The Weekly constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1868-1878, November 26, 1872, Image 4

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\ {xnMSTIMCT PS1N11 -Bias ^onstrtalron. A.TLA S TA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26 (irnt P*rk Corner. Chicago bu been bovine a little side show intberliapecf a pork corner. Ithas unused tbefol^f there, betidea di*jnmtling the mar ket to a considerable extent The thins presents an instance of one of those eminently daring though not religioof- ly ecrnptf ous dodges that enterprising bus' ll ess men occasionally resort to, for the pur pose of making money faster than the alow routine of legitimate trade permits. This pork mature was quite an audacious thing, and folly aa Mg as it was bold. A band of speculators mossed all the pork in the country in their atorebouaea in Chicago. Tncir accumulations ran to 125,000 barrel* probably. To show the gains, it b only nece'sary to slate that the sabs of mess pork in New York In three months, outside of those to the Chicago apeculatore, ham not been what a half-month's saies should be. And (he stork hi New Yore on the 1st was only 13,‘jOO barrels, against 47,000 barrels the same time last year, and the moat of the I9.U00 barrels was supposed to beheld for Use The area for the cultivation of cotton in Egypt, instead of being almost Bdmitable, at with us. is confined to a lisoitad ares, which ia subject to oilier culture except where the ffrice of cotton is eiceptjonaliy high. " The Delta." as that portion of lower Egypt t called width lies b tween the Damielta and Rosetta brmnchesof the Nile, b the cob Delta or triangle—HoieUa on the west, and Cairo on the south. The base of this trian gle b about sixty leagues in length, its height ad comprised with- about fifty, and all the land dn it b if i — The firm manipulating the contract b said to be Win. Young A Co,, of Chicago. They began operations in June. Tbb firm holds 80,000 barrels In excess of the supply in Chicago usual tbb season. They hare got the grip on lots of firms who ham contracted for foture delivery at a certain price, ami can't buy asm at the terms of Yoong A Co The market b badly disarranged, bat if mailers can be carried by outsiders until the new crop comes in the profits of the specula tors will dwindle considerably. GLEANINGS FROHFOREIGN FIELDS. COTTON CULTURE IN EQYPT. BY EDWIN DE LEON. B ; OTtDfi OF COTTON CULTIVATED. yyptian cotton crop bu attracted much attention daring the last six years, and exaggerated idea* have prevailed ns produced there, journals otherwise well informed, atonrd article which •tafemenU are freqnen] AJtXA OB CULTIVATION—maiQ LHOH. n-growing area of Egypt There are three dtfes at the angle) of thi» IMPBOVKD OUTLOOK. IHE MESIOENT DfStIH* TO XC4UK MEND UKlViftSAl AMNE&TY. No Troops for tlie United States Marshal at New Orleans. wonderful fertility. Thbfertil ty is due to the nailin’ * f the soil, and panlv to tbeease with which it can be irrigated; since it b Covered with a nrt-woik of canal, end ditches, by which a supply of water can he regulated, in ordiosiy seasons, with mu the- mfiiwi accuracy. The periodical rains which fall in AbysinU, Nubia, and Upper Egypt, supply the source* of the Nile, and cause its snnusl rises, on which the fertility and the very fond of Lower Egypt depend. The wat is descend slowly; the first flash of rain being absorbed by the sandy and spongy soil of the desert and the Airestcf Members of the Alabama Li'gislsture Unwise and Uuueressary. HYMENEAL. OltXS—QltTH—Hurled. itWintnior, on Ibi IxthlMt.. Mr WiLbeTA. Orme, of Ml ledgevtlle, lias Suite Heath, of the former place. “ Oeeplto or eioTm or marly weitcer, Lore r looms fair ia er’iy clime. And with rory Jinjfcv together HEW AD VEET1SEMENTS. A 1 SOMETHING NEW, 6 rabble ar- AuliJ 1^| tides, sell as sight. CaU'ogues '9 free. N. Y. Mf*g WANTED Kk!;s A nd hearts throughout all time. DOKT’T bunding now with hand.* truth-plighted, Bright your future pathway glows; May the lamp -fraction lifted. Guide yrmr footsteps tofts dose.** river beds; so that it is fully five months af ter the rainy season begins before the rise in the lower Nile is perceptible About the end of May the rise begins to be measured by the Kilometer, situated on the Island of Roods, opposite Cairo, and it continues rising until the Septeoiner equinox, when it reaches its full hei^tb, and 1* let in on the fields. Con trary to the generally received idea the Kile does not ovrafl >w its banks, andi* not allowed to do so. To prevent the possibility of such inundation, which would be disastrous in the extreme, at the time of high Nile, tue govern- mentHta;i.>ns large bodies of men at all poiu’h where damage is apprehended, furnished with raateriHl ro-cersary to raise levees or repair Breaches. The idea that the great fertility ol the soil arias from the deposits made by such overflow, is equally erroneous. A system of artificial irrigation by cabals, the supply of water in each of which ia regulated by offi cial authority, baa long since been sub stituted for the old ov -rflow, and from time immemorial the rulers of E.QP have devoted their ai.-uiion to econo mising * and utilizing the fertilizing waters of the Kiie. For tbi* purpose was made the great barrage, or back-water bridge, near Cairo, commenced hy MeU-mmct Ali, and completed by said Pacha, the object of which w.ts to keep a certain reserve of water in the upf-er Nile to supply the Delta, when reeded. Its cost rose to £4,000,000 sterling The Mnhornondieli Cana), erected at A tfen, Was partially intended for a similar purpose, partly for communication between the Kile and the sea. When the waters of the Nile have risen to their full height, the Viceroy in person cotnes to Cairo, and a formal ceremony of ‘cutting „ » to tbit important matter; for although cotton can no longer be styled “Kin//* as formerly, the dethroned poten late is alill powerful. It is proposed, in a aeries of abort papers, to give the results of pvatf n, and long residence in f to show what is the character He extent of Egyptian rivalry to the cotton growing region of our own coun- vy Special to the iftenlag Pti:| Washington, Nuvunber 10. There 5s good reason for believing that the President will, in his forthcoming met age, recommend to Congress to complete the work of amnesty by making it universal, and by restoring those to citizenship who are now excluded by the third section of the Four teenth Amendment to the Constitution. Sod a couise has been urged upon the Preaid- it by several mcmliers of the Cabi net. arc one of them is authority for say inti that he has decided to do so. TLOOPS REFUSED TO THE UNITED STATES MARSHAL AT HEW ORLEANS. The United S ales Marshal at New Or* .fans made application to the President, by telrgi-Kpb, Saturday l*g\ for troops to aid nim in arre-ting certain persona who were conspiring against the election laws, and who manife»:ed an intention to resist the Federal aut: oriti's. The President prompt ly refused to c< iup!y wi?h this icquest, de clarin': »m!» »c i->« entirely unnecessary, ts- p-c: lly when there wa« no information aiio**ng Ui»t ti»e civil authorities were pow- erle** to execute the laws and to punish those wno attempted to legist them. ARUb>T • F MEMBHRS .»P TnE ALA BUI A LKGtSLA A UiU. CONDEMN AO BY THE ADMIN ISTRATION. The action of the United Slates Marshal in AIaImm*, in arra'ing Democratic mem bers of the Legisln-nre for aflegtd violation of election laws, and carrying them to Mo bile to prevent a quorum of the Legislature, i* seve ely condemned here by the Adminis tration as un wise, tmnr*ces>«Hry and perhaps illegal. • If the account of the affair as tele graphed North in c rn-ct, the Marshal who made th*. arrests will receive » severe repre mand, if not the greater punishment of heiug disiutt-scd Hum t flice. hneb is the expressed view of Ath-rnet -General Williams. ami baa b» en cultivated time out of mini the narrow strip «f fertile land which fringes the Ujiiter,Nile, beginning at Thebes. But Uili native tottoo iaof iuferior quality, short in staple, c«mr»e in fibre, and fit only for the levnufacture of the course stuffs worn by the Fellahs, or peasantry. Its cultivation was very limited, and, nniil Hie year 18.ft, it was the only kind grown in Egypt, and was ex- ciiihiv* ly u*ed for home consumption. In mis year, when the energetic rule of Mcfae- Ymet M«u reviving old Beypt from its ashes, a Frenchman. named Jumel, walking in the garden of Mxlto Bey, at Cairo, ob served a curious plant, the leaf and ll»w»*r of which were unfamiliar to him. He ques tioned thegardner, and learned it was a cot ton plant, a few specimens of which had been brought from Indi i, in give variety to the ornaments of the g ird* n. Seeing the great supcloritr of this plant to thecommon kind cultivated in the upper country, M. Jumel I*nNight the matter to the attention of the Viceroy, and, by bis aid and co-operaiion, Miocedcd in making it-* culture general in the Grille hinds of the delta of Lower E^ypt, whence the great bulls of the crop is now ole tallied.. U waa-not nntil 1840 tbat the experiment of introducing the American sea island cot ton feed was attempted. ' Since that time it has been largely introduced, and the yield lias been fully equal to tbat of our best sea island. From some peculiar quality < f the soil, however, or possibly from the sssteni of irritation a<l >pl<d, it has been found n«cea- sary to procure new n*a island seed every two yetifs. tind the Jumel and Mako cotton has tli -reforS been pre erred by the Egyp tian cultivators. There are, therefore, three species of cot ton grown in Egypt: 1. The native cotton, short staple, coarse. •«I. Mnko or Jumel, long staple, fine. d. American sea bland. These varieties arc all perennial, but are sown anntiady, ei'*ept the