Newspaper Page Text
.—11..^
■—Kill I
CljfS'flutljmiilmirkr.
The Kuta Bag-a Crop.
Some of our best farmeis annual
ly put in an acre or two ol rula ba~
gas, and thus lay up lor winter a
the boiler, to keep the jars off the
bottom, and to permit the heat to
pass readily up through. Place the
jais in the boiler and till it with cold
water up to the neck of the jars.
Put slats on the top of the jars, and
pul on weights to prevent them from
K ao, HI- —j - tipping and filling with water-—
supply of good succulent H>od that Bring the water to a boiling point,
conies in use wheu they are obliged j and boil (rom ten to twenty minutes,
in a great measure to depend upon according to the quality of the fruit,
dry food only. When the bagas are When the fruit is well thro’, take
chopped up and sprinkled with a out one jar at a time; when the fruit
little corn meal or bran they are has settled fill up lrotn another jar.
eaten eagerly bv cows and steers, Have a preparation of sugar and
and are not only fattening and milk- j water—one pound, or a pound and
producing, hut extremely wholesome, a halt, as preferred, to a quart ol
They are raised as easily as a crop ; water—keep boiling hot, and fill up
of ordinary turnips in drills. The the interstices between the fruit with
ground must he well prepared and this; have each jar completely filled,
manured deeply, the rows struck j and then put on the cap and seal up
about thirty inches apart, and the
seed drilled in. When up two or
three inches the plants should be
thinned out, removing the weakest
to four or five inches apart
thoroughly cleared of weeds
as directed. Jf sealed up in this
way, and the jars are air-tight,
there will be no trouble about the
fruit keeping. We nave common
and red currants put up in this way four
The ! years ago, that are in first-rate con-
cultivator should be passed through dilion now. The less sugar put in
twice carefully. In three at the lime of canning the more nat-
once or
or four weeks another thinning out
should lake place, allowing the
plants to stand from eight to ten
ural will be the taste of the fruit on
opening.
After canning, the jar; should be
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS-
For fir*t class Pianos-
9ZIFV no agents. Address U. c>.
45 Broadway, N. Y.
lit on trial—
PI ANO CO.
r p i; July 29 4w
o’c l op k:
A MONTI!—Expenses paid—
1| f J Male or Female Agents—Horse
and outfit furnished. Address, Saco Novelty
Co.. Saco, Me.
uirfaV nhot ci as, «etoi,tkb«
Guu materials of every kind. Write for Price
List, toGreat WesternGr.n Works, Pittsburgh,
Pa. Army guns and Revolvers bought or trad
ed for. Agenis wanted July 29 4w.
rpilIS IS SO HUMBUG!
I By sending 35 Cents with
age, height, color of eyes and hair, you will
receive, by return mail, a coirect picture of
your future husbard or wife, with name and
date of marriage. Address, W Fox, P O Draw
er No. 24, Foltonville. N.Y’. 4w
W
A
e
W. PAR
RICULTURAL
K II R’
DEPOT,
S
Thea-Nectar
IS A PUKE
BLACK TEA
with the Green Tea Etator.
Warranted to suit all tastes.
For sale everywhere. And |
for sale wholesale only by
the “Great Atlantic and I’acifi-Tea Co ,” 8 i
Church St., New York, P O Box 5506. Send
for Thea-Nectar Circular
inches apart. The hoe should he cooled gradually, and krpt inacool
freely used between the plants, and and dry place.
the cultivator between the rows.
Frequent stirring of the ground is
indispensable in the production of a
large crop. They are not removed J
from the ground before November, j
We have known eight hundred J
bushels to be raised to the acre, and
have heard of twelve hundted.
The seed should he put in the
ground from ihe loth ol June to the
1st of July. A sod broken up the j
previous autumn is perhaps the best |
lor this crop.—Germantown Tele
graph.
The Turnip Fly.
Those who do much in growing
the turnip, experiences more or less
inconvenience from the fly upon the
young plants. An English farmer
says: “For the last fifteen years, on
sowing turnips, I provide, ready
slaked, one ton of lime to me acre. . .
