Newspaper Page Text
Volume 3.
12,1874.
Number 22.
THE weekly deh&crat
Is PnBUSUBT) Every Thcrsday ■ .
By ben. E RUSSELL, Proprietor.
^iYERTISINO* BATES AND - RULES,
vl vert foments inserted at $2 per square
' first insertion, and $1 for each subse
quent one.
\ g qunre is eight solid lines of this type,
liberal terms made with contract advertisers.
Loiril notices of eight lines are $15 per
•uric" or $50 per annum. Local notices
jj” (imn three months are subject to
(rmi'ieut rates.
Contract advertisers who desire their ad
Tenisements changed, must give us two
week-*’ notice.
Changing advertisements, unless otherwise
stipulated in contract, will be charged 20
cc iifs per square. ;
M’irri‘1 ,r e and obituary notices, tributes of
and other kindred notices, charged
.< niher advertisements.
Advertisements must take the run of the
* r W c do not contract to keep them iri
n ,iv I particular place.
Announcements for candidates are $10, if
only for one insertion.
Kill, .,re due upon the appearance of the
advertisement, and the money will be collect
ed ,V needed by tbe Proprietors.
tie shall adhere strictly to the above rules,
and will depart from them under no circum-
* <#nCe TEKMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Pei annum, in advance, - * $2.00
p,. r dx mouths, in advance, - 1.00
l’er three months, in advance, - 50
Single copy, in advance, - - 10
I, IT, A I, ADVERTISING.
,Sheriffs sales, per le>-y, $3; sheriffs mort-
C«e sales, per levy, $5; tax sales, per levy,
«.;? citation for letters of administration. $4;
citation for letters of guardianship, 4; appli-
f,,r di .mission from administration, 5 ;
application for dismission from guardianship
a! application for. leave to sell lanpl (one
squ if*.). 5, and each additional square, 3;
application fi>r homestead, 2; notice to debt
or* mid creditors, 4; land sales (1st square),
a pm I each additional square, 3; sale of per-
himblr property, per square, 2.50; estray
a iti.“iv'v days, 7; notice to perfect serv-
to foreclose mortgage, per
i to establish lost papers, per
ig titles, 4; rules
e cases, 10.
i mini st nil or s, ex-
• linns, arc required by law to
iv iu the mouth,
hours of 10 in the forenoon and
ion, at the court house door
in which the property is situ-
mles must be given
razette 40 days previous to the
ice, 7;
rule
s nisi to
Silimrc,
4;
rules to es
tenure.
. 4;
rules coi
(0 perl*
act a
ervice in
S:«h«
1 of]
anil, etc..
eculor*
or
ru-ir Hans,
- lie lii-M .in
the first '
H iii
e hours ot
4 in ill
I' Ilf
ternoou, 11
in (tic 1
: urn
(y in ;vhi<
mo-1.
N..t
ice of the:
in 1 pi
ulilii
• gazette *
<luy of
sale
sale of personal property
i like manner 10 days pre-
Aotiecs for tin
•nils! be given i
.iom to sale day. . ,
Notices to the debtors and creditors of an
state must also be published 40 days.
Notice that application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, &c.,
must be published for two months.
Citations for letters of administration,
guardianship. &e,, nmo be published 30
days -fin- dismission Crum administration,
monthly Or three months—for dismission
from guardianship, 4<t days.
Holes for foreclosure of mortgages must be
puWis'ie I monthly for four months—for es-
t iblisliing lost papers for the full space of
three nuritlis —for compelling titles from ex-
eciiiors or administrators, where bond lias
liven by rhe deceased, the full space of
months. ", e ' ■
lieu ion will always be continued ac-
U lo these, tbe” legal requirements
otherwise or loTed.
three
I'm
■ inli
mile*
Warring oiy 4he Wtutei- 7
OltANGEBURO, S. C. Feb. 28.
To the Editor of the Charlatan Courier:
About two weeks ago, Wiliiaui Brown,
t negro in the employ of Mr. S. D.
Guess, of this county, was killed by the
pideutal discharge of a pistol, which
lie had about his person. The scene of
the fatal event is in Barnwell county.
The attendant circumstances are these:
Mr. Guess had employed Brown to as
sist him in hauling his house furniture
over is Barnwell. At the place of Mr.
