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THE EASTMAN TIMES.
R. S. BURTON, - - Proprietor.
H. W. J. HAM. - - - - Editor.
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 1, 1873.
Not a Question of Wheat.
Dr. J. C. 0. C. C. Blackburn, the
smart little man who 'runs a paper,
ridiculously called the Patriot , at some
point or other down the Macon Road,
joins in the now popular amusement
of squirting water at the Herald. lie
says in this ‘ Patriot" of his :
“Grange Organ. —This mooted ques
tion is settled at last. The child is
born, named, and the {Atlanta Herald
steps to the front Ye pigmies, who
were striving for the position, hide
your faces, throw up the sponge, and
retire gracefully. But what will the
Herald do ? It stands committed not
to become the organ of any clique, or
ganization, association, combination
or party, but will only consent to lol
lovv the course indicated at its very
birth, that of independent journalism.
But you know men will change, how
ever eternal may be principle. Should
the Tier aid back down from its lofty
position of independence, which it has
so long justly prided itself in, arid be
come the organ of our Grange friends,
it will remind us of the course pur
sued by an old minister in Virginia,
when that State was a colony. It
was the custom of the several congre
gations to pay their preachers in
wheat and tobacco, the current cur
rency of the day. At first, the old
man was made glad by receiving his
instalments regularly. After which
his salary began to decline. He was
surprised. He called in an old deacon,
in whom he had implicit confidence,
and enquired as to the cause. Said
lie, “I preach regularly, zealously and
independently, as 1 did when I began,
but my congregations grow smaller
and I am at a loss to divine the cause."
“That is all very true," replied the
deacon, “but to be candid with you,
we don’t like your independence."
“Well," remarked the preacher, “if
that’s all, I’ll change that, for I want
the wheat."
We will not apply the moral until |
we sevi whether the Herald “wants the
wheat."
That the Herald “wants its wheat,"
is no less true than that Dr. Black
burn “wants his rye ;" but that we
have lost any of that independence of
action which has been at once our rec
ord and boast, is not at all true.
The Herald stands pledged to sup
port not a single candidate of the
Grangers or a single measure of the
Grangers.
That it has seen fit to write in favor
of the movement is a proof that it be
lieved the movement susceptible of
great good. The very moment they
show demogogism, illiberality, spleen
or prejudice,, we shall give them the
liveliest fight we can make. The se
lection of the Herald as the “Organ of
the Granges” merely meant that the
Herald being a paper centrally locat
ed, widely circulated, neatly printed
and liberally edited, was a proper me
dium in which to print the advertise
ments of the order. There were no
pledges given or required ; spoken or
implied. Simply a business patron
age, totally unsought by the Herald,
and conferred upon it to its surprise.
We trust that this explanation will
satisfy our friend, the bantam of the
Patriot. We promise him that if we
ever own an “organ,” lie shall be
dressed in a red jacket and a proud
tail and sent out into the crowd to col
lect the pennies while we grind the
machine.— Atlanta Herald.
We read the above bombast and
fustian with no little amusement, and
thought that it might somewhat tame
the ardor of the Herald, and contri
bute somewhat to the better feeling of
the Pa r of, to have heard what T. J.
Smith, Master of the State Grange,
said to us a few days since. Said he,
“I was astonished to-day to sec that
the committee on a newspaper organ
had selected the Atlanta Herald. They
have entirely transcended their pow
ers, had no right to make any such
selection, and I am satisfied when the
State Grange meets in Macon, the
whole matter will be repudiated.”
The newspaper is the product of
vast labor and thought. And yet
when you arc face to face with
it, and it talks in such an easy natural
way, making itself completely at
home with you, you are prone *o for
get at what cost it has, been brought
into life. It comes to you so quietly
and so smoothly, that you may well be
pardoned for tripping into delusions
that it springs into voice and being
—something like Minerva sprang
into full panoply from the brain of
Jupiter— at the mere touch of a magic
wand.
A French lady, hearing that a tun
nel cost 5,000 francs a yard, importun
ed her husband to buy her a dress of
that material.
[COMMUNICATED.]
Towns Station, M. & B. R. R.)
September 11, 1873. }
Editor Times:
A Grange of Patrons of Husbandry
was organized here to-day under the
auspices of Mr. Fred. L. West, of Lees
burg, Ga., composed of the following
gentlemen : I). McArthur, J. C. Clem
ens, Sen , D. F. Mcßae, M. N. Mcßae,
Chas. Stewart, J. D. Clemens, J. W.
