Newspaper Page Text
THE_W EERILY SUH.i
Official Journal of Decatur County.
R. M. JIIiNSTOV, :: Editor and i’roprirlor. |
SATURDAY Ml BN.NG, OcT. - r T'l, 1572- )
——-—I
National Democratic Ticket, j
FOR PRESIDENT :
HORACE GREELY
OF NtW YEEK.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT.
B. OEATZ BROWN.
tr Missouri.
Second Congressional District —For
Congress :
GEN. GIB. J. WRIGHT,
OF DOUGHERTY-
Congressional Election.
The next important election which
claims our attention is the Congres
sional From prospects now,
we think the Democracy can easily
carry the day, if the white men will
but turn out and work. We have a
noble champion is the field, who is
doing all in the power of man, but
everybody knows that it is impossi
ble for General Wright to achieve
victory unless tve all do our duty.—
He lias a wily and able man against
him, and one flho will leave no ex
pedient untried to secure bis elec
tion—and then two he is backed by
an administration which will ndt
scruple to use unsparingly public
money to Carry the election. Re
member, Democrats; that we have all
this to combat, and arouse yourselves
for the conflict. Exert your every
energy, let your manhood show it
self—let all pull together, and the
victory is ours.
Horrible.
The most horrible and revolting
act that ever came within our knowl
edge, ago in
Quitman, in this
State. A liis own
daughter and then carries her to
Jacksonville, Fla., and commits an
abortion upon her. We copy the
following m regard to the affair from
the Banner :
The parties to this bestial, revolting hor
rible crime, are J. W. Stalnaker and his
only daughter, by a previous marriage,
Captolia Stalnaker, aged about fifteen
years. We have read the evidence in the
case, as elicited by the Masonic fraternity,
of which lie was a member, and it not on
ly fully establishes the guilt of the par
ties, but it is revolting in the highest de
gree ; and we unhesitatingly assert, that
the records of crime, of bestiality, and de
pravity, throughout the civilized world,
will exhibit no parallel case.
After his success in negotiating
Georgia railroad bonds, Mr. Henry
Clews, was selected by President
Grant as a tit man to succeed the
Barings as financial agents of the
United States in London. Now Mr.
Henry Clews tells Wail Street that
the business interests of the country
would not be safe in Mr. Greeley’s
hands. What does Wall street think
of their safety in President Gi ant’s
hands, with Mr. Henry Clews as
financial agent.
Negro Riots.
There was considerable of a riot
in Macon on Wednesday during the
election, between the negroes, who
tried by force to control the polls,
and tire Whites; One white man and
two negroes were killed, while sever
al on both sides were wounded.
There was also a riot at Augusta,
and attempts were made to create
one in Savannah.
Decatur county is behind in the
election. Nearly every other county
we have heard from has gone Demo
cratic. Should this not make the
sleeping Democrats here wake up.
We can? carry the county against
Whiteleyi- Let us do it.- It can, it
Ought, it must give Wright a mftjor
ky.
Miller County' —We are gla’d to
Hois that our young friend Bush has
been re-elected to the Legislature
from this county. Mr. Heard, his
opponent, is a good man and a Dem
ocrat. The vote stood Bush 249,
Heard 202. thus giving Conp a ma
jority of 47 votes. Gov. Smith's
majority was 248.
Greeley is making astonishing
headway in his tour out West. His
speeches are models. Every word
is clear cut, appropriate and sensi
ble. There is no excited appeal to
public prejudice, but plain talk to
plain people. Everywhere enthusi
asm is on the increase.
Business dull and money scarce—
except with Grant men. —Camilla Her
aid.
We have no doubt but what the
above paragraph is true, considering
the fact tha* this is election time.
The Election.
This event which has been troub
ling the brain of our people for some
time past, took place on Wednesday
last. We speak for this city, when
we sav we never in the whole course
of t»uv life saw a more quiet election.
The negroes, though a very large
number in town, were quiet and or
derly, and we saw no disposition Gn
their part to cause or create a dis
turbance of any kiud.
