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THE |ORTHEA$T GEORGIAN,
PUBLISHED EVERT FRIDAY,
'CIV; /•
BY T. W. & T. L. GANTT,
PROPRIETORS,
AT TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM,
^VARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
Office, Broad Street, Granite Row.
ELECTION.
Four More Years of Cor
ruption and Misrule.
GRANT CARRIES ALL BE
FORE HIM.
FAREWELL FREEDOM.
GEORGIA ITEMS.
GENERAL NEWS ITEMS.
Greeley’s defeat is more overwhelm-
•ing than his warmest supporters coukl
Lave drampt of. The gains of the
Radicals in the popular vote have been
universal throughout the Union. The
New York World places Grant’s popular
majority' at 300,000.
The Tribune gives Grant 232 electoral
.votes, at the lowest, and 78 for G reeley,
'with the rest doubtful.
The Harold's election estimates, gives
'to Grant twenty eight states, and to
‘Greeley eight, or 268 electoral votes
Tor’ Grant to 30 for Greeley. The
popular majority for Grant is placed
at 350,000.
The Herald says, editorially, that
whether the result will be accounted
for by the popular strength of Gen.
Grant, on one hand, or the weakness
of Greeley and the feebleness of the
Liberal Republicans, combined with
the Democratic bolt, on the other hand,
it is, in many respects, the most re
markable defeat in the history of the
country.
The Savannah Sews says, as the
smoke of the conflict clears away a
scene of wreck and disaster is disclosed
ui$>aralelled in the history of political
contests since the foundation of the
government In no State has the ex
pectations of the supporters of Mr.
Greeley been realized. The gains of
th^ Radicals in the popular vote have
bieii universal throughout the Union,
and even the strongholds of the oppo
sition, including some of the most re
liable Democratic States, have been
carried by them. Such a triumph
must have some other explanation than
the popularity of Gen. Grant or his
administration.
The Dawson Fair was a success.
Spiritualism is known in Atlanta os
Modern Hysterics-”
Robinson, with his mammoth circus,
is taking Columbus by storm.
Panther-hunting is on the programme
in Stewart county.
A very large wheat crop is being seed
ed in North Georgia.
Mr. Eli Bradley, an old citizen ot Lib
erty countv, died on Wednesday last.
The young men of Macon misbehave at
circusser.
The horse disease is exciting consid
erable apprehension in Macon.
The Massey Cotton Gin took the first
prize at the Columbus Fair.
The gin-house of Judge John Turner,
of Hancock county, was destroyed by
lire last week. No. 23.
The Cuthbert Citizen is offered for
sale.
There has been a change of schedule
on the Macon and Brunswick and Macon
and Western Railroads.
There are five hundred and twenty-
eight spiritualists in Atlanta, and it is
getting so that the preachers are protest
ing against it.
The Lagrange Reporter is offered for
sale. Satisfactory reasons arc given for
selling out on the part of its proprietors,
The Cincinnati Commercial says that
Bullock is in Paris, and contemplates
Nile trip this winter with some of his
friends.
A white infant about three days old
was found at the door of a colored man
house in Upson county recently.
Physicians report sickness in Elbert
county, the diseases being principally
chills and fevers and typhoid fever.
The lower story of the present pcs'.
office at Rome has been leased by tlie
United States government for ten years
A negro thief in Augusta snatched a
purse containing nearly two hundred
dollars from the hands of countryman
and got off with it.
Four divorces were granted in one day
in the Superior Court of Atlanta, a fact
which makes the Herald man howl for
joy.
Frosty mornings have caused the quiet
village of Conyers to be afflicted with a
TLe agricultural report for October
says that the com* crop promises to be
the largest ever grown.
James Gordon Bennett, Jr., is about
to issue an edition of the Herald in
German.
President Thiers lias prohibted the-sale
of caricatures of the cx-Emperor Napo
leon and his family.
lion. Wm. Dougherty, one of the most
distinguished lawyers in Georgia, died in
New York recently.