Mako, which will hu*t two vesra. The Mako is greatly pre f^oodf alUiough the cotton it produces is not w , beat sea island, but rather better loan our beat upland cotton. The two latter species alone are exported, the first, or native cotton, cultivated on the Upper Nile, being jaed chit fly for ft riling divans, the Egyptian substitute foruur chairs and beds, and which serve the double pur pose of mans hy day and couches by nigbt, even among the richer classes. It is ul*o used to make the “Nigain,” or soldiers’ uniforms, as well as the single blue shirt which consti tutes the entire toilette of both the mule and female Feb ah. The culture of thin species Is not extensive, nor arc these fabrics now inanofnctuml as largely as f« r- nn-rly. Mcbemet Ali, who entertained the idea of manufacturing on a large scale, estab lished twenty-four large factories, employing twenty-four thousaod operatives, but it was soon found to lie unprofitable; so tbat in 1832 all that remained of his great enterprise were, one large mill worked by steam, and three small ones worked by ox power, manu facturing cMt-fly armv uniforms, and con suming, on an average, not more than ten thousand biles of cotton per annum. The great buildings erected by Mnhemet Ali, amt filled with expensive machinery, both for cotton at d silk manufacture, were abandoned, with the usual improvidence of administration, and the writer has ‘ r wandered through their large, fla, filled with the remains of the machinery left there to rust away. The rapidity with which the cotton cul ture developed ibelf after M. Jumel’s walk in the garden at Cairo mav be inferred from lot experts: the following statement In ls£l exports were 60 bags*of 100 pounds In 1823 exports were 500 bags of 100 pounds each. In 18.3 exports were 1,200 bags of 100 pounds each. In 1824 .exports were 1,500 bags of 110 pounds each. This. ti»o, while Mchemct Alps experiment of manufacturing were going on, consuming an amount ol which we have no meaus of judging, as sta'isticsare a m *dera innovation of cotton bad risen to ntioui *4*.* 000,000 pounds; in 1858, to 57,000,000, and in 1865, to the maximum of 560,000 bales, of the i •\vclgbt of oar own. Be) ond this point, 1 do not think it prob able the Egyptian production will ever jwss nor is it at all probable that it will keep up to thestfftgu «s when i be ext a rdinary stimu lus lately gives it is wiredrawn. The res* *n* f«»r this otdiuon will be fully staud in con clusion. Fio n 18*»2 to 1865 the production was almost doubled, in c »n.-equtncc *if th< Am«*r.eau war and the uicn aw.\J value of the s sp e In 1854, the quantity of enttoo consumed in this coumiy.wat estimated at about 6,000 - 000 pounds; and the u-ual price of the ginnid ctuion fibre in ihe villages in which u was grown, or at AU-xaudris, varied from $12 to 814 or 813 the hundred pounds, which would give from 6 to 8$ cents per pound net on shipboard. The cot on n-ieti foimerly to lie sent down from the villages in lar^e, loosely-packed bags, each weighing one hundred pounds. Now, bower, r, ailqsh modern appliances of cul ure, of prepara tion, ami pressing are in u*e in Egypt- The export ‘Of cotton seed rose its 1805 loth second rank of values. This cotton seed was shipped to England chiefly lor manufacturing au o.l found to Ik admirably adapted to lubric nine machinery, iMuLaiao for use as a valuable i« rtiiizer. T^iik Is a new exportation from E »ypt due to the enterprise of a speculative Englishman who first conceived the idea of utilizing a hitherto worthies* product; for in roost parte of E.:ypt the only fertiliz'^r needed is water, Vho rich MHi requiring only an*isture. With on thia, under an ardent son, ii cracks often into figures and dries up. Hence, rains b. log Infrequent, the chief care of the Egyptian nOilnniiwaa i* to .upply thit imp irtunt tf-cmiil, mid hi* m-nte ot iulnliou cannot well lie implored. In aid of the ancient syatem. which i* alntnst if not quite *> otd m Ihe Pnarao is, tlie appliance, cf modern Kience -re hrouxht to heir upon the laid, mewamfia ot me fide, and..team iwmua are now to he tern alonjt the bankt, la wanetaecance. of American manufacture. "IMaU-RreltS the prerent Viceroy, it a ti riiatgl find *«ry aocci total cotton grower, owning actually, if not nominally, not only ▼ant lrac-a of land end whole Tilia^aa, but the labor and eaey lireacf the FUlahn who work Ik.’i in order to appreciate correctly the preterit find future probability of Egyptian rivalry, ii will ba neceaaaiy to ooaaider the area of canon land now under raltiva'ion in that country, in character and capacity, the pecc- Jiaritica of culture, the kind of labor employed, Ihe net retain, the pawib lily of ttt eztention—comparing all there with our own. Tuese topics wOl be treeled in subsequent papers, id which will be given the result of personal observations extending throuzh ▼ • ^ Egypt bv the writer, ne passed in the cotton- i Sou:h.*ru £t j Mates. (he Kile” (Holey) takes place, over which he presides, in the midst of a general holiday and the rejoicings of the people. The open inp of these waters gives new life tc. the land. The South Carolina planter can form an idea of the appearance presented by the whole face of this country, under irrigu’ion, by looking on his own rice fields, when the water is on. Ia Egypt the system is applied well. Hence in the early sp. ir*g, and again in autumn, the traveler in Egvpt sees Un whole surface of the country covered by 1 turbid, sluggish stream as far as the eye can reach, intersected by embankments uni scattered over with the fan like crowns of the palm trees, rising on their slender, straight stems out of these apparent lakes The villages are always built on* emi neucea. The animal most useful for agricul tur.il labor there is the hideous and ungainly water ox. He wallows in this muddy sot.', and with the water-birds shares the domain. In winter when the waters have been ab sorbed, the soil, which is a rich black loom l teems with verdure. In spring our s as«n of fl iwers, the harvest ha vim; been gathered, tli»* earth looks bare and brown, parched by the hot Khamsin winds, which blow like fur- nance blasts, uud wither all remaining vegetation. Both as to time and treatment of the crops great diversities exist between eisl and west. In themont >s of December and January there is a rainy season at Alex atidria and its immediate vicinity, but not in the Delta. In Upper Egypt it s« idem rains, and sometimes there is not even a shower for oiB y months. The dews are heavy and copi* »us in the summer ami winter, but not at other teasnna. The deposits of the Kile waters constitute the only fertilizers of the 6oiI, since the Fel lahs use the manure of animals of burden for fuel, drying it carefully in the sun in the shape of cakes for that purpose, f hew mien may be frequi ntly seen busily occupied in fe - . . . collecting and prepari* g this strange kind ot fuel, the scarcity of wood in K/yp rendering this custom imperative. Mo*u-rn fertilizers are unkuown iu Egypt, and (he same may be said of steam-plows and other modern agri cultural improvements. The Egyptian Fel lnh is as bigoted as he is ignorant and scorns all innovations, preferring the rude tools used by his fathers, and the more educated of the pachas or proprietors have vainly in- tnduced improved implements. The Fel lahs adhere to old wraden plows draws by the water oxen, which scratch the earth to the depth of a few inches. The Feliab * ns slovenly and careless in bis work as he in his private habits, and os an agricultural laborer by no mean* equal to the rv>uth» rn negro. The water is brought up on the field* by mean.-* of the 8ak«*yu-hs—Shadoofs, or water wheels—wh‘cn rtill make one of the pictur esque feat up s of the river scenery. These water-* heels, are prohnbiy an invention of the Phaio’.c times. They are rude wheels, with a uumber of earthen pots fastened on outer rim, slowly turned by a water-ox mov ing in a circle, each revolution of the wheel emptying into a trough which connects with the urains, a number of these pots, and filling the lower ones, which nre thus submerged in the rivers. The harsh creaking sounds of the revolutions of th* se wheels makes melody to which Egyptian agriculture moves, and a strange melancholy sound it is. The seeds of the cotton are sown in Lower Egypt at the end of March or beginning of April, before which they oolv give one wont ing of the land. If the soil be poor, they pi over it several times*. The cotton planta are watered periodically by means of the >ake- yiehs—in winter every fifteen d.