The Houston home journal. (Perry, Ga.) 1870-1877, July 11, 1874, Image 2

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lion Of personal and social equality with the the negro. Either he was a sincere enthusiast andii’fool, or he was chief krfave of the nation. Being sincefe. be cofiudently believed that the race were essentially equal. There are fourteen tlionsand dogs in yonr district, and not one of them ever made Stunner's mistake. Even a ne gro’s dog trained to love his master faithfully, never forgets that all other negroes are not wliut Sumner said they were. Philosophy craves infor mation as fo whether Stunner in all Iiis glory possessed the acnmen of an unlettered dog. Probably Mr. Free man is prepared to answer. Let him either confess himself the lower animal intellectually, or disabuse the dog’s mind of an unehistian error. Bex. Zink. Houston Home Journal ” SCREW PHESi M.'.HTJN, Eortoa .vilir Pr.oi-RiETor.. FIRST STREET, CORNER OF CHERRY; - ^ WARER00M5; Poplar Street, Between Third and Fourth !i)-.*r circulates thoroughly in i, (ho wealthiesl and most popnlons coitoii scfcti.n of (Iciil'gia. SATURDAY MORNING, JULY, 11 COTTON GIN (Patented February 21,1873, and April 28, 1874.) PATENT JCNfe 10, iS‘23( Awarded the Great “Eclipse” Press over all competitors at the’ Georgia State Fair at Macon in 1873. GU.KBMEY, BAETRUM & HEi\DK BOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, WINDOW AND DOOR PRaiips r'W' TERS, NEWEL POSTS, SCROLL WORKS, B UJLDERS’m WARE, GLASS, OILS. PAINTS. PUTTY, pyrn r£ iE ^ With Adjustable. MciU Sox and Sirin for Ginning Damp. Wet or Dry jf xnisices hearty, cordial support. Be not di- inr iicrinent [ tided by local issues—beware of jeal- Ie College, ousics arising from “cla ms overloolr- on Sunday ed,” “stocked conventions,” and per- much our soual predjndices. These- are weap ons furnished by a skillful enemy to break yonr ranks and defeat your cause. Look with distrust upon “people’s tickets,” “citizens’ candi dates, ” when brought forward in op position to yonr regular nominees.— They are subterfuges generally of dis appointed aspirants, who are nsed by the opposition to defeat yonr or ganization. We cannot afford to destroy or weak en the Democratic party. It has res cued the State from Radical misrule; it has broken the alliance that existed between power and crime; and lias checked the system of public pin nder which was driving’our people to bank ruptcy and “uin; it has restored the control of the government to the virtue and intelligence of the State; it has | given Georgia a position in the Union ) beyond that of her unfortunate sis ters of the $outh. Will yon, relying upon yonr liinjority, grow listless and unconcerned? Remember bleeding South Carolina. Will yon split into petty jealousies, and endanger yonr snceesS? Think of down-trodden Louisiana. Will you, l>y a thirst for position and place, distract and di vide your forces? Look at plundered Florida, and determine, that in this contest, patriotism shall guide your actions, and loye of State control your aspirations and your hopes. Your defeat is Radical rule, and Radical rule is oppression, civil rights bills, plunder, bankruptcy and-social degredation. Yonr success gives as surance of constitutional government, enforcement of law and maintainance of right. The cause is worthy of your efforts—its success should be tbe day- star of your ambition. Individual re sponsibility is essential to a favorable termination of the. struggle. Let the campaign be quick, sharp, decisive.— Look well to your nominating conven tions. See to it that nene but mnr of integrity are offered to the people for their support—men who will spurn the rings who would raid upon yopr treasury—men who will look only to Georgia’s interest and liouor. With such men to hear yonr standards .yon will command a victory. In the Fed eral elections there is great need-oi ac tion . Indifference, before, gave Geor gia men in Congress who would have inflicted upon the white people of the State injuries and insults too revolting to contemplate. Justice to yourselves, justice to your children, justice to peace and and good order, justice to humanity, justice to an ignorant race, whom they would riin under the guise ol friendship—all require of ns active, decisive effoits, unceasing labor, to brand these men with the seal of con demnation, and remove them from a position they have degraded and dis- gtaeed. •Men of Georgia! the issue is. with yon. It is big with consequences.