A Califonia dairy contains twelve hun
dred cows, the milk of which is churned
into butter by steam.
The present season is said to be one ef
of the sickliest ever known in the North
west.
Robert Bonner, of the New York Led
ger, will erect a monument to the mem
ory of Fanny Fern.
An enthusiastic scientist predicts that
in less than twenty years baloons will
make regular trips across the Atlantic,
George Sand makes more money from
the sale of her novels than any
woman ever did before.
The Emperor William of Germany has
prolonged the time during which public
gambling is permited at the watering
places of his empire for two years.
Many of the most fashionable women
ofNcw York dispose of their society
dresses to the Cheap Johns for the best
figures they will fetch.
In Kansns, lately, two children, while
playing, shut themselves within a chest
and when discovered both were dead
from suffocation.
There are in the lunatic asylums of
Austria one hundred and two persons,
each ot whom believes that he is the
late Emperor Maximilian of Mexico.
General Wade Hampton will deliver a
lecture in Alexandria, Ya., within the
next fortnight, on the life and character
of General Lee-
A gentleman driving throngbt the
lower part of Richland county, S. C. a
few days since, ran over a good sized alli
gator that attempted to cross the road.
The wheels did not seem to dosconcert
his alligatorship much.
The Birmingham Murniny News, of a
late date, announces that Stanley, the
discoverer of Livingstone, has threatened
of horse
....
Ip ,
The Savannah New reports h caba
Double veting was a negro'amuse-
raent in Macon election dav.
River pirates have been operating
near Savannah.
The Reform party in New Orleans
are running G. T. Beauregard for
Administrator of Improvements.'
if-,-;;.,'
SEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
A. K CHILDS, U. NICKERSON, Y. tt. WYNN.
A Chicago paper is. talking about
“ the next world’s fair,” as if we didn’t
have trouble enough with this world's
“ fair.”
A female correspondent of die Wash
ington Chronicle writes an article on
“ Making Tracks for Heaven.” , But
the arguments she uses are not suffi
ciently convincing to keep the editors
of that paper from making tracks in
the opposite direction.
The Author of “ Home.”—It is
proposed by a society ofjournalists aqd
professional men in Brooklyn, New
other York, to erect a monument in Prospect
Park, of that cityj to the memory of
John Howard Payne, the author of
“ Horae, Sweet Home,” and if possi
ble, bring his remains from Tunis to
greenwood Cemetery.
Radical Frauds nr
County.—The bold Radical game of
repeating that was so successful tried
in this county, was also attempted
with considerable success in Richmond
counjy. ThclChroniclc says six him
dred illegal votes were polled. Ne
groes from South Carolina voted. In
the dusk many repeated.
Poor South Carolina.—The peo
ple of South Carolina arc very serious
ly disturbed at the prospect of a new
tax levy of over two percent, as the
parting benediction of the present cor
rupt administratin in that State. They
mean to resist it to the last court of
appeal, but the newly elected State
Government is of a character to prom
ise nothing better.
ft
Richmond
very general and violent drunk. The it with an action for libel for publishing
,The Result in Georgia.—Gree
ley, iu 24 counties, has 9,615 majori
ty,). ; The returns are coming very
slowly and meagerly.
The Darkey’s Paradise.—A res
taurant keeper in Washington City was
fined in the police court on Saturday
a hundred dollars and his liscenca re
voked for refusing to entertain colored
persons in his establishment.
A shrewd itinerant carpet-bagger
has been doing a good business in
straightening-oil among the negroes of
Mississippi. The magic oil is warran
ted to “ straighten their hair oat like
white folks,” and is sold for the trifling
sura of one dollar per bottle.
News comes from Paris of a riot of
some consequence on Friday. A band
of about one hundred and fifty persons
made an attack uponjthe Octroi station
at the town ofBesseges, Department
ofGard, and wounded a number of the
gendarmes. The latter were com
pelled to fire upon their assailants, sev
eral of whom were killed and wound
ed.
town marshal lias been in active demand.
