Newspaper Page Text
THU. EXPOSITOR
WAYNESBORO’, GKA..
Subscription Price: SIOO Per Annum, in Advance.
Cemmaniratinm marked thus | are to he paid fur
as advertisements.
APPOIMBKNTS OF MY. MU. S. JOHNSTON:
Ft rut .Sunday in tho month —Waynesbovo’.
Second Sunday, and Saturday before—Mt. Zion.
Third Sunday, and Saturday bafow— Old Church.
Third Sunday night—Waynesboro’.
Fourth Sunday, and day before—Clark’s Chapel.
Fifth Sunday—Waynesboro’.
Meeting of Waynesboro’ Lodi*, No. 271, F.\ A. 1 . I.\
Waynesboro’ Ledge, N0.274 F. - . A.-. M.\ meets
•a follows : On Friday night before tho Ist Sun
lay, and in the afternoon, at 2 o’clock,of Friday
before tho 3d Sunday in ouch month.
Meeting of Waynesboro’ No. 251, I. 0. 8. T.
The Waynesboro’ Lodge, No. 254, of lndo
pendent Order of flood Templars, meets every
Thursday evening, at fl o’clock, in the Court
house. It. F. LAWSON, W. C. T.
I*. P. JoHHSTOX, W. S.
Waynesboro’ Post Office Regulations.
Office hours, from 8 a. m. to 12 m.; anti from
2p.m.t07 p. m. Positively no mails delivered
before or after nffico hours.
July 1,1873. Mrs. M. L. Mitchell, P. M.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 7, 1873.
Chops are “looking up - ’ since the de
lightful e howers of the past few days.
■ ———•—
Preaching. —Rev. P. C. Morton
will preach at the Presbyterian church
on Sunday next, both morning and eve
ning.
The communication, “ltcd Tape,”
from Many Villagers, was not received
last week until after we had gone to
press.
Large quantiles of land exchanged
hands last Tuesday, by direction of the
law. Ridding was spirited, and fair
prices generally were paid.
Mr. RandolphUidgi.ev, of thiscoun
ty, while endeavoring to avert a difficulty
between two gentlemen, in Augusta,
last Saturday, was accidentally wound
ed in the left band by the discharge of
a pistol in the hands of one of the par
ties.
i . . -r
Rksvroa.m. —This semis to have
been written upon the winding sheet of
the Augusta Constitutionalist , when a
short time ago, it went down under
creditors’ claims. The first number of
the new issue lias been received—and
it was with real pleasure wc gleaned its
pages. It has ahrat/s been democratic ;
it is a staunch old journal—a real ban
ner iu the ranks tf Georgia rights, aud
long may it wave. Friends, we 11 pay
postage; please send it right on.
Installation ok Okkiokrs. — The;
following officers of the Waynesboro j
Lodge of Good Templars, elected last
Tuesday uiglit, for the ensuing quarter,
will be installed this evening:
Rev. Geo. P. Johnston. W. C. T.
Miss Lily Lawson, W. V. T.
Mr. 13. F. Dike, W. S,
M r. 8. J. Bell, W. F. S.
Mr. ft. C. Blount, W. M.
Mr Ezekiel Attaway, W. F. T.
Mr. J. F. Lawson, W. C.
Miss Georgia Garlic*, I. G.
Mr- T. 11. Blount, Jr., ()• G.
As the quarterly report and G. L.
returns have to be made immediately
after this meeting, all members of the ,
Lodge arc earnestly requested to be
present. .
[communicated.]
BED TAPE.
Mr. Editor :—Can not our good lady
postmistress relax a little of the strin
gency of her post office rules, lately put
in operation by hor ? All liberties of
late arc, more or less, abridged. But
we can not understand that the public
service requires that the post-office here
should be closed four or five hours out
of the twelve between morn and night
We will uot close without compliment
ing her on her efficiency, faithfulness,
and eminent capability; but must earn
estly beg that we have tho liberty of
access and transaction qf post-office bus
iness throughout the day.