*ys, in spring if there be much kew, every welve days, and in summer, every eight days Standing water, or too much mois nre, rots the plants. The cea island cotton wilt not stand tht- water culture eo well as the Mako. Jjands are fl ioded iu D-ccmbqy, and water remains on f inns ten tc twenty days. Weeding fellows immediately The cotton watered by means of wheels as above described, is called Miskarri and gives on an average three hundred pounds to the acre. That which is sown in winter, and watered by the canal, while the Kite is at high water is called Busby—is not as good— nor is the yield so large by one-third It pro duces on an average two hundred pounds to the acre. There have been remarkable yields in *r© cial spots, rising os high os seven hundred pounds to tlie acre—but this is rare. JVAKl'Bfi. The Klaater Spirits of the World, AND >IU HOUSE 0* AKEftfC*. HE OUD-T BOOK. OP THE YEAR. STB report rale* of tt to 100 copies ia a few __ r * ~ *■* • Be Deceived* bat for ajKi throat, boarM ncM fted bronchia) difficulties, use only WELLS* CARBOLIC TABLETS, worthless Imitations arc on the market, butt only ScientiScprep-rmiooof Csrtx.licAcid fo^ lungdieesfesls wbe" chemically combined with oth-r well known remedies, ss the?e tablet*, sad six parties sreesatiooed against, urine any In ml* cosew of irritation of th*- hrxre these Tsblete rbould be freely u*«d their desnsingssd he ding properties are »^tcni?hlu«. GEORGIA* Henry County* Okdtxakt’s Omcs, September fS. 187Y. OHS J. LAN - Y applies to me for letters of *d- miuis-ration cum UstamaUo anexo on the estate . Jeim Taney deemsea late *.f ssio coomy. If objections sxUl let then be filed within Statutory time, or the letters will be granted. W itness my official rigr-amre. •• uEu. ii. NOLAN. Ordinary. ‘ Printer’s fee $4 00 B Be warned) nerrr ne^l-ct» co.d, it is essfly cared in its indptect state when it bmime* chronic Aj VC OOODSfEa'^ hW Tim; OtuCKO. St LeK sepso—jnty8dAwly P. WRIGHT. C W. STEGALL. WRIGHT & STEGALL, Bankers, vcalers in Exchange, \ND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Thnma««file... Gco'iria. curd, rave this day entered into a limited iMrin^rabip. under the laws i-f Georgia, to do business _ — xeyi*. *"- ** — Tn-j s the firm name of *T bomasrili-. . WVgh: & su-rt’l Th s treaeral nature of tba bust- ' “ f-e, is trat of iLnidng, Exchange and Com- r.nur P. VrisP ard Calvin W. Stegall general pet tn-ra. b*»;h «•: ilie<xanty and --t*te afore- s id, and Tnoma* C M tchrll, «•! the same place, is th-* rp* ctol par n -r Raid copartuerahtp n iriness this dati, September SJ,'87S, and * • “ c. Mr Colocidences. Tlie r»x>rd of coincidences is now having a lively run. A w*>man writing to the Missonrl Republi can calls attention to the fact that the burning «»f Chic.»go and the Michigan fires occur*ed on the sixth anniversaiy of the burning of the Hhcirandoab Valley by Sheridan with troop* mostly composed of Michigan and Illinois regiments. Sherid’in laid waste that beautiful district po that ‘’even a crow living over it woaM have to chitv bis rations whh him ” The burning of the Michigan towns is said to have been terrible, and -the flame? seemed to leap from the skv as if hy mag overtaking and destroying people and cattle by the roadside.” The Boston fire brgan on the 10th of No vrmber. On the 10»h <»f November Oeneral "liermnn Lsued his order to burn Rome and Atlanta. North Caiolins. The North Carolina Legislature is organ *zed and has a Democratic majority. All of the officers elect are Democratic. Whole families want)p be United States Senator—Vance and Barringer, and M»*n i mon. and lots of other-', u o numerous to mention. It is too early to forecast the result. Illinois Grant’s majority in Illinois is 55,801, or 4651 more than in 1868, while bb vote 9,478 less than in 1868. • Greeley’s vote it 185,014, or 14,120 '*jss than Seymour’s in 1868. The Radical decrease therefore is not qnite half os much aa the Democratic decrease, will thus bo seen that t.*ere were not enough Liberals, with all the Democrats, to have changed the resu:t in Illinois. The Democratic v .te at the 'art election was about 116,000. A picity full vote was polled at the recent election. The Liberal strength in Illinois is about the decrease of Grant’s vote f ora the - ote of 186**, viz 478. tST For one we never expressed a direct opinion as to the result—were always doubt ful—but we did assert—and now adhere te naciously to the belief—that we- the Demo cratic party—pursued the right course in ac ce*>ting the Cincinnati nominee. Wesutren den d no principles'—made no sacrifice. A straight-out Democratic nominee would not have carried a half dozen 8l*tes. In thi.- fight Horace Greeley and Gr-'z Brown leal in a reform movement that will uliimalelv succeed. The canoe whs right ami just and will triumph at lost— Vnld»*Ui Tthic\ fiyThe only surviving relative of John Howard F»yne, aulhnr of *• Home, Sweet Home” is Mrs. Lnener. the wife of a clergy- -r>m wt tbvtford Sint ion, Westcheeeter county New York. Nlark Iwain'i Troubles. It turns out now that the real cause of Mark Twains recent funny and fcrooiotis piotest against the works of ilatlen in intro ducing his works to the EngiLh public, with his (ilatten’s) swash interlarded, was ’not wholly literary rage—for it is related that flatten, when in California, made a whimsi cal reference to Twain’.- marriage. The h u - morist never could abide him afterward. Hattfii’s “notice” was m-t without humor, as will be se»-n. It runs: “Alark Twain, who, when be bas been long enough sob; r to per il it an estimate, bos been uniformly found to hear a spotless character, has got married. It was not the act of a desperate mm—it was not committed while laboring under tem porary insanity; his insanity is not of ;h..t type, n«»r di>es ho labor; it was the cool, methodical, cumulative calculation of human nature working in the breast of an orphan hankering for »om; one with a fortune to love—«mne one with a bank account to ca revs. For years* he has felt this matrimony coming ou. T.vcr since he left Califoreti-t there lias b'en on undertone of despair running through nil his letters like the subdued wail of a pig beneath a wn«h tub. He felt that he was going, that no earthly power could s ve Mm; but, as a concession to bis weeping publishers, he Tried a change of climate by p itting on n lin*-i: C’.mt and wrt'iug »e p ra from the West Indies. Vhen he trieii rhntwrb, and durum hi* latter months he w.-.s nl^ays const .ndy under the inflaence of this jmwe? ful drug. But rhnbnrb, wniie it may give a fitful glitter unne eye and adrceitfui readme*s to the giiU. cannot loug delay the pang* of approaciiing marriage. Uhubiurb was‘not what Mark wanted. Well that genial spirit has passed away; that loving, bright *m !e will n • more gre- 't thee.tr y baf-keeocr.nar the old familiar “chalk it down” delight his ear. P»*or Msik! He wn»> a good schemer, but he couldn’t Ik made to work.” Nstne*a. A young mar. who wert from this office two years ago, to gain a living In a dis art c : imc, returned Friday night with a pair of side whiskers. A new shade of silk is covered hy a very deadly poison, and in one dress, there is enough poison to instantly kill the most dis tant relative of the young man courting the weaier. A InndUdv who rejoiced to find that she could rent her upper rooms to a couple with out children writes to learn bow long it re quires for a middle-agtd man to become an accomplished clog-dancer. The effect of tbe suppression «f the liqnor traffic is already visible m Danbury. A wo man who,one month ago, hardly knew where to get bread for her children, now has a com plete aet of new jewelry,—laribury Jem. States Atlanta, Ga , November 20.1872. Editor* Constitution: I notice in your valu able paper of the 12th, an article headet “The Hon Ben. Hill for United biab-s item tfirand I oelieve myself, like “Democrat, that we can do much to place Georgia sidelo side as the peer of auy Stale in tbe Federal Council. But I differ very much with ‘•Democrat” how to effect that end. myself deny that we need a con- stiiu'ional lawyer st this time to serve us properly in the Federal Con gress. Our statesmen have been discussing and defining constitutional and the States Co.. Mfr. 79 Va-ran. N Y. JnilliQTWi i -ump fur I)!u«^te-i Catalogue < DlllludlS I tJuiidlng A. J ‘ “ loirti street, New York. 85h.70 OxUdes pnuted. OUNG MEN. TEMMEKS LAuLc.- or JllMs TEJtri! Agents wnn>*d in every cuanty, for •-*rhe People’* standard ttibie*” 5oU illnstznriona. Kxtrateri.«. Pru«>i<ectci ilrcm Ziegler A McCnrdr. MS Arch street. Phil*. DIE* *ND uBN Ij wjuiteil to sell Protean Dot ton Wiole Batter *, 25 cts; Batton Worker, 50 cte; N edle TrrcsdJ*.' Thim ble.’25 cte; Moiocco NeedlVBook. 50 cte; (GUnre sad 5 papers small Meedira. $15 per day Mir -; earn pie free tu any one at above price TtlOUNtiN & CO.. 596 Broadway, N. Y. comnicLces itch- th ee yrare from date. Tbonuts .. «-ll. tbe cLU i e.tner, baa paid Into the o mn flock T. n Vu«u«4*d Doiltra. Dated this Sept b*r2, 13*1. ARTniR P;WH1GUT, CALVIN W STEGALL, Til* *S. C. MI i'CHxLL. W tre a -I X Smith, Notary Public. Grand Lodge of Georgia. HE 'Cent*on o f Capital a « and alt perfonr having o ered’-y the re*olut;o of h F A . M., h- week lu this clt.. _ cunipVte'he Grand t o- ge Ha l no^ In comraof an At n.bt-r.y street, the Gnu d Master is bwiz d to h'VO i» eaed oocds of the«-rand Lodge, rn. ten -esreto run, redefmnble in ftvejearaat tion or the Gran* 1»dge. bearing ten per cent. interest. p»yaol»- sen i-annu Uy. Tbe?e bond- « LI be nipp y s-.-cu'-e by a mortg «c on ti e building and * t. u£.u Miiich $ have already been ex App^cations U r these bonds may be made to Geo. Adxai-, Chairtn >n of the nalftilnv Comm-ttee; J> s. K. We us, Gr nd Treasurer, or to the under signed udr- ss eith rat Macon, Georgia^ no 14 -« 3t&«2t GEORGIA* ISe-ricM County ^^711 RKAS, Uaniima 8 inn'’ns, cnardlan for the —- Kirkland, d*ceai hr.vln? spp led Jor letter? of dusmissiou from trust tSd .... the time , by Mid letters should not be September «dtb. 1872 e, if any they have, with!' _ d by law, •'ranted. G> OlKitA, rsKnlb County* OKPijraer’s Omcr, November 21, 1872. RS J\NE TlIbN .rf having appHidto me for M b tt. ra ft gn rd.aushlp, of »he perron Mifl prop erty or Mnriha Ja -o a» d Nancy Turner, minors of *7111. J. Tar* er, -a epf Newton county, acceised. All p*f'-* n- wcern* d are hereby notified to their objections if any they have, within the time “■ r ■ • will be granted raid appll- nov23-".4w Primer NO LICK. WWfiS lw *o’d on the 2’d day cf December next. raining 49 acres, 12 Mere* „ J ptice «f l»*’d. cleared, and : h« remal-der In the vroo s and well 11tub re t. • g«»od hone.