We are again subjected to the mor
tification of p. defeat—caused too, no
doubt, by a failure on the part of the
whites to turn out and vote. We
can name men here in Bainbridge,
who were in almost a stone’s throw
of the polls, and yet totally ignored
the fact that such a thing as an elec
tion was being held. We don’t know
what they mean, or what their inten
tions are, in thus helping Radical
ism, but we do know that they are
very w’rong in the matter. But then,
it is passed and gone, and what is
done can’t be undone;
We are informed that steps are
being taken to contest *)tke election
in this coun various grourtds;
and if these grounds are well taken,
we may yet have the pleasure of see
ing Messrs. Butte afcd Butler in the
General Assembly.- This; hoWtriefi;
is a question to be decided by law
and not by us> and hence we will. res
frain from saying more about it at
present, more than to advise the
Demoef ate to attempt nothing of the
kind, save on good grounds; Let
their action in the matter be that es
honorable men— nothing else be
comes US;
B. Bh Brimbetry.
We have been given a copy of the
Camilla Herald containing the reply
of B. F. Brimberry to an article pub
lished last Week in the Son, and writ
ten during our absence by Mr. D. A.
Russell. The language in which Mr.
BrimbeiTy’s article is couched makes
it obvious to any who may have pe
rused it, that he is no gentleman , and
hence we do called on, un
der tlio rules code of honor,
to give iMhat WKe which we might
had from % different
source. The author of the article
in the Sun gave his authority and
the source from whence he obtained
his information, Col W. T. Cox, for
merly Mayor of Bainbridge, and as
there can be no comparison between
the two as regards character, w T e do
not think the public will be much
troubled in deciding a question of
veracity between this gentleman and
Brimberry.
As we cannot stoop* to Brimber
ry’s level, and as w T e do not care to
raise him to the standard to which we
hope we occupy, we here dismiss the
matter, not caring to deal or bandy
words with a man whose infamy
has declared him the detested of all
honest men and gentlemen, and who
is like the vapor from the stench-pile,
rises only as he rots.
The Election in the State.
W e have not yet gained all the
election news, but have heard from
about twenty-eight or thirty coun
ties, and so far Smith is about thirty
thousand ahead, and it is authenti
cally thought that he will carry the
State by from [SO to 60 thousand
votes. This is gratifying to the
hearts of Democrats.
Many counties which have been
strongly Badical since the war, have
redeemed themselves and given de
cided Democratic majorities? Bibb,
Richmond, Monroe, Troupe, New
ton, Wilkes, Talbot, Pulaski, Mor
gan, Scriven, Warren, Baldwin, Ma-‘
con, Hancock, and many other's
which have been regarded as Radi
cal strongholds, have gone Demo
cratic by large majorities. The Leg
islature will be overwhelmingly Dem
ocratic. Chatham bounty, the nest
of the “ Wahoo ” has given 2-,000
Democratic majority. Decatur and
Thotoas are the only’ counties yet
heard from that have gonte Badical
A long good 35ght to Radicalism*
in proud old Georgia.
fiow NoW ?
We learn that the Republicans of
this county are ** down on us ” for
the tenor of our phper for the past
several issues, and* some have even
proposed to make it a personal mat
ter cn those grounds. While we
don’t care wuf a' cent no how, at the
same time we can’t see how any sen
sible man in that party can say that
we have said anything that was not
entirely admissible under the legiti
mate rules of political warfare.—
When the Sun— which was the first
in this District to do so—announced
its intention of supporting Greeley
and Brown, we were called by some,
a Radical. Our answer to this im
putation was that when the proper
time arrived we would show whether
we were a Radical or not —and we
have hat we are.
IM not who, are ]
“ down on us,” for a strict and
straightforward advocacy of princi
ple, they art at liberty to be so, for
anght wd care ; and when they see
fit to' make a personal matter of any
of our sayings or -doings, we hold
ourself responsible.
R. M. Johnston, Esq.
Editor Sun :
I am informed that certain persons have
put in circulation a report that you absen
ted yourself last week, in order to give
“ sub-editors ” a chance to exclude all com
munications, reflecting on the candidacy of
Maj. Bruton, and in fact to run the.pdpcr
in an underhand way, in favot df that
gentleman. I knew not the business or
motives that led you away from home, but
I do know, that you left your paper in my
charge and instructed me to run it in the
interest of Col. Gee, so far as the Senato
rial contest was concerned. I informed
you at the time, that ks I was a supporter
of Bruton, i could write ndthing against
him. Both -yourself and J. E. Donalson,
Esq., afterwards informed me that you had
engaged him, Donalson, to write a Gee
editorial.
During the week several communica
tions, abusing Maj. Bruton’s record were
handed in, and I rejected them for several
reasons, kmong others, because we had not
space to Spare. They were uiijust charges
against Maj. Bruton ; they were (some of
them) Untrue in fart, personal in their ten
dency.