With admiration for the sex, and as
severations that we are thoir servants
ever, Most respectfully,
Many Villagers.
July 30, 1873^
The number of immigrants arriving
at Castle Garden, New York, during
last week was as follows: Sunday,
790; Monday, 1,0a7; Tuesday, 30;
Wednesday, 224; Thursday, 122; Fri
day, 840- On Saturday the number of
arrivals was the largest for some weeks,
being 2,152,
Southern Manufactures.
Newspaper correspondents, says the
New York Commercial Advertiser, who
are making tours of the Southern Staton,
report that now manufacturing schemes
of all sorts are much talked of and that
there is a fair prospect of a revival of
industry. Revival is word,
however. It is rather a creation. The
districts which before the war were
destitute of the slightest trace of manu
facturing enterprise, are those w. ich
aro now indicated ns tho Lowells and
of the future, and tho only
drawback to the accomplishment of the
desired results is the want of capital.
Yet the statistics ot tho experiments
already made show that the promise of
a good return for investments is not
without foundation. One correspond
ent writes that “tho past five years
have witnessed a gvent revival of tho
old yearning after machinery, that the
laud is half secretly overrun with sur
veyors and speculators in mill property,
who are prospecting for advantageous
situations for future factories, and that
those mills which are already at work,
cotton mills especially, pay dividends,
which are almost beyond belief.” Divid
ends, of twenty-five per cent per annum
are said to be common among tho few
mills now in operation, and in one in
stance a profit of fifty per cent, has
been obtained. The same correspond
ent dwells upon the advantages of
Southern mills over those of the North,
arising ft on.- the facts that they use
the cotton fresh from the field, before
its staple lias been subjected to the
pressure of baling, that the cost of bag
ging and hooping and transportation is
saved, and that the developments of
the new coal fields of the South will
make fuel cheap and so reduce the out
lay for motive power. These are strong
points, and if thoughtful and sensible
Southerners can be brought to sec that
the use of their own resources aud the
application of their own hard labor are
the real processes through which whole
some rehabilitation must come* the next
census will exhibit a striking contrast
to that of 18*T0.
Luna ky. —The new theory that the
moon lias alternate periods of red hot
heat and frigid cold takes the starch
out of some popular traditions and ro
mances. We believe that it was Lord
Byron who sueeringly said tLat the
only curiosity the lady observes had
concerning tlie moon was to find out
whether there was a man in it. They
may now rest contented that there is
not a single lunarian, and all schemes
of emigration thither had as well be
abandoned at once. Even the fabled
solitary brush burner must be a myih,
and the jagged figure which we see at
full moon is probably only the shadows
cast by peaks at that lime incandescent
with accumulated heat, while on the
other side a temperature far below that
of our poles forbids the idea of human
life.
The cow that “jumped over the moou”
is intimately associated with ou infan
tile beginning in bock learning; but
we now know that she must have given
it a wide berth, else she barely escaped
furnishing the neighborhood where she
“lit” with a carcass of well done roast
beef.
Only the “horns” remain as eviden
ces of civilization or liquidity, and these
round otf so quickly that they afford
but temporary points upon which to
hang a theory or an argument. We
are forced to give it up that only “dis
tance lends enchantment to the view”
of our beautiful nocturnal luminary,
aud come to the conclusion that she is
too changeable and inconsistent for our
comfortable closer acquaintance.— Co
lumbus Sun.
Bkadeiki.ti’s Female Regulator.—Wo have
often rood in the newspaper* of tho grand success
of medical compounds put up at tho North and
elsewhere. Many of those medicines havo had
their day, and we hoar no moro of them. Thoir
proprietors have made fortunes, not so much from
the curative powers and virtues of thoir mixtures,
as from tho no:orioty given them by advertising,
by which people were made to believe all tho
good that was said of them A preparation is
now before tho public, which is becoming very
popular, and is known as Bradflold’s Female
Regulator, put up by L. IJ. Bra-Mold, of Atlanta,
(Ja., nt 81.50 per bottle. Such is its curative
virtuos that it has gained wide-spread populari
ty all over tho country where it has been made
known, and it is being Introduced everywhere.