An Alabama editor unsuspectedly, and
without malice aforethought, created a
feeling sensation in Camilla the other day
by insisting on the payment of his bills.
A lad named Harris, living near Fort
Valley, was caught in a cotton gin last
week, and had his head crushed in the
shafting, killed him instantly.
A young man in Atlanta found a cor
set in the street the other day, and was
immediately attacked with the hysterics.
He was in in a very critical condition at
last accounts. I guc: s he was.
Two new railroads are rapidly ap
proaching Rome, Ga. The Memphis
Branch Railroad, graded within four
miles of the city, will soon reach the
State line.
The Rome Courier says the Secretary
of North and South Railrway has bought
the iron for the first twenty miles of that
end of the road, and that track-laying
will commence this month.
An affray took place at Arlington,
near the line of Early and Calhoun coun
ties, between some railroad negroes, into
which some white men got mixed—re
suit, a colored funeral.
The Supreme Court-room in the old
Capitol buildings in Milledgcville will
hereafter be used by the Superior Court
of Baldwin county.
Another pistol in the hands of a saloon
keeper’s clerk was discharged in Macon
on Monday. The ball lodged in the
thigh ot Elbert Grant, colored. No par
ticulars are given
It is rumored that Governor Smith will
commute the sentence of young O’Neal
to imprisonment for life, if petition to
that effect is signed by a sufficiently large
number of prominent citizens.
A colored duel to >k place on the sul -
urbs ot Macon. One of the boys in b’ack
was shot in the chin, but the wound
not dangerous. This want of accuracy is
disheartening.
A citizen of Alpine, Chattooga coun
ty, catches so many “ possums” that lie
marks them and turns them out for an
other year. The farmers are busy seed
ing wheat and an unusually large crop
will be seeded. There is a boy in that
county eleven years old, a son of T. J.
Lawrence, who has cultivated one acre
in cotton and one ncre in ground peas.
Ho will make fifty bushels of peas on the
one acre.
CHILDS, NICKERSON & CO
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
THE NEW
DRUG STORE!
! ""IT'- - r -, r ... ^
STEEL, NAILS,
HORSE & MULE SHOES
HORSE SHOE NAILS, AGRICULTURAL IMPLE
MENTS, CARRIAGE and SADDLERY HARDWARE,
FELLOWS, HUBS, SPOKES, AXLES, SPRINGS.
&c., RUBBER AND LEATHER BELTING,
BUGGY WHEELS, MILL SAWS, MILL
FINDINGS, ANVILS, BELLOWS,
VICES, HOLLOW-WARE, &c.
8©“ Manufacturer*s dgenls for the Sale of
Blngley’s Steel Plows, Peacock Steel Plows,
Fairbanks’ Standard Seales,
Sawyer’s Celebrated Cotton Gin,
Water Elevators and Pumps,
Circular Saws, &c., &c„ &c.
Any article in our line not in stock will be ordered when desired, with the
least possible delay: Call and examine our stock and prices. nov8-tf
MY CONSTANTLY INCREASING BUSINESS AND THE FACILITIES Win. .
I HAVE IN MAKING PURCHASES, ENABLE ME TO OFFER ^
IREATER1NDUCEMNETS THAN EVER™ n CUSTOMERS
TO PAINTERS
I offer GALENA LEAD at $9 per hund.
NASSAU LEAD at $14 per hundred.
