The Expositor. (Waynesboro, GA.) 1870-187?, June 26, 1873, Image 1

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HATES FOR LEGAL ADVERTISING: Sheriff Sales, per square 8 300 Mortgage Jifa. sale*, per square * 5 00 Tax Collector'll sales, per square., 3 00 Citation for /setters Administration and Guardianship 4 00 Application for Letters Dismissoi-y from Administration and Executorship. 6 60 Application for Letters Dismissory from Guardianship 5 00 Application for leave to sell land, per sqr 4OQ Notice to debtors and creditors. 6 00 Ijand sales, per square 3 00 Sales of perishable properly, per square 200 /'.stray notices, sixty days 6 00 Notice to perfect service 7 00 Rules nisi to foreclose mortgages,per sqr 300 Rules to establish lost papers, per square 600 tittles compelling titles 5 00 Rulss to perfect service in divorce cases 10 00 Application for Homestead 2 00 Obituary Notices, per square 81 00 Marriage Notices 1 00 of : Transient advertisements, first insertion..Bl 00 'Subsequent insertions 75 No advertisement, taken for less than one dollar. Monthly or somi-monthly advertisements insert ed at the same rates as for now advertisements, each insertion. Liberal deductions will be made with thoso ad vertising by the quarter or yea r. Ail transient advertisements must be paid for when handed in. .Payment for contract advertisements always duo after first insertion, unless othorwiso stipulated. of jMfftriptlon: One copy, in advance, one year 82 00 One eopy, in advance, six months 1 00 A club of five will bo allowed au extra copy.’ No notice will paid to orders for subscrip tion unaccompanied by the cash &g grofcisjsioiMl GEORGE E TERSON. D. D, S., OFFICE NEXT TO PLANTERS' HOTEL, WAYNESBORO’, QA. FAMILIES desiring his services at their homes, in llurke, or adjoining counties, call address him at dec23-ly lA. O. LOVETT, ATI OR NE Y AT L A W, WAYNESBORO’, GA. Will practice in the Superior Court of tl e Augusta, Middle, and Eastern Circuits. — Special attention given to Justice Court practice. febl 5-1 y A. M. RODGERS, ATTORNEY AT L A W WAYNESBORO, OA. OFFICE AT TIIE COURT HOUSE. PERRY BERRIEN, attorneys at law, WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA. OJfict in Cjurt ITousp basement -northeast room " John ix \shton, ATTORNEY AT LA W, WAYNESBORO’ GEORGIA. Will practice in the Superior Courts cf the Auguste, Eastern, and Middle Circuits, the Supreme Couil of the Stele, and in the District and Circuit Courts of the United States, at Savannah. Claims collected and liens enforced. Special attention given to cases in Bankruptcy. jel2-ly HOMER CL GLIBSON, ATTORNEY AT LA W, LAWTON YILLE GEORGIA. Will practice in the Superior Courts of the Au gusta. Eastern, and Middle Circuits, the Su premo Court of tier State, and in the District and Circuit Courts of the United fates, <ti Sa vannah. Claims collected and liens enforced Special attention given to cases in Bankruptcy. -S.ter-R£ , Buggy Building E E FA I RING. WE are prepared to repair BUGGIES, CARRIAGES, eto., in a workmanlike manner. Painting, Trimming, and Blacksmith ing executed in the best style, and at reasonable rates. We solicit orders from nil our old, and as many' now, friends that may desire anything in our line. WJT Special attention given to the making and repairing of wagons plow-stocks, and plows. J. AE. ATT A w AY , inyls-tjanl Waynesboro’, Ga. ~MAT. 13 PERKINS, PROF. OF SCIENCE AND LITERATURE OF MUSIC WILL TKACH CLASS-SINGING, CONDUCT MUSICAL SOCIETIES, AND 'Organise and Drill Choirs, with special reference to (h wants of the Church. Address, , MAT B. PERKINS, jy22* Lawtonville, Burke co., Ga. TETITRO THOMAS,” DEALER IN FAMILY GROCERIES, !)i-y Goods and. Clothing (.Opposite Planters' Hotel), WAYNESBORO, GA. ~ W. A. WILKINST DEALER IX DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, DRUGS AND MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, ETC., ETC WAYNESBORO >’, GA. R. 11, BARR, 7 " DEALER IN GROCERIES, LIQUORS, DRY GOODB, CLOTHING, ETC., ETC., WAYNESBORO, G A. $5 TO s‘2o Per Day! Agents Wanted All classes of working people of either sex, young or old, make more money at work for us in their spare moments, or all the time, than at any anything lso. • Particulars free. Address G. STINSON & CO., Portland, Maine. JOB PRINTING NEATLY EXECUTED AT TWs omce. fie 1$ 1 fluff* r. BY FROST, LAWSON, CORKER <te GRAY. VOL. 111. ( TRUE LOVE. A maid reclined beside a stream, At full of summer day, And half awake, and half a-dVeam, She watched tho ripples play ; She marked the water fall and heave, Tiie deepening shadow’s throng, And heard, as darkened down the eve, The river’s bubbling song ; And thus it sung, with tinkling tongue, That rippling, shadowy river— ‘ Youth’s bright day will fade away, For