The Weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1868-1878, November 12, 1872, Image 4

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M- ^rnstHntion. Term* of anbacrlptlon: rimi CO^STITCTIOK par man t> Of All mhacrijrtioaa are payable atrlctl r la tfnaca vA, aOKtxpimUm of 1Utime for »Uck payment alufa,amleaaprertoaaljrenewed, the namaoftba eaWrlber will be atrlckell from oar booka. |mr Claba of .Tea fU 00, and a copy of tka paper a-at frartothefetter-np. ATLANTA, TUESDAY4NOVEMBER \% nOSERU fPIRITDAtlUI< Claqaent Lecture kyRev. W. P.Hur ricane D. D. The Pint yccthodbt Chcreh ana filed laitnlfht with an Internment aadlaaea. Bar. Dr. Hanlaoa eartialaad their attention for two hoara fa amaaterly lecture. The foRowlnr U a brief rynnpela of It: fenfire awf Gen Oemea : The tank before me to-night la one nfsfrfaf eloae examination, b la embanaarinm, beeaaae of the rx teaUacraameof tbeaobject and the brief time at lowed for ita dlacaaalou. Imbanaealnc from the mnlOpUdty of the poteta whleh pwaa forward 00 the mlad for notice. 1 may probably omit soma eau thlara. In order to arold 1 hi. aa far «• I po-a!Wy may, I abaD aak >onr fadtnded and epeclat attention. At moat of yoo are aware, Ido not apeak from memory. 1 bare co notea before me, and therefore mart rely the rObject ee It pre-enta itaclf to my mind at thla time. * I Abell HMktmr to givs occasion for offense to bo one. Thet le not my purpoee. If 1 should bj thence do an, I declare In advance thet it ii not my object or desire to offend en jr men. If 1 speak my convictiots le atrooc language it le because I see tbe troth, ea it •trikes me. In vivid color*. At the seme time I not bigot eroogh to suppose tnat it I* imp©* h.blc for me to be mlrtaken, nor am I uncharitable enonjth to condemn other* because they do not tee nal do. The nfcjoet for dircnarlon to-night la, to my mind, • very clear one. I have no doubt on it at all. It la not the robjoct of to-day, or yesterday, or last week, or lest year'* examination. For more then twenty years this rnbject hM been before tbs public mind For more than twenty year* author*, men of edence, teemed divines, have rxamlned it and in mb* stances, there have been converts to the theory of WONDERS OF THE WIST. The United Staten Explorers at Panqoltch, Southern Utah. Rourcaa of the Sewler-Thouauuda at Acre, af Lava Bock Discovered— Surpasalnr f OTClIncaa of tbe Scenery En Route—An In. closed Inland Luke Two M lies tanf — Indian Barbarities and IS emlnlaeencea bp a Herald Correa'en- d.e n t • several months, treating tbe Indians with unusual kindness, and finally inviting sixty of their braves to a grand powwow and sup per hi the church, when the feast was at ita height and the ordiy red skin began to feel the befaddling influence of fire-water, tbe doors were dosed, ready citizens st the windows fired on the caged Indiana and the massacre con tinned until the entire party was destroyed. As was to be expected, the sur vivors of the tribe retaliated on the city, and with soch effect that it stands now deserted, waiting far quieter times before following tbe example of Panquitch and taking to itself the spreading families of Mormondom. Georgia State Agbicurtcral Socie- tt, Om E at Atxaeta. Qa, Noseaber lit. 1ST2-— dy order of tbe Executive Cosolttee tbe follcw.iyE la pnbl'abed aa a razLnuXAET rasmea let ros 1573-comtTT NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A fJTlYTk. I SOXKTmso HEW, S stUMe ar- rr. - | tide*, sell ax tight. Catalogue. WANTED I>OI\r’T :c*ived 9 bat for courts, colds, fore, oamncM and bronchial difficulties, use only WELLS’ CARBOLIC TABLETS. ¥ortbleas 1 initiations are on the market, i the only scientific preparation of Carbolic Add Long disease* Is when chemically mmhiTu»d with other w<dl known remedies, as t be?? t abuts. and all Tbe vast majority of eas**, however, on rx*m!n* lion of the proof* and demonstrations, baa resulted in discarding it and them. In tbe first brarch of the subject, I most bring to notice, aa a very strong argu ment to the chnatian mind against this modem theory of eplrftnallMi yielding to It, ban, in avast majority of Instance*, resulted ia the rejection of the Chris tian religion. To the man who feds the Bible true to Mm who regards It ss the book of God and treasure* up Ita predoos promises aa the greater wealth ia this life and tbe Inestimable treasure of the life to coma, this fact la a string argument against the corrapting Inflect** • of the day. But we may he answered sand are awered, and I accept tbe answer—If the Bible is of find we ought not to receive it as of God; If the Christian religion la not true It does not demand allegiance. And whatever la true we ought to accept It as true. I ftmr not the truth, come from where It may, and tend where It may. 1 cannot have any in- tenet in believing an error. That would be suicide to my own anal. Bat the truth I want to know. If bare It not show It to me. Prove It to me, and aa an honest man I accept It. 1 embrace it, gladly, readily, joyfully, and take it home to my heart. But do not make too great a demand of mu The troth must appeal to my reason, most reach m jedgasent and la press my mind, and meet the de mands of my Intellect. I cannot take a statement for fact. I cannot take an assertion for argument, cr a ramj work of fancy for re ility. I propore then ts briefly aa I may—in the Hr i place to examine this question. 1st Are there any proofs that disembodied spirits have held communications with men in the fl- ih, by mean* of socallcd mediums t What I desire to express la this; la there say truth in the statement, or l been produced any fact tending to chow that the spirits of departed men have communicated by speech or by physical detnor stration, by writing or other tangible methods, knowledge to men t Of course, I take the position that there is no such proof. It Is asserted that this proof has been given by meana of rapping* on tho table, on wall* of l ouses and by various demonstrations, audibly to the sense of hearing. I p’esume, course, that you are acquainted with the fact that thess alleged demonstrations have been examined by men of scle* ce—such men aa Prof. Farrady, of Eng land, Agazzls, of America—and I dare assert that U»* rc has not been given a rol-tary Instance In which any sueli demonstration, audible to the human ear, ha< not been, nor cannot be proven to be by human Instrumentality. This Is no novelty. Some <f you will remember the celib ated “Cock Lane Oho-t," n disturbance that occurred In Loudon in 176*—one hundred ai d ten ye-.rs ago. A certain man h *d a wife to die. Tier sister also dUd Tbe widowed nun hoarded with a man having two daughters. For some canto; which I will not now state, something was alleged in reference to the of borrowing mon< y or something of that kind, a conspiracy was gotten up .against the widower. Certain strange noises were heard in the bed room of the girl—the noise of a cat scratching on something like a chair, or some hard substance. Hap ping*, thumpings and noises In va*loua parts of the room- Very soon, as a matter of course, It attracted the attention of numbers of people and It was found that these noises were the mean* of communication from the ghosts. One rap signified no; two rap* yes; cornrpeedenoe was had with the supposed •pir.ts. question* were atked and answers given, in the main correct. Among the number of the alb ged •pirit* were tbewi'e of the widower, Kennady, and her •later. These stated that they hod been poisoned and would not be satisfied until Kennady was hung, and prophesied that \ e would be tang la three years. It very soon attracted the attention of the clergymen of the Church cf England. Tba celebrat'd. Lexica gr aphrr, Dj. Job sou—whose mind bad a srong tende ncy towards spirituality visited them. Ho went t*> v Isit the supposed spirits in the vaults where tbelr bodies lay. The sp'ilta promised to be there and answer question* by tapping on tbecoffin-Ud. Two other gentlemen went with Mm to the place desig s*grated to. hear what tbe spirits had to say. They naked question*, but no answers came. The whole th'ng was a failure. After or n lderahleex itement, in which these parties were involved, and the character of respectable people. U finally turned out that a certain Mr. Aldrich demand ed that the little girl should be taken to hla bouse and placed in a particular room of hi* residence and be under the care of tome ladies, not previously con nected wit h these demonstrations. IIcr person should be tfcwr* examined, and by these ’adlcs placed In a bed, and answers then solicited from the spirits. This was the critical experiment Tto parties objected, and would not a'low it and so It ended. The little girl, however she might have created the principal part of the notes, was detected taking a little board— a sounding board of acme kind-placing It on her back underneath her stays, and by that mear.s pro duced noises. Procreation fotlowec this; parties were arraigned before court and heavy dam ages fouLd again?t them. 1 state this case to show that the business of spirit rapping Is not altogether modem. I could go hack to the timed of Room, Greece and Egypt and show that these ex* hibrt lens have all occurred hundreds of years ago. It la n very easy matter to be imposed on In the dark. The speaker iUoatrotcd h<_w sound was communi cated by n tube like a gaa pipe It is an easy matter to prcducc sounds to delude the cor, and sights t mislead tbe rye. As I raid in the ruteet, ail I seek is the tru.h. In reference to the tipping of tables, it is r >nu-nd.d that they are moved by rpirits In answer to q orations—certain movements indicating ye*, and certain movements no. Ano her exhibition of al leged spirit power is really a series of legerdemain, I*--formed in toe dark. Of course an experienced a!.debt-of hand master can deceive you with vour eyes open in the day light. It isa ranch less difficult frat in the dark. I can give you for Instance, one Il lustration. Buppoae an Iron ring large enough to pass over the arm is placed on a table. It appe m like a perfect ring No place where It can be opened take n apart. Yon examine It andsxtiffy yourself of that fact. That ring is placed on the