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The Black Tiger.
Unsurpassed Deviltry.
A Tourist’s Story.
Two Visions.—Two visions are pa?s-
ing before us. Study well the grouping
The motley mass of Radical treasury I A tourist tells the following story : j and note which is the more pleasing pic
thieves, carpet-baggers ai.d bummers, at\ We recently met our friend Dr. Lord, {Qre 0 f the two. Lee, the conquered,
Chicago, who recently nominated Know formerly of Boston. He has been a re-j cloistered in calm dignity at Lexington,
Nothing Grant for President of the Un- j sideut of this section for about six years, j moulding the youth of our land for exalt-
6 ------ e-,. Ka J 1 *| Je wor ] 4 ] t Grant, the
planks of their platform : lsivefy engaged uujmg »w., «— , conqueror, tnangmg with every shift of
r — r « .1 i :— bewildered with
It was one day before dawn, in Nica
ragua, and I was travelling with the na
tives— Niqnitans—and many a tale they
told me of the adventures of Walker and lw «. u .u 6 ■ . .. . .
his fillibusters : but the most exciting of, ited States, put forth the following as one ; During his first few years - | e d usefulness m tin
all the stories was one told me by Manuels,! of the planks of their platform : ! sWely engaged in buying wool, and on | conqueror thangin;
a rcon, as we stopped to rest in an old, “ Seventh—The government of the | one occasion becoming bewildered with , the popular breeze, the slave of paity. the
hut, which he had formerly lived in but United States should be administered with j the muupl.c.ty ol crouxed roads over the ; accessory of Stanton, the Radical nominee
deserted years ago. j the strictest economy, and the corruptions ; broad prairies, he rode up to a small cabin . f or President.-Petersburg Express.
“There was a compadrc of mine, va-1 which have been so shamefully nursed j enclosed in a e ump o 0C j J - a , j J n Hamburg they have formed a stock
cuero on Zapatero,” the peon began, and fostered by Andrew Johnson cad jane a a w me ea c . ,T» P c !company with a capital of 8250,000, for
“some four or five years ago* His corn-j loudly for Radical Reform. j e * ,. L eD coop, i . j starting a German colony in Florida. It
panion was taken ill with calentura of a This comes from a party _who nave t a ^ a, _ i „ 1 is expected that 20.000 North-Genuans
DR. JOHN BULL’S; AFFUCTED ’ ^
GREAT REMEDIES. I BEAD THIS.
Sargent’s A^ces.
scovill'S hoes.
very bad type, and was obliged to leave j created a public debt of $3,000,000,000 ;
{he inland. Joachin, knowing I was an who keep a standing army in ten States
Omefepcc, sent for me to take the sick i of the Union, in time of peace, at a cost
man’s place for a while ; and I, finding j of 8130,UUU,000 a year; who gave 8500,-
thc pay very good, and the work such as 000,000 bounty to Union suldiers to se-
I liked, got into the canoe and skimmed , cure Western influence; whospend 8000,-
across. Six months 1 lived on the island, j 000,000 a year, when, eight years ago,
and I tell you, senores, no man can say j 880,000,000 was sufficient lor all expenses
he knows what loneliness is who has not of government; who are head and shou;d-
tried cattle breeding in an uninhabited ers in public treasury, plundering and
! ed on the top of a hen-coop, with :
“ Halloa, boy I”
“ I reckon you're a stranger,” was the
response.
“ Look here, sonny.”
“ I . in’t your sonny.”
“ No, not my souuy ; but if you will
jump down and come here I’ll give you a
dime.”
The boy sprang as if* alighting from a 1 the war, fewer were issued in a year
wasp’s nest, and coming up to the strang
er, exclaimed .
BILL’S CEDRON BITTERS.
AUTHENTIC DOCUMENTS.
Arkansas Heard From.
TESTIMONY OF MEDICAL MEN.
can be directed thither in course
years, which would make the speculation
au exceedingly successful one.
In one week in April over thirty pa
tents were issued to Southern men. most
ly for agricultural machinery. Before
robbing, and none to stay their polluted
hands; who have taxed every laboring
man in the country 8200 a year of his
hard earnings, and mortgaged his life
blood forever, to uphold their ill-gotten
and worse used power. President John
son has tried to prevent this wholesale
robbery of the people, hence their desire feelings of wonder and delight, said :
to impeach and disgrace him :
But here is another plank of the rotten
concern :
“Twelfth—This convention declares
Before my time j jt s sympathy with all the oppressed peo-
out loud to my- j pl e who are struggling for their rights.”