ever and for ever!” The twilight past, the moon at last Rose broadly o’er the night, Each ripple gleams beneath her beams, As wrought in silver bright, The heaving waters glide along, But mingling with their voice, The nightingale now pours his song, And makes the shades rejoice; And thus ho sung with tuneful tongue, That bird Beside the river— “ When youth is gone, true love shines on, For ever and for ever.” TIIE COTTAGE BY TIIE SEA. Grant Beautifying liis Property in Long Brandt at the Public Expense. The Washington Rally Critic , several days ago, contained the following item of news : “A few days since there was shipped from Washington to Long Branch, the summer house of President Grant, three wagon loads of choice flowers in pots, two rustic settees, and forty hanging baskets, which the keen eye of the prac tical observer will miss for some time from the Botanical Garden. Long Brauch, in the meantime, will present to the Washiugtouian the home attrac tion of having the President’s garden enchaining his cottage around with the array of floral gems and rustic property herein before described.” This is all very nice and doubtless very home-like and attractive for the President and the few officeholding Washingtonians who may accompany him or from time to time visit the exe cutive mansion by the sea. But what will the people who arc taxed to provide these luxuries say? The Botanical Garden is no more the private property of the President than of the humblest citizen in the country. He has no more right to ship rare plants, choice flowers, and beautiful hanging baskets from this conservatory fhau ho has to take the Goddess of Liberty from the dome of the Capitol and set it up on his private grounds at Long Branch to frighten away trespassers. Not only wa3 tho Botanical Garden despoiled, but a large portion of the furniture which the Gov ernment tho White House was shipped to Long Branch. Eight wagon loads of it, according to the Herald ; arrived last Friday. They contained enough apparently to fill a couple of such Swiss cottages as tho President resides in, and comprised all varieties of household furniture, from tete-a-tetes and sociables to flow erpots and soap boxes. Tho St. Louis Republican says of the Republican nomination in the South: “A movement in Louisiana between tho whites and blacks for a better under standing challenges the admiration of a St. Louis Republican paper, and it gays : ‘On this basis a really South ern Republican party that will redeem tho South can bo established.’ But what about that Republican party in the South which the Republican Con gress, tho ltepublica administration, and the whole Republican press have been supporting, in violation of law and justice, for ail theso years ? Is it not ‘really Republican’ after all?’ When a Republican paper calls for anew par ty to ‘redeem the South,’ does it not mean to admit that all that the Repub lican party has done for ton years, with its Bullocks, Warmoths, Kelloggs, Ca seys, Durells, Claytons—with its frauds, robberies, civil wars, Ku-klux bills and armies—does it mean to admit that its party has failed to ‘redeem the South “BALUB POPULI aUPREM A LEX ESTO.” WAYNESBORO’, GA., THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1873. Singular Fatality. —On Tuesday last Mr. J. W. ITixor, former chief of police of Stanton, was crushed to death by the cars at Gordonsvillc. The sud den deaths in his family havo been as remarkable as they havo been distress ing. His father was thrown from a stage and carried home dead. His bro ther was taken suddenly ill in tho street here and died a few moments af ter being carried home, and now tho last male member of the family has met with an accident which resulted in his death in fifteen minutes.— Stanton Vin dicator. Partisan Insincerity.—What thor oughfacod Radical partisans are capable of is illustrated by the proceedings of the recent Ohio Stale Republican Conven tion. That grave body in one of its resolutions. says: We condemn without reserve the vot ing for or receiving of increased pay for services already rendered, and de mand that the provisious of the late act of Congress by which the salaries were increased should bo promptly and un conditionally repealed. And iu another resolution it also de clares as follows; Second—Wc reaffirm our confidence in President Grant, and in the wisdom, integrity and success of the administra tion of his high office. Now the approval of President Grant made the increased pay bill a law, aud he is.receiving §25,00 a year iu conse quence of his assent to it. Thus we have the Ohio Convention condeiquing Congress and approving Grant, while both are guilty of the same act. Important to Bankrupts. —Judge Erskino, Tuesday, issued the