As soon as the plants appear the ! night explaining the theory and pnn-
over the ciplesof t
FACETLE.
An up-train—A short skirt.
Sweepstakes are sootable food for
i sweeps.
A dentist can stop a woman’s
I tooth, but not her jaw.
Call a spade, a spade. You may
| call stockings, hoes.
Soldiers in battle are not allowed
to whistle to keep their courage up. j
That must he left to the bullets.
“The dearest spoi on earth,” it is
j said, is the store where they don’t
■ advertise.
“Through tickets to go around
the world,” lor sale in London for
$ 1,250.
It is a had sign to see a cockney
1 communist with his hat off’ at mid-
ft
GREAT CHANCE FOR AGENIS.
Do you want a situation as agent, local or
tratling, with chance to rnakc^ .** to
•ao par day selling our new 7 strand
While Wire Clothes Lines ’ They last for
r*er; sample free, so there is no risk.
Address at once, Hudson Hirer Hire Works,
cor. Water St, A Maiden Lane, N. A. or
16 Dearborn St. Chicago. July29^Aw-
W ANTED—AGENTS. ($20 per day) to
sellthe celebrated HOME SHUTTLE
SEWING MACHINE. Has the underfeed,
makes the “lock stkeii" (alike on both sides,)
and is fully licensed. The best and cheapest
family Sewing Machine in the market. Ad
dress, JOHNSON, CLARK & CO., Boston,
Mass., Pittsburg, Pa., Chicago, 111., or St.
Lotus, Mo. Aw.
and Pulcn !■
lime is spread from a cart
young plants in the rows. In hot
seasons the plants have hr,d rough
usage from their tormentors, hut
sufficient plants escape. I never
missed a crop, nor have I had
to sow a second time. The lime
must be put on dry, and on a warm
true democracy—to a lamp
j post.
j Some husbands, though anything
j but sharp, are awfully shrewd.
Most lovers like to be alone—with
'■ their sweethearts of course.
A baJ hat taken to an evening
or hot and dry day ; for if any dew party frequently comes out as good
or moisture he upon the plants they j as
will be destroyed. The lime must t
n*w.
, , - , .i One ought to have dates at one’s
be ready to put on the moment the c • ..
. . l 1 • r • .i . . 1 fingers end, seeing they grow on the
mischief begins, for in ihe twenty- j J °
four hours of
a hot season the fly
can ruin any crop ; it is no use then
going lor the lime.”
Bcrorating Wore Land.
At a recent meeting of the Amer
ican Institute Farmers’ Club, when
palm
The World speaks of water mel
ons as “cholera bomb shells from
Carolina and Georgia at a dollar a
piece.
A young doctor being recently
asked to dance the “Lancers, 1 ’ said
this question was called up, one ol he was much more able to lance the
the members said that the most ef
fectual method in his opinion was to
turn under clover, peas or buck
wheat. It was objected that buck
wheat contributed but little to the
restoration of exhausted land ; clo
ver and peas are well adapted for
this purpose—the former being es
pecially. A. M. Curlis contended
that manure was always the best
medicine for worn out land. In the
absence of a fertilizer it is well to
plow deep and sow with peas or
dancers.
The season for sitting on circular
saws has begun. A man down east
sat on one the other day, and they
buried both of him in the same grave.
They tell of a farmer in Kentucky,
who was so lazy that when he went
to hoe his corn he worked so slow
that the shade of his broad brim hat
killed the plants.
Young ladies are now advised not
buckwheat, and turn it under when to put too much oilIon the hair, for
the reason, that it is apt to spoil not
lh{ ! i only the lappel of the coat, but also
the vest.
the crop has attained lull growth,
and then sow with rye, and in
ring seed with clover. Take off
e rye crop arid leave thr clover
A lemarkable family lives in Dal-
sp
tn<
until the second year, and when it is las county, Ark. The father is 10S
in blossom plow that under and sow years old, the mother 106, and the
with wheal or rye again, and seed two are the parents of twenty-nine
with clover. Treated in this way-
land will certainly improve. After
the second crop cf rye or wheat has
been taken off’, the land will be in
good enough condition, usually, to
plant in com.
ourarara fbtit.
