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MACON. NOV 25 .S7S.
Fifty-seven More Shot.
TThe State Department at Washington
and the British embassy both have official
advices of the shooting of the remainder
of the crew and passengers of the Vir
ginias, on the 12th instant. This foots
up tho list of the butchered at 106! The
last butchery must necessarily have been
perpetrated in cool defiance of the orders
of the home government, and proves that
the Cuban Administration, under the
• control of a lawless and sanguinary mob,
composed principally, as it is said, of Car-
list adherents, hold tho Spanish Republic
in contempt.
How far this open display of contempt
for the Republic may reconcile that Gov
ernment to the proposition of joint inter
vention we will not undertake to say.
'Certainly the fact that the Cuban admin
istration is in practical rebellion to the
Home Government, cannot be made
plainer by any act or confession of the
Ca . to liar administration; nor ha3 the
Republic any right to expect the adhe
rence of Cuba, upon any other terms
than those upon which they expect to en
force the submission of the Carlists, or
any other party in Spain in revolt against I would aIso " be considered by~the Spanish
War with Spain.
Tho dispatches to-day, with the pre
vious talk of Washington correspondents,
all concurring, render it probable that
the United States Government has de
mandpd of Spain & joint intervention
with that power in Cuban affairs for the
restoration of order in the island and the
punishment of affronts to the United
States and of the massacre of citizens.
While this demand was going forward
to Spain, the same dispatches tell ns
(that deputations of Spaniards were wait
ing on the Spanish Minister for Foreign
Affairs demanding that Captain-General
Jouvellar should be maintained in office
as the representative of Spain in the ad
ministration of Caban affairs, and the
minister spoke them very softly. At the
same time a rumor is current of an im
pending crisis in the Spanish ministry.
These points indicate a promising oc
casion for war wifh. Spain. The Castel-
lar government, as much as it really de
sires to maintain friendly relations with
the United States, dare not consent to &
joint intervention with our government
in Cubari - affairs. Such consent would
be tacit admission of incapacity and in
ability to maintain the authority of their
own government in the island, which no
administration of Spain, in respect to its
own safely, would dare give; and it
Tkb Chronicle and Sentinel under
stands that a white girl in that city
pan says the • 0 ] 0pe d with a negro man a dhy or two
i Pierce county folks have promptly paid : qn, e ^ wa3 employed as a nurse,
their taxes. Not one tax.fi. fa. has been ^ the negro as a coachman in a family
THE GEORGIA FRE88.
Tes Blackchear Georgian 'says the
their authority.
Among the victims in tho last murder
the telegraph states that there were seven
teen British subjects, and these must
have been executed against the remon
strances of the British Consul, who was
in mieted to watch and protect the in-
t__-vsta of that government and people in
the premises. We shall see what course
that government will pursue in the mat
ter, and whether the conclusions of the
Times and Telegraph of yesterday are
sustained.
This last and most sanguinary execu
tion in the face of the protests and re
monstrances of Spain, England and the
Unitod States, and in the shape it now
assumes of the most deliberate and au
dacious. fillip in tlie indignant face of a
reprobating Christendom, will stir up the
excitement in the Northern cities to the
point almost of frenzy.
We are sorry for it. It will be an evil
day for tho country, and particularly for
the South, when the United States ac
quires jurisdiction in Cuba.
Cotton all Picked!
Such is now the talk that greets our
oars from Southwestern Georgia and Cen
tral Georgia, surrounding Macon. Is
that so f If it be tone, or approximately
true, the receipts will soon wind up with
a round turn, and big crop and little
crop men—bulls and bears—will look at
each other with blank astonishment. Both
■will be disappointed, and the crop wind
tip half a million short of anybody’s esti
mate. Is that going to be the case ? Let
us hear. Tell us, ye planters and buyers.
We know there is a notion entertained
by some that the crop is being kept back,
but planters say no producer is willing to
take the risk of storing his crop on his
plantation. That risk is a lively one.
Firing gin-houses has now become a
staple amusement of the country, and
few producers can afford to furnish it at
their own expense.
A Rich Convict.—Richard Mackay, of
Colorado, who has just been sent to the
Penitentiary for a term of eighteen mon chs,
for manslaughter, owns some of the best
mining claims about Nevada, in Gilpin
county; and is reported to be worth from
$75,000 to $100,000. His case was carried
through all the courts, lasting nearly three
years, and conducted by the best counsels
in the Territory. He has spent $30,000
in the effort to get clear. Mackay gained
the high opinion of officers and all with
-whom he had to do, and daring his con
finement in jail here, was allowed regu
larly to go alone to his meals at Cliar-
p : -)t’s and elsewhere, and the night be
fore he was taken to Canon City, unaccom
panied he went over and had an hour’s
chat with Judge BromwelL He was al-
•ways prompt to his word, and it is be
lieved by • (Deers here that he could have
been (trusted to go alone to the peniten
tiary and deliver himself up.
The greatest herdsman in the world is
the title claimed for Samuel W. Allen, of
Texas, who owns 225,000 cattle. He has
.one ranch, eighty milos long and forty
■wide, between the Nevada and Columbia
livers, the largest on the continent, which
pastures 120,000. Two others accommo
date respectively 70,000 and 35,000.
These cattle all subsist on the native
grasses of a part of Texas. His herds re
quire the attention of at least 400 herd
ers and branders, and the use of 3,000
homes. He brands 60,000 calves every
year to keep the supply. The value
of his stock, exclusive of the land, exceed
five millions and a half.