Clemens, P. McArthur, T. J. Smith, W.
W. Livingston, E. 11. Graham, W. W.
Pitman, A. 11. Graham, J D. Stewart.
I). Stewart, Geo. Browning, Frank
Smith, John McKay, Geo. Burkhalter,
J. D. Wynn—and the following ladies:
Mrs. Caroline Cotter, Mrs. M. Mcßae,
Mrs. E. Clemens, Mrs. Sarah Clemens,
Mrs. Katharine Mcßae, Mrs. Living
ston, Mrs. Miller, Mrs. Jennie Pitman,
and Miss V. Clark.
The following gentlemen and ladies
were elected officers : Master, D Mc-
Arthur ; Overseer, D. F. Mcßae ; Lec
turer, J. C. Clemens, Sr.; Treasurer,
M. N. Mcßae ; Secretary, T. J. Smith ;
Chaplain, Chas. Stewart ; Steward,
J. W. Clemens ; Assistant Steward,
D. A. Graham ; Gate Keeper, W W.
Livingston ; Ceres, Mrs. Caroline Cot
ter ; Flora, Mrs. M. Mcßae ; Pomona,
Mrs. Katharine Mcßae ; Lady Assist
ant Steward, Mrs. E. Clemens.
Yours, &c.,
Granger.
‘Been Bankrupt Mnce tlie First
Sliovel of Dirt was Taken
Out.’
A correspondent of the Chicago Tri
bune who has been up in Minnesota
for the past year investigating the
management and future prospects of
the Northern Pacific railroad tells
some ugly things about the road and
its projectors. He says:
The Northern Pacifiic Company
never had any financial standing: it
lias been bankrupt from the day the
first shovel full of dirt was taken
out. And if the people had investi
gated the prospects of the company,
they would not to-day be holding
hundreds of thousands of dollars of
its worthless paper. For the last
two years the only receipts the
Northern Pacific Company lias
had were from the sales of land
and its unsecured watered bonds.
There has not been a section of twenty
miles o tii. t road that lias paid its
operating ' xfcnses. And while the
head men of ti c Northern Pacific have
been keeping up a show of appear
ances from the money received from
its bonds and its lands, the operators
—the laboring men—have gone un
paid. I have met men on the North
ern Pacific railroad so poor and so
disheartened, that they were in a
manner beggars ; yet they were on the
pay-roll as creditors of tlio company
for months of wages.
Other crimes against humanity are
justly laid at the door of the Northern
Pacific Company. That company has
employed smart, shrewd, yet unscru
pulous men to visit the Scandinavian
provinces, and deceive and inveigle
those hardy sons of the North to
its inhospitable barren lands. And
it is openly asserted in St. Paul that
Minister Cramer, Grant’s brother
in-law, has been one of these paid
agents. Hundreds of Scandinavians
are scattered along the line of the
Northern Pacific railroad, living in
mud hovels, and barely raising enough
provisions in the short season to sub
sist on during the long gloomy and
terrible winter, with no market for
what little surplus they may stint
themselves to acquire—whose curses
are loud and deep against the decep
tion practiced upon them.
A Sure Cure for Boils.
Dr. Simon, a physician ot Lorraine,
states that, as soon as the character
istic culminating point of boil makes
its appearance, he puts in a saucer a
thimbleful of champhorated alcohol,
and, dipping the ends of his middle
lingers with the liquid, rubs the in
flamed surface, especially the central
portion, repeating the operation eight
or ten times, continuing the rubbing
at each time for about half a minute.
He then allows the surface to dry,
placing a slight coating of camphorat
ed olive oil over the afflicted surface.
He states that one such application
will, in almost all such cases, cause
boils to dry up and disappear. The
application should be made at morn
ing, noon and in the evening. He
avers that the same treatment will
cure whitlows, and all injuries of the
tip of the fingers. As soon as pain
and redness appear, the fingers should
be soaked for ten minutes in camphor
ated sweet oil. The releif is said to
be immediate, and three applications
arc generally enough to afford a cure.
LYNCHING IN LOUISIANA.
Twelve Horse Thieves Hanged
By the Yigilanct Committee.
