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WASHINGTON GAZETTE
FBIDAy, fuf ""If
~ *
ATRIP TO THE OBIiBBAMD MUt
~ i . - hire.
ifor Hydraulic Mining, A
• Tijj-tiffin Mtr spMt*i
thi#iw*ufin of rffo yeartfikn a jaunt
into the ootinlry j especially into such
a couMo’ a* oprs la. On Tues
day last. we bia us away easterly
to tlie goodly county of Lincoln, and
to the celebrated Sale gold in i no. The
day was glorious; anyway the fore
part ; just enough bree*o and not too
much sunshine. The roail led througb
a country that is now in the beauty of
luxuriant vegetation. Thelarge corn
fields, and there are a great many of
them this yesr, are a beautiful dark
green and and the stately stalks look
as it they had a wealth of soil .and
moisture harking them. The people
in the couutey arc a* busy as bees, and
it is very rarely the case that one of
them is seen on the public highway,
hut men, women and children, white
and black, arc to be seen in the fields
by tho score, goncral busily engsgod
with tho harvesting of small grain.
Tills means prosperity and a great
deal of it. Tf anybody along our road
Was eating idle bread we saw no
signs of >*. The harvest and the
grass arc moving them up as never
before.
The sain mine is located about tour
miles beyond tbo county lire
Ot Liuuolu county, ami sixteen
miles Horn Washington. yVr
riving alllic mine wo dial wont to the
pumping station about a mile and a
quarter from tho mlne.andon Fishing
creak. Here we fouud two immonse
boilers, sud two engines of sixty horse
power each. Each boiler is large
enough to supply the two engines with
sufficient steam,and the two boilers an
used alternately, so as to allow time for
cleaning out. This Is ueccssary for
safety, as you will readily understand
when we tell you that at nililulght
Sunday tho engine* are started, mid
kept in constant operation day -ami
night until midnight Saturday. The
very best machinery Is used and it is
kept in tho best order. These pumps
throw ft steady stream through a sev
len lne.lv pipe, of five hundred gallons
a minute, to a height of one linudrol
hud seventy feci, and up a grade of
■tore than half a mile in length,
t From the pumping station we drove
found to (lie mine, and tho first indi
cation wo had of proxlnity was the
sound of mighty rushing waters; It
was the “giant” as it is called, culling
down tho hill. Looking down wo
saw a great gulch seventy five feet
deep, a hundred or more feet wide
and in nit four or live hundred yards
Ring. However, it Is not so wide ex
cept in the main part of tho mine
where the giant is now at work. The
general ami natural eoncepllou of
cntling away earth, is that is dono
Willi shovels and pick, but when these
miners wanted to cut a water way
ft-om the mine to a branch, they
turned on a heavy head ol water from
aMWo-lnch noaxlc, following up the
cut with a large trough, which car
ried oil'the mud ami water and the
work was down in ono-tenth the time
it would have taken oilier wise.
TNo'vlew of the giant at work was
a novel ami interesting sight to one
who hail never seen anything of the
kind. The giant is simply an iron
nozzle eight or nine feet long tapering
downi'to two inches where the water
rtloots'owt. It is attacked to the end
ef tile seven Inch Iron pipe by a most
In'gentous universal joint, so that the
nozzle can he turned In any direction
just as If were attachod to a rubber
hose. This universal joint Is so con
structed, that ajjiOK the wa
ter poises through it does
not leak a drop. The force and
effectiveness of the stream thrown by
the giant is simply tncrcdiblo to a man
who has never seen one at work. The
Alow ot water Is more than a thous
and gallons a minute through a two
Inch nozzle. The giant running only
during the day exhausts the res
orvoir, which Is supplied from tho
pumping station where the pumps
run night and day. The giant
throws the water with such terrific
force as to cut down the dirt and reck
by the car load ala distance of sixty
or seventy feet. The softer rocks are
shattered to pieces and the large hard
ones are easily displaced. Tills great
rush of the water then rapidly washes
the dirt and smaller rook down tht?
