well. I believe they are the
cheapest manure that the farmer can
buy, as potash enters largely into all
the grain and grasses that are raised.
Twenty bushels can be sown to an
acre with the very best results.—
Leached ashes are also good though
a larger quantity should be used.
All around us large quantities both
of leached and unleached ashes go
to waste every year. These should
be returned to the soil.
New Material for Paper.
The cost of rag* for the manufac
ture of paper has led to long contin
ued and costly attempts to substi
tute other articles, such as wood,
straw, bamboo, cornstalks; kttske.j
etc., but owing to the great expense
ror chemicals and the machinery
necessary for converting the materi
als into pulp, the cast of paper has
not, to anv considerable extent, been
reduced, *
It is now alleged that the okra
plant, which grows luxuriantly in
all parts of the United Stales, posses
ses all the reqisites for making every
description of paper, from the com
mon wrapping to the finest book or
bank note paper, either sized or non*
sized, without the addition of any
other material whatever. It is
claimed that this has been practical
ly demonstrated, and the discoverer
has, within the past few months,
manufactured by the most simple
and economical process, in different
mills, a variety of samples of papers
which, although made under unfa
vorable circumstances, possess all
the characteristics of paper made
from linen rags and manilla rope.
If this should turn out to be true, it
cannot fail lo greatly affect the price
of paper, as the okra can be raised
cheaply and abundantly. We un
derstand that arrangements have
been made for commencing th^ man
ufacture of okra paper this season.
Keep of Cows.—A correspond
ent of the Germantown Telegraph
wishes that he could make the truth
vivid to every keeper of cows, that
the care of them is something that
requires knowledge and painstaking
in detail. Cows must not be neg
lected or deprived of sufficient food.
Good shelters anti abundance of food
they must have if we would make
them profitable. Evenness of local
temperature is a necessity. If the
weather is cold or wet without doors,
they should be made warm and dry
within the stable. If the sun shines
too hot, they should have the privi
lege of shade. When a cow r be
comes uncomfortable, the flow of her
milk is restrained. A cow will re
turn to you in proportion as you con
fer care upon her.
Stick to One Thing.
There are many farmers who do
not slick lo one thing long enough to
make it pay, and consequently they
lose in everything. At one time
they conclude to devote themselves
to stock raising. Before they get
fairly under good headway in this,
they change their minds and go
back to raising grain. Some again
make a speciality, for a time, of a
certain crop—wheat, corn, or pota
toes, for instance. While they are
following this speciality, the crops
may be small and the price low, and
they turn to another just in time to
mids large crops and good prices in
what they have left.
The best farmers we Eave ob
served are those who first find out
what their soil is best adapted to
produce. They then turn their en
ergies in that direction and go
straight forward in that line. A'
poor crop does not discourage them.
They keep on, and are sure to be
finally successful.
To illustrate our idea:—We qnce
knew a farmer who always made it
a point to fatten from twenty-five to
thirty hogs every year. . Let | the
price of pork be high or low, he ev»
ery year had his lot of hogs of about
the usual number. He look great
E lide in having the best in the neigh-
orbood. Some years, perhaps, he
might have done better by sellinghis
corn instead of feeding it. Some
years, perhaps he might have done
better by turning his whole atten
tion to some other speciality in farm
ing. But we always notice this,
that, taking one year with another
for a long time, say ten years, he
made the hogs^ay. He was a suc
cessful farmer.
Another planter near by, every
S ear planted potatoes. Sometimes
is crop would fail, and sometimes
when he had a good crop the price
would be low. But he kept straight
forward—Every Spring he planted
potatoes. The result in that case
was the same as that in the other.
Taking one year with another for a
considerable number of years, he
made the potato crop pay. He, too,
was a successful farmer.-
• The farmer who would make his
business pay must have a policy,
and adhere to it*
Interesting Facts,
A legal stone is 14 pounds in Eng
land, and 16 pounds in Holland.—
A fathom, 6 feet, is derived from
the height of a full grown man. A
hand, in horse-measure, is 4 inches.