Raw and Boiled LINSEED OIL,
COLORS OF ALL KINDS,
TRANSFER PICTURES,
A young man name;! Burr, shot
and wounded a negio in Macon on
Monday, and was arrested by the
pqlice. The arrest was resisted by a
party named Spinner; whereupon
Mayor Huff ordered the arrest of the
aforesaid, Spjnncr, however, oyeraw-
*4 the officers with a- brace of dotiblo
barreled shot guns, and they left in
disgust
...The St. Lou is Democrat thus re
tards the discomfiture of a person who
smoked on one of the street cars of t!.a'
city: Onegentleman was seated on the
high railingenjoying hi3 Havana, when
a lady, who was seated immediately
in front of and considerably below
him. got up, nod without saying a
Word; slapped the gentleman in the
the, knocking his Havana out of his
mouth. The gentleman, on asking an
explanation, was told by the lady
*• that she would not allow her brother
to smoko in her presence, much less a
stranger/ He told her he did not
wish to ressntthe insult, but would
' mther that she bad requested him to
step, when her * big brother' ’’got up
»iul ordered the young man to shut up
nr he would put a head on him. The
nflair ended without a fight.”
There is a speck of war in Asia.
Corea has long been a thorn in the
side of Japan, and the lat ter looked
with complacency upon the attack
lately made on the island by a United
States steamer. If an open rupture
takes place between Japan and Corea,
and load# to war, China hasjdeclared her
intention of siding with the Corcans.
China, in fact, has been arming rapi
dly within the last few years; lias a
large army and a respectablo fleet.
Feeling strong and secure, like nations
we are accustomed to call more civil
ized, she naturally is spoiling for a
fight, and this Corean matter gives her
the opportunity. China has at present
fifty thousand men provided with En
field and Remington rifles, and thirty
field batteries. Her navy consists of
six Bjen-of-war, besides numerous
smaller vessels, and is constantly in
creasing. Her coast and river defen
ses are all in excellent condition, and
military roads have been constructed
in various parts of the Empire.
a quota;ion from the New York &un.
Mrs. Crittenden, window of Laura
Fair’s victim, is at present keepin
boarding house in San Francisco in or
der to support her family, who are iu
poor circumtances financially.
The New York Times declares that
General Longstrcet’s action in declarin
for Grant shows a nobility of soul which
few Southern men po >: css.” It is nobility
of soul too which most Southern men
would be ashamed to possess.
Hon. J. P. Benjamin, late Confederate
Secretary of State, as was announced by
cable a lew days since, has, at the in
stance ofthe Lord Chanced >r, been raised
to the rank of Queen’s Counsel—the lea
der of the English bar.
It was three hundred and eighty years
ago, Sunday, that America was discov
ered. If Columbus could have known how
voluble the property would become, he
would have undoubtedly held on to it
—until alter the election, anyway.
The hair has now climbed up to the
very tip top of our belles’ craniums. Iu
fact “ the merry brown hairs where leap
ing over the crest of the—head,” and
what sort of bonnets the girls arc going
to wear over the mass “ the deponent
knoweth not.
Somebody has recently invented a
very valuable trunk. It is made with an
outside covering of cast-iron, lined with
nitro-glyccrine, and when it is thrown into
a railroad car or baggage wagon this out
side covering is torn to pieces, and the
baggage-smasher is blown into very
small lrngments.
Foreign Ministers of the United States
are now assessed for funds to aid in the
election of General Grant. This is another
innovation on the free system of our Gov
ernment, made by the party in power,
and of a most dangerous character.
There will be a tearful reckoning some
day, when all the appropriations of the
people's money for partisan purposes arc
overhauled. Over three tons of pain-
phlctsco itaining flic Ivu-KIux trials, were
sold to a Washington paper dealer the
other day at three cents per pound.
They cost $12 O000.
The Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, Eng-
is engaged in casting an anvil block
which is to weight C50 tons. It is de
signed forn steam hammer of 34 tons, the
most ponderous in the kingdom. This
trifling implement is to be used in the
manufacture of heavy guns.
A cigar factory, after a Vienna fashion,
has been started in Baltimore. In the
manufacture a piece ol straw, with a small
rush running the entire length of the
cigar, is placed in the center, and the
wrapper placed around it. When ready
lor use the straw is withdrawn, and the
piece of rush serves ns a mouthpiece.