Ira Felder the two men were engaged
in unloading. A wooden table had been
placed in the wagon, with the top side
down. Brown was standing within the
fim of the table, and it is supposed
that as he stooped to raise a bag of corn
■which was near, the pistol became dis-
engaged, dropped, and the back of the
lock struck the riui of. the table, which
oaused the pistol to fire. No doubt the"
lock was resting against the cap. The
hall entered near tlie heart and . death
onsued in a few seconds.'-^At ^the time
of the report of the pistil Mr. Guess
■*as in the house. On hearing it be hur-
ried to the wagon to ascertain what
b as the matter. There he found Brown
iu an unconscious state lying across the
r ’ m ot l ^ e table. No one saw Brown at
ttle t * me he was shot. A jury of inquest
Jas empaneled on the spot, and a ver-
' c ) ron dered that the deceased came
wife, who expressed herself as being
perfectly satisfied. The body was buried
and Mr. Guess thought no more of the
matter until a few days ago, when tbe
body was disintered by the officious cor
oner of this eoun+y. A post mortem ex
amination was made by Dr. A. C. Dukes
who cut open the body. Mr. Guess was
arrested by four stalwart negroes and
dragged to Orangeburg to stand his tri
al, before a jury compost d entirely oi
negroes, and had it not been for the per
sistent opposition of one or two of more
intelligence than the others, would hav
been found guilty of murder. It is get
ting to such a pass that if a negro is ac
cidentally killed in South Carolina, and
a white man happens to be in hearing
distance, he is just as likely as not to
be the perpetrator, according to the in
telligence of the average negro juror.
Mr. Guess is a quiet, peaceable citizen,
of known veracity, whose account con
cerning the death of Brown is not in
the least doubted hv persons of ordi
nary intelligence who know the man
any have heard the statements. Wh
paps lor this second examination and
inquest? The tax payers.
Paysan.
Cutting Down Cotton-
The hue and cry raised in the South
against the production of great crops of
cotton, the Courier. Journal thinks, may
result in something, after all. The Ten
nessee farmers, at the meeting of the
•State Grange in Gallatin last week, took
a decisive step in the direction of South
ern independence. They not only pro
pose to cut down the the cotton crop and
raise their own provisions and stock, but
go further, and urge the wives of farm
ers to practice economy in dress and
house hold expenses. The following is
copy of a resolution which they
adopted:
Resolution by the State Grange of
Tennessee, That the Lecturer or Sec
retary of this Grange recommend to the
Lecturers of the subordinate Granges
to earnestly and urgently request the
members of their respective Granges to
lessen the cotton crop from two-thirds
(the old plan) to one half, and increase
the corn crop to one-liftlf, and all other
crops in proportion, which will enable
the farmer to save his cotton in good
time and in good order, thereby realiz
ing a good and better price for his cot
ton; and with this increase of the corn
crop raise his own stock of every kind,
and do away with the necessity of buy
ing all of his supplies, and have the
pleasure and gratification of seeing fine
fat stock of his own raising, without any
outlay to himself; and th t the Lecturer
or Secretary be requested to communi
cate with all the Granges of the cotton
States upon the subject; that the Lect
urer or Secretary be instructed to urge
upon the women and men of our Order
to adopt and practice a rigid economy
in dress and other matters about their
homes.
Should the policy of the Tennessee
Grangers, or one approaching it, says
the Journal be adopted and. kept up for
a sufficient time throughout the South,
it will no doubt be followed by beneficial
results that will be general. Once inde
pendent, the Southern planter will be
able to exercise a power in the markets
which he does not and cannot have while
devoting his time and money to raising
cheap cotton. It is not likely that the
farmersofthe Ssuuth will go to extremes
in the matter of raising their own food
and stock, and uobody will be much
hurt if they undertake to save a little
money by chocking the tendency to an
overproduction which is keeping them
poor.
One of our exchanges puts it this
way: James Gordon Bennett, of the New
York Herald, last week gave $30,000
to the suffering poor of New York city.
About the same time Robert Benner, of
The Senate for Inffa .on.
A Washington correspondent of the
.Mew York Tribune, who has made
careful canvass of the Senate on the
question of whether or not there shall
be more currency, writes as follows un
der date of Monday.
It has all along been apparent that
the hope of defeatingthe scheme of the
inflationists lay in the probability of a
disagreement between the Senate and
the House, and during a "somewhat pro
tracted visit at the national capital^'
have been at some pains to ascerfffin
just how strong that probability was.