That’s a bid for the Fenian vote. But
isn’t it sublimely cool, in the face of the
fact that their satraps at the South, under
the direction of Graut, are daily irnuiur
ing peaceable and innocent citizens in
dungeons—sending them to the Dry Tor
tugas—denying them trials by jury—and
disfranchising, and oppressing them in
the most brutal manner? These enun
ciations of the bottle-toters of the Sphynx
are not without a parallel, in impudence,
in the case of the cloven footed individual
who promised the Saviour all the king
doms of the earth if he would fall down
an(f worship him, while at the same time
the old rascal didn’t own enough territory
to accommodate a moiety of the Radicals
who will seek his dominions—Talbotteu
Gazette.
land. I have sat in the doorway of that
hut when Joachin was away for days at a
time; 1 have sat and looked over the
meadow, which is always gray and never
green; I have dozed with open eyes un
til my cars grew full of phantom voices,
and strange, uncertain shapes began to
move the plain.
“ Joachin’s odd ways made me laugh
when I first came to the place, but he
said to me : “Wait till you have been
here a month, you will be as strange as
I.” And he was right
was up I began to talk
self, whether alone or not, like Joachin.
I talked to things and to the cattle, but
said scarcely a word to my old friend,
even when we were together. And some
how, toward the last, I began to like the
eternal silence and the gray monotony of
a life which took its color from the gray
world without. Yes, senores, it may seem
strange, but I often look back with pleas
ure on that hermit time in Zupatero.—
But. my story does not advance.
“ One night, after I had been six
months on the island, I was seated by the
fire, talking confidentially to the plantains
that were boiling in a pot. Joachin was
not in the hut, and I was expecting him
home to supper. Suddenly I heard his
shout outside, and the next instant he
dashed in banged the door to, and threw
the heavy bar across it. Just as he fixed
it, and, panting, leaned his shoulder
against the stout wood, as an additional
support, a shock, so heavy that the whole
hut quivered, made the door bend.—
Another followed ; then all was still. I
had sprung up at first sight of Joachin,
but the scene passed so quickly that no
word had been spoken as yet. But when,
after the second blow on the door, the at
tempt seemed to be abandoned on that
side, I took my comrade by the shoulder
and shook him, for he seemed wild with
fear. “ Grand Dios, man !” I said, “ what
is this ?” His appearance was ghastly.—
The old Guatemala jacket he wore, his
leather breeches, even his boots of alliga
tor hide were ripped and cut with the
thorns of the acacias. 11 is livid face
streamed with black blood from many
deep scratches, and perspiration drenched
his long, ragged hair. “ A black tiger 1”
he whispered; “ it has chased me across
Savannah, lor my horse was tired out.—
It is after me ! Oh, listen !” Then, in
the deathly silence, while wo held our
breath and Joachin strained my hand
backward and forward, I heard the hard
snoring of a tiger just outside the door.
No doubt of it! The beast had singled
Joachin out, and let the horse go free.—
While we listened the direction of the
sound moved about, now up and now
down, accompanied by gentle pats upon
the door, as if the animal was resting his
velvet paws against it as he reared him
self ou his hind legs. At length we
heard the sound of scratching, and I drew
my machete. In a few seconds a black
paw, armed with terrible crooked claws,
was seeu working ou our side of the door.
I gave a downright cut which nearly
severed it, and the animal, roaring like
thunder, threw himself against the wood
again and again in rage.
“ Then, auother pause followed, and we
stood holding each other by the ami.—
Yery soon a noise upon the roof showed,
as we had expected, that the enemy was
directing his attack to that direction, and
I got my old gun ready. As sooif as I
saw fur I fired and wounded him, no
doubt, for he rolled from the roof and we
heard him fall heavily. But again aud
again he returned to the attempt, and
every time I caught a glimpse of his
black and shining skin and fired, his roar
ing was terrible to hear, and Joachin,
who never had courage to spare, sat on
the floor in a corner, striving to close his
ears to the sound. All night long the
struggle lasted, and every crack of the
hut was tried by this untiriug foe. He
dashed upon the door, he bounded about
the roof, scratching the thatch away, but
ever disturbed by my fire ; he tried the
walls and the door again and again. It
was an awful night, senores, that’s the
fact; and I, for my own part, did not re
cover the nervous strain for months.
“ \Ykh the dawu the tiger’s efforts be
came fainter, and at length ceased whol
ly. When the sun rose I took my spears
and sallied out to meet him. I followed
liis trail for a mile or more, easily guided
by the clouts of blood which stain-j rose to affluence—the one by making
“ Well, oid boss, what is it?”
“ I’ve lost my way, and don’t know
where I am. Can you tell me?”
“ Yes; you're ou your horse.”
Mr. Lord laughed at the boy’s wit, and
handed him a dime. The boy took the
| money, and looking up with mingiing
of
A Sharp Witness.—Before the in
vestigation committee yesterday, a wit
ness, from the Treasury Department, was
examined, wheri the following dialogue
occurcd:
“ Have you known of any subscriptions
of money recently in your department ?”
