Newspaper Page Text
Patoh'msbille §ispatrb.
By George P. Wood*.
HAWKINSVILLE, GA., JULY I#, 1871.
General Grant has issued a procla
mation pardoning C. C. Bowen, the
man of many wives. Bowen is about
•a hard a case and one of the great
ant scoundrels that ever went to Con
gress. He is now happy.
A mar named Wilson, who lives
in Hall county, left his home and
family thirty-eight years ago to go to
'California. Up to thirteen years ago
his family heart! from him occasion
ally, but since that time they did not
bears word till one day last week lie
•Avqpped in on them. He found his
children all grown up and married,
and what is stranger than all, his wife
still faithful to his memory.
Rev. Mr. Howeriug, of Valdosta, is
the oldest Methodist preacher in
Georgia. He is over ninty years
old.
The Fouhth or July in Eastman.
—A correspondent of the Telegraph
gives that paper an account of the
■celebration of the Fourth of J uly in
iEastmau. The writer says some of
Ihc patriotic residents of the town
loaded up a huge pine stump for
each Stole in the Union, giving to
•Georgia, the largest stump and a
double charge of powder. At sun
rise they were touched off tit inter
mils of one minute by a watch, and
-as the fuses were of equal length the
■regularity exceeded that of usual
•cannonading, and the reports were
much louder, being heard a distance
•of ten miles.
There arc a few more stumps left
within the limits of the town, not
withstanding the great clearing away
that has been done for the erection
-of the Court-house now being built
fnH other public buildings, private
residences, stores, etc.
Mercer University.— I The Atlan
ta Constitution learns lrom Dr.
Brantly, who has returned from Ma
•con, that Dr. H. H. Tucker, Presi
dent of Mercer University, tendered
bis resignation at the meeting of the
Board of Trustees, snd his resigna
tion was accepted. Rev. J. L. M.
"Curry, of Richmond, Virginia, but a
native Georgian, was elected Presi
dent.
The Atlanta Sun says the now
Methodist Church at Warrenton was
dedicated last Thursday, Bishop
Pierce officiating.
m t>t»
Dr. R. L. Roddy, of Monroe coun
ty, has a half acre of clover which is
said to average about waist high.
The seed were sown in November
last, and the crop cut twice.
Brunswick. —The Appeal says:
We are reliably informed that a com
petent engineer, the agent of a Ger
man company, will soon be sent to
our city, for the purpose of making
arrangements for the establishment of
a direct Ocean Steamship Line be
tween this point and the German
ports.,
The Houston Horae Journal says
that the man TTunt, who has liecn ap
pointed Collector of Revenue for the
Macon District, lives in that county,
lie went to Houston in the early part
of 1870, was appointed census taker,
was elected tax receiver last Decem
ber, tried to be elected county school
commissioner, made a bid for carry,
ing the mail to Fort Valley, and now
weeps, like Alexander the Great, be
muse there are no more offices to fill.
Here is a bit of French philosophy.
Jt is set down to the credit of Alex
ander Dumas, file: “ Walk two hours
Mtftry day. Sleep seven houis every
slgfaL Get up as soon as you wake.
Speak only when necessary, and say
only half what yon think. Don’t
write anytirisg but what you can
sign. Think neither too much nor too
little of money; it is a good servant
bnt a bad master. Beware of women
before you are twenty. Avoid them
after you are forty.
Gen. Denning has left Columbus for
Washington to answer a summons from
the Ku-klux comuission
A female prize fight took place at
Salem, Mass., a few days ago. Here
is a portion of one round, “ Nell was
a little behind lime with her counter,
trot received the blow smilingly, and
soon opened with her left, getting a
•tanner on the widow's wing, and send,
lag the latter to grnuu. First knock
down Cor Nell”
The Georgia trotting-borse, Bis
■sit, is training on one of the trot,
ting parhs ia New York.
Outrages at the North.
Os all the inhuman acts that dis
grace civilization and darken Chris
tianity in the New World, none can
compare with those perpetrated at
the North, a section which claims
pre-eminence over the South for mor
ality and religious piety. Northern pa
pers are teeming daily with most dis
gusting details of homicides, sui
cides, wife-murder, cbild murder, and
innumerable other acts that belong
more to a race of barbarians than
to people claiming to be Christians.
