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Mother’s Grave.
BT O »• PRENTICE
The trembling dew drops fa.ll
Upon the shutting flowers, like souls at rest;
The stars shine irlonously, and ail
gave me are blest.
Mother, I love thy grave ! ,
The violet, with its bWssoms blue and mild.
Waves o'er thy head. When w.ll it wave
Above thy child?
T5r a sweet flower, yet- must
Its bright leaves to the morning temp'Sfrbow,
Dear mother, 'tis thine emblem-dust
Ls on thy brow.
And I conld love todie—
To leave untasted life s dark bitter streams,
Bv thee, as erst in childhood, lie
Ai d share thy dreams.
And I must linger here, .
To stain the plumage of my sinless years,
And mourn the hopes of childhood dear
With bitter tears.
Ave. I roust linger here,
'A lonely branch upon a withered tree,
Whose last frail leaf untimely sear
Went down with thee.
Oft from life’s withered bo\ver,
In still communion with the past, I turn
And muse on thee, the only dower
in memoiy’s urn
And when the evening pale
Bows like a mourner on the diin blue wave,
I stray to hear the night wind s wail
Around thy grave.
Where is ihy spirit flown ?
I gaze above—thy look is imaged there —
I listen, and thy gentle tone
Is on the air.
Oh, come, while here I press
My brow upon thy grave, and in those mild
Thrilling tones of tenderness,
Bless, bless thy child.
The Little People.
"the CniLD’s THF. FATHER OF THE MAN.”
In the quiet nursery chambers,
Snowy pillows yet impressed,
See the forms of little children
Kneeling, white-robed, for their rest.
All in quiet nursery chambers,
While the dusky shadows creep,
Hear the voices of the children,
Now I lay me down to sleep.”
"If we die ”—so pray the children,
And the mother's bead droops low,
(One form without her fold is sleeping
Deep beneath the winter’s snow)—
" Take our souls ”—and past the easement
Flits a gleam of silver light.
Like the trailing at His garments,
Walking evermore in white.
Little souls, that stand expectant,
Listening at a gate of life,
Hearing far away the murmur
Of the tumult and the strife.
We who fought beneath those banners,
Meeting ranks of foemen there,
Find a deeper, broader meaning
In your simple vesper prayer.
When your hands shall grasp the standard
Which to-day you watch from far,
When your deeds shall shape the conflict
In this universal war,
Pray to Him, the God of Battles,
Whose strong eyes can never sleep,
In the warring of temptation
Firm and true your souls to keep.
Miscellaneous Items.
The English make sixty thousand tons of
cheese a year. The production is larger than
usual this season.
Millard Fillmore is reported to be writing a
history of his Presidential administration.
Gen. Meagher’s Montana investments will
bring his wife a fortune of $400,000.
A Massachusetts merchant, who had heard
nothing from his son for two years, lias just
found him in the Sing Sing State Prison.
Suicides in France are more frequent in
winter than summer, which proves them to be
more dependant on physical than mental suf
fering.
Not less than two hundred thousand persons
have settled in Missouri during the past year.
The growth of our Western States and Terri
tories is one of the wonders of this marvellous
Age.
Swindlers in Montana plate copper dust with
gold, mix it with a small quantity of good
gold and sell it for pure. Tt resists acids like
the genuine article, and cannot be detected by
the weight.
The amount of money obtained by the rob
bers of the First National Bank, at Indepen
dence, Missouri, last week, was about eighteen
thousand dollars, two thousand dollars of
which were in gold.
The city of Louisville is being suggested,
and strongly urged as the place for holding
the Democratic National Convention to nomi
nate candidates for the Presidency and Vice
Presidency.
The case of the United States vs. W. G.
McAdoo, formerly a member of the Knoxville
bar, and Attorney General for that District,
for treason, was dismissed, upon the presenta
tion of his pardon by the President and pay
ment of costs.
Mr. Silas Bronson, who died in Hartford,
Connecticut, on Monday, was a native of Mid-
dlebury, Connecticut. He leaves an estate es
timated at over Si,000,000. He gives by his
will $200,000 to the city of Waterbury for a
public library.
Among recent “ strikes ” is a strike of Queen
Victoria against the London butchers. She
refuses to pay them for her establishment the
large prices they have been exacting. This
course, which was taken to benefit the poor,
has already, it is said, produced a perceptible
reduction in the price of meats in the markets
of England.
A few days since a Mrs. Cooke, liviug about
twenty miles above McMinville, Tennessee, on
the McMinville road, put by mistake into her
biscuit dough ansenic instead of soda, and the
consequence was the death of herself and
whole family, consisting of her husband and
three children.
England pays tax on 657,000 dogs.
A Walker's Dictionary—the mile stones.
OM maids ough to be charming. They are
matchless.
A reason why your.g ladies should avoid
rit lalism: It makes them Just and cross.
£ Punch.
Judy knowg a man so hard up that he even
sleeps on tick.