Wo nre informed that immense quantities of this
medicine arc being sold in all sections of the
Soutli and Southwest, cspeein.ly in the city of
Now Orleans and in Texas. This much we say
in justice to its proprietor, who is a gentleman
of integrity, and who would not engage in tho
manufacture and sale of a humbug. —Lafrrangc
Reporter. ff*?“ B. F. R. is for sale in Waynes
boro’ by Wilkins <t Cos myl-3m
A clergyman says that modern young
ladies are not the daughters of Sbprp and
Hai, bqt of !:cm and slmai.
Imvoiitant Dtsoovi.nv.—Galileo invented tho
tob-scopo; Columbus discovered a now world;
Ilarvcy, tho circulation of tho hlood, nnd to Prof.
Mow is duo tho credit of lunching tho lightning
how to talk, but it was reserved to Dr. J. Rrad
fikli) to penetrate the mystic depth* of science,
nnd drag therefrbm the wonder of our century.
The victory has been won, ami woman ia free!—
Tho sale of Dr. J. lißAnm i.n 1 * Female Hog*,
later i* unprecedented in tho history of popular
ronie ties, and thmninds of certificates aro coming
in from grateful women, throughout the t’nion,
attesting its powers and npplaudiug its untold
bonefits to their sex. For sale in Waynesboro'
by Wilkins A Cos. myl- 3u
Major St. Clair Abrams, of the At
lanta Herald, recently published a card
defending his military record from at
tacks of the Chattanooga Times, in
which he says:
“On Sunday, at Rcsaca, when my
corps (HoodV) stormed the Federal
works, routing Howard’s corps, John
C. Rrotvn, then Brigadier-General of
Stevenson’s brigade, was the first man
whose horse leaped the Federal works.
Ask him if lie was not followed by
Alex. St. Clair Abrams, who was the
second man across the breastworks ?”
A silent but veritable revolution has
taken place in tbc English fashiouable
world. Hitherto it has been the prac
tice, when friends or acquaintances were
• leaving town, to call on one another
aud leave a card with the letters, iu
pencil, P. P. C. At present, if that
missive be left by tie owner, and no
departure takes plnee within eight days
r.c umbrage is to be taken; but if a
fortnight or a month elapses, and there
is no prospects of the departure, the
P. P. C. is to be accepted as a notice
to quit all visiting—a decision as defi
nite and unchangeable as the laws of
the Modes and Persians.
—• -•>
Baron Reuter does not seem to be
losing any time in beginning operations
under his contract for building railways
in Persia, by which the Shah has con
ferred upon him such valuable privil
eges. The chief railway among those
projected is one from the Caspian Sea
to. Teheran. The English engineers
have already completed tho survey nnd
location of the first fifty miles of the
line from Teheran to Kasvin. Another
party is soon to bc*gin operations at the
Caspian Sea and locate the route to
ward Kasvin, so that progress will be
made from both termini towards the
centre. The entire length is about four
hundred aud fifty miles.
Two youths in Chicago lately played
Damon and Pythias in a small way to
a very select audience of two or three
policemen. One of them, Elijah Har
ris, tried his hand at highway robbery,
and cleaned out his victim, hut had tho
misfortune to get “pulled.” He was
held to answer in the sum of SI,OOO,
which he did not have about him, and
was returned to the lock-up until he
could be removed :o jiil. On the same
evening another bo) about the same
size was put in the same ceil of the
lock-up for some trilling offense. The
two youngsters consulted upon how
they could help each other. Elijah
had money secreted ou bis person and
the other boy had none. The other
boy was lined $5 and costs, and return
ed to the cell preparatory to being call
ed for and taken to a place to work out
the debt. The boys now divided mon
ey and changed clothes, and when the
work-house coach called, Elijah walked
out and took his seat in the conveyance.
Arriving at the work house he prompt
ly paid his small line and slid. Tho
other boy has explained the little trick.