-with three rooms and two cnirn ey«. r.l*o a s od kl rh u ana a good well of wau-r. Fur Farther porticahirs, apply »o M B BOYCE. nov23 v.3: N -cro**. «i OlFTfHTElpmSE The only Reliable Gift Distribution in the Country! L D. Sice’s Nineteenth FiRWH AXVDAL DISTRJBDTIOY, To be Drawn Wednesday, Jan. 1st* ’73 $200, 000 00 T n Ynlnablo Oil tn I $ 10,000 10,0 00 5 Prizes cf $1C00 each 10 Prizes of $600 d>tlo One Span of Matched Horses, with Family Carrirgo and Silver-»7ouated Harness, worth $1,500! - P v** ••nrm- « Ac Bagyies, with Silver. Ttonutrd llsrneiky worth fiGUO each. Five Fine-Toned Rosewood Pianos, wo: th $500 eacb! 25 Family hewing Itlnclr nes* worth IlOU each X 12390 Ontd mid Hltxr Ijtcer TTunting Witches (in all) worth from §20 to §300 each * G>ld rh.i n Silv r-ware, Jewelty. etc., etc. Number of G.fts 25,000! Tickets Limited to 100,000! igeutN Wonted to Self XIcKeta whom Liber %I Pre -iumi will be Paid! SlngTe Tickets *2; Six T!ck. ts$iO; Twelve Tickets $2 ; Twenty Five $40. (irmlar** con; lining a fall lin of prixes, a descrip tion of the 11 ai ner« f drawing, and other informs in rrf>>renee t«» the Distribution, will be sent to ordering them. All letters mast be sddressid acres more or Kao, or land, being in 2d district originally Henry, now Braiding n r. bold as reJ estate of John II. Sprue*, de ed. Terms cosh. October t«h 1872. Wit. H. SPKtk if, Ex- cutor. Price 25 cents a box. Send for Circular. GbORfilAy Henry County. Oiuuxabt'b Orncz, November 11th, 1872. WM. L. MASON has applied for exemption of % > person Utr And setting apart and val.iatl<>n of homes: Ad and I wi lpaas i pontheaatne at 10 o'clock, on the 25ih day of November, 1872, at my agents mwfits p. h WtiEK— . „ v will prove i* o forf. it $5.0>j0. New pautrd July 18. ^ SampUwfiee to all. Address W. u. Ciil KSTKK 267 Broadway. N Y. wiih *ent free by mail. Address, wlih ernt retnm stamp. M. YuUxG At CO. “ \* * iondt street. New Xork. AGENTS! ARAUE CHANCE furnished ana expensr . COUL instamljiy. This simple mei.u can possess, free, by mail, for »5 cents, together with a marriage guide, E-?3ri»ti.in Oracle, Dreams. Hii>ts to Lokies, Wedding-Night &hlrt, -ac. A qnrta- book. LLfAM A> CO., Kobe., » nUa. Thea-Nectar. A Pure ChineseTca THE BEST TEA IMPORTED. Warranted to suit ati tastes. . JAck get ool' 90 and SO Pound Boxes. For sale at W holesale only by tub & BE1 Atianttc & Pacific Tea Co, P. O Bux55ub Xe* Y«>ra city. via 48! Broa'l'*ay. N. Y.. ..... ^ tO«» PIANOS, MEL 0DEO NS, and OBOnNS, of six first-class makers, includ ng U'a tew' at very low priers l«r Cash; or part cash, and balance in small monthly installments New 7-octanefirst caasS PI A »OS modem improvements, for fiT 7 » cash. Now ready a OONCElt j 0 1‘Alt- LOR ORGAN, the most beautiful style and perfect tone ever made. Illustrated Catalogues matted. Sheet Music and Music Merchandise. A^tnts wonted toc*nvo»» fur the great combination THE GREAT ILlUS i Rated PaOPLe’o week ly. tie best and ch>Apest papex published. DIO • Kltiia ana a corpse of host mpulau author- write exclusively for it. We give A copy of the paralleled chr*»mo, JUST SO HIGH 'rom twenty-hf pay s like tni- ben ^ for terms; and secure territory for this t,rent en terprise at ouce. MACLKaN.STODDART&CO., Publishers Philadelphia. F*.. or f incinPHti <»hio. rr $75 to $250 per month, & male and female, to introduce the GENUINE OVfiD COMMON SBN-^K FAMILk SEW- rm ING MACHINE. This machluewili stitch, hem, ~ Ml, tack, quilt, con., bind, braid and embroider s. in a mod superior mannt-r. Pnce only $i5. Fully liCf-n-ed and warranted for five years. W* I stronger, more beanuful, or more tlasL I than oats. It makes tbe **Elast ; c Lo'-k rititen. zn ’-very autch con be cut. and still the cloth cannot -W be polled apart without tearing it. We pay ogen; from 5'i5 to $250 per month and exp« - commotion irom whicn twice that aaiouut kr.be made. Address SaCOMB .v, CO., Boston, _TrMass.; Pittsburg, Pa; Chicago, 111., or bu Loui.-*, MistKiuri «E TS WAN * ED EVI HYWHEUE .tosell tee best low priced Com-bheliei patf-ntcxuL; _ l et fanners and everybody - ho h.i Cheap Farms 1 Free Homes On the line of Uie UNION PAClrlC RalonOAD? 12*000 OO t) acres of the uest Farming and ML era! La ds iu America- 3*000*4HMI Acres In Nebraska, in the Platte Vaifey, AlildL Climate, Fertile Soil, for • •rain growing and btock Paining unsurpassed by any in the Uni^a Mates. CHE vpkR IN PRICE, more favorable terms given, and more convenient to market than can * elsewhere. Free Horn . tfcadE.for Actual Settlers, The beat location for Colonies -aoldiers ei'titled a Homestead of 1GO Ac.ca Send for the new Descriptive Pamphlet, wi'hnsw maps, pablisheo in English, German, stwediah Danish, mallet free ever v where. Address, O V. DAVIS, Land Com’r U. P. R. R. Co Oxana. Nfb. DUTY OFF TEAS TH? GRSA** AMEUCCAN TEA CX7MPANY have bnsines» con*.ea:ons withuli .hepriucipol porta of China and Japan, and Import their Tern din ct from place of growth, thus saving the cons .m<-r from 5 to 8 profits. It is now nlmut 12 years since the Com pany was organized—and it has Ikj n a sp eudid cess from the very li-su This was dnu to the that we itr.po'ted and sold only The Best and Purest Good* and airtribu’ i d them to onr cusb miers in all the United Suites, 1 or cue small pn»h ■a:. tbe Tea-grower and the T?o*conaum~r. rutted the system of supplying consumers in di taut parts of the country witu Teas at New York Corgi Prices, on the Club plan. And since we adopt d t‘' E lan We have sav<-d tbe people of this country M IONS OF DOLLARS article of everyday nually, in tjr. Send for Club Circular, which contains full di tions, prernii ms, Ac. The Groat dmer : C3n Tea Go 31 and 33 VEScY STBEi.r, P. O Box G*W New York Ci MOllf CFFICT. rijvhfs doctrines, for the past thirty or forty years. And where, I a.^k, are we now ? In deed we are worse off now than we were when they first Ix-gan. Every ten year old boy in the land is familinr with those discus sions, and they are tired of them. When out Legislature meets ii will have to e>cct c United States Ser at or, and I say, like u Deino crais,” for Heaven’s snke Jet members risi above personal favoritism and send a man who can, and will be of 8->me service to the country. But I sty for the good of the country, and for pr.gqx-rity, don’t send any more politician?, for tl ey have been tried, and found wanting. “Dtmocrui” seems to cla>s the Hon. Ben. Hill and the Hon. Rouen Toombs with H<-nry Clay, and the Hon. J. C. Calhoun. The United States is indebted to Henry Clay for h*r now ffourlsbing condition in the manufacturing, uud mechanic arts, and we. in the Nwh, are nf»w jusi passing thropgh the trial and troubles, lha’ the U*in J D. Calhoun predicted, between thirty and ferry years ago, we would do il certain measures passed which were then pending. And, in my bumble judgment, the United States South h »s never rent to the Congress a thorough, practical statesman since tbe death of those two statesmen; and now, at this particular time, since the inMitu lions of the South have changr-d and slavery is abo’ished, w - 1 need a different class of statesmen—we want ihomngh, practical, lar^e-hearted men of ability and inttgrity, 10 .represent us both in Congress and our ^la’e Legislature, who wiit gt» to work to build Op oar **waste pliMrs” and exhausted country—men who understand the ogricnl- tural, mineral, manufacturing and medium cal wants of the country. They should lx chosen from the industrial class, what 1 mean by the industrial classes, the farmers, merchants and mechanics. We have had enough of law, and States Rights doctrine, and it those questions have to be dhcu*sed wilhm the next ten years, let it t* done bv ihe Northern people. For everything Wr* may say on thobe qn<*ih>m> will have but little effect, bm rather add fuel to the fltm-s. I lielieve tbe brst thinj for tuis coantrv would he to drop all the old aspirants for office, and politicians, and select new men, ami young men. tu fill all those places, both Federal and Slate. There are 'thou-ands of young men :n the country who are well educated, and fongbt through the late war, and have learned more of bunun nature, of tbe management and wauls of the government in that brief four years of struggle aud calamity than they would have learned in a lifetime of peace and prosperity. Now. I would suggest to our Legislature when they meet, to eh-cl the flou John B Gordon, United Stales Senator. He is com paratively a young min in the prime of life. He is a lawyer and a good orator, a fine prac tical business man, and t» ebrisdan gemtexna.. His record is known to all. In the late war ne rose from a Captain to a Major General He would be an honor, not only to the State, but to the United States. Indeed, I believe he has more of tbe good qualities combined, that goes to make up a thorough, statesman, than any other man of his age in America. Iron. EgT That was a very tei der-heorted man wb«>, on being told ibal his wife, who had left dr the house only an hour before, was drowned, and that her body was found a mile or so bt- She must have floated down quite lively!” Is, 2>. SXZ7Z3, Box 86, Cincinnati, O. NOJ1C&. r pOLLED before me as an estray, on tbe 22d day of I. NxV* raber, 1872, by W. L. Hnhler. of Cook*a District, G. « . of Fallon county, Georgia one COW, old, with bl ck head and and wh’te buk and beily, aid tail. \ r>t sa<d fee-* If. Tne owner Is hereby notified to appear bef«ie me, i-rove property, pay cost* ana ex pense a»d take b^r away else rhe will be sold ou the premi-e* of said Bokler, tbe taker ap, five m-les fn m * * !anta, one mile from Howt Il’s Mill and between ibu Face’s Kerry and OeFoor’s Ferry Roads, on Tuesday, vbe 9d day of Dumber. 1872. JOHN T. COOPER, Cl. rk Coart of ordinary. nov25-dlt 3500 REWARD. [ HEREBY offer a REWARD OF FIVE BUN- DEED DOLLARS, for tbe apprehension, with proof Sufficient ‘o convict, the party and hit accomplices, who assa^siuTid my husband, Wfiliam P. Milton, in KHJay. Georpia on the night of the 16th day of Apn- to*L, by shooting him Uxroagh the winaow of *' • m, wniie at nis sapper table - 17th f’ay of Jam, 1872. NANCY C. MILTON. Tliti KENTUCKY LIBRARY GIFT CONCERT. $500.000IIBAIETOPAY ALL GIFTS A Full Drawing in Sight!I $<Q0,«G0 FOR ONLYSiO w (Voi»d Or»nd Gift Concert authorised t d'SL.