The Greensboro herald. (Greensboro, Ga.) 1866-1886, September 02, 1875, Image 2

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£7?e IjvnilcL THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1875. Ai ei'ST REPORT OF THE AOKim/n iCAI. HE. PAitT.nuvr. The State Agricultural Department, under the able management of our fel low-citizen, Hon. T. P. Janes, is doing a vast amount of good, and is destined, at no distant day, to work a complete revolution in the agriculture of the State. The lust report, which is very full and comprehensive, abound? in in structive and interesting information. In addition to a stateuient of the gen eral condition and average of the vari ous crops throughout the State, the Commissioner has elicited and presents facts upon farm economy which are worthy of careful consideration. Would that the report was in the hands of every farmer in Georgia. Had we the •space we would gladly lay it before our readers in full, but it is out of the question, and, hence, we can only give space to certain salient features which we trust will he sufficiently suggestive to awaken our people to serious reflec tion. We quote from the report: ‘‘Only 20 per cent, o f the farmers buy entirely for cash, while those who buy on a credit pay at the enormous rate of 44 per cent, per annum interest on what they consume, amounting, in the aggregate, iu the State of Georgia, to the astonishing sum of §4,250,000 — four mid a quarter millions dollars paid by the farmers in interest on what they consume. Is it remarkable that farm ing is not profitable under such a suici dal policy? No legitimate business can pay 44 per cent, per annum on the cap ital necessary to conduct it, and live. Another instructive lesson taught by (lie above answers is the fact that 80 per cent, of those who raise their sop plies make a profit, while 75 per cent. of those who buy lose money. Let us put these facts together, and study the lessons taught by them: Ist. Only 20 per cent, of the farm ers pay cash for what they buy. 2d. Those who buy on a credit pay sn avernga of 44 per cent, per annum interest on the cash prices. •3d. The farmers of Georgia pay, in interest on supplies—nearly all of which can be raised on their farms—the sum o/U ,250,000, which is more than of the bonded debt o f Georgia , and is 14 per cent, of the valua of the entire cotton crop of the State. 4th. 80 por cent, of‘Chose who raise their supplies make a profit, while 75 per cent, of those who buy, lose. These are startling facts, which tak en in connection with thoso developed in previuus reports from this Depart ment, viz: that the farmers of Georgia anuually lose, by the injudicious pur chase and use of fertilizers, more than 12,000,000, and that one great branch of industry, sheep husbandry, one of !hc avenues of escape from onr enibar rassments, is absolutely prohibited, by the absence of necessary legislation and the consequent tax of 15 per cent, of the whole number of sheep in the State to feed dogs, demand the serious con sideration of our farming community. What are the remedies for these blights upon our industry? The diflGculties teach their own les sons, and suggest their own remedies: Ist. Experience and theso facts tea oh that, raising cotton to hug sup plies .to raise cotton , at present prices, leads directly to bankruptcy and ruin. 2J. That those who raise their own supplies make cotton at a profit , and are prorperous. Indeed, correspond ents generally report that those who raise their own supplies cannot lose money, \l they attend to their busi ness. 2d. That borne manure* must be hus banded, concentrated, and judiciously applied. 4th. That the farmers must demand such legislation as will remove the pres ent prohibition upon sheep-husbandry. With only 370,492 sheep in Georgia, the annual loss by dogs, valuing the sheep at only 81.30 per head, is SS3,- 457, which is a mere trifle compared to the amount lost to the State by the preventio® of sheep raising. To sum up the whole in a few words, the farmers, to he prosperous, must— -Ist. Cease to buy supplies that can be raised on their farms. 