An Irish mile 2,540 yards; a Scotch
mile is 1,984 ; a German, 1,806 ; a
Turkish, 1,626. An acre is 4,846
square yards, 1 foot and 3£ inches.
A square mile, 1,760 yards each
way, contains 640 acres. The hu
man body consists of 240 bones, 9
kinds of articulations or joinings
100 cartilages or ligaments, 400
muscles or tendons, and 100 nerves,
besides blood, arteries, veins, etc
Potatoes planted below three feet do
not vegetate; at one foot they grow
thickest, and at two feet they are re
tarded two or three months. There
ar6 no solid rocks in the arctic re
gions, owing to the severe frosts.—
The surface of the sea is eslinated
at 150,000,000 square miles, taking
the whole surface of the globe at
190,000,000 square miles. Its great
est depth is supposed to be equal to
the height of the highest mountains,
or four miles.
ASTBOHOXIGAL MOVEMENTS OF PLANTS.
M. Ch. Mussel has published a
paper endeavoring to show that cer
tain characters of the trunks of trees
are related lo the movements of the
earth. The trunks of trees, he says,
are always flattened in the northerly
and southerly directions, and expand
ed in an east and west plane. He
states that he could support his the
ory by several thousand examples,
and that his views are thoroughly in
accordance with astronomical laws.
A Substitute for CofEte.
From chemical analysis it appears
that the seeds of the asparagus
wlien dried, parched and ground,
make a full flavored coffee, but little
inferior to Mocha, containing in com
mon with tea and coffee, the princi
ple called taurine. Dry the aspara
gus berries well, after being thor
oughly ripened, then rub them on a
sieve, thus the seeds are readily sep
arated.
Home Made Super-phoepbate of lima.
A correspondent in the CoutUry
Gentleman, writes : To make super
phosphate of lime, I take 500
pounds of bone and 175 of vitriol.—
My bones 1'lake to a pine block and
cut them up small. (They don’t fly
so much when I use pine.) I put
them in a pile and let them heal and
dry. Then I take a large flagstone
and put a frame around it. Then
get a boulder with a flat bottom, fas
ten a ring to it, have a tope and pole,
and let them work like a well sueep.
1 he frame around the flag keeps the
bones from flying off when the stone
strikes them. 1 put my bones into
a large kettle with twelve pails of
water, and boil them six hours. I
have a large box made of plank and
put my bones into it and .then the
vitriol. I keep them well stirred.—
Wfi’en they are hot, dry off with dry
earth. I don’t dry with ashes—they
are not good to mix with phosphate.
I sell 2,000 bushels a year. A glass
company takes almost all my dried
ashes at tny place, paying 25 cents a
bushel, rounding measure.
Coltirxtion of tbs Bath. Sponge in the Adriatic
Sea.
During the past few years, Dr.
Oscar Schmidt, professor of zoology
at the University of Gralz, has em
ployed several weeks of the early
summer in artificially producing and
rearing the bath sponge. I!is la
bors have met with such success
that his system has been adopted
by the Austrian government, and by
it carried on, on the coast of Dalma
tia.
To Ci.ean Paint.—There is a
very simple method to clean paint
that has become dirty, and* if our
housewives would adopt it, would
save them a great deal of trouble.
Provide a plate with some el the
best whiling to be had,* and have
ready some clean warm water and a
piece of flannel, which dip into the
water and squeeze nearly dry; then
take as much whiting as will adhere
lo it, apply it to the painted surface,
when a little rubbing will instantly
remove any dirt or grease. After
which wash the part well with clean
water, rubbing it dry with a soft
chamois. Paint thus cleaned looks
as well as when first laid on, with
out any injury to the most delicate
colors. It is far better than using
soap, and does not require more
than half the time and labor*
II has for some lime been a well-
known fact that several families of
zoophytes have such great powers of
reproduction that a portion of one
will grow and form on an entire new
body. This property has been tak
en advantage of by Dr. Schmidt, his
process being to cut the sponge into
pieces, fasten each to a pile,and im-r
merse it in the sea. The pieces then
grow, and eventually from each one
a spherical sponge is obtained.