*ibutiou t>y '.o among tne ticket holders: -ue Gran-: Gilt, me Gran i one cs.-h Gif 1 ,. .. c*? tO.iU); 15enshGifts.. 1,<K>0 each 1S.OOU' 20 ca-h Gifu.. 900 each at*b Gilt One c-sh ;»;fr one cash Gut,.... cv-h G ft, ... 6,000; 50-cash Gifts.. 400 each 5,00» 60 cosh Gifts.. »>* each 4.0WI 1 !00 cosh Gifts.. 20) each a«.toj<i.2 caeh Gifts.. 100each Total LUO Gifts, all rash $500,000 Tt» mocrj to pay >U tba, gift* U now upon do- One cash Gifu... posit, ard * Farmxks* asm Dsovsns’ Baxk, I Lnnisvtiie, Ky., b*ptembcr i6,137! | Tht- is to «itl r that there is now on deposit in this bank over h.*’' a million of dollars to the credit of the Gift Cam er ranc $501,000 or which is held by thU h.lit’ .. *Tr 1 11 m rr ' I f- Erica of Tickets. . .. $1M); 28 for $ for *Mj; 13 lor fSS for *3,0)0;373 for $5,iXih No uiscooiu on lees thau $:u> worth of Odu-teara t xoe. The drawing w 11 positively and uneqaivoeaHy p'actt D.crwbvT 7 Agents -reperemptorily required to d'-se rates ai d m- lc j returns November 25, m order to xive ample nme for the fira! arrangements. Order* for tickets or oppheauon lor cucaiara ehoaid be sd- dressea to Gt>v.THOS. E. BBATfLVTTBy Aiert PabiH Librarr of Rec;acxy, octI LwrdA.eafAweowtd Loaisvilk; Ky Tftket* for rate by Rcdwine A Fox. Atlanta. Ga WMlnliir.cUM'K IMPORTANT TO HORSEOWRRS B It 0 Ji 0-C ii L< OitALUM TH«? NEW ODOIYLE88. NON-POISONOU8 Deodorizer and Disinfectant, Has been used with great success iu Cun^d*, Detroit, Buffalo, Rochester, and other phee* in <he prevailD HORSE EPIDEMIC. tipr nkiiiig tlie i io»r» and mk -Icx, warning ihe Mon>tvers,au(i decomposing the p-*tson- «-u« • xhalaii' iis from the m .nuru and urine when sprinkled ■ ith it. For decoiuposlnf and destroying a. 11 bad odor* and Oti*eai, as well a? icruii of tUsesse^and^^uc particles in the air—thrown off by For purifrina tbe Air the ati mil breathes by hanging coihe* wet with i. h* ad, so tiiathe will not breathe over aud over again font air. To npongeand syringe (lie nostrils ~nd mouth- check the acrid poiKiuous dia Henry County. Admiu'Mtrato ’s »al Y VIRTUE of an order of the Honorable Court of O.'dina y of Henry county, ueorjrU, wi l be ry Gcorvta, on 'he first t ttesdmy t o-tl9-w4M Printer's office. novlS—w2w Gaardtuu's Male. B T DeKalb County. Administrator’s Sale. lag deecriben proj er y. bladvsr, the follow- Pulton County. Kouce to Debtors aud Creditors. __ ihe ettoc of Alston H Greene • eevased, to-oit: 1 at of la d >o. 24 In th* T4 h cUurlct ot original ly Fayette now, Fulton county. Also, the following lota, fr ctlon* and islands be longing to raid eatare: ioi of land No. IS m the 8th district Of or'gi alivCsrrell no* I'aralron ounty; lot No 872, in the 14th district of the drat section Cherokee now Foreyth countv; k»t No. 455. 17th dis trict of the second section orkiuslly Cherokee now Cobb county; tot No 425 4h di-uict of Apifiin? f-ounry, on*in lly; fraction No 84, 17th diaatet of origin *4 ly Henry now Pu'toa count', con tain In e 127 acres-and fnu-Uon No xft inea'ddtauietconuinirg 149 acres. Also. i»l«cd No. 1, in raid dis;nc* c*»i - talning 'M ' rr *', an.1 island No. 2, in raid district, coiitoin^rg 2 acres, and Island No. 6. in ra'd district. contaipiagaA acres. Ale», lrUud No \ in the Cth ‘ Tsforkli' *-—* *-*— * GEORGIA. FULTON COUNTY—All persona In- VJT debit'd to the estate of Sarah M. U--rper. lata of ■aid couciy.dec-a-ed.a’e requeatrd to make immediate payment, end ell pe’sous having claims anoint said estate will present them properly proven w. A. HEMPHILL _ _ Administrator with the will annexed. NoriS-wSOd. GEOBGIA* Poitou County. OaDCtoxT's Omcs, November 6, 1872. dl trict o jiaaly Gwinnett coauty. containing .jntaining 4 acres, and island No. 2. tn the 7th disinct of origin ally Gwinnett, containing 8-10 of an sere, and Gland No 3, in raid district, conummg 1M acres, ar.d frac tion No 42 in tbe 6?b district. Gwmn> tt county,«on- taininv 69 acres, and fraction No 249, in eaiddis r nct- containing 75 acre. 2 he same being sold for distribution for the pur pose of winding up said est -ta. 1 eras ca?h VTILLI a W l ZZARD, Administrator. This 99h October. 187«. oc S4-w4Ti renter's fee $W QEOBUl.t* Fulton County* OuDnsanT's Omcs, November 20, 1872. applied for exrmption of personal tv will ra-s upon the same at my office at City Holt, o the hihdsy of November. 18<2. at 10 o'clock A. M. DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary. no\~2’.-dltAw2t Printer's fee $2 00 GEOUGIA* Fulton County. Oni'txaBY's Omcs, November4th, 1872. Tuesday in Janaary n- xr. hfty acres east corner of «ov No 203, In old Sixth d'rtrfct. of said county, and aLo ten acres joining the same of lot No. — bold as the property of Georg-; W. Gray, word of undt reigned, and - or bis bmedt. 1 eras—credit un til 25 h of December, 1878, with ten per ernr interest. Go.O. W. WILKIES nov22 d30d Guardian. GEUtitilA, Deliuib County. OxotKoax's Omcs. October 19,1872. VT7HER"AS. J.G. Eidson, Administrator of th v • estate of te. M. Eld-on, deceased, having ap ” * for letters of ciamisslon from sa d adminiatra CitdUUlA* lle«ry County. Obdccabt's Omcr, November 18th, 187**. S AR AH KING and Robert Porton has applied to me lor letters of administration da bonis non, cum t* stamen oa mx<\ on tbe osta.eof John Wade, de ceased. late of said county: If objections exist, let them be filed within statnfo p y time, or the letters will be granted. Witness my official signature. novtf—'wlsmSm tiEOKulty Henry County. OnotSART’s Orncx, November 15, 1872. E PHRA1H 8. PAUGASON has applied to mo for exempti-n of per-onaiiv aod srttiog apart aud valmtinn <f homes fp^id. and [will -wssupon the ram e the 30'h day .of Novembs., 1872. at 10 o'clock A. , at my office. novl7-dl*Aw2 f GEO. 1L NOLAN. Ordinary. Printer's fee $2 Milton County. Milton County Mimifl’s Sale. e so1d*n the first Tuesday in December W ILL be sold«r n-xLbctw-f the Court Ilou.-c i ■en the tag’ 1 hours of sale tx fore door, in the town of AU-hiretta Milton counry, Georgia, he following property, to-wit: Two 1 ta of aid nnvh rs7 and 71, in the first nia- trict ai d first section of Milton coenty. Levied on as the property of #i Ham Tbonasan. deceased, to saiisfvati fa issued fr *m th« Superior Court in fa- of the sdnintstiaiors de boms non. This Sist day of October, lb72. novl—wtds GEORGIA* nulton County. Obdin’art's Orucx, August 30,1872. R OBERT N. ROGERS, administrator de bonis noo, • f tne estate of Robert Rogers, late of said county, deceased, having filed his edition, stating that has fuily disebsr- od hi> t< nst: This ia. iherrfore. to cite and admonish all persons interested to be and appear st my office within the time pre-crlbed by law then and ihcre to show cause, if any they have, why said letters>huuld not be gr&uu-d. Given under my hand and official signature. O. P. bKBl.TON, Ordinary. sej>4-woam3m Pnntcr’f fee $4 t my office i file their ohj -ct'ons. if any they have, within tho time prescribed by law else h ave will be grained said administrator as a plied for DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary. nov5—w30d Printer's fee $5 Printer's fe - $10 00 GEORGIA* DeKalb County. Ordinary's Omcs, September 25, 1872. w DEkEAS, Drewry Mauldin, Adminis rator of v v ihe estate of Benjamin Mtulfiln, late of said county, deceased, applied for Idlers oi dismission from raid trust: This is, therefore, to cite and admonish all per ms interested to be and xppear at my office, within the time prescribed by tow, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not 5 granted. Given under my hand at office. W. R. WEBSTER, Ordinary. GEORGIA* Fulton County. Oborcaby's Omca, November 4th, 1872. ^LIZ\BRTHRU^SKiLhas»ppHe- for letbraof acp26 wfim Printer’* fre *10 NOTICE. i tb’s S1st day c orei, o r the 1045th . ftfity. On. an estray dart bay Horse Mule, about iwci1%or fourteeu years old. left shoulder wi h the letter Appraised bv’o U inaingham aud *V, B. Bensley, to he worth sixt> dotiare. The owner Is hereby notified to app»-ar before mu prove property, pay cost and expenses, and take hia away, tire he will be mid iu Decatur, on the firs Tuesday in DcCenibct, 187*. W. R. WEBSTEH, O dhary Printers fee $5 onv2—wlm A <1 tn i 11 i st rat *r N Sale. b*-rni xt, b fore the Co*irt Il< catur, DrKalb c nnty. G- orgia, under an order Coart of ordinary of said county. Uie following . - „ - the estate of kufl , deceased, to-wit: One half interest irf mill »nd lot land coesis ingof 16 *cres of Lot No. 230. Home Lot No. 191 Containing 201M acres, and thirty acres of Lot No. 190, omialuiug in he sggrrgHte SUM scrap, more or less, about one hundred and thirty acres cleared, the balance iu woods and well timbered, *“ it-houses, pt-aco and’pple gi-od dweliing-hou^e aud« ;h springs ^ running through the farm, bold for division. 1 e»ms one-half casu. the balance a cct9-w40d i twelve month's credit. G. B.HUDSON. Administrator. (Printer*.- fe $10) GEOltGIA* MU tore ronnty. OnntN art’s Omcs, August 33, 1872. W HERE AS, Ann B. Binion, executrix of Job Uii ion. lata o r said county, deceased, hiving applied for letu-rs of dismission fr: m sold trust: This is, th re-fore, to cite and adutoiil-h all persons mtere-tad to be «nd appear ai my my office within the time prescribed by law, then and thereto show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be grained Given tinder my handsnd c. eep4-woani3m .dal signature. Admiulsti ato Halo. in the legal hours of eale, before the Court*Mouse oonrtn Alpharetta, the fo lowing lots cf land, con taining forty acres each. a mg lots cl or less, ss the property - iektonn. <;encased, in the 2d diMrtct of st ion. vix: Nos. 1087. 