The Bainbridge weekly democrat. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1872-18??, April 24, 1873, Image 1

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The Bain bridge Weekly (illume BAINBBIDGE, GA., APRIL %K, 1873. Humber 30. r*EEKLY DEMOCRAT 1 j, I *VBLIJ'H*B Event Tbimdat 0 E BUSSELL, Proprietor. -JPTSO RATES AND RULES. ' -menu inserted nt $2 per square £■££*«, ‘“ d « *-«■*-**- • pijeht solid lioco of this type. -** rc !.Ic with contract advertisers. i are $15 per ^ Local notice# three month# are subject to -.advertisers who desire Iheir ad changed, must give us two “ ” 1 ^ltertisements, unless otherwise contract, will be charged 20 *n«l ol.iluary notices, tributes of j^TVn.1 other kindred notices, charged ■fj^r advertisements. H*erti* roenU " ^ term* "‘ a ’ „i „„ticcs of eight In ;. nr $50 per snaura. lei than rtnt rates ^ijnriunceiii take the run of tb# ,t contract to keep ahem in nlar la for c:iudidaaes are $10, if rtinn. ’ ! ,W up**n the appearance of the •"^pni and the money will be colleet- !tTUl ^ the l-roffietors. ' .. .i|„. r c .trictlv to the above rules, ' , nl ,|,cm under no circum- siT.scr.imox. nances, TEMI: ^ ";;„ K i n a |vance, tf.brfi' months, in advance. $a.oo * 2.00 1.00 advance, - - 1U LEGAL ADVERTISING. per levy, $:5; sheriffs mort- *•» saleK. per levy, cr.» of adininirtration. $4; ran for letters of Rtmrclianship, 4; appli es for diwinisaion from administration, 10; s'irtll.Ti fitrdiainiyion from guardianship, ' . ’ • n f,, r leave to sell land (one '5 nn ,l each additional square, 3; 1 (ion for homestead, 2; not ice to debt- !»nl crclitors. 4; 'and .^es <lst square), mi rjdi additional square, 3; sjvIc of per- SjMo pr'•jrji5- per square, 2.50; estray 2.^ J ulv days, T; notice to perfect serv- , T rulrs'nisi to «ortgage, per ■ XTf 4- rules to cstalfiftb Ho*t papers, per ;:1 v. 4; rules compelling titles, 4; rules terfift service in divorce cases, 10. jilni of land, etc., by administrator*. «- r,t„ r «. r guardian**, are required by law to rifllon the first Tuesday in the niontn. the hours of 10 in the forewarn and - W nftern<M»n. at the court house door liyrh the propci SCENES AT THE WRECK OE THE ATLANTIC. A Herald CorreipcndentDown Among the Dead—TerribieLights Under the Sea—A Female Sailor. From the Herald’s Halifax letter dated the 7th inst, we extract the fol lowing graphic details: Notwithstanding the weather has been clear and calm ever since the eventful disaster, the monster ship with all her strength has slowly and constant ly drifted to pieces. Divers, though have worked their best and have recov ered hundreds of the bodies of the un fortunate victims. To look upon the position of the sunken hull it becomes more aod more incomprehensible how it was ppesible for tfic vessel to have been driven in where she now lies. It is the opinio® of the fishermen* of the locality that she struck on the Gram pus Reef about half a mile east of the scene, and ran along the reefs until she brought up again-t the fatal rock. She is lying on her port side, well under water from amidships ; the hull is al- ;t abreast of the reef and forms a sort of breakwater between it and the shore of the island, which appears only about forty yard* off. All that portion of the hull from the forward hatch is severed as completely as it hud bceo cut with some piece of machinery. Ihe sea has caused it to forge ahead thirty feet or so, leaving a gap or passage way. where the small boats are continually running in and out and carrying curios ity seekers •from the shore to the wreck and back. THE FATAL KOCK looks close enough for one to leap on to it from the forward part of the hull. It is a small rock or rather that portion of it which was above water, scarcely the interior of the wreck. The waters were clear and^ every object plainly vis ible around the ship where she lay on the reef* All around the objects looked weird like; tb^glasscs in the casque magnifying the already bloated forms in to twice their size. The waters are very cold, and A chilly feeling creeps over me at first, but as 1 proceed it wears away and I enter upon the task I have undertaken with more nerv# than I fancied I possessed. The immense hull lies well down on the port side, which is broken in several places from contact with the reef. Fish were swim ming around eagerly devouring the par ticles of food which are to be picked up. Picking