He objects to trial for a robbery which
he did not commit, and has tho money
to pay his fine and costs, but tho police
have not let him go yet. They have
been outwitted and are mad about it.
The boys certainly had the right to
“swap" clothes if they wanted to, and
that’s all they did to produoc this dra
matic illusion.— St. Louis Republican.
The Memphis Appeal of Tuesday
says: “We publish among nows items
this morning another recital of another
nameless outrage (lone by a negro. This
is the sixth of these diabolical deeds
■announced during the past five days.
Sudden vengeance wreaked by exaspe
rated friends or kinsmen of the person
brutalized lave followed in nearly every
instance.”
Tho Marshfield, Missouri, Democrat
stales that a “big strike” of lead has
been niadc on the farm of Mrs. Williams,
in Webster county, in that State, and
that miners from other parts of tho coun
try are flocking there to work it. The
lead has been struck in several places,
and tli 3 most gratifying results are ex
pected from it
Communism on the High Hkas. —
Until the late news from Spain we had
never heard before of communism es
tablishing itself under that name on
flic high seas. That seven ships of war
in the Spanish navy, four of them said
to be the finest in tho sunk#, should
be seized and held by crews proclaim
ing themselves in favor of communism,
is a startling fact. The Government in
proclaiming them pirates has given
them a designation which is appropri
ate to communism both on land and sea.
It is not likely that tho mutinous crew
will attempt to carry out their interna
tional principles outside tho limits of
Spain. If they should do so it would
be treated by other nations as piracy
without the necessity of any proclama
tion from the Spanish Government to
that effect.— haltmore Sun.
The Lancaster Intelligencer says:
“For a long time—it may bo said, in
deed with but few exceptions, since the
wu: —the Democratic party has been
inactive almost to indifference ; yet it
has always preserved its organization
intact, and kept a watchful eye upon
the situation of our National and State
affairs. For the close communing which
it for a long time maintained, it was
taunted with being laggard, and when
it am wered such taunts by making an
advance and accepting what was called
a liberal view in politics, it was reward
ed with a still more embittered thrust,
of having abandoned its principles, and
met, as it should have met, they say,
with overwhelming defeat. The sacri
fice the Democratic party then made, we
say has both purified and strengthened it.
* * * In its old entrenched position
the Democratic party will recuperate
its strength, receive new recruits —as
it always has done when the emergency
demanded it—perfect its organization,
temporarily confused, hang out its old,
time-honored banners: inscribed with
principles which are imperishable, give
utterance to its notes of battle, which
so oft have wrung in clarion tonos
through valleys and over mountains, to
the music of which the true aiul good
men of the land have so oft kept pfep <
and once again, as of old, march to vic
tory.’’
Something Mrw Cxneii the Sun-.-. Anew era
is dawning upon the lifo of women. Hitherto she
ha* been called upon to suffer tho ills of mankind
and herown besides. The frequentund distress
ing irregularities peculiar to her sex havo long
been to her the “direful spring of woes unnum
bered.” In the mansion of the rich and in the
hovel of poverty alike woman has been the eodr
stant yet patient victim of a thousand ills un
known to mau—and these without a remedy.—
“Oli, L->rh, how long!” in tho agony of hor ?oui
hath sdie crie-l but now the l our of her' re
demption is como She will suffer no more, for
Dr. and. 1! RAUF I rut’s Female Regulator— Woman's
best Friend—is for sale by nil respectable drug
gists throughout the land at $1.54) par bottle. —
For sale in Waynesboro’ by Wilkins A Cos.
Plain Talk- —The Granges are re
freshingly plain in (heir resolutions.
There is no machine ring about the fol
lowing, passed by a farmer’s meeting
held at Clifton, 111.:
“Resolved, That we believe a thief
should be called a thief, without regard
to social or political standing, and we
characterize the recent salary grab by
our Congress and President us no bet
ter than a steal.”