But; notwithstanding these, I would
have published some of them, had not I
been satisfied that a compromise was about
being mack, which tvOukl in all probabili
ty result in the withdrawal of. Col. Gee>
as I was satisfied that Maj. Bruton was
the stronger man, and I was unwilling to
run the paper in the interest of Brimberry,
which would be the effect of it, in case the
compromise should be made as I then ex
pected and as it was in fact, afterwards
mßcld:
Therefore, so far as these certain per
sons’ report concerns the motives or ac
tions of myself in the matter, I pronounce
it false.
I have been for sometime a supporter of
Brutou, but my advocacy of his claims
has been fair and honorable. I would
support no man in an underhand way.
Very respectfully, yours,
D. A. RUSSELL.
The above note Explains itself, so
far as Mr. Russell is concerned. As
some parties have—l know not who
—put the unjust report referred to
by Mr. R. in circulation, it is but
meet that I should give some expla
nation of the matter.
I left home on my own private
business connected with my paper,
and left Mr. Russell in charge of the
Sun, he consenting to editit as a per
sonal favor to myself. Mr. J. E.
Donalson was also requested to act
as assistant editor. I requested these
gentlemen to write nothing but that
which was in strict accordance with
the course already adopted by my
self, in regard to the Senatorial mat
ter, and I was not prepared to sus
pect that any one could manufacture
such an unfounded report, until in
formed by a friend that such was the
case.
Had I dSsired to go against the
nomination and in favor of Bruton,
I would have done so openly and not
in the dark. I thought I was right
in supporting Maj. Gee, and would
have done so to the end. It was a
matter of political principle with me
and not preference.
The Sun has ever been steadfast
to principle sinfee my control of it,
and ever will be, until it passes from
my hands, malicious reports and ac
cusations of personal enemies- to the
contrary notwithstanding.
The report is so ridiculous that I
hardly deem it necessary to dispute
it, but to prove how very unfounded
it is, I simply refer the reader to the
last issue *of the paper. That edi
tion Will be found containing sever
al Gee' articles, but which were
changed somewhat after the Comprcn
mise was effected and Maj. Brutyjfc*
became the legitimate candidate of
the people.
R. M. MH'NSTON,
Editor Sun.
Editorial crumbs.
The fall fights have opened in
Cuthbert. The city treasury has
been replenished, tfnd Sawtell is hap
py-
The Male Academy at Cuthbert
opens this week.
Hon. Thos. Hardeman, Dr. H. V.
M. MiHer and Gen. G. /. Wright
spoke in Cuttrbfeit on Wednesday
last.
Dawson has anew omnibtiS.
One of the circus men was cribbed
in Albany for playifsg three card
monte? . - •
The Early County News says :
Whiteley, the Radical candidate for’
Congress, delivered an erratic, dis
jointed, scattering, illogical and un
truthful tirade to the negroes of
Early, before the court house door
on Saturday last.
It is said, upon authority of some
members of Commodore Vanderbilt’s
family, that his income amounts to
the enormous sum of $15,000 a day
or $4,000,000 a year. * »
Two of the editors of the Chroni
cle and Sentinel have been nomina
ted by the Democrats —Gen. A. B.
Wright for Congress and Pat Walsh
for the Legislature.
Gen. Anderson, of Confed
erate memory, died in Memphis Sun
day. 4
The Radical Ordinary of Chatham
county, who is described as a very
honest and efficient officer, declines
to be a candidate for re-election, say
ing : “I think yae time has come
when the representatives of the prop
erty and intelligence of Chatham
county can chooSe ode of their own
people to fill the important office I
am now administering.” We will
venttire a large wager that he is a
Grgfeley man; \
Greeley is makipg a fcodr through
the West—everywhere meeting with
enthusiastic receptions and making
capital speeches. Ulysses is travel
ing some j but like the mouse in the
meal tub, hejWjjJffiyQr a word.
m Mexico build COt*
ton factories.
A police officer in Columbus let
off his pocket artillery at a darkey.
Everybody took a drink after the
Coroner’s inquest.
It is now a penal offense to play
cards even for amusement in a Geor
gia bar room —this is morality.