table, and an other by it* side. Tbe feat is to get these separate, and put this ring on the arm of some party while they have their hands ^pinned fast. New suppose you hold yourarzs together *11 the time.no rirur coal l be got on. New yen are in tbe dark Now yen feel the ring cm the table. You touch It and say y t*. much farther and put tbe ring on my arm. You bring your hand back and Join bands. I soya few mythical words and move my arm and the rlr.g slip# on your arm. The next demonstrations arc by words, as they ray, communicated by a spirt through a m-diom ; that the movement of tbe medium 1- mechanical and an- torn*’.leal. If that really be so, it mere*/ employ* the hand* of tbe medium to do tbe writirg. tbcmedii being In the meantime unconscious of what he writes and knowing nothing of tbe matter of commuaica lion—or In other werdt a mere automaton. Now we approach the moral argument. The argument of the speaker was very elaborate and eloquent. lie elucidated the theories cf magnetism and electricity and mother element which an Austrian Baron, after careful and extended experi ment, hod des’gnated as tbe odic force. We regret that are are unable to give tbe lecture hi full this morning.. UtrmtD States Commissioner’s Court. A numb r of parties from Walton county were np be fore United State* Commissioner John L. Conley on yesterday for a violation of tbe Erforcuaent Act— the whipping of George A. Harris, colored. After boring warrants against tbe following named per sona were dismissed: Archy Haya, William Bora. K. XcOarhee, whites; Gabriel Johnson. Isaac Felkcr. Charles Jackson, colored. The following named persona were held in bond* of £500 each Jamra He . David Rowe, whites; and W.lliam Neal, colored About Show a—One of the sweetest And Hcgvat shows ever in our office was there yes erday afternoon, in tbe person of two *weet,heaatifnl young ladies, weighing respectively 190 and 430 posed*. F. S. Tbs abort la correct, aa one or tbe young la dies wrote tbe lteaa, saving tbe word*, 'sweet beau- tifal,” which we added. We Uke tbe show- hope it will come again. Tor Air-Line Railroad now runs by city time and not by the Georgia Railroad time as Panquitch, Southern Utah. October 8, 1872 Jo’iMon—be of tbe multitudinous tea-cap and mighty mood-says that every man is a rascal when he is ?ick. He toigut have added the converse, that every man feels himself a hero when drinking at the divine cup of per fect health; when, as with the mountain and canyon rangers of tbe expedition, the dayh roll by on a a'lken thread of enjoyment, aa the Arabs would say, from the silent clarion of the rising sun to the latest flicker of the evening camp-fire; when through long hours in the saddle and laborious clambering up precipitous mountain sides there seems an in exhaustible fond of grit and endurance wa ting only like an impetnous youib, to be called into play; and when looking at grand near and distant scenery through eyes clear from much sleeping alfreneo, you are lost in wonder that Sidney Smith should call the country M or«lj a kir.il of healthy grave.” Through days set in blue and gold most marvellous we have journey ed in tbe South of Utah for the past ten days—blue of the cloudless heavens and gold of tbe suddenly changed “quaking asps’ of the country. Pine and aspens predomi nate in the woods of UU:i; the pine with its sombre hues giving a fu *. air to yawn ing cinyons r.fready sufflti a ly gloomy, and looking on distant white and red liil;s, like masses of black r ck or close clinging shrub —the a pen, with wh tc trunk and glancing leaf, adding a light, joyous element to the scene, which approaches the gorgeous and wonderful, when as now acres and acres of the golden foli.tge flame on tbe hilltops and run like arborescent lava into tbe valleys, tbe wbi e trunks shining in contrast like polished idlvcr. RETCRNIKG TO BALT LAKE from his astronomical trip to Cheyene, spend ing a half w«-ek among the many mines of the Cottonwood ar.d Parley’s Park, including fa mous silver mines, and lying a few days in rendezvous camp at Beaver, Lieutenant Wheeler started for the unsurveytd moun tains on the south with a small party and train of seventeen pi-ck mules and an escort, the whole expedition spreading out fan like, as before, and sweeping down the territory in five divisions, Lieutenant Hoxie on the far east and Lieutenant Marshall on the extreme west. Thirty miles south of Beaver, in its own valley, lies Porowon, the prettiest and shadiest of the Mormon towns that wc li .ve yet seen, lsj ring on a beautiful elevated vite at the mouth of Centre Creek Canyon, on the east side of the valley. With many substan tial stone and wood several-storied houses, manv double rows of arching trees along the streets, and a general air of tidiness in i's in tcrnal economy, it gave us a pleasing sur prise as we rode into it ou a still Sunday morning, our bell marc and p:ick train mak ing unseemly hubbub in its religions streets, and showed a marked contrast with squat, mud-built settlements as Gunnison, Scipio and other towns of the 31 any Wives. entering the mountains at pauowan, through the canyon, baffled in an attempt to scale the main ridge a dozen miles from town by an almost perpendicular Indian trail and a stubborn, heavily-laden packed train, the Lieutenant kept a southerly cour e over the line of foot bills on the west of the main ridge. Foot hill.) in name, but mostly 9,000 and 10.000 feet above the sea, reft with deep and difficult canyons, which lead out of the main ridge into the valley, and up and down which we had to make our own trail, Indianwise. Up and down them, then, we went, coming out upon box canyons, with perpendicular, tanlalizingly do e walls, just far enough apart to prevent passage, crossing half a dozen sucb in one day, with much fatigue to the mules, finding, as we swept southward, a more open country, of vast rolling, grazing fields, where thousands of cattle and sheep were pasturing, and of a sudden, aa we mounted the creat of a bill, gathering in one vast view the whole wild scenery abont the head-waters of tbe Virgin, stretching far off to the blue inc*a of ihe Colorado, waving in long swell on the south eastern horizon. We were in sight of some of the grandest and WEIRDEST OF AMERICAN S EXERY, and the next day, after a night made anxious by the Iofs of two of tbe party, whom watch-fires and carbine shots failed to guide to camp, (but who came in late next morning, after a cold and sleepless watch,) I sat long on a prominent peat with a to pographer, enjoying the novel grandeur To tbe County making tbe largest and beat dis play, (full explanation* to be given here after $1,000 Second Brat do Trird Brat do. Fourth Brat do. Field crops—restricted to crop* produced in Geor gia, or by citizens of Georgia For the moat economi cal result, with full report, on tbe following crops : nonnor cnora—czbxalb. Corn, five acres $50 00 Wheat, c dc acre 50 00 Oats, one acre 50 00 Rye, one acre 50 00 Barley, one acre 50 00 9weepatakra —Beet result on one acre in any cereal crop, the competitor making bis own ■election $400 00 ■at cnora. Clover Hay, one acre, minimum two and a half ton** $50 00 Lucent Hay, one acre, minimum two and a half ton* 50 00 Native Oriffc Hay, one acre, minimum one and a half ton* 50 00 Cultivated Gras* Hay, without Clover, two ton*... 50 00 ea-vine Hay, two and a half tons SO 00 Corn Fomge, fear tons 50 GO Sweep*take»—Best remit on one acre in any t rag* crop, the competitor making hi* own selection $150 CO BOCT OBOF. Sweet Potatoes, one acre $**5 GO Irish Potatoes, one acre Turnips, one acre 45 00 Ground-peas 25 00 Beets, one cere 45 00 Cbufaa 25 00 TJX CROPS. Field P»**, one- acre Bean*, one acre 3COXIY CHOPS Cotton, one acre, not lees than 1500 pounds of Lint, (full explanations to be given here after $5*0 00 Cotton, one ac e, minimum 4,000 pounds per In a 11 c *•*» of irritation br«ne these taxlxt* should be freely us:o, their cleansing and healing properties are astonishing. Be tarn rued, never negWct a cold, it if easily cured in it* indpii nt etate. when it becomes chronic the cart is exceedingly difficult, Uie Weils* Carbolic " * specific. K’iLuOGG, 18 Platt St. New York. Sole Agent for United States. Mfra. 19 Nassau, N. Y. nililniw I Send stamp for Illustrated Catalogue on DUUUUlS I Building A. J. B'CKNELL A CO., 27 Wanen street. New York. FREE TO BOOK AGENTS! AM ELEGANTLY BOUND CANVASS ING BOOK for the brat and chespes: Family Bible ever published,'"ill be sent free of charge to any book agent. It contains nearly £00 flue Scripture illustn uons, and vgenta are meeting with unprecedented success. Address, stating experience, etc, and we will show you mhat * ur egenta are dome, NA- TIO^AL PUBLISHING COMPANY, Memphis, Tennesrae. or Atlanta, Ga. W ANTED—Experienced Book Agents and Can- VKsaers, in ailparts of the U 8. to sell THE MEMOIR OF ROiiER BROOKE TANEY, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the U. S. jVftn book heretofore published in this country, throws so much light upon our Constitutional and Political History. It is a work of extraordinary Interest and of permanent value to the Historian, the Lawyer, the Statesman, the Politician, and every class or intellt- —it readers. a^Soid by SubSvription only-Ex- llshcra, Baltimore. the view. We wife 10,000 feet above the sen, on the western of .twin peaks, above the main source of the .Sevier. 