And along side with these horrible
developments will be found tirades
against the South for Ku-klux outra
ges. The Commission now siltiug in
Washington snd hearing testimony
against our own section for alleged dis
orders,can find suttlcieut to do within
their own borders. As spcciiueus of
Northern Ku-klux outrages we copy
elsewhere the harrowing details of
cases of lynch law and assassination
iu Illinois. They are not surpassed
by anything ever brought to light in
this country.
Colton IMuylng out lu Brazil.
It seems that the cotton int rests
of Brazil are on the deeliue. M bile
the export of this staple from Rio
Janeiro in 1868 amounted to 113,466
bales, they were !n 18C9 45,005 bales
—.-an enormous falling off—which whs
further reduced in 1870, when the ex
ports from that port were only 17,910
(Brazilian) bales. The exports of
cotton from Santios during lost year
were 243,728 arrobas, equal to about
18 180 bales of 400 pounds, which,
added to the 18,910 bales from Uio,
makes a total export of cotton from
Brazil for 1870, 36,190 Brazilian
bales, which is less iu weight than 28,-
000 American bales.
The Savannah Advertiser, of Sun
day, says:
Eli Wilson, 11. J. Beddingfleld,
Thomas Welch, Jordon Wood, Elisha
Dukes, West Meadows. James Welch,
W. Peter Smith, Ezra New and Wil
liam Hull, arrested on a warrant is
sued by United Stales Commissioner
A. W. Stone, on complaint of Thom
as Pope, for an alleged violation of
the Ku-klux act in Washington coun
ty, Ga., were brought before a court
of inquiry, composed of United States
Commissioners G. L. I-ce and 11. C.
Wayne, for examination yesterday.
After hearing the testimony I’clcr
Smith, Enoch Smith, Ezra New and
William Hull, were discharged, the
remainder of the party giving I oncls
in the sum of one thousand dollars
each, or a joint bend in the sum of
eight thousand dollars, for their ap
pearance on Monday morning at 10
o’clock.
Cotton crop* In thv ton Imol.
The last New Orleans Picayune
has the subjoined iu its commercial
and finished review:
The tail end of the Inst crop will
doubtless be worked off about on the
basis of present figures ; but ere the
next crop begins to come in lively
the true condition of cop affairs
must become known abroad, and ex
ert a powerful influence in the mar
kets.' The season has now sufficiently
advanced to form an estimate of the
probable yield of cotton, with an av
erage sc son heneforth ; and w ; th
the information at hand, we do not
see how anything like the yield last
year to the acre can be obtained.
The whole crop is fully three weeks
backward. At least ten per cent, of
the land plnnled lias been drowned
out, an I so overcome with grass and
weeds'that it will have to be aban
doned, or, if cultivated, will yield
nothing. Where the rains have
ceased the bottom lands have been
baked by the sun that the hoe bounds
from it as from a rock. The general
rulo is that the bottom land crops are
failures. This is a fixed fact now.
The bill lands may do pretty well,
but there is not oue planter in a doz
en who expects anything above a half
crop on bottom lands, and very many
have abandoned them entirely.—
When it is remembered that these
botton lands are the best we have,
some idea of the injury may be
formed.
The same paper, in a letter from
Jefferson Texas, sajß:
The crops look tolerable. A large
area of corn and other grain has been
planted than last year, and less cot
ton, and it is small for the season.
We are in need of rain now, and ten
day’s of drouth will blast the pros
pects.
The perfection of human nature
lias been attained in anew religious
sect in Scotland, which calls itself
“The Northern Evangelical Society."
Their creed are that they are intirely
sinless, as pure and innocent as their
Creator, and that all other sects are
devoid ol the true spirit of religion.
The Dayton Herald says: “ Mrs.
Yallandighara is now in a hopeful
way of recovery. She ia able to sit
np during a portion of the day. Her
many devoted friends are ministering
every’ care and attention requisite to
sustain her in the reoent terrible
shock whioh abe has suffered. n
From the Telegraph and Messenger,
lie Railroad Imbroglio.