ray way towards the hull I catch hold of a rope and scramble up the deck. The place where I have de- cended is where the ship parted and a sectional view of the hull and cargo in obtained. The forward hatch is open and I peer down the hold. Oil ! WHAT A SPECTACLE is presented! The cargo has broken bulk and lay heaped up in a confused mass;*bodies of men a women, bruised and torn, were jammed among the cases and crates. It is a horrible sight to look upon, and the magnifying power of the orbs through which I gaze upon it renders it all the more horrible. Fishes swim in andjmt among the bod ies and boxes, facing upon the bodies of the dead. Limbs are strewn around, having broken off from the body from the continual action of the waters, which, when agitated, drive against the ugly pieces of the broken hull that stick up here and render my movements very hazardous. Having seen enough of this part of the sunken horror, I pro ceed towards one of THE STEERAGE CABIN'S, the one where all the women and cliil- point a successor just as any other j The Great Disaster of the Half Cen- property or privilege. So that the tary, spiritual care ot a people may be This is what the New York Tribuna disposed of in the same way as the calls the wreck of the Atlantic. It says right to shoot game in the owner’s that not siuce the British frigates St. parkis sold. As the incumbent J*Gcorge and Defence were wrecked off grows old, of course the right of the coast of Jutland, in 1811, has any rl. N«i L* ff tllC: thirty feet square, and upon this tw0 j 4,. on were drowned as they lay in their ■hundred or more human heinps stood for J bunks g cran ,bling along the deck ifii'o- pizcltc 40 'lava previous scued by , for I lie ale of y.nrre*ia property like manner 111 'lays pre- sitn- les must be given , .. the two or three In urs, until I boats from the main land. TljF. ROM kitT10 INCIPIENT of this terra.!, calamity has been the discover*- that nc*il' the men* a com mon saii.w. azcl one whose life was sac rificed in effort. fio save others, was a v ,, r "„ L , woman ■*!' about Wenty or twen ty-live years .0 age. Her sex was not luowu until tl> and the ru le elot’uiag removed prepare-* l..rv for Initial. 8ho had served as a I CCS grinning I common Sailor for three voyages, and j ; n g backward favorite shipmate with all. She j under current; some were dressed, many presentation becomes more valuable, and the price advances. A case in point has recently oc curred. Falmouth is a town in Cornwall, England, near the well- known Lizard Point, and not far from the Eddystone Lighthouse. The rectory of this place is worth about $10,000 a year, and is increasing in value. The ingumbent is in his sev enty-seventh year, and the income of the Church property is constantly increasing. Charles II. gave “the parson of the parish and his succes” sers. lorever” the right to a portion ot the earnings ot the inhabitants of the town, in the sdape of a tax of about thirty-five cents a year on all houses, shops, warehouses, cellars, and outhouse* then in existence or thereafter to he built. Besides this, there are tithes and surplice fees, and what, are known as the Black Rock Beacon dues, consisting of fifty cents on every coasting vessel and over sixty cents -on every other vessel which shall pass the beacon The-town tliought of trying to buy the fiectory, and thus free itself in pa* from these imposts; but high legal authorities have decided that they can n^ycr be got rid of. At the recent auction the sale was started at about $30,000, and rose by slow bids to $45,000. The auc tioneer urged tlie value of the in come and the extreme age of the in cumbent, dwelling on the probability of his soon dyirg, but all in vain. •‘Very well, then,” said the auction eer. “my clients reserve the right oi such frightful loss, of life been added to the Borrow of the sea. In that week 2000 men were drowned. The sinkipg of the Royal G eorge off Spithead, in 1672 when Admiral Keinpeafeldt went down with his GOO men, was long cele brated in song and story as the great catstrophe by sea for many generations. The wrecking of the Royal Charter, on the Aaglesea coast, in 1749, when 446 lives and much treasure were lost, seut a thrill of horror throughout the civil ized world. The same year, too, the Pomona was cast away on Black-water Bank, and 385 men were drowned. The Austria, burned in mid ocean