11 flow it*, on the south, we looked down upon mountain system, spread out on a plain several thousand feet lower than the country north of us. Tbe wh.de region south seemed to have snuk i:i some Titanic convulsion of nature, or (he region on the north to have been erected by some volcanic force whose marks were plain and frequent in THOUSANDS OF ACRES OF LAVA ROCK; here, in the shape of enormous bill* an. ridges composed entirely of the black, in fcrnal-looking rock; there, in the middle of wooded and grassy valleys, piled in rough, irregular masses, like the slag from a blast furnace, and with a characteristic clink when struck by the hoof of a mule, for over one of these valley deposits of eruptions we were obliged, unwillingly, to drag unwilling mule*, wiihtnu fectund leg?, when we wera hopelessly hemmed in by its diabolic bl ck- nesa. In this lower country, spread out like a map seen, with bird’s-eye clearness, were the white w tiled canyons of two branches of the Virgin, winding distinct for miles towaids the horizn; further off wete the broken ends of the uplifted £edeui«niary deposits, one at the bottom of an ocean, and now standing exposed high in air, with abrupt edges an 1 platcau-likc summits, while tho blue rim of the Colorado mew bounded the wild scene. Domes, pinnacles and grotesqueness in every form.wrought by the patient artist. Time, rose in every direction from ’he sides of can yons, out of the middle of isolated plateaus and on the distant Virgin Mountains; every where a strange moulding of the materials of nature into weirdness and majesty. At the confluence of the north and south forks of the Virgin stood a WONDERFUL PILE CF ROCKS in perfect vra’*einUinee of a Rhenish castle, with sheer white walls, apparently as smooth as art could make them, many outlying walls, inclined at defensive angles to each other, en closing the main fortress, which rose from tbe centre of the pile precipitous of great height, w ilh red stained walls, ev< n sur mounted by a watch tower—the wbo’e cov ered on the very summits, fortress and out lying works, with a short growth, of pines, in sinking resemblance to men—and as wo look ed and the soft air blew from th** south to us it was easy to glide iuto the imagination of some vast moated castle, -drifling'down from cbivalric days and standing, with its legion? of defenders on its walls, to guard the fair Virgin River at its feet. Turning from the deceptive picture, and regretting rather that tbe knightly days were dead, when each fancy might be a reality, another picturesque scene was far b-.low us a thousand feet. On the north onr pack train, with the Lieutenant and orderly in advance and escort in the rear, winding in Indian file along the pebby beach of A LOVELY ENCLOSED LAKE, TWO MILES LONG, of variously colored water, sparkling in the noonday sun, and the sound of tbe bell-mare*? bell came to us soft and distinct as the train rounded the head of tbe lake and skirted a dark wa l of lava. We were scatchiug the sources of the Sevier. Pionging through primeval woods and stepping c&uliousiy over iari-Ive lava, we catne unexpectedly, in an open glade, upon a sea-green stream, bursting L orn a hii 1-side, twenty feet broad at its issue, and pouring a mighty fhiod of water down through the valley. J£ive miles above was the lake; strata of lava intervened, and be low, thousands of feel, was this gigantic spring; this inference was ready that the lake was the source that we were searching, con fined by the lava and ISSUING BY SUBTERRANEAN COURSES in this mighty valley stream—one of the most beaudful sources possible for a river. Here, ia Pantuich, * log-house frontier town, once deseated through fear of Indians, and lost year resettled, a junction was yesterday nir.de with Lieutenant Hcxfc. fresh from similar wild grandeur in the East, and a forced march of sixty mi us, and arriving at three in the morning on a sleeping camp. To morrow an early start is to be made south ward for Toqucrville, the LAST RENDEZVOUS OF THE EXPEDITION. Rumor has come of a small valley near the road to Toquerrille rivalling the Yosem- ite in grandeur, though on a much smaller scale. An effort will be made to find this new wonder. A wild Xibelungen interest surrounds the silent city of Circleville, thirty miles above P*nqui:cu. Several years ago— probably in the Black Hawk war of 1305— Indians killed and horribly matilated an old man, tending him back to town on his ox team, handled and disfigured. The citizens, enraged, played the part of hypocrites for per acre 50 00 Tobacco, one acre 60 00 Csne* one sere. Southern 60 OC Sorgho, etc., one acre 50 00 Kicc, low land, reventy bushels per acre 50 00 Rh-e, upland, one acre 50 00 Broom Corn, one acre 50 00 CHOPS ET BOYS UNDEH E1XTXZX TEARS OP AGE. Cotlon, one acre $35 00 Corn, one acre r 25 00 Pit ml am s will be offered to cncoarage Fish ~ilture and similar premiums to those offered in 1874, for rumples .of Field cr-pa. Garden and Orchor.i pro ducts, and the like. Sauced Barnett, Secretary. f. B —The Press of the State la respectfully r quested to extend it’ courteous co-operation in pub lishing the foregoing list Georgia Election Returns. WILKINSON COUNTY. Irwinton, November 6 th. The following is the vote of Wilkinson county : Greeley, 969; Grant, 105; O’Conor, 2; majority, 864. Congress—Blount, Demo crat, 989; Anderson, Republican, 96; ma jority, 893. Perfect quiet and good order prevailed at all the precincts throughout the day. TAYLOR COUNTY. Butler, November 6. The election passed off quietly here yester day. The afficial vote of thi.*, Taylor county, gives Greeley 294 majority, ana Cook for Congress in Third District, 288 majority over Brown “so called” straight The whites all voted for Cook and Greeley except a very few, mostly of them Radicals. O’Conor got one vole. Would have written sooner but have just got returns. nSARD COUNTY. Franklin, November 6th. The following is a list of the polls in this county: Greeley 540; Gnnt332; O’Conor 13; II. R. (l&rris—for Congress 6:2; Be- tiiune 327. DODGE COUNTY. Eastman, November 6. Election passed off quietly. No turn out— several persons came in to-day to vote, aris ing fr*»m mistake of some newspaper an nouncements. The following is the vote; Greeley 151; Grant 9; Phil Cook 149; Jack Brown 9. BALDWIN COUNTY. Millkt osville, November 6. Greeley, 942; Grant, 328. For Congress— Blount, 934 ; Anderson, 3i3- CARROLL COUNTY. Carrollton, November 6. Greeley, 859; Grant, 431; O’Conor, 22. For Congrses, 4tii district—Harris, 957; Betbune, 115. From the Augu ta Chronicle Conyers, N >veraber 6. Return? from Rockdale county give Gree ley S48; Grant, 286; O’Conor, 24. For Con gres^—Blount, 386; Anderson, 288. Americcs, November 6. Sumter gives Grant 617 majority; Brown (Republican), for Congress, 590. Quiet. Millkn, November 6. Nothing reliable from Jefferson county. It is reported that Wright has a majority of 200 for Congress. Darien, November 6. Greeley, 120, Grant, 514; Rawls, li' Sloan, 541. All quiet. Camak, November 6—Official vote Warren county: Greeley 491, Grant 401, O’Conor 18; Wright 4S8, DuBose 20, Clay ton 4 !l- A gentleman from Burke county last even ing brought information that the Radical Presidential ticket carried the couuty by about 90 majority. Sloan, Radical candidate for Congress, ca ries the county by the same majority. From the Columbus Sun.) MUSCOGEE COUNTY. Grant 1,207; Greeley 1,313; 0’0onor43 Harris 1,370: Beihune 1,208. HAUKIS AND TALBOT COUNTIES. The latent advices induce us to believe that Harris has gone Radical by 200 votes and Talbot by 175. It is reported Bethnne got some white votes in Marion, but that county and Chattahoochee have gone heavily Demo emtio. From the Savannah Mirror.] CHATHAM COUNTY. The full city returns, as received this morning from the managers of the election yesterday, are as follows: Rawls, Dem., for Congress, 3,16t; Sloan, Rad . for Con gress, 2,428; Rawls’ majority, 783. Sloan, 1,241; Rawls, 2 j Sloan’s majority, 1,238. Tho managers are discussing tho question as to the legality of the piecinct balloting. It will be decided to morrow. The following is Sloan'n majority over Rawls: Mclnto&li c nnty, 60); Barke, 320; Liberty, 400; Brunswick, 135 Bullock county gives Rawls a m jority of 500, and Effingham 115. ITALL COUNTY. The Gainesville Eagle says: The election on Tuesday was .bout the tamest affair of ihe kind we have ever witnessed. No one seemed to manifest any concern, and hence every voter cast his ballot without molestation or constraint. Less than half of the vote of the county w as cast. At three precincts the polls were not opened. Below we give the con solidated vote for this county: Greeley 645, Grant 171, O’Conor 7. For Congress—Bell 646, Darnell 155. LUMPKIN COUNTY. The Mountain Signal says: In this county the election passed off very quietly, and the following result shows a very light vote: Greeley 176; Grant li3; O’Con or 18; Bell—for Congress 227; Darnell, Rad ical 106. As this county can poll 700 votes, it will be seen that halt’ the votes were not cast. COWETA COUNTY. The Scnoi Journal says: “The election at this place last Tuesday passed off quietly. Tbe whites only turned out tolerably well, but the negroes turned out much better than they did at the October election. There were at least three times as mat y negro votes polled at this precinct on Tuesday as there was on the second of Octo- **t, and they voted almost solidly for Grant and Be hune. gThe Greeh y electors received 242 votes; O’Conor, 5; Grant, 92. For Congress—Harris (Dem.) re ceived 256 votes, and Beihune (Rod.) 91. There were 836 votes polled iu all. Greeley’s majority over Grant 159. Harris’ majority over Beihune 165. At the Sharpsburg precinct, the Greeley electors received 66 votes, Gram 5», and O’C mor 33 For Congress—Hcmy K. Har ris (Dem.) received 97 votes, and Betbune (Rad.) 52. THE ;gjreat WHALE! r w ,7 Atlanta, fc t room nearlv 100 feet long, which it absttt fl la It is worth going hundreds of miles to see. Tht price of admission ia ptu very low. so tint one maj see it a dozen time* and not mis* the cost. Admission 90 cents; children hair price. Drop the money in the box yourself and walk in NO. 69 WHITEHALL STREET, Next to Mr. Wa Robinson’s Shoe Store, octll-dit&wixa Price 45 cents a box. Send lor Circular. A P. WRIGHT. a W. STEGALL. WRIGHT & STEGALL, Bankers, Dealers in Exchange, and COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Thowtaaville Gco-gla. G EORGIA. THOMAS COUNTY.