The Cincinnati Coimeeciai. thinks it
very remarkable that the people of half
a dozen States should have shown such a
decrease of confidence in the Administra
tion in the late elections, when President
Grant was making such peculiar exertions
•to rescue the country from the financial
troubles. Didn’t he issue a part of his
reserve greenbacks, and didn’t he pay out
a. portion of his silver change? The
American people should hare shown their
appreciations of the grandeur of these
things.
Dodro Cobn.—We were presented yes
terday by Mr. J. P. Hunt, of Jones coun
ty, with a head of this new ccxoal, which
he claims to be invaluable for forage, and
excellent also as an article of food. Mr.
Hunt has raised it at the rate of one hun
dred bushels per acre and4,000 pounds of
forage. He considers it a great benefac
tion to the planters of the South. A
limited supply of seed may be had at the
drug store of Messrs. Hunt, Rankin k
Lamar.
Da. Dio Lewis now tells "our girls”
that if they want to learn to walk well
they should "walk aa hour s day, with a
weight—nay a bag ofi beans—upon their
heads. A few days agp the Doctor ad
vised ladles to eat beans to improve their
complexion. We begin to suspect that
he belongs to the beam ‘ring/ and is
trying to bull the bean market.
A Boston bees singer leaves lor New
York on the Saturday night express, sings
morning and afternoon, nnd returns to
Boston op the Sunday night express.
He has aU his expenses paid, and receives
two thousand doUare a yeas salary.
people as a step looking at least, to the
ultimate surrender of the island—a pro
position perfectly infuriating and mad
dening to the Spanish people. In a word,
the proposal of the United States remits
the Spanish Republican government to a
prompt refusal', or to tho alternative of
being driven at Once from power in dis
grace. That they will refuse it promptly
and unequivocally may be counted on as
certain.
Then if there be no middle ground of
compromise acceptable to the United
States, and if the President adheres to
his purpose of bringing these insulters
and murderers to a reckoning and pun
ishment, the use of national force for this
purpose in the harbors and on the soil of
Cuba becomes necessarily an act of war
with Spain, and commits the government
to a struggle—not particularly perilons,
it is true, but still protracted, vexatious
and expensive. Spain has on old trick of
refusing to come to terms, and of keep
ing a controversy almost interminably in
a dead and live condition which is har-
rassing and costly to any power at war
with her.
We trust in the ehapter of accidents
something may turn np to prevent a war
with Spain in this case, and the begin
ning of an endless series of West Indian
annexations or protectorates—with more
incongruous, hybrid and impracticable
populations to take care of. There is
more Africanism than can be safely
carried in the United States already, and
it is going to be an increasingly distract
ing, debasing, troublesome and danger
ous element in our citizenship, without
adding the millions of negroes in the
West Indies.
issued in the county.
The Savannah News, referring to Dr.
Tucker’s lecture in Atlanta last Thurs
day, on “Beauty a Daty,” eays if beauty
it a duty "we are acquainted with some
people who are too undutiful to be
healthy.” Harris evidently speaks from
personal experience. tau Wi «* w»
Thibtt-two shares of Augusta factory
stock sold in that city on Friday at $162
to $170 per share. AeCe^el toe Hiieta|
Iv any gentleman in this sqetion baa an
old, well-trained *ointer, he can trade
him for a cow e . . :f by applying at the
office of the Covington Enterprise. If
tee had the pointer, that cow and calf
should be ours before night.
The Covington Enterprise reports the
burning last Tuesday night of Taylor and
Branham’s store at Oxford. A portion of
the stock, the money and books were
saved. Loss $800, on which there was
no insurance.
The same paper regrets to learn that
Mr. J. R. Hightower was shot through
the thigh, on the 12th instant, while.en-
deavoring to arrest the negro Aleck Allen,
who killed Mr. George, near Stockbridge,
last week.
Several Covington merchants speak
of closing out their business, and moving
themselves and families to a more pros
perous locality.
The Houston Home Journal cautions
the planters of that county against a man
in that city.
The Columbus Sun, in an article on
“How Cotton is Behind,” notes the fact
that of- the interior towns in point of re
ceipts Augusta is 12,928 behind last year;
Eufaula, 1,849; Columbus, 4,036; Mont
gomery, 18,627; Selma, 3,386; Nashville,
3,992; Memphis, 18,560. Macon is 88
r “* y,aci .7^* • 2
* What We Need.—The Hon. A. R.
Wright, of Rome, has written a capital
letter to the Atlanta Constitution on the
subject of a State convention to remodel
the present, constitution. From it we
extract and print, with our hearty en
dorsement, the following:
The present Constitution is the work
mainly of vagabonds and scallawags. Ita
purpose, the prolongation of power to
plunder. Government was regarded by
them as a machine with which to rob
capital and oppress labor. We need the
Constitution of our fathers, with a few
restrictions. 1. A prohibition of the
State to go further in debt except in case
of war. 2. A prohibition of her credit to
any corporation or individual for any
purpose whatever. No law can be
framed that will tie the hands of the
wicked. The fires of hell cannot bind
them to truth and honor. Dot the Gov
ernment protect us in person and prop
erty, and leave each man to "work out his
• own salvation with’fear and trembling.”
We’ll bluff the rogues and vagabonds.
3. City corporations must be confined to
the police o ’ their cities. Earnest men
must l*s p rmitted to'control their capi
tal and : tor. Popular vote3 to build
I railroad.- wat.-rworks, factories, colleges
calling himself A. Taylor, and liailmi? • f or re lig ; o‘ -ccts edid omrte genus, one-
la/VM AatlBat a Srm X E*— __ — ^ _ We. n \ • 1 • . 1 ' • A S *
A Missouri girl, on her wedding day,
•old her piano and bought a sewing ma
chine and material enough for a suit for
her husband and herself, and at once set
to work making them wp. Her husband
t, Mn-v-s :*■. Tn twe weeks her four sisters
ward all married.