“ When Greek meets Greek then
cornea the tug war.’’
This is Veiifg in Hhel
blows dealt by the Georgia Central
and Macon Brunswick Railroad Com-1
panics, ajul since .the result-of the
last runnel lias been announced, let
Macon withdraw her forces and leave
them to fight it out, for the Brun
swick evidently ueeds no help, and
Macon should do nothing to prevent
a movement that not only Assures her
original purpose of permanent com
petition for her meghto to and from
the sea-board, but o(iens up new lines
of competition to the southwest, west,
and northwest, which she never ex
pected. The Eufaula and Montgom
ery movement, which contemplates
the construction of an air line by
Americus to llawkinsville, opens the
great northwest by Memphis ns well
as Nashville, and insures to Macon
throughout all the future a reasona
ble tariff for freights. If as is intima
ted the same paities control a link in
the line to Vickburg, that will secure
them a fair banco for frieghts or pas
sengers at Montgomery, and if their
road to Brunswick or Savannah
gives these the advantage of a hun
dred miles or so in distance, what
should prevent them from doing the
business.
It is true a good many bales might
pass along the line that we in Macon
would never see, but we are getting
used to that, for hundreds of cars
have passed already, without break
ing bulk, that might just as weil take
the other route, when, if our city fa
thers keep from throwing more of the
stock away, we should have a reason
able prospect for some dividends, at
least. Under these circumstances, if
it should happen that any corpora
tion should find it difficult to make
both ends meet at the end of the
year, by reason of guaranteed divi
dends on large amounts of stock, di
vided business and nctivo com|Msti
tion, where none was anticipated ; and
if it should happen that those who
snapi>cd their fingers at Macon's in
terest, when they thought their own
so secure that they could gratuitous
ly endorse such obligations, and put
their jiroperty in the breach, with
out consideration that even they
should meet with losses in the gnme
of consolidation, let us not lie over
came by lachrymose demonstrations,
but say to our mayor and ahle. men,
” thank them for the benefit that was
not intended. Lot them alone, sev
erally, and turn them over for com
fort and enlightenment to the chan
ces that await them in the near.
FWTfttE.”
Hon. B. 11. Hill Interviewed.
A Herald com-»|«»n<l«-nt eityr he
interviewed Hon. B. 11. Hill in the
parlor of the Kimball House, on the
22d of Inst month, and reports the
result ill three columns, in the Her
ald of last Friday. The main | mints
are—as condensed by the Macon Tel
egraph—Mr. Hill sustains the “new
departure ’’ and looks upon the next
canvass as a final ft ngglc for consti
tutional liberty. He seriously doubts
however, whether the Radicals would
peaceably surrender power, if de
feated, and thinks that Governor
Hoffman made a capital mistake in
permitting the last election in New
York to be hold under the shadow of
Federal bayonets. That was but an
experiment to sec how far they could
venture in controlling the freedom of
elections in the States, and the fact
that New York snbmitted to it em
boldened the Radicals to legalize the
process in the Ku-Klux bill. Mr Hill
says there is a deep gulf between all
honest Southern men and the Radi
cal party, which has maintained its
power by destroying good govern
ment and turning the people over to
remorseless plunderers. He rejoices
in the fact that slavery is abolished,
and recognizes the hand of Provi
dence in it. Believes the negi oca arc
working splendidly, but has his
doubts whether the habit will outlast
the existing generation of laborers.
Don’t believe there is any railroad
ring seeking to run the State, and if
such a scheme ever exists, it must
come in the future.
One will hardly say that these sen
timents have a Radical leaning—Sa
vannah Republican.
A Hard Story.
The Newburn Republican is re
sponsible for the following : A man
named Edward Brown, of Pitt coun
ty, who fled to the swamp during the
late war to avoid the draft, has been
lately discovered living a hermit life
in a den and settlement of his own in
a dense thicket near the river bank.