-We, the under signed, tare this day entered into a limited partnership, under the laws of Georgia, to do business a: Tbotnasville, Georgia, under tbe firm name of Wright & btcgalL The general nature of the busi ness to be, ia that of Banking, Exchange and Com mission. Arthur P. Wright and Calvin W. Stegall are the „ *neral partners, both of the county and ©tate afore said, sad Thomas C M tchell, of the same place, is the special par.ncr Said copartnership huriness on this date, September 4J, 1874, aud ; * uiEvuiuiuuuwjuuur, in auiuul within the legal hours of sale, the following property A house and lot in the dty of Houston street fifty feet, aud -e$75 to $250 per month,SEE O male acd female, to introduce the GENUINE IMPROVED COMMON S£N>E FAMILY SEW- 7m ING MACHINE. This machine will stitch, hem, -*■ fell, tuck, quilt, coro, bind, braid and embroider, in a most superior manntr. Pr.cc only $i5. Fully licenced and warranted for five years. We _ will pay $1,000 for any inachln^that will sew a I stronger, more beautiful, or more elastic seam I than ours. It makes the “Elastic Ixvkstitcu.” zfi Every stitch enn be cut, and still th* doth cannot •wa be pulled apart without tearing It. We pay agents from $75 to $450 per month and expenses, or a rj commission from which twice that amount can wr.be made. Address SKCOMB A CO., Boston, Mass; Pittsburg, Pa.; Chicago, HI, or St. Louis, Missouri. •wid h one hundred aid twenty feet to bounded west by W. A Fuller and on the south bj Z A. ttiLiamE it bring part of land lot 84, in ths 14th district of originally Henry, now Fulton county, Oeontia, levied on as tha property of Willis orr by virtue of and to satisfy a fl fa issued from the Jus tice's Court of the lu3t>th district G. ML, In favor of C. Bndwellva WUliaOrr. Levy made by J.R. Tomp son and returned to me Nor. 4th, 1879. Also, at the same time and place, a lot on Broad street in th* dty of Atlanta, situated In Block five of orignally land lot number 77 in said county, fronting twenty-five feet an Broad street, and on the north east side thereof, and running back same width foriy feet with the building thereon, now occupied by the Atlanta Daily sun office, levied on as the property of O. A, Lochrane, trustee for his wire, Josephine Loch- ranr, by virtue of aud to aatiafy a fi fa is -.ued from Fulton Superior Court in favor of James R. Powell vs O. A. Lochrane trustee, as afi-resaid. Nov. 4,1879. Also at ihe s^me t me and place four dty lots in the city of Atlanta, two of sod lota fronting fifty feet each on Jones Avenue anl running baric parallel and adjoining each other t .o hundred feet and fronting on Bush street each fifty feet, bounded on the east by the M ssion Baptist Chnrcfc, and the remaining two fronting on the north side of Bosh street (opposite the two before described) fifty feet each and running bick parullel and adjoining each other one hundred and eighty feet to and fronting on Johnson streetffifty feet each, all known as the Jones Hill property in th* Firft Ward of salt* * - -* property of M A I G. W. ADAIR, Auctioneer- Executort.’ Sale. he Pat Lynch Estate! J IT VIRTUE OF AN ORDER FROM THE \ Ordinary of Fulton couuty. will be sold a*, the ty Hall, in the dty or Atlanta, within the legal hours of rale, on Ihe first Tuesday, 3d day of December next, the following property belonging to the estate of terminates throe years from date. Thomas C. Mitch ell, the special partner, has paid into the c> mmon stock Ten Thousand Dollars. Da < d this Septem ber 9, 1879. ARTHTR P.;WMIGHT, ALVIN W 8TEGALL, octsl—w8m Continued brilliant success of D its on &Co’s GEMS OF STRAUSS! German Hearts, Aqnarrellen. 10C1 Mights, Manhatten, Tgen blatter. Artist Lifi ’ “ ’ ~ tire. Barker?inn, Blut and many other popular Watizcs. SHALER’al PATENT PARADE TORCH for the CAMPAIGN of 1879, is a in tht; packing, prevents all danger cf dripping and soiling the dothing, and is perfectly safe in handling. By blowing through a tube in the than any other, and costa to burn onl v two or three cents per night. Manufactured and sola by ». M. AiKMAN A CO. I Pearl street- N.-i» — Manufacturers c Hand Lanterns. Cheap Farms! Free Homes! On the line of the UNiON PACIFIC RAILROAD. 12*000• 600 acres of the uest Farming and Mineral Lauds in America. * 3*000*000 Acres in •Nebraska, in the Platte Valley, now for sale. Mild Climate, Fertile Soil, for Grain growing and Stock Raising unsurpassed by tn« 1 n fhe ITnlrr-n Ktitini elsewhere. Tree Homesteads for Actual Settlers. The best location for Colonies—Soldiers entitled to a Homestead of 160 Acios. Send for the now Descriptive Pamphlet, wl*h new maps, publishco in English, German, Swedish and The Great New Church Music Booh THE standard: i fde point of being introduced satiffiel with lees than TWICE THE ORDINARY CIRCULATION sent Price, $1 50. aprl2—wedAsatd&wly $64^160 Kentucky State Lottery. Legalized by an act of tin Legislature. Meat liberal Lottery ever drawn. Only 7,140 Tickets and 3,080 Frizes. To bo drawn Nor. 30th, 1872, in Covington, Ky. One Capital Prize of $25 9 000. 1 Priz-j of $5,000 | 13 Prizes of $-250 1 Prize of 2.«30| 3D Prises of ““ « Prizes of 1,&0U I 420 Prizes of 2 Pr/Z.s of 6a | 2,G10 Prizes of 3,063 Prizes, amounting to $G4,260 Tii&pts, $12. Halves, $6. Quarters* $3. erOur T ottertes are chartered by the 8tate, crawn at the time named, under the supervision of sworn Commissioners. C&The drawings will be published In the New York, Chicago and Louisville pa pc a Pw“We will draw a similar scut me the last Satur day of every month during the yearn 1: 72 a id IS at our ri»k i»y Postofflco Money C Registered Letter, Draft or Express. Also, at th? some time and pi ce, two framed bolid es. situated on the Fair Grounds (or Ogrethorpe P. rk) known ns the Skating Rink and secro ry*s office, said Sksting Rink b log 30 by 196 feet, d said Secretary's office being 90 by 80 faet, each te story high; Levied on as the property of R. I. Kimball, by virtue of and tosatLfy afi fa Issued from the Justiee Court of the 1234th District G. M., in favor of O. A Smith vs. IL I. KimbalL Leroy made by James Campbell, L. C, and returned tome November Lochrane, trustee — wit: a par; of land, lot No 77, in the 14lh district original! - *" — — — k^own ont _ , recordeo in the Clerk's offl. e of the Superior Court af Fulton county, Ga, by the No 3, from 91 feet on th* east side of Pryor street, and running back cast same width 103 to an alley. Levied on as tne property of O A Lochrane trustee by virtns of and to satisfy a mortgage fi fa Issued from Fulton Superior Court in favor of Charles Emory vs O A Lochrane, Trustee etc November 4,1879. ’ the same time and place, a lot and last sitting of a six-room dwelling, said £ uated on Walton street in the city of Atlanta, a by Bt feet, more or less, it bein< part of land lo 78. in the 14*h District of originally Henry now Fnl ton county, Ga.; levied on as the property of Henry Hodges by virtue of and to satisfy a fi fs issued from tbs Justice’s Court of the 655th District G M in favor or B U Bigham vs Henry Hodges. Levy mads ' R Thompson, L C, and re'orned to ma. Novi 4th, 1872. Also, at th** same time and place, that tract c. cel of land lying and being in the 14th dUtrictof orig inally Homy, now Fulton county, ua.; itbeingpartof iand lot No 156. bounded on the one side by the Macon and Western Railroad right of way and By lands ba- ioniring to Joseph Caldwell. Samael Hill and others, * iuing one hnndrod aud;fifty acre*, more or less, the property of Je-se Boring, trustee for ef an acre in the Fith Ward of the city of Atlanta, Atlantic Railroad adjoining the property of Grnbo Levied on as the property of William Rich; also a lot ■Etainiog U of an acre on Willi.m street, in thei First Ward of the city of Atlanta, adjoining Princa and Winn. Levied on as the property of w Tittle- Th ompson 3 WQRIC-HENCVf.'iED PATENT Glove-Fitting Corset. No Corset has crer enjoyed such a wo:ld-wide populari ty. The demand for them U constantly increasing, be cause THEY GIVE Universal Satisfaction, Are n*ndsomc/Purable7 Ecocom^al and « Perfect Fit. stamped with the name THOMPSON, aud the trade mark a Crown. sold by all First-Class Dealers. It is not a physic which may give temporary relief to the sufferer for the first few deaes, but which, from continued use brings Piles and kindred diseases to aid in weakening the invalid, nor is it a doctored liquor, which, under tbe popular name of “Bitters" is so ex tensively palmed off on the public as sovereign reme dies, but it is a mows powerful 'route and alterative* prononneed so by the loading medi cal authorities or London and Paris, and has been long used by the regular physicians of other countries with wonderful remedial results. DR. WELLS* EXTRACT OF JCRUBEBA retains ati tbe medical viitnes peculiar to the plan and mut-tbe taken as a permanentcur-tive agent. Is tlicrc want of action iu yoor Liver aud Spleen ! Unless relieved at once the blood becomes impure by deleterious secretions, producing scrofulous or skin diseases, Blotches, Fel ons, Pustules, Canker, Pimples, etc. Take JUUUBEBA to deuse, purify and restore th* vitiated blood to healthv action. Have you u Dyspeptic Stomach ? Un less digestion is promptly aided the system Is debili tated with loss of vital force, poverty of the blood, dropsical tendency, general weakness or lassitude. Take it to a<selrt Digestion without reaction, it will import youthful vigor to the weary sufferer. Have you a weakness of the Intestines ? You are n danger of Chronic Diarrhoea or the dreadful Infiam- infiummations. weakness of the Uterine „ must procure instant relief or you are * Urinary Or- Have yo gansf Yi ...... .... liable to suffering worse than death. Take it to strengthen organic weakness or life be comes a burd-n. Finally it should be frequently taken to keep the system in perfect health or yon are otherwise in great danger of malarial, miasmatic or contagious diseases. Q.KELLOGG, 18Plattst.Ncw York, .. .. .. u .. lgtato ircular. fsbJtdJtwtf WitAMIA&E. effi-ers of Ei hood restored. Impedimenta to Marriage removed. New method of trosunent New and' remarkable remedies. Books and circulars sent free, in sealed envelopes. Address. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, No 2. South Ninth St^ Philadelphia, Pa —an. Instim ion having a high reparation for honorable conduct and profes sional skill. cov8-dAv 2v m ^ * ]D'siiU!a£ii£) «L i‘j vif “MLSliCS. 5. 