“ Y’es sir, large amounts.”
“ How much ?”
“ I have heard of subscriptions as high
as a thousand dollars.”
The managers swelled with expectation
at the proposed development, and asked
eagerly—
“ For what purpose ?”
“Why,” said the clerk, “to carry the
New-Hampshire election for the Republi
can party.”
The committee at once collapsed and
agreed to ask that witness no more ques
tions. It may be remarked in this con
nection that this Radical committee, while
refusin'; admission to Democratic Senators,
permit Sumner’s presence at all times.
Always be Planting a Tree.—
Considering the cost, and small amount of
.laLor, there is no one thing that so amply
paysasthe planting of a tree. Well-grown,
it becomes always an object of beauty, a
source of joy to the owner and his family,
a plcasuse to visitors and to the residents
of a neighborhood—adds an appearance
of increased value to the premises—im
proves the geueral effect of the scenery—
becomes a protection from cold' winds—
reduces the severity of the temperature
enhances the rental value of a residence
—ofteu more admired than the most cost
ly building; and finally can never be
viewed without a thought of the supreme
creative Power which “ doeth all things
well.”—Horticu Iturist
A freak of nature has been seen in Ar
kansas, in the shape of a man with three
ears. One was on each side of his head,
and the third, belonging to another fel
low, between his teeth.
Shakspear must have had a vision of
the modern bonnet when, in “ The Tam
ili" of the Shrew,” he wrote the follow-
ing :
Petrichio—
“ Why, this was moulded on a porringer ;
A velvet dish—fie, fie !
Why, ’tis a cockle or a walnut shell.
A knack, a toy, a trick ; a baby’s cap;
Away with it! come, let me have a bigger.”
Katharina—
“ I’ll have no bigger : this doth fit the time;
And gentle women wear such caps as these.’>
The cable to be laid from the southern
point of Florida to Cuba has been com
! pletcd by the English manufacturer, and
• will be laid this Summer.
“ I reckon you must Lave a power
money.”
“ \Y hy so, my boy ?”
“ ’Cause you slather it away so.”
“ What's your father’s name ?” inquir
ed Mr. Lord.
“ Bill Jenks,” was the reply.
“All, yes, I know him,” exclaimed
Mr. Lord ; “ he grows wool, dou’t he ?”
“ No ; but his sheep does.”
“ If you knew me, my lad, you would
be more respectful in your replies. I’m
a friend of your father; my name is
Lord.”
“ Oh, yes,” exclaimed the astonished
lad; “I’ve heard pap read about you in
the Bible and starting off for the house
on a dead run, he bawled at the top of
his iuugs :
“Mother! mother! the Lord is out
here on horseback, and has lost his way.”
From a lecture by Wendell Phillips.
The Eloquence of O’Connell.
Perhaps you doubt my testimony. If
you do, I will vuuch for it with the en
dorsement of a man who never loved De
land, and that is John IluudolpU of Roa
noke. [Laughter] When he went in
and heard O’Connell, the old Virginian
cried out: “ These are the lips, and this
is the tongue of human eloquence.” I
think he was right. 1 have listened to
the impressive solemnity of Webster, been
delighted with the grace of Everett, daz
zled with the rhetoric of Choate; I know
the iron strength of the logic ol Calhoun ;
I have been beneath the magnetism of
Henry Clay; it has beeu my fortuntf to
sit at- the ieet of the great speakers of
the English tongue ou the other side of
the water; but I think O’Connell’s ora
tory blended into one harmonious whole
the solemnity of Webster the grace of
Everett, the logic of Calhoun, and the
magnetism of Clay. [Applause.] Nature
seemed to have intended him lor a De
mosthenes of our epoch. She giued him
with everything that goes to make up the
great tribune of* the people.
In the first place, he had a magnificent
presence, impressive iu bearing—impos
ing like that of Jupiter—Webster himself
hard'y outdid him in the majesty of* his
appearance. And this is much more
than you fancy at first in the qualities
of an orator—liis physique. I remember
Russell Lowell telling us that when Mr.
Webster came home from Washington, at
the time when the Whig party thought
of dissolution, a year or two before its
death, anu he went down to Faneuil Hall
to protest, and drawing himself up to his
loftiest impresiveness, his brow ciothed
with thunder, he stood before the listen
ing audience and said, “ Well, gentlemen,
[ am a Whig—a Massachusetts Whig, a
Constitutional Whig. If you break the
Whig party, sir, where am I to go ?”—
“ And,” says Russell Lowell, “ we held
our breath, thinking it a fearful thing
where he would go.” [Great laughter.]
If he had been five feet three, we should
have said, “ Who cares where he goes?”
[Renewed laughter.] So it was with
O Connell.