Eugenie feels better now that she is asked
to act as god-mother to the expected addition
to the Imperial family of Austria.
Paris bakers are compelled to weigh their
bread in the presence of the purchaser wheth
er requested to do so or not.
The latest thing in church sociables in In
diana is a masquerade.
Morlat. the Swiss geologist, provided in his
will that his skull should be engraved with
his name and deposited in the Museum at
Berlin.
The Chicago Journal says that Southern
Conservatism is dc.td. If it is the Radicals
are afraid to pass the graveyard.— Prentice.
Max Muller says lang lage is only a diction
ary of taded metaphors.
There is an old lady in Mexico who was
born in 1755, still alive and hearty, and re
joicing in eighty-three grand children and
three hundred and thirty-two great-grand chil
dren.
“ Madame, at what price per yard do you
sell this broadcloth?” asked a young man to a
fair miss.
" Five dollars, sir.”
" You're a little dear.”
“ Yes,” replied the blushing maiden, “ so all
*he young men tell me.”
A large eagle chased a pigeon into a house
in New Haven, Conn., both flying through an
open window. The bird of freedom was cap
tured.
Thackeray said the drollest thing he heard
while in this country, and the most character
istically American, was the remark of a New
Yorker:
"Oh, I have no objection to England, Mr.
Thackeray. The ODly thing I should be afraid
of would be to go out at night there, lest I
might step off.”
An impromptu Democratic mass meeting in
New York, Tuesday night, nominated General
Sherman for President, and Hoffman for Vice.
James T. Brady in a recent letter on jour
nalism, pronounces editors only second to
lawy ers as honorable men and good fellows.
Jimmy was always good at a sarcasm.
A man in Lynden, N. Y., quarreled with his
better half. She left him and he married an
other, who, after presenting with a considera
ble family, died. Immediately on her demise
ihe first wife returned to her allegiance, and
the couple are again loving and happy.
It is said Grant told Ben Wade, by way of
retort, that the Capitol had turned out more
"traitors” than West Point.
Mrs. Stanton calls Geo. F. Train’s speeches
in favor of female # suffrage, " meteoric showers.”
The Emperor of Austria’s visit to Paris,
without the Empress, was regarded by the
Empress Eugenie as p, slight which could, with
difficulty, be overlooked.'
On the visit of Gen. Lafayette to Montpelier,
Vt., in 1825, the only carpet iu town was the
one put down iu his room at the State House.
The Montgomery Advertiser says the follow
ing resolution was sent to the reporter’s desk
hy a Radical member of the Convention, but
was not acted upon :
" Whereas, D. H. Bingham is absent from
h—11 without leave, therefore
"Resolved, That the Sergeant-at-Arms be
instructed to nab him by the neck and burn
him alive.
A thanksgiving article i
concludes with this verse
Mil i CO.
IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS,
CHINA, CLASS-WARE
—AND—
TIME
ATLANTA, GA.
Many of the best Merchants in the States of
Geor^i.i and Alabama
return regularly from New York and other
Eastern and Northern Markets to buy
CROCKERY, GLASS-WARE,
—AND—
TABLE CUTLERY
from this house.
These Merchants Testify
that the difference in
Prices will in nowise compen
sate for the Heavy Freights,
Long Delays, and the Ru
inous Breakage to which,
very many who pur
chase those Goods
in New York are
subjected.
n a Northern paper
The Mexican newspapers say that a contract
has been made between Minister Romero and
the United Status Government for $3,000,000
worth of warlike implements, $2,000,000 of
which are to be taken in vessels, muskets and
smaller arms, and the remaining $1,000,000 in
cannon.
A year or two since the poor box at St. Ma
ry's Cathedral, San Francisco, was robbed,
and, in order to prevent a recurrence of the
theft, a pipe was connected with the bottom
of the box, through which the contributions
slipped immediately into a reservoir in the
basement. An ingenius rascal, however, re
cently found his way to the treasure by cutting
the pipe below the box, stopping it so as to
"The eagle he is a very nice bird
Foi* the battle time of the free;
But when the sweet notes of peace are heard,
Oh the turkey’s the bird for me, my boys—
The turkey’s the bird for me.”
A boy eight years old offered himself at the
polls in Springfield, Mass., last Monday, to vote
iu his father’s place, who was out ot town.
That is almost equal to the effort made by a
buck negro to vote in the Georgia Unconstitu
tional Convention in the place of an absent
member.
Genuine Wit.—A distinguished Southern
lady, who is the wife of a prominent and ex
treme Radical, residing in one of the Northern
States, while engaged in plucking the grey
hairs from her husband’s moustache, was asked
by him,
" What are you doing, my dear?”
"Only carrying out your own policy, sir;
exterminating the whites for the benefit of the
blacks,” was the witty reply.
rrentice disputes the assertion that Greely
htis no manners. He says his manners are
very bad, but there is a plenty, of them.
The damsel who is accused of breaking the
young man s heart has been bound over in the
bonds of matrimony to keep the pieces.