following order in reference to bankrupt matters in tho District Court: In regard to filing petitions to restrain sales under executions, &c., a copy of the bill or petition, unTHs otherwise or dered by the Court or Judge, should accompany the writ of injunction. All petitions or bills must be filed in the Clerk’s office before being presented to the Judge or Court, and they should state fully the grounds upon which the prayer for the writ of injunction is based, so that tho Judge may be fully aud particularly notified in the pro mises. All facts essential to a full uu derstauding, of the subject matter must bo set forth, otherwise action may be delayed and petitions returned for cor rection. Cortificatcofadjudication ought to accompany bills asking for injunc tions. Officers of Court will look care; fully to the bankrupt law and general orders of the Supreme Court of the Us. States and the rules of this Court in taxing their costs. A Goat with a Broken Heart. —A gentleman of this county of undoubted veracity tells a strango story about a goat dying of a broken heart. The cir cumstances are those: The gentleman’s boys, perhaps, had a pair of kids that were raised togother and never knew what it was to be separated. From some unknown cause, after they were grown, they became estranged from each other, one of then became greatly attached to an old family horse which was said to be about thirty years old. They grazed togother during the day and slept side by side in tho stall at night. Whon tho horse was used, which was not often, owing to his vonerable age,- tho goat would run about in appa rent great grief bleating like the yow after its young. The old horse’s strength fiually gave way, having weathored tho storm in this world so long, and ho died. Tho poor little goat never re covered from tho painful separation.— With tho most sad and pitiful look from its eyes it would roam all the day long over the fields and pastures in quest of its lost companion. But alas ! the old horse was gone and in less than two weeks the devoted littlo friend followed. It died of a broken heart.— Valdosta Time s. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR, IN' ADVATSTCK. Bishop Whipple, of Minnesota, says bo has eight Episcopal churches in his diocese composed of Indiaus, and four of the clergymen arc Indians. A correspondent of the Courier Jour nal says a half teaspoonful of sulphur placed in each sock every morning is a sure preventative against cholera. Tho Henderson, Kv., News says complaints are made by mast of our far mers this'yoar, of the unusual appear ance of vast numbers of tobacco worms. The New York Commercial Advertiser says: A clergyman stopped his prayer to lead an unruly man out by the ear, and then went on “as I was saying, O Lord 1” A negro man in Tennessee who hitches on M. D. to his name, is rapid ly exterminating his race by giving the wrong powders. Such black tneu need elevating. An exchange says Mrs. Sherman, tho poisoner, is allowed to take care of the plants in the Connecticut State prison, and is quite an expert in the art of poi soning the bugs. An old woman at Liverp x>l, Ohio, “don’t want ’em to take any trouble after she was dead, but if it was just the same she’d like to be burried with her spectacles on.” A clergyman is reported to be au thority for the statement that a con vention of baldheaded men is soon to be held in Boston for the purpose of reviving tho old wig party. “A Wintcrset, lowa, girl made 200 revolutions with a mill shaft aud escap ed uninjured.” In our letter of con gratulation we gave her the brevet rank of “Our Summerset Heroine.”' It is stated that the passcugcr earn ings of the Union Pacific Railroad arc much larger this season than any pre vious one. The receipts for two weeks of May, ending the 24tb, were $219,- 900. * A son of Gen. D. H. Hill has been appointed a cadet at West Point, where his father, tho General, graduated in 1842, in the same graduating class with Earl Van Horn, Longstreet and John Pope. The late Dean Alford’s grave is un derneath a yew troe in St. Martin's graveyard, and these words are on the stone that marks it: Derertonum via tons Iltcrosolyman proficient is .” “The inn of a traveler on his way to Jerusa lem.” This is just a trifle personal, but its the way they put such things out West. A St. Louis editor in speaking of a brother writer, says : “He is young yet, but he oau sit at the desk and brush the cobwebs from the coiling with his cars.” The famous London auctioneer, whose advertisement stated that the only drawbacks on a certain country place which he had for sale were the “noise of the nightingale, and tho litter of the rose leaves,” was the right sort of man for his profession. - - Au Illinois editor who was enjoying himself at San Francisco when Horace F. Clark stopped issuing passes over the Union Pacific railroad, writes to his wife that ho is walking homo for his liver’s sake, aDd will arrive in the' fall or early spring. # - ... A Washington letter says : “Some disoon tent is manifested because Grant has refhscd to let the negroes of the principal Cities in Virginia givo him an ovation.” Gen. Grant shows his good sense for onoo. Tho thermometer rauges too high just now for that’sort of insensc. His Majesty will find it much pleasanter snuffin’ the sea breeze and quaffing his Bourbon at Long Branch. FICidKGS A.