trough to the gold mill fbur or tlvc
hundred yards distant. The larger
rocks are elushed hv hand atul then
washed dewu. This trough has a
j fall of live inches in twelve feel which 1
causes a rapid current. Cross-way*
lon llie bottom strips are nailed and
j, big won# 'lujpkMAver Is placed. This
%|lliPi*inoJlbr fjhe If tips loose pagli
cies or|p,td aid wheiijfbe dirt and
rock A to tli%miU,J|they arc in
tfntifl thi sta&p*. gpd the gold pat
lulbrt fikerWUMp wMiil not' hV a
day’* rations for a negro in black
berry time.
The reservoir i* on *>JJ <* Hie l**M
above the mine. Von would Imagine
4hat 4 was * targe •beat nf wafer
which you could take in at a glance,
but you would make a mistake. It is
about ten feet wide and about half •
mile long, 2600 feet. It winds atound
and follows the countour of the MU.
The bottom is no graded as to enrry
the Water from the extreme end
where it flow* in to tho other end
where the pipe takes it down to the
mine. The top bank* of fhe reservoir
are on a dead level the entire length,
to give the greatest capacity for hold
ing water. The capacity is twenty
eight hundred euWe yard*,or.in round
number#6B(l,ooo gallon*. Thepnmp*
till the resovoir in 22 hour* and 20
minute*, and the giant exhaust#it in
ationt half that time The skill In en
gineering and the perfection shown
up In the constniciton of thme work*,
are very admirable.
Professor B. M. Haft' formerly of
Dnlonegah, la superintendent of fhe
mines, and It was under hi* skillful
engineering that these most excellent
Work* were constrUcted.
He is one of tho finest mathema
tician* and civil engineer* in the state.
Effccilvens* and chenpne**’ of con
struction are the objects he al
ways ha* hi view. Ho *sy the
reason he built the resorvolr In #ueh
a shape was because It was realty bet
tor, and b'tides the dirt nould be
thrown out cn each side with shovels
and without the cost of wheeling.
Wo are indebted to the Professor for
many codrtesle*.
Where the giant is now at work
the hill has in former years been hon
ey-combed through and through with
shafts and drift# and work
ed over by tho dry mlito
lug process. The same ground
is now being worked over by the hy
draulic process and every partlclo of
of gold taken from it. The mino la
now bgltig operated by the Sale-La
wn e Mining Company which leased
it lea* than a ago. After the oltt
ground is worked over the giant will
continue to cut* it* way through the
bill wherever there is a trace of gold.
The richest find since the giant began
it* work was in what is known as a
chimney. The vein fora distance of
six feel yielded fonrteru hundred
dollar*’ worth ot gold. The richest
panful panned out lifly-flve dollar*.
Trying to ascertain the output of the
mino in any stated time win like
trying to find out any prudent business
man’s a Hairs lie lore the proper time.
At the end of each year the lessees
will make a allowing and puy
the owners their pro rata ; which is
ten per cant of the gross output. The
shares in the mine arc owned princi
pally by people who live in that part
of the country; but the lessees are
Cincinnati men.
We met Col. Anderson, one of the
lessees, at the mine, and fouud him a
very genial gentleman.
The Site mine was discovered before
the war in a very unexpected man
ner. A negro woman was washing
clothes and got the water out of u
branch. When the tul> was emptied
gold was found in the bottom. A lit
tle research disclosed au exceedingly
rich gold mine. In a very crude way
♦26,1X10 worth of gold was taken out
of the ground in two years’ time.
The expense was not more than one
or two thousand and. Lars. The largest
s nglo nugget ever taken trout this
mino contained ♦287.00 wmth of gold.
The giant is now playing within fifty
feet of this spot. There are many
more iqjerestiug facts which we
learned concerning the Sale mine, but
this Article is perhaps too long already.