Dickens’ reading of the death of Little Doin-
bey is by far the most effective of his recita
tions. He moves his whole audience to tears
by his exquisite pathos.
Brown had been iu love with a young lady,
and asked permission to call her by tne name
of some animal, which request was granted on
condition that she should have the same
privilege. On leaving. Brown said: "Good
night, ‘dear,’ ” " Good night, ‘bore’ ” she
said
The negroes of the Union League in Newton
county, Ga., are bound by an oath to defend
each other in hog stealing. One stolen hog
has therefore got nine good Radical voters into
jail-
A simple epitaph in St. Pancras Church-yard
is touchingly commemorative of the gluttony
of a husband and the grief of his widow:
"Eliza, sorrowing, rears this marble slab
To her dear John, wlio died of eating crab.”
A rapid transition from the bridal to the
bier was that of a fellow who was married in
the morning and picked up dead drunk at
night.
HVLiBIRTIDIE Sc CO.
Guarantee as good Sales as can he had in this
country.
g€f°Call and see them or send Cash Orders.
August 17—8m.
Administrator’s Sale.
A GREEABLY to an order of the Ordinary
of Coweta county, will be sold before the
Court-house door in Newnan, said county, on
the first Tuesday in February next, within the
legal hours of sale, half interest of half lot
No. 108, in the 1st district of said county, and
half interest of seventy acres of lot No. 97, in
the 1st district of said county (widow’s dower
excepted), belonging to Henry M. Summer, late
of said county, deceased. Sold for the benefit
of the heirs and creditors. Terms cash.
Dec. 14-tas. J. C. SUMMER, Adm’r.
Administrator’s Sale.
A GREEABLY to an order of the Ordinary
of Coweta county, will be sold before
the Court house door in Newnan, said county,
on the first Tuesday in February next, the fol
lowing lands, to-wit:
Fraction 24} acres, more or less, No. 167;
Fraction 1} acres, more or less, No. 168;
62J acres, more or less, of North part of lot
No. 164, adjoining lands of G. 0. Wynn and
Patrick Carmichael;
38 acres, more or less, West portion of lot
No. 159;
54 acres, more or less, being South part of
lot No. 164;
115 acres, more or less, of lot No. 155, lying
on Shoal creek near R. Hardy's Mill.
In all 295} acres, more or less. Sold as
the property of John E. Watkins, deceased,
for the benefit of the heirs and creditors.—
Terms one half cash, the remainder on a credit
until 1st of December 1868.
M. J. SMITH, Adm’r.
November 9-tds.
_ Some one calls Mrs. Lincoln’s late trip to
New York the " widdow’s cruise.” Simon
thinks she has made a great jar in the Repub
lican party bp her peppery talk.
A Maryland paper brings out its old cuts of
runaway negroes to illustrate the Radical chase
for office.
To the Radical assertion that Grant is ‘sound
on the goose,’ a Southern paper querries ‘what
goose ? ’
An Era of Politeness.—Foul language has
been banished from the Austrian Camps. By
an imperial edict all officers are required from
this time to address common soldiers as ‘ you’
and not as ‘ thou; ’ the latter formula indica-
Administrator’s Sale.
Y VIRTUE of an order of the. Court of
Ordinary of Haralson county, will be sold
before the Court-House door in Buchanan,
said county, on the first Tuesday in January
next, within the legal hours of sale, one town
lot in the town of Buchanan, known by num
ber forty-nine (49), containing two hundred
feet square, more or less, lying on the north
side of said town, on Van Wert street. Two
good dwelling houses on said lot. ~
property of Johu Duke, late of said county,
deceased, for the benefit of the heirs and cred
itors. Terms cash.
Nov. 23-tds-$7 50. Z. P. DUKE, Adm’r.
Marble Yard.
D. N. JUDSON, Agent,
Dealer and Worker iu Italian and America
MARBLE, MONUMENTS, BOX TOMBS,
TABLETS. HEAD' AND FOOT STONES,
MARBLE FURNITURE, Ac.,
Corner Peachtree and Walton Stfeets,
AlXASTA, GEORGIA.
N. J. would respectfully invite fhose
wishing to purefrasf to call and esamfne his
stock of Marble and Work, which will be sold
upon the most reasonable terms/ Orders so
licited and promptly filled. [Jan. 5.12m.
Dit H SELLS, Pres’t. I ANDREW DUNN, Sv* y
R. P. GLENN, Treasurer.
Georgia Loom
—AND—
MANUFACTURING COMPANY.
GEORGIA—Campbell County.
TT T HEREAS John Baggett, administrator
VV on the estate of Jackson Baggett, de
ceased, applies to the undersigned for letters
dismissarv from his administrationship:
Therefore all persons concerned are hereby
required to show cause, if any they can, why
said administrator should .irtft, receive letters
of dismission on th£first Monday in November
next. . .
Given under my band as Ordinary of said
county, this April 4th, 1867.