0, ?5 (balm St. X. Y. No. 4 DeCive GEORGIA* Fulton County. Omncakt’s Omcx, November 5,1879. E VAN P. HOWELL, guardian of the minor chff dren of WGliam A Greene, deceased, baring ap plied for leave to sell the real estate belonging to sale minors: Tbi- i? th-rafore to notify all persons concerned to file their objections, if any they have, within the time proscribed by law, elso leave will be grated said guardian as applied for. DANIEL POTMAN. Quinary. rS-v4w - [Printer*, fee £5 . , B _, , orenc? Machines, that we have token in exchange at a towjpnce^* Wilson, Singer, Howe, Weed a that we have to' ~ * *“* sale very cheap. County Sheriffs Sales for December* 1872* her next, the following property, to-wit: One hSif undivided interest in lota Nos 23 and <4 of the subdivision of the Ponder Property. No 24 commencing at the i^outhwest coiner of Ponder Av- No 43 commencing on Ponder Avenue 200 feet from the corner cf We-i Third, and running son;h along Por.de*- Avenue 110 feet to ae alley, thence westward- ly 195 feet to lot No 22, thence north *3 feet to corner of No 2L.ther.ee esst alonv the line of No S4 200 feet to beginning corntr: Levied on as the property of Jotepa Fry, by virtue of and to satisfy an attach ment fi fa issued from toe -Justice* Court of th? 123tth district, G M. in f .vor of John R. Wallace vs Joseph Fry. GEORGIA* Campbell County. T7K>UB weeks after date hereof application will be H McLarin. deceased, including wild lands, for the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said deceased. This November 4th, 1S72. eov5-w4v OGLETHORPE UNIVERSITY, /Atlanta, Oscrgis. ' PHE exercises of th!f? .i?tit uuen wil be [resumed ± on the 1st JKontfay in October and dosoont c I st Wednesday in July, 1873. Tul Ion $75 per annum—half in jujvance. i«tf3firi.<rwtf IhrraidenL JOHN 8. WILSON, President Board of Trustesa. A&ZSS3 _WflH533. The Blaster Spirits of the World, AND THE TREASURE H3U3E Q c AMERICA, THE GUDAT BOOK OF THS YEAR. GENTS report pales of 25 td 100 copies In , days. PnosPKcTtTH I'are Adiress J, New York, Chicago. Cincinnati, ' »ep*0—iOijft-dAwly A O hoars or days. W. GOODS PEE 6,1 St. Louis. Ne* Oriti MONEY CANNOT BUY IT! lA/i. ourui wu uunawi ri lur u,y ronocr Olsga sine lot. and part of land lot eighty three. In the I orr tet nth district of originally Henry, now Fnlton couu- ~r, with the Pomp and Fixtures thereon. Also, one acre on the comer of Thurmond and Hay den streets, with Three Tenement Honsetherw on—a jartofsaidUrt eighty-three—and Two Lots, 50 by 60 ^A^Iat of all wtdchwill be posted and exhibited at the sale. And Thirteen Males, One Horse, Six Wagons. On; Carriage, several Sets of Haro eee. Two Dump Carts, and the Tools of a Black*mitn Shop complete, and all the Quartroing Tools. All will be told for the pu-poee ©f makirg a dlvis- * the -heirs of Patrick Lynch, d^cearad. J ” October 18 h. 1874. PnTRR LYNCH, JAMES LYNCH. f Exerulorf * oct!8—w4 r d Printer's fee $25 GEORGIA* All Ktott County. Okdixobt's Ofxick, August 30,1879. X. ROGERS, administrator de bonL t non, of the estate of Robert Rogers, late of said *“ —■“ '* , stating interesed to be and appearat say" office*wuSTnti?© tlme’procribcd by law. then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said lciten-Vhould not be granted. Given under my hand and official signature. O. P. bKEt TON, Ordinary. Pnnter’f fee $4 1/ ion value your Eyesight use the Perfect Lenses cr, ard derive their name “Diamond 7 ' on account uf their Hardness and Brilliancy. They will laetinany years without change, and are warmntea superior to tui otaers in use. Manufactured by J. K. Spencer & Co„ Optidaus, New York. Caution—None genuine unlc-i? stamped with our trade mark. For sale by Ifawpon- Jeweicrs and Optidana, are Sole Agmita for Atlanta, Georgia, from whom they can only he obtained. Wo Pcdlcrs enrol oyed. *ovS5-diOd&w l v TUB KEN T V (Hi Y LIBRARY GIFT^ CONCERT. $530,000 IK BAHK TO PAY ALL GIFTS A Full Drawing in Sight!! $100,000 FOR ONLY $10 A T the Second Grind Gift Concert authorized by special act of the Legislature, m aid oi the Public Library of Kentucky, onavotnabW postponed from September 4tf to December 7, and which positively a*vd nnevuivocally occurs in Louistiile, Ky., batar day, December 7,1872. without further deia> ou any ac,ounCwhai€ver, the foil wing Cash «-ift» are lor distribution by lot among the ticket holders: One Grand Gift, cash *100,000 One Gran 1 Gift* cash, * so, W Oue Cash Gift,. .. Jft.OCO 4 ca*h Gift* $5,C«0 each - - - 15 cash Gifts.. L0U0 each 20 cadi Gifts.. 900 each SI cash Gifts.. 8uo each 25 casu Gifts . 700 each 3 > cosh Gif: s.. coo each 45 ca.-h Gifts.. 5tf) each 50 cash Gift*.. 400 each GO cosh Gifts.. S00 each 100 cash Gilts.. 200 each 612 cash Gifts.. 100each $500,000 TY 71LL be sold before the Court House door, in > V the city of Atlanta, on the first Tuesday In Dec mber next, within the legal hours of sale, th* following propem, to-wit: Lot of land No 61, in the Seventeenth District of originally lienry, now Fulton county, Ga, containing 20)4 acres, more or leas. Levlsd on aa the property of James L Mathissn. Also, a lot containing itf acre, on Decatur street. In the Fourth Ward af tha city of Atlanta, adjoining Longlev, Robertson A Shebau, It being put of land lot 52, in the 14th district of orig- iraliy Henry, now Fnlton county, Ga. Levied on as the properly of M J Hinton. Also, a lot or parcel or land containing sixteen acres, more or less, situated on the east side of Peachtree road, adjoining Wal lace, Solomon and others, it being the residence of H O Hoyt, and situated in the southern portion of land lot 106, in the 17th district of originail Henry, now Fulton county, Ga. Also, a lot containing V of an acre situated on Daniels street and an alley, in the 4tb ward of the city of Atlanta, adjoining Bill. Eox- li-h and Wallace, it being partof Undlot No 45, in the 14th district of originally Henry, now Fnlton counjy, «a. Levied on aathe property of H C “ * A:1 levied on by virtu* of and to satisfy a fi fa by Madison Bell, Comptrollet General, in favor of the Sts’c of Georgia vs Foster Blodgett, principal, and W B It hod e*, Ephraim Tweedy, William Gibson, Her bert Stallings, William Doyle and J P Poole, of Rich mond com. ty, in said State, and Henry O Hoyt. Geo p Pu.uett. M J Biutonand James LMathison, of said Fu ton county, securities. Property p-lnted out by N J Hammond, Attorney General, June 3,1874. Al^o, at tbe same time aud plarro, a city lot in the first ward of the city of Atlanta 50 by 400 foet, situ ated on Forsyth street, adjoining Os bum and Chap man; also, a lot 33 by liO feet, on Whitehall and Peters streets, adjoining Holland and Brooks; also, a Ua 62 by ifO feet on Forsyth si rest, in the first ward of said city, adjoining Adair and Irwin, all being in land lot 77 in the fourteenth district of originally Henry now Fnlton county, Georgia. Also, part of land lot 85 iu said district, being a city lot in the first ward of said city of Atlanta, containing^ of an acre, sit rated on an alley and Maconand Western Railroad, adjoining Jacx aud Wellhouse; also, partof land lot 77 ia said district, beiDg a lot 80 by 62 feet, in the sixth ward of the city of Atlunta, situated on Broad strict, adjoining Uealy and theEmmelestate; also, a lot coLtainlug oue sere in the sixth ward of said chy, situated oa Gray aud Kicny streets, adjoining Busse, it being part of land lot 89 in raid district/; also, part of land lot 84 In said 14th district, it being a city lot 200 by 70 feet, situated on Race Track street and an alley, in tbe Aral Ward of said city, adjoining Holland. Also, a lot containing M of an acre, on Stonewall street, in tbe first Ward of said c»ty, ad- 65. it being i ■ rcct, in the 3d WanTof said dty, adjoining Also, part of load lot 45, it being a lot con taining 12 nc. cs, on Fair street, in the Sd Ward < said c»ty. Also, part of land lot 82 in said District, being'a lot containing % of an acre on Gilmore and Fori s?ro*ta. in the 4th Ward of said city, adjoining Sbehane and Laird. Also, a lot containing of an acre, #u For syth and Brotherton streets, in -at Ward of ssiddty, Adjoining Adair and Bowen, it bring part of land lol 77 in the 14th District of originally Henry, now Fnl ton county, Georgia. Levied on as the property of ” district, *!*o a lot containing one quarter of mu acre oi. Marietta and Corput streets in tha Fifth Ward of raH city, adjoining Millard and Griffith, it being part of land lot 79 in said District; also, a lot 96 by 80 feet on hitchsll street in the Sixth Ward of the dty of Atlan-a, adjoining Ysllntina and Collier, it being part of !and lot 77 in the 14th District of originally Henry, now Fulton county. Georgia. Levied on as the p -operty of L Scofield. All levied on as the property of said defendants by virtue of ahd to satisfy a fi fa issued hy Madison Beil, Comptroller General,In favor of thrS*t* of Georgia vs Foster Blodgett, principal and Hanibail I Kimball, John Rice and Varney A Geskil), late of said county, aud Henry OJlojtand Lewis .'cofluid, of said county, seenritfss. Property pointed pointed out by N J Hammond. Attorney General, June 3, (fit. Also, at the same time and place, a tract or p« reel of land, coma ning one hundred one and on -quarter (101acres, more or less. It being the south naif ef land sot 121 iu the 14th district of originally Henry, now Fnlton county, Georgia, bounded south by A ~ McCook east by T J Perkctson. nutth by Haafett in favor of W R Philips vs Edward White, maker, und V A Gar kill, indorser. October 7,1879 Also, at the same time and place a tract or parcel land containing three and one-foorth (Sjf) acres, mofeoi-lces, having the following boundaries tov ’* Commei clngat the northwest corner of land lot in thi 14th district of originally Henry now Fnlton couD .y and thence south westwardly on sold land lot " ‘24 feet, thence rastwordly^o right of way of Oue cash Gift, 10 oOO One cosh Gift.... 9,000 Oce cash Gift,.... " “ One csriiGirt,.... One cash Gift,.... one ca«hGilt,.... One cash Gift,.... One cash Gift,... Total 1,000 Gifts, all cash. 6,000 5,000 i de- posit, and ref apart for that uarp*«-*». ... r «, » aud Hrovers’ Bank, as will be seen oy the following certificate of the Cashier: V. Fakxeks' axd Drovers’ Ba^| Louisville, Ky., September 26,1S72. , This Is to certify that there is now ou deposit Tn this bank over half a million of dollars to the credit <f the Gift Concert fana $500,000 of which is held by Uig. b-i tor $500; 118 for $1,000 ; 285 for *2,500; 575 for $5,000. No discount on lees than $100 worth of tickets at a time. Tbe drawing will positive?