Rule to Perfect Service.
GEORGIA, COWETA COUNTY.
Ocweta Superior Court. March Term, 1868.
Adeiia J. Edmonson, 1
vs. I Libel for Divorce.
Hugh Barkley. j
I T APPEARING to the Court by the return
ol the Sheriff, that the defendant does not
reside in said county of Coweta, and it further
apuearing that lie does not reside in said State:
It is, on motiou of Counsel, ordered, That
the said defendant appear an answer at the
next term of this Court, else that the case he
considered in default and tlie complainant al
lowed to proceed.
And it is further ordered, That this Rule be
published in tne Newnau Herald, a public
gazette of said State, once a month for four
months previous to the next term of this Court.
JOHN HAY & SON,
Attorneys for Libellant.
Order granted.
JOHN \V. II. UNDERWOOD. J. S. C.
A true extract from the Minutes of the Court,
April 6th. 1868.
April ll-4m. J. P. BREWSTER, Cl'k.
! Rtoney Point, White Co. ^Ark., May 23. '66.
i Dr. John Bull—Dear Sir: Last February T
of two i was in Louisville purchasing drugs, and I got
some of your Sarsaparilla and Cedron Bitters.
My son-in-law, who was with me in the
store, has been down with the rheumatism for
some time, commenced on the Bitters, and soon
found his general health itn pro veil.
Dr. Gist, who has been in bad health, tried
them, and he also improved.
Dr. Coffee, who has been in bad health for
several years—stomach and liver affected—improv
ed very much by the use of your Bitters. In
deed the Cedron Bitters has given you great
popularity in this settlement. I think I could
sell a great quantity of your medicines this
fall—especially of your Cedron Bitters and Sar
saparilla. Ship me via Memphis, care of Iiick-
ett & Neely. Respectfully, C. B. Walker.
Bull’s Worm Destroyer.
Rule to Perfect Service. *
GEORGIA, Carroll County.
Susan M. Daugherty, 1
vs. I Petition for Divorce.
Robert Daugherty. J
I T APPEARING to the Court, by the return
of the Sheriff that the defendant does not
reside in said Slate, it D on motion of counsel
Ordered, That said defendant appear and
answer at the next Term of this Court, else
that said case be considered iu default, aud the
plaintiff allowed to proceed.
It is further ordered That this rule be pub
lished in the Newnan Herald, a public gazette
of this State, once a month for lour months.
Order granted.
.JOHN W. n. UNDERWOOD, J. S. C.
I certify that the above and foregoing is a
true extract from the Minutes of Carroll Supe
rior Court for April Term. 1868'.
J. M. GRIFFIN, Dept. C. S.*C.
May 23-4 m.
Ga., j
6. \
\\ }
GEORGIA—Coweta County.
\l UEREAS James P. Askew, administra-
toi of William Askew, represents to
the Court in his petition duly filed and entered
on record, that he has fully administered said
estate:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
persons concerned to be and appear at my
office within the time prescribed l>y law, and
show cause, if any they can why said execu
tor should not receive letters of dismission cm
the first Monday in October, 1868.
Given under my official signature, April 1st,
1868. B. U. MITCHELL, Ord’y.
April 4-6m.
To my U. States and World-wide Readers.
I have received many testimonials from pro
fessional and medical men, as my almanacs
and various publications have shown, all of
which are genuine. The following letter from
a highly educated and popular physician in
Georgia, is certainly one ol the most sensible
communications 1 have ever received. Dr.
Clement knows exactly what he speaks of. and
his testimony deserves to be written in letters
of gold. Hear what the Doctor says of BULL’S
WORM DESTROYER:
Villanow, Walker County, G.'
June 29, 1866
Dr. John Bull—Dear Sir: .I have recently
given your “Worm Destroyer” several trials,
and find it wonderfully efficacious. It lias not
failed in a single instance to have the wished-
for effect. I am doing a pretty large country
practice, and have daily use for some article of
the kind. 1 am free to confess that I know of
no remedy recommended by the ablest authors
that is so certain and speedy in its effects. Ou
the contiiwy they arc uncertain in the extreme.
My object in writing to you is to find out udou
what terms I can get the medicine directly
from you. If I can get it upon easy terms, I
shall use a great deal of it. I am aware that
the use of such articles is contrary to the teach
ings and practice of a great majority of the
regular line of M. D.’s, but I see no just cause
or good sense in discarding a remedy which we
know to be efficient, simply because we may be
ignorant of its combination. For my pari, 1
shall make it-a rule to use all and any means
to alleviate suffering humanity which I may be
able to command—not hesitating because some
one more ingenious than myself may have
learned its effects first, and secured the sole
right to use that knowledge. However, I am
by no.means an advocate and supporter of the
thousands of worthless nostrums that flood
the country, that purport to cure all manner
of disease to which human flesh is heir. Please
reply soon, and inform me of your best terms.