An immense pilgrimage is now going
on in France to the miraculous springs
at Lourdes. Pilgrims of both sexes
throng the roads in all directions, clmn*-
ing psalms to beguile the fatigue of heir
journey. Fifty thousand people are said
to have assembled at the springs.
A Paris medical professor has issued a
forty page pamphlet, to show that the in
tellectual development of man is to b 0
rated by the amount of phosphorus in
the brain. The treatise is in the shape ot
ft report to the French Academy of Sci
ences. His theory is founded upon ob
servations on the battle-field, where nt
night the writer had remarked phosphor
escent vapor issue from the mouths and
noses of the killed.
Important Case Before thf. Su
preme Court.—A Washington dis
patch to the Louisville,Courier-Journal
says:
“ Although the United States Su
preme Court has met without any
flourish of trumpets, it is known that
its docket is rich iu cases of importance
aud interest to tlie public as well as the
legal profession. The first in order of
the cases held under advisement is that
of Thomas Jefferson Green, of South
Carolina, petitioner, involving the con
stitutionality of the celebrated Ku-klux
law of Congress. The case has been
argued by Hon Revcrdy Johnson for
the petitioner, and the date of the de
cision is uncertain. It is not likely
that judgment will be pronounced be
fore the December term.”
TO THE VOTERS OF CLARK COUNTY.
With a grateful appreciation of the kindness of
friends, who have announced my name in connec
tion with the Clerkship of the Superior Court, I
hereby respectfully announce tuy purpose to retire
from the Office at the close of my present term,
8 JOHN CALVIN JOHNSON.
SEW BOOKS
AT
BURKE’S BOOK STORE:
Mrs. Gaines’ Lawsuits.—Mrs.
General Gains and Iter famous law
suits are again commanding the atten
tion of the people of New Orleans, this
time with a prospect of a speedy ter
mination of her long protracted battle
in the courts. The indefatigable
woman lias proposed to the city council
to compromise her large claims on the
city, based on judgments against the
innocent holders who have purchased
from the corporation property which
the United States courts have decided
belonging to Daniel Clark’s heirs. The
New Orleans papers says it looks very
much as if Mrs. Gaines had the city in a
corner on this point, and expresses a
hope that a reasonable compromise
maybe effected.
Outbreak of the Hoof and
Mouth Disease in the Argentine
Republic. —Tlie following circular
has been issued from the Treasury
Department to Collectors of Customs
at all ihc principal ports: •
The Department has received in
formation that the hoof and mouth
disease of horned cattle has again bro
ken out iti portions of the Argentine
Republic, and therefore, to prevent, if
possible, its introduction into the Uni
ted States, you arc requested to give
the necessary instructions to custom
officers at your port for the careful
observation of the existing regulations
which prevent the Importation of meat
cattle or hides from a country afflic
ted with such disease, unless such im
portations are accompanied by a cer-
tfiente from the United States consular
officer at the port of shipment^ that the
same are free from infection, and are
the product of a section of country
where the disease does not exi^t.
New Advertisements.
A serious accident oocurred in a
parish of county Cork, Ireland, on
Friday. The floor of a crowded court
room gave way suddenly, and of the
two hundred persons precipeted into
the cellar several were instantly killed
and above forty injured.
An old man, an inhabitant of Cornay,
In Alsace, arrived nt the German office to
declare his choioo nationality, “ You are
very old,” said the Pru«*inn ! “it is hardly
worth your while to make n choice'”
“ I know I can not live long, * was the
reply, “but as I wish to go heaven I
desire to die a Frenchman.” The
old man on returning home sank exhaust
ed, and died holding his certincatcof
French in his hands.