Nor is there any ambiguity in the
following mottoes’inscribed on the ban
ners of tbe farmers who celebrated In
dependence Day at Lamark, iu Carroll
county, 111.:
“No more Republicans! No more
Democrats! We want and must have
honest men to fill public positions.”
“Salary-grabbers, huut your holm.’
“Salary of our Congressman, one
hundred bushels of corn a day. Poor
follow!”
They might have added that the sal
ary of President Grant is over six hun
dred bushels of corn or two bales of up
land cotton a day, with house, fuel,
lights, stables and grounds free. Poor
fellow!
A Detroit man recently forwarded
the following letter to the insurance
company in which his wife’s life was
insured : “Dear Sir: I take my pen
in hand to let you know that E ain well,
but that my dear wife, insured for $5,-
000 in your company, is no more. She
died to-day. Her policy is No, —. I
can truly say that she was a fond wife
and a good mother. I lave tho doctor’s
certificate, so that there will be no trou
ble about the policy. Sho was sick
only a short time, but suffered much.
Do you give a check iu advance, or
must l wait sixty days for the money T
Yours, &c.”
A not very courageous individual re
marks: If Mont Blanc were a solid
lump of gold and in order to become
the owner of it wo bod nothing to do
but to go iu Prof, Wise’s balloon and
take possession of the same, we would
a thousand limes rather sit down on
the shorg of Masachusetts Bay and
starve to death. Fur we then should
have at least the stern satisfaction of
knowing wjperp we were and what we
were doing.
\ 1 Ad vci’li sen ten ts.
NOTH li—Adiuiuisitratoi 'm .Sate
or Lmuiiticl Count) Lands,
lly leave of tho Ordinary of Burke County,
Georgia, I will sell nt, public auction, on iln<
FIRST ftWSDAY LV SRPTEMRER,
187:1, before tho Court house door in Swains
horo,’ Emanuel County, between the lawful
bouts of sale, to the highest bidder, tho fol
lowing lands nnd Improvements thereon, be
longing to the eftate of Colonel James
Grubbs, late of Burke County, to-wit.
Onr House and Lot in 4 tho village of Sum
merville, containing One Hundred Acres,
more or less,adjoining lands of F. A. Jones.
William Donovan, and oilier lands of -.aid
estate and known ns the “l’erry Place."
Also, One IL use nnd Lot in the village
of Summerville, containing Two ItumPod
Acres, more or less, adjoining lands ot WaJ
como Coleman', William'Nasworthv, And F.
A. Jones, and known as tlie “Brack Place.’’
Also, One House and Lot in said village,
containing Twenty-five Acres, more or less,
adjoining lands of Wlulnn Donovan, Mary
A. Inman, and the Academy lands, known
as the .
Also, One House and Lot In said village,
containing Four Acres, more or less, adjoin
ing lands of F. A. Jones. J. 8. Inman, and
the place w hero Adelaide Pierce now re
sides, and known as the “Churchill Place. ’’
Also, One House ami Lot in said village,
containing One Hundred and Fifty Acres,
more or less, adjoining lands of F. A. Jones,
Dr. L. B. Bonehelle, William Nasworth.v. A.
G. Inman, and other lands of said estate,
and known as “ColonelGrubbs’ Homestead.' 1
Also, One House and Lot, in said .village,
Containing Fifty Acres, more or less, ad
joining I; nils of said estate, and hounded on
ail sides by lands of estate, and known as
the “Tlatfkolt l’la e.”
Also, One House and Lot ill said village,
containing One Hundred ond Fifty Acres,
more or less, adjoining lands of Dr. L. B.
Bonohelie and other lands of said estate,
and ki own as tho “Col. Grubbs’ Old Place.’’
Also, A Tract or parcel of improved land
containing Two Hundred Acres, more or
less, adjoining lands ei' Reuben Boatright,
A. S. Kirkland, J. M. Wiggins, and lands of
said estate, and known as tin* “J. A. Mur
pliree Place.” Comfortable dwelling anil
out houses on said land.