When first discovered he fled to his
hiding place, upon being pursued lie
showed fight, but finally surrendered
and insisted upon refusing to go in
the army. Upon boing informed
that the w ar was ended about six years
ago, he coucluded to abandon his
hiding place and return to the old
plantation, where he found many
changes since the commencement of
Lite rebellion. His only clothing was
made from the skins of coons and
other animals which he has captured
during the time. Having seen no
one with whom to converse during
about eight years, be has nearly lost
the control of language except a
few profane words. His father and
mother lisve both died during the
past year.
A man has been hauled oat of the
swamps in North Carolina, who went
there to avoid the draft in 1864, and
until he was discovered did not
know the war was over.
Horrible Tines In Illinois. j
JjftinMao,i Jnl/ 5 -As the Judy
JoknsQuyras pHsing down U»o . Mms-
#t abow she
was tired iifto? by -sons persona ore
shore. B unett White was shot 1
through the abdomen and another j
shot passed through his clothes i
Fig is now lying at the! Tremont j
House, in Quincy, in a critical' con-j
dition. T•' o young men named
James G. West and Cbailes O i,
have been arrested on suspicion ofbe
ing the guilty parties,
fiendAik murder or a twjuuiriruL
YOUNG LiDY.
A dastardly and brutal innrfim- was
committed near the village of -flab
bona Grove,DeCab county, Illinois,
on the evening of the sth indt. Miss
Jonita McCormick, a beautiful young
lady of seventeen years, daughter of
Mrs. McCormick, a wealthy farmer's
widow, while sitting at the supper
table with her mother, two younger
sisters and brother, was shot dead by
a farm hand in the employment of
Mrs. McCormick, named John Reed.
The reason for his committing the
horrid deed was the fact that Miss
McCormick had refused to accom
pany him to a 4th of July cclebra
tiou on the following day. Heed
fired two shots through a window
from a double-barreled shot-gun—
the first shot entered her brains kill
ing her instantly. Reed returned the
gun to a neighbor from whom he
borrowed it, and fled. The whole
neighborhood is in pursuit of him.
and if caught will pretty certainly be
lynched at once.
a father roasts iiis ctitf.n on a hot
stove.
Martin Moard, a farmer in good
circumstances residing near Ultiman
Iroquois county, Illinois, was arrested
on Saturday lor murdering bis boy
age II years, in a most cruel and
fiendish manner, on the 14tli ultimo.
It appears from the testimony of
Meard's wife that on that day, while
she was lying sick in her bed, the
brute stripped the child, laid hint on
a hot stove and roasted his back in a
terrible manner, then lx at him un
mercifully and placed him in his sick
mother's bed, where Itcdied in a few
hours. The fiend buried the body
of the murdered boy under a hedge,
and then went to town and publicly
advertised that his boy had run away.
Suspicion was subsequently aroused
that there had been foul play. Search
was made, the body found and the
murderer arrested. He is now in
jail at Wutsckn. Mrs. Meanl wit
nessed the whipping and death of her
boy, but was helplessly sick in child
bed at the time.
Later—the murderer ku-kmxkd
W athkka, J uly b. —Meard.an Irish
man. confined ill the county jail here,
awaiting trial for burning and whip
ping his 11 years old boy to dentil,
was taken from jail at 7 o’clock this
evening and hung by an incensed
mob of three hundred armed men,
followed by ono thousand men, wo
men and children.
Mean! gave the Masonic signal of
distress, which was not responded to.
He renounced the craft. He was giv
en an opportunity to apeak and pray,
and confessed his guilt in an address
to the crowd. He refused the bene
fit of prayer by a Protestant clergy
man and begged for mercy.
Storms in tlic West.
Dayton, 0., July 10.—In a furious
storm yesterday the German Luther
an Church was prostrated and four
killed nnd 20 hurt. The bridge over
the Miami river was destroyed and
two hoys killed. The Southern Ohio
Lunatic Asylum was unroofed, and
also the Catholic Church and the
Miami Railroad depot and fifty other
houses were damaged.
Syracuse, N. Y., July 10.—Two
violent storms occurred on Monday.
The lightning struck every part of
the city, and hail fell big as walnuts.
The lightning killed one person and
shocked many’.
Berlin, Ontario, July 10.—One
hundred Sunday-school pie-nice rs,
refugeing from a storm in an old tan
nery, the flood gate giving way, pre
cipitated them into the vats below.