Attar a tine day up to live c’eJock,
the rain gathered its forces and gave
us a lively bout for'the last ton miles
of thF road home. Even this was a
vory* slight interference with the
pleasure of tiie trip to the interesting
scenes at the Sale gold mine.
In it* report of the services on com
mencement Sunday of Andrew Fe
male College, Cnthbert, Ga., the Ma
con Telegraph says: “A a learned
prayer was offered by Rev. Mr. Lloyd,
ol Fort Valley.” This reminds us of
the clcrsrsnnan of New England who
was reported to have, on one occasion
‘■offered the most eloquent prayer
ever addressed to a Boston audience."
Horatio Seymour's mental faculties
are still vigorous ami umimpaired.
In a recoil! letter to a near friend he
expressed bis gratitude lor that fact
and ventures the prediction that he
has some years yet to liTe,
OEN TOOMBS OH THE HBOBO.
The Black Bao*. H~Bva. Wilt Die Ont
Because It la a Borofe Baca.
(AtlantnlMspetl* In Hew
The .KjfemiigJournal pabnahls ati
interview with FX-Senator lfobert.
on the future of the Agroi
They tee bis views as they won lift av#
been given in the North American
Review had not bad health prevented
the preparation of an article for t|%t
He says lhat hi* speech on slavery
In Tremont Temple, Boston, is as true
to-day a! II was then and wifi be for
nil time. The negro race is an infer
ior (Hoe. He was no created and It
God had not intended to make him
inferior to the white man He would
never have created him Mack. All
h'story shows him to be incapable
of governing himself. He cannot,
therefore.gdrem count riesor anything
#l*e. The position of the Iter. I>r.
Hargood that the two races most rise
or toil together, he says, I* very fool
ish. The negro race is dependent
for every thing. He docs foot fhink
they ran be educated. It vwill be
I found In the end that a* a race they
are nncdueationtble. He says educa
tion is Increasing crime among ihem.i
A negro is ont of his element at the
blackboard. His natural tionie is the
cotton patch and the plow. There he
has always done best; there he will
always do best.
As t# the future of fhe negro raee
in the South, he said : It Is the plain
est thing in the world, he wil'. die out.
110 Is dying out now. I think I
ought to understand tho census. I
have studied It enough. I tell vott
that it 1* being falsely interpreted bv
certain people In this country. The
negro It dying Out as a race; ho is
bound to die out. That Is what will
become of him. It is the history of
all Inferior races, and ’here Is the broad
distinction. Thu negro race 1* a scrub
race; the white race is a thorough
bred race. In time the scrubs are
bound to die mil, hut the thorough
bred* lige on to procreate the species,
it is a law of God and caunot change.
BXVXBB BTOBM IH THE MOBTBt-
WXBT 1 •
-i
A dispatch of the 15|h from Omaha,
Neb., says: Tbo second severe rain
and wind storm within half a week
visited this section yesterday. One
residence In Omaha sve* struck by
lightning, but the occupants escaped
Injury. A brakesman named
van was kiitad by lightning
lunibus. Immense damage was done
in theoouutry to the windmills, shells
and barns by tho wind.
The storm along the Union Pa
cific railroad was particular
ly severe. At Milliard, twenty miles
west, two lumber yards were entire
ly blown away. At Klkhorn. two
houses and a barn were blown down.
For a distance of six miles west of
Grand Island, the telegraph pol#
were laid flat. The same storm struck
North Platte depot, and was blown
to pieces when telegraph communica
tion was cut off. Tlie dooot at
Phelps station, on the Burlington and
Missouri railroad, was partly
wreck oil. A great deal of damage
was done for a distance of fifty miles
along the Nebraska railroad in the
southern part of too stale, a great
many buildings being wrecked. The
reports arc meagre so far, owing to
the Interruption of telegraphic com
munication.
HR FLRAD9 OUILTT.