2d. They must cease to buy fertilizers, except to supplement home manures, carefully husbanded under shelter. 3d. They must reduce their planting down to a cash basis. • 4th. They mast demand such a tax upon dogs and such protection from their ravages as will enable them to raise wool and mutton, and thus utilize, almost without labor, their at present waste or useless lands. The remains of General John C. Breckinridge have been removed from the vault where they were placed at the time of his funeral, and buried in ihc Lexington. Kentucky, cemetery. Tlie Problem of the Xegro’a Future. [From the St. Louis Republican.] Why is it that all efforts to attract immigration to the Southern States have been signal failures? There are no fairer regions on the continent than Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee; there is no place in all the North where an industrious white man can make more money, with the same amount of labor, (ban on the cotton lands of Mississippi, or in the sugar districts of Louisiana, But though choice lands in Mississippi and Louisi ana may be had from §5 to §lO per acre, though farms in Arkansas, Ala ban:n and South Carolina may be had for next to nothing, there is not, and has not boen sinca the war, any immi gration whatever into the negro States, with the exception of Missouri. Texas, it is true, is filling up with new settlers, but they come from other Southern States; and all the migration that is seen in the South is either a movement of whites to the North, or a transfer of whites and blacks from one Southern State to another, no influx of population from the North or from abroad is observable. The conclusion which these singular facts irresistibly force is that the inert, immovable negro population in the Southern States is an impassable barrier to immigration. If the 512,000 blacks now in Virginia could be transferred to lowa, the two States would change places; immigra tion would poor into the white State of Virgiuia, and avoid the black State of lowa, and the Northern position and oharacter of ths latter State would not avail to change the eurrent. “Indeed, the fact that whites from the North and abroad refuse to go into the South no less now than before emancipation, proves that it was not slavery, but the presence of the black race that lias caused the inferiority of those States to their Northern sisters in wealth and power. If the blacks7n the South were assimilable with our composite race, as other people are, or if they were as insignificant in numbers as they are in the Northern States, the force of circumstances would settle all difficulties. But when there arc4,ooo, 000 blacks in the South—when there are five blacks to seven whites in Vir ginia, one black to every white in Louisiana, four blacks to tlirco whites in Mississippi, and four blacks to two whites in South Carolina; and when it is reflected that it is the nature of the negro race to become so rooted in the soil that nothing but forco can detach him from it—the future of our rela tions with this separate and inferior race is found to be enveloped in diffi culty and uncertainly. On one band logic and abstract right require that, in a Republic, all men should be equal; but the opposition which the Republican North presents to the civil rights law, and its manifest determination to overthrow it, prove conclusively that whites and blacks in this country are Bot equal, and that the whites arc resolved they shall not be Whether the two raec3, thus socially and logically separate, should not be geographically separatod—whether it will not become necessary to surrender a portion of the South to the negro to save the other portions—-whether, in deed, the negro himself is not now forcing things in this direction—arc questions which, within ten yens, per haps, we shall have to consider and de cide. .4 Piece el' Secret History. Ex-Gov. Vance of North Carolina delivered an address before the South ern Historical Society at Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs Va, on the 18th u!t. The Richmond Dispatch, has a report of'it, from which the fol lowing is taken: Alluding to the fact that much has been said about the