Newspaper Page Text
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T/he vx eor^ia w eeKiy x eiegrapu - —- — -?—
3geUgra#lt&M™M n 8 e t
j Iflscontent with tlie Modern
System of Education.
There seems to be a growing feeling
■ ef discontent witb the present system of
^education, judging from the signs that j
aie almost constantly cropping out.
“through the press and other mediums of |
^public sentiment, Professor Agassiz put
the case very plainly whenjhe said that
our children are still taught "the tra
ditionary learning of the middle ages;’’
and the Baltimore Gazette thinks that
* - 'when the clown at the circus asserts
'that he has been through college, and
afterward explained to the mystified ring*
■ master that he went in at the front door
and out at the back, he was not being
vvexj far from defining the course of
--many a graduate.”
There may he some exaggeration in
-these expressions, but it is certainly true
■‘that there is too much haste to learn
iv-.nny things, and hardly any at all to
'learn anything well. There seems to be
feverish a desire to build quickly and
many stories, and too little to see that
: the foundations are solid enough to sup
port the superstructure, slight though it
be. That humbug of the ages, “discip
line of the mind,” is pleaded as an excuse
for lumbering the mind with a lot of
stuff that, in nine out of ten cases, is
practically useless. Where one student
is taught German or French, one hun
dred have Greek and Batin hammered
tut© them at a cost of time, and money,
tad brain-worry that is really frightful.
- Practical knowledge is too much ignored,
and that tells the whole story of the pop
ular discontent. It is high time that a
new departure on this subject was being
taken all over the country, and we are
glad to see it is being done in some quar-
•ers. The elective system of study as
adopted in some of our colleges is a great
step towards it, and we hope to see it
t.he rule everywhere, instead of the ex
ception, as it now is.
~ Tlie Financial Chronicle’s Cot
ton Statement.
In the Financial Chronicle, received
yesterday, we find some facts not stated
- m its report as summarized and trans
mitted by telegraph last Friday. The
total crop, as published heretofore, is set
down at 3,030,503 bales; total exports,
2,67O,0S6 bales, and home consumption,
1,201,127 bales; leaving stock on hand at
the close of the year, 00,939 bales, against
54,521 at the close of the previous year.
The total crop of each year since 1825 is
also reported, from which it appears that
- the crop of last year was the third largest
ever grown in this country, being exceed
ed only by that of 1870-’”1, and of 1859-
’60—the former being 4,352,317 bales, and
the latter 4,669,770 hales. That of 1858-
’59 is fourth, being set down at 3,851,-481
bales. Tlie crop of 1825 was 720,027
bales, and not until 1830 did it reach a
million bales. That year it footed up
1,038,848 bales. Of the Sea Island crop
if 25,289 bales raised last year, Florida
grew 10,764, South Carolina 13,156, Geor
gia 1,269, and Texas 1,100 bales. The
total gross weight of the crop last year is
set down at 1,S24,920,023 pounds, and the
average weight of the bales 464 pounds.
The Georgia crop weighed in the aggre
gate 233,686,018 pounds, making the av
erage weight of each bale 462 pounds.
Alabama shows the greatest average
weight in bales, 487 pounds, and South
Carolina the lowest, 444 pounds.
Still at It.
The Danbury News-roan still continues
to be as funny as he can, consistently
with the circulation of his paper and the
Tow place per annum at which it is fur
nished subscribers. The following j
'fair samples of his latest:
With the display now required for a
-first-class funeral, people are beginning
to understand what are the terrors of
death.
When you feel depressed and dissatis
fied, and wherever you may look naught
"but fro wing skies meet your view, wash
yourself. <
The churches were well filled Sunday.
'The shape is an improvement, but the
trimming is not wholly satisfactory.
They set a little further back on the head
than the summer styles, we think.
This is the season of preparation for
fairs. The honest yeomen are picking
out the best grain from several acres to
exhibit as the average yield. The little
spfij twelve years old, who shows such
clear, handsome bread, has been to see
lier grandmother abent having it made,
and The advantages of agriculture are
'further illustrated by impossible angels
fondling improbable poodles in lisle
•thread and canvas. Everybody should
- take a personal interest in these farm
gatherings, and, if he has no horse of his
' own, should draw his balance from the
* bank, and unhesitatingly plank it on the
«' races.
Lawyer Prince’s office boy took a
- good streak Saturday afternoon and gave
tbt office floor a thorough drenching with
-water. Early in the evening Mr. Prince
came in with a young lady client, and
-•"the moment he struck the wet floor one
foot turned partly on its edge, and de
scribed a half circle with wonderful ve
locity. He clutched at a desk but missed
it, when the other foot gave out, and
again he was half way down, but partly
recovered, lost the other foot again, then
* both feet, and, after vainly snatching at
a chair, went down full length, turning
over the chair and smashing the panel to
the door of a hook case with one heel.
To odd to the embarrassment of the
affair the lady remained till it was over,
■ and the next day there was a story in
circulation that Mr. Prince had the tre-
■ mens, and tried to murder one of our
-most estimable young ladies while in the
fit. The office boy says if he could only
stand still long enough he could give the
.particulars.
-'"General Buckner’s Fortune
Reclaimed.
Something of a romance is connected
■ with the recent return to Mrs. Buckner,
- the wife of Gen. S. B. Buckner, the late
- - Confederate General, of Kentucky, of a
* -certain large property which, when the
'■•"War broke out, she had conveyed to her
’ -brother. When Gen. Buckner entered
* the Confederate service, and before Mrs.
4 B: joined him there, she conveyed the
'property to her brother under a deed of
crust. -The young man afterwards mar
ried, ■ become a father, and entered the
Union. service. The question now was,
-- -what'would be done with the property.
** B--he , ’siiould die or be killed with-
: out-cn£aWzrg a will re-conveying to
. his - .slater - the property she had
deed&t to ihim, his child would inherit
the fortune. On the ere of the battle of
ShnrpAnxgr however, he mad* a will of
this character, and at the battle named,
was killed. ^General Burnside, who com
manded. the corps in which the young
man served,-knew-that this will had been
made. HAkept-the secret, and after the
war, informed .Gen. Buckner of it, and
the latter, by his aid, was enabled to re
cover the will. The testamentary proofs
having been -obtained, Mr3. Buckner’s
title was fully proved, and the fortune
which seemed at.one time to hang on a
- slender thread was -returned to her.—
Montgomery. Mvtttim,
Three Better*, Portraying the Rise,
Progress, and Fall of the Celebra
ted Canteen Assurance Society, by
the President Thereof.
[From tl e Toledo Blade.]
the rise OF THE CANTEEN ASSOCIATION.
No. 1.
Bourbonviele, III., Ang. 25,1873.
Labor may he Heaven’s first law, but
it ain’t mine, nor my second, neither. I
hev labored in my day, but it was only
when all other means of obtainin one
meal and twenty drinks per diem hed
failed; and those periods have been to
me the bitterest recollecshuns of an
eventful life. And with the memries of
them dark days still ranklin within me,
how terrible wos my feelins when Elias
Bustard, the keeper of the only grosery
at Bourhonville, notified me, in the most
peremptory manner, that henceforth and
futever, I could hev neither crackers nor
whisky at hia bar, without money, or, at
least, putting up something that he could
in time turn into money.
But, thank Heaven, Bustard can’t
chain lightnin, nor can he fetter intellect,
mind is, and always has been, superior to
matter. I hev found a way not only to
beat Bastard, but to evenchooally room
him, which I shall remorselessly do. Its
a big thing in the world to do all the
business; its a bigger thing to rooin and
blast your opponents.
I got my idea by chance. When Bus
tard declined to give me my regular nip,
I sot pensively on the table in front of
his bar, and to calm my perturbed soul
until I could determine on something, I
picked up a life inshooronce pampl llet,
and mechanically dropped my beamin
eyes onto its pages. It was an advertise
ment of a skeem called the Tontine Plan.
I read it, and shrieked “Eureka.” “Now,”
sed I to myself, “tremble. Bustard.”
It appeared, from this, that a.number of
men clubbed together, and put in a pool
so much money each, every year, and never
took nothing out, ’cept at stated periods,
say every ten years. Those who died in
side of that time, and those who, for any
reason, got tired of payin, did not hev
any claim watever on wot was in the
pool, the whole of it being divided up
among those who held out faithful to the
end.