According to the estimates of
Dr. Schmidt, a small piece of
sponge at the end of three years will
represent a value of ten cents. The
total cost of raising 4000 sponges, in
cluding the interest on theexp ended
capital for three years, is estima
ted at $42.40, and the income at about
$80, leaving therefore a net profit of
$37.60. There is no doubt but that
the Dracticeof this branch of indus
try will be the means ofcousiderahle
benefit to the inhabilantsof the Ibrian
and Dalmatian coasts.
Sharpening Edgo Tools.
The Mark Lane Express copies
the following recipe for sharpening
edge tools from a German scientific
journal, for the benefit of farmers,
mechanics and laborers :—“It has
long been known that the simplest
melhoJ of sharpening a razor is to
put it for half an hour in water to
which has been added one-lwentieth
of its weighl of muriatic or sulphuric
acid, then lightly wipe it off’ and af
ter a few hours set it on a hone.—
The acid here supplies the place of
a whet-stone by corroding the whole
surface evenly, so that nothing more
than a smooth polish is necessary.
The process never injures good
blades, while badly hardened ones
are generally improveb by it, al-
hough the cause of improvement
remains unexplained.
“Of late this process has been ap
plied to many other cutting imple
ments. The workman,at the begin
ning of his noon-spell, or when he
leaves it in the evening, moistens the
blades of his tools with water acidu
lated as above, the cost of which is
almost nothing. This saves the con
sumption of time and labor in whet
ting-”
Influence of the Moon.
Young plants, like human babies,
must have plenty of rest. If they
shoot up from the seed in the wan
ing of the moon, they enjoy the re
pose of the long, dark nights; if in
the growing moon, their young life,
over stimulated by the light, perish
es or suffers deterioration more or
less.
The latest observations make it
certain that the sun-heat reflected
from the full moon^s face is suffi
cient to dispel clouds, and it must
modify, therefore, notably, the cli
mate of the kitchen garden.
One of the most brilliant astro
nomical discoveries of the last ten
years is that of the so-called eleven-
year cycle, during which Jupiter
and the other planets alternately col
lect upon one side of the sun, and
then at other times, disperse them
selves around it, producing in the
one case an abundant supply of spots
upon the sun’s disc, with a corres
ponding lowering of the climate of
the earth, and in the other, the dis
persion and disappearance of spots,
and a higher mean temperature ol
the earth.—Lesley's Lectures.
Greasing Wagons.
This is of more importance than
many wagon owners imagine. The
following, from an unknown source,
is valuable information on the sub
ject, which we trust will be duly
heeded:—
“Few people are aware that they
do wagons and carriages more inju-
ry by greasing too plentifully than
iu any other way. A well made
wheel will endure common wear
from ten to twenty-five years, if care
is taken to use the right kind and
proper amount of grease; but if this
matter is not attended to, they will
be used up in five or six years.—
Lard should never be used on a wag
on for it will penetrate the hub, and
work its way out around the tenons
of the spokes, and spbil the wheel.
Tallow is the best lubricator for
wood axle-trees, and castor oil for
iron. Just grease enough should be
applied to the spindle of a wagon to
give it a light coating; this is belter ,OWB;
than more, for the surplus put on will
work out at the ends, and be forced
by the shoulder-bands and nut
washer into the hub around the out
side of the boxes. To oil an iron
axletree, first wipe the spindle clean
with a cloth wet with spirits of tur
pentine, and then apply a few drops
of castor oil near the shoulder and
end. Oik teaspoonful is sufficient
for the whole.”
We would add, that for journals
on which there is a heavy pressure,
it is a good plan to mix with the oil
some lamp-black or common soot;
powdered plumbago or black lead is
also employed for the same purpose.
Exchange.
W. w. PARKER’S
AGRICULTIIRAL DEPOT,
Macon, Georgia,
Headquarters for all Kinds of Improved Plantation Implements and Machinery.