It was a fearful scene. Fortunately
only one boy was drowned.
Florida to be Sold out by the
Radicals.— The Marianna Courier
says: “In one single county in this
State, (Columbia) there are seventy
five thousand seven hundred and five
acres of land advertised for sale to
pay taxes due on the same. If this
is not a strong argument of the de
vastation and ruin the Radical party
is bringing upon the people of that
State, what more touching and vital
could lie adduced I This is a fair,
direct and legitimate result- of the
corrupt administration of Governor
Read, the shameless dishonesty
which has marked the action of the
Legislature, and the general want of
confidence consequent upon the cor
ruption and dishonor known to per
vade throughout every department
of the government.” . ,
A trout, weighing 25j pounds has
been taken, with a hook, in Toup
per’s Lake, Northern Now York, this
season, by Dr. Perkins, of Albany.
The editor of the Albany Journal
verifies this statement over his own
initials, and adds: “ The only record
ed larger trout taken by hook is that
caught by tha late Silas Stevens, of
Albany, thirty years ago, in Persico
Lake. It weighed S3 pounds.”
Fashionable virtue—Flirt with
your friend’s pretty wife; pretend
you are in love with her older sister.
Wn-htuftoa.
W'amiington, July 7.— Joseph H.
Sp&<i testified ibefufc the Ku-klux
Cwimittqfe that A la&hma was quiet
urßil last winter, -Jrhen disguised
bauds commenced various outrages,
ami eon tinned until recently. These
outrages terrorized the negroes and
made them uffaid to vote. Opposi
tion trt itegro* education came from
the lower classes. Former owners
are strongly in favor of general and
impartial education. Speed claims
to be and ex-Confederale officer, and
■is now regent of the State Universi
ty ; aud superintendent of education
in Perry county, Alabama.
Albert Richardson, colored, Clarke
county, Georgia, formerly a member
of the legislature, testified in Janu
ary last, that a' band of disguised
men, whom Richardson believed to
be Ku-klux, came to his house and
fired at and wounded him. He re
turned the fire awn wounded one
assailant mortally, whereupon they
retired, carrying off the dead man.
He knows no canoe far the attack.
Whipping aud similar outrages
continue in that section, creating
such terror that negroes living in
isolated places have abandoned their
places for the town, where they have
nothing to do and suffer distress.
Inlerrallnß Dialogue.
“Father, what is a radical f"
Answer—“A radical is n rapacious
:iniiu:il of the genus homo, a native
of the New England States, but occa
sionally found in the Middle and
Western States; of satanic spawn
and Puritan parentage, conceived in
sin. bom in iniquity, nursed at the
breast of jealousy and self esteem,
rocked in the cradle of prejudice and
intolerance, educated in the school of
low cunning and play and lives by
the public ami private plunder.”
“Now, my son, since I have defined
radical, let me hear you parse it.”
Answer—“A radical is a compound
unconstitutional noun, sjK’ckled in
lierson, declinable in numlxir, heath
enish in gender, and in des|»crnto case
governed hv the nlinighty dollar and
negro credulity, according to the
Puritan rule, one ignoramus governs
another.
A one-legged ni >n amused the
crowd in Lancaster, Mass., the other
day. by hopping half a mile in six
and a quarter minutes.
FOR SALE.
ONE Good MILCH COW cun
lx- honghr cheap l-y applies
lion to the undersigned.
July IS—ts J. 11. DYCHKS.
Cheap Reading.
TUB
_A.-tla.nta. ISTew Era.
CLUB RATES.
in order to place the
WEEKLY NEW ERA
within the reach of oil. the proprietors
have determined to offer the following
SPLENDID INDUCEMENTS:
One copy, nT-e year 2 00
Ten copies one year, $ 1 00 each 1500
Twenty eoides, one year, $1.25 each. .25 00
Thirty crqdes, one year, $1.09 each.. .80 00
The Wreklr F.racOTlfnln* nearly twenty
eight column's of choice reading matter
each iHAUc, of rulitici, Litera
turc, Market Reports, and
asxnaiAX. maw*
Make up your Clubs at once.