— Do yonr duty, and all will be well with, you aScl-your noble olfi : State. Respectfully submitted, Thos. Hardeman, Jb,, Chir’n Dem. Ex; Com. Georgia Gleanings, The Dalton Citizens learns that a panther attacked and killed a little girl while in McLemofe’s Cove, Ca toosa connty last week. W. R. D. Moss, Ordinary of Chero kee county, died last Saturday. While on her way to the burial of Mr. Moss the next day, his mother-in-law,. Mrs. Hill, was thrown from her bug gy and her nose and left arm broken. Dr. 0. C. Harrington, convicted in Fnlton Superior Court last week of robbing R.P. Spencer, in Penn BedeVs gambling room last winter, was sen tenced, on Wednesday, to ten years in the penitentiary, aid HeCue, an accessory to the-robbery, to a : fine of §600 and costs, or-one year in the chain gang. The Comptroller General is sending out to each tax receiver a land map, with each lot of land, district and sec tion plainly marked as a guide in tak- ing land" returns for taxation. Re ceive! s by the-aid of this map can tell when all the lands in their counties are returned. The Sun and-Enquirer says the Ala- sire making all. the Genuine Pattern, with Oscillating Box, tVKmi- factttreh by Who Should insure; The rich do not need - insuranefl against fire, though it is well enotfgii for them to have it. P.C.SAWYER,MACON, CA House cloYr jn the totfn 0 . Houston connty, Georgia;®, Tuesday m July next daria. gal hours of sale, the follo^n .erty to-wit: 123} acres oMdftfcmjBfr- r the west part o&ioLiffifralL more or less of(the$!^(wg!s Sonth half of let NbSThin^l trict of Honstcp’county-" fe the land now/oceujjikl bv j Howard, except his hottiest&j as the property' of smd'JoIm : ard, Bankrupt ‘ -Sii * Bat those who would be left houseless and penniless if burnt ont, cannot afford to be with ont it. The Georgia Home is one of the most reliable and promp in the payment of losses, and is as liberal in. its charges as tiny that are reliable. . From ten to fifty dolla’S will give you from one to five thousand dollars of insurance on yonr dwellings. Having furnished my shoi> with new machin ery, and the best of workmen, there is no Gin mode that can excel mine as to finish. I am now running the bearings of the Saw and Brush in the pivot, or oscillating boxes that never heat, th < ngh run as high as 2,000 revolutions to the minnte. I hope my patrons will not do this year as they did last, wait till they needed the Gin before ordering. Send yonr otdeas at once so that I may have time to do yonr work right. It costs no more to order now than in Septem ber. THE SAWYER ECLIPSE COTTON GIN with i s improvements, has won its w„y upon its own merits, to the very first rank of popular favor. It stands to-day WITHOUT Ct Mi-ETITION in all the points and qualities desirable or attainable in a PERFECT COTTON GIN. Our Portable or Adjustable Roll Box places it June 13 4r. A New Idea! T. Collins found. The veritable Tom Collins haa.tnrn-. ed up at last. He called on our May- ] ol - the other evening and requested tiiata “Idler freedmau” be arraigned for alleging Unit he, Collius had made his way from Florida, to this place with a board tied over his eyes, in the manner tlnit bnlls and vicious bon- vines are occasionally fixed. We shall - await the denouement with some in - terest iw ‘Collin’s reputation is at stake in so far at least as wearing a frontis- ■peico over‘his byes are conceraed. His, (Collius,) many friends all over the country will be glad to learn that he.is taking legal steps to repel this foul.. aspersion, and to remove the blot from this coal black classic brow.