Aug.-16-6m-$6. R. C. BEA\ ERS, Ord’y.
AFFLICTJ5D,
BEAD THIS.
Administratrix’s Sale.
E Y VIRTUE of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Coweta county, will be sold
before the Conrt-fcrofrte door in the city of New
nan. on the first Tuesday in December next,
within the legal hours of sale, the following
lands, to-wit:
One hundred and eighty-two (182) acres of
lot No. 116; lot No. 141, except seven acres
off of the South-east corner ; fifty acres of the
North side of lot No. 142, and thirteen acres
off of the North-west corner of lot No. 148—
four hundred ami fort? (44(7) acres, more or
less, all lying in the 2d district of said county,
six miles South west from the city of Newnan
On the premises are those valuable Springs
known as the Mineral Springs of Coweta.—
There are 40 or 50 acres of creek bottom land
on the place, the creek well ditched, and the
land in a high state of cultivation, in as heal
thy a section as there is in the county, and
convenient to Churches, Academic and a good
Mill.
Sold as the real estate of James Curetou, de
ceased. for the benefit of the hell's and credi
tors. Terms cash.
Oct.l9-tds. SARAH CURETON, Adm’x.
B
MANUFACTURERS AND PLANTERS
LOOK TO YOUR INTERESTS!
And don’t fail to call at office,
(Bdl-Johnson Building, next door to Post Office,)
ATLANTA, GA.,
And see in operation
Mendenhall’s Improved Self-Acting
HAND &. POWER LOOM!
Easier Understood, easier to Operate, and more
Reliable, and possesses superior advantages
over all other Hand Looms, and
is more Simple and Durable.
Planters can be independent by
Weaving all their Goods for Home Wear
on the Mendenhall Improved Hand Loom.
From lo to 30 Yards
Can be woven on this Loom in one day! It
weaves as fast as any Factory Loom ! Half the
cost of the clothing of a family can be saved
by its use.
From 85 to $10 a day can be made on it.
ITS PARTS ARE SELF-CHANGING!
By the turning of an easy crank it lets the
Warp off, winds up the Cloth, treads the Tread
les, and throw’s the Shuttle. It Weaves
Jeanes, Satinets, Lindseys,
Blanket Twill, Double-Plain Cloth,
Various kinds of Ribbed Goods,
Fencing Twills of all kinds. Flax,
Cotton, Tow or All-Wool Cloth,
Bagging, Towelling, Table Linen,
Balmoral Skirts, Woollen,
Linen and Hemp Carpets.
In fact anything, from a handsome Silk to a
Rag Carpet.
it is small, neat and light, not larger than a
common breakfast table. It is made in the
most workmanlike manner, of good material,
and handsomely varnished. It is very simple
and easily understood—everything is perform
ed by turning a crank.
Looms and County Rights for Sale.
gff°For further particulars, bill of prices,
descriptive circulars and samples of weaving,
address
Georgia Loom & Manufacturing Co.,
April 6-12m. Atlanta, Ga.
Administrator’s Sale.
Y VIRTUE of an order from the Court of
Ordinary of Heard county, will be sold
before the Court-house door in the town of
Franklin, within the legal hours of sale, on
the first Tuesday in January next, the fol
lowing land belonging to the estate of Lucin
da Furlow, deceased, to-wit:
The East half of lot of land No. 191, in the
3d district of originally Coweta now said
county of Heard, containing 101} acres, more
or less, improved. Terms cash.
Nov. 2-tds. C. V. FURLOW, Adm’r.
Rule Ni Si.
GEORGIA, CARROLL COUNTY.
Superior Court, October Term, 1867.
William P. Wilson,
Mortgage, Ac.
I
Ison, 1
r
vs.
Samuel J. Rowan
T APPEARING to the Court, by the peti
tion of William P. Wilson, that on the
twenty-first day of January, in the year 1862,
Samuel J. Rowan, of Houston county, in said
State, made and delivered to petitioner his
promissory note for the sum of eight hun
dred and ninety dollars and twenty-seven cents,
(credited with one hundred and five dollars
and twenty cents;) and that the said Samuel
J. Rowan afterwads, to-wit: on the twenty-
first of May, in the year 1862, made and de
livered to petitioner his certain other promis
sory note for the sum of three hundred dollars,
(credited with twenty-two dollars and ninety-
one cents,) whereby one day after date of said
note the said Samuel J. Rowan promised to
pay petitioner the said sums of money, amount
ing in the aggregate to the sum of eleven hun
dred and ninety dollars and twenty-seven cents,
principal, for value received; and that after
wards, to-wit: on the thirtieth day of Novem
ber, in the year 1866, the said Samuel J. Row
an, the better to secure the payment of said
notes, executed and delivered to petitioner bis
deed of mortgage, whereby the said Samnel J.