The troubles which we last week
anticipated would occur between the
citizens of Vermilion parish and the
horde of cattle thieves that infest that
region have at last broken out with
terrible violence. The committee,
urged to desperation by the cool au
dacity of the robbers, have given
vent to their long pent up feelings of
indignation and commenced the work
tf retributive justice. Up to writing
some twelve of the gang have been
swung up.
Our streets are full of vague and
exaggerated rumers concerning the
operations of the Vigilance Commit
tee, the number executed, &c., and it
is next to impossible to obtain a cor
rect detailed accout of the extent of
the troubles. From the best sources
at hand, we elic.t the following infor
mation :
“A delegation of citizens from Ab
beville had called upon Gov. Kellogg
with a view of laying the facts of the
case before him, and ascertaining their
course of action in the matter. The
Governor told them, it is said, to go
on and do whatever the exigencies of
the case seemed to require
Armed with this permission, they
proceeded at once to seize and hang
three or four of the worst characters,
among them two sons of ex-Sheriff
Lege. A prisoner was taken out of
jail and shared the same fate ; a
butcher was seized and executed.
Persons who came from Abbeville last
Monday testify to having seen three
or four bodies swinging from
trees in the neighborhood. The most
intense excitement prevails, and the
members of the committee were scour
ing the country in search of the
“spotted" individuals and hanging
them as fast as caught. Two of the
leading thieves are known to have
passed New Iberia on Sunday, the day
after the hanging commenced, on their
way to the bay. One of them is said
to have thrown his saddle into the bay
and turned his horse loose upon arriv
ing there, preparatory to making his
way to the city. He was, however,
telegraphed for and arrested. On
Tuesday evening a man warned Pag
nol was hanged.
The up boat was boarded this
(Thursday) morning while at Jeane
rette by a party of fifteen or twenty
men, armed with shot guns, and a
orisoner on board, supposed to be the
one arrested at Brashear, forcibly ab
ducted. Parties who afterward met
this same crowd declare the prisoner
was not then in their possession.
This morning he is said to be on a tree
near Dr. Dungan’s plantation.”
The foregoing are the only details
we have been able to gather in regard
to this fearful affair which maj be
considered at all reliable. It is not
known licre how many thieves have
been executed up to this time. The
most reasonable reports put the num
ber down at twelve.— New Iberia Su
gar Bowl, Sept. II
After the Worms. —A Middlcficld
farmer has “rastled” severely, this
year, with cabbage worms.’* When
they first put in an appearance, he
gave them a dose of slaked lime fol
lowed by lime unslakcd, charcoal,
pounded oyster shells, copperas water,
hen manure, carbolic acid, bromo
chloralum, kerosene, (on the appli
cation of the latter, “they wriggled
their tails and asked for more,’) magic
oil, vermifuge, pro. cough syrup, ano
dyne liniment, sneezing snuff, several
washes, and dyes for the hair, condi
tion powders, and various remedies of
the day, after which it was about “an
even thing” for the cabbage and
worms. Asa last resort he gave them
a dose of sperm oil, which extermina
ted every worm, arid he has this year
the best lot of cabbages he ever raised
in bis life.
Livingstone is heard from again A
Paris dispatch reports the arrival in
that city of Mr. Starnes, the English
traveler, who has been roaming around
in Central Africa, where he had the
pleasure of meeting Dr. Livingstone
in June, parting from him so recently
as the Ist of July. Mr. Starnes re
ports the doctor in perfect health, but
the dispatch gives no information as
to how much longer he expected to
stay in Africa.
Gen. John B. Gordon and Gen. W.
B. Bate, of Nashville, have been in*
vited to attend and deliver addresses
at the reunion of the seventh Tennes
see Confederate regiment, which is to
take place at Gallatin on the ninth of
next month.
To The Press.
In accordance with a series of reso
lutions passed by the Georgia Press
Association in Convention at Aineri
cus, the undersigned Committee were
appointed to take all necessary steps
for the formation of a National Press
Association. The Committee having
O
received, through their Chairman, a
number of favorable responses to the
proposition to form such an Associa
tion, from journalists of several States
and Territories, giving to the Commit
tee the assurance of their hearty co
operation in the movement, we deem
the object worthy ol an effort, and the
present an auspicious movement to
begin the work, we therefore issue a
call for a Convention of journalists
throughout the Union to assemble at
St. Louis, Missouri, on Wcdnesdav.
the 26th of November, 1873 r to organ
ize a National Tress Association.