the year before, lost 4C1 persons. On the Pacific, which disappeared in 1856, there were 186 people; and on the City ef Glasgow never heard of sisee 1854, there were 480. Of the Arctic, we in America have still sorrowful recollec tions; 300 men, women and children were lost on that ship, off the coast of Newfoundland, iu 1854. On the same dead lino of coast the Hungarian, with 220 people, was cast away in 1866. The sinking of the North fleet in the English Channel, last January, was the largest great sed disaster uytil that which we now record. By the wreck of the North fleet 375 persons were swept out of the world. ing five feet. He struggled bat lit tle and made buffvery few slight move- ments’of the limbs. His heart ceased to. beat in about twenty-five minutes and his remains were delivered to his friends and will be buried to-morrow. There was «o disturbance, everything passing off quietly. t After the execution the written state ment of Spann was delivered to Miss Eberhart at his request. Two of the Misses Eberharts, sisters, and two brothers were at the execu tion. i-t he pi-fii in like -vs to naif -lay. Mtnt»tlir--lrM«r» and creditors of .1 Me mu$r ali“* lie puWisl»«<l 40 'lays. Notice tint *' U m«i Ordinuv for le«*o to seOJouJ. *« ns lie pn'in-VMI Vr I wo wnlIts. 'ililions for tctlevs of oWmirteMW' .rli.i.-liiv- &e„ ieu-t •* jviMi.-he-l :> .‘.'il’.le'for* Iter* 'm-Whs-H# Ulswisd* gl'.IC ’ ■ dish Gov. I.esiic of Kentucky has sent a message to the Legislature of that State, in which he lays before that* body the address of Got. McEnery of Lousiana, and reviews at length the unhappy situ ation of affairs in the latter State. “Their cause,”*he says, ‘-is our cause; for their danger is oiir danger. The bitter cap which they drink to-day may j be soon commended to our lips. To abandon her hr to abandon the common cause of State Rights. If the great wrong which has been perpetrated against lier shall puss unchallenged and , unredressed now, it may serne as a sirs iuutiiifton. l-precedent to render resistance to simi- A gone cup of Obloutr tea will not j lue encroachments more difficult is the t anybody," said Mm Partington, as j future.'’ In conclusion, er the lnakogcmv. with a i says Horrible Accident in the Portsmouth Navy Yard. A frightful accident occurred in the new Yards and Docks carpenter shop in the navy yard yesterday mornning about 10 o’clock. Mr. Aadrew Sweeny, an old and respe<Sed citizen of New town, who has of lato been employed as helper on the circular saw table, while the saw was stopped, after the band had been thrown- off incautiously crawled under the table to secure some cedar sawdust, and his head, coming in con tact with the revolving saw, was eaught in the teeth and cut in a fearful manuer, Ilis hat was torn into shreds, and enter ing the top of the head, assisted iu cut ting it lengthwise f»*r a distance of six kiches. The gash went clean through to the skull, exposing the brain to view. The unfortunate man had his injuries tenderly cared for by Surgeon Bates; after which he was carried home, in Newtown,, and now lies in an extremely critical and suffering condition. In ante-bellum days Mr. Sweeny was the florist of the commandant.^Norfolk Journal, 6 th. Absolvtely the Best Protects* Against Fire.’* Over 12,000 Fires Actmlly Pul Out With Itl i MORE THAN S10,000,000 00 WORTH PROPERTY IS-SAVED FROM THE FLAMES. The Babcock F. W. FARWELL, Secretary; 78 Market St, Chicago; 407 Broad* way, New York d In daily use by the Fire Departments of the principal cities of the Union. The Gov ernment has adopted it. The leading Rail, ways u»e it. • . [mch20 If Send for “Its Record." BEX E. RL SHELL, Ag’t. BunbrHg* Q*. , ...aking the bidding £10,000, or$50.- guided by the rope from above, and j I,,,,, assisted by one of’the divers who lias T’o suell a condition of religious undertaken to conduct me through the j ^ (>n ,; a?c ,j oes a union ot Church and | wreck. I reach the companion way. If j state reduce llio inhabitants of a | the sight in the hold among the C: ‘T 0 j (, cft and enlightened country.