The Savannah News, of Monday,
says the Right Rev. Bishop Persico,
of the Catholic Church, has tender
ed his resignation to the Pope. The
causes inducing this act are not sta
ted. Reverend Father Wayrick, now
pastor of the Church of the Holy
Evangelist, New York, is spoken of
as the successor of Bishop Persico.
Dr. Evans, the American dentist,
is as famous as ever in Paris. His
business is worth to him over $50,-
000. \
Rev. J. Blakely Smith, of the Geor
gia Conference, is dead.
Ren. Butler has been sent to Ohio
to canvass for Grant. Ha has such
a penchant for carrying things, that
it is possible he would not be satis
fied with a political success.
The administration, through the
Attorney General, has refused to in
terfere with the sentence passed upon
Ku-klux prisoners from the South
ern States.
Joe Brown has come out in a let
ter announcing himself for James M.
Smith. Some of our exchanges make
fun at this, out We look upon it as a
favorable straw.
Horatio Seymour, the Democratic
President in 1868 {has taken the
stump for Greeley.
Young Jarnes Gordon Bennett is
going to build a $250,000 monument
to his father: It will be a white mar
ble shaft with designs illustrating
journalism.
John Gofraan, of the Talbotton
Standard, lias returned from the old
world.
She is no true wile who sustains
not her husband in the day of ca
lamity ; who is not, when the world’s
great frown makes the heart chill
with anguish, his guardian angel,
growing brighter and more beauti
ful as misfortunes crowd along his
path.
Radical Villainy,
It is astonishing, as often as the
colored people have be fen fleeced,
duped, and bamboozled by the Rad
ical leaders,' they still retain faith in
them. Yet, it appears that such is
the cai& with many of them, al
though the action 1 of some in voting
the Conservative ticket yesterday ing
duces the belief that the time- is'nM!
when
i { , *
OflFfiere are pertinent in al
luding to the Radical villainy which
was. at the polls yesterday.
Such an instance of duplicity arid
rascality/ is apt often
light. TbfcdAarties,
much about the colored
people, deliberately deprive them of
the right ofFsuffrage by pocketing
the money here to' pay their
poll taxes, afid giving them bogus
certificates which were not 'tforth the
paper they were printed on. Not
only wras the money sent from Wash
ington pocketed in this style, but
these deluded people were induced
to' place their own money in the
hands of some of these parties, and
it went the same way/ bogus receipts
being given? as vouchers. This per
fidy towards the colored people, who
have lifted many of these fellows'
into fat offices, should be sally ex
posed. livery intelligent colored
man should n’ow see what sort of
men have been using them as tools,
and should cast them off. The at
tempt to pay the poll tax of a list
of eight hundred yesterday was a
mere sham. The party attempting
it knew it would not be allowed ; but
it deceived the colored voters. Now,
the question’ arises, what will be done
with that eight hundred dollars ?
Will the colored voters get any of it?
Not likely.—-Sac. News.
Jerusalem has been lighted with
gas, and it is proposed to run street
cars up the slopes of Mount Zion.
Items of Interest.
The Masonic Institute at Chatta
noga is to be sold.
Bismark’s autobiography is near
ly ready for the press.
General McClellan is an active and
warm supporter of Greeley.
A niece of the late Lord Palmer
ston is travelling in the Western
States.
Altogether there are now forty
nine hotels at Saratoga, and more
building.
Trinity University at Tehaucana,
Texas, matirculated 333 students
last year.
A daughter of General Birney is
Said to be studying type-setting iii
Boston.
Tlierfi is in Berlin an American
lady dentist, whom the Teutons pro
nounce a success.
Sixty-five out of a cargo of three
hundred coolies died on a recent
passage to Cuba.
A vigilance conimittee has been
formed in Chicago to put down
thieves and murderers:
Nevs&a’s latest discovery is a soda
lake large enough to supply the whole
civilized world;
The Louisville Presbytery has ex
pelled from the ministery John C.
Young, for habitual drunkenness.
A statue of Federal General Rey
holdsgis to be erected on the battle
field df Gettysburg, where he was
killed.
North Carolinians are getting up
a fresh excitement about their de
serted gold mines in Mecklenburg
county.
The insurance agents of Macon
Ga., have received instructions to
advance their usual rates twenty-ffve
per cent.
North Carolina has but four cadets
at the United States Military Acade
my at West Point. She is entitled to
eight.
Senator Sumner’s wife has been
the summer at Venice. For
eign papers speak of her as a highly
attractive woman.