An abundance of canned fruit “is
a good thing to have in a family,”
both as regards health, comfort and
snjoyment. All who arc in the habit
of laying by in this way large stores
of the different kinds of small fruits
in their season, are convinced that it
is a paying investment; and with
most it has ceased in a great meas
ure to be regarded as a luxury, but
is rather classed with the necessa
ries of life.
Many who have plenty of fruit,
or who have the means with which
to purchase, neglect to can it on ac
count of the trouble or expense, but
they will dry or make into preserves
their surplus, with much more labor,
and at a much greater expense;
while fruit thus prepared will require
more care and be less palatable than
when canned.
If poperly done, canned fruit re
quires but little labor in its prepara
tion, and little attention afterward,
and is the least expensive mode in
which it can be preserved.
We have lately given a number
of methods for canning, and now
we will add the one we have
practiced for a number of years,
and which we have found very suc
cessful.
We use glass jars as the cheap
est in the end, and the most easily
taken care of. Pick over the fruit
and fill the jars. Take a common
wash boiler, and make of lath, fas
tened together by two or three cross-
bars, a frame fitted to the bottom of
children—fifteen boys and fourteen
girls.
“Sam,” said one little urchin to
another, “does your school-master
ever give you any reward of merit ?”
“I s’pose he does,” was the reply ;
“he gives me a thrashing every day,
and says I merit two.”
The other evening a gentleman’s
button became fastened in the fringe
of a lady’s shawl. “I am attached
to you,” said the gentleman, laugh
ing, while he was industriously try
ing to get loose. “The attachment
is mutual,” was the good humored
reply.
The question, “Does getting drunk
ever advance one’s happiness ?”
would seem to be put to rest by the
Irishman who went courting when
drunk, and was asked what pleas
ure he found in whiskey. “Oh, Bid
dy, it’s a trate entirely to see two of
your swate, purty faces instead of
one.”
Some one wishing to be witty ori a
gentleman with a large mouth, asked
him “If he had a long lease of that
mouth of his f” when he, as good
humoredly, answered : “No ; 1 have
it only from year to year. 1
The Gold Hill, Nevada, Newe,
speaking of a country which is de
scribed as “out West,” where local
papers chronicle the hanging of
horse thieves thus : “Mr. Jim Cle-
mentson equine abductor, of Min
nesota, was lately the victim of a
neck-tie sociable.
“A man who’d maliciously set fire
to a barn,” said good old eder Pay-
son, “and burn up a stable full of
horses and cows, ought to be kicked
to death by a jackass, and I’d like
o be the one to do it.”
REDUCTION OF PRICES
TO CONFORM TO
REDUCTION OF DUTIES-
Great Saving to
Consumers
BY GETTING UP CLUBS.
Send tor our New Price Li.-t, and a club form
will accompany it containing lull circciion* mak
ing a large saving to consumers aud remunera
tive to Club organizers.
THE GREAT AMERICAN TEA COM
PANY
31 A 33 \esey Sireel.
P. O. Box 5643 New Yo'k. 77 4w.
JURIJBEBA.
Is a South American plant that has been used
for many years by the medical faculty of
those countries with wonderful efficacy, and
is a sure and perfect remedy for all dis
eases of the Liver and Spleen, Enlargements
or Obstruction of Intestines, Urinary, Uterine,
or Abdominal Organs, Poverty or a »ant of
Blood. Intermittent or Remittent Fevers, In-
da,nation of the Liver, Dropsy, Sluggish Cir
culation of the Blood, Abscesses, Tumors,
Jaundice, Scrofula. Dyspepsia, Ague & Fe
ver or their Concomitants.
l)r. Il'ells’ Extract of Jurubcha
is a mast perfect alterative, and is offered to
the public as a great invigorator and remedy
for all impurities of the blood or for organic
weakness with their attendant evils. For the
forgoing complaints
Dr. Welts' Extract o) Jurubcba,
is confidently recommended to every family
as a household remedy which should he freely-
taken in all derangements of the system.