New Constitution for Georgia.
Judge A. R. Wright, of Floyd, in a
paragraph to be found in “ the Georgia
Press” present some very cogent rea
sons in favor of the formation of a new
State Constitution for Georgia as soon as'
practicable. The movement looking to
this end should be cautiously initiated,
so as to avoid failure, which would result
in Very mischievous delay, but we ought
to make it just as soon as we can with
safety.
As matters stand the solvency of the
State—our escape from bankruptcy os-
ruinous taxation rests alone on the chap
ter of accidents and contingencies. ’ So
long as the people can maintain a Legis
lature representingand responsible to the
tax-payers, we can probably keep afloat;
but if we foil even one time, and a ma-
nority of negroes and their white fugle
men get possession, fatal mischief may
well be done. Ten or fifteen millions
may be added to the public debt, and
probably would be, in the creation of new
and recognition of old fraudulent bonds.
To prevent this and give tho people re
pose and security the power of the Leg
islature to plunge the people in debt
ought to be carefully restricted by the
fundamental law.
And it is quite as important, too, to
restrain county and municipal govern
ments to fee strictly legitimate business
of those local governments. Indeed, tlie
power to issue bonds for any purpose ex
cept in the adjustment and liquidation
of accrued debts, onght to be denied.
Why ? Because we are in no condition to
use that power wisely. Almost every
county in the State, on a bond question,
is substantially in the bands of voters
who pay no property tax and have little
permanent interest in the soil. A bond-
issuing administration furnishes labor,
wastage and stealage, which non-tax-pay
ing voters have no pecuniary interest in
preventing; but, on the contrary, are
frequently induced to believe that they
have a personal interest in promoting.
This large class, led by active fugle-)
men from white politicians on the make,
will scarcely fail to procure a ballot-box
response of “yea” to every proposition to
increase a county or a city debt, and
therefore the constitution should permit
neither county nor city to go’in debt. It
should demand of them to square their
annual expenses by their annual income,
and meet emergencies by special tax, in
stead of by selling bonds at a heavy dis
count in order to mortgage the property
of the people to the amount of ten. dol
lars principal and interest for every one
of cash borrowed.
If the people of the towns and cities
fail to protect feemeelvee by wise funda
mental law, they may be ground to dust
by taxation and finally sold out by the
sheriff. Every piece of property, public
or private, in a mu&eipal corporation, is
as strictly liable for thess public debts
as for any private debts, and hence the
people can no longer repose in safety with
their homesteads subject to indefinite
mortgage by voters who hold no property
liable to execution. .
These are vital considerations, demand
ing recognition in a new code of funda
mental law, but there is not one men
tioned by Judge Wright which is not of
great force in the aunt direction.
A postal card was received at Port
land, Me., recently, haying a dollar bill
sewed on one side-of it. and directly above
the bill was written: "If this is stolen,
it will be after it learn the Klttery poet
office.”
"Wkt,” asked a governess of her little
chsjge, "do we pray God to give u* our
daily breed? Why don't we aek for four
days, or fare days, or a week*” “We
want it fnsh,” replied the ingenious
child.
from Griffin, who is traveling around in
that section sharpening gins ostensibly,
bnt “in reality faying to humbng the ne
groes into going West.
Mb. Samuel Lindsay, an old citizen of
Lee county, died very suddenly last
Thursday night, says the Americas Re
publican. He had served the people of
that county as Clerk of the Superior
Court, Sheriff and member of the Leg
islature.
The last Brunswick Appeal tells this
story:
A Fresh Water Baptism.—Not more
than a hundred miles from here is a large
canal in which the sacrament of baptism
has been administered from time imme
morial. JuBt after the close of the late
war a colored woman having received
baptism at this place, and walking up
out of the water stood on the margin.
Looking down the canal she raised both
hands and exclaimed, “Free from sin and
free from slabeiy, bresa God and GKnral
Grant; I tink I see Mass Jesus walk pun
top de water.” An old colored friend
standing near her looked over her shoulder
in the same direction and said in a stein
manner: "Ki, Tills, dot eootah."
Henry county makes a splendid show
ing. She is out of debt and has $4,700 in
her treasury. 1 • _sat . ■ ;.
The Chronicle and Sentinel of Sunday
announces the death, on Friday, of Mr.
Daniel Kirkpatrick, a well known citizen
of Augusta, from paralysis, in the forty-
ninth year of his age. He lived only six
hours. During the Mexican war he was
an officer in the Thirteenth United States
Infantry.
The same paper has the following;
TnE Petrified Skeleton of a Homan
Being Foond-Undbr an Old Stomp in
a Swamp.—On Friday last, while a col
ored man named Adam. Nelson was dig
ging up a large light wood stump in what,
is known as DeLaigle’s swamp, about
three miles from the city, he suddenly
perceived in the hole he had dug what
was apparently a human hand. Although
for the moment almost paralyzed by the
discovery,' he soon stooped down and
picked up the thing. Efis first impres
sion was correct. It was most certainly
ahuman hand,bnt completely petrified and
as hard as adamant. After gazing at the
singular affair fora few minutes, Nelson
came to the conclusion that the body to
which tie hand belonged must be
buried under the resinous roots of the
huge stump. Hu' therefore set to work,
and in a short time had the last portion
of what was once a mighty monarch of
the forest on the surface of the ground.