Two Greeley and Brown flags
have been raised in Shirley village,
Mass., the first anti-rodical flags that
have ever floated there.
Six children of the late Rhilip
Winnebiddle, a wealthy Pittsburg
millionaire, got the neat little bequest
of nearly $200,000 apiece.
Dr. Brown-Sequard is soon to leave
Paris for New York. He intends to
take up his residence permanently
in the United States*
Nilson will not need io give con
certs to support her husband, as he
is worth $1,000,000 in his own right
and in his expectations.
The ex-Empress Eugenie now
dresses almost entirely in black and
red. Her beautiful hair is beginning
to show threads of oilirer.
Col. Caleb Shearer , near Paola,
Kan sas, recently killed his daughter
and himself, and fataly wounded his
wife and his son-ifi-law.
Two cents will buy a poUnd of Tex
an steer at Baxter Springs, but it
takes, a quarter of a dollar to fetch
a square drink of benzine.
A member of the House of Com
mons put his name down on the
Messrs. Rothschild’s subscription
list to the French loan for $40,000,-
000.
Tourists are now returning from
Europe in large numbers, and it is
necessary Ao engage passage from
the several weeks ahead.
General R. M. Henry, of North
Carolina, who was one of Caldwell’s
ablest advocates in the last canvass,
has taken the stump for Greeley and
Brown.
WrlHarcf Prescott Smith the £reat
railroadist and master of transporta
tion of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail
road, died in Baltimore on Tuesday
morning of hemorrhage of the bow •
els, aged about 48 years.
Suppose there is stealing,” argues
that Radical rhetovcian the' Beast
Butlery “what, of it? some
fuil steals a million, that is only
Iro and a half cents apiece, and the
merican people won’t be so small
as to make a fuss about such a trifle/
The Nassachusetts spoon theif is a
correct exponent of the Grant philo
sophy.
The Indiana Ballot-Box Stuffbrs.
*-sThe Indiana Sentinel says,' that of
the eleven inspectors of election ap
pointed by the Morton corruptionists
in that city for the October Election
two are interested Radical candida
tes, and eight Others are crimnally
implecated in ballot-box frauds in
that city or elsewhere.
James Gordon Bennett, the late
editor of the New York Herald, left
a large bequest to' his wife, but only
upotr the condition that she remain
ed bis widow. This condition will,
it is said, be set aside by the courts.
It has been judicially decided over
and oter again that all conditions in
restraint to marriage are opposed to
public policy, and simply null and
void. Mrs. Befinett is much younger
than her late husband, and may
marry again.
The enormous drain upon the Fed
eral Court Fund to carry the elec
tions in North Carolina and Maine
has exhausted the entire appropria
tion intended to meet the United
States Court expenses in all the
States. The appropriation was larger
thart ever before,- yet it has Been ex
hausted before the fiscal year is half
gone—used up to re-elect Grant—
and now the entire Federal ’ Courts
of the country will ha T u to run on
the tick until Congress meets in De
cember? —Pair tot:
The Like Tenure.—Mr Wendell
Phillips, who is always inventing
some new and lively rascality in poli
tics, sprang upon a Boston audience
the other night the happy thought
that Grant should be supported this
time with the view of securing his'
repeated re-election until “every
white man in the South over forty
“years of ago should have been put
under the ground.” As Grant him
self is now over forty years of age
this is equivalent to a life tenure of
the Presidency. Why expose the
country to a succession of quadren
nial rows in order to accomplish this
purpose. Would it not be more
simple, practical, and honest to pro
claim at once that if Grant is elected
in November no more Presidential,
Elections will be held “until further
notice”? Butler ” was present at
Phillip’s “new and ap
plauded it. He is just to
take the next and unfurl
of “Grant for life!” Lee him
of his poor nephew, the Hodlurn,
who has no other hope of retaining
his post in Egypt, and declare for
the life tenure of Ulysses the First!
N. Y., World's*
How THE PRESimter OF THE I/ATE
Confederacy Jefferson
Davis, Ex-President ofiHAte Con
federate States of AmenMparrived
in the city yesterday and stoked at
the Galt House. A number
who heard of his presence hast«al
to call on him, and Avere received
a quiet way. Mr. Davis’ appearance
in the hotel considerable
attention, to avoid
it in every A
number of the house
were presented to friends.