—--V. j was horrible, the one that now met my was ten times more so. There. !jj» in an immense heap, were a hurl dor more bodies. They looked fr feody was washed ashore j the world as if they were alive, with i hurt tu ''"' , 'it weiui ! pleasiin^siidle lip-rn ker”j;,ce and the tea | respectful but earnest and solemn pro- md forward with the | urn by her side. “I k now some say it Gov. Leslie I therefore recommend that a icUinjr tifles wlit bond ha* x- h by ihc ilircciUJcd, the full of hiMiniion will always b« continued ao- •t"dinj» to thev, tins legnl requirements, ul#* otherwise ordered. w describedbs having fewer of the vi- ; -were half nude. Children were. 1 cee incideBt to a sailor's life than is J j n g to their mothers anj stout men ml, hut she was, nevertheless, as jolly I clasping their wives and seeming USUM Bit His Ear Off. • Aa Mr. Thomas Coleman was walking <ivn Sherman street, Chicago, he was »&nly assaulted, by a burly ruffian, ih" first seized him by the throat and irftr him into the gutter after which •flit off a portion ol hia left car. IIhv- accomplished this feat of cannibal- *ic enterprise the wretch ran off before J victim could prevent his flight or <7 tor assistance. Mr. CVdemwa nn- ^iatelv reported the matter at the i-Taory police station, where he gave as .■>4 a description of his assailant as foible, asked that he bo arrested if SttiL lie stated that he never seen ^ruffian befor, and knew of know rea- vaaby he or any one else should wish “laitilate hearing appartus in that ^cr. vere if' an old tar as : «y of them. One of the j they met their fate with calm resigna- survivOTS of the erew in speaking of her tion. No description of the bodies remarked, 1 1 didn't know Bill was a | brought to the surface could convey an woman. dilatorious to the nervous cistern, aHd subscribe cold water; but I need the flagrant herb, and two cups just equal- izes uiy temperature* Some say, too, that it shortens life, and where the Widow Shoot died, at one hundred and toil, it was remarked that if she hudn t drank tea she would have lived to be an old woman. I’m sure she survived her The editor of the Washington Ga- strongly Favors the repeal *of all *** for the collection of debts. He £ v» it would place all upon a perfect f V«lity, “and there would be no debts «ve debts of honor. There would be v credit save such as was obtained by of a character for honesty and ^critr. A man’s fair name would be 1 nh seething to him, and he would a pride in knowing that he ceuld r *»y merchant where he was known °4<bu'.a credit and give no lien save 1 ®I«on his honesty, no security bis fair name. Men who now ac- take advantage of the law for the of evading the payment of just He used to take his liquor as \ idea of the horrid sight in that cabiu regular as any of us, ■ and was always j q close my eyes and motion to my con . fll . tealkuow beuging and stealing tobacco. He was j duetor my readiness to leave I have, aconesvo y, fade. I "But wo are exposed to thcpekoedil towards the where the men were by themselves and where.there was such a rush for the companion way. Peering down into that cabin I saw a similar picture of death. Bodies of stalwart men, old and yonug. were hustled to gether on the stairway, giving—from their distended nostrils, gaping mouths and staring, glossy eyes—some concep tion of the terror which seized them as they vainly struggled to reach the deck, but were prevented by the waves which swept over the ship as she healed over banging Ks chair upon the floor, at the and filled the Cabin. Fwm anotherpart same time pulling tbe doctor s cup from of th vcl I obtained a view of the table into his lap. The boy darted Of the vessel j through tho bat . k door, while the guest danced around with pr— he was a woman.” The most singular ^ reco llection of which will part of the whole story is that the wo- j My conductor.motions me man was an American, and was tlieonly I steerage cabi one of that nationality belonging to the 1 crew. 1Vho she was and where she came from, and her motive for leading such a strange life of hardship, never was and never will be lully known All along tint <»ast, a few rods back from the shore, arc hundreds of rude, plain, unpainted coffins, piled up in a hideous, conglomerated mass. In front are long lines of dead men, women and children, in all the various positions which result from sudden death. There was a woman with her hands clasped in prayer and a peaceful expression upon her face; then a man who had evident-1 t he SLEEriNO test against the unwarrantable interven- : tion of Federal authority in the State j of Lousiana, to which your attention has been called, be prepared and ut- | tered by the General