I am. sir, most respectfully,
Julius P. Clement, M. D.
KA YTOyS OLEUM VITJE.
This great German Liniment is an almost
infallible cure for
Rheumatism,
Neuralgia.
Rheumatic
Pains in thk
Back. Breast,
Sides ou Joints,
Toothache,
Nervous Headache,
Earache, Sprains,
Bruises. Swellings,
Cuts, Insect Bites.
Burns, &.C., &o.
I
This great remedy should be in every house.—
! For horses this remedy has no equal.
Ask for Kaytox’s Oleum Vit.e. Take no other.
Sent by Express for $1.
KAYTON’S MAGIC CU11E.
AX EGYPTAIN REMEDY.
! For the cure of Sudden Coughs and Colds, Asth-
| ma, Acid Stomach, Sore Throat, Heartburn, Sea
'Sickness, Cholera, Diarrlirea, Pains and Cramps
in the Stomach. Sent by Express for 81.
KAYTON’S DYSPEPTIC PILLS.
Are a sure and pleasant cure for Dyspepsia, Bil- j
ious Disorders, Constipation, and all Disorders |
of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels, and when '
taken regularly will cleanse the blood. These i
are the greatest auti-Bilions Pills ever placed be
fore the public.
Sent by mail for 30 cents per box.
The above medicines are prepared and sold by
PkoT. II. H. KAYTOX.
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 hy Druggists and Country Mer
chants generally.
For sale in Newnan. at the Drugstore of Dr.
EDDY SMITH.
J
ro
C/3
Sargent’s No. 10 Cotton Yam.
ri^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. II. J. SARGENT.
(.
COURTENAY & TRENH0LM.
Shipping and Commission Merchants,
iHARLESTON, S.C. , Rive special attention
i the dispatch of Oousi wise and Foreign Fr> i,
by steam direct to BALTIMORE and NE'tA
YORK and i’i« Baltimore to PH I LAD ELPHI 4
Insurance and Freight Kates, as low, via CLuulcs.
ton. as by any other line North.
gyFirat-Class Packet Ships will always be or. th«
berth for LI VERPOOL during the present coUm-
season; Shippers can economize in time aa .tru on
freight aud insurance to Europe by consigning
cottons to Charleston in preference to Gul
Quotations for freights, insurance, &c.
points, furnished weekly to regular correspon
dents.
jnsigning j
hiif rorrs. /
c. to all J
•respon- /
July
1866 1 v.
mm ms ins i
JAMES B. HTONICUTT,
SEISTOI-A-, <3--A~,
JAS. E. JONES. R. s. BURCH.
JONES & BURCII,
GROCERS and PRODUCE
NT ercliants.
C, REENY1LLE STREET MASONIC BUILDING
ISTE'Wlsr^A.ISr, Gk/A.
We have on hand at our COMMOPlOI S
STORK, and daily arriving—
CORN,
BACON,
FLOUR,
MEAL,
GEORGIA—Haralson County.
M ARY A. WETHERBY, administratrix on
the estate of E. J. Wetherby, having
made application to me for letters of dismis
sion from said administratorship:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
persons concerned to be and appear at my
office within the time prescribed by law and
shew cause, if any they can, whj T letters of
dismission should not be granted said appli
cant on the first Monday in November next.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this 13th day of April. 1868.
JAMES H. WILLIAMS, Ord’ry.
April 2o-6m.
Base-Ball—Rules of the Game.—
With the recurrence of the base-ball sea
son, all players are interested in the re
vised rules of the game, as laid down in
the following summary of the new rules
in the Montgomery Advertiser:
The ball must be marked with the
maker’s name and its size and weight,
which must be from 9 1-4 to 10 1-2
inches in circumference, and from 5 to 5
1-2 ounces in weight. The bat must not
exceed 40 inches in length. The base-
GEURGf A—Coweta County.
HEREAS William B. Brown, sr., admin
istrator of Wjlliaru B. Brown, jr., rep
resents to the Court in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has fully ad
ministered William B. Brown’s, jr., estate:
This is therefore to cite and admonish all
persons concerned to show cause, if any they
cau, why letters of dismission should not be
granted on the first Monday in September next.
Given under my hand aud official signature,
February 19th, 1868.
Feb. 19-6m. B. II. MITCHELL, Ord’y.
-DKALF.R in-
FAMILY <JB<3€£BIES
MERCHANT.
ALSO AGENT FOR
TtfL A. 3E* 33 ’ SI
NitrogenizcdSuperpliosphate
jggT’The best Fertilizer for this section.
CALL AT THE
BULL’S SARSAPARILLA.
A Good Reason for the Captain’s Faith.