Mr. Davis’ has no polnßMyignifi
cance whatever. He is , o|HKy en
route to Baltimore and Ndrrßjlon
business connected with his
companies. Ik
Mr; Davis looks younger than
did ten We are told that
he is enjoying health, and
his apperance of the
Galt House last that
repoat. He is iu year
of his age yet his step that
of a young man, and liis
He had a cane in his handPpQk it
did not seem to be carried in the
least degree for support. Hishppi
is considerable grayed—
iron gray in color—jjperms beared is
also tolerable white, though that of
his temples is still dark and
rently but little touched by time. —
he wears a full beard, with a closely
trimned mustache, and this possibly
aided to make his face appear roun
der and fuller than we have seen it
iu a long time.— Louisville' Courier ,
mh.
Mortgage Law.
Sec. Ist, Be it enacted, etc., thfet
from and after the passage of this
act, no person after having executed
a mortgage deed to poreonal proper
ty, shall be permitted to sell other
wise dispose of tbe same, with intent
to defraud the mortgage, unless the
consent of the mortgagee be first
obtained, before the payment of the
indebtedness for which the mortgage
deed was executed to secure.
Sec. 2nd, Be it farther enacfacf,
etc-, that if any person shalll violate
the provisions of the first section of
this act, and loss thereby is sustain
ed by the holder of the mortgage,
sliali be deemed and held guilty of a
misdemeanor, and upon conviction
thereof, shall be punishably by a fine
in double tbe sum or debt for which
said mortgage was given to secure
and upon failure to pay said fine
immediately, the person so convicted
shall be imprisoned in the common
jail for a period not less than six
months nor more than twelve*
Vekginnia Tobacco Crop. —The
Danville Register says the tobacco
crop of the season is not a first-rate
one. At one time it promised finely
but in ripening on the hill it has
not done well. We have had oppor
tunity within a few days past of
seeing a number of tobacco fields in
a district of country* that produces
tbe weed in as hijjjn perfection as
any on the globe, observed
that, while the tobacco was
bright, very many of tne plants were
not ripening uniformly, some of the
leaves bein'' entirely ripe and yellow
while others, particularly those at
the, were still green. What is worse
the fields were firing badly, so that
the ground leaves, in many places,
were entirely destroyed. Much of it
was mere trash. We hear that this
condition of things exists generally
in the surrounding counties of Vir
ginia and North Carolina, and the
received opinion is that the crop will
inevitably be light and chaffy. It is
certain that it will not be a heavy
yield, though the number of hills be
greater than usual. —Macon Tele
graph:
Autum Dues.
BY B. E. MEJI*.'
The Antrim dues are falling fast.
Upon otir cotton patch ;
The man we owe impatient waits,
And says; “come up to the scratch.”
The cotton’s short by drougth and rust,
But still he won’t relent:
The bacon’s gone, the corn is dust,
And thefe’s the fifty per cent.
It’s hard to give up all we’ve made;
We’ll try to be content;
it's right to pay for what we’ve used,
(But then that fifty per cent!)
And still I wish they’d make a law
For folks to “pay as they go;”
Then liens and fifty per cents, would stop,
And we’d be richer, I Know?
South Garolina, September 2G 1872*
widespr,J dLrartion of" The ju te ° f
will fall into S’., of .* h <»»
through thq loss of thefr% u . a l l Th V t,OEl
will suffer through the km Hf In *
to. I ears ago the use of- r l lol *-
out the Hindoo industry , n tltTn V ®
mng and weaving. <), ir WsJr J*.
yorary impulse to coWttowhJ f j?'
potation. But with the* swL ex '
tnfe rebellion and the tfubaetnE
m chiton culture at the South it V*"}-
dined fn India. The expoCion
of cotton from the ports of Her
Kent India doming -™.i»
for some years past, and shows
diminution in 1872—N. Y. World 0 * °
Bayley’s Chill and Fkvm p,,.. »
sale by the Agent. riLL ». for
1. R. Yl Ardeli, Drugg^
New Advertisements.
LAND AND MILLSFOR^Me
1 Ac,es lan,3 > >n
and giist mill (water p,, w ,. rlll .
good order, 11 mihs east of BninbriC
one mile from the line ol the A. & y y
l . Apply to J. L. Per.itt, Harrell
Oct. b; ’72. 10-ts
G- D GRIFFIN;
AT THE
KENTUCKY & TENNESSEE
Has on hand and for sale a fine lot flames
an’d Saddle Horses.
. ITc is also expecting at an early dav.
find lot of M ules.