—Th&niasTSitle Times. "We would mil the attention of.T» and Amateur^o Kinkels-NeVMeii the Reed Organ arid MeloJeon, a, the best work for these instrnmei& work is pronounced superior to 1 4 of its class by Teachers who Wo- in the power of every planter to regulate the picking of the seed to suit himself, and is the only one that does. Properly managed SAW- The Fastest, Most Durable, Lightest IJranght and Cheapest Screw Cotton or Hay Press in the World. PACKS THE BALE IN TWELVE ROUNDS. Two to three Hands, or one Light Mule packs a Bale in Two Minutes. Bales of Cotton packed by this Press range from 500 to 800 pounds. YER’ia ECJ.JPSE GIN wQl maintain the full nat ural length of the Staple, and be made to do as rapid work as any machine in use. Three Premiums were taken by S * WYEIi’S ECLIPSE GIN last year, over all competitors, viz: Two at the Southeast Alabama and Sonth- - west Georgia Fair, at Enfanla—one a silver cup. the other a diploma. Also the first Premium at the Fair at Goldsboro, North Carolina, ■SHUTTLE- it. It contains a clear and simple of instruction whereby anv one hut acquire the mastery of this fhvotte merit, with a few month’s stmly. bama negroes white candidates for office at their bands sign a paper endorsing tbe social equality bill. - -The Crawfordville Gazette is the name of a new paper to bet started by Mr. Ciarehce Stephens, nephew of the Hon. A. H. Stephens. It is now stated that Dr. Lipscomb",; will hot resign the Chancellorship of the State University. Mr. George Thornton, of Hartwell, was killed by a pair of rnnawiiy mules on the 20th. They threw him against a tree.. w Doc Simpson, of Atlanta, was_rnn. over and killed, just below Fairbirrn; on the Atlanta and West Poiut "rail road, last Friday night; drunk. . ' Atlanta has t-he only negro student remaining at West Point. He suc- c ssfnlly jawed the last examina tion and his name is Henry Ossian Flipper;—He is an appointee of Free man’s. Nine acres" of wheat threshed ont for-;C.-Graves, near Rome, lose week, 209 bushels—a fraction over twenty- tliree bushels per acre. The Savannah valley country that the Augusta people seek to have open ed ^ the world by a goverment ap propriation for the improvement of their river, embraces ten counties in Georgia and five in Sonth Carolina. It has an arae of 5,082,331 acres, or nearly 800,000 sqnare miles, a terri tory larger than Connecticut, Rhode Island and Deleware combined. T his territory yielded in 1870, 3,543,711 bushels in corn, and 109,345 bales of cotton. . To make good, tree of cost (and pay expenses of transportation) any portion of the Iron Work of the “Eclipse” that imy prove defective within Three Years after Purchase, and Warrant against Breakage without limit as to time The “Eclipse” can be tarnished all complete, or simply the Irons, as partiesmay desire Presses arranged for steam or-water power when required. We have Testimonials from many of the Largest and Best Planters in Georgia (and all the other Cotton States) using this Press, whose names areas “familiar as honse- Will be delivered on the ears at the followinj prices. Thirty-five Saws $131 25. Forty Saws 150 00 Forty-five Saws 168 75 Fifty Saws 187 00 Sixty Saws 225 00 Seventy Saws 262 00. Eighty Saws 300 0C vlways be a fiivorte work with the Tec on account of its clearness ami swta progression, more of an amusement fo study for the Pupil, nnd will pnwe j; of wealth to the Amateur, on accoc the- many choice Melodies. Sonqs,, that Mr. Kinkel lias selected anil am hold words.” Planters visiting Macon fire earnestly advised not to purchase a Cotton Press nntil they examine closely arid thoroughly the “Eclipse,” and judge, for them selves. Send for descriptive pamphlets containing testimonials and juices. . Though far superior to all other Presses heret fore, we have made recent valuable improvements, giving all parts increased strength, and affording still Lighter Draught, and dispensing with what was known as fhe ‘-inner sleeve. The “Eclipse” is now To prevent delay, orders and old gins should be sent in immediately. Time given to responsible parties. P E R F EG T I ON! Findlay's Improved Power Press FOR STEAM OR WATER POWER. expressly for this work. KiimbS Method' wtB be mailed, post-paid *i ceipt cf $2.50. Address j. L. TETEltS, 599 ErtoJe N. Y. P. O. box 5129. Voluntary Testimonials, 50 Dollars ! f FARMERS, MERCHANTS, MECHANICS, Are furnished from various sections of the cot ton growing States, of the charac ter following. Welbubn.G a., October 15, 1873. Mr P,C. Sayyyeb. Macon, Ga.: My Gin is doing well and I am well pleased \y ith it; In fact it can’t be heat. Resrectfnllv. a L. WILLIAMS. Grahams, S. C. Sept. 10, 1873. P, C. Sawyer, Esq,: Dear Sir,—When you sent me the fifty, saw pin. yon requested me when 1 tried her to lot yon know how I liked her, and according to yonr request I will do so. Yesterday