presence of" an un ruly disloyal Union sentiment in North Carolina during the war”and “the pre valence of the unjust impression that North Carolina could beeasily detached from her duty to her confederates,’' Gov ernor Vance said that “it seemed there were sonic who presumed upon it far im portant purposes.” “Soon after the failure of the Hamp ton Roads conference I was visited by Governor Graham, whoso death we so recently deplore, who was then a Sena tor of the Confederate States. After giving all particulars of that conference which had not appeared in the papers, and the prevailing impressions of Con gressional circles about Richmond, etc. he infirmed me that a number of lead ing gentlemen there, despairing of ob taining peace through Mr. Davis, and believing the end inevitable and not do* tant, had requested him to visit me and urge me as Governor of North Carolina to take steps for making separate terms with Mr. Lincoln, and thus inaugurate the conclusion. Grovcrnor Graham re marked that he had agreed to lay their request before me without promising to dd hi personal advice thereto - “I asked who these gentlemen were, and with some reluctance he gave me their names—chiefly Senators and Rep resentatives in the Confederate States Congress. I asked why these gentle men did not begin negotiations for their own States with the enemy, and if they would come out in the papers with this request to me. “He said they would not take the in itiative. They were so surrounded at home, and so trammelled by pledges, etc., as to render it impossible. Ide dined the proposition, of course, and asked him to say to those gentlemen, with my compliments, that in the moun tains of North Carolina, where I was reared, when a man was whipped he had to do his own halhxiiug; that the technical word ‘enough’ could not be cried by proxy. This secret piece of history will serve to show that there was a faintness of bonrt and a smiting together of the knees iu other parts of the South outside of North Carolina.” GLEANINGS. :ck Aaother revolution is expected in Ilayti. Three toxros in Russia, wye totally burned last week. Trouble seems to be brewing between England and China. The President of Ecuador, was assas sinated a tew days ago. The insurrection in the Christian provinces of Turkey, is spreading. The Old Catholics have had a har monious Conference at Boon, Germany. Thirty seven foreign Governments have accepted the Centennial invita ion. Moody and Sankey, the revivalists, will hold their first meeting in Spring field, Massachusetts, next week. Wheat in the Nashville market is quoted at §1.25, and the Banner says it is not likely to go above those figure at present. The foot and mouth disease has broken out in Eugland. Twelve thou sand animals have been attackod in Dorsetshire. The Chicago Tribune says three dol lars a day is readily given fur farm work in many parts of Illinois, lowa and Minnesota, The Khedive-of Egypt is preparing to go to war with Abyssinia, and (be indications areihathe proposes to make short work of it. A bond of Ku-klux have inaugurat ed a reign of terror in several counties of Illinois. Many murders ha"e been committed by them recently. A heawy frost fed in various parts of Illiuoi* <m) Saturday tight. Pota toes and -other vegetables were severely injured in the vicinity of Chicago. Immigration iuto the United States shows a decrease of 80,090 for they ear ending June 39, 1875, as compared with the year ending June 30, 1874. Montreal, August 27 —Tike Catho lie cure ol £t. Jean Baptiste village has given notice that he will re-luse the sa crament to members of his church who •vonr low-neck dresses or pull-back skirts. The celebrated boiling spring of Pagosa at DeJ Norte, Rio Grande county, Colorado, is an immense cauld ron of water 60 by 80 feet. The water is remarkably clear aud of unknown depth. It is probably the largest spring in the world. Ilicc is Lacouting a favorite crop in some sactionn of the South. It costs £6 40 to cultivate aod send to market an acre of rice, yielding 1.200 pounds of clear grain, which sells for BS4 The protit is about 847 CO per aere, and the crop is not a difficult