What an object then met his eager gaze 1
In the bottom of the hole was lying, in n-
somewhat cramped position, the entire
Body of a man with the exception of the
hand previously found. The whole figure
was petrified like the haad, and had the
appearance of a stone image. The skull
was cleft in twain alinest to the neck,
and near by was lving a heavy stone
hatchet which had evidently been used to
do the deadly work. The negro carefully
rri-'.-l the figure from the hole, and car
ried it. together with the hand and hatcimt
to his cabin near the Savannah road. He
says he intends to sell them to some
museum if the authorities hare no objec
tion. ~kruut~yt . r i y
Two negro children, aged three and
two years, respectively, were burned to-
death on the Sand Hills, near Augusta,
Saturday morning. It-is the same old
story. They were left alone in the house
by their mother, and, together with the
house, were entirely consumed. t-
General Toombs on the Financial
Polict OF THE Govkrnment.—A Wash
ington correspondent of the Augusta
Constitutionalist furnishes that paper
with a synopsis of General Toombs’ late
speech during Wilkes court, from which
we extract the following well-aimed
broadside:
The speaker remarked of the financial
policy of the Federal Government that it
was rotten, and full of evil, and evil eniff
that the Government had usurped all the
banking privileges of the country, in tlie
previous enjoyment of which the people
of the United States had grown to be
prosperous, happy and great. Under the
present system of banking privileges and
prohibitions, .corrupt Federal officials
have it in their power to manipulate the
Government currency as often as the
speculative impulses of their base hearts
may prompt them to coespire with the
plundering money-changers of the land,
in creating financial panics for the pur
pose of involving all in one common dis
aster, that they may build up coloaxalfor-
tunes upon the ruins of commerce and
the misfortunes of the people. The cur
rency of the Government could not be
forced beyond a marine league from ths
American shc^p- It had no recognized
value as the basis of auirpulating medium
among nations Of ths earth.' It had
upooitejjaee the stamp of coercion, at-i.
Coring wtieiwwr seen the declarations of
its inherent Weakness. Its purchasing
power is derived fromar^trary law with
out which it would not be worth the pa
per now carrying itaAfise assertions of
value to every lidhuot and fireside
throug-ont this broad land. The plan
ters of the South are forced to Why their
supplies at the foflate<rprioes induced by
specious currency, and compelled te sell
their cotton at the rates of European
markets, where the onerons protective
tariff of the Federal Government has well
nigh placed a perpetual inhibition upon
all commercial intercourse with the peo
ple of these various countries. A just,
and sufficient tariff for fee purpose of
revenue only, a repsll of the present na
tional bank laws, a re-enactment of the
ante bciftm basking privileges by the
LegisHmire* of the diffqut States—hrith
specie os ths basis of
«ae regarded hgr the
safe exit from the finam
threaten to engulf the
one cemm’on ruin.
hair of which is composed of Africans
* just out of slavery,” and one-third of'
tlie rernvn ’.T of scheming Democratic
andR-. T /k’.’.Vuticians .will breakdown
ultimo vv -u> i not very remotely, any
people "»on ;:irtb. 4. City and quasi
county utuyurutions should be' mode to
pay as they spend. 5. The judiciary
should be thoroughly remodeled and put
beyond the tinkering of di'am-drinking
lawyers and lager beer politicians. 6.
Hie pay of members of the Legislature
should bo constitutionally defined.
The Rome Cpmmercial of Saturday
says for several days work in the- mill's 1
of the Rome Iron Works has been sus
pended, but teat the company on Friday
made arrangements to pay their hands-
and procure a full supply of cool, and
that work on full time was to have been'
resumed yesterday. Up to the giving,
out of the coal supply the mill hod been
running night and. day and employing
two hundred hands.
Public Hcimul* vs. Poor Schools.
Editort Telegraph and Messenger: The
friends of public education are indebted
to you in no small degree for the prog
ress their cause has made. Not only
have you from time to time presented
many excellent arguments in advocacy of
the justice and policy of a system of pop
ular education, but your columns’have
been open at all times to communica
tions and discussions intended to shed
light upon the subject.
It would seem that after all that has
been said and written there surely c-au
he few intelligent persons who are still
groping in darkness as to the true nature
and purpose of the public school system,
and yet, as I have good re rson to know,
many erroneous views are still enter
tained by men in our very midst. Please
allow me space in your popular and
widely-read paper to call attention,-to
what i conceive to be the most common
error now prevailing in reference to tho
public school system, viz: the confound
ing the present “ Public School Law ”
with what hasJjeen known in Georgia for
three-quarters of a century as the
Poor School Law.” The prima
ry and sole object of that law
was to provide educational facilities for
the children of the indigent. The mo
tives which prompted its p.i.'-uge were
good-.but' in its operation it was a fail
ure. As it satisfied tho consciences' of
our generally well-to do people, however,
and shielded them from the charge of
being illiberal and wanting in charity
towards the poor, no great concern was
felt about its efficacy in affording the re
lief whicn it professed to extend. Why
tho law was a failure I need not stop to
argue- It was due pet-hips much less to
careful handling of the funds (for our
fathers were honest if they were not wise)
than to the fact that it was an effort to
extend charity to- men who, though poor,
were yet possessed of a good degree of com-
mendahlepride and sel£-respect. Ignorance
was preferred to an education obtained
at the sacrifice of all that contributes to
honorable manhood, and so far as the
worthy poor were concerned the law was,
as it deserved to be, a miserable failure.