READ THE CAPTAIN’S LETTER AND THE
LETTER FROM HIS MOTHER.
Benton Barracks, Mo., April 30, 1866.
Dr. John Bull—Dear Sir: Knowing the effi
ciency of your Sarsaparilla, and the healing
and beneficial qualities it possesses, I send you
the following statement of my case.
I was wounded about two years ago—wsis
taken prisoner and confined for sixteen months.
Being moved so often, my wounds have not
healed yet. I have not sat up a moment since
I was wounded. I am shot through the hips.
My general health is impaired, and I need
something to assist nature. 1 have more faith
iu your .Sarsaparilla than in anything else. I
wish that that is genuine. Please express me
half a dozen bottles, and oblige
Capt. C. P. Johnson,
. St. Louis, Mo.
r. S.—The following was writted April 30,
1866, by Mrs. Jennie Johnson, mother of Capt.
Johnson.
mmm mmsm,
Senoia, Coweta County, Georgia.
March 23-6m.
COFFEE,
SUGAR,
SYRUP,
RICE,
LARD,
BUTTER,
iiPXXcEisrxiss: GrUAr^ro,
And ail other articles in our line, to which wo
invite the attention of the purchasing public
February 16-23-tf.
Atlanta Machine Works,
-AND-
IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY
JAS. H. PORTER.
R. II. BUTLER.
Dr. Bull—Dear Sir: My husband, Dr. C. S.
Johnson was a skillful surgeon and physician
in Central New York, where he died, leaving
the above C. P. Johnson to my care. At thir
teen years of age he had a chronic diarrhea
Administrators 5 Sale. | and scrofula, for which I gave him your Sarsa
A GREEABLY to an order of the Court of ; parilla. It cured him. I have for ten years
Ordinary of Carroll county, will be sold j recommended it to many in New York, Ohio
before the Court-house door in Carrollton, on j and Iowa, for scrofula, fever sores, aud general
the first Tuesday in July next, within tne leg .1 | debility. Perfect success has attended it. The
PORTER &, BUTLER,
PROPRIETORS,
v 'At the old Stand of J. L. DUNNING,)
-A.TXj-A.TsTT-A. 3 Gr-A-_
At this establishment can be manufactured
and repaired all kinds of Machinery. We es
pecially invite the attention of all interested
in Coweta and adjoining counties, to our Grist
and Saw Mill Machinery, Cotton Screws, Gins,
Fans, Bark Mills, Sugar Mills, and Boilers.
Castings made without extra charge for Pat
terns when in regular line of work.
Saws re-toothed and gummed in the best
manner.
£2rTERMS CASH.-^a
February 15-ly.
BOARDING HOUSE.
bag is declared the base, thus obviating
lay
hours of sale, the North half of lot of land
No. 30 in the sixth district of said county,
containing one hundred one and one-fourth
acres, more or less. Sold as the property of
Lydia Goodson, deceased, for the benefit of the
heirs and creditors. Terms cash.
MICHAEL GOODSON, Adm’r.
Mar 19-tds.
GEORGIA—Haralson County.
W HEREAS W. J. Brown, administrator on
the estate of Rowland Brown, deceased,
represents to the Court that he has fully ad
ministered the estate of s*id deceased:
This is therefore to cite all persons concern
ed, kindred and creditors to show cause, if
ed the grass and rocks. He was wound
ed to the death, I saw plainly. Aud at
last, I found him, stone dead, beside the
body of Joachin’s horse, which be must
have destroyed in the very last effort of
bis rage, dying in the act.
“ Alter that adventure, my compadre
and I both left Zapatero, finding it a re
sidence too exciting for us. We could
not sleep in the hut. I should not object
to return to the old lonely life there when
you have done with me, senores.”
“We must all be unanimous,” observed
Hancock, on the occasion of signing the
Declaration of Independence; “ there
must be no pulling different wavs.”
“Yes,” observed Franklin, “ we must
all hang together, or most assuredly we
shall all hang separately.”
A dog died of consumption at Spring-
field, Mass., the other day, after being the
oompanion for some time of a person who
eiok with that disease.
the difference which formerly arose when
the base-bag Dccame displaced. The strik-
Anoldl&dy, reading an account of a er must stand astride the line drawn
distinguished old lawyer who was said to be acr0sS home base, not on the line as
the father of the New Y'ork bar, exclaim- heretofore; ana he o he chooses,
ed : “ Pool man ! he Lad a dreadful set | ste P forward, but not backward, to strike
of children ” I the ball. Y\ hen two hands arc already
lout, no player running home at the time
Two swells, whose respective parents j j 3a ’j j s struck can make a mu to count
in the score of the game if the striker of
the ball is put out. The umpire must al-
° i any they have, why said administrator should
bricks and the other by bootmaking
met in a bar-room. Said the sou of Crisp
in, impertinently, to the son
“ Suppose we moisten our clay
all means,” replied the other, ’ “ provided f ore t j ie third innings, but uot afterwards,
not be discharged from his administration, and
receive ietteis of dismission ou the first Mon-
dav in November next.