I have conversed" With nearly every
member of the Senate, and I have trust
worthy accounts of the language and
opinions of the few with whom I have
not talked myself. You will see, from
the list which I append, that just now
there is auiajority often or more votes
in the Senate for inflation in some form
or another, counting as inflationists those
who are rep uted as unsettled in their
minds. While the result isone, perhaps
hardly expected by the people, then
ire virtually no new features to be re
corded. The West and South are prac
tically united ; n its favor, as they have
been before, while the East presents a
still firmer front in opposition. Both
■senator? from Texas, both from Cali
fornia, both from Ohio, and perhaps
half a dozen from other Western and
Southern States, are the only represen
tatives of those sections who are not in
the ranks of the inflaticnists, while the
proportionate representations of infl-
tionists among Senators from Eastern
ind Middle States is still smaller. In
this way the lines are drawn at the pres
ent moment. What changes may take
place it is, of course, impossible to fore-
l . ^ ^ out h from the accidental dis- j the New York Ledger, gave $40,000-
ot a pistol which he had about for a farm nearTarrytown, on which to
( I : '' m -1 he corpse was brought back j keep his horses- In the amounts of the
J rg, where the deceased two investments there is a slight differ-
Lo U !^ r ‘ ^ uess explained as far ence. In their character the difference
uiJ the circumstances to Brown’s is immeasurable.
A Roystering Legislature-
The closing hours of the Georgia
House of Representatives were marked
by the fiercest kind of legislative fun.
Our dignified law makers put aside their
stiffness for a time and entered into the
spirit of the occasion with a joyoasness
quite characteristic of small boys. Every
description of bill was introduced, and
some of the most prominent members
came in for a share of t he wit of their
honorable confreres. Among the resolu
tions and bills introduced were the fol
lowing;
Be it enacted, by the Senate and Rep
resentatives, That the session be extend
ed until the year 1900, or so long as
there are funds in the State Treasury
Provided, that the Hon. Mr. Turnbull
of the State of Banks shall not be al
lowed to speak more than twenty-four
hours at one time.
ing her nose b; wean its teeth, wrench
ed and tore tl 5 unfortunate woman’s
face so severely that her countenance
will undoubtedly be disfigured for life
She has lost h^r interest in and fond
ness for caninq pets since then
A Gabbler’s literal-
A singular aud most touching inci
dent occureqthe .other day in connec
tion with thefleath of poor Gus. Clayton
The Rev. E *J- Gillespie, of the Cum
berland Presibyterian Church, was called
upon to pnfeeb the funeral sermon.
Upon following hi§ ’guide to where the
remains were, judge of his surprise to
find himself in a gambling saloon, sur
rounded by men of the world, gamblers,
and others, whose ears were all unused to
hear the voiee ef God’s ministers in such
a place. The reverend gentleman, was
equal to the occasion, and preached a
discourse that will be long remembered
by all who had the good fortune t<
heir it. Many cheeks all unused to tears,
were wet.— Waco Examiner.
1850. PROSPECTUS 1874.
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS.
An old. Maine Liquor Law
In July, 1690, Maine then being a
British province, jurisdiction in crimi
nal cases was vested in a Court of Ses
-ions, its members being partly militin
tnd partly of a civil composition. Atone
"f their sittings they declared-the fol
lowing as the law pertaining to the li
quor traffic:
Whereas there is great complaint
made of several abuses taken notice of
in ordinaries by excessive drinking runtl.
flyps, etc. The ill consequences whereof
is publickly seen in the misbehaviour
of several persons in the presence of au
thority for the preventing the like for
the future; it is, therefore,
Ordered, That from henceforth there
shall not be any rum, or any other li
quors or flyp v sold unto any inhabitau
of the towtr'OT fti' any ordinary keeper
sell unto apy stranger more than one gil
for a person at any one time. And al
civil officers, especially selectmen and
constables in the respective towns in
this province, are required to take es
pecial care by inspecting any suspicion?
house or houses where any such abuse?
or profsneness may be added, and in
case any ordinary keeper shall presume
to transgress this order he shall imme
diately forfeit his license.
A New York paper gives a list of un
fortunates who are absolutely depending
for their food and shelter upon the char
ity of the world. They are men and wo
men of intelligence and education who
cannot find employment. In another col
umn of the same paper is given a list ot
Mr. Speaker Shewmake asked all who . ., , , „ ... ...