It was finally repealed, and to-day we hare
no school law, the primary or sole object of
which is to provide educational fticilities for
the children of the indigent. Ignorance of
this fact is the cause of much misappre
hension, and the source of many wrong
conclusions. Nor is this ignorance con
fined to tho people. The writer heard a
discussion by our representatives and sen
ators at Atlanta a little more than a year
sgOy which forced him to the conclusion
that three-fourths of those who partici
pated in the debate did not actually un
derstand the law they were discussing.
Wealth and general prosperity suggest
ed the “Poor School lew.’ ’ The “Public
School Law” was suggested by the gen
eral poverty of the peoplo. Then it was
said, out of the general abundance let us
make special provision for the indigentj
Now it is said, out of the general poverty
let us make provision for ourstit-es. Un-;
der the former law none but the indigent)
were expected to reap direct benefit.
Under the present law all are expected to.
share in the benefits afforded. It throws
ide the doors of the aohooi-room and ex-.
nds an invitation to all to oome. In.
• eloquent language of- another, “lb
opens no free schools, but schools.that
cost; schools for which every parentia
obliged to contribute. They are not in
tellectual poor-houses, to which indigent
children shall come, tremV>li»g- under the
inevitable humiliation of poverty con
fessed and exposed, to receive a dole of
the cheapest and coarsest rations that can
sustain mental life. It spreads- a feast
to which all the young may come joy
fully, not as Quests, but as children,
rightful partakers of their fathers’
bounty.”
Let us hear no more of estimates as to
the number of poor chiMken. in our
schools, nor of the wealthy monopolizing
the privileges and appropriating the
funds, but rather let us unite hands and
hearts for ths success of an enterprise
that brings incalculable good to our
whole people, promotes general prosper
ity and conduces to tho material growth
of our city. Z.
aper curremcjv.
or as the oirar
which
country in
Wise Worm.—The Courier-Journal
rs^gring to tho ease of the Yirginius'and
ftlia complications that hare grown out of
the stooting by the Spanish officials of
her crew aad passengers, wisely says of
the newspaper howl that has gone up aU
over tho country:
The olamor of the press has been very
injudicious and absurd. The most un
reasonable opinions have been given and
the most senseless suggestions made.
The best tl)at the President can do is to
gather all the fjmts and be ready to lay
them before Congress in a cun- ana
comprehensive form, stripped of aU fever-
ish exaggeration and sxtoavaganse, and
the Aamtan people may as well make
up their minds to wait.until that is done,
and ovage to cry out for imme iiaw and
•nsrgefta fcterfereace.”
Trial of Louis b. Pike for the Murder
mf Curl F. Baer.
Jury Obtained and tbe Testimony
Begun.
The case of L. B. Pike, charged with
the murder of Carl F. Baer, came up be
fore the Superior Court yesterday. The
State was represented by Solicitor-Gen
eral C. H. Harris; Colonel W. A. Lofton
and Messrs. Blount k Hardeman. The
defence was conducted by Colonels John
B. Weems and Sam. HalL
The morning session of the court was
wholly oocupied in making up a jury.
Comparatively little difficulty was ex
perienced, however, in obtaining a juiy,
as the panel was full when the hour ar
rived for taking a recess for dinner. The
following named persons constitute the
jury; W. F. Horne, Jacob Reid, W. H.
Parker, Jere Foss, Geo. P. Bond, T. J.
Lane, J. W. Skipper, F. B. Beville, Chas.
Craft (colored), C. D. Findlay, Elihu
Price and James Meara.
At three o’clock the court met and the
testimony was begun by the State. Tho
following is substantially the testimony
as taken yesterday afternoon s
Jacob Bussell, sworn—I was present
when Baer was killed. Mr. Pike killed
him. (Identifies prisoner.) The killing
occurred on tho 19th of August, at En-
gleke’s saloon, below the Lanier House.
I was in' Engluke’s saloon, standing
at the’ counter with three other' men,
besides Baer. Baer was with us. Tlie
men were the two Ehglekes, Hartwick
and Baer. Pike came in with another
gentleman, and called for some beer.
They didn’t drink the beer. Mr. Pike-
called Mr. Baer aside. They talked
together a few minutes as near as I can
remember, and then I heard the report of
a pistol. I looked around and savr’Mr.
Pike with a pistol pointing toward Mr.
Baer and Mr. Baer falling down. [D. C.
Garrett was brought in, but witness was
not able to identify him asth^man who i
with Pike.j Then I leftthoroom nnd di. o
see anything else. About 10 or 15 min
utes I went in and saw Baer lying dead.
I saw the wound. Dr. Fitzgerald was in
there examining the wound. The wound
was on the left breast. Looked like quite
» small wound. Suppose it was done by
» small ball. I believe it was about
noon, or' between 11 an-1 17 o’clock, as
near as I remember. I saw no weapon
to Baer’s hand. I don’t know what L.
stands forto Pike's name. I was stand
ing about 5 or 6 steps from the parties
when the killing took place. Pike just
laid his hand [on Baer's coat and. asked
hilni ftvatep aside. The pistol was found
a few minutes after-two or three min
utes; as near a-s I can remember. I looked
around as quick as I heard the pistol fire,
and them went instantly out of the build
ing:
Cross-examined—I think I have given
the names ot all the persons in the saloon
at the time. I- was talking with Engelko,
Baer and Hardwick. We were standing
near the front door and against the coun
ter. Pike - had not been in the saloon
long when-he -called B-ier aside. U hilo
Engelko -was drawing the beer he called
him aside. I* don’t remember whether
Pike or Baer spoko first. I think Pike
told Baer he wanted to see him, when he
took him by the coat. I don’t remember
wbat Pike said to-Bheir. I think to said
“I want to-see you.” Be took him by
the coat in a gentle-manner. They went
to the opposite corner of the room from
us. After Bier and Pike stepped aside,
I and the others • continued the conversa
tion. W. G/ Engelke and Hardwick were
with me. A. Eugelke was dm wing the
beer. Pike and Baer- ttilked together a
minute or two.