All the foregoing described Houses and
Lots aud Tracts of Land, situate, lying, and
being in the County of Emanuel, State cf
Georgia—most of them well improved with
Dwellings and Out Houses, in a healthy 10->
cality—sold for distribution, and for the
payment of debts of deceased, without re
serve bid.
Terms : Cash. Purchasers to pay for pa
llets and stamps. Possession on day of
sale, except Col. Grubbs’ Homestead Place,
the J. A. Mtirpbree Place, and the Perry
Place, of which last mentioned places pos
session given Ist January, 1874.
J A AILS W URL BBS,
Administrator James Grubbs, deceased.
Juiy 25th, 1873—jy31-tds
QEORLSIA, BIJKKE COUNTY.
Office of the f ierk of fonnfy Commissioners Burke Cos.,
W AYNosnoßO,’ Ga., July Ist, 1873.
It is ordered by the Board, That the Clerk
give notice, through The Expositor, that all
Creditors of the County of Burke me here
by requested to hand into the Clerk a certi
fied copy of all judgments, orders and ac
counts that they may have against the
County, by the FIRST DA VOF A (JOUST,
prox,, otherwise jio provision will be made
for the payment of the same.'
A true extinct from the Minutes. Wit
ness my official signature-the day and year
above mentioned.
JNO. lb MUNNERLYN, Clerk.
jylo-4\v
QEOIMifA, I*liftlte COUNTY.
Clerk's Office family Board of Commissioners,
Waynesboro, CJa., July 15, IM7 3,
It lias been brought to the notice of this
Hoard tlmt there are persons selling liquors
without license, and as all persons are pro
hibited by law from dealing in liquors with
out paying for license, prompt steps will be
taken against all parties violating this law,
and a vigorous prosecution instituted against
them. The Court room of the County Board
of Conpnissiotters is situated on Liberty st.,
t ext door below the residence of John 1).
Munnerlyu, where thoy will convene < n tbe
first Tuesday in each month for the trans
action of county business. And tike Clerk
will bo found at said plate at all times.
JNO. I). MUXNLRLYS, Clerk.
j>24—3w
AN ORDINANCE,
Be it ordained, That from and after the
passage of thiu ordinance, It shall not be
lawful for any stone animal, either Horse,
Bull, Hog or Goat, to run at large in the
streets of the town of Waynesboro. And it
shall be the duty of the Town Marshal im
mediately to proceed to altar the condition
of said animal, and eary into eftect the
provisions of this ordiance.
Ail ordinances militating against.the pro
visions of this ordinance be and the same
are hereby repealed. 8. A. CORKER,
Chairmen Board Commissioners.
E. F. LAWSON, Secretary. jy24-lui
Notice to the Planters of Burke-
I AM NOW AGENT FOR THE SAWYER
GIN, manufactured in Macon* Ga. I
will warrant every GIN to give satisfaction.
My friends will please call at my shop, in
rear of the Court-house, and I will give them
ail theintormatioa they may desire in refer
ence to the same 11. S. BEAL.
jy#l—2m
ISTO'TL’JCOIHS!
BY CONSENT OF MY HUSBAND, Jas.
F. CiiAXCis, 1 hereby notify all con
cerned that*after one month from this date,
I shall become a Public or Free Dealer,
according to law in sucli case provided.
MARY V. CHANCE.
July 24th, 187:5.
TANARUS, .Tamos F. Chance, husband of Mary V.
Chance, hereby consent to her being a pub
lic or Free healer.
JAMES F. CHANC E.
July 21th, 1873/ _
TAKLBN TJJP!
A BAY MARE, BLINDIN’ RIGHT EYE;
with some saddle marks; about eight
years old, aud about fifteen hands high.—
Any person, who will prove property, can
come forward and recover said amine 1, hy
paying expenses. Otherwise she will be
dealt with as tho iaw directs.
M. V. GREEN, J. TANARUS.,
jyl7-4w 4>7tli District. G. M.
JOB PRINTING
aT
r Tix± exmoe.