one to grow. Vicksburg, August 26. A special to the Herald from Macon, Miss., dated the 24th inst., reports a riot at New Hope Church, in which eight negroes were killed and several wounded. The riot was caused by a quarrel between a white tnau and a negro about dram beating. The heat on the Southern Pacific Railroad grade, near the Colorado des ert. is so intense that the theuiometer often uiarks 120 degrees in the 6had", when shade can he found. A consider able number of the laborers on the road have died of the heat. There is prob ably no other spot in the United States that can equal this PORTER FLEMING, COTTON FACTOR, Commission Merchant, 138 Reynold* Sr., Augusta, Georgia tttjf*Comniission for Selling Cotton $1 per Rale. Orders for Bagging and Ties cspectfully solicited. September 2, 187-')—lino J. M. BURDSLL, COTTO A F A ( 1 ° ll Commission gSMiBBI Merchant, Continues business at Vo G Warren Block, AUGUSTA. GA. solicited. Strict attention given to Sales and Weights, and Orders for Goods filled at t’asli Prices. September o, 1875—1 m J9Lm ~ ~ fWXO W fWL BCiCV WAHEIKHAE NO. 1 WARREN BLOCK, COMMISSION 0 MERGHAHT-£ililS AOGU ST A, GA. rniIANKKUL FOR Till: ÜBKRAI. PATRONAGE HERETOFORE BESTOWED. 1. would lake this occasion lo notify the planters of Georgia and South Carolina that he continues the Commission Butii.tss in nil its branches (except buying and selling futures;, and solicits consignments of Cotton for sale or storage. He will give the selling of cotton his personal attention. He is, eg heretofore, Agent for tlie just ly celebrated Patapsco Guano and Grange Mixture. [sept2 —2m] VI A. STOV \ LL. Scott’s Improved Cotton Tie ! The -Hu it Secure, r Adjusted Cotton Simple, A llasil v Tie in the Market. mm, wMf & co., Wholesale Grocers & Cotton Factors Aipls. m REYNOLDS STREET, sppt .2-3 m AUGUSTA, GA. WILS Oi\ & DUNII AH, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN N @ss3 E G €T- J9L. 1C <*> To n.l € € o 9 Pipes, etc., etc. |©“Wc sell at New York Pi ices to Merchants. Goods GunranteeJ.*©a 180 It l oad Street, (Opposite Express Office, Next to Telegraph Office,) .A.TJ C3-T7 JS T - OSSOXIG-XjA.. September 2-Sni i T in i .i—— i ii r~ U. A. RAMSEY. 11. 11. D ANTiGNAO. RAMSEY 1 IYANTIGNAC, Auction and Commisson Merchants, NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PLANTERS HOTEL, No. 304 Broad Street. Augusta, Georgia. ATTENTION PAID TO THE SALE OF PRODUCE "VS* REFER BY PERMISSION TO* Alfred Baker, Esq. President National Exchange; Bank. H It Hickman, Esq, President of the Bank of Augusta. Col S K Johnson, Supt Georgia Kit. H F Russell, Esq, Cotton Factor. 7, McCord, Esq, Grocer. B S Dunbar, Cotton Factor. W F Her ring, Esq, firm Claghorn, Herring & Cos. George T Jackson & Cos, Flour Merchant. Sibley & iVheless, Cotton Factors. Blair, Smith & Co,-Commission Merchants. Hon Charles Estes, Mayor of Augusta, Ga. .Dr II II Steiner, of Augusta, Ga. Col E W Cole, Pres’t Nash. <fc Chatt. lilt, Nashville. S W Edwards, Esq, agent Air Line RR, Nashville. Rev James P Boyce, Louisville, Kentuck}-. September 2—lm G VOLGEIt. C. lIUNEKEN, §. wmmn & eo., DIRECT IMPORTERS, -MANUFACTURERS OF £ DEALERS IN Segarn 9 Tobacco 2 => “ 2ZP 22- rp _ 19*> and 2*54 Broad Street, Augusta, i*a. sept 2-J lll GR ANGER WA R HHOUSE, Conducted by the Patrons of Husbandry. Mark- your coHon P.U. A. Planters 1 Union Agency, No. 6 Mclntosh Street, AUGUSTA, - - GEORGIA. At the Commodious Fire-Proof Warehouse formerly occupied by Jennings, Smiih & Cos. CHARGES. Commission for Selling Cotlon, per bale 50c Storage—First Week : : : : 10c “ —Each Additional Week : 5c Drayagc—l’cr Bale 10c outside of the Order admitled on the same terms,.Commissions included. Kjfi,Bagging and Ties furnished Patrons. W. W. RHODES, Sup r t. au gusto,lß7smo3 /ALUABLK CITY PROPERTY I WILL SELL THE DWELLING HOUSE and Lot on which I now reside, on rea sonable terms. The dwelling has four geod rooms and on the lot is a good kitchen and servants house, and au excellent well of water. The lot contains two and one-half acres, all newly fenced and everything in good repair. For terms, &c., apply to Samuel A. Torbert. Aug. 11, 1875-tf Green t-sboro’, Ga. Ut EOII6I i-stireetie <mnt.v- V9T Richard G. Carlton, adminis.rator of Travis C. Carlton, applies for Letters of Dismission, and said Letters will be granted on ihe first Monday in October, 1875, un less valid objections thereto are filed. Given under my hand officially, July 3d, 1875. JOEL F. THORNTON, Ordinary. July ?