The State here anno"jiced closed, and
the defense was opened-by Col- Haliwith
a brief address to the juny, and then, be
gan the examination iof witnesses;
Charles Carhart, sworn—I saw Mrs.
Pike on Sunday night-airffiio carshec^ two-
days before the shooting. (Points out
Mrs. Pike.) She walked over te> tho
Brown House and inquired of the watch
man where she could find her husband,
Mr. Pike. It was about 5. minutes- after
11, directly after the Savannah train,
came in. The watchman told her- Mr.
Pike didn’t stop there. X told hex-1 wai
going by the hotel where her husband
stopped and I would show her the way
there. She thanked me-vory kindly if I
would do so. I wcntwitii herto Btown-’s
hotel, on Mulberry street, opposite
the Lanier House. 1 told her I
would go up stairs and’ see if Me. Pike
was in. Mr.. Baer get in tlie door
as I started up the steps. Hie wanted to
know who. I was looking for. I remarked
I was looking - fpr ZSr. Pike. His wife
wanted to see him. His remarks were
that Me. Pike was not there aari -was- not
boarding there—that be hadnib been to
town in six weeks. L remarked to him
that I had seen himion a Thursday, with
Mr. Besore, not to dispute his w-ord. Be-
turned to ■ Mrs.. Pike then, and told her
that he would take her to where she
could find her.-husband. She thanked
him kiudly, if he would do- so. As
he turned off he>said, “I will excuse
you darkys.” E stood there then about
five minutes talking to Ctsd : George- I
walked on. behind Mr. Baer and Mrs.
Pike, ’and got, to the Sputtswood
Hotel- He left her standing on
the sidewalk, in front of the iiotel
while ho went in.. He came otet and
went in.-tho direction of the Brown
House. I folibwed alosg behind them.
They-turned- the corner' of tho Brown
House, and: went on down to. Nelson’s
corner, Th«ne I lost sight of than. Nel
son’s house is right aexoss from Artope’s
marble-yard,, on tlie corner of Third and
Plnm streets. I returned then, in front
of the- Brown, House,, meeting Officer
Grace, E asked hiii* if he had seen any
thing -oX a< lady and gentleman. He said
no,, he hadn’t. Grace and myself were
iin.fronlt of tae Brown House, sitting on
[the- railing. Across tho street were
Mr,.Baer and Mrs. Pike, near the car-,
'shed, talking. They came across-
Ito-Barowa's Hotel. Baer leaving her on th&
sidawalk while- he went into the hotpl;
-His went ill, stayed a few minutes and
cam-- out again on the sidewalk. Sold
seme thing ta her, but I couldn’t under
stand wbat it was. He ’went - back - tiito
the Hotel again. He came out an&Mr.
Win. F. Brown came out on the front
stoop, and went beck into tee Hot ah, Mr.
Baer then remarked to Mrs. Pike if she
wanted to go any further. Sh^said no,
not with him. His answer was„ “^ell, I
have done for you all I can, andyou don’t
put up with my offer—my wishes.. I’ll
have to leave you here on the- sidewalk.
He loft hev then and went on. down tlvo
street. Officer Grace and myself offered
our services to take hey cwt to Mrs. Phil-
Ups’ boarding house. Wo went there aad
couldn’t wake anyone up. We came up
the street tfnd she asked if I knew where
Mr. Casey lived. I toil her I did. Offi
cer Grace nnd myself coins on - as
far as Mr. Vannucki’s with her, on
Third street. Mr. Grace loft and
told me if she couldn’t get into
fCaoey’s she’d better come to tho harraoka
jtssd stay till morning- I goes around to
Mr. Casey’s house with Mm. Pike, knocked
at the door, nod Mrs. Casey came to tha
.window and wanted to know who it was.
J toldher.it was Mr. Pike’s wife, from
Now*Tork, who wanted to stay there till
morning. She said she couldn't give any
answer without Mr. Casey was at home.
I told Mrs. Pike I would go up to the
City Hall, or go anywhere till she did get
a place to stop at. I then thought of
Mr. Walton’s. We went to Mr. Walton’s
and woke him up. . He came to the door.
I told him there was a lady who would
like to stop there till morning. She
went in and he took her name. Then I
left.