Rowan conveyed to petitioner the undivided
half interest in the Laurel Hill Farm, (which
consists of six hundred and seven and a half
acres of land,! situated In the eleventh district
of Can oil county, Ga., it being three hundred
and three acres of said land so mortgaged ; and
it further appearing that said notes remain
unpaid:
It is therefore ordered, That the said defen
dant do pay into Court, on or before the first
day of the next Term of this Court (held on
the first Monday in April next) the principal,
interest and costs due on said notes, or show
cause to the contrary, if any be can; and that
on the failure of said defendant so to do, the
equity of redemption in and to said mortgage
premises be forever barred and foreclosed.
And further, That this Rule be published in
the Newnan Herald once a month for four
months previous to the next Term of this
Court, or served on the defendant, his agent
or attorney as required hy law.
JOHN W. H. UNDERWOOD, J. T. C.
Geo. W. Austin, Petitioner’s Attorney.
A true extract from the Minutes of this
Court, October 23d, 1867.
J. M. GRIFFIN, D. Clerk.
Nov. 2-m4m.—$1 pr sq ea in.
Sargent’s Axes.
Sargent’s No. 10 Cotton Yam.
T HE above goods, and in all numbers, are
offered to the public.
An ample stock always on hand at the store
of the subscriber in Newnan. Georgia.
Oct 26-tf. h! J. SARGENT.
Rule to Perfect Service.
KAYTON'S OLEUM VITAE.
This great German liniment is an almost
infallible cure for
Rheumatism,
Neuralgia,
Rheumatic
Pains in the
Back, Breast,
Sides or Joints,
T6otbachs,
Nervous Headache,
Earache, Sprains,
Bruises. Swesongs,
Cuts, Insect Bites,
Burns, &c., &o.
This great remedy should be in ever}' house.—
For horses this remedy has no equal.
Ask for Hatton's Oleum ViT-ffi. Take no other.
Sent by Express for II,
KAYTON’S MAGIC CURE.
AN EGYPT AIN REMEDY.
For the <*trre of Sudden Conghs and Colds, Asth
ma, Acid Stomach, Sore Throat, Heartburn, Sea
Sickness, Cholera, Drarrhces. Pains and Cramps
in the Stomach. Sent by Express for II.
KAYTON’S DYSPEPTIC PILLS.
Are a sure and pleasant cure for Dyspepsia, Bil
ious Disorders, Constipation, and all Disorders
of the Liver, Stomaofc and Bmvels, and when
taken regularlv will cleanse the blood. These
are the greatest anti-Bilious Pills ever placed be
fore the public.
Sent by mail for 30 cents per box.
The above medicines are prepared and sold by
Prof. H. H. KAYTON.
Savannah, Ga.
To whom all orders should be addressed; or to
the Agents, A. A. SOLOMONS & CO., Whole
sale Druggists, Savannah, Ga.
A liberal discount to those selling again.
For sale by Druggists and Country Mer
chants generally.
For sale in Newnan, at the Drug Store of Dr.
EDDY SMITH.
July 23, 1866-1 v.
JAS. E. JONES. R «
K - S. BUarp
JONES & BURCH.
8ROCERS amt PROBl| t
Merchants.
AT THEIR OLD STAND,
GA.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
4 LL persons indebted to the estate of Jo
seph W. Young, late of Coweta county,
deceased, are notified to come forward and
make payment, and those having demand:
against said estate will present them withi
the time prescribed bv law.
GEORGE E. YOUNG, Adm’r.
October 12-tds.
T WO months afier date application will be
made to the Ordinary of Coweta county
for leave to sell the land belonging to the es
tate of James M. Bridges, deceased, for the
benefit of the heirs and creditors of said de
ceased. MARY M. BRIDGES, Adm’x.
Oct. 12-2m.
We have on hand at our COMMOWor*
STORE, and daily arriving—
CORN;
BACON,
FLOUR,
______ weal,
COFFEE,
SUGAR,
SYRUP,
RICE.
lard,
butter,
□E»x3coE3xri3s: otrA.ixro.
And all other articles in our line, to which w*
invite the attention of the purchasing nnhi;,
February 16-23-tf. 1 c
fTIWO months after date application will be
made to ihe Ordinary of Coweta county
for leave to sell the lands belonging to the es
tate of T. D. Watkins, late of said county, de
ceased, for the benefit of the heirs and credi
tors. J, P. BREWSTER, Adm’r.
October 5, 1867.
GEORGIA—Haralson County.
K INNETH MURCHESON, administrator on
the estate of James H. Murphy, late of
said county, deceased, having applied to me
for a dismission from said estate:
This is therefore, to cite all I'*”-’' ---—“
ed, to be and appear at my office within the
time allowed by law and show cause, if any
they can, why said administrator, on the first
Monday in February, 1868, should not. be dis
missed.
Given under mv hand at office Julv 15, 1867.
JAMES II. WILLIAMS, Ord’y.
August 10-6m.
w
GEORGIA—Heard County.