JAMES H. WILLIAMS, Adm’r.
Mjv 16-6m.
cures effected in some casts of scrofula and fever sores
were almost miraculous. I am very anxious for
my son to again have recourse to your Sarsapa
rilla. He is fearful of getting a spurious arti
cle, hence his writing to you for it. His
wounds weie terrible, but I believe he will re
cover. Respectfully,
Jennie Johnson.
DR. JOHN BULL,
Manufacturer and Vender of the Celebrated
SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP!
FOR THE CURE OF
AGUE AND FEVER
The undersigned takes this method of in-
- forming the public that she is prepared to
accomodate a limited number of Boarders on
moderate terras. The subscriber hopes by a
strict attention to the necessities and comforts
of her patrons, to merit a liberal proportion
of the public patronage.
For further particulars apply at my residence
opposite the Baptist Church.
mrs a. e. McKinley.
Newnan, Ga., Dec. 7, 1367-tf.
SADDLERY AND HARNESS.
Run Here Everybody!
W
GEORGIA—Heard County.
J HERE \S Jesse J. Jackson having ap- j
plied to me for letters of administr.t- !
tion upon the estate of James H. Hill, late of j
said county, deceased:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
and sino-niar the kindred and creditors of said
CHILLS AND FEVER.
there are no heel-taps
Religion is as necessary to reason as rea
son is to religion ; the one cannot exist
without the other. A reasoning being
would lose his reason in attempting to ac
count for the phenomena of Nat ure, had
he not a Supreme Being to refer to. If
there had been no God, mankind would
have been obliged to imagine one.
The Striped Bug.—All persons who raise
Cucumbers, Squashes, &c., will be pleased to
learn that this troublesome and destructive
bug cau be kept off the vines by taking small
twigs or sticks, from ten to twelve inches in
length, winding a small piece of white cloth
around one end, and saturating it with Kero
except in case of illness or injury. Dou
ble catches are allowed; that is, when
one play er picks a ball off the hands of
another player, the latter failing to hold
it. The author reckons the position of a
short stop the most important one, apo
which many will dispute. He also says j
that the third baseman’s position is more
laborious than that of other basemen.—
The three out-fields he rates as of equal
be granted.
Given under mv official signature May 18tb,
1868. W. H. C. PACE, Ordinary.
May 23-30d.
The proprietor of this celebrated medicine
justly claims for it a superiority over ail other
remedies ever offered to the public for the safe,
\ certain, speedy and permanent cure of Ague and
~ er, or Chills and Fever, whether of short
long standing. He refers to the entire
Western and .South-western country to bear
him testimony to the truth of the assertion,
that in no ca»e whatever will it fail to cure, if
T HE undersigned takes pleasure in announ
cing to his friends and customers that be
is again prepared to do anything in the
Saddlery and Harness Business,
with neatifess and despatch. My motto is
£l Quick sales and short profits.” He also
manufactures
Xjoatlior Collars.
Call and see him up stairs at Old Repository.
Country' Produce taken in payment for work.
Nov. 2-tf. ’ GEO. W. VANCE.
Executor’s Sale.
W ILL. be sold before the Court-house door
“ A Repository of Fashion, Pleasure, and
Instruction.”
HARPER'S BAZAR.
The Publishers will commence, on November
1st, the issue of Harper’s Bazar, a weekly
Illustrated Family Journal, devoted to Fash
ion and Home Literature. their aim L two
fold : to supply' the existing need ot 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 :tt an im
mense cost, with the most celebrated of tbo
Fashion Papers of Europe, especially with tlni
famous Bazar of Berlin, which supplies tha
fashions to the lending 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 for night large pat tern-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 dirrections,
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 op-
superfine calendered paper, and will be publish
ed weekly.
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
1868.
The publishers nave perlectea a system
mailing hy which they r can supply the Maga
zine, Weekly, and Bazar promptly to those who
prefer to receive their periodicals directly from
the Office of Publication. Postmasters and
others desirous of getting up Clubs will be sup
plied with a Show-Bill on application.
The postage on Harper’s Bazar is 20 cents a
year, which must be paid at the subscriber *
post office.
TERMS:
Harper’s Bazar, one year $4 00
An extra copy of either the Magazine, Week
ly, or Bazar will be supplied gratis for every
Club of Five Subscribers at $1 00 each, in on*
remittance; or Six Copies for $20 00.
Back numbers can be supplied at any time.
HARPER & BROTHERS,
Franklin Square, New York.