All papers in the United States are
requested to make a notice of the place
and time, and every journalist is re
spectfully solicited to attend.
'The Georgia Press will please do’us
the favor to keep a standing notice of
the call, until the day for the meeting
Robert L. Rodgers,
Cary W. Styles,
C. \V. Hancock,
T. M Peeples,
J. B. Reese
Committe.
GEORGIA NEWS.
When a paper gets down to where
you can’t find a local item in it, we
think it ought to suspend. We don’t
call any names, but address this item
to those who will understand.
This is the way the Grand Jury of
Washington county talks about dogs
in their General Presentments. We
are in favor of making the law a gen
eral one: “The census return fur
nished by the Tax Receiver to the
Comptroller General under a recent
law, shows the enormous number of
2364 dogs in Washington county, ma
ny of them doubtless, “worthless
curs,” and in many instances, a nui
sance and expense, rather than a ben
efit to their owners. Our Senator
and Representatives are respectfully
requested to obtain the passage of an
act taxing dogs in this county two
dollars per head. The fund accruing
from such tax, to be appropriated for
educational purposes.”
Sandersville has had quite an inter
esting protracted meeting.
A \\ ashington county nigger slipped
his hand in a cotton gin the other day.
He is out of the potato business for
the present season, at least.
Hancock county men who desire sit
uations, write letters to prominent
mercantile firms, and forget to gave
their names or addresses. They rare
ly ever succeed in getting what they
seek.
For a readable, racy, live, little coun
try paper, give us the Sandersville
Herald every week. It contains more
nice readable matter for the fireside
and home circle, than any country
weekly in Georgia, save one, and we
are too modest to tell what the name
of that one may be
One Atlanta and two Augusta
banks had suspended under the money
pressure, up to the 25th inst.
Mr. A. P. Surrency, of Appling
county, has a fine boy, about a year
old, whom he calls Alexander Pendle
ton Surrency, after the Hon. A. H.
Stephens, and the editor of this paper.
Wc mention the fact to show that per
haps our humble efforts to make a pa
per for the people is appreciated
abroad.— Valdosta Tunes.
If Madame Rumor be correct in her
whispering, there may be a large fam
ily reared and all of them named after
their pa ; which we presume would
prove that his ‘‘humble efforts” were
appreciated at home. —Brunswick Ap
peal.
Only at Home. Humph !
The morals of the average Georgia
editor has degenerated to the pitch
that they can print a statement of a
single man’s killing from fifty to nine
ty rattlesknakes in one day, without
so much as closing an eye.
The Atlanta papers have at last
concluded that it don’t pay to hire a
special engine to carry their mails.
So very, very sad, that they don’t
own a railroad and fixtures of their
own.
A reporter has interviewed General
Austell, President of an Atlanta bank,
who has just returned from New York
and he gives it as his opinion that the
late crash and panic will only affect
the Southern money market tempora
rily, and that in the course of ten or
fifteen days money will be easier here
than it was before, lie assigns good
reasons for his opinion.
The Atlanta Herald is making anx
ious inquiries about its traveling
agent, Mr. B. F. George. Say, when
George d)es come back, please ask
him about our man. We have entire
ly forgotten his name, now, but any
way, just ask about him, and he’ll be
apt to know who he is, as they’ve like
ly been in caucus somewhere, devis
ing means to get back home.
The Spiritualist ami Free Lov
ers at Chicago.
The annual pow-wow of these ill
starred bedlamites has been going on
for several days in that sensational
centre of the country, Chicago. The
meeting is termed the National Asso
ciation of Spiritualists, and the ex
travaganzas of the delegates, male
and female, are to the full as impious
and preposterous as usual. We give
a quotation from the proceedings :
“A\ oodhull is defending her course
as President, and her peculiar notions
of life, with vigor, and, during Tues
day night’s session, she indulged in
the most radical utterances on all sub
jects. Miss Anna M. Middlebrook, of
Connecticut, said : ‘I stand here, to
night, as far as Christian religion is
concerned, determined on its destruc
tion. In politics lam a rebel, I avow
it boldly. This is a sham republic.