J JLLIAM G. CRAIN, executor of the
last will and testament of George Crain,
deceased, having made application to me in
proper form for letters of dismission from said
trust:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
persons concerned to be and appear at my
office within the time prescribed by law, and
show cause, if any they can why said execu
tor should not receive letters of dismission on
the first Monday in February, 1868.
Given under my official signature, July 24th,
1867. W. H. C. PACE, Ord’ry.
August 3-6m.
“A Repository of Fashion, Pleasure, and
Instruction.”
HARPER'S BAZAR.
The Publishers will commence, on November
1st, the issue of Harter’s Bazar, a weekly
Illustrated Family Journal, devoted to Fash
ion and Home Literature. Their aim is two-
fold : to supply the existing need of a Weekly
Fashion Newspaper, and to combine therewith
a first-class literary journal, which will be in.
dispensable to every household.
Arrangements have been made at an im
mense cost, with the most celebrated of the
Fashion Papers of Europe, especially with the
famous Bazar of Berlin, which supplies the
fashions to the leading journals of Paris, to
furnish the same to them in advance, so that
henceforth the fashions will appear in Harper s
Bazar simultaneous with their publication in
Paris and Berlin—an advantage enjoyed by no
other journal in the country.
The patrons of Harper’s Bazar will receive
every fornight large pattern-plates, containing
from forty to fifty full-sized patterns of ladies’,
misses’, and children’s bonnets, cloaks dresses,
under clothing, and other articles, accompanied
with the necessary descriptions and dirrectionj,
and occasionally an elegant Colored Fashion
Plate of the size of Harper's Weekly.
Harper’s Bazar will contain 16 folio pages
of the size of Harper’s Weekly, printed on
superfine calendered paper, and will be publish
ed weekly.
T WO months after date application will be
made to the Court of Ordinary of Heard
Soli as the county for leave to sell all the land belonging
to the estate of James MeStewart, late of said
eountv, deceased.
JOHN T. S rODGHILL,
Oct. 19-2m. Adm’r de bonis non.
prevent the money flowing down, and extract- S ,£rio™ S
S iperiors ad iressing inferior officers, sub-offi£
cers and soldiers are also in future to add to
their names the title of their rank. Swearing
at inferiors is strictly forbidden. It is a pity
swearing at the men could not be forbidden in
our own army.
ing the accumulation at his leisure when his
circumstances demanded it.
In the island of St. Thomas a popular vote
has been taken to ascertain the sentiment of
the people on the transfer of the island to the
ffiforms u^that the fTu h bj n% Cub f a Incision of character is shown in a eon
antxZ c h ,l S reSUlte , d in fav ° r ° f stant recurrence to others for advice, whiehfe
Danish island bv thVn ^ he P urchaie of } he j either rejected without reason or acted upon
considerable excitement Thrwhole C of at thf 1 With ° Ut , con ? < * ion - decision of character
native population begin to be tiri of Spanish i ™~ -eas ^vice except when necessary ; and
Rule to Perfect Service.
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
Coweta Superior Court, September Term, 1867.
Joseph J. Pinson, 1
vs. [Rule for Injunction, Dis-
Jos. R. Meriwether, f covery, Ac.
Wm. G. Herring. J
I T APPEARING to the Court, by the return
of the Sheriff', that said defendants are not
to be found in said county, and it further ap
pearing that they reside out of said State:
It is therefore ordered by the Court, That
they appear and answer at the next term of
this Court, and upon failure thereof that said
Bill be taken for confessed.
And it is further ordered, That publication
of this orier be made in the Newnan Herald,
a public gazette published in the city of New
nan, and said State, once a month for four
months.
JOHN W. H. UNDERWOOD. J. S. C.
chas. g. McKinley,
Solicitor for Complainant.
A true extract from the Minutes of the Court,
November 2d, 1867.
Nov9-m4m. J. P. BREWSTER, Clerk.
w
GEORGIA—Coweta County
HEIIEAS William J. Bryant, adminis
trator of Matilda Bryant, represents to
the Court in his petition, duly filed and entered
on record, that he has fully administered Ma
tilda Bryant’s estate:
This is therefore to cite all persons concern
ed to be and appear at my office within the
time prescribed by law, and show cause, if any
they can, why said letters should not be gran
ted on the first Monday in May, 1868.
B. H. MITCHELL, Ord’y.
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
Superior Court, September Term, 1867.
Mary E. Green, 1
vs. j- Libel for Divorce.
Samuel H. Green, j
I T APPEARING to the Court from the re
turn of the Sheriff, that the defendant
does not reside in said county, and it further
appearing that he does not reside in 3nid State:
It is on motion ordered, That said defendant
appear and answer at the next Term of this
Court or that he be considered in default, and
the plaintiff be allowed to proceed.
And it is further ordered, That a copy of
this Rule be published in terms of the law.
JOHN W. H. UNDERWOOD, J. T. U.
SMITH & TURNER, Att’ys Pro. Li’b’lt.