\D FACTS. It is not our intcution to take any part in the discussion of the fence law, but we feel it our duty to give all the facts we can gather, either for or against the law, so our fanning friends may be the better prepared to arrive at a cor rect opinion. The report of the Agri -••ultural Department for 1871 shows the total cost of fencing in the State of Georgia to be $45,191,016. In arriv ing at this cost of‘fencing per acre.— From a eompciidiumof ninth census 1870, of the United States, it appears that the total value of all live stock in Georgia is $30,156,817. Tbqpe figures show that the cost of fencing amounts to $15,035599 more than the stoek in the State is worth. The totsl value of the farms in the State is $94,559,468 To protect the crops raised on the farms from depredations by stock, under the present fence laws, there is invested in fences nearly ns much capital as the farms arc worth. The total value of farming implements and machinery in the State is $4,G14,701; take that amount from the cost of the fences and we find the fences have cost $40,770,- 250 more than all the cotton presses, gins, gearing, plows, hoes, wagons and other implements used on farms. Don Piatt’s Candidate for thk Presidency. —We ore delighted to note the popularity of our nomination of Capt. Jack for tho Presidency and Shucknaßty Jim for Vice. The Louis ville Courier-Journal , u captious, unrea sonable sheet, objects on the grouud that Capt. Jack don’t run well. If the independent press is going to act in this absurd thanner we will have to create a vacancy by retiring from its ranks. Capt Jack lias all tho elements necessary for a popular candidate. He is course, brutal, ignorant and vicious. We do not knew as to his family, but doubt not that it is extensive and cap able. lie will make a first-class soldier President if he escapes casualty and scalping. It would be bad to have a President who had been scalped, al though we have had several who ought to have been.— Washington Capital- Tan Yard Aristocracy at Long Brancii. —The arrival of President Grant aud his family at Long Branch on Friday was the occasion of consid erable flutter among tho inhabitants permanent and transient. Tho Presi dent’s own carriage was on hand, with two prancing bays and a proud colored driver, awaiting their arrival. The President disembarked with his family and iriei.ds amid the drizzling rain, took refuge at once under tho shelter of the. depot, entered the carriage in waiting, buttoned tho curtains all around and sped away at a rattling pace for home. In tho carriage with the President were Mrs. Grant, their daughter Nellie, Mr. Dent, Sr., and Ulysses Grant, Jr. The President wore his customary suit of solemn black, with stove-pipe hat ( and looked stern as usual, having a rather florid color in his face. Mrs. Grant also wore black aud looked un usually handsome and pleasant. Miss Nellie looked as a reigning* belle of the day should, and wore a traveling linen duster over her dress. The seaside cottage was all in condition, and the President’s party rested there, content to put up with a few inconveniences in cident to moving for the night. The President’s baggage had been arriving all day. Eight furniture wagons had been driven down Ocean avenue to the President’s cottage containing the Fed eral baggage. Four oarriages and a buggy had been towed in the train of furniture wagons, comprising a seaside phaeton for Miss Nellie, a two seat bug gy for the President and a friend, the huge high-backed English carriage for tho united family, a dog-cart for the boys, and a modest roekaway for Mrs. Grant’s accommodatoin, while the seven magnificent horses of the President had been led or driveD to their seaside stab-, ,lmg. RULES FOR LEGAL ADVERTISINGS Salta of land, etc., by Administrators, Extents to, or Oumdians are required by law to be held on Dm JtrstTnsSday in the mom A, between tho hours of (Mt V* ‘-he forenoon and three in the afternoon, at the court house in the county in which the property it situated. Notices of these sales must be given in a public gazette m the county where the land ties, there