afternoon I timed her. I ginned one hour and thirty minute s on a pile of cotton that was too damp to be in real good order. I then packed the cotton put ting 754 yards of bagging on the bale. I then weighed it and it weighed 514 pounds. I do not hesitate tc say she is the fastest and picks as clean as any gin that I ever saw ginning. I would exchange her for no 50 saw gin of any other make, Magnolia not excepted. Yours Respectfully H. EASTERSIX. P. S. I weighed seed cotton for one other bale, the first one I ginued on yonr gin last Mon day afternoon, and it turned out fourteen pounds over one-thLd—bale weighing 467 pounds. AND OBwmco Silver Gloss ; Start -£32.0 Xjcl.-KS22.Clrr. StAUCFACTCKED KT T. KIXGSF0BD HAS BECOjSE’ V Household Necessity Its great excellence hasaeritwHtoj mentation of Europe for- American fic-tuTe. - PULVERIZED-CORN STJffi BEST IN THE WORLD! Athens, A ill., April 20th, 1874. Mb. P. C. Sawyer;—I am very well pleased with the fifty saw Cottpn Gin I bought of yon last summer. It does all you said it would, and does it well It Gins Fast, PickB Clean, makes a good sample; and with the adjustable breast never chokes. Inover expect to use any other. . Yours truly. J. R. BATTLE. E^TIie Highest Premium was aivanlefi to it at NeW Advertisements. TBE2MBED R5T T. KINCSFORD &*SiOll| E%ressIyfor food, when it iira made into pndding-s, is a dessert of f* excellence. For Sale by-all UrSt-class GmaP I Lone 13 'j Findlay’s improved Power Press, for steam J or water power, possesses rare advan tages, and’conveniences. Screw Pin is ten feet long; Gearing heavy and strong, and instead of the doubtful and dangerous “olntoh” arrangement, tight and loose pulleys with “shipper” are used, thus insuring Safety, Certainty nnd Promptness of action. This Press will be supplied with our new-patent Conical Boilers, a most valuable im provement, for the purpose of receiving the “end thrust,”, and very materially lessening friction. This Press was also triumphant at the last State Fair. THE GEORGIA GRANGE. Fairburn, Geo., April 21st, 1874. Mb. P. C. Sawyer, Macon. Ga.: 'Dear Sir.—The gin I bought of yon last Fall, we arc pleased to say, gives entire satisfaction. We would not have any other. We have ginned 390 bales, ginning from six to ten per day, cot ton thirdiug itself after prying tale. We can ba fely say, that in our opinion, it is tbe best gin now in nee. Yoitrs Bespt. etc., MILLER & McKOWN. We, the undersigned, have witnessed the op eration of Messrs. Miller & McKown’s gin, made by P. C. Sawyer, Macon, Ga., and can say it c cans seed better than any gin we know of, and and makes as good lint as any gin in the State. HENRY STRICKLAND, E. P. S. WILLIAMS, W. R. ELDER, W. T. ROBERTS, REV. S. HARVEY, J. L. MARTIN. Ohio State Fair; Northern Ohio Fair; Anrer. Institute, N. Y.£ Cincinnati Exposition; Indianapolis Exposition; St. Lonis Fair; Louisiana State Fair; Mississippi. State Fair ; and Georgia State Fair; Official Organ of the Patrons of Husbandry. The Geoegia Gbange, representing and advocating the interests of the Patrons of Husbandry in-this State, already number ing a Membership of eighteen thousand and rapidly iucreasing.frQm day to day, presents to. every, class of our citizens, both in Georgia nnd elsewhere, one of the most efficient and valuable-advertising mediums in th? land. It ..circulates in every county in the State, arid doubtless comes under the eyes ol a hundred thousand .persons. All interested should not tail to take notice of the tact. Our advertising rates ore liberal, Teems of SunscBipiiON.—One year, $2; to dubs of ten and upwards, $1.50. Address letters and communication to— GEORGIA GRANGE PUB. CO., P. O. Drawer 24, Atlanta, Ga. , Political Melange.9 Mb. Editor.—Those melancholy -days have come again, wherein -the political skillet begins to" seethe and newspaper correspondents overflow with eulogistic gush. New-found, fa- vorits are paraded before the the pub lic, and “Many Voters” know their HOUSTON COtfi GEORGIA, Lvw.— -- —The esfcite of Allen E. SpraeUf?-' said countyj.deceased, being resented and not likely to be np sec te d) I This-is ther&forb to cite all.p^ concerned,,to ofSir at the July “ 1874, ol the Court of Ordinary county and show cause, if any h have, Why the administration « estate shonld not be vested-bj Clerk of the Superior Conrt olfl connty, or any other jjersnn de& lit and proper by the Court.