ATHENS
Foundry and Machine Works
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
(GENERAL FOUNDERS AND
•Y*, MaeMn "to IVtern Work, Smithing and
vSSstJStz&r ex ‘ en,iTe co,lecti “ n
Iron and Brass Castings
Mill and Gin Gearing, Mining and Mill Machine,
ry, t,te»m Engine*, Saw MlIU, Hoisting Screw*,
Lighter Screws, ftqgar Mill*, Cotton Seed Crush
er*, Shafting, Pulley*, Thresher*, Fan Mills
Smutters, Hark Mill*. Mill Spindle*. Hor*
era, Rutile Stalls, Mill Crunks, Com Shel|er„, „ v .
Also manufacture, and are Agents for. the most
approved Turbine Water WbeS*. Brooks' Patent
Revolving Cotton Pres*, Iron Fencing, Grave Eu*
closures, Balconies* Ac,
B. NICKERSON*
V -n -Mill TO at A, £ nt Superintendent
N.H.—Mill Findings furnished at manufactu
rer's price*. novft-tJsnl
THE NORTHEAST GEORGIAN
Is Only $2 Per Annum,
S&DSCTtlDH 1*071 IT.
JXTO'W IS THE TITVCE. j
UNIVERSITY LEAD, $i 2 ner .
The UNEQUALED ATLANTA
PURE VARNISHES, ’**
TUBE COLORS,
BRUSHES, and everything in their 1^
TO MERCHANTS,
I offer a full line of GENERAL DRUGS, at Moderate Prices, and the
PATENT MEDICINES, at Proprietors Prices: AYERS’; SCOVITT»n*
TUTT’S; McLEAN’S; SIMMON’S LIVER REGULATOR- S ’
RADWAY’S; VINEGAR BITTERS; FONTZ'S ’
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS, and
a full line of other Patent Medicines, at
a very moderate advance on cost,
A FULL STO*CK OF SOAPS,
From 30 cents to $3 per dozen. PERFUMERY, from 90 cents to |io p« a-*-
and everything else in my line at prices satisfactory to any reasonable buyer ’
TO PHYSICIANS,
A full stock of every needed MEDICINE, SYRUPS, TINCTURES, EL1XER8
CHEMICALS, PURE POWDERED DRUGS, &c., &c., all of PURE ’
QUALITY, and CHEAPER THAN CAN BE
PURCHASED ELSEWHERE.
TO MY GENERAL CUSTOMERS,
I offer at retail, a complete stock of CHOICE COLOGNES, fine EXTRACT!
Handkerchief, Colgate’s COLOGNE, CASHMERE BOUQUET, and ot!
TOILET SOAPS, Genuine BROWN WINDSOR, IND1XICAL, and
manv other varieties of SOAPS, The best COOKING EXTRACTS,
WHITE GINGER and SPICES, of all kinds, TOILET SETS,
and a variety of articles which must be seen.
gggr Frequent calls arc earnestly solicited, and satisfaction guaranteed in err
instance.
WM. KING, Jr., M. D.
The Poet at the Breakfast Table—
By Oliver Wendell Holmes. $2 00.
The Marble Prophecy and Other Poems—
By Dr. J. G. Holland. $1 50.
Dolliiiger's Fables and Prophecies of the
Middle Ages. 82 25.
The Land of Charity—An Account of
Travancore and its Devil Worship. S2 25.
Present Issues ; or, Facts Observable in the
Consciousness of the Age—By Rev. K. W. Mem-
minger, of South Carolina.
Premiums Paid to Experience—
By Edward Garrett. Illustrated. 8175.
Try Cracow and the Caipathians—
By Alex. 11. Hutchinson. Illustrated. 82 00.
The End of the World—.-1 Lore Story—
By Ekwnrd Eggleston. 81 50.
Wonders of the Yellowstone—
Edited by Bayard Taylor. 81 50.
Travels in South Africa—
Edited by Bayard Taylor. $1 50.
Wonders oj the Moon—
43 Illustrations. 81 50.
Copper's English Literature—new. $2 25.
The Cruise of the Frolic—
By W. H. G. Kingston. Illustrated. $2 60.