A (Hapatch of the 15th from Phila
atlellthia, tatk: Jose[>h F. Cottrin
ger. former secretary ami treasurer of
the Ceutral Trau*|H>rlatk>n company,
wito ) charged with Illegally issu
ing certificate* of stock of that corpo
ratlon, and who was arresteil at Bush
kill, on Satuniay.wa* brought here
this afternoon. He was tsken to the
office of the company, and there con
fessed his guilt to the directors, and
stated that he did not ask for mercy,
fottringcr was then taken before a
magistrate where testimony was pre
tested, that thhre has been
an over issue fw 3,0(15 shares of stock
the par value of which is over 154.230.
M'lieii askwl by the magistrate if he
had counsel, he replied that he had
not, and that he did not want any.
Tho magistrate thefi committed him
in 150,000 to answer at the next term
of court. This amonntot security
could not be furnished, and ho was
sent to jail.
The mood of merit for promoting
personal aesthetics is due to J. C, Ay
er & Cos., whose imcomparablo Hair
Vigor is a univcral beautifer of the
hair. Harmless, effective, agreeable
it has taken rank among tho indispen
sable articles of tlie toilet. To scanty
locks it gives luxuriance, and with
ered hair it clothes with tlie hue of
youth.
OVERFLOWING MOMKT VAULTS.
Hanks &oabtS”toUa* tSotr Cash Accumu
lation.
*_ Mr vr Rat- w~
If l Fro# to„ N Vmtitirasfl
Ik presifimt oKine fit thb JfMgesfl
aßdfbu*iiytih>ankain tie vMlWlty of
VHuI direct laid As dm Ifljst uftekjl
-W>ney, i, *Jply Jpm Ethb wAed
the banks are becoming money poor.”
Tho speaker we* one ol tlie last of the
New York bant, ftcsklunl* ty qliyg
to rtW ! custom ef paying interest bn
ilsptllli il Illlklißf 4lMfk- Um
*Hi*4omi4 Oicoe.UM* *eqs*U#*--ox
cept hi a few special cases—bee iuse
the present e.rtiWlon oTtHe backing
business did not warrant such pay
ment*. The same bmft president re
fused outright, a tow Atfs igo, tft ac
cept a deposit •( ♦l.jfli.OOte Hi* bsnk
has more money than it knows what
to do with.
O. D. Baldwin, president ot the
Fourth National, said .Shere was
about ♦61.000,000 of cash lying Idle in
tf e hanks. He declared that his
bank would he glad to iosa money 6u
call at 3 per cent per annum, but there
seemed to he or demand tor large
amounts, Henry Clews* remarked :
the arant of conffdunce among inves
tors Us* left itpr banks, the treat com
panies, and large estates hardened
withxash. It would be a good thing
for business everywhere if some of
this money could be got into active
circulation.” An old established law
Arm down town holds more than pi.
500,000 of trust fund*, for which they
have thus far been unable to And
profitable investments. Most of the
large banks are complaining of the
.steady Increase In their cash supply.
One Walt street bank Which control* a
very large estate has il* vaults filled
with money, which the bank ha* thus
tar been un.iSle to place to advan
tage.
The undesirable plentitude of cash
is not confined to banks and trust
fu.id*. Even .the large vaults in the
massive sab-treasury building are be
coming uncomfortably crowded. It
baa recently been fouud necessary to
pot timber cross pieces In the com
partments of the silver vault to pre
vent the irfin partition* from being
broken dpwn by the increasing ac
cumulation of silver coin. Even the
central corridor of this vault is being
slowly tilled with bags of silver dol
lars, each bag weighing fifty pounds.
Fortunately tin? silver vault rests
upon a solid foundation of 'masonry,
iron, about thirty %et
TDIfIWPiWS snflitlcr vault, which con
tains gold coin and paper money,is also
crowded. Most of the compartment*
are filled and bundles of gold and
silver certificates arc stacked up in
plain view ou shelves running around
the vault, Several millions of dollars
are disposed of in this way.