ItisNOT A PHYSIC—It is NOT wbatis
popularly called a BITTERS, nor is it intend
ed as such; but is simply a powerful altera
tive giving health, vigor and tone to alt the vi
tal forces, and animates an 1 fortifies all weak
and lymphatic temperaments.
JOHN Q. KELLOGG, Platt St., New York
Sole Agent for th United States.
Price One Dollar per bottle. Send for Circu
Jar Jitly26rnp 4w.
NATURE’S
Free from the Poisonous and
Health-destroying Drugs us
ed in other Hair Prepara
tions.
No SUGAR OF LEAD-No
LITHARGE-No NITRATE
OF SILVER, and is entirely
Transparent and clear as crystal, it w ill not
soil the finest fabric—perfectly SAFE, CLEAN
and EFFICIENT—desideratums LONG
SOUGHT FOR AND FOUND AT LAST!
It restores and prevents the Hair from be
coming Gray, imparls a soft, glossy appear
ance, removes llaidruff, is cool aud refreshing
to the head, checks Ihe Hair from falling off,
and restores it to a great extent when prema
turely lost, prevents Headaches, cutes all hu
mors, cutaneous erupt ions, and unnatural Heat.
AS A DRESSING FOR THE IMIR IT 16
THE BEST .ARTICLE LV THE MARKET.
DU. 0. SMITH, Patent.*, Groton Junction,
Mass., Prepared only by FItOCTOK fil’OTH-
ERS, Gloucester, Mass. The Genuine is put
up in a panncl bottle, made expressly for it
with the name of the article blown in the glass.
Ask your Druggist for Nature'* Hair restora
tive, and take no other.
For sate in Milledgeville by L. W. HUNT
A CO.
In Sparta, by A. II. BIRDSONG & CO.
p July 2 ly. n Feb28 ’71 ly.
T. W. WHITE,
nUUBDGBTZLI.ZI GA
WILL mCTICE IN Tins AiTS TSZ ASJ9SnN3 CCUNms,
lyAnpli
cations for Homestead Exemp
tions under the new taw, aud other business
before the Court of Ordinary, will receive
proper attention.
January 1 1 s71. ly.
Macon, Georgia,
HEADQUARTERS FOR IMPROVED MACHINERY.
AGENT FOR
BLANDY S CELEBRATED ENGINES, SAW AND GRIST MILLS, LOWS PATENT SHINGLE MACHINE, HALL’S DRAG
OR CUT-OFF SAW, FAY’S PLANING MILL. LEARNED’S LATH MACHINE,
DIAMOND CORN MILL, STRAUB & COS.’ CELEBRATED
Queen of the South
PORTABLE GRIST MILLS-
legal ShBertfsements.
NOTICE.
A LL PERSONS hav ng claims against the
estate of Thomas I’. Smith, late of Lau
rens county, deceased ire hereby notified to
present them to the undersigned duly proven,
within the time required by law ; and all per
sons indebted to the sail) estate are required
to make immediate settlements. This July
25th, 1871.
August 1, 5t.
THOS. D. 8MITH,
Exr. T. P. SMITH.
G eorgia, laurens county—
Sixty days after cate application will be
made to the Court of Ordinary of Laurens
County, for leave to sell the real estate of Ben-
jam in Bnrch, late of slid county, deceased.
July 26th, 1871.
BENJAMIN H CALHOUN, Adm’r.
August 1, ids.
Cane
Mills and
Seed
Patent Evaporators, _Saw Mills. Portable and Stationary Engines, Cotton
Hullers. Hydraulic Rams, Pumps for Deep and Shallow
Prindle Steamers for Stock Raisers, Reapers and Mow
ing Machines, Threshing Machines.
Horse 'F’o'wers and. Cotton Presses,
SELF-FEEDING GINS, CORN SHELLERS, HARROWS OF ALL KINDS, HAY CUTTERS. THE MOST APPROVED PLOWS
COTTON PLANTERS, IMPROVED STEEL SWEEPS, COTTON CHOPPERS,
FITHlsriSIIPID
J±T MANTJP A.GTITRBRS’ PRIOH-S-
—STATE AGENT FOR—
WOOLS'S FATSffT WOODSXV BOMB
AMS XttT7X.ll O OSS A A
r k p May 30, 1871.