1<«8, 1049, 105', 1051 heirs and c*edi*ors. Terms, one half cash; the other incut is made. KOBiiRi TUOMH5G', Administrator. November 4,1872. Printex’s ftfe $10. novO-tds NO VICE, JAMES EASON, colored, MARY BASON, colored. Rale to Perfect Service— v i!ton Superior Court- > Libel for Divorce. August Term, 1872. I T appearing to the Court, by the return of tn-. Shciiff. that • he d fcnihxut doe j not reside in thi ronnty. am it further appiraring that she does not re tide in this *iate. it is, on motion of conns< I, ot ti red tbat raid defendant appear aud answer *' th side in this state, it d- red that raid defendant appt _ next term > >f tin » c ~mr<. rise - ha. toe caee be com iderea in default and pratutiff -Uowidto j rocecd. And It r further ordered that this rule be published inti State ureas once a month f jr four montns. N. B. KNIGHT, J. 8. G, A true extract from the minutes of Milton Superio. 2ourt. W. Ii. NE'BIT. C ». C no^*-wlam4m Printer's fee $10 this G4-rO(£GIA* (Hilton County. To the Ufirs-at-Law of James N. Lanier. Deceased N OlICE is hereby viven that I will apply to the Court of Ord-uary *»n the First Moaday in De- rember next, to raublish ac<»py of a Wil* made by J:<m*-s N. Lanier, decra-ed, the original having been burnt The cot.y is now filed in the Ordinary's ' — 4 Ail peraono interested will ft the r f-bjectioi o tile same, i iiefore that day. > h rwise their conseut to the ram" will be tak**u pro Two Valuable Farms FOR SAX.ES. COOSA RIVER. ©N EXECUroa’S SALE. HA i- itia, deceased, I ofisrfor rale those valuable J:-™* lyiug ou • oora River, About twelve miles from Rome, tn Kloyd county, known aa tbe old Carr p ace, and th • Quiuu place. The firat containing £40 acres, • *f which i*0 i* goo'l bottom land, withaB necessary improvemen s TTus farm ilea m Uie bend oi tn« Hi' er aud is fully enclosed with one-half mile of fencing. The health of this locality is unsurpassed, tne re-sl ience bung on a high randy plateau overlook ing the entire farm Easy and rega'or transportation •o K .me by s carab at twice a week. Bat rarely is . heat ail *ricer* It prevent?* tbe spread o' the dis- enae »y completely cleansi g the mouth and purl fying the brenth. Horses lllce It whBe they turn away f< smell of for Vic *dd which -.s poison, ting to Inflamed mncous surfaces. Futupi Pii tUoUics. Preparedon’yby i and irrita- ri* u - « &■ * ;< 176 William Street, New York. OTSOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS. It is not a physic which may give tempo- ary relief t ’ the sufferer for the first few fieses, bnt which, from continued nae brings Plies and kindred disease* toaid • n weakeuir^ the invalid, nor is it a d' ctored liquor, W lich, under the popular name of “BItl. re*’ is po ex tensively palmed off on the public as ‘m reme dies. but ti Is a moat powerful Ion c and alterative, prononncod so by the iw-.ug medi cal authorities of London and Pans, aud has been long used by the regular physicians of other conn tries with wonderful remedial results. DR. WELLS’EXTRACT OF JURWEBA retains all the medical viitues peculiar to the p*an and mo*>t be taken as s permanent curative agent. la there wuot of action In your Elver and Spleen! Units- relieved the blood t-eco.nc- impure by delcterio'ie s«.crj lions, producing scrofnlour or skin discreet*. Blotches. Fei- Take JUKI vitiated blood to healthv action. Have von a Dyspeptic stomach ! Un less digesu m is jiromptly aided the system Is debili tated with .-om of vital force poverty of the blood, dropsical tendency, general weakness or lassitude. i luiUHic/, naif™ w»uiw* w uecnuuc. t to assi-t Digestion without reaction. It will inflammations. Han tie to suffering worse t ake it Pi siren comes a btzntan. itrhool ;«rfect health v MONEY CANNOT BUY IT! tjpOBSIOeTIB PRICELESS!! But the DIAMOND SPECTACLES will Preserve it. If yea value your Eyesight use the Perfect J Ground frem Minute Crystal Pebbles, melted t ! thpir name “IHtniiTut’’ nn U.~rr, Lerises * togeth er, and denve their name “Diamond on account of their Hardness and Brilliancy. They will la*t mmiy years without change, and are warrantee super; oil others in use. Manufactured by J. R. Spencer A Co.. Optidana, New York. Caution—None genuine unit . _ . _ . egent _ stamped with our trade mark. Pur sale by Reapoc- * t the Union 8han> A Floyd, i, are Sole Agents (or Atlanta, they con only bs obtained. No s'catno a?, twice a week. Bat rarely is placed upon»he market. F«»r a di<*u iba- tiun among numerous heirs tt wilt positively be sold, mod at a low price The firm is now stocked and tcnantvd f«»r tne coming year, bat the purchaser will receive thore os. The quinn place lies one half m : le below and cen- Hk> a ree. of whh h 2 0 are cleared - m *tly good movements ndorante—water good . andean be h**: at bktcaln. The Memphis Branch hallro d in r piu ronstraction, runs within 400 yards of this farm, the river lying oetwevn, acd a good ferry established Refer to Hon. Ben. Yancey and Gen. M. ir,ja. 3500 H.EWARJD. ^ BOWERY LODGE, No. 81, F. A. M., hereby offer a Retard of FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS for the spprehunsion, with proof sufficient to convict the party or parti's, who assassinated our beloved Brother, William P. Milton, in £11 ijay, Georgia, on the night of the 16th day of April, 1872. Done bv • rder of the Lodge, and given under the Seal thcr< of. This 7ta day of June, A. D., 1871 TH'»MA9 F. GRBSR, Wore'ipfol Mostar pro tern. W.R. Welch Secretary pro tern. eepl5-w90d NOTICE. GEOltGIA* Campbell Csnuty. Obdixobt's Opuck, November 14th. 1872. . .of raid barr w HOG. of «hicn the following to a description, viz: Abo-.tti.rru years okL color very tight blue, with black spots; narked—split in each *»r, and valued at *• ven dollars by T PII dso- ana Junta A Luck, freeholders or said district, ar d that taKer ap be ali owed 10 cents per day for taking care of raid h g The owner is hereby notified to appear before me, prove pro erty. pay costs and expense *, and take him away, else he wilt be sold ou the premises of s«td Be lord Lacs, in ratr district, on Monday, the 25th di x of November, 1672. # B. C. BEAVRRP, Ordinary. Piintera fee tf'Vlfi—wit $64,260 Kentucky State Lottery. Legalised by on act of the Legislature. Most liberal Lottery ever drawn. Only *7,140 Ttcketa and 3,080 Frizes To be drawn Nov. SOtb. ’872, in Corirgton. Ey One Capital Prize of 825,000. 13 Prixes «f $250 30 Prizes of 60 421 '-fixes or... 2 Priz s of 5 . 12,610 Pnzeu of fcOQ'i Prize-*, amounting to Tickets, $22. Halves, $6 Quarters, $3. fST’Onr l ottertes are chartered by the State, and' «.rawn at the time named, under the supervision of 1 Prize of $5,000 1 Prize of 2 !50 Prize* of 2,M>J sworn i ommis-ionera. SAir' Tbe ora-rings will be published In the New York. < hicago and Louisville papers. tff*We will draw s similar scoeme the tost Satur day of every month d'-ring tbe years ls72 and 1873 t^“Be-.it at our ri-k oy Poet office Money Order, Registered Letter, Draft or Express. fc39'“fe«Hi for a circular. hMITH, 8IVMONS & 00- GEOBGIt* DeKalb County. Oudixauy's Omcs, No.ember 4, 1872, WJ HEREAS. Miles H. Nash, udminietrator of the 1 V estate or John W. Nash, durca—d, having appttcd for leave to sell thj real estate of said deceased This is therefore to notify all persons concerned - j file their objections, if any they have within the time prescribed by tow else leave will be granted nov7-wlw Printer's fee $5. GEORGIA* DeKalb County. OanraoKY's Omcs, October 23.1872. \irilERBAB, 8u*an A. White having applied for if letters of administration un the esta eof John W. Wnite, late of DeKalb -ountv, deceased. Tills is, therefore, to notify ali persons concerned, to file their oi jections. if any they have, within the time allowed by law, else letters will be granted said applicant as applied for. W. R. WEBSTER, Ordinary. oct25-w40d Printer's fee $5. GEORGIA, Ueli.all> Couuty. OnDiMonT's Omcs, October S3 1872. will annexed, said county, aeceaseu. This is, therefore, to notify all per* to file their objections, if auy they ha\ time prescribed by tow, else letters wd» be granted Oct25-w40d Primer’s fee $5 AdmiuiMtrator’N taale »‘d before the Court House door. W^„t: Dens lb countv, Georgia. ag«*e-f\»ly to on order of the Ordinary ot Walton county, Goor twenty acres of toi ceased. TERMS CaSU. DAVID BTILL, Adm’rde bonis i . of Littleton Rains, decenseo. OCtl3-wtds . Printer's f re $10 GEORGIA* DrKalb Cuuty. OmUNAUv's Omcu, November 13, 1872. W HRHKAB, J. w bwi- ey having applied to for>he guarniansbit> of • he pereon and prop erty o'Jails and hmma Wright, minors c * Wri.ht, decessed: This is, therefore, to notify all persons concerned to Hie theli objections, if any they hive, within the time prescribed by tow, else Icticis of guardiNnship will be granted raid *t«i lTco.-» as i*m lie. fur W U. WEBSTER, Ordinary. Printer's fee $4 novl5--w4w _ personalty and set tug apart at d va’__ tionof home-teed, and I tri.l pa.