THE BEST THRESHING- HORSE
Tlie most Improved Powers for G-inning,
THE BEST COTTON GINS MANUFACTURED,
THE ECLIPSE COTTON SCREW,
2.rtal
Tlio Best Thell Plows and Threshing Machines,
PLANING BA ILLS
tbO
CbO
A Xi L
AND GRIST MILL UACHIIBXI,
KINDS Or SAW
WOODEN HORSE-COLLARS, (BEST THING OUT.)
THE REST STEEL SWEEPS MANUFACTURED.
Cider Mills—Fan Mills.
All Goods Warranted lo give entire Satisfaction, or Money Refunded.
r & p May 30,1871,
Hollingsworth Block, under Spotswood Hotel, MACON. OA
r 21 p 72 3m.
MANSION HOUSE
Three doors above Globe Hotel
Broad Street, An&nsta, Georgia
Board per Day,.
Single Meals,...
.§2.00
... 50
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
HRS. C. A-HUDSON, Proprietress
Not. 5,1870. 43 ly.
PLANTERS’ HOTEL,
Augusta, (*a
Th« only Hotel in the City where Gas is used
throughout.
JOIN A. GOLDSTEIN.
VINECAR BITTERS
J W,L«„, Propn.tor. R. H. MtDoK.ro k Co., DruegiMA A
Gen. Agent., Sen Franciero, Cel., end 34 Commerce etreer, N. Y,
MILLIONS Bear Testimony to their
/ ^ VVunderfill Curative Effects.
They axe not a vile Fancy Drink, Made of Poor
Knm, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Krfkeo
Liquors, doctored, spiecd ondsweeteued to please tho
taste, called “Tonics,”“Appetizers,” “Bestorcrsy* Ac ,
that lead tile tippler on to drunkenness and min, but era
a true Uedtciae, made from the native roots and herbs
of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimu
lants. They are the CHEAT BLOOD Pl'RI.
FIEK and A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System,
carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood
to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bit
ten according to directions, and remain long unwell,
provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral
poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted
beyond the point of repair.
They Sre a Gentle Purgative as well as a
Tonic, possessing also, tho peculiar merit of acting
as a powerful agent In relieving Congestion or Inflam
mation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.
FOB FEMALE COMPLAINTS, whether In
young or old, married or single, at the dawn of woman
hood or at the tom of life, these Tonic Bitters have no
equal.
For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheuma
tism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion,
Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fe
vers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kid
neys and Bladder, these Bitters hsve been most
successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated
Blood, which Is generally produced by derangement
of the Digestive Organs.
DTSPEPSI.V OR INDIGESTION, Head
ache, Pain In tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightne® of tho
Chest, Dizziness, Soar ^Eructations of tho Stomach,
Bad Taste in the Month, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of
the Heart, Inflammation of the Lnngs, Pain in tho
regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful
symptoms are the offsprings of Dyspepsia.
They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate tho torpid
Liver and Bowels, which render them of unequalled
efficacy in cleansing the blood of ail imparities, and im-
parting new life and vigor to the whole system.
FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt
Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimple* Pustules, Boils, Car
buncles, Ring-Worms, Scald Head. Sore Eyes, Erysipel
as, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and
Diseases of the 6kin. of whatever name or nature are
literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short
time by the use of the* Bitters. One bottle In such
eases will convince the most incredulous of their cura-
*ive effects.
Clesnse the Vitiated Blood whenever you And its Im
parities banting throtgh the skin in Pimples. Eruu
tiona or Bores; cleanse it when von find it obstructed
and yoar feelings Will teU you when.' "Keep'the blooti
letup of the system will folios
pure, and the beann oi me system will follow.
Ftn, Taw* and other Worms, lurking In the
system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed
mid removed. Seys ■ distinguished physkrtotW
there is scarcely an individual upon the face oftbe
earth whose body is exempt from the presence of
worms. It is not npon the healthy elements of the
body that worms sxbt, hot upon the diseased humors
ssdfllmy deposits that breeTthese living mounters of
disease, he system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no
BhthehnttiUcs, will free the system from worms like
SOLD Bt ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS.