I said to myself, what can he done in
New York, in a marble palace, can be
done in Bourhonville, in a slab shanty,
and done on the same equitable system.
And who knows hut what, with such a
promising plan, the slab shanty may grow
into a marble palace. This soil is as good
for mushrooms as that further east. I
determined to start a Tontine grosery.
The first thing was a name; and to the
end that its objects might be understood
by everybody, I called it the Canteen
grosery.
I called on three of Bustard’s custo
mers, who wos in the same fix I wos in,
and developed the skeem to them, to
which they assented, remarking, philoso
phically, that they’d go into it, anyhow,
as they had everything to make, and
nothin to lose.
We organized by electing the follow
ing officers:
President—Samuel Sharkey.
Treasurer—Jemes Pettibone.
Secretary—Aleck Billson.
Consulting Actuary
“What in thunder’s Consulting Aetoo-
ary ?” asks Billson.
‘A consulting actooary, my child,”
said I, beamin’ onto him, pityingly, “is a
gentleman employed by insurance com
panies, who has gone into figgers as far
as the rule of three, and whose principal
dooty is to make up tables showing that
the company he works for is solvent, and
to certify that any new plan submitted
to him is a good thing, and to wonder
that it was never diskivered before. We
must hev a consulting actooary—every
well-regulated insurance company has
one. We can’t keep house without a
consulting actooary.”
It bothered us somewhat to find the
man, hut finally Sam Billson, Aleck’s
brother, was chosen, as he knowd the
multiplication table. Our organizashun
complete, we issued our .prospectus.
We stated that a Canteen grosery wos
a purely benevolent project to give its
members an opportoonity to provide in
their youth for a sure supply of likker in
their old age. Members were required to
contribute 25 cents a week, which would he
expended joodishously, bu't firmly, in new
com whisky, at the lowest cash price.
This whiskey should he put into the Can
teen barrel, and there stay for a mouth.
At the expiration of a month, the likker
is divided among the survivin’ members.
The ignorant popnlis hed some trouble
to understand how they wos to he bene-
fitted by this process, but I made it clear
to them. In the first place, half of our
original members will either die, or get
tired, and resign, before the month is np,
and the shares of sich become the prop
erty of them who stick. In other Life
Insurances the death of a member is
again the company; in the Canteen plan
its in the company’s favor. A zealous
Canteen President ought really to go out
and kill enough members each month to
make a big divvy at the end of a Canteen
period. Second, new whisky improves
and strengthens with age. A barrel of
new whiskey will stand four buckets of
water every month, thus largely increas
ing its volume. Then the likker is bought
at 80 cents a gallon, which is cheeper
than by the single drink, There is 64
drinks in a gallon, for which, at Bustard’s
price, 5 cents, yon pay $3 00. I figgered
it this way. (I ought to have been con
sulting Actooary.) For convenience, we
put the'price at $1 00 a gallon.
100 members, paying 25 cents per
week, will give money enough
in a month to buy 1 gallon
each, aggregating 100 galls.
Add 4 gallons of water a month
to each barrel of 44 gallons... 10 galls.
Total likker on hand as found at
end of Canteen period 110 galls.
There is about 64 average drinks in a
gallon—this 110 gallons makes, there
fore, 7,W0 drinks, which, at Bustard’s,
would cost $352.
But the advantage don’t end here. It
is safe to estimate that, of the number
who are in originally, one-half of them
will drop out, which redooces the mem
bership to 60; and at the expirashun of
the first Canteen period, the account
would leave 110 gallons to be divided
among 50 members, who hed paid only
$1 each, giving each one of them nearly
2igallons.
For obvious reasons, I didn’t say any
thing about rent nv offices, salaries nv
officers, committees, and so on, for the
time hedn’t come for that.
The idea took gloriously. We put up
a hoard, which we lettered: “ Depository
nv the Canteen Association,” and before
night we had one hundred members,
each of whom had chucked in his quar
ter, and was regularly enrolled as a
member.
This gives us a funa of $25 to start on,
and we held a meeting to determine as
to our mode uv operation. There wos a
great deal to do. In the first place, we
hedn’t determined what we was entitled
to for commission on the policies; then
came a question as to who wos to go to
Cincinnati to buy the liquor, -and as to
what brokerage wos to be paid whoever
wos selected; and then, finally, we hed
to determine what salaries wos to be paid
the officers.
This we shall do to-morrow. But the
Canteen Association of Bourhonville is a
fixed fact. It is in good runnin order.
We shell all start out to get now mem
bers, so that the flow of money shall be
kept up regular and uninterrupted.
Sah’e Sharkey.
Gov. Moses of South Carolina narrowly
escaped a kicking the other day. Ben
Hernandez of Charleston went to see the
Governor about $500which his Excellency
owed him. The doorkeeper refused to
let him in, and he knocked the doorkeeper
down. Moses went to the rescue, and
Ben threatened to whip him, too, if he
didn’t pay up. A policeman arrested
Ben.
Financial and Commercial
Office Telegraph and Messenger ">
September 17, 1878. S
Cotton.
The market to-day was heavy, buyers still
holding off. We quote: Ordinary, lSe.; good or
dinary, 14c.; low middling! 16c.; middling 161c.
The receipts to-day were the heaviest of the
season, reaching 28S bales—187 by roil and 95 by
wagon. The shipments were 228 bales; sales 155.
MACON COTTON STATEMENT.
Stock on hand Sept. 1,1873 1,899
Received to-day 282
Received previously .1051—1,336
2,785
Shipped to-day J28
Shipped previously '654—
Stock on hand this evening 1*853
Bagging and Ties.
We quote bagging at 16}@17c. Arrow ties 91®
10c. Demand good; supply ample.
Finax>3MtJU
Exchange on New York, haying at par, selling
at 1@S-10 per cent, prom.; gold, buying at 10,
selling at 12; silver nominal; buying at 3, selling
at ®’ —o—
Commercial.
Within the past few days business has bright
ened up considerably, though the great scarcity
of money has a depressing effect. The demand is
good for all prime articles of consumption.
Produce.
Coen—We report an active demand and good
stocks. We quote white 85c.; mixed 80.
Floue—Demand good, supply ample. We
superfine $7 50; extra $8 50; plain family (0 25;
family $975.
Provisions.
Bacon—Stock good and demand active; clear
rib sides Hi® 12c.; shoulders 101c.; sugar cured
hams 16}®16}c.
Lard—In tierces 10f@llc.
Groceries.
Coffee—Firm, with an upward tendency, rang
ing from 241 to 27c. Very good stock in market.
Sugar—Brown ldc.; yel. e. llbgllic.; white
ex. C 12®121; A 12|@lSc. Market strong and ad
vancing.
LATEST MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH
Financial.
New York—Noon—Stocks active. Gold 111.
Money 7. Exchange;, long 81; short 9|. Govern
ments dull bnt steady. State bonds quiet.
Evening—Money easy at 7 to gold, when ru
mored failures buoyed the market to commission.
Sterling 81. Gold lUgll*. Governments, only a
trifling business doing. State bonds quiet and
slightly lower.
Midnight—Sis 161; 62s 131; 61s IS}; 65s 15l; new
151;67a 16; 6Ss 16; new 5s Ill; KM0sl2}. Ten-
nessees 81; new 801; Virginias 42; new 50; con
solidated 511; deferred 11}; Louisianas 44; new
'40; levee 6's 65; 8’s57; Alabama 8’s 70; 5’s45;
Georgia 6's 65; 7’s89; North Carolinas 27; new
151; special tax 10; South Carolinas 321; now 14;
April and October 23.
New Orleans—Exchange—sterling 21}, New
York sight 1 premium. Gold 111.
London—Noon,—Consols 92J@92i; new fives
911.
Paris—Noon—Rentes 57f40c.
Frankfort—Carlist bonds quoted on Bourse
here.
Cotton.
New York—Noon—Cotton steady; uplands 20};
Orleans, 201: sales 931.
Futures opened: September 1715-16®1811-82;
October 17}@171S-16; December 17 9-16; Febru
ary 18; March 181.
Evening—Cotton steady; sales 2430; uplands
20}; Orleans 201; new I less.
Cotton, net receipts 1400; gross 2818.
Futures closed steady; sales 8.000; Septem
ber 18}; October 17 23-32; November 17 9-16; De
cember 17 17-32.