, , , , .... the paid base-ball organizations, with
opposed the bill to stand on their heads I. .. . ~ ,
,,, . 1 their respective cost. One player receives
That the Hon. \\ . W. Baldwin, off , e no onn
, „ , , I the extraordinary sum ot §2.200 a year,
the county of Williamson, be requested J ^ ^ are d lessthun §1 00Q ^
to locate the capitol. j. . . , , , ..
..... , - , . t- <i i is fir services rendered only a portion oi
A bill to authorize his Excellency the i ,, .... ..
„ , , the year. The disparity between the
Governor to farm out tbe members ot . „, . , , „ , .
, , , ,, _ I earnings ot brain and those ot muscle is
the General Assembly to Grant, Alex- , . .
, . not altogether encouraging to the vota-
ander & Go. .
. , nes of the former.
A bill to appropriate lot cents, or so
much thereof as may be necessary to
compensate the Hon. T. R. Mills, of the
county of Chatham, for extra service
rendered in behalf of Bibb county.
A motion was made to lay Mr. Turn-
bull on the table.
Mr. Hoge remarked that Mr. T. hav
ing been under the table last night, it
was uufair to put him on the table. Ar
gument sound, and motion ruled out.
After such an overwhelming outcome
of humor, our talented legislators may
now retire in the proud consciousness
of having performed the duty they owe d
to their State and their constituents.
—Savannah A h.
The folly and danger of fondlingand
coddling poodles and other small dugs
have recently had an impressive illus
tration in the experience of the lady
known in literary and theatrical circles
in New York as ‘ Ada Clare.” She was
nursing her pet dog which was ill, and
while holding the animal in her lap the
treacherous little beast, for some trivial
cause or other, sprang at h«r, and, catch-
s The World’s Marine-
A German paper states that the com
mercial marine of the world comprises
56,281 sailing vessels and 5,148 steam
ships. Of this number England alone
possesses 3,081 steamers and 20.842
ships. Next in order comes the Uuited
States. Then France with 392 steam and
3.973 sailing vessels. Germany, despite
all her efforts, shows only 3,984 vessels
of all classes. Belgium, which has only
a few ports, possesses more steamers
than sailing vessels.
RICHARD SIMS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Bainbridge, Ga.
■^.Office in Court House.
W. W. McGRIFF,,
attorney at
Bainbridge, Ga.
“Aly edited and newsy.—’’Marietta (Ga)
Journal. ‘ One of the best newspapers
published.”—Franklin (Ga) News,
great paper—an honor not only to Savanah
but to the State.”—Atlanta (Ga) Constitu
tion. “A real live paper—one of the
best on the continent.”—Sandersville (Ga)
Herald. “Should be received by every
business man—able, fresh, spicy.”—Mari
anna (Fla) Courier: “The neatest, witti
est and most ably edited daily in the South
ern States.”—Covington (Ga) Enterprise.
“One of the leading journals of the
South—e iiied wiih ability and sprigbtliness
— invalu .ble to m, i chants and business men
—Christ.an Index.
In issuing this, the twenty-fifth annual pros
pectus of the Sayan? x H Moknixg News, it if
unuece -oiry to roce t to the history of the
paper. For a quarter of a century it has been
the conspicuous and consistent champion of
Southern sentiment and Southern interest's.
The career of the Morxi.vg News has been
one of singular prosperity. It made a place
for itself from the start and has kept if, while
all of its contemporaries of that day, and all
save one of its later rivals, have perished by
the wayside, and to-day it stands firmly es
tablished in popular favor, with little or
no competition within the area of his circu
lation.
The restless activity, energy and enterprise
of the age have so extended the sphere of
journalism that the modern newspaper is
literally encyclopedic in character, compri
sing everything ofspecific or general interest
iu the vast domain of art, science, literature,
religion, politics and the news. Its tendency
is to occupy the field of the pamphlet, the
magazine and the novel, and it is gradually
usurping the functions of those vehicles of
thought and information. Its scope embrace
the discussion of every subject which has
been invested with interest by the restless
explorations of the human intellect, and in
cludes every topic calculated to instruct or
to entertain. In the newspaper of to-day the
the profoundest exegetical article goes forth
surrounded and relieved by the brilliant es
say, the caustic review, the pungent editorial,
tiie sparkling letter of correspondence, and
the racy paragraph—the whole forming a
Commune of Belle-lettres wherein the most
noteworthy literary effort has scarcely any
advantage of position over the poorest item.