A true extract from the Minutes of the Court,
this October 22d, 1867.
Oct.26-m4m. J. P. BREWSTER, Clerk.
Notice to Debtors’and Creditors.
A LL persons having demands against the
estate of William Brook, deceased, will
present them in term3 of the law, and all in
debted to said estate are requested to make
immediate pavment.
Oct. 26- 40d, TOLLESON KIRBY, Adm’r.
GEORGIA—Coweta County.
G EORGE W. BRYANT having applied to
be appointed guardian of the person and
property of William H., George C., Charles J.,
Elizabeth J. and James M. Hendrix, minor or
phans of George W. Hendrix, resident of said
couuty:
Therefore all persons concerned are notified
to be and appear at my office within the time
prescribed by law, and show cause, if any
they can, why letters of guardianship should
not be granted.
Witness my hand and official signature.
Nov. 23-30d. B. H. MITCHELL, Ord’y
YY
GEORGIA—Carroll County.
HEREAS Obediah C. Cavender, execu
tor of the last will of J. J. Cavender,
represents to the Court in hi3 petition duly
filed and entered on record, that he has fully
administered J. J. Cavender’s estate:
This i3 therefore to cite all persons concern
ed, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administrator should
not be discharged from his administration,
and receive letters of dismission oa the first
Monday in February, 1868.
Given under my hand and. official signature,
this August 5th. 1867.
Aug. 10-6m. J. M. BLALOCK, Ord’y.
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
1868.
The publishers have perfected a system *
mailing by which they can supply the M/’ A '
zine, Weekly, and Bazar promptly to those
prefer to receive their periodicals directly from
the Office of Publication. Postmasters nnd
- n— o -r ap
plied with a Show-Bill on application.
The postage on Harper's Bazar is 20 cents n
year, which must be paid at the subscriber'*
post office.
TERMS:
Harper's Bazar, one year $4 00
Ar t extra copy of either the Magazine, Week
ly, (,x Bazar will be supplied gratis for every
C’L.t> of Five Subscribers ai £4 00 each, in one
remittance; or Six Copies for S20 00.
Back numbers ca.n be supplied at any time.
HARPER & BROTHERS,
Franklin Square, New 1 ork-
Administrator’s Sale.
R Y VIRTUE of an order of the Honorable 1
Court of Ordinary of Haralson county,
will be sold at the Court-house door in Buch
anan, within the usual hour3 of sale, on the
first Tuesday in January next, a certain hou?8
and lot in the town of Buchanan, in Bald
count}’, together with adjoining land?, rod.®
twenty ivies in ail. more or less, being all the
real estate owned by John Duke in said town
at the time of his death.
Sold as the property of said John Duke, de
ceased, for the benefit of the heirs and credi
tors of said deceased. Terms cash.
Nov. 9-tds.-$7 50. Z. P. DUKE, Adm’r.
Administrator’s Sale.
B
T WO months after date application will be
made to the Court of Ordinary of Heard
county for leave to sell all the land belonging
to the estate of Richard Newman, late of said
county, dec'd. C. T. BROWN, Adm’r.
Nov. 2-2m-$6. De bonis non.
Fair Warning.
A LL indebted to the estate of King W.
Perry, deceased, by note or account,
GEORGIA—Coweta County.
W HEREAS John F. Cook, administrator
of John C. Perkins, represents to the
Court in his petition, duly filed and entered on
record, that he has fully administered John C.
Pe ^t'- QS . C I tatC ; - _ j snow cause, it any ^-
This is therefore to cite and admonish all j dismission should not be granted on the nr?,
persons concerned to show cause, if any they . Monday in December next,
can, why letters of dismission should not be —
granted on the first Monday in December next.
Given under my hand and official signature,
May 30tb, 1867.
June l-6m. B. H. MITCHELL, Ord’y.
Administrators’ Sale.
B Y VIRTUE of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Coweta county, will be sold
before the Court house door in the city of
Newnan, on the first Tuesday in January next,
between the usual hours of safe, the Store
House and Lot belonging to the estate of King
W. Perry, deceased, situated on the South-East
corner of the Public Square and on Depot
street, containing thirty-four feet front and
running back East sixty feet, including the two
feet alley between said Store House and the
adjoining house East. Sold as the property of
said K. W. Perry, for the benefit ot the htiri
PETER G. PERRY, ) AfWr
EMELINE R. PERRY, f A
November 16-tds.
* I^WO months after date application will be
I made to the Court of Ordinary of Coweta
connry for leave to sell the lands belonging to
the estate of William Brooks, deceased. (
Oct. 26- 2m. TOLLESON KIRBY, Adm’r.
GEORGIA—Campbell Coudtj.