Baltimore—Cotton, net receipts 150; gross 159;
exports coastwise 450; sates 36; stock 416; mid
dlings 20; low middlings IS”; strict good ordinary
171; market dull.
New Orleans—Cotton, net receipts 578; gross
671; exports coastwise —; sales 300; stock 9315;
middlings 18}; low middlings —, strict good ordi
nary —; market steady.
Wilmington—Cotton, net receipts 93; stock
165; middlings 18}; sales —, market quiet.
Charleston—Cotton, net receipts 821 > gross
—; exports coastwise 727; sales 200; stock 4190;
middlings 18; low middlings 17}; strict good ordi
nary IV,}; market dull.
Augusta—Uotton.net receipts 613; sales 618;
stock —; middlings 17; market declining.
Savannah—Cotton, net receipts 1456; exports
coastwise 945; sales 619; stock 37054; market dull.
Mobile—Cotton.net receipts 276; exports coast
wise—; sales 155; stock 5135; middlings 18; mar
ket quiet.
Boston—Cotton, net receipts 101; gross 168;
sales 200; stock 9000; middlings 20}; market quiet.
Norfolk—Cotton, net receipts 305; exports
coastwise 180; sales —; stock 474; low middling
18}; market quiet.
Memphis—Cotton, receipts 221; shipments 115;
sales ; stock 348; low middlings 17}; market
dull.
Galveston—Cotton, net receipts 66; gross—;
exports coastwise 13; sales 42; stock 4800; Texas
ordinary —; good ordinary 16}: market dull.
Philadelphia—Cotton quiet; middling 20};
low middlings 19}; strict good ordinary 17}; net
receipts 63; gross 101.
Liverpool—Noon — Cotton steady; uplands
9; Orleans 9}; sales 12,000 bales; speculation and
export2,009. „ , . ...
No arrivals transactions; sellers demand 1-16
advance.
P.C. SAWER’5
.A i ’ *! f'f 'i'i'i
CHOLERA,
DYSENTERY,
CHOLERA MORBUS,
DIARRHOEA,
AND ALL
BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
cured and prevented by
Railway's Ready Relief!
r f CHOLERA prevails as an epidemic, the Pre
ventive measures are the most wise to adopt
The Liver, Bowels and Stomach should be kept
regular. Rad way’s Pills, in small doses, will secure
tms requisite. Radway’s Ready Relief diluted in
water, (one teaspoonful to a tumbler of water),
taken as a drink, three or four times during the
day, will disinfect the malaria inhaled in the sys
tem, and neutralize all acid orunhealthy elements
caused by the combination of the malaria of the
atmosphere with the gases of the stomach, (which
are often in these epidemics acid), imparting
warmth, energy and health throughout the sys
tem, and preventing the separation of the watery
from other properties in the blood. _ „ ,
If seized with CHOLERA, the Ready Relief
should lie given as strong and often as possible.
This will secure rest and hold the properties of the
blood together, equalizing its circulation, pre
venting congestion, and prevent the diminishing or
lessening of the pulse, and stopping vomiting and
purring. The body should bo rubbed with Ready
Relief from head to foot, and along the spina.
This will impart new energy and vitality to the
nervous system, stop cramps, spasms, ana induce
free perspiration. As soon as the stomach is
quieted, sue to eight of Railway’s Pills (no danger
of diarrhoea need be feared) should bo riven. The
Liver, Stomach and Bowels will at oncebe restored
to their natural duties, and the neutralized ele
ments of disease be expelled from the system.
This treatment has rescued thousands from death.
Looseness, Diarrhoea, Cholera Morbus, Cramps,
Spasms, etc., and all painful discharges from the
bowels are stopped in fifteen or twenty minutes by
taking Radway’s Ready Relief. No congestion or
inflammation, no weakness or lassitude, will follow
the use of the R. R. Relief.
basis good ardinary, 813-16.
Evening—Cotton sales to-day embrace 5^00
American.
—o—
Produce.
New York — Noon—Flour quist and un
changed. Wheat a shade firmer. Coro a trifle
better, steam Western mixed 65®68. Pork firm;
new mess 18 00. Lard firm ; old steam 8 11-16.
Turpentine dull at 43. Rosin quiet at 310 for
strained. Freights firm.
Evening—Flour firmer; common to fair extra
8 35@1100. Whisky active at 99®1 00. Wheat
active }nd 1®2 better; winter red western 1 68®
169. Com closed firmer; western steamer mixe
66®68. Rice steady at 8}®9}. Pork firmer;
new mess 18 00, cash. Beef quiet and steady;
mess 8 oo®10 15. Lard excited at 8}®8 13-16.
Navols quiet. Rosin easier at 3 05®810. Tallow
quiet. Freights firmer. , , , ,
New Orleans—Flour in good local demand;
double extra 5 75; treble extra 7 00®7 75; family
8 23®9 50. Com quiet and firm; yellow 72; white
73. Oats firm at 47@48. Bran quiet at 85. Hay
dull; prime 23 00; choice 26 00®27 00. Pork, no
demand, 1725. Bacon, dry salted meats and shoul
ders 8}®9; sides 10}@10}; hams nominal at ISfflH.
Lard dull; tierce 8K&; keg lOpglO}. Sugar dull;
fair 10@10}; fully lair 10}. Molasses, no move
ment. whisky dull; Louisiana 98;Cincinnati 106.
Coffee firmer at 22®23}. Com meal firm at 2 85
@3 00.
Louisville—Flour active and firm at 6 00®
8 00. Com firm at 60 for sacked. Previsions
8 met and steady. Fork nominal at 16 25. Lard
rmen steam held at 8}@9. Bacon quiet; shoul
ders 9}®9}; clear rib 10}@10}; clear 10|.
Whisky quiet at 93.
Cincinnati—Flour firm at 6 90@7 10. Com
firm at 55. Pork in good demand and flan at
16 00. Lard strsng; steam 8}; kettle 8}. Bacon
firm; shoulders 9; clear rib sides 10; clear
10}. Whisky firm at 92.
Wilmington—Spirits tuipentine quiet at 38.
Rosin quiet at 2 55 for strained, 4 62} for extra
pale. Crude turpentine quiet at200 for hard;
3 45 for yellow dip and virgin. Tar steady at 2 SO.
St. Louis—Flour unchanged. Com firm and
higher, with light offerings; car lots No. 2 mixed,
44; at east side on track 45® 46}; elevator, round
round lots, 44}. Whisky in advancing tendency;
31® 95. Fork quiet at 1625®16 30; Iptter price
on orders. Lara quiet at 8} for steam.
London—Neon—The weather is wet and unfa
vorable to crops.
Liverpool—Noon—Lard 40s.
Evening—Turpentine 32® 33s.
LONDON—Evening—Turpentine 82.
Marine News.
Fortress Monroe—A schooner dragging her
anchor broke the Hampton Roods cable to-day.
It will probably be repaired to-night.
Charleston—Arrived —Jesse S. Clark, Inez,
Monte Christo.
G EORGIA, MACON COUNTY.—Mrs. Harriet
Caldwell, guardian for Nancy E. Caldwell,
has applied for exemption of personalty, and set
ting apart and valuation of homestead, and I
will pass upon the same at 11 o’clock A. M„ on
the 6th day of October next, at my office.
sep!8-2t JNO. M. GREER, Ordinary.
A DMINISTRATOR’S SALE—By virtue of nn
order from the Court of Ordinary of Jsiqier
county, will be sold before the Court-noose door,
in the town of Monticello, in said county, on the
first Tuesday fn November next, one tract of land
containing live hundred acres, more qy loss, lying
six miles east of Monticello, and adjoining lands
of J. H. Ezell and thelandsbclonringto the estate
of Thomas Jordan, deceased. Sold as the prop-
erty of William R. Powell, deceased, for distribu
tion. Terms made known on day of salev
seplS-wtd B. T. DIGBY, Administrator.
fy EORGIA, CRAWFORD COUNTY.—Where-
VX as, John W. Smith applies to me for letters
of administration on the estate of ArtlRir Mur-
eliuson, late of said county, deceased. r
These are, therefore, to notify all toe kindred
and creditors to be and appear at my office Dial
show cause, if any, why said letters should not
bo granted the applicant.