It has been the aim of the conductors of
the Morning News to keep the paper fully
abreast of this tide of progress and improve
ment, and to this end no expense has been
spared. That their efforts have been in some
degree successful, is evide.it from the Bill 1
tering encomiums bestowed upon the paper
by its contemporaries, and from the large
circulations and influence to which it has
attained. The plansofthe Proprietor for 1874
comprehend a nearer approach to the ideal
ournalisui of the time than everbefore. Th“
features that have given the paper a marked
individuality among Southern journals, and
which have brought it up to its present high
standard of popularity, w.ll be retained and
improved upon. Events of interest transpiring
in any portion of the world within reach of
the electric wires, will find in the Morning
News a prompt and reliable chronicler; and
its arrangements for gathering the news are
iucli that all important omission of the tele
graph are reasonably sure to be supplied by
its staff of special correspondents; so that the
readers of the paper are certain of finding in
its comprehensive columns the latest anu
freshest intelligence, systematically grouped
,nd attractively edited.
In its editorial conduct the Morning News
will consistently pursue the policy which
iias characterized it from the first. Questions
•if national or sectional interest will be can
dully and impartially discussed, while-every
<ubject of a political complexion will be
treated with an eye single to the welfare, the
progress and tbe substantia! development oi
the material e ouices oftLe Sfiutl'. The sys
tem ot carpel-bag robbery and plunder that
has impoverished our section—the popular
practices of official knavery and corruption—
and all those odious features of Radicalism
which have for their object the prostration
of sovereign States and the disestablishment
of civil irovernment in the South—will be
held u) t the; everest c nice nnation; and at
all times, in season and out’oi season, the pa
per will advocate the primitively pure doc
trines of a strict construction of the Consti
tution, and the administration of tbe powers
of the Government—Executive, Judical and
Legislative—within the limits prescribed by
that instrument. In observing tbe interest
of a section that has been so sorely oppress
ed and so persistently belied, the course gl
the Morning News will be, as heretofore,
either cautiously conservative or sharply
aggressive, as the nature ot the circumstan
ces may snem to demand; and it will be the
aim and purpose of tbe conductors of the
paper to maintain its position as one of the
leading exponents of Southern opinion.
In tiie news department, the current local
affairs of Georgia and Florida will be chroni
cled with thesame picturesque and pungent
assiduity that has mule them such prominent
and popular features of the paper. The local
department is in charge of a gentleman of
skill and reputation, and will continue to be
the most complete and reliable record of home
events to be found in any Georgia journal,
'ihe commercial department is full and-com.
plete. The figures are collated by experts, and
their accuracy.is such as to commend them
to merchants and business men in this and
theadjoiningStates. Tbelocal market reports
are compiled with laborious care and may
be relied on as representing every phase of
Savannah’s commerce.
The Weekly News is a carefully edited Com
pendium of tbe freshest intelligence, and
comprises all of the most attractive features
of the Daily. It contains thoughtful editorials
L A MI upon matters of current interest, lively con-
A W j densations, characteristic paragraph, and
( the latest telegrams and market reports up
to the hour of going to tbe press. It specially
commends itselfto the fanners and planters
C. G. Campbell. Office No. 1, Sanborn’s of Georgia, Florida and the adjacent States,
Range ; up stairs. Feb’y 26. 1874-ly. and is furnished at » price that places it
within the reach pfa.i.- ' * . - ‘ 7 — . —
ll'hat is here is said of the Daily and^Tfiek-
ly may also, with equal truth* be said of the
Tri-Wrkklt News. It is one of the bett* pa
pers of its kind and contains : everything of
tnterest that appears in the Daily, together
with the latest telegra ns and commercial in*
tclligence.
TERMS.
Daily Morning Newb. $10 00
Tri-Weekly News. BOG
Weekly News. : 5FOQ
Money may be sent by express at tha risk*
and expense of the proprietor. Address 1' 1
J. H. ESTILL, Savannah,
‘ ' •?—r».
Decatur County Stiff’s Sales.
Will be sold before the Chart Honss door
in the town of Bainbridge, on the first Tuen-
day in April next, between the nsnal hours
of sale, the following property to wit:
One Gray pony horse and one baggy.—'
Levied on as the property of Jacob Harrell
to satisfy a Superior Court ft fa in favor ’of*
Belchers & Terrell.
W. W. Harrell Sh’IT.
One bale lint cotton marked W. 8. R. No
1. Levied on as the property of W. $; Ro
binson to satisfy a Superior Court ftfh.on tb--
vor of Belchers & Terrell.