Postmasters arc authorized and requested
to act as Agents. Address
N F.W KRA OFFICB.
jnlylJMf Atlanta, Ga.
Dodge County Sheriff’s Sale.
Will he sold before the Court House door
in the town of Eastman, Dodge County,
on the first Tuesday in August next, within
the lawful hours 'of sale, the lollowing
property, to-wit:
Lot of land No. 123, lying and being In
the 16th district of originalty Pulaski now
county. Also lot of land No. 84 in
the {.Mh district of originally Pnlaski now
Dodge county. Al! levied on as the prop
erty of Ralph Brint to satisfy two Pulaski
county Lax fl fas vs. said Print. J/evy
made and returned to me by M. 8. Peters,
Constable. This June 30. 1871.
—ALSO —
At the same time and place eight hundred
acres ofland, numbers not known, but lying
in the 19th district of originally Pulaski
now Podge county, and known as the
place whereon Shade Smith now lives.
Levied on to satisfy two tax fi fas in favor
of Pulaski county against T. J. lJarkwell,
Agent and trust for 8. E. and M. A. Bark
well. Lew made and returned to me by
8 M Peters. Constable.
JORDAN BROWN. Sheriff.
July ft-tds (Printers fee $3 50 a levy.)
GEORGlA—Pulaski County.
Whereas. Nicholas Rawlins, Executor
on the estate of J. C. Rawlins, deceased,
applies to me for letters of dismission :
These are. therefore, to cite and admonish
all persons conrenied, to be and appear at
mv office, within the time prescribed by
law. to show cause, if any they have, why
said letters should not be granted. Given
under my hand and officinl signatnre.
J. J. SPARROW. Ordinary.
July 6-m3m (Printer's fee $4)
Goor^[i& —PULASKI COUNTY.
Whereas, H. 11. Whitfiield applies to me
tor letters of administration on the estate
of Elizabeth Daniel, late of said county, de
ceased :
These are, tlierfbre, to dte and admon
ish all persons concerned to be and appear
at ray office within the time prescribed by
law to show cause. If any they here, why
said letters should not be granted the ap
plicant. Given under my hand and offi
cial signature. This July 5,1871.
J. J. BPARROW, Ordinary.
jnly#-30d (Printer’s fee $3 50.)
Bacon ! Bacon !
| Is
BACON !
10,000 lbs. Bacon for &ale
-AT— s
DYCHE’S.
Oxxeeup for Oaah I
—ALSO—
A good variety of Coffee, Sugar, Flour,
Lard, etc., all of which 1 offer at very low
rates. J. H. DYOHES,
July6-tf llawkinsville, Ga.
Pulaski Sheriff’s Sale.
Will be sold before the Court House
door in the town of llawkinsville, said
county, on the first Tuesday in September
next, the following properly ; to-wit:
One Steam Haw nnd Gris't Mill, with ap
purtenances and attachments thereto be
longing, now being in said county near the
line of the Macon and Brunswick Rail
road between Htation 15 and 15). Levied
on as the property of Enoch J. Collins, by
virtue of a mortgage fl fa issued from
Twiggs Superior Court in favor of Hurtle
man & Sparks vs. said Collins.
R. O. FL'LGHDM, Sheriff.
julyO-tda (Printei's fee $5)
Administrator's Sale.
By request of (lie heirs of General Mark
Wilcox, will be sold iu Eastman, Dodge
County, on the first Tuesday in Aqgust ■
next, within the legal hours of sale, for the
benefit of the heirs and others, the follow
ing lots of land, to-wit:
No. 814, 21st district, 3d section,) >CT
“ 100,17 th district, Ist section | 3 _
“ 1079, 2d district, 4th section i 2o’
“ 165, 9th district, 2d section ( 5’3
“ 83, 16th district, 4th section |s' £•
“ 823, 23d district, 3d section J £•<{
“ 14, 15th district Dooly.
“ 129, Ist District Lee.
“ 168, Ist District Lee.
“ 88, 7th District Raker.
“ 129, 10th District HaiH-rshmn.
lUOaciesfor the 8. E. quarter es
20th soclion, township lltli north, in range
4, West Illinois. All sold as (lie property
of Gen. Mnrk A. Wilcox, deceased. Also
at the same time anil place will be sold the
right and title of all lands whatsoever be
longing to said estate, except the dower of
8. A. E. Wilcox, the widow of the said
Mark A. Wilcox. Terms Cash.