Given under my hand and official signature tUe
September 15,1873. JAMES J. RAY,
sepl7-w30d» Ordinary. .
HENRY SCHMIDT,
FASHIONABLE BAEBEB*
. Huff’s New Building, Down Btahjt
W OULD be pleased to have a call fN* life £1
customers and the public generally,
sep91m
CLIPSE
COTTON GIN.
(PATENTED MAY26,1873.)
With Adjustable Roll Box and Swinging Front,
for Ginning Damp, Wet or Diy Cotton.
Also, the Celebrated
GRISWOLD GIN,
GenuinePattem,with the OscillatingorWater Box,
Manufactured by ’
P. 0, SAWYEK, Macon, Ga.
RADWAY’S READY RELIEF
WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE.
INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS,
INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER,
INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS,
CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS,
SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING,
PALPITATION OF THE HEART
HYSTERICS, CROUP. DIPTHERL4.
CATARRH, INFLUENZA,
HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE,
NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM,
COLD CHILLS, AGUE CHILLS.
The application of the Ready Relief to the part
or parts where the pain or difficulty exists will af
ford ease and comfort.
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in
a few moments cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stom
ach, Heartburn, Sick Heachache, Colic, Wind in
the Bowels, and all internal pains.
Travelers should always cany a bottle of Rad
way’s Ready Relief with them. A few drops in
water will prevent sickness or pains from change
of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bit
ters os a stimulant.
FBVER AND AGUE.
Fever and Ague cured for fifty cents. There is
not a remedial agent in the world that will cure
Fever and Ague, and ail other Malarious, Bilious,
Scarlet, Tvphoid, Ypllow and other Fevers (aided
by Radway’s Pills) so quick as Radway’s Ready
Ready Relief 50 cents per bottle, and Pills 25
cents a box. Sold by druggists.
hsalthTbeautt!
STRONG AND PURE RICH BLOOD-IN
CREASE OF FLESH AND WEIGHT—
CLEAR SKIN AND BEAUTIFUL
COMPLEXION SECUR
ED TO ALL!
DR. RAD-WAY'S
Sarsaparillian Resolvent
Has made the most astonishing cures. So quick,
so rapid are the changes the body undergoes, under
tlie influence of this truly wonderful medicine,
that EVERY DAY AN INCREASE IN FLE3II AND
WEIGHT IS SEEN AND FELT.
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
Everydropof theSARSAPARILLIAN RESOL
VENT communicates through the blood, sweat
urine and other fluids and juices of the system,
the vigor of life, for it repairs the wastes of the
body with new and sound materia). Scrofula,
Syphilis, Consumption, Glandular Diseases, Ul
cers in tlie Throat anil Mouth, Tumors, Nodes in
the Glands and other parts of the system. Sore
Eyes, Strumorous Discharges from the Ears, and
tlie worst form of Skin Diseases, Eruption, Fever
Sores, Scald Head, Ring Worm, Salt Rheum, Ery
sipelas, Acne, Black Spots. Worms in the Flesh.
Tumors, Cancers in the Womb, and all Weakening
and Painful Discharges, Night Sweats, Loss of
Sperm, and all wastes of the life principle, are
within the curative range of this wonder of Mod
em Chemistry. and a few days’ use will prove to
any person using it for either of these forms of
disease its potent power to cure them.
If the patient, daily becoming reduced by the
waste and decomposition that is continually pro
gressing, succeeds in arresting these wastes, and
repairs the same with new material made from
healthy blood—and this the SARSAPARILLIAN •
will and does secure—a cure is certain; for when
onoe this remedy commences its work of purifica
tion, and succeed* in diminishing the loss of
wastes, its repairs will be rapid, and every day the
Later—Sales of uplands, new crop shipments, patient will feel himself growing better and strong-
flmrvl nrrlinnrv. a 1.V16. ‘ i*r tlin food digesting better, annetite improving.
er, the food digesting better, appetite improving,
and flesh and weight increasing. Not only does
the SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT excel all
known remedial agents in the cure of Chronic,
Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin Diseases, but
It is the only positive cure for
Kidney and Bladder Complaint*,
Urinary and Womb Diseases, Gravel, Diabetes,
Dropsy. Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of Urine,
Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all cases
where there are brick dust deposits, or the water
is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the
white of an egg, orthrendslike white silk, orthero
is a morbid, dark, bilious appearance and white
bone dust deposit, and when there is a pricking,
burning sensation when passing water, and pain
in the small of the back and along the loins.
Tumor of 12 Years’ Growth Cured
by Radway’s Resolvent!
Beverly. Mass., July 10,1867.
Dr. Radway : I have hail Ovarian Tumor in
tho ovaries and bowels. All the Doctors said "there
was no help for it.” i tried everything that was
recommended, but nothing helped me. I saw
your Resolvent, and thought I would try it; but
had no faith in it, because i had suffered for twelve
years. I took six bottles of the Resolvent, and one
box of Radway’s Pills, and two bottles of your
Ready Relief; and there is not a sign of tumor to
bo seen or felt, and I feel better, smarter and hap
pier than I have for twelve years. The worst tu
mor was in the left side of tho bowels, over the
groin. I write this to you for the benefit of others.
You can publish it if you choose.
HANNAH P. KNAPP.
WORMS!
The only safe and sure remedy for TAPE, PIN
and WORMS of allkinds.
PRICE $1.00 PERBOTTLE.
An Important Letter
From a prominent gentleman and resident of
Cincinnati, O., for the past forty years well known
to the book publishers throughout tho United
States:
New Noek. October 11,1873.
Da. Radway: Dear Sir—I am induoed by a
sense of duty to the suffering to make a brief state
ment of the working of your medicine on myself.
For several years 1 had been affected with some
troublo in tho bladder and urinary organs, which
some twelve months ago culminated in a most ter
ribly afflicting disease, which the physicians all
said was a spasmodic stricture in the urcta, as
also inflammation of the kidneys and bladder, and
gave it as their opinion that my age—73 years—
would prevent my ever getting radically cured. I
had tried a number of physicians, and had taken
a large quantity of medicine, both alopathic and
homeopathic, but had got no relief. I had read of
astonishing cures having been made by your rem
edies, and some four months ago read a notice in
the Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post of a cure
having been effected on a person whv. had long
been suffering as I had been. I went rigr. toff ana
got some of each—your Sarsaparilliau Resolvent,
Ready Relief and Regulating fills—and com
menced taking them. In throe day I was greatly
relieved, and now feel as well as ever.
C. W. JAMES, Cincinnati, O.
DR. RADWAY’S
A DMINISTRATOR’S SALE.—By virtue of an
order from tho Court of Ordinary of Jasper
county, will be sold before tho Court-house door,
in the town of Monticello, in said coanty, on the
first Tuesday in November next, lot of land No.
61, in the ISth district of formerly Baldwin, now
Jasper county, containing two hundred and two
and a half acres, more or less. Sold as the prop* ■
ofhis heirs and creditors! Terms made known | PERFECT PURGATIVE AND
scpTft-vrtd Administrator# [ REGULATING PILLS.
Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet
gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and strength
en. Radway’s Fills for tho cure Of all disorders of
the Stomach, Liyer, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,
Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipation, Cos-
tiveness, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Fe
ver, Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles and all De
rangements of tho Internal Viscera. Warranted
to effect a positive cure. Purely vegetable, con-
tainfng no mercury, minerals or deleterious drugs.
■ Observe the following symptoms resulting from
Disorders of the Digestive Organs:
Osnstipation. Inward Piles, Fullness of the
£lood in tlie Head. Acidity of the Stomach, Nan-
sea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or
Weight in the Stomach, SourEructations, Sinking
or Fluttering at the Heart. Choking or suffering
Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of
Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Fever and
Dull Pain the Head, 3Sefieiency of Perspiration,
Yellowness of the Skgt and Kyee, Pain in the Side,
Chest, Limbs, and sudden Flushes of Heat, Burn
ing in the Flesh. * ...
A few doses of Radway’s Pills will free the sys
tem from all the above named disorders. Price 25
cents per box. Sold hy Druggists.
BEAD
“FALBE AND TRUE V’
fiend one letter stamp to RADWAY &CO«No.
t Wtaren. comer Church street, New York.
Information worth thousands Till be s«nt yoq
aarUeadAwiy
THIS BIN TOOK THREE PREMIUMS LAST YEAR.