Assembly, of the State of Kentucky, in a suitable form to ho laid before the Congress of the United' States, and that cur Senators be instructed and our members iu the House of Representatives be requested to give all proper aid in supporting the appeal proposed to he made by the peo ple of Lousiana for a ftedress of their grievances. The Death Penalty -.The Execution of Spann, the Wife Murderer. loes of the (AineseSaid Dr. Spooner, -and do not-often get our teas pure.” “Well. I always hope for the best,’ replied Mrs. P., sipping her cup, with out remarkingthe doctor’s, pun. “Some times it is not so good as others, and then again it is, but the price is very cquenbie. and I have to give just *as much for half a dollar’s worth 5s I did before the duties were taken off. which ^ ^ ^ ^ 0 , clock 90me three An Office Mot Wortt Having. The experiences of Dr. Win. Ber tram, one of the brethren from Mis souri, as told at the State Depart ment, a few days since, are truly heartrending. The Dr. ‘ ‘fit init the Radicals most valiantly, and last May was rewarded with the consul ship to Montevideo. . Although' the salary was only $1,000 per annum, he bad been informed that there were various ways of legitimately swelling this insignificant amount to a respectable figure. He set sail for his post, accompanied by his ‘atn- ily, but he soon, found after his ar rival thgt his bed was a procrustoan one indeed. His slender compensa tion, which he found himselt unable to add to, was much taore than swal lowed up in the expenses of the con sulate. ID could not employ a clerk for less than $2,008 a year, am} had to pay $600 per annum rent for an office. Living he found to be high, aud haivng no incans he was com pelled to dwell in a tent. The other consular representatives refused in consequence to hold any social inter course with him. After, standing it several months hu resigned and came Jiome, and now tells the story. Petition and Rule Hi Si to PorecloM Mortgage. Drury Bmnbo, Executor, re. J. j. Totes. Superior Court, Decatur County, Mag Term, 1873. STATE OF GEORGIA, DECATUR 00. U being represented to the court by Git petition of Drury Rambo, executor of ih« last will aud iesiament of Daniel Rambo, “ vleecaseil, that by ileedof mortgage, dated on the first day of November, 1870, J. J. Yates cohveved to the eaick Drury Rambo a lot of .land IU the 20th district of said count j, knovru in the plan of said district os lot no. 872. for the purpose of securing the payment of a citfrtnin proinisory note made by thfe sold J! J. Yates to the said Drury Rambo, due on the first day of November, 1871, for the-tom ef seventeen dollars and fifty cents, which note is now duo and unpaid : *lt is ordered that the said J. J. Yates do pay into this court by the first day of the next term thereof ihe principal, interest and cost due oft said note, or show cause if any he has to the con trary; or in default ^thereof foreclosure jo granted to the said Drury Rambo of said mortgage de**d, and the equity of redemption of the said J.-J. Yates therein be forever barred, and that service of this rule be per* footed on said J. J. Yates by publication onoa a month for four months, according to law. Witness the Hon. Peter J. kroner, J«4ge of said Court, this January 2d, 1873. T HAMPTON, Clerk. [Special Dispatch to the Atlanta Sun.} Preston, Webster Co., Ga., April IX.—Spann, who was convicted last July for the murder of his wife and taken'off”which | sentenced to be hung, was executed was made such a fuss about in the pa-1 pers. I hope your tea suits you. “Hello!” said Ike, starting up and Jy perished in terrible agony; then,) Herc . piled up in heaps on the port j ,. It , u ; ts me well, madamc,” said the most heartrending of all, a little gir j wcre numbers of bodies of men. ^ ..p cr l K ,j, s a trifle too hot, staring sightless; a babe with its arms j ^ s(TCWn amon „ them bed clothing of ’ ■ himself. clasped about the neck of its JDOt “ er -| one kind-and another. From continual lte returBe d and explained his con- “J .V- J...A woman dinning to her j kncc h;„g against the stanchions and | seen . through the win- sharp. jogged woodwork which is splia-^ j ^ dog aftcr his cat , and lie had and the dead woman dinging child so firmly that they had not been parted; waa but one of the many scenes which made strong men weep. ONE VERT HANDSOME WOMAN, with long, flowing dark hair, had died seemingly in the effort to screen her beautiful p-rson from rode gaxe. A - most her only raiment was a night wrap- ! rushed to the rescue.