W HEREAS J. T. Deavenport, administra
tor of William B. Pennington, repre
sents to the Court, in his final return, dnlz
filed in office, that has has fully administered
William B. Pennington’s estate:
This is therefore to cite and admonish ei-
persons concerned to be and appear at my
office within the time prescribed hy law, and
show cause, if any they can, why fetters o-
are forewarned to come forward and close up
order of the Court of | b - y rene ™| sufficient security, or else the
papers will be placed in a lawyer's hands for
suit. Those complying with the above will be
the 1st Tuesday in February next, within the I p nted indigence until they can convenient
ly! nf mIa the interest of the estate ! meet the Payment. The books and
Y VIRTUE of an
Ordinary of Coweta county, will be sold
before the Court house door in Newnan, on
rule i when obtained, it is either followed up judici-
Dm^dSt^? S very^op^ POratl0nWltbthe !g^ V r ; d a rre ^ eCt€d0n 0r rea *^ nable
Administratrix’s Sale.
B Y VIRTUE of an order of the Court of
Ordinary of Coweta county, will be sold
before the Court-house door in the city of
Newnan, on the first Tuesday in February next,
within the legal hours of sale, all the land
(widow s dower excepted) belonging to the j
estate of Sanford Hubbard, deceased. Said
laud lies in the Panther Creek district. Sold
for the benefit of the heirs and creditors.—
Terms cash. ELIZABETH HUBBARD,
Dec. T-tds. Administratrix.
legal hours of sale, the interest of the estate
of W~m. B. Brown, jr., in 150 acres of land,
the same being fifty acres in lot of land No.
267 in the Grantviile district of said county,
and twenty-five acres of the adjoining lot in
Meriwether enunty, number not recollected,
all belonging to the estate of Wm. B. Brown,
jr., late of Coweta county, deceased. Sold for
the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said
estate. Terms cash. ,
WM. B. BROWM, Sr., Adm’r.
December 7-tds.
papers
may be found at the store of Perry & Flem
ming, Newnan, Ga.
EMELINE R. PERRY, Adm’x.
P. G. PERRY, Adm’r.
January 12-l2m.
Witness my hand and official signature,
1, 1867. R. C. BEAVERS, Ord’y,
June l-6m-$0,
GEORGIA—Heard County.
A LES RIDLEY, administrator upon the es
tate of James Presnall, having m a '- 5 .
GEORGIA—Campbell County.
~\\l T'ansant, administrator: application to me in proper form for letters e-
. ?. A ansant, deceased, repre- | dismission from said administration:
Administrator’s Sale.
B Y VIRTUE of an order of the Court ot
Ordinary of Carroll county, will be sold
sents in his final return, duly filed, that be has
fully administered said estate:
This is to cite all persons concerned to ghow
cause, if any they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from hi3 adminis
tration, and receive letters of dismission on
the first Monday in December next.
Given under my hand and official signatuie,
June 18th, 1867.
June 29-6m. R. C. BEAVERS, Ord’y.
This is therefore to cite all persons concern
ed to be and appear at my office within t
time prescribed by law, and show cause, it aD -_
they can, why letters of dismission should n»-
be granted on the first Monday in February,
1868 ' o t b
Given under mv official signature, July 1- l “»
1867. ' W. H. C. PACE r Ord’ry.
August 3-6m.
IWO months after date application "dll ?-
made to the Court of Ordinary of He ari
YOOffr J. IiOACr
H AVING resumed the practice of Law, will
taithfully attend to such professional, cleared —some good bottom — common
county, deceased.
October 19-2m.
J. M. GENTRY, Adm’r-
— . . GEORGIA—Campbell County.
before the Court-House door in Carrollton, on | TTTHEREAS Russell Dailey, administrator I c ^ ntj for leave'to sell'a 11 theland'in belong-
the xat Tuesday in January next, within the ; \\ of James Dailey, deceased, represents j ag ^ t fc e estate of Thomas Milam, late of ^
legal hour3 of sale, lot of land number two ; in his final return, duly filed, that be has fully 4 r
hundred ninety-seven ^297), in the sixth • administered Jame3 Dailey’s estate:
district of said county, containing two hundred j This is therefore to cite all persons concern-
two and a half acres, more or less—thirty acres ; ed to show cause, if any they can, why said
. , , . . . . . . _ .1 - jmmon im- | administrator should not be discharged and •
business as may be entrusted to him in Coweta jprovements. Sold as the property of John j receive letters of dismission on the first Mon-
aDd aajoining counties. McYicker, late of said county, deceased for
Fees graduated to suit the times. I the benefit of the heirs and creditors. ’
fig^OffSce in the Court House. I Terms on the day of sale. i
Newnan, Ga., August 24-tf.
Nov. I6-tds-$7 59. JESSE GRAY, Adm’r. June 29-6ra. R. C. BEAVERS, Ord'
Everybody take Notice!!
Marble Head Stones furnished for Soldi* 7
day in December next. j Graves—size, 2 feet by 10 inches, with insenp-
Given under my baccLand official signature I ... * rn <? r oVTMAN.
is June 18th, 1867. tion-m any quantity, at $3.50, by S. B. OAi
Ag’t of WM. GRAY, Atlanta,
this