be any. Notice*for the sale qf pemunal property must be given in like manner ten dayg previous $o sale day. Notices to Debtor* and Creditors of an estate must be published forty days. Notice that egy attention will be made to the Court of Ordinary fir reave to sell land, etc., must be published once a week for Jour tee the. Citations for Letters of Adminis tration, Q aardianship, etc., must bs published thirty days. For dismission from Administration and Ex ecutorship three, months—Dismission from Ouard unship, forty days. Rules for Foreclosure qf Mort gage must be published monthly fnr four months. For establishing lost papeos, for the full spare f three months. For compelling titles from Aamiuii Irators or Executors where bond has been given by deceased, three months. Application for Homs del fuuftt be published lieice. Publications tcill altc iyf be eontinved according to these requirements unless otherwise ordered. BrtT One inch, or about eighty words, is a square; fractions counted as full squares. [NO. 43. lie Would Have Hi* Garden. Wo suppose thera is a time that comes to every man when he feels he should like to have a garden. If he takes such a notion he will tell hia wife of it. This is the first mistake he makes, and the ground thus lost is never fully recovered. She draws her chair up to his, aud lays one hand on his kneo, and purses up her lips iuto a whistle of ex pectation— the vftren—and tells about her mother’s garden, and how nice it is to have vegetables fresh from the vines every morning, and she will go right ont and plan the whole thing herself. And so she docs. He takes his spade, and works himself into a perspiration, and she tramps around under a fright ful sun-bonnet, and gets under his feet and shrieks at the worms, and loses her shoe, and makes him first vexed, and then mad, and then ferocious. After the garden is spaded, he gets the seed, and finds tlat she has been thonght ful enough to open the papers and empty thirteen varieties of different vegetables into one dish. This leads him to step out doors where he can commune with nature alone for a mo ment. Then he takes up the seed and a hoe, and a line, aud two pegs, and starts for the garden. And then she puts on that awful bonnet, and brings np the rear with a longhandled rake, and a pocket full of beans and petunia seed and dahlia bulbs. While he is plant ing the corn she stands on the cucum ber hills, and rakes over tho seed pan. Then she puts the rake handle over her shoulder, and the rake teeth into his hair, and walks over the other beds.— He don’t find tho squash seed until she moves, aud then he digs them out of the earth with his thumb. She plants the best seed herself, putting just about two feet of earth and sod upon them. Than she takes advantage of his absorp tion in other matters, and puts down the petunia seed in one spot, and after wards dig them up, and puts them down iu another place. The beans she con ceals in the earth wherever she can find a place, and puts over the setni-paa again, and opologizes, and steps on two of the best tomatoe plants, and says “O, my!” which in no way resembles what tfo says. About this time she discovers a better place for the petunia seed, but having forgotten where she Inst put them, she proceeds to find them, and within an incredible brief spaoe of time, succeeds in unearthing pretty much everything that has been pat down. After confusing things so, there is no earthly possibility of ever unravel ing them again, she says the sun is kill ing her, aDd goes over to the feneo where she stands for hours, telling the womau next door about an aunt of hers wl o was confined to her bed for eleven years, and bad eight doctors from the city, but nothing would give her any relief uutil an old lady—but you have heard it before. The next day a man comes to his office to get the pay fora patent sced-sowef which his wife had ordered, and he no more than gets away, before *a patentee of a new lawn-mower comes iu with an order for ten dollars, and he in turn is followed by the corn sholler man, and the miserable garden er starts for home to head off the rob bers, and finds his wife at the gate with his own hat on, and just about to olose a bargain with a smooth-faced individu al for a two hundred dollar mowing machine, and a pearlhandled, ivoiy mounted, hay-outter. He first knocks the agricultural implement agent on the head, and then drags the miserable woman into the bouse, and, looking the door, gives himself up to, his emotions. —Danbury News, The Aiken (S. G.) Tribune says: Tho recent rains apd unusually high ooid winds have materially prevented tho working of cotton in this neighborhood; and whero the youug plant has not died 4 has attained but a poor stand.