The Fire Shi]>s—A Talc of the Naval War.
By Kingston, illustrated. 82 00.
Kingston Library of Adventure—0 tol, $3.
The Eustace Diamonds—
By Anthony Trollope. $1 25.
Ebb Tide—By the author of Valeria Ayl
mer, Ac. Paper, SI 00; cloth, 81 50.
Mayne Reid's Works Complete-^ 1 50 pr tol
Elegant Editions of the Poets, $1.50 to 3.50
Juvenile and Toy Books, Games, &c.,
In great abundance. For sale at
BURKE’S BOOK STORE.
TIN ROOFING
AND GUTTERING
Done in the best manner, and repairing of
kinds of PUMPS and BELL HANGING.
all
OS' All work warranted and done by
C. B. VERONEE,
ov8 At shop, one door above Center & Reaves.
The Chicago Farm Pumps
T. A. BURKE,
Bookseller and Stationer
» 4
TO THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA,
Corner of Broad Street and College Avenue,
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
Has always on hand and for sale, at very low prices,
MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS,^
JUVENILE, POETICAL, HISTORICAL, AND RELIGIOUS BOOKS.
; SCHOOL BOOKS,
BIBLES, PRAYER, AND HYMN BOOKS,
Plain aud Colored Photograhs. Chromes.
Blank Books, Writing Papers, Envelopes, Initial Papers and Envelopes, and Commercial
Stationery generally, in every variety. The best grades at Low Prices.
WEDDING AND VISITING CARDS PRINTED TO ORDER.
ARTISTS MATERIALS OF ALL KINDS, ,
PICTURE FRAMES AND MOULDINGS.
Particular attention given to Framing Pictures.
Agent for Hallett, Davis & Co’s. Southern Gem and Steinway Pianos, and MASOX
& Hamlin Organs.
Pianos and Organs sold on time, payable by installments,
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E. E. JONES, STOVE, TINWARE!
And House-Furnishing Emporium!
eOOKISS AM HEATISG STOVES IN ENDLESS VASIEU;
1 .
SSroad and Thomas Sts., •Athens, 6<r.
LAMAR CO B, A. 8. ERWIN, HOW’ELL COBB
COBB, ERWIN & COBB,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
JSjP Office in the Deupree BnUding._JF%
Are Cheap, Dnrailo and Efficient
OVCEIR 100,000 SOXJD.
EVERY PUMP WARRANTED
laj P*rs» (ha Sot Them.
CHILDS, NICKERSON & CO..
General Hardware Dealers,
nov8-tf AGENTS.
YYTTLL BE SOLD before t.be Court
\ V llnuso door, in the town of Tefftrson. .Tack-
son county, G».. on the FIRST TUESDAY IN
DECEMBER NEXT, within the legal hours of
sale, the following property ;«o wtt:
Four hundred acres of LAN D, situate, lying and
being In said county, on the wstsnof Buffalo creek,
five mile. Southwest of Jefl’erson, on the Federal
Road—the place where 8. W. Stephens formerly
lived, and known as tt\o Stephen^ place. Said
place is well improved.
Levied on by virtue of two tag (Ufa*., against
E. J. Hamilton, for the years lRTOund 1871. Levy
made and returned to me by J. Y.\ Poster, L C.
Written notice given tenant in pottaeMlon,
September 2d. 1873. J. I>. JOHNSON.
nov 8 Deputy Sheriff.
rVEORGIA, HART COUNTY.-—
V_T Ord'nary’s Office, October 81st. 1873.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hilly hasappUed Cor exemption
of personality, and setting apart, and valuation of
Homestead, and I will pass upon the same at 2
o’clock, on the 16th day of November 1872, at my
office.
nov 8 F- C. STEPnENSttN, Oidimtry.
The Elevated Oven Cook Stove, with all Utensils, for
oct-5 tf material Wurranfcd Use Very Beal, f Operation Caaranlced or ao fair.