With reference to social problems I
am a revolutionist. Why should we
in the nineteenth century go back 1800
years for our doctrine ? Is there not
more than we can learn from the liv
ing present ? II we live up to our
philosopny we will see the time when
the mummery creeds of Christianity
will be overturned.’
Mr. Higgins, of Jersey City, pro
posed dropping the name “Spiritual
ists” and calling themselves anti-
Christians, and inveighed against the
laws of marriage.”
Jay Cooke & Cos., and Iron Cotton
Ties. —Jay Cooke and his co-laborers
in the field of financial patriotism,
have made not less than one hundred
millions of money by fleecing the
Government. The process still goes
on, and in each great bond sale or oth
er stroke federal financial policy,
Jay Cooke & Cos., handle the funds
and line their protuberant pockets.
It was Jay Cooke & Cos., that absorb
ed millions of acres of public lands
and gave birth to Duluth of immortal
ridiculousness. But Jay Cooke Sc Cos.,
are not content with these little opera
tions bv 1- which the whole people are
plundered to poverty that a newly
born nobility may riot ie ill gotten
wealth and despise the wretched poor
reduced to penury by the knavery of
those who prey upon the Government.
Jay Cooke & Cos., are the owners of
the iron cotton-tie, with which cotton
bales are made exportable. The ties
are patented, and Jay Cooke & Cos ,
have so used the Federal Courts that
the inventor’s widow and orphans get
not one dollar, and all competitors in
the iron-tie market, save one, have
been expelled by injunction, and Jay
Cook & Cos., forthwith advance the
price of iron-ties from five to nine
cents, and this in the face of the fact
that iron has declined thirty per cent.
By every possible device, honest and
dishonest, the people are plundered by
their great greenback masters of the
East, and the chief of those now” levy
ing such intolerable exactions upon
the helpless people of the South, oven
as the favorites of the empire have
robbed the whole country, North and
South, is the desperate body of public
plunderers, known as Jay Cooke &
Co. —Memphis Appeal.
The first duty of the Grangers, it is
suggested, should be to extinguish
every orator who begins with : “I
have not the good fortune to be a far
mer, but I have always felt the most
profound interest in the truly noble
and predominant pursuit of agricul
ture, and never was the interest great
er than now ”
Coleridge says there are four kinds
of readers—the hourglass, whose
reading runs in and out and leaves no
trace of gain ; the second, like the
sponge, takes everything ; the third
retains only refuse that some would
throw away ; Tut the fourth, like the
miner among gems, keeps the pure
and casts aside the clippings.
The possessors of the Tichborne es
tate are already out of pocket SBOO,-
000 by their fight with “the claimant.”
But the lawyers don’t feel particularly
mournful over it.
It is stated that a handsome young
lady named Miller has left Dubuque
to become Brigham Young’s last wife.
A MODEL NEWSPAPER
The Savannah Daily Sews.
The Savannah Daily Norning News i* RC
knowledged by the press and people to be the
best daily paper south of Louisville and east
of New Orleans. Carrying with it the prestige
and reliability of age, and it has all the vigor
and vitality of youth, and its enterprise os
gatherer of the latest and freshest news lag
astonshed its cotemporuies and met the appro- '
bation ol the bublic.
'During the year 1873 no expense of time,
labor, and money will be spared to keep the
Morning News ahead of all its competitors in
Georgia journalism, and to deserve the flatter
ing euconiums heaped upon it from all quar
ters. There has as yet, been no serious at
tempt made to rival the special telegrams which
the News inaugurated some years ago, and
the consequence, is that the reader in search
cf the latest intelligence always looks to the
Morning News. The telegraphic arrange
ments of the paper are such that the omissions
made by the general press reports are promptly
and reliably supplied by its special correspond
ents.
The Morning News has lately been enlarged
to a thirty-six column paper, and this broad
scope of type embraces, daily/ everything of
in terest that transpire in the domain of litera
ture, Art, science, Politics, Religion, and Gen
eral intelligence, giving to the render more
and better digest than other papar in matter
the State.
It is perhaps needless to speak of the poli
ties of the Morning News. For years and
years indeed, since its estalishment,—it has
been a representative Southern paper, and
from that time to the present, in all conjunct
ures, it has consistently and persistently main
tained Democratic States Rights principles, and
labored, with an ardor and devotion that know
no abatement, to promote and preserve the in
terests and honor of the South.