W. W. Harrell 8h’f^ r .
Lot of land No 203 in the 27th Dist. Mid
county. Levied on as the property of D. 8. -
Love to satisfy a ft fa in favor of Burrell Rob- l
erts, Admr. *. r _
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lot of land No. 386 in the 16th Dist. of said
county. Levied on as the property of J. C-
Glover to satisfy a tax fi fa in favor of T. J.
Jeter Tax. col. of said county. Levy made ,
and returned by 'Constable.
„ W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lot of land No. 200 in the 15th dist. said ‘ >
county. Levied on as the property of IF. JL
Parker to satisfy a tax fi fa in favor of offi
cers of court.
W. W..Harrell Sh’fF.
Lots of land No’s 3C3 and 362 in the 21st
dist. of said county. Levied on as the pro
perty of John Hall to satisfy a Justice Conrt
fi fa in favor of of Benejah Pate. Levy -
made and returned to "me by a Constable.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Ldts of land No’s 457, 458 in the 15th dist.
of said county. Levied on as the property
of R W. Mathews to satisfy a Superior
court fi fa in favor of A. Davis & Co.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lots of land No’s 89and 90 in th 20thdist.
of said county. Levied on as the property
of R. W. Hooks to satisfy a Superior court fi
fa in favor of Benjamin 0. Smith.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lot of land No. 20 in the 22nd dist. of
said county. Levied on as the property of
Jos. D, Pepper to satisfy a fi fa in Caver of
W. H. and Catharine Andrews.
~ W. W; Harrell Sh’ffi
One Store House and lot in the city of
Bainbridge, now occupied by E. J. Hender
son and bounded as follows: On North by
Broughton street, on West by West street and.' • 1
on South by Troup street and on East by store
house occupied by G. R. Mayton. Levied
on as property of Ira. W. Sanborn to satisty
a fi fa in favor of Officers of Court.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
One dark bay mule and fifty bushels corn
more or’e «; also lots of land No’s 203 and
-38 in t e 27th dist. of said county, - Levied
on as the property of D. S. Love to satisfy a
Superior 10 art fi fa in favor of John Jones.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi -
Lots of land No’s 72 in the 21st disk, lot
No. 79 in the 14th dist. and lot No. 6 in tiie
2Jth dist. all in said county. Levied on as
the property of John R. Hayes, to satisfy
f .ur Justice Court fi fas in favor of S. H.
.ay, Jno. M. Cooper & Co. Satterfield and
Dickinson, and T. M. Allen. Levy made
and returned by Constable.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lot of land No. 404 in the 15th dist. Mid
county. Levied on as property of R. J.
()dom to satisfy a tax fi fa in favor of T. J.
Jeter tax Col. said county. Levy made and
returned to me by Constable.
W W. Harrell Sh’tt
Lot of land No. 258 in the 15th diet, of
■said county. Levied on as the property of
George Dean to satisfy a tax fi ft in ftvor of
T. J. Jeter Tax Col. said county. Levy
made and returned to me by Sonsaable.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lots of land No’s 89 and 90 in the 20th
dist. of said county. Levied on as the pro.
perty of R. W- Hooks to satisfy a Justice
Court fi fa in ftvor of A. J. Swicord.
W. W. Harrell Sh’ffi
Lot of land No 267 in the 27th dist. of
said county. Levied on ao as the property
of Mrs, Delilah Eggarton to satisfy a tax fi ft
in favor of T. J. Jeier Tax col. of said oounty.
Levy made and returned by a Canstable.
W. W. Harrell Bh’f,
Lots of land No’s 208 and 209 in the 27th
dist of said county. Levied on as property
of S. G. O’Neal to satisfy a tax fi ft in ftvor
ofT J Jeter Tax Col of said county* Levy
made and returned to me by Constable.
W W Harrell, Sh’ffi
Lot of land No 452 in the 15th dist of said
oounty. Levied on as the property of Ben
son Cloud to satisfy a tax fi ft in favor of T J
leter Tax Col of said couniy- Levy and#
and returned to me by Constable.
W W Harrell Bh’f.
Lot ofland No 116 less 40acres, lot No 128
less 20 acres and 105 acres off of lot No 124,
all in the 20th dist of said county. Levied
on as the propepty of Mary Gandy to satisfy
a Ju.tice Court fi & in ftvor of CSiett and
Tones Levy made and returned by Consta
ble.
W. W. Hrnnt, Sh’ffi
Bower & Crawford,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Bainbridge, Ga.
tgr Office in the Court Boose. [Idly