J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. MCDONALD A CO,
Drugglstsasd Gen. Agenfc, San Prancisco, California,
and 13 and 31 Commerce Street, New York.
r A p May 13,1871.
70 ly.
Schedule of the Georgia Railroad
iii I b • ■■ ■ — :i *■
SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE,
Georgia andM. & A. Railroad Company,
Augusta, Ga., January 20, 1871,
. January 22d, 1871,
will ran as fol-
INT, >
l- )
O N and
thff
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN, DAILY,
(SUNDAY EXCEPTED.)
Leave Augusta at.......... ....8.00 A. M
“ Atlanta at.. 5.10 A.M.
Arrive at Augusta.. 6.30 P. M.
“ at Atlanta 5.40 P.M.
NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta at 8.30 P. M.
“ Atlanta at 10.15 P.M.
Arrive at Augusta.. 6.40 A. M.
‘ Atlanta 7,30 A.M.
Both Day and Night PasseDger Trains will
make close connections at Augusta and Atlaa-
ta with Passenger Trains of Connecting
Roads.
Passengers from Atlanta, Athens, Washing
ton, and Stations on Georgia Railroad, by ta
king the Down Day Passenger Train will
mako close connection at Camak with the Ma
con Passenger Train, and reach Macon the
same day at 7-40, p, m.
COTTON PACKING
RENDERED EASY WORK
BY THE USE OF
SMITHS IMPROVED HAND POWER PRESS.
EVERY PRESS GUARANTEED
TO WORK WELL
A Southern invention and one of the most complete of the age; pronounced by
the mos’t intelligent planters of Georgia and South Carolina, better adapted for
cotton packing than any Press or Screw in use; Simple, Durable, and not Liable
to get out of order; has a great concentration of power, mid two hands c«n pack
cotton readily, and only four required to pack rapidly and easily.
As an experiment one man packed a bale of cotton weighing 530 lbs., doing
the entire work himself.
Manufactured by
WHELESS & CO.,
p r &n May, 5,
COTTON FACTORS, AUGUSTA, GA.
p 69 r 18 n 1 lm.
Harness ! Wagons!
CRAS G- GOODRICH,
Q71 BROAD ST , AUGUSTA GA-
Offers at low Prices, THE BREMERMAN PLANTATION WAGON
for 2, 4 or 6 horses. Warranted, in every Respect, to be A NO. 1.
SADDLES, HARNESS AID PLllTlTIOlf CgAR, TRINES ATD VALISES, FRENCH
AID AMERICA! CALFSRI.YS, SOLE LEATHER AMD SHOE FHDI.YCS.
Jan. 31, 1S71. p 56 6m. 4 6m
rSIIJMfi 1
WATCHMAKEBS
AND JEWELERS
312 BROAD STREET AUCTSTA, Cfl.,
Jan. 31, 1871, 4 ly.
Iu again calling attention to our valuable
preparation,
SUMTER BITTERS,
we do »o with renewed confidence, it having
been before the people of the South for over
three years, aud its largely increasing sales
proves its
GREAT POPULARITY.
We have recently much improved It by the
addition of a foreign
AROMATIC AND RESTORATIVE HERB,
wiiich, together with its other well-known and
approved ingredients, and
PURE RYE WHISKEY,
made expressly for us, renders
SUMTER BITTERS
The most delightful TONIC
APPETIZER, INVIGOKANT and DY8
PEPTIC ELIXIR,
before the people, aud as a Preventive and
Cure of
CHILLS AND FEVER
Never Fails.
Samter Bitters are not offered as a
cure-all,
but tor those diseases for which it in especial
ly recommended,
HAS NO EQUAL.
Try it once and you wilt never be without
i in your family.
For sale by all Druggists, Grocen and Deal
ers everywhere.
DOWIE, MOI8E &DAVI8,
Proprietors and Wbotesate Druggists,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
For sale by L. W. HUNT <Je CO., MLledge-
viUa, Ga. 6
For sale by A. H. BIRDBONG & CO.