-3m (JILTZS PATENT WELL Boring Machine. rr E UNDERSIGNED HAVING pur- JL chased the county right of Greene County to the alawe mentioned invention are prepared to bore wells on short notice upon reasonable terms.and with the utmost dispatch. Those who have been accus tomed to the old system of well digging, with its plodding drudgery, expense and delay, can form no adequate idea of the manner in which such herculean tasks may he accelerated,until they try GIL'I/C'S patent labor saving machine. It bores a beautiful, uniform, cylindrical well, with a smooth perpendicular wa l, at. ati expense of only one dollar per foot,com pleted—at the rate of 50 to 100 foot perday. Any one wanting a well without much trouble or expense, will do well tog.ve us a trial. Those who have favored 11s with their patronage pronounce our machine one of tlie most useful of modern inven tions, and Gilfz a benefactor of bis race, one before which even Keely's hydropneu matic-pulsating-vacuo would pale and he hide liis diminished head. Ye who are curious to find the philosopher's stone, behold! the hidden alchemy that transmutes wlmt it touches into gold. Ye who are thirsty give us a call and we will lead you to pure and crystal waters. Address, Young. Armstrong & Cos.. Bairdstows, Ga. REFERENCES: Stephen Stokely, Lexington, Ga; Robert Freeman, Edward Banders, John Jewell, and F Landrum. Stephens, Ga; Cullen Caldwell, .Mitchell Lane, and VVm Burton, Bairdstown, Ga. - aug 19-tf GEOKGiA— (irecne County. On the first Monday in September next application will be made to the Ordi nary of said county fur leave to sell a por tion of the real estate of John Armstrong, deceased. TAMES R. SANDERS. Adm'r. August 2d, 1?75w4 NEW FALL GOODS I>EW FALL GOODS? The Fredericksburg Store! Augusta, Georgia. WE ARE NOW RECEIVING OUR Stock of Fall and Winter DRY GOODS, and which will soon be complete in every department. We have now in stock choice styles of new Calicoes at 6J, 8 and 10c ; Black Alpacas at 25, 35, 40, 45, 50, CO, 65, 75, 85, Si and $1 25 to $1 50 ; Black Mohairs from 45c to $1 50; Black Cashmeres, Henriettas and Bombazines from 75c to $1 50; Beautiful Colored Dress Goods from 25 to 75c ; Kentucky Jeans at 15, 20, 25, 35, 40, 45 and 50c ; Tweeds and (,'assimers at 50, CO, 75 85c and $1 to $150; Kerseys and Satinets from 40 to 75c; New York Mills and Wamsutta Bleached Cottons at 10c; Fruit of the Loom and Londsdale do. at 121 c; other makes of Bleached Cotton at lower prices. Purchasers will do well to examine our slock, and we particularly wish them to notice the superior black and finish of our Alpacas, Mohairs, Cashmeres and Bomba zines, To those of our country friends who can not pay us a visit we will, upon applica tion, send them samples of any Goods we keep that can be sampled. Also, a Price Lis t of all the leading articles we keep. We are agents for the celebrated Domes tic Paper Fashions, and will, upon applica tion send Catalogue with Prices and De signs, and upon receipt of the price of any Pattern, will forward same by mail or otherwise. Country merchants who buy close for cash, or city acceptance, will do well to ex amine our wholesale *:ock,and we respeet fttlly invite them to do so. V. RICHARDS & DUO., Corner by the Planters’ Hotel, 301 Broad street, Augusta, Ga. aug26-2m “©fl tor : “©a w : COURT : “©a |AVENUE SALOON!: ..... re;ir Hall & Co.’s.,) ; ■••• ; dwreenealporo’, fin., : ; John P. Cartwright, Prop’r. j •••••• !