Croet-eeemined—It was about 1 or 3
o’elosk when I left Walton’s. I hadn’t
beau drinking any that night. I don't
know how long Mr. Baer and Mrs. Pike
were standing in front of the Brown
House; I suppose 5 or 6 minutes. I sup
pose Gvm« aad I had not been on .the
railing over 5 minut^. I stoppedjrith j fel
Mrs. Pike at Brown 8 Hotel not over 5 c j ty 0 f Macon, on tha first Tuesday in Deeenhsr
minute*, at Yaunueki’s about 3 minutes, next, within the legal hours of sate, the following
and at Casey’s long enough for Mrs. I , ltl . ■ :Lu jl
Casey to get|up and come to the window. ]
Grace and l went to tne Brown House at { James W. Knott and family, being 20 acres of k>
the same time. We were at Phillips’ J No 42, and moft fully described In the deed o
about 4 or 6 minutes Grace joined me j
between the Brown House, and Nelson s , of November, 1S59, and recorded in book I, folio
corner Grace was on duty. We went 598. in the Clerk's office, Bibb Superior Court,
to the Brown House together and sat
down on the railing soon after we got. issued from Bibb Superior Court, in favor of the
there. When Baer went into the hotel : Macon Buildine and J-ioan Association vz James
t M«. Pike standing alone onrthe ^noit, tnajfefrr
ilk 5 or 6 feet from us. Mrs. Pike . land situated in said county of Bibb and State 5
hod no bagffajre with her. Clod George • Georgia, near tbe city of Macon, on the west *id©
Eves in Griffin. When Mr. Baer and | SST&JSfSSSJ^Si
was starlight, and gas light. He left her «iM> Superior Cmirt in favor of the Mmmi BuU-
. i. _ k c dine and Loan Association vs James W 1
standing on the sidewalk about 5 or 6
minutes while he went into the hotel.
She didn’t talk to anybody while there.
I have talked to nobody about this thing
since it happened except Mr. Besore. I
refused to talk to the counsel for the
State about this case. I came to the
Court-house once and talked with CoL
ding and Loan Association vs James W Knott,
trustee for his children. Property pointed oat in
said mortgage fl fa.
Also, at tho same time and place, lot Mote In
block No 70, in the city of Macon, confauAtaff the
residence of Job H Cheny, with all the imiMns-
ments thereon, situated on Cherry street, n> sold
city. Levied on a? the property of Job H Cherry
tn satisfy a fl fa issuing from JBob Superior CHWrt
in f-vor of L L Harden vs Job H Cherry, and W»
A trherr.-, security. Property pointed oat by-
Weems about the case. I talked with i pHiirtfC s attorney!
J^^BBWte«®BSSSSS
mew about the cose when I was sworn, i iqb . ] 0 t 3 in block-1, lot 2 in block £ r >*tai and 4
Mr. Pike was boarding at the Gillespie iu bluc^ 3,-lot 1 in block 5, lot 4 in block 7/ and
House before Mrs. Pike came to Macon. ] ot 4 i’». Wo< * containing 1 acre,move or
map of survey of the lands of- the late T Wml4
folk, deceased, lying cast of tho Ocumlgoe rivwr,
near East Macon, hr mid county and State. Lev
ied on as tile property of Riduird F Woolfolk, to
satisfy a II fa issuing from Bibb Superior. Court,■
inn-in fmnt of f-bo Ttmnm Ifnnw 'Rn,v»J hi favor of I O Plant & Son vs B. F Woolfolk.
mg in front of the tfrown aouse, Bae^p p rope rty pointed out by pfaintilfs attorney.
wa3 doing- nothmg. ocMtds GEO. F.CHEB11Y. Sheri!
there about a minute and then walked
right back, me -ting with Grace on the
way.
Re-direct—When Mrs. Pike- was stand-
having gone in, she
She looked to me to be dissatisfied and
restless.
Sam. D. Rainey, sworn—I know Mrs,
Pike. (Identifies her). I saw her- first,
I think/on the night of the 17th of Au
gust—Sunday night—with Mr. Bae A be
tween 10 and 11 o’clock, or later. Fswr
them pass the Spotswood Hotel. Iff wmb
Gharies. F. Baer. I was sitting justfia*
front of the hotel with Mr. Tom Harris*
and Mr. Ben Grimes. Previous to thaff
time I spoke to Mr. Baer in the bar of
tiie Spotswood Hotel. This was the sec
ond time he had been there with Mrs.
Pike: The first time he asked if I knew
where Mr. Pike was. This was about
half an hour before they passed there the
second time. The second time they just
walked 1 by and didn't stop at alL
Cross-examined—I am Hving with Mr.
Besore. Am employed by him.
Pike is accompanied in the court-room
by his wife, mother and little daughter.
He is looking to-bo in his usual health.
Eufaulti Correspondence.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger: One
of tho most violent! aad destructive storms
of wind, rain and bail that has visited
this section in many years, occurred last
night, 16th, between tbe boors of nine
and eleven o’clock; About half past sine,
a heavy cloud with* vivid flashes of light
ning came up from the northwest, and
when it got directly- over this city, it dis- ■
charged a tremendous- quantity of rain
and hail, and occasional thunderbolts that
jarred the very earth. The window glass
in tho city suffered extensively from the
liail, and the streets.were washed badly
all over town. In about one hour after
this storm opened, and jnst before it
ceased, another and a more fearful one
came thundering along in its pathway.
It was this last storm , that did the great
est damage. It blew almost a hurricane
for the space of five or ten minutes* and
before its fury nearly every bouse-in the
city suffered more or less. The txa roof
ing on the whole southern side of the
Chattahoochee warehouse was Mown off
and hurled acrcxrtho- street into the
yard of a neighboring residence.
The Planter’s Warehouse of 1L. F.
Johnston k Co. was also-unroofed «n the!
northwest corner, and nearly all of the
south side. Out-houras,. fencingj. chim
neys, sign-hoards, etc., were blown; down
in all directions, and iho city this morn-’
ing looks ragged enough, I can- tell you.