P. If. COFFEE, ■
Administrator,
July6-Uls (Printer’s fee $7.50)
Pulaski Sheriff’s Sale.
Will be sold before the Court House door
in the town of llawkinsville, on the first
Tuesday in August next, within the legal
hours of sale, the following property, to
wit :
One bay Horse, eight or nine years old.
Levied on as the proprrty of Elijah Wil
liamson to satisfy one lien fi fa in favor of
Marv C. Dvkes vs. said Williamson. Thi*
July 4, 1871.
ALSO—
At the same time and plnce will he goM
one lot ofland No. (18 in the fourth district
of Pulaski county. Levied on as the prop
erly of John J. Eubanks to satisfy one tax
fl fa in favor of Pulaski county and aim*
one tax fi fa in favor of the State or Geor
gia, vs said Eubanks.
R. G. FULOHUM, Sheri If!
j uly 6-tds [Printer’s fee $8 50 a levy. J
Administrator’s Sale.
Will lx- sold Iwfore the Court House
door iu the town of Irwinville, Irwin
county, between tire usual hours of sale,
on the first Tuesdny in Augtist next, tlic
following jwoperty to-wit:
lads Nos. 280 and 224, nnd half of lot
No. 227, all in the Fllli District of Irwin
county. Sold a« the property of Godfrey
Purvis, Sen., deceased of said county.
Hold fur distribution. Terms mule known
on day of sale.
J. J. HENDERSON,
Administrator.
July 6-tds (Printer’s fee $5)
Dodge County Sheriff Sale.
Win be sold before the Court Ileus*
door hi Eastman, Dodge County, within
the legal hours of sale, on the first Turn
day in August next, following the proper
ty ’ to-wit :
The undivided one half interest in Lot
of Land No. 283 in the 19fh District, and
undivided half interest in Lot of Land No.
2 in the 20th District of Dodge connty.
Levied on as tire property of N. McDuSg
fie to satisfy a Superior Court fi fa frorS
Bibb county in favor of B. A. Thornton v«
N. McDuffie, principal, and Lem Cberrfl
and J. Williford, Securities. *
Property pointed out by plaintiff's aUoq|
neys. June 30,1871.
JORDAN BROWN, Sheriff
julyfl-tds (Printer’s fre $3 SO)
Georgia—PULASKI COUNTY.
Whereas, H. H. Whitfield applies to me
for letters of dismission from administra
tion on the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth Whit
field. deceased:
These are, therefore, to oite and admon
ish ail persons concerned to he and appear
at my office within Ihc time prcserßied by
law to show cause, If any they have, why
said leUers should not be granted the ap
plicant. Given under my hand snd offi
cial signature. This July 5,1871.
J. J. SPARROW. Ordinary
july6-m3m (Printer’s fee $4)
GEORGIA —Dodge County,
Whereas, (’has. C. Kihbee, Esq., having
applied to me for |iernianent letters of ad
ministration upon the estate of F M. Lau
rence, late of Macon county, Alabama, Who
died leaving real estate in the county o
Dodge:
This is therefore, to cite all, anil singular
the creditors and next of kin of said r. M.
Laurence, to show cause, Within the time
prescribed by law, why permanent letters
should not 'lie granted to said Char C,
Kibbee on said estate. This June 30, 1871
SEABORN BURCH. Ordinal?
joly6-30d (Printer’s fee $3 50) . •
GEORGIA—Irwin Connty.
Whereas, Jacob Wliillcy, Sen., has ap
plied for the guardianship of the perannr
and property of Mary and Margaret Pufl
vis. minors of Jacob Purvis, deceased : ■§
These are. therefore, to cite and admofl
ish all concerned to be and appear at mfl
office within the time prescribed by law, fl
show cause, if any they have, why saW WW
tern should not lie granted the apnlicant
Given under my hand and official sijffismre
WILEY’ WHITLWY. •
Ordinary
July 6-306 (Printer’s fee 3.50)