/ and unequivocally take place December 7. Agents are peremptorily required to clrae sale* and make returns November 25, in order to give ample time for the fiuai arrangement*. Order ■> for tickets or application for circular* should be ad- dresred to Gcv, T2IOS. E. BRATJLTTTE, Avent Pabllt Library of Kentucky, octl2-wed*9st&weowtd Louisville. Ky. Tickets for sale by Red wine A Fox, Atlanta, Ga. TTTILL be sold on the first Tuesday in November V v next, between the legal hour-' of sale, before the Court Hotue door. In the town of Nashville, Bcr- s as the property of J J Parri-h, to satisfy i rity. the same being apart of lot of laud No. 362. iu the 9:h d: strict of said connty; property pointed out by defendant Levy made acd returned to me by C H Shaw, Constat) 1 -, this October th?26th, J879. THOS. D. 1UTCH, Sheriff B. C. nov5—wtds Printer’s fee $2 50 per levy GEORGIA* OcKalb County. Oed is art's Omcx, November 4,1872, applied for leave to sell thi real estate of Printer’s fee $5. GEORGIA* Fayette Connty* Oxdixart's Omcx, November 4, 1879. their objectiono. if any exist, on or before the first Monday in December next, else letter* will be grant ed to the opsj&Ant. \V estern Railroad lfc8 fe*t, tfieflee Westwardly along tbe garden fence of said premises to the rt*r or north we -t corner of said garden fence 680 feet, thence 8c.ntwes<wardly 138 feet to the beginnin with a two siorry brick dwelling in which ant now resides and all other improvements on said premises. Levied on aa tbe property of EdWard White by virtue of and to satisfy a mortgage fi fa. lrsued from Fnlton Superior Court in favor or W. Phillips v«. Edward White. Property pointed out fifa October 7,1872. Also at the tame time and place, a dty lot In the cl y of Atlanta, fronting on Pryoratrestflfty feet, and rnunisg back one hnr.dred ana fifteen f«et to an alley, laid alley aixty feet, having thereon a story framed dwelling house, bound sd them . Levied^. _ r _ tiostee for Tsbitha J Powefs by virtue Iriy aJi-fai*?ued- from PulioncflPpdrit _ vorof?Sr « W P Chisolm vs said WT trfa'ta? of UsJ Powers Property pointed bhl . . ■ ‘-swap 50 per levy, - DcKalb Coqutr Sheriff Sale* for De cember, * Will.be sold before.ttte Court House door in Deca tur, DfeKRlb Cottutt. on the first Tuesday In Decem ber next. Within the legal hours ef sale, the following property to-wit: Two hundred and fifty acres of whole or said lot, except 50 acres in the corner of said lot. Alt of said land situate In tbe 18th district of said connty. Levied on ss the property William C Jaciisou, -«y virtue of sndtoaiular- - “ issued from DcKalb Superior (toort in favor o Also, at the same time and i . mill, levied upon as the property of lien hy virtue of two fi fas, one In favor o Robert J Wall, aud the o hftr iu favor of Z T Wrigh \s Robert J Wall, leaned from DcKalb Snpenoi Court. Property pointed out iu said fi fas. GEORGIA* DcKalb Connty Ordctart's Office, October 24,1879. J AMES A. ^ HEi-P ^ RD having applied forth- guar dianship of the person anl property of Chariio Clinton, minor heir of *lvlna Moore, diceased. All persons concerned are hereby notified to file »eir objection! - “ * • -* *•— * ' law else lett the applicant. OCt26-w4w GEORGIA* DcKalb County. Oiroixart's OrFicx, October 19,1879. any they can, why granted as applied for. Given under my baud at office. Decemb r next, within tbe Icral hours of sale, land lotnnoib ronehandrod und iiftv-fcnr, of the four- tevnth district of origiuilly Henry, now Fnlton county. Sold a* . ... South Carotins, uccc.tscd, for divi.-i GEORGIA* ffiUIton County. Ordmabt’s Office, August 37, 1871. \ A THERE AS, Ann B. Binion, executrix of Job f V Binion, late or said county, deceased, h ivlag applied for letters of dismission from said trust: This is, therefore, to cite and admoui»h all perse interested to be and appear at my my office wititin the time prescribed by law, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why sold letters should cot be granted Given under my hand and official signature. O P. SKELTON. Orninnry. iep4-woam3m Frinter's fee $4 GEORGIA* Deltnlb Connty. Ordinary's OFFtcx, September SS, 187*. tKAS, Drewry Mauldin, Admlnis rator of _j estate of Bi-uismin M ulnin, late of said county, deceased, applied for letters Oi dismission from said trust: This is, therefore, to cite and admonish all per ms Intcrci-tcd to be and appear at my office, within the time prescribed by law. then and there lo show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not *■8 granted. Given under my hand at offle-. W. R. WEBSTER, Ordinary. GEORGIA* milton County. Y7H>UR weeks after date application will be mace Ju tor leave t*> sell the lands belonging to the estate of Jacob Strickland, late of said couuty, deceased, for the benefit of the het>s and creditors of said de ceased. ROBERT THOMPSON, Adra’r. October 7,1878—octl2-w30 Printer's fee *7 GEORGIA* Fayctto County. TO ILL WHOM IT BAT CONCERN. YY7ILLIAM JOHNSON having in proper form ap- vv plied to m* for permanent letters of adminis tration on the estate of Mai in da Johnson, lave of said connty deceased. Tills Is to cite all and singular the creditors and next of kin of Maliuda Johnson, to be acd appear at my office within the time allowed by law and show cause, if any t ey have, why perraanert ad ministration should not be granted to William Johu- tober 1st, 1879. octS w30d D. C. MINOR. Ordinary. $5to$20 ptr d«r !Asent**» GEORGIA* Henry County. Ordimart's Office, October 29th, 1372. G EO W. ROWAN has applied for exemption c personalty and setting apart and val tuition of novl—w9w GEO. M. NOLAN. Ordinary. Printer's fee $i GEORGIA* Berrien County TYICHARD HARMON has applied for exemption Lt of personalty aad setting span and valuation of omestead. and I will pass oron tbe ram atclcvec .’clock, on the 15th day of November, 1872 TbU October 29 th, 1872. GEORGIA* Fulton County. Ordqsart's Office, November 4th, 1872. file their objections, if any th<?y have, wic< iu the GEORGIA* Fnlton County. . Ordimart's Office, November 4,1879. CALHOUN, administrator of the estate of „ _ Betjamin Little, d-ceased, having applied for leave to sell the res. estate belonging to said de This is therefore to notify all persons concerned to file their objections If any they have, within thn time prescribed by Uw, else leave will be g anted M 1 RS. A. L. DOUGUEKrk has applied for litters ef administration on the estate of ttilliam This is therefore to notify all person' file their objections, if any they have, within the time prescribed by law, else letters will be granded the DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary Printer’s fee $4 Executor’s Sale. Y vlrfne of an order of the Honorable C Ordinary of Lee connty. will lie sold be'ore the Court House door, in the city of Atlanta, on the first Tuesday in December next, fifty acros of land. It be ing part of lot >199 one hundred and eighty nine, ccaeed Sold for the benefit of the heirs and tors. Terms cash. October 21th, 1872 BEnJ. F. COCK, Executor. oet27—w40d • Printer's fee $5 GEORGIA* Henry County Ordimart's Officx, September 95.1879. J OHN J. LANRY applies to me for letters of *<_ mlnls'ration cum tatamento anexo on the estate of John Laney deceased, late of said county. Witness my official signature. GEO. M. NOLAN. Ordinary. eept29—w2m Printer's fee $4 00 fllllton County ishcrifl’s Sale. \\J ILL ba soldoB the first Tuesday In December ft next, between the legal h.mrs of sale be fere the Court Home door, in the town or A1|»h*retm Milton connty, Georgia, the following property, to-wit: Two l«ta of 'and numb rs7 and 71, In th? first n! trict and first section of Milton coetity. Levied on the property of Wi.ilam Thomason, deceased, aatiaf v a fi. fa. issued from the Superior Court in vor of Mary Manning vs. E J. ai d R. A. Camp. 9500 QAK BOWERY LODGE, No. 81, F. A. M., hereby offers Reward of FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS the apprehension, with proof sufficient to convict party or parties, who assassinated our beloved Brother, William P. Milton, in Ellijay, Georgia, the night of the ICth day of April, 1879. Done by order of the Lodge, and given under Seal thereof. This 7th day of Jane, A D, 1679. THOMAS:F. GREER, Worshipful Master pro tem. W.R.Wxtcn Secretary pro tem. eepl5-w90d be aud apn**r at my office in " ed lyl iwtoehow c letters should not be W* It. WEB41ER, Ordinary Printer’i* ft- $10 00 l'ostpoue>I Administrator's SsSe. A dminlstrator's r>r»l ~- N. R. FOWLER^ Auctioneer. r trirtae of an order uf tbe Honorable Court of Orcin*ry of Fu'ton -eounty, Georgia. I will sell b.fore the Court Ilonse door m At lanta, wiibin the legal hours of nie, -oa the first Tuesday in Draemh r next. t':e follo*!n ' nal estate, to-wit: A part of 'and lo* No. 141. of the l«b District of originally Hmry. now Fulton cuna-y. eontaning sixteen acroa, lying about or e mil* w Lie c >rporate liralta of the city of Atlanta, a' Jo the lands of J. L Miller, John Adair. Thomas . ander and others. Al*\ one dt j lot In Atlanta, cot* ner of Race T arck and Tat nal stroets. 60 by l'* 1 fccte upon which thre is a frame store houar.bi Ing part of iSbdlot No. *4 of Ktnl district, r-oln aa the property Of Joseph Course/, deceased, for the benefit of credl'ora. Terms -Uslf c*«h; batenc- s*x months with 7 cent interest Octaber 17; h, 1*79. JOHN T.AKtUDUiS. Administrator. oct*8-vrt3s Prin c*’a fee $10 * the property of John Fatierree, late of Atlanta. Ga, Z al> 2 th, \872. and twelve W. R VKN ABLE, Administrator. 