••••••(•• • * • • M respectfully announce to my“\3B friends and the public generally that I have just opened the finest Saloon in this city. My bar is supplied with the finest pure do raestic and imported “fdfl Whiskies, Brandies, GINS. WIRES AMD LIOUOR3 OF EVEiSY VARIETY, AND CHOICE CIGARS. FRESH LAGER RECEIVED DAILY. ICE ALWAYS ON HAND, The paironageof the public is solicited, may 20th, 1875-yl .1 P Cartwright hides, - GREEN ™ DRY, Wanted TN Exchange for SHOES and LILITH EBt. For first-class Hides, we wiil give the highest market price. What we mean by First-Olass hides is, tiiose clear of holes and taken from healthy animals. Murrain hides can not bn rated as first-class. Persons wishing to sell their Hides as first-class, must not keep them till they are partly destroyed by worms. We have a supply of Bark now on hand, and hope our customers will cover up and take care of their hark until we can make room for it at our yard. We have as good stock as can he found anywhere, and remember ours is a home enterprise. , BROWN & MONCRIEF. Greenesboro’, Ga., May 27, 1875. Something JYew MIXED IN BARREL AT RETAIL, 81.00 PER GALLON, Half the pricp of the same in jars and a better article. For sale by W.C. CARTWRIGHT W JUfT E D ! ")00 BUSHELS*OF NICE DRIED FRUIT, For which the highest market piice will be paid by c. M. Kl> Greenesboro’, aug. 26-tf J. F. 1A V I.OIC. BARBER Md" HAIR' DRESSER, Room over J P Cartwright’s saloon,former ly occupied by M L Richter, may2o.’7s-tf Greenesboro', Ga Take Notice! I WILL TEACH ANY ONE to determine the age of Horses from one to twenty one years of age. Price $5.00; In advance—satisfaction guaranteed. EATON J. MAPP. April 28th, 1875.—Gm0 Notice to Debtors and Creditors. ALL PERSONS INDEBTED TO THE estate of John Armstrong, deceased, are notified to make immediale payment and those having claims against said de ceased, will present them to me duly authenticated. JAMES R. SANDERS, Admin’r. August 2d, 1875w5 Gi EOltttlA—Wreeiit Count?— V On the first Monday in September next an order will be granted to Miles W. Lewis, executor of Litlleberry Jackson, to sell all the real estate of said Litlleberry Jackson, unless valid objections ti the same are filed. Given under my hand officially,August 2, 1875. JOEL F. THORNTON, Ordy. nugusts,lß7sw4 Petition for Corpora* tion. STATE OF CEORGIAH Greene Countv. j TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAID COUNTY: mi!E Petition of Antoine Poullain, Thom l as N. Poullain, Jr., Philip Poullain, Celeste Moore, Marion B. Moore, Harriet M. Ware, Julia C. Poullain, Sarah N. Pouß lain, Henry B. Plant, Joliu P. Kennedy, Maurice Wilkinson, William M. Reese, Augustas l!ees ami William L. High, Shctcelh: That your petitioners have asso ciated themselves together uuder the name of tho ‘Fontenoy Cotton Mills 1 for t lie purpose of engaging in the business of manufacturing Cotton or Woolen fabrics, grist, flour, and lumber, at Scull Shoals, in the County of Greene aforesaid, upon a body of land which your petitioners propose to acquire, known as the •‘Fontenoy tract," ly ing op both sides of the Oconee River, iu the counties of Greene, Oglethorpe and Oconee, and containing Thirty-eight Hun dred an es (more cr less ;> Also, of using so much of said land, in the prosecution of their said business, as may be requisite or necessary, an I dividing the remainder into farms of ten,twenty, forty, and one hundred acres, or into village lots, with convenient avenues or streets, and leasing or selling the same to immigrants or actual settlers, in furtberanee cf tho objects above speci fied. The capital slock of the Company to be One llnmirori and Filly Tliou- Killlll Dollars,, divided into shares of One Hundred Dollars each, and to consist in part of the land aforesaid representing Siren I[undrcd and Fifty share*, with the im provements and property thereon, to wit : A large Cotton Factory containing 3,300 spindles, 116 looms, and other machinery ; A grist mill, having two run of corn stones aud two of wheat stones; a Saw mill, a wa ter Gin, a blacksmith shop, a toll covered Bridge upon stone piuvs, n brick ware house, brick dwelling house, a two story Store house, and sundry operative houses, cabins, eto.; and in part of seven hundred anil fijty shaies in cash subscriptions, to be made by the said Henry B Plant, John P. Kennedy, Maurice Wilkinson, William M. Reese, Augustus Reese, William L. High, and others. And to this end your petitioners desire to be Incorporated, under said name, for the period of twenty