1 Advertisements.
ft lil>KG IA, 111/HKH < ttUNTY
* * Whereas, <in,i:.u L Cocujian applies to
I tlm Court ot Ordinary for Latter* Dismiswiry M
I Administrator upon the estate of William N.
ilondorson, deceased. 'those are, therefor*, to
cite and admonish alt pot,urns interested to be
nnd appear at my office on, or before, the First
MURRAY IN SEPTEMRER NEXT, to
show cause (If any they win) why saM lotto re
should not bo gruntod.
Given under my hand and official signature,
at Waynesboro’, this Juiio 2d. 1873.
jul2-3ui K. F LAWSON Ordinary.
/'IEOUGIA BURKE (OI'XTY-
V I Whereas, John W. Cab • well, oxooutor
, of Baldwin I! Miller, deceit *••(!, applies to the
I Court of Ordinary-fur loavo In sell all the r*al
estate lying beyond tho limit* of the County of
lturke, nnd one tract >f lurid lying within th*
said County of Buiko, known a* tho Greenway
place .- ’1 iieeo are, therefore, to cite and ad
monish all persons interested to be and appear
j nt mv office on, or bolero, tho 1t Monday In
; September next, to rhovr cause (if any they
own) why said leave should not be granted,
j Given under my baud and official signature,
: at Waynesboro’, this July 7th, 1873.
jylU-.d E F. LAWSON, Ordinary,
/ 1 UOHOIA. BURKE COUNffto
vT Whereas, Bijuschaiidt Jlal skler, Ad
mimdinior do bonis mm, of Barnett B. Lowl*,
deceased, npplios to too Court of Ordinary for
letters dismissory a* said administrator • These
aro, therefore, to oito and admonish all persons
interested to lie and nppear at uiy office on, or
before, the Ist Monday in November next,
to show cause- (if any they can) why said ad
ministrator shoould not lie dismisrod as required
by law, .. tCHt*
Given under my hand and official signature,
at Wayne.-boro*, this July 7lh, 1873.
jvlo-3i.ii E. F LAWSON, Ordinary.
/ I EOHta IA. llldtkE COUNTY—
V T Wh Teas' Francis A. Jonhs administra
tor of Ava lonian, dcee.i.sou, applies to the Court
of Ordinary for letters dismissory from said ad
ministration : Those are, therefore, to cite and
admonish all persons interested to be and appear
at my offi. e oil, or before, tho lut Monday In
November next, to show cause (if any they
enn) Why said letters should not be granted.
Givvn under m,v hand and official signature,
at Waynesboro*,' this Jrly 7th, 1873.
jylU-3m E. F. LAWSON, Ordinary.
/J EHKRIA, HUUkE COUNTY—
I Y ll "hcreu.i, Francis A. .Links, executor of
Allen Innitiu, deceased, applies to tho Court of
Ordinary for letters dimuissory from said estate:
These are, therefore, to efto and admonish all
person? interested to bo and appear at my offiee
on, or or before, tho Ist Monday in Xovem
lier next, to show cause (if auy they can) why
said letters dismissorj should not be grautod.
Given under my hand flivl official signature,
at Waynesboro’, tins July 7th, 1873.
jvlu—3in E.F. LAWSON, Ordinary-
NOTICE!
I FOREWARN ALL FEKSoNL NOT TO
trade for a Promissory Note made by
me for One Hundred and Twenty Dollars,
and delivered to Emma S. Kelly, due No
vember 1,1873, dated January, 187.3, as the
consideration of said note has entirely failed.
JAMES GALPHIN.
July lfi, 1873 — 17-3 w
TUTO't I('E to Debtors ami Creditor*—
I v All persons indebted to tbe late Win. Cos,
of Burke County, ffce'J, nre requested to make
immediate payment ; and all person* holding
claims against estate of said doeeased are here
by required to present them to undersigned duly
attested in the time prescribed by law.
AFREET A COX,
F.xocuUi c Hill of deceased.
July 4th, lS7#~jyio 7n
NOTH’ E to Debtors and Creditors—
All yersona indebted to tbe estate of Wm.