In one small campartment—not a
large as a two-foot cube—there arc
packed thirteen bundles of greenbacks
of large denominations. Each bundle
contains exactly fi,000,000. Book
keeper Burr consulted his ledger'when
asked how much money there was In
the sub treasury last week, and re
plied.” in round mimburs, ♦272,000,-
000.”
Many people have considered that
the American newspaper comments
the British reverses on the Afghan
frontier have been unfriendly. The
London Time* cannot lie considered
unfriendly to England In any sense of
the word—it is the most conservative
paper published in the British Isles—
and thi* is what it publishes from Its
Calcutta correspondent: “The hon
ors which the Crar has heaped upon
General Koniaroff and others con
cerned in the unfortunate Penjdoh
incident have already. If Is said, seri
ously afflicted British prestige in these
region*; and any ctHtreosion on our
part wilt be taken a* an admission of
defrat and will utterly ruin British in
fluence throughout Persia and Af
ghanistan, besides having a bad ef
fect on onr Indian subjects."
wa *i.*p*s*D in sattcxau.
Desultory firing was heard near
La Libertad last Sunday night and
it is believed that tho forces of both
parties are approaching. The com
ing Pacific mail steamer is bringing
100 Nicaraugaians. There is ao Un
ited Slates war vessel here. Il is said
war is being carried en with the us
ual barbarities of civil war. Briio
was butchered by the Indians. Mon
tcrosa and Parrilla are both prison
ers. Letona still holds Banacbapan,
notwithstanding repealed attacks.
It is certain that liivas took Cojute
peque Saturday. If Mcnendcz is beaten
there is almost certain to be civil war
iu Guatemala.
Governor Robinson, having signed
the Boston Metropolitan Police bill,
that city is now without a Police
Board and serious complication arc
feared.
- kwm
|Gheti# Pectoril j
thdSiff ectluf the throft atullngt: 1
toon* *dU.SO with by xkm mto;okj of &fr- 1
fill. As ototasry eoagh or eo|k mftln I
fro* to trlftiag or anconaeiotM a
poeare, ito oflem but the beginning of to ftoUl
gieknwe. frii'i Chkbkt Psctobal he
veil proves iu oOoney In n forty ye*rt‘ fight
* nflh lUgnt nu 4 lnng dt—Me, nod tobonld bn
token in toU ennee vitbont del*y.
II iJtgtonmi awe tsilß
“Il tsar I took o MT#r cold, which effect #d
V lawss. I hod torrlWo*ou*h, ukl wm!
stihl after Diehl without i!|i. Tho ilocu.ro
aooo 000 w*. t wtod AVXB'o Cssssv Par.
toaxL, which rolloTod mj lunao, ladwMd
doop, sad sffbrdod no tho root uccccs* rj .
tor (ho rocooory ot mi otresfth. By tho
eonUnwod mo of tho Pxivobal s eormo
aoM con was <*mM I mm mom at yoon
ol<l, halo sir,l hearty, sod om oolioSod jour
Caaaav Pscruasi. rorod mo.
Hoaxes EAiaaaoruxa.’*
Bootrisaham, Vl., Julj IS, IMA
Crtif. —a Mother's Tribute.
"While ho tho country >eo winter mj Itttlo
hoj. throe jenn eld, wu token U 1 with eronoi
g Hemet M tf he wouM die from tArniiffn.
loUon. one ot tho (MnUj Mneelcl the mo
of ATKk'a Cnsnar E* i-ro*i, boiile of
which WM slwsjn hast la tho kocoe. This
wee tried in tmall and frequent donee, and
to onr-daitgka to toto then half an knar tho
little patient war breathing oaellT. The doe
tor add tons too career pnrosui. had
eared mj darllas'a Hie. Ou jou wonder at
Sur STWd 1 ude Sln.rerelj yneii.
Mat. Knna OsnskV."
MS Watt tatoh at., Hew York, Maj IS, 1(81.
“I hare Mod Avsa's Cnsnar Prcronai.