- J Witness my official signatnrfil June 6. 1874. A S. GILES, I i w Qtap&. In addition to our regi iar “Eclipse” Press, we offer for this season, (guaranteed above,) a strictly With horizontal levers, for working inside of gin-house. Will be from three, to four times as tast-and lighter draught than any other Hand Screw Press ever offered. FOR BEttiG THE Locust Grove, Ga., October 30tb, 1873. Mr.. P. C. Sawyer, Slacon, Ga.: Dear Sir—-Enclosed find draft on Griffin Bank ing Company for $150, as payment for oar gin, with which ire are well pleased. Yon rs truly, H. T. DICKIN & SOX. bine bloods, noted riot so much fdr noble deeds, as for noble capabilities, and a generous readiness to promise all things. They would consent to serve the dear people in soirie ' official place if Urged gently—arid’assured as to perquisites. Now it is not sad to hear an lionest worth, rind of conspic uous merit, and of eminent fitness, and doing the largest and best range of work. All other Machines in the Market were in direct STILL a N O T H E R! By positive right wo will also manufacture in all its forms Nisbet’s Improved Wrought Iron Screw An Importhrit Invention. A corresjxmdent of the Vicksburg Herald gives an account of anew in vention-now. in practical operation in Mountain Cotton Mills, near Bolton station, on the Memphis and Charles ton Eailroad, which, if it proves to he a\\ tjjrf t js represented, must; have a inpre ijnppjtant pffept nppp the pj!Pr Auction and jnapqfaptpre of cotton than even "Whitney’s pqttpn gin lias had. It does away with the .ordinary process of ginning, converting the cotton just as it is taken fropj the field intoi bread of superior jqnaKty. It costs only §250, and is attached to the ordinary card stand. It is said that specimens of this thread made hy this machine have been sent to nearly all the Northern manufaptnreps and have been jnononncedfstronger and more lustrons than that ppnn by the ordinary method. 3ft is claimed that a thread spun by this means will sustain fully one-third more weight than a thread of ■ equal size made of cotton that has; jrassed through tire process of compression and tl^e com plicated machinery of common cotton lriills. The great importance of toe invention, however, oopsists.. in. the i.n-i tluit by its cheapness aud;simpHc- ".ty it may be introduced into common use. the natural-result of which will oc to transfer the whole work of eoti ton spinning from manufactories tp .o thecot.oa field.-; thus, effecting- a groat saying in the cost-of packing <nd-!transportation, and>in other es- The above letter enclosed the. foil owing testi monial, addressed to Mr. Sawyer, viz: Locust Grove, Ga., October 30,1873. We, the undersigned have witnessed the oper ation of ons of your Eclipse Cotton Gins, which we thjnk superior to any gin we have ever seen used. It leaves the seed perfectly clean, and at thename time tarns ont a beautiful sample. H. T.'DICKIN & SON, E. ALEX. CFaKV hll iAXO, ~ M-LTSABBISr GEORGIA HOUSTON COUNTY: By virtue of. authority granted -by the Ordinary of said county, will be sold be fore the Court House door in jtbe town of Perry, on the 1st Tuesday in August be tween the legal hours of sale the following land lying in the,-13th districLofsoid coun ty viz: . • East half of lots No. 306 and 307, all of 264’eveept" about- forty acres off of the north ride, and fill" of 203 except fifty acres In a square forjn iri the south-east corner and about 10 acres off of the north ride-— To be gold as the properfy of the estate of Watkins Imidler, late of said connty- de ceased. Terms ouedtalfi purchase money flue December 1st 1874, ftud the other half December 1st 1875, with interest from date of sale. Titles to be made when pnrch">se money is paid. Maegabet A Laidi.kk, July 1st 187L Executrix. BAPTIST OTMN BOOK COTTON PRESS, EWFor Hemming, Fell ing, Stitching, Cording, Binding, Braiding, Embroidering, Quilt ing and Stitching fine or heavy goods it is itnsarpassed. Where wa ha-YQ no Agents ws will deliver a Maehinq for- the price named above; the, neatest. Rail Road- Station of Purchasers,- Needles for all Sewing 8a- Ghlnsf for Sate; OtiStacIiines taken in Exchange. Send? fbr- Circnlars, Price List, &c., and Copy of the Wilson Reflector, one of the best Periodicals of the day, devoted , to Sewing Ma chines, Fashions, G-eneral News and Miscellany. BAPTIST HYMN &> TUNE- 503 Six sizes.