Kdeps always on hand horses ami mules
and dan accommodate the public, either by
selling or hiring sto'clA
Call and see him jAif he has not stock
to sent iu a few days
C. C. CREWS. N.ATT.
CIIKWSJ^LATT,
eoTTO^BRri’ORS
commission Merchants.
flknfinali, Ga.
J&g?* 1 ' Orders prompTß at tended to. Con
sigmh'cnts solicited. w
Oct. 5, ’72.
A. M. ri.OAN. 3, H. RUM.
a.m.slo^Tn&co,
COTTON FjMTORS
—AND
General Commission
mebchAts.
CLAGHORN A CUKNIKOTAM’s RANGE,
Bay Street, Savannah, G*.
Bagging and Ties loVcst market pri« 4
Libei al cash advances made on consij'ii
ments for sale in Savannah or on shiji
meats to reliable correspondents in 1 iver
pool, New York, Philadelphia, or Haiti*
more.
Otst. 5, ’72. Ito-Slii
DECATUR SHERIFFS SALE.
WILL be sold before the Court Honse
door, in the city of B'rinbridge, n»
the first Tuesday in November next, the
following property to wit:
lots of bifid, ’numbers 240 nnd 229 io
lotlr district of Decatur county, leuetl< ,n
as file propeity Os I'auiel Hdniphrty, tic
satisly one Superior Coilit ft fa, in favor and
Hull & Briggs Vs Jlanfel Humphrey.
L. F. BURKETT, Dept. Sn'fl.
aYso,
At the same film} and place, lots ol'»«»
Nos. 15, 71, 51 and 50, in the I'dtb oiltiict
of Decatur county,' Cfa,, to satiefy onet'O
perior Court fi fa, in favdr of Duncan Mfe
Lunch lin vs W. B. tVomb'e, John S. Clif
ton and Cuyler Freeman, levied on as lb*
property of said Freiftttfi/
L. F. BURKETT, Dept. Sh’ff.
ALSO,
At tbfe same tirad and place, lota of Una
Nos. 15, 71. 51 and 60, in the 20th district 1
of Decatur co»>n v, as the property of W.
B. |Womble, John 8. Clifton and Cujlrt
Freeman, in favOr of Duncan McLaucblin.
I*. F. BU RKETT, Dept. Miff.
DECATUR MORTGAGE SHER
IFF’S SALE.
WILL be sold before the Court House
door, in the city of Bainbridge on lb*
ftrst Tuesday In December nett, tbe f°|
lowing described property, to wit: Oct
red bobtailed steer named Bob and one
white Ox, levied on h 9 tlie property o'
Thomas Phillips col., to satisfy one mort
gage fifa, in favoi of C. C. King vs. said
Thomas Phillips. Said fifa issued fro®
Decatur Superior Court.
L. F. BURKEET, Dept’y Sheriff.
POSTPONED SHERIFF'S SALE.
WILL BE SO.*D before the Court
House door in the cliy of Baiuhu<k #
on the first TO'-sday in' November next t jC
following property to wit: . .
One P.iiy Mare/ paid property being lev®
on asthe property of Redden Mot*,
satisfy one Superior Court fi fa > D “* vor s
S: W. Patterson, surviving partner «
\V. Patterson St Biot her vs. raid ‘‘% aeu
Mock. h F. BUrket,' Dep Mi 0.
GEORGIA— -Decafat Comity. ,
On the first Monday in >ovem ~
will apply ter the Court of Cj^ ,na /Li.,'
leave to self tfte real estate Os Mr in
deceased. , _ . _ .
J. J. DOLLAR, Admr.
Oct# sth, 1872.
Georgia— Decatdr r
On the first Monday in
will apply to the Court of 0
leave to sell the reffl estate of
bury, deceased. J R RlC „,Adm'.
Oct. sth, 1872. •
GEORGIA— Decatur County. J
On the first Monday m - for
will apply to the Court of Oni' - ){<
leave to sell the real estate of- P
Thomas. jAg T [IO MAS. Adnfa
Oct. sth, 1872. j
GEORGIA— Decatur
On the first Tuesday }“
next, bids will be Ox
bridge across the 1 g’ vlD *’
known' as the Baranaug tbe
bond and security for keep g I V.
seven years. JOHNS 0 *
g. S. MANN.
D. B. CURKV.
County Conun is ol
Oet. sth, 1872.