1 * 2. Printer’s fee $10 srpy» W3n Printor'p fiis lift AdminiNtrutur'n a>alt% »ilay In Decrmt l‘ door in Decatur, * of the Court .f ing lands of th* t of la*> i No *68 aud half or lot No. 169, containing in the whole SOSJi acre* more or less, in the 18ih«listr ctof saidconu;/ about 8 miles Lorn Decatur, a' out 100 acres cU-a cd. at builtiiu^s, peach and apple »i chords, i f mis < ash. oct9-30d (Printer MILES U. NASH, ADMtariSrRATRIX’S SALE LL hr* fold on the firs: Tncsday In Novembtv 1812. before th • court house dooriu Decatur, b county, under an order of 'he court of O di nary of said county, one-half lot of land 101)4 uert-s. more «»r less, being a part of lot No. 72, m the “ District of originally Henry, now Dt-Ktih rou The place has g«H*d impruvi-meuts dwelling and house-, good apple and peach or han's, some 251 acres cleared, good water—one mil* from Stone Mountain. Terms cash AtlmluisitriT tor’H JPale ■^Y^lLLbeso to an ord -r of the Ordinary oi Walti gia, on tue the Court House dou*. in utttv, Georgia, agnvibly ‘ connty, Geer ^mlu'KtrtitorV " aloi kmongh. Ht-nrr county, G One hundred one and a fourth sere*, more dries*, known as north half of lot No. 157 in 12 h district said county. Sold fur the benefit of* the h«!r# and crodltor*. Terms eu-h. NEWTON M SOUTH. aug!6-w3m Ad^InlstralcF. GEORGIA. Il*-*Tf Cuantf. Orwrart’s Orrr.-x, Oct-dwr 8th. IBP.. ( 'NKO. W U !LHiN>, Gnoiibcn o' (ho W. UttJ Y h -vlng petition'd for lcav<* land the rra 1 estate of Ward, ».ll p-rsoti- are notified :o filn obj-ctiona. if anyexi-t, within etatutory time, tri e leave wil • ; grant, d. G iO. M. MU.a N. Onl*naro ccril-wlw Prtntn** f.*-$S Guurcllr.n’s Halo. B r virtue of anor’*r.»t ih.? Court of Ordinary of ileury county. Ga. will be aitiu a wtiole or Iu desirable quantities, b fore the t’lmn Il -u-e door in n. the waidof -uitdersigu.-d. aow Newton connty, Ga. ! One hundred one and oce fonr.h acres, more or lera of 1- t No. one hundred a>id seventeen («17) In said distri«t and county, four ( ) *rre*. mo e or Irs*. of lot No. one hundred and tlx ittS'.) in s*'.d dl* rKt and conn y. one hundred und eighty e-gln a d o’>o- f -urth (18^*4) acr.ta, more or lc*n-, lot X".on» M*- dred and r-uven ilO ). two hundred and thtee-fouituU ar-es. more cr lee». o' tut No ewie t-u» dnd ana dgftV' 1 (108), two hundr.-d two srjd onc-l nti i UOLUXGI. X- DIl KKIiMIN, Gd'ordian. rfe. Notice to hebtors and Creditors* A LL i»ecsons having claim* agtin-t Lmrl Turnip- seed, deceaiK-d will i resvn i item as required by law.andall persous iudeho-d to debased, o estate, tdi tie payment to uuttereigrajn at Bear r, Georgia. . C. A J. W. TURNIPSERD. Administrator’s Sale. FIRST TUESDAY IN DECEMBER N-XT, oct!3-wtds the ly Henry, now Dal-.lb county, alt sold property of Litiletou Hal ns. deceased, for the pur pose or distribution among the heir* of s*ld di ceased. TERMS C ASH. This October H, 1872. DAVID STILL, Adm'rde bonis non, of Liitlcton Rains, deceased. Printer’s fee $10 . vtilnge of Bear thcek, Ga., W*«on and Wet-tern Railroad, di-'l-gnl-h-d ss iwrt of lota «>f lai d No*. 47. 43. 49, 50, an » 79. oont-tintug five hun dred and i wei ty-seven aero** tSdR) iaoue «-r less, and adj doing lands of Dunn** Cam,». Ul, Manley, Dor- m. Hre Brown end others. The plantation prop.w d for sale i* a dos’rmWe tiace, r.ear market,good wells of water, and a healthy location, and In a good ncighltorhoo.! The dwelling h n>e I* a eimmo voa* building, well fiui-bed, and a mr* froute gin boose und pros* All the out houses and tens t> house- a e well ar ranged and In gn*-d r«*i«lr Tie to is »h>»i one seventy-five *igr.'* o' w«4 lat-d, , _ aatdghty flveor » iue*» acrea of gooti errek bottom la*>d, clcar.tl, well decked aud in GEORGIA* DcKalb County. OnmsAivY's Officx, October 1st, 1879. — .. s.NCY A. NASH having applied for the gnnrdiantidt* of the persona and property of ^ u u *• • honus P., and George K. GEORGIA* Dcftalb County. Ocuinart's rtFFtct, October 29 h, 1872. M ARY A. McALPIN, wife Of Floyd T. Mc.Mnin, having applied lor cxi million of persontitv and setting apart acd valuation of home-tenl, and I w : .l pats upon the sam« on Wednesday. 13'h day of November, 18-2, a; 12 o'c'.ock, Al, at u.y office, In cccutur. W. R. WEBsTFR. Ordi nry. Jl—w2w Printer's foe ri Also, at the nmc t-’me and ttiare. locste-t In tbe vil lage uf Bear Creek, two Brick Bior.i lteM)tn»«4x50*eet, two story high, well fiatish-d; one Fr-me >V‘T\ Room. 18x30 fcei; ttirec Dwelling Houses ard tens, all well finished ard comfortable, and convenient t«* the oust partof the village Also, s verrti u Improved suitable fr» host css ami dwell!- p i urporo-s—all being in a thriving vitiate on th- roilro d ^•dra the |*r<*4»erty of Ia.v Turnip .-cud, deceased, for the lM>mfi. of b-.-irs aud cr-dllorn. For further information, call on J. C. Tornlpsecd, at B ar Creek, or J. w. Tun-d on the plantation. Terms cash, or hulf cash and alf rrv'tit 19 o>outha. J. C. A J. W. TURNIPSKED, Adm.nistaator. oct9-40d tPrintcr’a $201 GEORGIA* Ileury County. Ordinary's Officx, October 7th, 1879. M ary II EARN, Executrix of Otiwn Hearn, ».ei it Ions i or l«-av« t«» sell ttftv acres, mom or ie*s of the real e-tatc of Osborn Hearn, C- c*a». d: If objections exist, let th ra b- filed wiibin staio* lory time, or thu leave will bn granted- GEO. M. NOLAN. OidSasty. oct!9—W4w Printer’s fuu$5 (i. W. AOAllt, Auctioneer. Executor’s Sal© Ordinary of Fuhou county, l wiil sell before the C'o ut House door in Atlanta, on th*i first Tuesday in December next, a certain ciiy iot In Atlanta, fronting aboot seventy-five feet on Peters street and running hack to the rfeht of wav of the Macoa and Western Railroad, being m the hnape of a Irian rle. and ia a part of ian i lot No. 84. of th? 14th district of oritrin- ally Henry now Fuitoa county, coatainlug one-six teenth of an acre, more or teas. S^'dasthcp-opertyof Catharine Ke'.ton, lata of sid connty. dec-a'eu, for distribution, tie-ms—Half cash; bsiaacj G months with ten pe ent Interest. J. M. SMITH, oct92-vr40d Fxecutor. ArimltiistratDrN S:tle. W 'LL BE -4H D on the Flrat Tuesday in Deem- h«rn<xt,b fore the Conn House door in De catur, DcKalb c nnty. Georgia, under an order of Court of « r*!inary of sai-l co.;n v, the following lunds, belonging to tb-* estau? of Kufus Henderson, deceased, to-wu: Or e h >lr inietest in mil! and lot land co> sis log of 16 M a-tea of Lot No. 230 Home Lot No. 191 c training acres, and thirty aero* of Lot No. 190. contain!- g in heaggr«g«te 3-*7M acres, more or less, anoutonc hmidn-d and thirty acre* cleared, the balance in wood sand well timbered, if -od dweiling-hou-e and oat-honst!*, peaclr and ..pple urohard. a well of rood water, »i:h sprin s «*n the phcc and several » reams of wat* r rmn iitg through the farm Sold for division, ti e ms one-naif caso, the balance on twelve month’s credit. G. B.1UIHSUN. Administrator. cct9-w491(P-ln’erV for $»0) GEORGIA* DcKalb County. Oudinxry's Officx, October 1st 1879. M ILES H. N ash having applied to fr.r leiters of admirtistraiia i ou the estate of John W. Nash, deceased. This is, therefore, to notify all persons concerned, to file their objections, if any they have, within the time all wed by law, else leave will be granted raid applicant as applied for. W. IL WEBSTER, Ordinary OC19—w4w Fruiter’s fee $4 00 piope ty of John Rauku. GEORGIA* Borrlen County. TX7HYHBAS, Hardima Birman*, guardian for the W miner heirs of Kirkland, deceased. hating app ied for letters of dismission from said show cause, if any they have, withij the time allowed by law, why said letters should not te granted* September 18.h. 1872 E. J. LAMB, Ordinary, sepSl- ;-wiam2m GEORGIA* tUlton County. A LLpfirrons inSebt’ed to the estate of James A frTuraS*, lite ef said connty decoarc.1, aro re ^nested to make immediate pavmenMffid thMe hav ing claims against said decsascd, wiil present them ^ P * perl:r * u ELDL&J32TH B.VoBmELtaMb. octl2-w3Qd - GEORGIA, Fnlton'-Goui^f. OiDcun'i Ornoi ^7orcmb.r 4th, 16H. nn(. JL HBMPHItL admlmMnitor with the will ▼Ttannexed of the estate of Sarah M Harper, late of (aid county, deceased, having applied for leave to sell the waole of the real estate b longing to said de ceased. for the benefit of legatees aud creditors. All persons concerned are hereby notified to file their objectiono, if any exist, on or before the first Monday in November next, else leave will be granted for said sale aa prayed for. Alro. a i boiler. the same time and mace, one IfcT.ea upon a* the property oTRobeit «i wan unaer and by virtue of a lien fi fs Issued from DcKalb Superior Court in faver of Bens .n ■* Bolton vl Robert J Wall. Property pointed ofit by-plaintiff’* at Als©ta’t the same time and olace, all that tract or parcel of land situa&lying and being in the connty of DcKalb. aud knotlb as lo: No. 4 in Cooper’s plan of a sundivislon of Howard^ land, and sold by G W Adair in July 1869, frosting on the right-of-way of th? Georrfa Raiirord hree hundred and thirty-*se feet and fi' e inches acd running nearly due couth on land line 1.663 feet, and adjoining Kirkpatrick’s land, then near!/ east 978 feet, aud adjoining load of sold How ard, and to the east line, corner of lot No 1, thence nearly north 1,479 feet to right of way of the Georgia RaIlro. d, said land containing St 39-100 acres. Levied November 2,1S7L JAB. HUNTER, Sheriff. NOTICE. rr-OT,t,ED before me on thteSltt ikj oI Oc'obee, 1 IKJ, br cileries Wood, colored, o' the .lOIStfc District, O. il , DeEelocotmty, Ge., enestrexdsrt be/ Bone Hole, ebont twetre or fourteen /eere old, Mim* cotiar mark- on the shoulders, branded on the left shoulder wDb tbe letter “C.” Appraised b/O. Winutiifhem end W, B. Betelej, to be worth Oztj °Thc osmer le herebr notUed to eppeer before me, prove property, pef cost end expenses, end tette him hwe/. else he will he sold in Decetnr, on the fixil Tneedej In December, lSVi. Estray Notice. OLLED before m* on thla 2d day of Nqvcpihcr. 1879, by M W. Wood, of the 825-Pdtatiftt,^ M, ~n county, Georgia, an estray COW; of a dun “ • ■ on the aides, white back and be ly. of jSam-ked with an under-hit In the right r, small, wide noma, the right bom rather drooped, about5or6ytar«<hd.. App alsed by Andrew Phil ips apd John J. Wood, wfepqrwprth twelve dollars, and worth 6M cent* ter day tb kt-ep uid cow. Thetowaar i* h-reby notified to appear before me. prove property!pay coats aad expemea ahd tak< ‘ — * ill basoiC on the prrmisea Of. sr*To.. on Saturday nov7-wlt 1 bhscyn on the prrmisTO of. raid taker dk in Doable Branch strict >Jileat^ \ O. P. SKELTON. Ort’ir.aryi Printer's fee $1 *. Estray Notice f POLLED before me on tbe 19th day of October, L 187*, by James Hood, of the 623d dia’fict, G M~ Milton county, an astray COW about7 or 8 years o:d cO reddish brlndle color, emooth cr- p off each ear, shofbteil, and holes in each horn. AppraL ed by W. S. DevereU, Eeq, and J. L. Daj, to be womi twenty- five dollar a. The owxe* Iilfchy notiflsd to come bafi urove property, pay orts and take her salt, will be auld on the pramisea of James Hood. the. taker up, om Saturday toe 16th day ©' Novcna’tar, 1879. O.P.bKELTON, Ordinary. x.ot'T-wU Printer** fee $4 GEORGIA* Fulton County. Ordixset’s Officx, November 6, 1879. C C HAM BOCK, administrator of the estate of • Tibs B. Oakes, has applied for leave to sell the real estate of arid deceased. This is, therefore, to notify all persona concerned, to file their objection*, if any they have, within the time prescribed by taw, else tease will be granted tha uidiDDlkuL DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordina poVMrtY ■, Printer’s fee $3. Fulton County wtaerJff’a Mules December, 1871* W ILL be rold on the pr -raise*, known as the oiu Kri«s Brewery, aimu * * - - portion of the city of Ailaa . _ ont.edrattiuewiny In Dr.