THE SAWYER ECLIPSE COTTON GIN with
its improvements has won its way, upon its own
merits, to the very first rank of popular favor. It
stands to-day without a competitor in all the
f aints and qualities desirable or attainable in a
ERFECT COTTON GIN.
Our Portable or Adjustable Roll Box places it in
the power of every planter to regulate the picking
of the seed to suit himself, and is the only one
made that does. Properly managed, SAWYER’S
ECLIPSE GIN will maintain the full natural
length of the staple, and V . made to do as rapid
work as any machine in use.
The old GRISWOLD GIN—a genuine pattern—
furnished to order, whenever desired.
Three premiums were taken by SAWYER’S
ECLIPSE GIN last year, over all competitors,
viz: TwoattheSoutheastAlabamaandSouthwest
Georgia Fair, at Eufaula—one a silver cup, the
other a diploma. Also, the first premium at the
Fair at Goldsboro’, North Carolina.
nsnsj-w oiisrs
Will be delivered on board the cars at the follow
ing prices:
Thirty-five Saws $131 50
Forty Saws 150 00
Forty-five Saws 168 75
Fifty Saws 187 60
Sixty Saws t. 225 00
Seventy Saws 262 60
Eighty Saws 280 00
To prevent delay, orders and old gins should be
sent immediately.
Time given to responsible parties.
TOLUNTART TESTDIOXIAXS!
Are furnished from various sections of the cotton
growing States, of the character following:
Locust Grove, Ga, October SO, 1872.
Mr. P. C. Sawyer, Macon, Ga.:
Dear Sir—Enclosed find draft on Griffin Banking
Company for $150, as payment for our gin, with
which we are well pleased.
- Yours truly, - H. DICKIN & SON.
The above letter enclosed the following testimo
nial, addressed to Mr. Sawyer, viz :
Locust Grove, Ga., October 80,1872.
We, tho undersigned, planters, have witnessed
the operation of one of your Eclipse Cotton Gins,
which we think superior to any other gin we have
ever seen used. It leaves the seed perfectly clean,
and at the same time turns out a beautiful sample,
etc. H. T. DICKIN & SON.
E. ALEX. CLEAVELAND.
M. L. HARRIS.
Mr. Daniel P. Ferguson, of Jonesboro, Ga,
writes under date of October lOi 1872, as follows:
I have your gin running. * * * I can say it
is the best that I ever saw run. It cleans the seed
perfectly. I have been raised in a gin house, and
I believe I know all about what should be expect
ed in a first-class Cotton Gin. I can gin five hun
dred pounds of lint inside of sixty minutes. The
first two bales ginned weighed 1100 pounds, from
3010 pounds seed cotton, bagging and ties included.
Irwistox, Ga, October 7,187A
Mr. P. C. Sawyer—Dear Sir: The Cot ton Oh
wo got from you, we are pleased to say, meets ouv
fullest expectations, and does all you promisedii
should do. We have ginned one hundred and six
teen bales on it, and it has never choked nor bro
ken the roll. It picks tlie seed clean and makes
good lint. We hare had considerable experience
with various kinds of cotton gins, and can, with
safety, say yours is the best we have ever seen run.
THOMAS HOOKS.
ELIJAH LINGO.
Gol. Nathan Rass, of Rome, Ga, says he has
used Griswold’s, Slassey’s and Taylor’s Gins, and
that he Is now running a D. Pratt Gin in Leo
county, Ga.,and an Eagle and a Carver Gin in Ar
kansas, and a “ Sawyer Eclipse Gin ” in Rome, Ga,
and regards the last named as superior to any of
the others. It picks faster and clearer than
any other gin with which ho is acquainted. Ho
says he has ginned eighty-six bales with It without
breaking toe roll*
Bullard's Siatiojt, M. & B. R. R.
January 20,1873. .
Mr. P. C. Sawyer, Macon. Ga—Dear Sir—The
Cotton Gin you repaired for me, with your im
proved box, gives perfect satisfaction, and I take
very great pleasure in recommendingyour gins to
the public. W. O’DANlEL, K> D.
Dr. J. W. Summers, of Orangeburg, S, C, writes
All your Gins sold by me this season are doing
well and giving entire satisfaction. I will be able
to sell a great many next season.
J. C. Staley, of Fort Valley, writes •’ "Your Gin
is the only Gin I ever saw that anybody could feed.
I have heretofore been compelled to employ a feed
er for ginning, but with your gin a thud can feed
it and it wul never break tho roll. It gins both
clean and fast and makes beautiful lint.”
Messrs. Childs, Nickerson & Co, of Athens, Gs,
write: “ All the Sawyer Gins sold by us are giving
satisfaction. We will be able to sell a Dumber ot
them the coming season."
Cochrak. Ga, January 7,1873.
Mr. P. C. Sawyer, Macon, Ga.:
Sir—The Cotton Gin we bought of you last Fall,
after a fair trial, has given us satisfaction. It
makes good lint and cleans the seed well,
fours respectfully,
T. J. A B. G. LEB.
GINS EEPAIEED PBOMPTLY
And made as good as new at the following low
figures:
New Improved Ribs $ 90 each
EollBox. 1000 each
Head and Bottom Pieces 1 50 each
Babbit Boxes 1 SO each
New Saws, per set,, 1 00 each
Repairing Brush v $5 00@15 00
New Brush... a,......,...-,.., 25 00
Fainting Gin 6 00
Can furnish 94 different patterns of ribs to the
~ at 291
•SVERYWHERE
THE SICK ARE
IJECTING ME-
TALIC MEDICINES
AND NAUSEOUS,
'DRASTIC
__ PURGATIVES.
EVERYWHERE they are strong in the belief
that a constitutional invigorant, a preparation
uniting the properties of a gentle purgative, a ton
ic, a blood purifier and a general regulator is the
great requisite in all diseases.
EVERYWHERE they are coming to the con
clusion that Simmons’ Liver Regulator is precise
ly such a .preparation.
EVERYWHERE mothers find it a sure neu
tralizer of acidity of the stomach, indigestion and
colic in children.
headache, bowel complaints, dyspepsia and fevers.
TAKE Simmons’ Liver Regulator, the great
family medicine, purely vegetable. It is indeed a
marvelous medicine. : .
Manufactured only by
sepd2taw£n
J. H. ZEII.TX A CO,
Macon, Ga, and Philadelphia.
Executor’s Sale.
G eorgia, taylor county.—by virtue
of an order from the Honorable Court of
Ordinary of said county, will be sold, before the
Court-house door, in the town of Butler, said
county, on the first Tuesday in November next,
within the legal hours of sale, lots of land Nos.
196,167,154, and west half of lot No. 165, all being
in the 14th district of said county, containing in
all 708} acres, more or less, the property of the es
tate of Samuel Montgomery, late of said county,
deceased. Sold for the benefit of the heirs and
creditors of said deceased.
Terms—One-half cash, balance small notes due
twclvo months from day of sale. Bond for title
and possession given. Title perfected when last
payment is made.
I will also sell for cash, at the same time and
place, 1 large road wagon and 2 young cows, the
property of said estate.
V. MONTGOMERY,
sepll 40d Executor.
New York and Brunswick
PACKET LINE
T HE attention of the mercantile public is re
spectfully called to the above Packet Lino be
tween New York and Brunswick, Ga.
The schooner S. P. Hall will be ready to receive
freight in New York on or about the 12th of Au
gust, and the G. L. Bradley about the 20th Au
gust.
We have every facility for receiving storing and
forwarding freight, and all freight shipped by this
line will receive prompt attention.
WARREN RAY, Ag’t New York, 120 Wall St.
8. C. LITTLEFIELD A CO.,
aug3wtf Brunswick, Ga.
BARNUM’S HOTEL,
Comer Broadway anil Twentieth street. New York.
ON BOTH AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLANS.
/COMPLETE with «U modem improvements;
V_/ rooms en suite and single; private parlors,
baths, elevators, etc. Locution unsurpassed, being
in the very centre of fashion and brilliant New
York life. In proximity to churches and places of
amusement, and Lord & Taylor’s, Arnold A Con
stables’ anil J. C. Johnson s dry goods palaces.
The hotel is under the management of A. 8. Bar-
num, formerly of Baraum’s Hotel, Baltimore; L.