Hollingsworth Block, nndor
Spots wood Hotel. XttACOH. CIA-
r 21 p 72 3m.
VINEGAR BITTERS
J Walks*. Proprietor,
lien. Apiu, Son Fit - “
MILLIONS Bear Testimony to their
^ Wondrrftil Curative Efeets
Thoynro note vile Fancy Drink, Made of Poor
Ram, Whltkej-, Proof Aplrtts and Refuse
Liquors* doctored, spiced and sweetened to please tha
taste, called •‘Tonics,”** Appetizers,*’ ‘‘Restorers,’’ 1c.,
that load the ti; pier on to dmn!: hums and ruin, but are
a true )!edi:ine ( made from the native roots anti herbe
of California, frfc tVom all Alcoholic Stimu
lant.. They are the GREAT BLOOD PURI
FIER and A LIFE GIVIXO PRINCIPLE,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System,
carrying off all poisonous matter aud restoring the blood
to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bit
ters according to directions, and remain long unwell,
provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral
poison or other means, and the vital organa wasted
beyond the point of repair.
They are a Gentle Purgative as well m m
Tonle, possessing also, the peculiar merit of acting
m a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflam
mation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.
FOR FEMALE COMPLAIXTS, whether In
young or old, married or single, at the dawn of woman
hood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitten have no
equal.
For Inflammatory and Chronic Rhennta-
tUm and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion,
Unions, Remittent and Intermittent Fe
vers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kid
neys and Bladder, these Bitter* have been most
successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated
Blood, which is generally produced by derangement
of the Digestive Organs.
DY*PEP*IA OR IYDIOE8TIOY. Head
ache. Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightnesn of the
Chest, Dizziness, Sour [Eructations of the Stomach,
Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks. Palpitation of
the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain In the
regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful
symptoms are the offsprings of Dygpcpsia
They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate the torpid
Liver and Bowels, which render them of unequalled
efficacy In cleansing the blood of all impurities, and im
parting new life and vigor to the whole system.
FOR SKIX DISEASES, Eruptions, Tetter. Salt
Rheum. Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Bolls, Car-
bunclea Ring-Worms, Scald Head, Sore Eyea, Erysipel
as, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and
Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature are
literally dug up and carried out of the system In a short
time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle In such
cases will convince the moet incredulous of their cura
tive effects.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find Its Im
purities bursting through the hkin in Pimples, Erup
tions or Seres; cleanse It when you find It obstructed
and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it Is foul,
and your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood
pure, and the health of the system will follow.
Pin, Tape and other Worms, lurking In tho
system of so many thousand*, are effectually destroyed
and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist,
there is scarcely an individual upon the face of the
earth whose body is exempt from the presence of
worms It Ls not upon the healthy elements of the
body that worms exist, hut unon the diseased humors
and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of
disease. So system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no
anthelmintics, will free the system /Torn worms like
these Bitters.
SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS.
J WALKER, Proprietor. R. II. McDOXALD 1 CO,
DruggLtd and Gen. Agents, San Francisco, California,
and 32 and 34 Commerce Street, New York.
A n May 13, 1871. 70 ly
FREIMAH BRO’S.
WATCHMAKERS
AND JEWELERS
>12 BROAD STREET AIGISTI, #•.,
Jan. 31, 1871, 4 ly.
SCHOFIELD’S
Ivon Hlni’Jts,
ADJOINING PASSENGER DEPOT, M ACOM, Gk A
Steam Engines and Boilers
G eorgia, laubens county—
Court oj Ordinary.
John Rayfield having filed his petition for
tetters ot Administrat :on on the estate of Hath-
erine J. Baker, late o f said county, deceased—
These are to cite all aod singular, the next
of kin and creditors of said deceased, to be
and appear at the regular term of this Court in
September next, to show cause why said ap
plication should not be granted.
Witness my hand s.nd official signature this
July 24th 1871. J. B. WOLFE,
August 1, 5t. Ordinary.
G eorgia, Montgomery county—
Court of Ordinary,
Cincinatus S. Guyton, having applied for
letters of administration cum teslamento an
uexo of E. J. Blackshsar, dec’d.