In mj femlly foe oareral , earn, and do not
heeltate to pronowneo It the moat effectual
remedy tat eeughe aad oolde we knee erer
died. A. and. CAB."
Lake Crjnul. Man., Jtoreh u, II*:.
“ I • offered for sight JOSH from Broneblthi,
sad after ujla* many ramadlee with an eoo
ceca, 1 war eured hj the nee of Aren’t Can-
BY PncroSAL. .Inarm Vusu."
Bjhalia, Miss., April I, imq.
“1 eannol mj naouffh In prsiM of Arm’s
Carur PecTonat., teUertng m 4 do tkas
hut tor Us see I should lour eTnee here died
Apm
Ho cam of sa affection of tho throat or
tans* atom which eannol he greatlj rellered
hr too as* of Aran's cur ear pr<r..aac.
Sad It Win ohirepe nee when tho dlsoeoe is
not already beyond tbo aontrol of modtslao.
rartranio nr
Ayer 4 Cos., Lowsll, Mm*.
goht bj all bruggtsto.
THK lIWA CTCLCHK.
VrsrM fiprrimere of a lermer’e
Veaill when. NamaWSe
tonalrojed
ilispatch o f the IfitV from Macon
City, I&wa, uvs: The bouse and
barns r>f Mathew lieddy, several
miles from here in the country, were
carried away in the slorrp Sun
day night, and the fariiUv hail a fear*
M experience. There are hardly
enough hoard* left about the home
stead to build a fire. Not a hit. of
furniture nor a stitch of clothing can
he found. Tho wreck is compleli t
Ifoddy's brother w-a* klwirn Imb' *
field. When the house went to niec
es Reddy was in a blitting position]
on the ground. On looking around |
tie saw by a fia.li ofligtuu'.iig tiiat his i
brother was -tretdied dead sonic
yards away. lie picked him up and
carried him into an underground
milkhousc. He then searched for
liis wife and fquyd her ill her night
clothes some ten rods from the hoti-e
in a cornfield. She was also carrie 1
to the milk house. IJe next looked
for his five-year boy, searching by the I
light of electric flashes, ami al last
d’eovered him thirty rods from where
the house had stood. The hoy was
almost driven into the mud. The
mother and child will hardly live.
The brother hail both ears split, hi*
head gashed and his shoulder cut ami
bruised. The wife hail three gashes
on her forehead and one en her nose,
a big cut in the back, bruises on her
•gs and is injured internally. All
three were beaten black and blue ail
over their bodies Ipy hail.
One fifteenth of the legal voters of
Massachusetts are veteran* f the
civil war.
WHAT IS TIE CArtl t
Zditon, sis rule, rarely ever tgree, aad
conie.juestlr are continually at logerbesdi.
Tit• v will toko up tho same subject and dis
ease it in thoir columns,kire il * thorough
analysts*, show up sit tbs points, sad if you
will take thoir articles and compare them,
there will always be some point of disagree
ment, There are, of course, exceptions to
this as well ts to all other genera! rules, and
we propose to give an instance where three
Georgia editors ale unanimously of the same
opinion
The editor of the flouthera World, pub
lished in At anta. sav , “I know the propri
etors of Brsdfield's Female Regulator, and
mmm vouch for their high standing in this
community. I also, from mr own knowledge
esn testify that it is a great boos to woman,
and his ho superior, and every lady ought to
aend for and read their book on female dis
eases, which they mail free.”
The editor of the MilledgeviUe Chronicle
aova he considers Bradhetd's Female Regu
lator the greatest bloasing ever discovered
for suffering woman: says he knows of six
ladiosinhm OMsmnnity who havo boea eured
sound and welt by i'a use, and he would ad
vise every suffering woman to use ft.