N. Green, of Dayton. Ohio, and recently of New
York; and Fr- man Bamum,of Bamum’s Hotel,
St. Louis. apr24 d2wsw4w&w6t
G eorgia, macon county.—whereas
li 'iij. F. Holsenbake, administrator on the
estate of Patrick A. McBride, deceased, represents
to me that he has fully administered said estate,
and applies for letters of dismission from the
same.
This is, therefore, to cite and admonish all per
sons concerned to show cause, if any, before me at
the Court of Ordinary of said county, on the first
Monday of October next, why said applicant
should not be disciiarged from his said trust and
the letters granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this 2d day of July, 1873. JOHN M. GREER,
jiily-l 3m Ordinary.
G eorgia, wilkinson county.—Notice
is hereby given that we shall nnply to the
October term of the Ordinary Court of Wilkinson
county for leave to sell the wild lands belonging
to the estate of Joel Deese, deceased.
THOS. M. FREEMAN,
J. B. DUGGAN,
nug740d Administrators.
G eorgia, laurens county.—a. e.
Vickers, guardian of Eugene M. Vickers,
having filed his petition for dismission from said
guardianship, representing that ho has fully dis
charged all his trusts as guardian, and made full
and fair settlement with nis ward,
Therefore these are to cite and admonish all and
singular the next of kinandcreditorsof said ward,
to be and appear at the next regular term of this
court in January next, then and there to show
cause, if any they can, why said letters should not
be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this June 17,1873. J. B. WOLFE,
jnnert 6m Ordinary.
G eorgia, laurens county.—Nathan
Peny, administrator of Nathan Metis, de
ceased, having filed his petition for dismission
from said administration, representing that he
has fully administered on all the assets of said es
tate, and discharged all his duties as administra
tor, as will appear by reference to his return and
vouchers filed in this office,
Therefore these are to cite and admonish all
and singular tho next of kin and creditors of said
deceased, to be and appear at the regular term of
this court in January next, then and there to
show cause, if any they can, why said letters of
dismission should not be granted. '
Given under my hand and official signature.
June 17th, 1873. J. 15. WOLFE,
juue!76m Ordinary.
/GEORGIA. LAURENS COUNTY.—By the
VI Court of Ordinary. James B. Guy and Har
dy Gay, executors of Josiah Gay, deceased, having
filed tneir petition for dismission, alleging that
they have fully executed the will of their testator,
and discharged all their duty as executors, und
that they have mado final settlements with all the
legatees of testator, as will appear In- reference to
their vouchers and returns of record in this office,
Therefore these are to cite and admonish dll and
singular the creditors and legatees of said estate,
to be and appear at the regular term of this court
in February, 1874, then and there to show cause,
if any they can, why said dismission should not
bo granted.
Given under my hand and signature,
this July 18,1873. J. B. WOLFE,
juiy25 3m Ordinary.
EORGIA. LAURENS COUNTY.—Starkey
T W. Swinson and Julia Swinson, executor
and executrix of the last will of Starkey Swinson,
late of said county, deceased, having filed theirpe-
tition for dismission from said executorship, rep
resenting that they have fully executed all the
trusts in said will contained, and have fully set
tled up said estate according to tho provisions
thereof,
Therefore these are to cite and admonish all and
lingular the creditors and legatees of said deceas
ed, to he and appear at the regular term of this
•ourt in January next, then and there to show
cause, if any they can* why said dismission should
not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this June 17,1873. J. B. WOLFE,
june216m Ordinary.
/GEORGIA, DOOLY COUNTY.-Whereas, E.
U M. Tripp, administrator of Martha W. Hol
land, represents to the court, in his petition, duly-
filed and entered on record, that he has fully ad
ministered Martha Holland’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not bo dis
charged from his administration and receive let
ters of dismission on the first Monday in Octo
ber. 1873.
Witness my official signature.
juiyll 3m J. R. HOLME9, Ordinary.
G EORGIA. DOOLY COUNTY.—Whereas, E.
M. Tripp, administrator of J. M. Walters, re
presents to the court, in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has fully adminis
tered J. M. Walters’ estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his administration and receive let
ters of dismission within the time prescribed tor
law.
Witness my official signature, this July 7,1878,
’ ’ " .Oratf ‘
G eorgia, laurens oounty.—By the'ttiaylor county ———.
Court of Ordinary. Cincinnatus S. Guyton, _L be sold, before the iwTl s -UEs
administrator cum tostameato annexo of Edward town of Butler, within thl i , ouas door ST*®
J. Blackshear, deceased haring filed his petition the first
for dismission, stating that hehas fully discharg- described property to-wit toe frn,
ed all his duties under the will of testator, and land No. 119 in the suJL j. 100 "vres ,
that he has fullv settled with all the legatees and i Muscogee, nowivrior^oounte^T® 1 01 orUi"„? I
creditors of said estate, NoTllS, in the £; y -’ also > 70 acriS'J
Therefore these are to cite and admonish all' Levied on as the proDertv of j' 1 ots si'i n y i <!
and singuiar legatees and creditors of deceased, to satisfy a fl. fa. froth Tavlor
N otice to debtors and creditors.—
All persons indebted to the estate of the late
W. B. Parker, of Bibb county, are hereby request
ed to make immediate payment, and all persons
haring demands against said deceased, will legally
present the same. M. J. PARKER, Executrix,
july24 6w Postoffico box 123.
G eorgia, laurens county—Lucretia
Bass, guardian of Welcome G. Bass, having
filed her petition for dismission from said guar
dianship, representingthat she lias fully discharged
ali her trusts as guardian, and made full and fair
settlement with her ward,
Therefore, these are to cite and admonish all
and singular, the next of kin and creditors of said
ward, to be and nppearat the regular term of this
Court in January next, then and there to show
cause, if any they can, why said letters should not
be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature this
June 17th, 1873. J. B. WOLFE,
jnneai6m Ordinary.
juiyll 3m
J. R. HOLMES.
Unary.
trade
t cepls each, at short notice.
V. C, SAWIEB.
in Vienna, Dooly county, on first Tuesday in Oc
tober next, lot of land No. 115, in the 13tn district
of said county. Sold as the property of Benjamin
Pitts, deceased, for the purpose of distribution.
Terms cash. JAMES BROWN,
juiylltdi Administrator.
G eorgia, laurens couNTY.-Supprior
Court, April Term, 1873. Presont, his Honor
A. C. Pate,Judge.
Lizzie E. Kane,A tibel for divorce. Rule to per-
John J. KaneJ {ect serrice -
It appearing to the court by the return ot the
Sheriff that the defendant does not reside in this
county, and it further appearing that he does not
reside in this State, it is on motionjof counsel, or
dered that said defendant appear and answer at
tho next term of this court, else that the case be
considered in default and the plaintiff allowed to
proceed, and it is further ordered that this rule be
published in the Tedfqpaph asd Messrsoer
once a month for four months,
Atrae extract from the minutes,
mtness my hand and official seal.
jtUMM Umla HARDY SMITH, flertb
/GEORGIA, LAURENS COUNTY.—All per-
VX sons are hereby notified that I shall apply
to the Honorable Court or Ordinary of said coun
ty, at the regular term in October next, after this
notice has been published sixty days, for leave to
sell all the lands belonging'.to the estate of Deli
lah Goff, deceased. - DENNIS KEA,
augl 60d Administrator.
/X EORGIA, LAURENS COUNTY.—John T.
YJT Rogers, guardian of William D. Mullis, hav
ing filed his petition for dismission from said
guardianship, representing that he has fully dis
charged all his duties as guardian, and has fully
accounted for and paid over to his ward all the
funds that has come to his hands, as will ap
pear by reference to his vouchers on file in tins
office, which he prays may be examined.
Therefore, these are to cite and admonish ah
and singular the next of kin and creditors of said
ward to be and appear at tho regular term of this
court, in November next, then and there to show
cause, if any they can, why said dismission
should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this April 25th, 1873. J. B. WOLFE,
apr29 6m Ordinary.*
fi EORGIA. LAURENS COUNTY.-Whereas,
VJT William M. Scarborough, guardian of Jo
seph Nobles, has filed his petition for dismission
from said guardianship, representing that he has
fully discharged all his duties as guardian, and
has settled with his ward, and praying that his
accounts may bo examined into by the court.