—.V. Y. Weekly. four thousand persons, mostly negroes witnc&Ung the execution. The condemned man was dressed in black—black sack coat of light fabric, new and fittiug lined pants, no vest, clean neat shirt. The primmer wept freely when he was met by the minister as fie ascended from the cell in the lower prison through the trap door. He was deeply moved when he bade Miss Eberhart, who was his accomplice in the crime, “good bye.” He walked by the aide, of the Sheriff a quarter of a mile to the gallows,firmly Petition and Rule Ni Si to Foreclose Mortgage. L. B. cniTTEXDliN VS. BENJ. T. RICH. Superior County, Court, Decatur May Term, 1873. *STATE OF GEORGIA, DECATUR CO. It being represented to the court by tha petition of Samuel B. Chittenden, bearer, that by deed of mortgage, doted the 13tb day of November, 1809, Benjamin T. Rich ooqvey<4 toTl'omaa M. Allen a lot of land in tbe twen ty-first district of said oounty of Decatur, known in the plan of said district as lot no. three hundred and twenty (320) for tbe pur pose of securing tho payment eTa promisor/ note made by said Benjamin T. Rich-to the said Thomas M. Allen, due on the firet day of January, 1871, for the sum of one hundred and ten dollars and fifty cents, which note to now due and unpaid: It is ordered that Um said Benjamin T. Rich'do pay unto this coart by the first day of the next term tbe princi pal, interest and eosts duo on said note, or »>how cause if auy he has to the contrary, or that in default thereof foreclosure be' granted to the said Samuel B. Chittenden* bearer tf said mortgage and the equity of redemption of the T. Rich, therein b*f tergd and broken, from the linings the bunks, the faces of these dead - more ehastly than any I have ever seen, j The news from Texas is of the same | refusing to ride. Imagination cannot picture anything ! old sort, made up chiefly of blood and [ H„ looked at his coffin and wept at more terrible than what was in this j border warfare. IIGrse thieves in the i the «; gh t of the gallows. The flesh is torn from | thinly settled portions of the Lone Star . Rev. J. H. Canood attended him, and . ... - j a y S 0 f | rea( j t k e ifth chapter of Jcb. and Rev. Isaac Hart prayed with him. Spann, the while kneeling and clasping bin hands compartment. . . the faces of many of the dead; others j State ply their Vocation ]lHlw « clutched about her , cs in are bruised and bartered about | y0 re. and are brought to gr.ef by balls r ° r - anJ \nother wobian. lying still and tiicir heads aud faces, which are red presented from the rifles of heroic by ^T' . inTc vIrt act ot”hooking | and bloody, and in striking contrast to j and of cunning scout, who take the ^Wnest debts would be' taught the l*"* ’ WiU hen death O v4rook her. An the pile, livid features'of others which | , ra il and overtake the rascals. The ..--.-.a. fher dress when death ov4 t hc 1 t he action of the waters has not d.s-; State has suffered recently to some ex- ’ tarbed. | tent from very cold weather, heavy rams S^ooiiny of eveu questioning the pro- y**? of paying to tho very utmost '‘‘•’thing. The tone and character of - e people would be elevated, and he * ‘ J *°®ld not pay for whit he obtained **^1 be looked upon with scorn and *''tempt. Many loafers who live by r wiu» and pay for nothing would be spelled to go to work and earn their in borne houeat and useful calling. e Mitre the time will come when all * %i for the collection of debt will be and we ray let it come the • bc;ttr. old man had one arm other hand, grasping a purse ounUiumg fifteen sov.reigns, had been wrenched from it. The grasp of the dead almost defied that of the living. the herald correspondent is the HOLD OP THE VESSEL. to obtain a view of the ship Church Livings. In the Church of England, as is with closed eyes, moved his lips in cl ient earnest prayer. Mounting the scaffold his confession was read, after which he said: “This and severe frosts, all of which eombine j 5 Friday before Easter Sunday,tho day Personal and Literary. Ex-Congressman Luther M. Kent, of Missouri, is lying ill in Paris. The rock upon which the English Cabinet failed tp spl'.WGlad-stone. Father Burke received a public ovation on his arrival at Queens town. The newly-elected Senator from Massachusetts came out of the Bout —well. The Dead letter Office in Washing ton is called tho “Literary Morgue.’ It is said that Dickens cleared $225,000 in gold during his last vist, to America. A couple of parents in Pennsyl vania have named their child Parepa Nilson Kellogg Bnsk. Miss Julia Wallace has been elec ted a member of the School Commit tee of New Hampton, N. H. Colonel Ouvry is publishing an ac count of the life aud labors of Stein, the great Prussian land reformer. A young lady'“took a horn” the other day iu church and nobody was shocked. His first name was Albert. Five thousand four hundred anti eighty-three works were published exuse tie ? in Germany from July 1 toDccember ; 1 187*2. j become nu’l and void to all intend aod paK fectod on paid Beniamin T. Rich by pabi tion once » month for four months awarding to law. Witness the Hon. Peter J. Sfroxier, Judge <ff B&id Court, Jnnnnry 2d, 1878. T. F. HAMPTON, Cleric, Mortgage, November Term, .1871 Wm. G. Robinson, who ones for the not of Richard II. Hinsdale, tu. W. C. Banli Present-the Honorable Peter J. Strati er. Judge of oaid Court. U appeasing to tha court by the petition of Wm. G. Rabins#*, who sues for the uee of Richard H. Hinsdale, that on the 16th day of February, WW, William C. UauU, of said county? made and delivered to <uud Eohinwm his certain prana, iaory note, bearing evert date with tbe dwf and year aforesaid, whereby sold W. C. Raul* promised to pay said Robinson or order. Fourteen Hundred and Eighty-eight doQan, value received, and that afterward, an tb# same day <nd year aforesaid, tbe rid.tato for the better securing the pay neat of SOM executed and delivered to said Wm. 6.Nib in son his deed of mortgage, whereby oaM Hauls conveyed to said Robinson all that piece or parcel of land llM*la,‘lying 0** beingfin the lvth district ef Decatur oounty, and known as number one in block “B** #f the town of Harrell, containing thirty fina feet on Brawn street, and running baakMrik ninety-five feet; condition: to dampen the spirits of the Texas gar deners. Io politics, the most important - livings ! event is the adoption of a new election of landed pn, U- which is expected fe „p. xway Drictors. These patrons, as they , f-uds at electu-ns and guarantee a fair ^called have the right to appoint I and untrammelled expression of the “ZT -MtO appoint I and untrammelled expression of thepoo- the Herald correspon are called, have the g pjx> • wiH at ballot-box, vhich looks below the water, wit j l t \any minister they may choose, to ^.^u^tful since ‘ the bill striking dent procured a of take charce of the flock, and it the j out 0 f t ^ e militia law all about a State r , - .• direction Of taae cunt tc — ’ - . ! oui. VI UK. iHmura-— penniseicn and under the a t j, e living wisbe§ to raise | and tbe power to d the wreckers and divers who were at j „„ the right to ar law hn alto become a la-, ^rk up-. *be bull, arf descended • =-e. - to declare martial upon which Christ was crucified”— drew an encouraging lessson and begged all prepare for death. Thtf Sheriff adjusted the rope, tied the prisoner’s hands behind him and placed tbe black cap over his face aod asked him if he was ready; to which he replied ’*Yes.” The Sheriff then cut the small leather strap, and the phtferot fell. Brine fall 'The Cincinnati Gazette w.«t8 a ; name for the new hotel. If it wants , i>y the Court that the said William CL Saak a strong and appropriate one why do pay into thia Court by Um M 4* «T not “Fig Ironr’ _ . _ . Rev. Mrs. Van Cott has so many calls to preach that she always says “No” when she sees a man with a white neckcloth approaching her. Mrs. O’Leary, owner of the myth ic cow that kicked over tho ctjndle that fired the barn that burned Chi cago, has opened a milinary store in Michigan. .the next term thereof tha principal, 1 and cost that may bo due on add Beta, or ahow cause to tho contrary if any he hae; and that on thilnre of aa>4 Wa C. Iteele a. to do. the equity of redemption fe am* te said mort,agod premnoe be ferrmr theraeAer barred and foreclosed, and It la further er- dered that thia rule ni el bepubBebed eoeea month for fbur months er a copy thereat berred upon the said Wa. C. Baals, or Mi special agqat or attorney at law throe UWlIl previous to the next term of this court. Witness the Hon. Peter J. Stroller, Jeff, cf sail Court January 6th, 1872. * I T. HAMPTON, 9«k.