-ce-.aber next, within the legal hdnr* of sale he fol owing property, to-vrit: US* half barrel^, 85 qmiter b.riels, 21* hogshead?,IU liquor b>rreiS, 18 3-inui plunk. 20 te t long. 50 b>i«h ei» of coi, one set coop r’s tools, «*ne !-borce wagon on** 2 h'*rae wa?on, onj wora bt-neb amt vice, one iron pump and tifiy feet, of robber hose, one iroi- kettle, one bundle b .n l iron. 3 s oves. one tug Irot rtvits, oue gr.nl stone, 3 shovel* and half bu«he measure; levied on . s thj property of George C. Fpcncer arid George Leliz, by virtue of and to sat- vs Gorge O. Soencer and tieor, Thla October 10 Iu 187 . A named dwvlting-lionse, twelve by slxtee** feet, situated ou a l-»t ir..c - ’ * * * ‘ Fair and Llunte-r ►trc« ts At ania Levied oa as . .. . . by vlnncof and tosatterya raorte-age fi fa issued from Fu ton sup«rior Oonrt Iu f »Vor or D. C. Town send A t o. v*. .«ohu teuukin. Prope rty pointed out in fi. fa October 4, 1872. Also, at the same time and place, one Iron safe oi the U«-rring patent, one Bit-bold A Kinzle’s iron safe, two fif:y-foot side i-h-.w cates, two small side show cases tlx ten foot couuur show cases, six ten find m rblc trimmed tabler, three eicbt ftn»t counter show cas *, five ei/ht f«» «t table-, two upri.-ht thosem frames covered with German silver, oue Howard A Co.’s Regulator, four sotid silver pitchers, tieveu stlvirccj'S, two silver dippers, three small sliver f titchcra, fifty five ('SjCHSea t»r sliver ware,containing rofhoneto three auu a half d. * n pi.ee* each, six sets of gold plus and tar rings, five pe«rl evta, «»ne p*-a 1 breast pin, six coral sets, • nc cameo set, eight dozen diamond sport.cl a. eight dozen si eel fram d spectacles. MX d< zen eye g as-es. ten pair of silver framed eve gia se-*. two seta iff gold Jewelry, one set of pearl and gold Jewelry * cried on as the prop-rty of vtoorge bharp, Jr„ and E B. F.ojd, by virtue of snd to satisfy u irorrga/c fl. fa. is-ued from Pul on Sut*crior Court in favor of Carotlae A. h'ioyd vs. hharn A Floyd. Property pointed out iu fi. fa. Ortobt r 4. A. M.-R3l{KEr SON. Dcpdty octS-lds ^ Kfup r’e fee $t 50 per BwrjHht Fu Itoii County. $500 HEWAHI>. J HEREBY offer a REWARD OF FIVE HUN DRED DOLLARS, far the apprehenrion, with proof sufficient to convict, the party and his recompiles*, who assassinated my husband, WLlUm P. Milton, In Ellijay, Georgia, on the night of the 16th day of April last, by shooting him through the window of his dining room, white at his supper table. This I7th day of June, 1871, eeo!5—w90d NANCY C. MILTON. A«lmiu<Htr nt© 's hnl«. [onorabie Ob _ . . .. . .. -rrorgla, wi 1 be sold be ore the Coart House door, in Guttu. ^paic.• Ing conn y (t<-or* ia, on ’be first '• V'#d«y in Ik-rea- ber next, within tbe legal hours of one hundred j of John II. Hpnace, de- Administrator’s Sale. Orainuryof I’eKa.bc timy, wi l l e t- '.d at the cuv Hall. In the dt- of Atlanta, within tue legal hour* «f sal-con the fir*t t ut*day In u»cetota’Tncxt, at public auction, to tue bight at • l id r, the foildw- ing describe! proper y, b longing to ihe evtate of Alston H Gracn? ectms -d, lot of la d bo. 24 lu tin 14 hulMrtct of original ly Payette now, F iltou county. Also, tha following lota, fr c ion? -nd Istands be longing to ^allt esis'e; lo« of land No. 19 m the 8th dtatrjct of or:gi sliv U»rn 11 no » ► aral-on c Mint* ; trict of the second suction orl -Inal.y rherok*** Cobb county; lot No 425 <th dictiic: of App:wt t ouii'T. ortrtn Uy; fraction n« 84, lTin dis'int of originally H- nry now Fn ton count % couiateiug 197 a re*-, mud frartloa No 2-rt5 In ra-d rilrtrlct cnnulnlrg 149 acre*. Also, isltnd No i, in >raid dj* r.c oa- tainl-. gijf em anu Is'ao 1 No. 9, In raM district, cont»inrg finer j*. at.d island No. 6. iu r* d dismct, CHUM" W »< res. /.ls>, Iflu-d N » , :n the 6th dl tiictor original.? Gwlmv tt couuty. coutaini-tg 4 acre*, and island No. 2, iu thu 7th «!»:r;ci of origin ally <*w.ncctt, containing 6 *0 «ff an *.cro, at d l-land No 3. iu said district, cnntitn:ng lM sen*. i.t<d frac tion No 42 intt.efiti uisiricu cwiuu tl c«*un*y, <ou- isinln- 69 acres, and fractiou No 2191, in aaiuuia’nc:- c-M.ta-ning ;5a r a ti he saute tteiitg sol4 for dHtrihntion for the pur pose of winding up a rid estate. ticrni*ca-h v.lLLiAd jlZZARD, Atintiiiisirator. . This lYd October, »87l oc’*4-w304 Printer’s fee $20 •Flex, October 5, 1879. TY* HEfcAtt. \V« iN^s- miiilhirator of the V V estjte oTD. H. Wells. iat8*ofsaid county, dc- c asod, n*prc5tnta ih-.t he has folly discharged his their ctiijcctions, if any exist, on or before tbe first Monday in January next, else lcticis of dtamlmion will be grafted the applitanr DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary. Printer's fee $6 GEORGIA* Fulton county. , Ohdinast’s Officx, Septeml»er5, 1879. T EMCEL DEAN-, admlnis’rator on the estate of .La Leranci H. Dean, rtceuscfl, reprent nta < hat he has folly discharg'd his said trust, and app.ies.for letters of^dismission: All oersoi.s concerned arc hereby notified to file their objections, if any exist, on or befo e the first Monday in Di-ct-mbi-r next, else letters of ecp7—w3ra Printer’s fee $5 GEORGIA* Fulton County. ’ ‘ Oudi. 1 *art’s Officx, September 5th, Ilf \ \Tt7ILLTS P.C^IS TCM.iuto*ll3tr»toron cu.to.the v V oi Wiliam A. Cli!to:nh late of said county, de ceased. npret-ems that lie has fully discharged his said irnst: All persons concerned are hereby notified to flic thrir objections, if any exteta, on or before the first Monday in December next, else letters of disn.if£Co wiil be granted the applicant. Da>1EL PITTMAN, Ordinary. sep7-vrthn% Printer's fee $5 ep7-w3m% MRS enli ate- o new, JAMES EASON, c‘ MARY BASON, col^ed^j Rsltato P«toct*?egric5—MUtou Sad . ^ ^AdgOstyerm, 187% TT appearing to the Court, by- tbe refora outfit X bheuff. thatihed feudant^e* notrOridc In thi* county, and it furiher eppi-aring thvfisnw d tea not re side in this Mate, it i^.nnituouon of c on us-1, or d rod that said defendantfippear a. d answer a:, tb taexttennoffaisc.or .tJsALa taecasebecoiteidereo inhefanltand p a-ntiff Holtdto, ruceed. And it <• fartherordereb that this role be published into btate press once a mon«h t* loot montns. N. B. KNIGHT, J. 8. C, ainutes of Milton Sn W. B. SE BIT Cl no-z—wiamiti • f rioter's fee $10 N OTICE Is hereby given to ereJlftris of Benjamin Little, late or Fnlton connty, Georgia, decease! to render an account of their demands. novS-wfiw JAMES ML CALHOUN, Ada*’r NOTICE. Admlnihtraior , « Hale. W ILL be sold tinder Ordinary < f D Kt he __ _ Ii D -Cfimber next, *»rf »re the CJ»»urt fl-rase door In Dncatnr, be*ween theli-gti b •tin of rale, t n-t nun- ont-d acres of land, mne or le.-s. brionging to th? •#- ^ —. - f g kk! water peach orr had -ra tbe plirro, pnu> ^oi awd Lig house. Sold tot purpose of division. oct2t-w40d 'cnn-Cteh. J. W. BROWN, Admtal-frator. Prih'er's fm. $ln 00 Ut'.OBGIAi DcKalb County* Oat>i5AKT’s Officx, Oc.obertS. 1879. W Hni.'EAH, Duran A. White having applied for letters or ad nlnis-ratl. n < n Uie - at* eot John W. Wnite, late» f De \a!b ountv, d«ce««cd. This is, therefore, to notify all puraoun concerned, to file their o. j ret tom*. If any they h*vc, within ihe time allowed by law, else lettora will be granted said applicant aa applied for. Vi. R. WEBSTER. Ordinary. t25-w40d Priuter’a fee $5. GEO KG I A, DcKalb County. OanrSAUTla Office, October 93 1871. the^estate of John White, late of Thi* is, therefore, to notify all pew ns concerned to file their objections. If any they have, within the time pweribed by law, else letters wd< be granted said applicant aa eppl ed f r. W. IL WEBSTER, Ordinary. octtSwIOd Printer’s fee $5 GEORGIA* Campbell C»*n«y. TO AU.WHOX IT MAT COKCfefi* C C. GARRETT having. In proper form applied • to me for permanent let tet a nt Rdminirirntioa on the estate of buith Cash, deceased, late iff said county: Tt.ta is, therefore, to cite afl and nngn'or the credi tors and n xt of kin of harau • «*b, to Is? and sppear at my office within the ti ne showed by law. show cause, if any they cm, why ptrmanc-ni sdmlnisinte t.on should no' be granti d to C. C. Garrett on Sarah Cash’s estate. Witness my hand and official signature, this 98th day of bepteuber, 1872. R C. BEAVERS, Ordinary. oct2 - wfiOd Printer's foe $4 Adininistrtitor’H Suits GEORGIA, CaxrsEU. Cocxrr. O N the first Tuesday in Dec* m’ er next, will be sold at the court house c.nor in T alrbam, in said county, within the legal hours of sale, b* of land, number one hundred and four (104) In tbe 14:h district ot Forsyth originally, bat now C«niphe l caiktr. Sold *»• the property of John Dunlop, dece ted, for the benefit of the hara end creditors of rs>d dtsc* scd. . p. n. DU LOP, Adralntauater. Printer** fee $» GEORGIA* Fulton County* Okdouxy** Omcx, November 4th, 1879. W ILLIAM JRNNING8, adtnlnlstiator of the es tate of Abram Wtiliama, deceas'd, baa ap piled fur leave to ash the r«d estate ot the said do- ceneed: This is thmfor* to notify all f le their object oue. " time} reseated by l nor5—w39d Printer's fee $5 Notice to Debtom aud Creditors. G eorgia. fultonTounty-aii persona tn- d«bt».d to«he rotate ef M. 11 rp-r. l.t of •a«d county.dcc a-ed,a errqu<a <-d to make immediate payment, and all peropuf raving claiu.* acaiut said estate will present thun properly prmca W. aT 11KMPHILT, ^Administrator with the will annexed