years, renewable at the expiration of that time, with the. privil ege of acquiring for themselves, their asso ciates, successors, and assigns, the legal ti tle to said land, improvements and proper ty. and of using, laying off, and leasing or selling the same, or any part thereof, as aforesaid; of making and .using a common seal ; and of issuing coupon bonds, to an amount not exceeding said capital static, and mortgaging said land, improvements, and property, to secure payment of the same,by deed of trust Jo three or more persons, up on the following conditions, to wit : That in case default is made in the payment of tho principal or interest, at the time stipulated, said tiirstees shall be authorized and requir ed, upon the written request of any bond holder, to advertise said land, improve ments, and property, once a week for sixty days, in a newspaper published at Greenes boro’, Georgia, and another in the city of Augusta, and Jo sell the same for cash, at public outcry, before the Court-House door in Greeresboro aforesaid, on (lie first Tue. - day in the month next after the expira tion of said sixty days ; aud if after deduct ing the expenses pfsnlc, and paying the principal #,n.J interest due on said bonds, any surplus remains, such surplus shall be paid to said Company, or divided among the stockholders thereof; Provided, That said bonds shall contain, upon their face, notice to the holder that not less than five per centum of Hie amount issued, to bo se lected by lot, shall b* redeemable annually, after the expiration of two years from their date. Also the privilege of conducting the nffairs and business .of the Company through a President, Secretary and Treasurer, and three Dire* tors, who shall be elected by majority of the Stockholders in person or by proxy, and bold their offices during good behavior, and until removed by the Stockholders at an annual up special meet ing: Also of making such By-Laws for the government of their affairs and business, and the compensation of cheir officers, as shall be deemed expedient or necessary-; of increasing said Capital Stock hereafter from time U> time as the said corporators, their assigns and successors mny see fit, to the sum of Rive Hundred Thousand Dol lars, and generally, of exercising all other corporate powers necessary to Jbe purposes of their organization, with no other liability than that fixed by Section IfiTti, of the Re vised Code of this State, to wit i "In case of the failure of said Corporation, tho Stockholders shaTT be bound, in their pri vate capacity, to arty creditor of snid Cor poration, for the nnuxunt of stock subscrib ed for by him until the said subscription is fully paid up, or un‘il the stockholder shall have paid, out of his private property,debts of tho said Corporation to an amount equal to Mr unpaid subscription ” M HF RF FORE your petitioners pray that this declaration be recorded-and published once a week for one month, in the Greenes boro' Ilerald, and that the usual order granting the same, bo passed by the Court at the next Term. W A. ft3. M. WALTON, Aug. 12, 1875—1 m Petitioners Att’ys r n pieces^™ f%ll ( ’ URED canvassed nil dried UU beef At less than packers’ prices—only 12J cts per pound. For sale by W.O. CARTWRIGHT FAIR NOTICE. II AVING disposed of my Saloon busi ness, 1 hereby notify all those indebted to me to conie forward immediately and set tle, otherwise they will find their claims in the hands of a Lawyer for collection. I mean what 1 say. J. T. CULVER. Greenesboro’, Ga., Aug. 5. 1875 GEORGIA —Greene County. Thomas Swunlnll, administrator of Gilby Moore, applies for Letters of Dis mission from said estate and such Letters will be granted on the first Monday in August next, unless vnii 1 objections thereto are filed. Given under my hand and official signa ture, the oth day of May, 1875. JOEL F. THORNTON, Ordinary, mny 6th, IS7s.—3m* Soda-Water! IlwiXOjust received one of John Matthews'latest improved Patent Lapland Soda-Water Apparatus, I am now prepar ed to furnish pure Ice-cold Soda-Water, with fine syrups of xarious flavors. [E?~Tiekels 10 certs—s. per dozen. .Volin V, Griffin,. Max 20. 1875—tf