These are to cite, all and singular the next
of kin and creditors of said testator to be aud
appear at the regular term of the Court in
August next to show cause if any they can,
why said letters should not be granted.
Witness my hand aud official signature, this
June lGth 1871.
J. It. WOLFE, Ordinary.
June 27 tf.
Notice.
A LL persons concerned next of km amt
creditors, are hereby notified that I shall
apply at the regular term ot the Court of Or
dinary of Laurens county, Ua., in September
next, for leave to sell ail the lands belonging
to the estate of Jonathan Mullis dec’d., for,
the benefit of the hei.-s and creditors of the
estate. This June 16th 1871.
JOHN T. ROGERS.
Adm'r. J. Mullis.
June 27 tf.
OF ANY
SIZM
requiumd
Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Mill Gearing, Gin Gearing,
(ORDINARY, OR GRAHAM’S EXTRA HEAVY,)
SUGAR MILLS AND KETTLES,
IRON RAILINGS,
OF ANY DESIRED STYLE AND AT PRICES LOWER THAN ANYBODY
SHAFTING, PULLIES ETC,
All or any Machinery, put up at firsNclaas IRON WORKS, put up in fhe
best style and at prices to suit the times. Give us a call before purchasing. W r e
will sell low for CASH.
J. S. SCHOFIELD A SON.
Schofield’s Patent Cotton Presses
STILL AHEAD.
Our WROUGHT IRON
COTTON SCREW PRESS
is the only Cotton Press that
has stood the test, being used
ever since the close of the
war, and is in greater and
more increasing demand than
any other
G eorgia, laurzns county—
Court of Ordinary.
Thomas J. Holliman, Adm'r. of Mary E.
j Stokes late of said county dec’d., haviig filtd
bis 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 aud ap
pear at the regular term of the Court in
September next, to show cause (if any they
can) why letters of dismission should r.ot
be granted to applicant in terms of the law.
Witness my hand and official signature
this March, 2nd 1871
J. IL WOLFE, Ordn’y.
March 7 1871. 9 Gin.
EORGIA, LAURENS COUNTY.—
Court of Ordinary.
Thomas J. Holliman, Guardian of Sarah E.
Stokes, Cardy C. Stokes aud Nancy S. Stokes,
having filed his petition for dismission from said
Guardianship.
These are to cite all aud singular, the next
of kin aud creditors cf said wards, to be and
appear at the regular term of said Court in
September next, to show cause if any they
can, why letters of dismission should not be
granted to applicant in terms of the law.
Wituess my band and official Signature this
Mrcb 2nd, 1871.
J . B. WOLFE, Ordn’y.
March 7, 1871. 9 6m.
Q 1
EORG1A LAURENS COUNTY—
Court of Ordidary.
Charles R. Wright, Adm'r. of William
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 in
October next, to show cause if any they can
why said letters should not be granted.
Witness my hand and official hiKuaiine l ms
March 24th 1871.
J. B. WOLFE, Ordinary.
March 28th, 1871. 12 m6in.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
A LL persons having claims againt Everard
H. Blackshear late of Laurens 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 tf.
AGRICULTURAL implements
machinery & SEEDS
rot- it-i ustrated . cn-.. ■
_ and Prices tc *" 0G ut
y oAM'L a .ECHOLS
AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSE. 4 SEES STORE
3ROAD ST ATLANTA CA-l-'SChSON j; AUCTSlA C.V
Our WATER STEAM POWER
PRESS is becoming
DARBY'S
FLUID
T
Hi IS invaluable Family Medicine, lot
PLANTERS' HOTEL*
Augusta, (ia.
The only Hotel in the City where Gas is used
throughout.
JCFLV A. GOLDSTEIN.
CHARLESTON HOTEL.
E. II. JACKSON,
Proprietor.