These are therefore to cite and admonish all
and singular the next of kin and creditors of said
Joseph Nobles, to be and appear at the regular
term of this court in October next, then and there
to show cause, if any they can, why said dismis
sion should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,
this March 24,1873. -
J. B. WOLFE.
mar271am6m Ordinary.
ry EORGIA. LAURENS COUNTY.-Whereas,
VX Aaron G. Odom, administrator of Benjamin
Mimbs, deceased, has filed his petition for dis
mission from said administration, alleging that he
has fully administered all the assets of his intes
tate, and discharged ail his duties as administra
tor, and praying that his accounts may bo exam
ined into by the court.
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and
singular, the next of kin and creditors of said
Benjamin Mimbs, to bo and appear at the reg
ular term of this court in October next, to show
cause, if any they can, why said dismission
should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, this
March 24,1873. J. B. WOLFE,
mar27 lam6m Ordinary.
A DMINISTRATOR’S SALE—Will be sold be-
XX. fore the Court-house door, in Monticclo, Jas
per county, on the first Tuesday fn October next,
the lands of Dr. J. W. Shropshire, late of Sumter
county, deceased. The same being a one-fourth
undivided interest in 5104 acres in the 13th dis
trict of said county.
HENRY DAVENPORT,
june28tds Administrator.
fy EORGIA, WILKINSON COUNTY—Where-
VX as, George W. Lord, executor of the estate oj
Wm. Igird, deceased, applies to me for letters ol
dismission. .
These are therefore to cite and admonish all per
sons concerned to be and appear at my office, on
or before the first Monday in October next, and
show cause, if any they have, why said letters ol
dismission should not be granted.
YVitness my band and official signature this 8th
day of July, 1878. W. F. CANNON,
july9 SOd Ordinary.
fy EORGIA, MACON COUNTY.-Whereas,
VX William Hafer, administrator on the estate
of John G. Parker, late of said county, deceased,
applies for letters of dismission from said admin
istration.
This is therefore to cite and admonish all per
sons roncernd to be and appear at the Court of
Ordinary of said county, on the first Monday in
November next, to show cause, if any, why said
letters should not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature this
the Slst day of July, 1878.
aug2 8m JOHN M. GREER, Ordinary.-
/~y EORGIA, DOOLY COUNTY.—Whereas,
VX John C. Curd, administrator, and Louisa L.
Denny, administratrix of A. W. Denny, deceased
represents to the court in their petition, duly
filed and entered oii record, that they have fully
administered A. W. Denny’s estate.
This is, therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator and administratrix
should not be discharged from their administra
tion, and receive letters of dismission on the first
Monday in November, 1873.
Given under my hand officially.
jul.v29 8m J. R. HOLMES, Ordinary.
ft EORGIA, JONES COUNTY.-Whereas
VX James M. Gray, executor of estate of Nancy
T. Parrish, deceased, applies to me for dismission
from said executorship.
These are, therefore, to cite nnd admonish the
kindred and creditors and all others concerned,
to show cause, if any they have to the contrary, at
this office on or by the first Monday of October
next.
Given nnder my hand officially.
ROLAND T. ROSS,
julySSm Ordinary.
fy EORGIA, DOOLY COUNTY.—Whereas, John
VX W. Cross, administratorof John Lockerman,
represents to tho Court in his petition, duly filed
and entered on record, that he has fully adminis
tered John Lockerman’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator, should not be dis
charged from his administration, and receive let
ters of dismission on the first Monday in October
next.
julyl 3m™' J. R. HOLMES, Ordinary.
fy EORGIA, DOOLY COUNTY.—Whereas, Jno.
VX W. Cross, administrator of Willis J. Locker
man, represents to the Court, in his petition, duly
filed ana entered on record, that be has fully ad
ministered Willis J. Lockerman’s estate.
This Is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from his administration, and receive let
ter? of dismission on tho first Monday in October
next.
julyl Sm ^ ‘J. R. HOLMES, Ordinary.
fy EORGIA. DOOLY COUNTY.—Whereas, J.
VX YV. Scott, administratorof Hannan Bedding-
field, represents to the court, in his petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that he nas fully ad
ministered Hannan Bcddingfield’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned,
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any they
can, why said administrator should not be dis
charged from "his administration and receive let
ters of dismission on first Monday in October,1873.
YVitness my official signature.
jnlyllSm J. R. HOLMES, Ordinary.
fy EORGIA. BIBB COUNTY.-Whereas, Cath-
VX arine Williams, administratrix on the estate
of James Williams, deceased, applies to the under
signed for letters of dismission.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
and singular, the kindred and creditors of said de
ceased to be and appear at the Court of Ordinary
on the first Monday in October next to show cause,
if any they have, why said letters should not bo
granted.
Given under my hand officially.
julySSm C. T. WARD. Ordinary.
fy EORGIA, BIBB COUNTY.—Whereas, John
VX W. Herin, executor on the estate of Abner
H. Hammond, deceased, applies to me for letters
of dismission.
This is. therefore, to cite all persons concerned,
to be and appear at tho Court of Ordinrny of said
county, on the first Monday in October to show
cause, if any they have, why said letters should
not be granted. ' t
Given under my Band and official signature.
julySSm a T. WARD, Ordinary.
f t EORGIA. BIBB COUNTY—Whereas. Val-
VX entine Kahn, administrator on the estate of
Jacob Gloss, deceased, applies to me for letters o!
dismission.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all
and singular, the kindredand creditors of said de
ceased, to be and appear at the Court of Ordinary
on the first Monday in October, to show cause, if
any they have, why said letters should not be
granted.
Given under my hand officially.
julySSm C. T. WARD. Oglinary.
Citation.
Martha J. Sherwood, Adm’*."} In Equity.
vs. BibbSup’rCourt.
Joseph Danncnhurg S-April Term. 1871.
and I Bill for Injuno-
Joseph Waxelbaum. J tion and Relief.
XT appearing to tlie court that Joseph Waxel-
JL baum, one of the defendants in the above sta
ted case, is a resident of the State of New York:
It is ordered by the court that service on the said
Waxelbaum be made by publication of this order
in the Telegraph and Messenger, a newspaper
published in the city of Macon, once a month for
four months, and that said Waxelbaum appear
and defend said bill on or before tho fourth Mon
day of October next. By the Court.
R. W. JEMISON,
Solicitor for complainant.
April $0th. 1873.
A true extract from the minutes of Bibb Supe
rior Court. A. B. ROSS. Clerk.
May 1st, 1873. maj-3 5t
JMEORCIA, BAKER COUNTY—Mrs. Ann
VX Ivey, guardian of C. R. Ivey, has applied to
me for letters of dismission from said guardian-
ship.
This is, therefore, to cite all persons concerned
to show cause, if any they have, why the said ap
plicant should mot receive the usual letters of dis
mission. JAMES P. BROADAWAY,
july223m Ordinary.
Joiner,, fo satisfr a fi. fa. from TriK.STKS
Court, in favor of 8. A. BonieiJ kJ- Sun-nT;
A. L. Borders, deceaSdfaraiSt
b. Joiner, and Daniel WorsSm
Also, at the same time and ,
239, and the north half of lotNa°«£*
district of Taylor county, and &
acres of the eastern half ollot ik 141 t-’lrs
district of Taylor county. Levi^on^’^^a
erty of Willis MeLendon, taiSggVtotta?
Taylor Superior Court in favo?of
strong against A. L. Edwards aad Wagf**
sep9 tds • c - A. J. POPE^
rrEORGIA* TWIGGS COUNnTS^
VT hereby given to nil persons havin, »
against Jas. Balkcom, deceased
c0 -?£- ty '*£ > ?f escnt th ?m toSpro»ri Y £"5
wittonthe time required by law
their character, amount and for'settiSLS.' 1 **
persons indebted to said deceased am in?? ti
required to make immediate pavnumt® '
J.FBALKSbJir
aug760d* Adm’rs estate of
of Silas and Jane Powell, deceased" “i
tho court in his petition duly filed,
record, that he has fully discharged all sT","'* I
of guardianship, and fully accounted f „,
over to his wards all the fonds in his
. Therefore this is to cite rtSStn
singular the next ol kin and «5iE£!5 5* I
wards f
time ]
cause,
not bo granted.
Given under my hand officially
aug264w J. R. HOLMR?