Sparta, Ga.
par May 6 1871, p69rld.4L
AGRICULTURAL implemcnts
machinery & SEEDS
«* J"' e '■'•■■■■ .1
SAIAU a .ECHOLS
AijdCUL7LRALI>ARtr.Cl£t L iicC j
FOUND AT LAST!
An Antidote for
Fever & Ague.
Kina s tret, 8. C., December 31, I860.
Mr. B. F. Mouse.
Dear Sir: I deem it my duty and only an
aet of justice to yourself, that I should make
the following statem.nt. coming as it does from
one who for many years h i no faith iu -Pat
ent Medicines,’’ and I hare persistently re
fused to use them for any purpose whatever
must ray that I have used your Fever and'
Ague Pills in my practice this fall, and have
never in the first instance failed to relieve my
patients. I have now frequent calls in my
Drug Store for yonr Fever and Ague Pills. I
always recommend them and with the happi
est results. I am averse to giving large quan
tities of quinine, or continuing its nae long,
and I can safely aay that Moise’s Fever and
Ague Pills fills its place and leaves the patient
no unpleasant symptoms. I wish that you
may have the satisfaction of knowing that
your “Fever and Ague Pills” have relieved
many under my treatment when other medi
cines hat I have tried have failed to do.
Yours, respectfully,
J. S. BHOCINTOW, M. D.
For Sale by L. W. HUNT dt CO. Milk dire-
ville, Ga.,
For Sale by A. H. BIRDSONG & CO.
Sparta, Gs.
p * r May 6,1871. p69r!8 4w.
none i.
Two months after date application will be
made to the CoHrt of Ordinary of Baldwin
County, Georgia, at the first regular term yh, r
expiration of two months from this notice, for
leave to sell lands belonging to the estate cf
B. B. DeGraffenreid late of said County de -1
ceased, for the benefit of heirs and creditots
of said deceased. April 4th 1871.
SAMUEL WALKER, Exact.
of B. B. DeGraffenreid.
r April 11, 1871. 14 2m.
G'
EORGIA, LAURENS COUNTY—
^ Court of Ordinary.
Thomas J. Holliman, Adm V. of Mary E.
Stokes late of said county dee d., havttg gi-4
his petition for dismission from said adminis
tration:
These are to cite all and singular the next of
kin and creditors, of said estate to be and ap
pear at the regular term of the Court m
September next, to show cause (if any they
can) why letten of dismission should cot
be granted to applicant in terms of the law.
Witness my hand and' official signature
this March, 2nd 187]
J. B. WOLFE, Ordn'y.
March 7 1871. 9 6m.
EOKGIA. LAURENS COUNTY.—
Court of Ordinary.
Thomas J. Holliman. Guardian of Sarah E.
Stokes, Cardy C. Stokes and Nancy S. Stokrs,
having filed his petition for dismission from said
Guardianship.
These are to cite all and singular, the next
of kin and creditors of said wards, to he and
appear at the regular term of said Court m
September next, to show cause if any they
can, why letters of dismission should not b«
granted to applicant in terms of the law.
Witness my hand and official Signature this
Mrch 2nd, 1871.
J. B- WOLFE, Ordn'y.
March 7, 1871. 9 6m.
G 1
G eorgia laurens county—
Court of Ordidary.
Charles R. Wright, Adm'r. of Willism
dec'd. having filed his petition for letters of
dismission from said estate:
These are to cite all and singular the next
of kin and creditors of said estate to be and
appear at the regular term of said Court m
October next, to show cause if any they can
why said letters should not be granted.
Witness my hand and official sigu^iuic Inis
March 24th 1871.
J.B. WOLFE, Ordinary.
March 28th, 1871. 12 m6m.
Notice.
A LL persons concerned are hereby notified
that at the regular term of the Coart of
Ordinary of Lanrens County in June next,
after this notice shall have been published
sixty days—I shall apply for leave to sell all
the lands belonging to the estate of John W.
Yopp dec’d. for payment of debts, this March
25th, 1871.
MARY F. YOPP,
Adm'r. of JOHN W. YOPP.