CHARLESTON, 6. C,
purifying, cleansing
odors iu all kinds ot sickness;
removing bad
for burns
sores, wounds, stings; ibr Erysipelas,
all skin diseases; for
MMIMiMM, and
cata^tT^oremoutb'^ortrThroat^ipuIe
foTTolicTdiarrhma^ThoIeru^^r^was^ to
soften and beautify the skin; to remove
ink spots, railoew, lruit stains,
taken in-
ally^o
ternally as well as applied extern
lHgCTprecomn!pn3e!n)j^rn^E^J«v^Ise<I
iT-^^fbMsaleT^ainTnlggist^aon^oun 1 ^
UyTMerejtantoT'aniruiayTe^TrderetrTi^
rectly of the
DTTtilY'l'KOPlh'LAOflC 66. y
^^"**** M lGLVVilliamjnreet^?l"L
pDeo24’701y, rilay2 nJqoeaHTny!
VERY POPULAR
Being the
lUO§T ECONOMICAL
to those having a
WATER POWER OR STEAM MCIIE,
It can also bo run from the baud wheel
shaft of gin gear.
Our HAND PRESS (indeed, as all of them
are) is too well known, and has established it
self as the Planter's Favorite. As there is no
comparison between a cast and "Wrought Iron
Screw,” we do not recommend "Cast Iron
Screws,” though we make them for those'want
inga CHEAP Press.
Send us your orders, or seud for Circular and
Price List.
THE WILCOX PATENT HORSE POWER
We claim to be SUPERIOR 10 ANY OTHER for Ginning Cotton, and it
is the only Hone Power made that we know of that can supercede the ordinary
Gin Gear.
I. I. SCHOFIELD * SOW, Macon, Or.
Jy 3 r Sc p p 771 26 6m.
Georgia tattnall county.
Whereas Benjamin Stripling Administra
tor of Laudy Stripling represents to the Court
in his petition, duly tiled and entered on re
cord, that he has fully administered ,Laudy
Stripling's estate, this is therefore, to cite
all persons concerned, kindred and creditors
to show cause if any they can, why said ad
ministrator should uot be discharged from his
administration, and secure letters of Dismis
sion.
C. W. SMITH, Ordir ary.
May 16, 1871. 19 m6m.
G eorgia laurens county—
Court of Ordinary.
Whereaa Jethro Ariine, administrator
d.h. n. of Mary A. Mason dec'd. has filed
his petition for dismission from said adminis
tration:
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all and singnlar, the next of kin and creditors
of said estate to be and appear at the regular
term of this court in December next to show
cause if any they can, why letters of dismis
sion should not be granted to said applicant
in terms of the law.
Witness my hand and official signature
this may 27th, 1871.
J. B. WOLFE, Ordinary.
June 1,1871. 22 tf
Montgomery Sheriff's Sale.
W ILL be sold on the first Tuesday in
September next, before the Ccurt house
door in Mount Vernon, two hundred acres of
laud, adjoining land of Clement A. Mosley,
levied on as the property of Jacob Willis, to
satisfy one fi fa issued from the Justice's
Court of the 51st district, G. M„ in favor of
John W. Adams vs. said Jacob Wills, proper
ty pointed out by plaintiff. Levy made aud
returned to me by James Morris constable.
MARTIN CO.VEY, Sheriff.
Juue24th 1871. 26 tds.
Montgomery Sheriffs Sale.
W ILL be sold on the first Tuesday in Sep
tember next, before the Court-House
door in Mount Vernon, two hundred acres of
land, known as the place whereon John 0.
Wilks now resides. Levied on as the proper
ty of John O. Wilks, to satisfy two fi fa’s is -
sued from the Justices Court of the 51st dis
trict G- M , in favor of David Scurry vs. said
Johu O. Wilks. Property pointed out by
laiutiff. Levy made and returned to me by
ames Mortis Constable.
MAJBTIAT CONEY, Sheriff.
June 24th 1871. 26 tds.
G eorgia, Baldwin county—
Court of Ordinary, July 20, 1871.
Whereas, R. N. Stubbs, applies to me for
letters of administration on the estate of his
deceased biother, Wm. B. Stubbs:
This is to cite all persons interested to be and
appear in said Court ou the first Monday ot
September, 1871, to show why such letters,
should not be granted to said R- N. Stubbs.
M. B. BELL, Ordinary B. C.
r 29 July 25, 4t.