Brookins, late of Burko county, deceased, will
make immediate payment to the undersigned;
and those having claims against said deceased’s
esfnto, will present them, properly proven, with
in the time prescribed by law.
WILLIAM VV A KNOCK, Executor.
May 34), 1873—je!2-6w
SEND FOB CATALOGUES
NOVEU.OS CHEAP MUSIC,
Novello’s Glees, Part Songs, etc.. .6 to 12 cent*
Nevello’s Church Mu5ic.......... 6 to 12 cents.
Novello's Octavo Edition of Operas.
Price $1; or $2, bound iu cloth, gilt edge*.
Novello’s Octavo Edition of Oratorios.
Id paper, from GO cents to $1; clylh with gilt edges
$1 to $2 cneh.
Novkli.os Cheap Editions
OF VIANO-FOUTE CLASSICS.
Bach’s 48 Prelude? and Fuguos. Cloth. ..$5 00
Bqcthoveu’s 38 Sonata*. Elegantly bound.
Full gilt .....: S 60
Beethoven's 34 Piano Pieces. Elegantly
bound Full -gilt ' 200
Chopin's Vaises. .Stiff paper covers 1 60
Chopin’s Polou.-uses “ “ 2 00
Chopin’s Nocturnes “ “ .. .... 200
Chopin’s Mueurkus “ “ 200
Chopin’s Ballads “ “ ...... 2 00
-Co -pin’s Preludes “ “ 260
Chopin’s Sonatas “ “ 2 60
Mendelssohn’s Corn),leto Piano Works. El
egant Folio Edition. Full Gilt. Com
plete in 4 volumes ...26 00
The Same, Bvo. Full gilt. Complete in
4 volumes ........14 00
Tho Same. Bvo. Paper. Complete in 4
volumes 10 00
Mendelssohn’s Songs Without Words. Fo
lio Edition. Full gilt 660
Octavo Edition. Full gilt 3 60
Octavo Edition. Paper c0ver5......... 2 60
Mozart's 13 Sonatas. Elegantly bound. —
Full gilt 3 00
Schubert’s 10 Sonatas. Elegantly bound.
Full gilt 3 00
Schubert’s Dances. Completo. Elegantly
bound. Full gilt 200
Schubert’s Pianff Pieces. Elegantly bound
Full gilt. 2 00
Schumann's Forest Scenes. Nino Easy
Pieces. Pa por covers '. 80
Schumann’s Piano Forte Album. Elegant
ly hound. Full gilt 260
The Same. Paper covers 1 50
MOTHER GOOSE.
Oil NATIONAL NUK3EUY ItUYMKS.
Set to Music by J. W. Ku.iott, with 63 beautiful
illustrations engraved by the Brothers Dnlilel —,
Boards, J 4.50. Splendidly t-ound in cloth, gUt
ec gea, fS. 60. • ’ '
ASK FOR NOVELLO’S EDITIONS.
Address,
J. li. I'KTKRsi, .IDO Broadway, W. Y.,
jy3-3w Jgt. Nnrellu's Cheap Music.
A FACT WORTH KNOWING.
rpHAT “DRAKE’S MAGIC LINIMENT’’
_L is tho best t etaedy for paint: of Ml
kinds: Croup in children. Sore Throat,
Dianlmea stnd Dysentery; Colic in Muled
and HovSo*; Scratches, Chills and Fever,
&e., Stc. Full directions aro nd every
Bottle. Try one bottle and he convinced.
For sale at Wilkins & Cos. sand Amos P.
Lambeth's, Waynesboro; Warmock Bros.,
Lester’s District : Mrs. H. Pkkk ns, Lawton
iville; Pskkirb He Brother, Saw Mill; F.
A. Joses, No.Oi, C.R. R.; and J. H. Dasihl,
& Cos., Milieu ahd No. 8, C. R. R.
W. C. HAUSER, General Agent,
jell) Bartow. No, 11.0. R. R.,Ga.
in
T ll k EXPOS ITU ,