—Fifteen styles. Price fifty cents to five ^ AUTHORIZED by toe tion at the largest meeting e*® in tlie country. PREPARED ab great time and money, g CHEAP1EST. IW ty cento;-' Vfe51 <W Booh i? ptononneed the cheap** Using our “Eclipse” frame, find adding our now “patent Conical Rollers,” to lesson friction, etc. HusPress will be made for-hand, horse, water or steam power, and in every, instance toe Scriejr Pin wffil_.be ten feet long, jnd four inches in diairieter,; of warranted material. - " . - "V ' “ hut .this hyperbolic landation in Which somia indulge in, becomes as monoto nous ftt tiffins us July accounts of spljool excises, nv the try of “catter- pillars.” Jt is §s4i ye*y sato know t^at such a great number pf men* the pnrg and good,' and ffifted, should hanker, “eyen as the hart pan teth fop t-lje jyater-brooks,” qftep anything so questionable of phspflpto? and respect, ibility as an office. There are two classes namely t “all the world and the rest of mankind who. believe that corruption in politics is natural and necessary, and that crafiy men with adaptable consciences and no others- pan pull the wires deftly. Now if this belief is correct why not “trot put” men with real qualifications; and tell plainly what the qualifications are, Let. ns hear- from a few genuine, straight out and. exemplary pis cals With a record,. philosophy is a powerful thing and will tackle any sort of a whale, but occasionally it is utterly baffled, and overwhelmed. There was a ChawJes Sumner—recently lamented, and be was a statesman, and a scholar.. His friejrds hehey-ed,him.ihsj>iredj.aDd his enemies acknowledged that he "was wise, though weak, Did:,they indeed believe he-was wise?. ; Now. this man was.pronddmd! ambi- tion&r^aspiting;to.the heroic difiimj-.. Ibwinton, Ga., Ociober 7,1873. .. Mb- P. C. Sawyer—Dear Sir: The Cotton Gin we got from you, we are pleased to say. meets our fullest expectations, and does all you prom ised it should‘do.* Wo have'ginned' one hun dred and sixteed bales on it, and it -has never choked nor broken the roll. It picks the seed clean and makes good lint. We have had con siderable experience with various kinds of cotton gins, and can with safety say, yours is the oest we have eyer seeurqn. We will be Prepared to Supply Any Kind of a Screw Cotton Press that may be Desired. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE ~ UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTH ERN DISTRICT OE-GEORGIA: In the matte of Joseph H, Thompson, Bankrupt—in Bankruptcy, This is-to give notice once a week ior three w-^elo: that f havq hetnappointed Asrig nee of the estate ot Joseph H. Thompson, of Byrbin "Houston eoimty, Georgia, who has beeuadjudged- u : bankrupt upon his own petition by the District Conrtof said Dis trict. • Robebt N,-HohzehAW. Assignee. Jnly Sth-lS7-l. 3"t - "We will introciuee a New Gin Gearing, bonnd to saperceflaoB hejsg amply the old-tashioned gmgeariug riinnmg.cm. anti-friction, tollgte. wo^pig raj t^e ground, thus dispensing with ‘,king-prists” and “centre-^upporto, ” and toe fropbje and doubt of .potting, them np. "V7e adrisepriftics' spV toey- gee. this view movement” and hear our guarantee, et<K Send for Descriptive CjrQjilav^ cantaininx Dctailel Ilhistrations oions-Fyeivss: ; K : LU-J find Testimonials, Prices, Teems,;Eff.- . Sirv The Colton Gin we bongnt of ' yon 1 taV Kill, afier afair trial, has given as satisfaction. U majes ^.goatyint apd cleans, tea. qced welL noWpectfiilly. D.-H Culler,.administrator de bonis.non of Allen P. Spradley, dec’d-s-applies for le.ive to sell the land of-said esta te. This is therefore to rite all persons con cerned to appear at the Angdst termlS74of theCourt of Orxlinary of said county and shew cause if any they- have why said ap plication should not be granted- * tYitilths lay official rignataxe this July Gth 137L -V «- GILES. ; ^ . -i.-v- ; Ordiwry. GINS IffiPAfRED PROMPTLY. tion, and in hamiv’nj" "' u;! our Order,.you will. te c0 Taylor, Secrefar3 , > sueh sni appropriated: as yon may o trihuie. A fail list of all co! appear-in the -'Georgia Gm Ryorthrof L.F-L P, c. SAWYER MACON, GEORGIA. €L£V£U>:D, OH-10. TronAYorkSjManon, Ga.