The special features of the Morning News
will be retained and improved upon during the
ensuing year and several new attractions will
be added.
The Georgia News items, with their quaint
and pleasant humor, and the epitome of Florida
affairs, will be continued during year.
The local department will be the most com
plete and reliable to be found in any Savan
nah paper, and the commercial columns will
be full and accurate.
The price of the Daily is $lO 00 per annum
$2.00 for six months; SI.OO for one month.
THE TRI-WEEKLY NEWS.
This edition of the Morning News is es
pecially recommended to those who have n*t
the facilities of a daily mail. Everything that
has been said in regard to the daily edition
may be repeated of the Tri-weekly. It is made
up with great care, and contains the latest des
patches and market reports. The price of this
edition is SO.OO per aunum, $3.00 lor six months,
and $1.50 for three months.
THE WEEKLY NEWS.
The Weekly Morning N ews particularly roe’
ommends itself to the farmer and planter, and
to those who live off the line of railroad. It is
one of the best family papers in tin* country,
and its cheapness brings it within the reach ot
all. It contains Thirty-six solid columns of
reading matter, and is mailed so as to reach sub
scribers with the utmost promptness. It is a
j carefully and laboriously edited compendium
j of the news of the week, and contains in addi-
I tion, an infinite variety ot other choice reading
matter. Editorials on all topics, sketches ot
men, manners, and fashions, tal-s, poetry, bi
ography, pungent paragraphs and condensed
telegrams enter into its make-up. It contains
the latest telegraphic dispatches and market re
ports up to the hour'of going to press, and Is
in all respects, an indispensi Lie adjunct to every
home.
Price-One year, $2.00; six months, $1.00;
three months, 50 cents.
Subscription for either edition of the Moi x
ing News may besent by express at the riskand
expense of the proprietor.- Address.
J. H. ESTILL.
Savannah, Ga.
MARSHAL’S TAX SALEST
Will be sol 1 before the Court House door in
the town of Eastman, Dodge county, Ga., on
the first Tuesday in October next, the follow
ing property, levied on under and by order of
the Town Council of Eastman, to-wit : Eight
Yds. of United States Digest, levied on as the
property of Thomas H. Dawson, to satisfy one
tax fi fa in favor of Council, vs. the said
Dawson. Property pointed out by defendant.
ALSO—At the same time and place will be
sold one lot of Law Books, to-wit; One Code
and four Yds. ot the Acts of the Legislature
of the State of' Georgia, levied on as the prop
erty of H. W. J. Ham, to satisfy one tax fi fa
in favor of Town Council, vs. the said Ham. —
Property pointed out by defendant.
ALSO—At the same time and place will be
sold one Circular Saw, levied on as the prop
erty of A. Murphy, to satisfy one tax fi fa in
favor of Town Council, vs. said Murphy. —
Property pointed out by plaintiff.
ALSO—At the same time and place will be
sold one pair of Fairbanks’ Scales, levied on
as the property of James M. Buchan, to sat
isfy one tax fi fa in favor of Town Council, ys.
said Buchan. Property pointed out by plain
tiff-.
ALSO—WiII be sold at the same time and
place, one Bay Horse, levied on as the prop
erty o' J. H. Lasher, to satisfy one tax fi fa in
favor of Town Council, vs. said Li sfier. Prop
erty pointed out by defendant.
ALSO—WiII be sold at the same time and
place, Three Yols. of Greenleaf on Evidence,
leavied on as the property of L. A. Hall, to
satisfy one tax fi fa in favor of Town Council,
vs. said Hall. Property out by defendant.
HLSO —Will be sold at the same time and
place, one Clock, levied on as the property of
T. M. 3/oseley, to satisfy one tax fi fa in favor
of Town Council, vs. said Moseley. Property
pointed out by defendant. ,
C. B. MURRELL,
Marshal
Sept. 3, 1873-tds.
oTcThorneT
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Hawkinsvillk, Geo.
Oconee Circuit —Court Calendar 1873.
Wilcox —4th Mondays, March and September.
Dooly—3d Mondays, March and September.
Irwin —Fridays after above.
Montgomery 7 —Thurs after Ist Mondays, April.
Laurens —2d Mondays, April and Oct (and Oct.
PuLiski —3d Mondays, April and October.
Dodge—4th Mondays, April and October
Telfair —Thursdays after above.
Jan. 31st, ly.