-s u;>on tne sam< ar. 12 o’c-ock, M. on Tim radsy the -Sih day November,'18•!, at r novl5—w2w GEORGIA* DeKaib County. OunxMoiiY's Omcs, November 13, 1872. John W. Toggle having applied said applicant as apptieljfor. novl5—w30d W. R. WEBSTER, Ordinary. Tib* B Oskca. has applied for leave to Mil owing p . . Patrick Lynch, dec^^-d, t Seventeen acres of lan L kn wu as ’be QU ARRY LOT, north and north.iw-t , r the (i.v Po«d- r Mara- I sine lor. and parr of ia»d >ot. i*ht\ three. In the to: r ’ qch sirceis, wiw mrw tem-menr Mon««*rntr son—% part of said to* ei^bty-threc-and Two Lota, 50 by 80 fieton Broad etrrvt. A Plat of aU w hich will be posted and exhibited at administration ou thee>tat< of James R. Rus sell, isteof raid countv deceased: This is therefore to notify all persons concerned to file Iheir obieefions, if anv th-y t.ave, wit iu the time irewriDcdby »aw. else lepers will be granted Prater's fee 84 GEOltGIA* Fulton Coitaty. Okdikart's Omcs, November 5,1872. dreuof William m plied for leave to sell the real cet>te belonging to sal • minors: Thi* is therefore to no‘ify all persons concerned to file their objections, i f any th'y have, within UK- time p»>cniv>d by lnw, dso lcivewill begranted said guardian as applied for. DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary nov5-w4w (Printer's fee $5 »VV. estate of D. H. Wells tote of said county, de- c- osed, represents th t he has fully discharged his trust. ions, if auy exist, on or before the first Monday in January n«-xt, e’se letteie of dismission will be gratted the a poll ran*. DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary oct *—w3tn Printer's fee $5 GhOKGIA. Fall OiunNAKv'e uitick, November 4,1872. M. CALHOUN, administrator of the rata’u < boLjc -tin Little, d cea-ed, having applied for leave to sell ths rea estate belonging to said de ceased: This to therefore to n«ti f y all person* concerned said administrator as a nov5—wSOd Printer's fee $5 GEORGIA* Fulton ronnty. OBDiNAnr'i* Omex, November 4,187*. jlfRt A. L. DOUGHRii f> has appli^ forhtu IU of administration on the estate of William Dougherty, l*te of raid county, d>-cea*cd : This is therifore t«* notify nil person- corn* file thi ir objections, if any they have, within the tit prescribed by law, el-e *e\tera will be granded th. said appllcaut aa applied for. DANIEL PITTMAN, Ordinary nov5—w-30d Printer's fee $4 GEORGIA- Pulton County. Ordinary's Omcs, September 5th, IHI YTTILLIS P.CHI8- LM, administ.ator on ratate.tbe It oi William A. Ohisoim. late of said connty, de ceased. represents that he has fully discharged hi* said trust: A1I persons concerned are hereby notlfie their objections, if any exists, on or before the first Monday in December next, else letters or diatntoCQ 1 will be granted the applicant. DaxIEL PITTMAN, On! set»7-w*m Printer's fee $5 GEORGIA* Fulton County. Okdihort's Omcs, Septembers, 1872. Lemuel H. Dean, f’ece.-tsed, repre* nte that be fully discharge d his .said trust, aud applies for letters of diamlsmon: All persons concerned are hereby notified to file their objections, if any exist, on or befo e the first Monday in Decemb. r next, else letters of dismission sep7—w3m Postponed Administrator’s Srie. I Fulton county, Ge'-rgia, I will sell h-. fore lot uumto-r one hundred and dftv-four, of the four teenth district of originally Henry, now a niton county. Sold a- the property of John Fattcrree, South Caro.lna, deceased, for division. Administrator's Sale. B v virtue of an crier from the Conrt of Ordinary or Fulton couuty, will oe sold on the . u.-daj in January next, on the preutires. in county, durit g tiu* legal hoars of sale, the foil wlnv leal estate belonging to tho estate of Richard John Ward of the city of Atlanta, in Fnlton o-unty, Geor gia, itcing part uf land lots Nos. 53 and 54 of th: * ct in said eoanty, commendi g at soaihv i* the Nurrary of Fete a. Harden A Co, side of Hill s rect, tr.ence alnug «-ast si street ad-at nee of tine hundred feet, more or lea-, to G’ynn street, thence east along north side of Glynn street four hundred and eighteen feet mm or less, hei.ee norto parallel to Hill street nine hu dred feet, m-rc or less, to the s utaern line of s -L T'Uraexy, thence west along raid line to the b- gin ning corner, in ail nine acr s more oi less. Bald property will be sold in | tree!- to suit purchas ra. Plats of which can b<* had at the «flice of Wallace £ Fowler leal tote rgents. Title* go«-d Iruits of man> variet’e*. It i* Dear Pair street. within about one-half of a mile of the main depot Persons vr.string a borne in the city, or to invest in ci'.y property, would do well to attend the eaic of this property It the new railroad depot shat) be loca-ed near it on the old Thompson vineyard, which Is ex pected to be done, this property will then bring twice iis present market once. Terms of sole One-third rash; one third in three moutup, and one-thira in six i * th* from date rale, tort two pavmcnta to be secured by note iskinp g.vod personal s- entity. Possession given oa t , firat payment and giving prop -r note of the otheyr *— 'nth si— * * following half of Will be so’d before tie < ’-ourt House door in Deca tur, DeK.-tib Conaiv. on the first rtn-s.tay iu D>-cem- her next, within the legal houre of sale, tbe * property to-wit: Two hu: dred aud fifty tana, more or h-re, th- s tate being thee*s lot number (252) two baud red and flf tv-two, and one hundred ana fifty acr a of l it bo 333 tt being tbe whole of said lot, except 60 acres in tbe northeast r.< »rnsr of raid lot. a|. if raid -and fitnatc in the 18tb district of raid county. Levied on »s he property of Wil-ism C Jackton, *j virtue uf and to -ai'sfy a d f» issued from DeKalb Superior Court iu favor of H il & ■“ , ' t — Prop'Tiy pointed out by Candlerva. W C Jack- plaiutiffia Levy made beptemb* r *d, 1872. Alta, at the same time and place, one steam saw mill, tavied upon aa thn property of Rooert J. Wal* Hen by vir us of two 1! fas, one In favor of R Jones Rob Tt J Wall, and the o-her In favor nfZTv. ngk * ~ Robert J Wall, to sued from D Kalb Sopeno aad by virtne uf of Robert J Wall nnder attorney. Also, at the same time and place, all that tract or ' county of DtKa’b. aud known as lo; No 4 of a subdivision of How»-d/ tand, and sold tfv G W Adair in Jn<y *869, fronting uu tbe right-of-way of the Georgia Ralirora hreehuudrt-d and thirty-o’»e itet and fire tnche* and rnntilng nearly due - oath on land lm** 1.663feet and adjoining Kirk|Nttnck*s land, then nearly east 978 feet, aud adjoining land of said How ard, and to the eas» line, corner of tot No 1, i hence nearly north 1,479 feet to right or wav ..f the Georgia Rallro»d, ► rid land contain' ng 2139-100 acres. Levied tpon by vi. toe of a mortgage fi la issaedfn>m De- Ka b Superior Ck.nrt, in favor of t-pieea A Koasarog vs George bbarp, Jr., and Annie F Hisrp. and as h**ir ptpoerty. Property pointed ^ out Jn^ raid mortgage November 2,1872. JAb. UUNTuK, abet iff NOTICE. Admin I s tr at or *s Sale. ILL be sold under an orde Ordinary of D.-Ka b county, i in December next, before the Court House door in Decatur, between the legal hoars of rale, me nuu- dred acres of land, mot e or less, belonging to th« es tate of F. N. Wri.ht. deceased. No 4-, in the 15th district DeKalb county, some tori) acres d-.-ared, some fresh laud epen; balance in the woods and w-11 tim bered. Spring of good waier peach orchard of division.' T' 0022-w40d 1'iug house, bold for purpose Print t s fee $ln 00. GEORGIA^ DeK.ilb County. • Obdixart’s Orncc, October 24, 1872. J AMES A. bHB*'P'RDhsnngsppl|.?d forth*- guar dianship or the person an t property of * Tiarlie Clinton, minor heir of i- lvina Moore, d«cea*ed Ail persona co'cer ed are hereby notified ‘ '* W. R. WEBSTER, Ordinary. [Printer's fee $4 00.] NOTACJB. _ 1872 by H. Uadgins, of the i045th District. G. JL, of DeKa‘b enact .-. Georgia, au estray < OW, marked aa follows: A slit an t two underbi s in the right ear, and a stir and one uudeibit in the left ear; red sidra; white back and belly; xbont ten years old. Apprals d by G. L. Craft and Ja nes Go*s, fre holders said of county, to he worth fifte?u dollars and that it is worth forty cents a oay to keep said Cow Tne owner is bereb notified to appear before ire, prove property, pay costs a *d « xp**(.*ts and take he- a vay. elsesh - wil. be sold ou the premises of the said Vf.« _ Hudicinf, the tai». . _ the:9th day of November >872. W. H.WEBSTER, Ordinary. • up of soul estray, on Friday Printer's let A3 K\ec«itor*M Sal*). B Y virtue of an on’.er of tbe Honorable Court ol 1 Ordinary of Lee county, will be so*d before the Court House door, in the dtv of Atianta, on the first Tuesday in December next, fifty acres of land. It bo lng pan of lot 189 one hundre 1 mod eighty nine, in the (14) fourteen11 district, originally H'-nry. now Pal ton county, lying n*s r East Point. Sold as the property of Isaac P. Cock, late of Lee county, de litl- s retained until all the payments are made. Interest from date of sale. K. N BttoYLKS. Aomin au-aior ou the estate of Richard J »h"snn, deceased. Printer’s fee $20. noitt-tOd GEORGIA* Fnlton County. Ordinart’s Ophck, November 4th, 1872. W M. A )IHMi > HILLadralns*tfat-v with tbe w annexed of the t state ,,t Sarah M Harper, fat* aid county, deceased, having applied for leav< sell the w ole of the real estate b lonrU'K to ««Sd eras* d for the benefit of 1 g ;tv»*s ai,d creditors. All |>ersons concerned are hereby notified to Nov6-wtd or d4t Printer's fra» $: un Campbell County A<liu'Xiistri>t<>r'n Hele. GEORGIA, CAmm, Coutcrx. | |N the firat Tuesday tn Deo* mher next, will be told \ / at the conrt house door in t-air burr., m sold county, within the legal hours of sale, lot of tot.d, numberouu hundred nud four (104) in the ’.4th district ol Forsyth originally, but now Campbell county. 8:»ld as the prop*Tty of John Dunlop, dere sid, * tbe benefit ot ihe heirs aud creditors of sa ; d dec**.« Terras cash P. M DU L f »P, oct9-«40d Adraiuistrator. Fulton County. G. W. ADAIR, Auctioneer- Executor.-.’ gal*. he Pat Lynch Estate L Uinta, within the legal. \ 3d day of December next, • » frith the Pomp and Fiz'inrra thereon. the aal' At* T rice* Mulra,On*Horse, SixWireM,Cm Can- ge, *cyeral Srtsof Ilwures, Twp Dump o a'Aols of a Btocksnriu Shop complete, suds •-—*ng Tools. sold for the pu'pore of maklrg a divis ion among the heirs **f Patrick Lynch, d.xeased. lERMb GASH. Oi-tob-r 18 b. 1872. P.TKR L\ NCH, U,, JAUEs UXl'Il. i EI,! “ 0 ™- OCM8-W4M irln .r - . (<«(» Admluist mi tor’. BUI<% N. B. FOWLER, Auctioneer. -le. District of originally Henry, row Fulton c umy. contanlng sixteen acres, lying abo :t w v mil.- w« *1 of tne corporate limit* of .hr city «*f Alia* ta. a Jo‘n*ng the lands of J. L Milbr, John Adair. Thoraaa Ak x- andi-r and «»tt:ers. Als.*, »er of Race Tat upon which th< t - ers. Als.