G eorgia, wilkinson corNTY~tafr
as, John McArtha and J. W "*»■ I
tors of the last will and testament of^Sh bS
son, deceased, have applied for dismS
said executorship of said decease! sw”®
therefore, to cite all persons intercdM w, 1 -;
“Ilf®, toe bme !-!wribed by U»,u
said letters of dismission should
to applicants. Given under my hand aafo#2 1
seal, this August 5tn, 1873. * r - i
aug7 8m
W, F, CANNON. Old!
A DMINISTRATOR’S SALE.—I
older of the Court of Ordinary of pL. J”* I
ty. will be sold on the first Tuesday m <
next, at tha Court-house door in sain coattTW :
tween the legal hours of sale, the tract of hid t
said county whereon tho widow's doner
and whereon Raiford Royal resided at
his death, being part of lots Nos. 333, JtTiW
248,m the seventh district, of said
ing287 acres, more or less. Terms
the day of sale. 3 1
Administrator tie bonis non|
augStds I
G EORGIA,DOOLY COUNTY.-Fuar voT
after date of this applica tion, atthsneitrql j
of Harmon ft. Parker, late of said onmt is
ceased, for the benefit rf heirs aad cie .un 1
said deceased.
MATHEV PARKER
angSSOd F_fcut^ |
JN EORGIA. WILKINSON COUNTY-WiaS
VX as, Joel J. Brewer, administrator.'! tta*
tate of Sarah Brewer, late of su'd cuo-itv, dj.
ceased, has filed his application for dismitsa
from said administration;
These are, therefore, to cite and sdmorn* u
persons concerned, to be and appear it my off«
on or before the first Monday in Navarttrstn
and show cause, if any they ha) e, why sad letR.
of dismission should not he granted.
Witness my hand and official sirmrtnre, tia
August 5th, 1873. W. F. CANNON,
aug78m Ordinary Wilkinson County,
C l EOlUilA, BIBB COUNTY.-Where* I
I Granville C. Conner ap-.'.ie, f ir l ttend I
administration upon the estate of W. A. Hoi**,
late of said county, deceased.
This is therefore to cite and nd. vmiCi all it!
singular the kindred and creditors <*f said -S 1
erased to be and appear at my office on or l*fc»
the first -Monday in November n-«, to «hv I
cause, if any they have, wlyv said h ten drail
not be granted. i
Given under my hand officially.
seplOtd C. T. WART . !ita» _
XJOSIFONKD JONES COUNTY SHKRUHl
X SALE.—Will be sold before t!r Cturt-hoo* I
door in Clinton, said county, on the ..r t-Tuestii I
' in October: Forty-seven an Jnne hr.. > -.•.ofhni 1
lying in said county, on the pidfik. .«*! laJig I
from Milledgerille to Macon, to sstisfy * fi * I
issued from the Countv Court of Joi cs cnnntj,i* I
fovor of James M. Gray, executor of Niikj I ]
Parish, against Luke Wilder. Propt.ty pond
out by the defendant, ^ _
seplOtds JOHN BRADLEY,Stont
G eorgia, dooly county-foot *«tii
after date application will he m. 'e to ta I
Honorable Court of Ordii s-v of Dioly muntj f« I
leave to sell all the lands Is-hnrimr to the cate I
of A. Y. Peaw, iate of said ronnty, der-Mga I
the benefit of tha heirs and creditors oi aid dr J
ceased.
augac 4w J. Y. PEAVY, Admimstnto. _
Administrator’s Sale,
W ILL be sold before the Court-hons.- iter.if I
the town of Forsyth, between the ball
hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in CM'jnf-ta■
following property to-wit: ScTenlotscf adlyigl
in Burcay’s district at Oolaparchee, -vntmnsl
fourteen hundred acres more or less, d t**l
the plantation whereon John Cotton '
bounded as follows: North by Macon >•'» »«; I
cm railroad, east by Hardy Fcrtms cad kit I
Jackson, south by lands rf Whittle rf J-f-1
Howard and west bv lands of Dr. A H. Ski rtl
lands of Dr. Wynne's estate, baid rro;*!U**|
for the purpose of paying creditors jnd dsttn-J
tion among the legatees. A. J. YVIL' .U** 1
septlltdl. Adaimga
rarponTAiir
To the Sick and Afflicted
Hear and Hejoice, for I Bring you Glad life? ^ I
Great- Joy. r
Jackson’s Magic Balsam |
THE GREAT MASTER O? PAI>\
Is curine the sick and afflicted to
er before heard of in tho annals ofmeto****-1
It is curing, without fail, „
The worst Neuralgia in from 5 to SI tx-.w
The worst Croup iri 5 minutes.
The worst Toothache in 1 minute. . ,
The worst Rheumatism in from Mminw di
The worst Inflammation inthcEyesinlvtid
The worst Fain in tin- Side;Back an4“*Jt I
The worst Painful Tumors in aUT I
The worst Spraings, Swelling*. BpW* ^ I
Thcfworst Catarrh in tho head is relieve! ie> j
The worst Palpitation of the 1
The worst Cuts, Chafe, or flesh wonad.. . f J
The worstcascof Bronchitis ;s relw-a |
Tbe'worst ease of Inflammatory
Tho worst Bums and Scalds in r? J® r ‘ ra;1J (
And for pains anil inflammation in » . f ^
the human body, either externals or ‘‘ {s a
there is no remedy in the entire f“ r ‘'USy t
dues pains and inaftmmitions so pw- _
promptly and so permanently as
Jackson’s Magic Balsas
P. VAN ALSTINE, Proprietor, Birr3'i&.£
Sold by all druggists at 25c* ^ c -* 3
bottle. ^
WHY NOl?
LET THE PUBLIC 0OPI
If Jackson’ Magic Balsam hasWI
and permanent cures provenngJJ^jjJMl
horse lotion or horse remedy hi W.T!*«S«1pI
let the people know it ? It si*I
Colic in horses or mules in 9jS“ t j. e prog** I
prompt is it in curing Colic 1 1 ^in!I* 11 J
will in each and every case, where- ^ jjf ztl
of water is given to a horse or nma (*«;: I
Colic, refund the money where ttdoej!
20 minutes. It is also thei very to* I
world for all saddle or collar nulls, a
bruises, strains, lameness, oldsorcs. .j]
pole evil, foundered feet,cuts,\ r °“'! c ‘ [1 |i s a)S
poisons, and wherever swelling a.u I
exist, either iatonially or exJJWJJVj ,v a tO ! *‘l
liniment or horse lotion in the " Jr -- I
gin to compare with
Baker Superior Court—May Term, 1873.
SUaW. Scurry
vs. Application for
W.T. Huff, Sallie V. ^ partition in
Huff, David R. Strother j Baker Superior Court,
and write, et aL
I T appearing to the court that service has
had upon ail the parties and their legal
been
rep*
I
Jackson’s Magic
And the time is not far-distant wta
of and dealer in stock will
icino in his stable, ready
&.W tiy all aroeskt, ,t 15c. *
Agents, Read TjjjjL
aug!4w4t Battlet^-p-
STRACB KILL «0Rf
Portable
upper-runnei* jttrl
Merchant
SIZES, GS.'I
Powers,
Cleaners, etf- j|
Pollies Fl
kinds of ►!
Millers’ )#l
Str.nh. MUl comy^
reaentatives in the above cause, as the law directs
except as to David R. Strother and his wife, who
are non-residents of said State, but now residents
of the State of South Carolina. It is therefore or- Pamphlet. ... - --— „ „
dered tifat stud services be perfected upon said i 14SM, Cincinnati; w- . /w-nD, ifirlvi
Strother and wife, by publiration in the public j ’ CARHAK1 « b *-
garotte, known as the Telegraph and Messenger, J jul24-wSra —UTiS» rfI '
it being the gazette in which this county has its I tH‘
publications entered and published, for once each
week for two months, ana that after said publica
tion, if said Strother and wife fails at the next
term of this court to appear and plead, then the
case to proceed-as in default as to them.
May 26,1873.
PETER J, STROZIER, Judge A..C.
A true extract from the minutes of said crairt
July*) 2m B. F. HUDSPETH, Clerk.
Working Class gfj
a valuable pacW« of «oods ^
dress, with six odflt wtuI ^ ft yot'N'Gjrf J f*
iTSGwinwioh^*