From the editor of foe Gainesville Eagle:
"I consider Bradfleld’s Female Regulator the
best medicine ever compounded and atfered
to th* public far the diseases for wnich it is
recommended. lam well acquainted with a
lady whs nererhad any health until she com
menced using it. It gave her immediate re
lief. and from that lime until now she has
eajoyed the best of health. I can nay with
hearty good will, ‘God speed Dr. Bradfieid in
the sale of his never failing Female Regu
lator !’ ”
Rend for our book containing valuable in
formation for women. IS will be mailed fros
ta eppiieinta. no
Tux Bsadfield Resulatos Cs..
i Box 28, Atlanta, Ga.
AWCA PIT L PRIZE B7SOOT-S*
■ i a mm Mil imi Till —.
'il. S.L.
a Una State Lottery Company.
to bans Crtttiy that w, miperru- tho r
-onto to&U tho Monthly ond Somt ABnnol
it of uitt.niiiioiono Stoto Lottorj fh.mpoaj,
ood In porooo nionago oori control tho Urowinno
thoms-lroo. ond that tho aonw oro roaloctod with
hoßooty, totro-m. ul In ood forth lowul nil par
tloS. ond w- outhorlso tho Composj to >M thlo cor
tlScwto. with for -imil.Ti of opr atgnotaroo ottoched
ta Uo oATorttooMMlo.y j
CoMMlootoßoro.
lnoorporntod In 1 to* for to jo m bj tho to*Ul.
tuxe lor Educolionoi n4 Choritolno parp.—o—
wHh o copilot of SI.MHI.MII—Io which smorrofuut
ot oror SXIO.UINI hoo Mhcc bocp odded.
Bj An nverwhctmtn popular felo Ito fronchtoo
woo nod* O port ol too prmout Stoto Coaolitutlao
wlcplt-d Doccmbor 34. A. t> Ito*
Tho orlj fcdtvrj oror votod o tod ongorood hp
tho people of onj ototc.
It noror HUM or postponeo.
Ito Orond Sisals MwwoWr Dnwlsfo
toko plnec sionlklj
A SPLKNDID OPi’OHTI NITT TO Wtff
A rOHTCMR. SEVENTR DUCNII DKoWTNfi,
Cl AS* to, IX MIAUMMf <W MUSIC. SKW
OH. EANH, TTRSBAVi lotf X*. ISHS
- Howtkly Brow to*.
CAPITAL PRIZE. $75,000.
100.000 Ticksts at Five Dollars Each
Fractions, in Fifths in proportion
lot or nu&-
1 CAPITAL fnum .iaa.i.oilUU..... . .fffipWO
l do do a ***
id do mi, io.oou
I PRIZE* Ol IfiCfiO.o..;vs* liiOfO
i do vni IMI
19 and !Mfr>
do aoo JO.OOl)
10 do •>... W.W.
m*> and luo 30.000
W) do 50 ,4JOO
1000 do 25-,....-.. 26.000
AmnoXIMATTOM
t ApprnxlmAtJoe of |f.V) fi.750
• do do 4,SOU
9 do do 250 2,250
vm Vru-A. to .9965.000
Apptfc'nHon for rtfwl to Itite* ttbould b made
only *> tfc* f SM <4mip*py in Orlwn*.
IT-ir furtbrr inlormntion grltn tiriOK
fnll*lrM Fof*TAl. HOTKft, Expr**** Mon#y
urds-FR. of JlfW York to ordio%r>
( ’vr*tM”y by Kprs-* (*lj muni of $S nd tipwnrdt*
t our linpuiwe) nddrHHMRI
M. A. DArPHIN.
25 4 New Orlrana, X*n.
° r M * TTnnhlngtiSn. D, C
ttnke p. o: Money Ordefß payable MUt <adr* bh
KegtteF**l Letter* to
MICW ONIKANV NApONAL EABTI,
Hew Orlvsna, U.
Georgia Railroad Company.
STONE MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
OKEIOB Oknkkal Manaoki; Y M
Augusta, Ga., May 23
COMMENCING Snndoj. M.y ,'lth,
linai: !i Ira.;ifi wiJ! run a-i
Trv.sr ;:. l>y ttu-n lun U ’
■U.-r tHAi: AtUnfk time.