*, or*- cl y lot in At_uu, c»<«* nrr of Race Tarek aud *1 stnal e.r. * is. 50 bv li* feet. I- re Is a frame store hou-e, bi lng part or , toting part e dlot No. s4 of raid district, s-olosstti pf op-Tty of Joftph Conner, deceased, for the benefit of rr«sri;ora. rertns -Half c»h; batonc - six tuouvhs with 7 pvt at interest October 17rh, 1*72. JOHN T. AKK1DGI4. Adminlmnor. i Prin n’»_fee $10 G. W. AD Vllt, Auctioneer. Executor’s Sme B Y virtne of an order of the BranreV* Coart of about seventy five feet on Pt-tcrs street aud ruunlng bark to the riwht of wsy of the Mscoa and Weston. Railroad Heine in the Khape of a trian tie. and Is a teent b of an acre, more or I* < cent intere/t. AdmittlxtrHtor’M Stale. N. S. FOWLER, Auctioneer eae. on the first Tuesday in Jam try texusu enni- tree and *ursy*h streets ard run In.’ due i a ong Peachtree street *<• Arnold's line, ’brace along . .. said 'ireiors-too(U)(«*t, tuvioorU-**, *o ForeyiH street, turner alo gF.usyt * ■ re t to the fteglMitag^ point, forming an angle, and being p’ rt of and •« t number seventy-eight .n the fourteenth district of orlgiuoUv Henry, now Fulura coa* l , Gror jia Hold W II VoNAHiJE, A unit i isttatoc. Atlanta, November 18th, 1872. Printer's foe $15 Fulton County Micrifr’w .vales f«*r aber* 1872. i premise?, k*ow Krtcs Brewery, situated in the 3<>uthwi*t« portion of tbe city of Atlanta, Fulton county Ui, on t.w first inereisy In December next, wlthra tho legal hours of sale lie following p’orv rty, to-wit: 381 half barrel-, 85 quarter bwieto. 29 hiigi*h<rad\2fi liquor barrels, 18 S-toct plank, 20 fe l long, flu bu-a it at coa-, one set coop. r*s tools, *«e 1-horse wagon, t-horro wagon, oao work tonrh and vice, om murtgace 11 fa. Issued from i*ulum Hunerior Court in favor John Rice and J.C. Konb&ri, Assiguea vs Gorge it. Hpeooer and Georee Leita scccnty. This October 10 h, 187*. A tramed dwelling-house; twelve by six’ee^ feet, situated on a lot fronting on l orn stre Lbctwcoc Fair and Hunter stre* ta tn the 8<l Waid or the city of Atlanta Levied oa as the prope ty of Jot n Riukm by vinuenf aad to satls f v a mortgage fi fa issued from Fulton Superior Court In f .vor »* f D. O. Town send A co. vs. John Rank n. Prop- rt> polnicd oat tn fi. fa October 4,1872. Also, at the same tins the Herring latent, one Oiebold i m rble trimmed tables, three eight fo- cas-s, five ei/ht foot tables, two upright rho# ewea, frames covered with Gerrcau silvef, one Howard A Co.’s Regulator, four solid silver pitchers, «ievea silver cu|«, two silver dippers, three er all stivig silver catra to pitchers, fifty five ('6)caser of silver w*ra,coutsia*c(- from one to three mud a half d< o-n pi«-era each, six set* of gold pins and car ringa, five pmri seta, nos pea 1 breast pin, six coni sets, * ne cameo set. right dnxen diamond •i-octod.w. righi dozen -’ed fiam d s 'cctacles, MX dozen eye rss*es. icii pair uf stiver framed eve gla-»e-, iw*» sets of gol i jos fclry, oae rat of pearl and sold jewelry ’ «ii>d on •* the prop-rtT of George Sharp, Jr„ and E B. KNijd. by vutas «m and to ratirfy a mortgage fl fa to Hal from Fulton “ tporior Court In favor of Caroline a H*>yd v-. btuut. Floyd. Property pointed out In tt. fa Ortob r 4, 1872. oetS-’da •yd. Property pointed out In tt. (a A. X PERKE’ SON, Deputy Pherifl. Fallen Cmint, Mio>l(f<s Kale, far December* 1872. \X7 IL1. be sold before the court boose d<-**r laths v v city of Atlanta. Fulton conn! v. (ia. wit iis i iw ringprupettv, to-wit: - _ t One ha f undivided interest in lots Nos. 23 and 21 of tbe subdivision of the Ponder Property. No 24 commencing at the Southwest c aner «h Ponder Av- Third nn*», murin g t*-t;h along Ponder Avetme 100 fee-».. v, est Thi if ■’reft, th- nci east along Weat Third 200 feet to beginning tor.nr. No 23 commencing on Ponder Avenue 2UU 'ret fn-n : lots Pr.ndrs Avenue ■ 10 feet to an al ey. th« nee wes'w i l.y 195feet to lot No 22, thence north feet G Corn.. *f No 24. thet.ee east alone tlie line of No *4 too ft et to to ginning C(.rntr; Levied on as ihe ptvp* riy of Josipu rry, by virtue •* and lo sattofy au auacV mentfi fa issued from tha Justioa <*»urt of the ,231th district, G M. in f vor of John K. W aUaca vs Joseph Fty. A.M. PKl.’KEnS'iN. Depti'y W ertfi. ftintw’s fee $2 50 per levy ■\M7TLL be sold on the first Tuesday In December V v next, bef«*re the Court Uow*c door, tu Atlanta^ property of i ——— mbv tier’s Conn of the 1 ^ ^ C. Bred well vs Wiilis Orr ]U vv m«d*- by J. It Tump- son and rettlrtied to me N«-v 4th, 1871 Also at the sune t me sod plea- four cl«y lota In tho city of Atlanta, two of aa d tora fronting fifiy fori each om Jones Avrnne and ruining be k parallel and S'!joining i sch other t o hundred f»«r and fiontlug on rensh street each fifty feet, bound -e •*" ’»••« —• a- theMraifHiBapaatChurch, and the i flouting ou the north side uf Ititah struct ( writ* the two before described) fifty feet each and rnni-liur — nttr ^ -* — - - - feet to aud fruotin* ou Johntou streegifty I to rattofy a (her 1,187#. time a»d ptoes, tw > fnm*d buf'd- « lhe Falr •♦runnda (or Ogretlor^c P rk) known as ti.e hkttiog ntua rat .-ecr- * *“ * iwt. lyiitir'i* to $V GbvitGl.lt Campbell Ct.nnijr. TO ALL WHOM IT MAT CONC H.* C. G'KKETT having. In proper form applied to me for iicrmsnent letters of i > dminirtrai , on the e-taus of Sarah Cash, deceased, late of raid C. This Is, therefore, to cite all and singular the «redl- ton anda xtoffcla of harsh ash, tube and apptr. my office within the tl i*e allowed by law. cause. If any they c.in, why permanent adm'nistra- t on shonld no' be grant cl to C. C. Garrett ou octfi wftM Printer’s fee $4 GEORGIA* Campbell Connty. F JUR weeks after data hereof application will be m*dc to tbe Ordinary ot raid county, for leave to aell ail the lav.da belonging to the estate of William H McLsrin, deceased. Including witd lands, for the benefit of the tielra and creditors of said deceased. This November 4th, 1872. . E. C. MOBI EY, Adm'r. nov5-u4w Printer's fra $5 ‘Campbell Couuty Mic-iff’a "ale. I ) T EHE wi l be ■ dd befpre the C nrt Itoura r ow In the town of Fair burn, Georgia, ot: the first of -ale. the follow i • On thouson-i pounds of seed c *ttoo Levied on bv virtue «> a moruage fl -a I sued rwm < aaspbell Superior Court u favor of W. T. Sima w ainst John Uiogdoa and Jane O’Neal, and made returnable ._ tne Kenruary Term. 1812. nfsaidCou t Levied on as the property o John Brog loo. ISAAC W. CARTER, 8h.r!ff novlt-wtds rriDbt'* Vltt-O ar >svy Fayette County. GEORGIA* Fayette Connty. Obdixobt's Orncz. November 4, 7872. E W. LEACH apple* for the guardianship of tbe • ptsonandproperty <>f Tfdwril Landrum, mi nor «ud drphau of J*p'ha Landrnm. deceased ed to tne applicant. nov7-w4w Guardian’s Sale. B Y vi-rue of in order from the Court of Ordinary of Pa>ctte county, will be sold on tbe firat Tuew day iu Jannarv. 1673 at the Court House door in aei*t county, between the legal hours of sato. T. E and C. W. Duff It's lot* rest tn ray cower, which con s ets of thirty-three and oo^third. 1&X) acres ot lot of land No 168. in the stxth district ol Fay cte connty. Sold fer benefit of wards. Terms Osrh. MAH I HA A. DUFFELL. nov!9-wtds tary’a office, raid Skating Rink b Kg 30 ny W I and raid Secretary's office besng *»by 80 feet, < Levied on as the iTtperry i, Kimball by \irtaeof and to rati fy ad tn l -tedfrewu tim Justice rtourtof t*ie lk»4 h District G M., In Urmr of o. A. rmith vs. u. f Kimball, tovrjr mad*: by Jamestampbe 11 , L. C, and returned to me November 1st, 1872. itmconatstiag of a slx-reom duelling, s.ld l uatad on Walton street in ihe cily of Atlanta and (3 S In uf*: )o ' i the 14<h District of originally Henry oncounty, Qa; levied oa aa the pmf*ertyuf Henry Hodgra b. virtne of and to ratl.'y a fl fa le-uod from ° otlrt if ti»et*5tb DlsUictG M ra favor Fulton bounty Sheriff*» arnica For December. .. ,5.-5*-3*siSr££Erzsssi: SSSSffSsUf^mV ^ «* *i«,ittltMKiiB,„i pUra.% met rr j> ir»i „d .11 ,uw (,m H) ^ I* twin* lb. «M'h l Of ..nd Jot 111 H. the 141b dlrtrict of oil f Jiujl, IImtt. ■rowFoltoocraoly. Oo-t^s boovted ream !>jr A 15 McCool, Mtlftl Pei kt non. rn.rn, by HudUt * JotMASld wet hy Jit.. M T.T inn oib' lo Levied oo u tbe jeoporty of Rdwird While, Hy elroe or. d to wliidy o 0 r, i.Raed five. Kallou Hn- wlnr OeA 10 '£ \. R . *• Edwoid tVbl'e, m>hw! ud V A GtfkM, lodoreer Ocmbr?, ira . AI.O. «■ the ..MO time .no pl.ee . ir.ct or mm! of Und cooulutae thr e ood one foerth PJ<> oeri., KOreorle~e, h».t«y lhefu luwli., -. oii.i.rJc -or.; Mmoo ood We.tern H.iJro d at fet-tl' ibeoee eoaTh! wwdly .door Mid right . t w.y .dUdS^^ S^* t ^L?e i,ro rtJ' 8 f*-** thence weeienudlT o!- eg thegudro fenre of m!o prea oer to 'be rroror imiS wo.1 comer of Mid girdra feim no feet the ce ■oat weal ward ly .'88 feet to tie beginning, togi-thra l^te amoa orry brick dwdlif g In which th*» def* nd- ant now resides aad all other tmpr> vemen w on mid SSSiTS. Jte2?! P «• e i-.rd >ilo by Tirlno if mod to MU.fy • o'OMgi -r rt Ik. Pb'Wpo,. SdmidwW ^TopMi> pointed out lo ei yof AtlaatA trooUneoe PrT ro.ree. df.y feet, end raonii ii back one handled ml I tec. fo-t lo an gihy, thence .long Ml .l er .Ity feet, toting lh.rn.no twoud.bWfMoryfruo.ddue lingh -m. ^oinded p<»lb hy the mid.nor of B D Sei k deemwd, >n|i| *7 *?»*’• *««. *' helm pert or lo dio: thfa ibel4!hD!.Trictoror1gia.!iyBmrT nowP.ilroo row. V i-eied no M tbe.r.pmy og WlUOioTNewm n- • tin.toe for T.bitbo J Pbwrra oy eirtoe •* end lo ... i.fy.Of. lMoed fr m Folton snp-TlocC..n.t In f» -orof F N * W P chl.'im m Mid W T N «en.a Wa-tee o' T J Power. Pnipery pointed oat hy Om- Ual A StcpbeoA pi.intlff'. •tio-ney. iarn.lt, 1K7A A M. I-m.KEIi'O.V, II. potycheriff, bold wtd. Printer', feu $* 30 per levy. NOTICK. XTOncZ Is hcrebv given to «reditora of Beniamin JN Littl-, late of Pul rea county. Georgia, dccaaamL to render ac account of thrir demands, no»#-w«w JAMES M UU410CH. Adm’r.