THE SOUTHERN FAVORITE!!
BIRKE’jTweek l V
Por Boys and. G-irls-
Beautifully Illustrated and Elegantly Printed!
Pronounced by the Southern Press to b»
the most elegant and talented
young people's paper print
ed in this country!
We are now publishing Marooxer 3 Bla>' .
a Sequel co the Young Maroooers, ana J- ■
Dobell, or a Boy’s Adve.vjt.rek. in a^xas,
one of Fannin’s men—pronounced ‘'Aff ua
the best of Mayjie PlcM's stories.” We s a -
begin, in the first number of 1868, a thn
story, by a lady of Virginia, entitled HE -
Hunter ; A Tale of the War.” which will v
for several months. ;
Among the regular contributors to bur -
Weekly are Rev. F. R. Gouldiug, nut
’The Young MaroonersMrs. Jane i-
Miss Mar)
importance.
Gen. J. C. Breckinridge. —A pri
vate letter from the youugest son of this
illustrious soldier and statesman, informs
sene Oil, then shove the sticks into the ground, us that he will leave Europe this month,
leaving out about lour inches with the cloth and will reac h Q ue bec by the middle of
GEORGIA—Heard County.
,f a /CHARLES W. MABRY*, administrator upon
the estate of Richard I. Watts, having
: mule application to me for letters of dismis-
j sion from said trust:
Those are therefore to notify all persons con
cerned to
time pre
they have, why said letters should not be
granted.
Given under mv official signature, Mav 18th,
1868. W. H. C. PACE, Ordinary.
Mav 23-6m.
in the town of Franklin, heard county,
within the legal hours of sale, on the first
j the directions are strictly followed and cairied Tuesday in July next, the North half of lot of! Cross; Mrs. Ford, of Rome, Ga.; Miss Mary
| out. In a great many eases a single dose has j land No. 190, ia the 12th district of originally Upshur, of Norfolk, Va., and many others.
'been sufficient for a cute, and whole families i Carroll now Heard county, containing 101£ ' ' 1 eont
have been cured by a single bottle, with a per- acres, and belonging to the estate of A. E.
feet restoration to the geueral health- It is, j Veazey. Terms cash.
however, prudent, and in every case more cer- j May 23-tds.-$5. G. D. LEWIS, Exec’r.
tain to cure, if its use is continued in smaller j
doses for a week or two after the disease has
upon it, above the ground. These sticks
should be placed one to every other hill.
[Federal Onion,
next June. The General at last accounts,
was in excellent health.
been checked,, more especially in difficult and
o he and appear at my office within the | lo °f s ^ ndiD » ca8es - .?*?*'*’ this medicine
scribed bv law and show cause, if anv will not require any aid to keep the bowels in
good order; should the patient, however, re
quire a cathartic medicine, after having taken
three cr four doses of the Tonic, a single dose
of BULL S VEGETABLE FAMILY PILLS
will be sufficient.
DR. JOHN BULL’S Principal Office:
No. 40, Cross Street,
LOUISVILLE, KY.
All of the alore remedies for sale by
~ ’ T. REESE, Sole Agent,
B 1
* pWO months after date application will be
L made ta the Coiirt of Ordinary of Coweta
county for leave to sell the lands belonging to
the estate of H. R. Harrison, deceased,
liav 30 2m. J. P. BREWSTER. Admlr,
Db
Jaunarr 2o-Ff.
Newnan, G*.
Guardian’s Sale..
Y VIRTUE of an order of the Court of'
Ordinary of Haralson coontv, Georgia,
will be sold before the Coart-house door in
Buchanan, said county, on the first Tuesday
in June next, all that portion of lot of
land No. 156, in the 8th district of originally
Carroll now Haralson county, which is situated
on the west side of Tallapoosa river, contain
ing one hundred acres, more or less. To be
Terms.—$2 a year in advance ; 4 |* re ^ c0 ]' 1 -
for $5 ; Five copies for $8 ; Ten copies ior j
and Twenty-one copies for 530.
Clergymen and Teachers furnished at ?t •
first,
tha
per annum.
The volume begins with tho July number.
Back numbers can be supplied from the r
aud all yearly subscribers may receive
numbers for the first six months, stitche
an elegant illuminated covet.
Address, _ J. W. BUP.KE & CO-,
* Publisher, Macon, Ga
Notice to Debtors and Creditors*
. . All persons indebted to the estate ol •
sold as the property of the minor children of - Harrison will come forward aud make pay©e
Sophia McBride, for the benefit of the heirs
and creditors. Terras cash.
SOPHIA McBRIDE, GuaFn.
April 25-tds.
of the same, and those having demands u °b J , r j, a
said deceased will present them in terms
law. J. P. BREWSTER. Adm r,
Maroh 14-40d-