March 28th, 1871. 12 60d.
( -1EORGLA LAURENS COUNTY—
f Court of Ordinary.
JOHN B DANIEL having filed his petition
foT letters of administration upon the estate of
Lott Daniel, late of said county deceased.
These are therefore to cite all and singular,
the next of kin and creditors, to be and appear
at the regular Term of the Court in June next,
to show cause if any they can, why said Let
ters should not be granted.
Witness my hand and official signature this
April 27th, 1871
J. B. WOLFE,
Ordinary.
May 2,1871. 17 tf,
Laurens Sheriffs Sales.
W ILL be Sold before the Court House
door in the town of Dublin between
the usual hours of Sale on the first Tuesday in
Juue next, the following property to-wit: Two
hundred (200) acres of Land, adjoining land*
of Wm. McLendon. David Wilkes and the
Oconee River. Levied on as the property of
Jno. J. McLendon to satisfy a Justice Coum
fi fa from the fifty second district G. M.. John
Jones vs. John J. McLendon and Mary
P. Holmes Adm’r. of C. S. Holms en
dorsee. Property pointed out by defendant*
Levied on and returned to me by Jno. J. June
Constable.
ALSO, at the same time and place, four (4)
lots of land numbers 159. 160, 220 aod 222,
each containing two hundred two and half
(202}) acres more or less, in the 17th district
of Lanrens County, Levied on as the property
of Geo. W. Jenkins to satisfy one Justice
Coart fi fa from the 342nd district G- M., in
favor of Lewis Beacham. vs. Geo. W. Jen
kins. Property pointed out by defendant. Levy
made and returned to me by B. A. Coney Con
stable.
GEO. CURRELL, Sheriff.
Dublin. Ga.. April 21 1871.
r April 25 1871. 16 td*.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors-
A LL persons indebted to Elijah Wells late
of Laurens county dec’d , are requested to
pay up immediately, and all bolding demands
against deceased, are requested to present
them to me properly attested within the time
prescribed by law.
Laurens couDtv Ga.. May 5th, 1871.
BENNETT C. JOINER, Adm'r.
May 9, 1871. 18 40d.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
A LL persons having claims againt Everard
H. Blackshear late of Lanrens county
dec’d., are hereby notified to present them to
me duly proven within the time prescribed by
law; and all persons indebted to said Estate,
are required to make immediate payments,
this April 27th, 2871.
ISABELLA M. BLACKSHEAR,
Ex’r. of E. H. BLACKSHEAR.
r May 2,1871. 17 t£.
Administrator s Sale.
W ILL be 8old before the Court House
door in the town of Rridsvilie, Tatnail
county on the first Tuesday in June next all
the land belonging to the estate of Joseph Coe
dec’d , sold for distribution. Terms Cash.
WILLIAM McLAIN, Adm’r.
April25, 1871. 16 to June 12.
VXEORGIA TATTNALL COUNTY.
Whereaa Benjamin Stripling Administra
tor of Lundy Stripling represents to the Court
in his petition, duly filed and entered on re
cord, that he has fully administered Lundy
Stripling’s estate, this is therefore, to cite
all persons concerned, kindred snd creditors
to show caui3 if any they can, why said ad
ministrator should not be discharged from his
administration, and secure letters of Dismis
sion.
C. W. SMITH, Ordirary.
May 16, 1871. J9m6ra.
RANAWAY
From DR. R. G. HARPER, a boy named
Caswell Walker. I forewarn all persons from
hiring him, as he is under a contract with me.
‘DR. S. G. HARPER,
r May 2,1871, 171m-
AGENTS WANTED.
For “Mortimer’s Acme Linen
Marker,”
for marking all kinds of houshold Linen,
AND
‘‘Mortimer's Card Printer and
r».
for Printing Cards, Envelopes Ac. Both
these litde Machines are articles of prac
tical ntilitj. Send for Sample. Liber*
al Terms to Agents.
Address with Stamp,
H. W. J. HAM,
Gen’l. State Agent.
Louisville, Gs,
May 2, 1871. 17 3a.