* ft- b!-u ....
luuown
Atb'-UB ,S^
** AtlnntA
Oatnecvillf*
Milledtievillfi HH|
Xnoon
August* 3
Loo Auguoto 10,30
* Wnron
MlUedjvilln t£g <*
" AfUntn
44 G*ineHvllUi 555 ~
44 Athene qiyj •*
" Born.-tt IJO .<
" Rojtowu 1 12s "
" Ficklen 149 ~
Arrive ot WuSiington 2.20 ..
Trolno connoci ot Ationt, ond Angnoto for oU
polnu IVcot, North.wet, Boot ond B.>utb-wet.
E. K. DOBSEY. JOHN W OBF.EX
Ut>. fu.. Agent. General Monog-r
Sheriff’s Sale.
WlTal. tm oM b*fo the r<mFt bon*#* door In
th.' town of Washington, Wilke# conn tv, O*
between the l. gi hour* ot ante ot the flrut Tu*-
(ly in July the following property, to-wit
One-ftmrfh Utid vid and intermit in a /rart of i aD d
lying nl Dying in the .minty ol Wilke*, State of
Oeorgia: bounded by land* of Jno. L. Andernon
Mr* A. H. Quinn. 2. W. BeUowf*. 4 # o. a. Sutton
and other*. Containing five hundred acres more
<*r !**. If vied on a* the pmpcrtv of T. C M< Len
don. to aattßfy a A fa iaauiug from* Wilke* Superior
Court In favor of Allen, Johnson & Wilson f* T
C. M-'L'-ndou. WituetM my official Bignatnre thi*
sth day of June, lft*s. GEO. L. AI.BEA
23-td Deputy Sheri# Wilke* Cos.
Administrator’s Sale!
4 OREEABI.T to an order of the Court of OFdi
nary of Wilke* county, will be *] to the
highest bidder *t the Court house door of said
county, on the fimt Tuesday in July nwtt. within
the legal hour* of sale, the following property to
wit: All that tract or parcel of land lying in the
county of Wilkea, State of Georgia* hounded by
lands of Sherar, Short and Boatwright and the pub
-1 c road; containing flf: v-*e T *n nrrw. aon* or laa
Sold a* the pr*perty of Mary O. Bherar, late of aaxd’
county, deoaaaod. Temaca-h. Thi* the 3d day
of June. ISSS. GEO. W. SHERAR.
2f-td AdMlulatrator.
Sheriff's Sale.
VIfILL b Hold before tfce court house
Tf door in the town of Washington
Wilke* counlj, Ga., between the legal hours
of sale on the fir*t Tuesday in Julv next.
Tne followinjf property to-wit: all that
tract of la ad lying in the caunty of Wilkes,
State of Georgia, bounded bv lands of M. H.
Bth, G. B. Bunch and others containing
22i acrea, more or leas, cut off by a line run
ning north and South on the western side
o! the fata of Simeon Rhodes.
Levied on as the property of Simeon
Rhode* to satisfy two fi fas, one issued from
Wilkes superior eourt in faror of T. C.
Hogue, surririnif partner, rs Simeon
Rhodes, and one issued from Wilk-s county
court in famr of Pearce, Willett A Ballard.
Levied on by O. C. Real, bailiff of the
county court, and turned over to me.
Property pointed out by defendant.
Witneas ray official signature this the 28th
of April, IBSS. J. W. CALLAWAY,
18-1 m Sheriff Wilkes Cos.
NOTICE.
Of intention lo apply to the Legis
lature In July next, for tho passage
of the following Act: An Act to
amend the Charter ot the town of
Washington, Ga„ byinereaing the
limit of llie rate of taxation : to pro
vide for the appointment of property
appraisers: 10 change the title of
President of the Board of Commis
sioners ; and to provide for the
widening and straightening of the
streets and side-walks of said lown.
L. W. Sims, B. S. Irvin,
Sec. B. T. C. P. B T. C.