I write hurriedly to inform you of the
storm, bnt not to give ultnil^.as the mail
wiB close in a few mimitbs, and I will not
have time. Ifc-Di S-
Eufaula, Ala., November 17,1873;
THE CKBEAT fiEUEDY
HOiTE PUEP0SSS,
.,-TAKBN INTBBNALLT-r.,,
diluted m water, it s I
and rewnettomiH I
IF 8TODESTLT SEIZED [
, $ 00n iSL ,n * S?*** 01 water, <tiW
utas, remove all BnauirMu. ^ » fev»J
PERSONS SUBJECT uT»nw_
in fkret minute.,
Radway’sleadyReii B1
I*. «r»nn Power
an* Cure of *«stlI W a« sm"' 5 '
Centagfoo*
B ibb county shebjff sales—wm be
sold before- the Court-hou»e door ill tho city
of Macon, on the lirst Tuesday in December'next,
the following property, to-wit:
Also, at the same tune and ptice, all that timet
or parcel of lands, situate, lying and being in the
city of Macon, in. said county and- State, being ac
cording to the plan of said city as parts oi lots No
7 and », in square 94, commencing-a* tbe comer of
Oak and Now streets; running aloug New street
140 feet, then at right angles 210-feet to an alley,'
then 140 feet to Oak street, then to tbe starting
point, including an encroachment-on New and
Oak streets. Levied on an the property «f Thomis
B-Artope, trustee, etc, to satisfy a mortgage U fa
issued from Bibb Superior Court, in fav*» of the
Mochanics* Building and Loan Association vs
Thomas B Artopc, trustee, etc. - Property pointed
out in said mortgage U fa.
Also, at the same time and place, aU that tract
•r parcel of land, situate, lying and beingnaar tbe
city ot Macon, in said oouuty and State, -ist. Vino-
vilk, -ou the right hand side, and fronting tho mad
leading from Mulberry street, in said city, to.For
syth, opposite the old Mucarthy residence phrne,
and adjoining the lot occupied by Thomas Harde
man, Said, lot containing 1 acre, more or less,and
adjoining: the old Pickett place on the east,-and
the Causey lands on the north. Levied on as tbs
property-oi John H Allen, trustee of Mrs Julio, A
Flint, to satisfy a mortgage fi fa issued from Bibb
Superior Court in favor .of the Mechanics’ Build
ing and Loan Association vs John H Allen, two-
tee of Mrs- Julia A Flint. Property pointed oat
in said mortgage ti fa.
Also, at same time, will lx: sold, at the brick,
yard of William G Huge, 30,000 bricks. Levied on-
as the property of Wm G Hoge to satisfy a li fa-
issued from Bibb Superior Court, in favor of Free
man A lioberte v» Albert B Itoss, ^dminisvmtor o
Hie estate of - Jehu Hollingsworth and William G
Hoge. Property pointed out by pltintiS’s at
torneys.
Also, at the same time and place, one undivided
half of that tract of land, in said county and State
known as lute 100.112,113,118 and 119; the south
half of lot 125; nil that part of lot 120. south'of
Swift creek; alb those parts of 114 and 117 lying
south of Swift creek,iuid contains narrow strips of
tbe list two named lets, north ot Swift creek. All
in the 8th district at originally Baldwin, now Bibb
county, containing MHttJ acre*, more or less. Lev
ied on as the property ot Andrew J Lane to satisfy
two li fas from B ibb Swperior Court, one in favor of
Walter Tate vs A-J Lane & Co, and one infavoraf
J F Tate, etc, vs A J.- Lane JL Co. Property pointed
ont by plaintiff’s attorneys.
GEORGE F. CHERRY,
novttds Bherifl.
TJAILIFF'S SALE.—Will be sold, before the
11 Court-house doormen the first Tuesday in De
cember, b-awe-'n 'haUerd.hours of tale, the follow-
,n &ne hnnurrd tor*, oa land, mare or less, with
improvements, lying vry miaul district, of Bibb
county,.. ne j now resin. ■ J Ik Knscht. Levied on
(O untidy :t .,r-.C W G Fitzpatrick vs J T
Knivht. .. :
One house and lotion, the Houston road, con
taining one acre, more or.- less. Levied on as the
property of John Doyle to satisfy • Ufa in favor of
Stephen Collins vs Johu Doyle.
Tiro hundred acreaoldond , more- or less, lying in
Warrior district. Bibb-county. Levied on as the
property of Riclmrd E Woolfolk t» satisfy a li fa in
Juvor of Daniel Harris-vs Bichard P Woolfolk.
Two hundred acres of.lnnd, more or less, lying in
Warrior district, Bibb county- Levied on os the
property of Ricl.anl E Woolfolk to satisfy a fi fa in
favor of Sophia Sosnewski vs Richard F Woolfolk.
Jk It-SUMMING,
novttds Bailiff Bibb County Court.
BAGOIf, BACON.
hjQ HALE CASKS-aL-EAE, USB: SIDES-
25 whole casks CUEAB. BI3t SIDES,
Tn store nnd to arrive,-on coiu*gninent;.Ntd)SR:-
at lowest market rates by
(29 fit JONES-A BAXTER;
REMOVAL.
JONES- & BAXTER
H AVE this- d*v- romovTwb to their new stole.
corner Cbttcn avenue and Clatwy -txwt.
CEowdre A Anderson’s old!stand) where they will
be pleased to soe.th“’.r oVS friends avd 1 nustomery
and tho. pub'je generally. The street cars A-oin
“Brown Hoxxc” and Passenger Be pot- pres in
ten steps oi our doorotury thirty minutes daring
the day.
ortgo fit JONES A RAWER.
New York and Bnais-wrclr J
PACKED 1 LINE
rpHK attention of the mereartjlfe pwhdr m re-
J. speetfnlly.raUeA to the above-packet Lius be
tween Newlork nud- Bmtisw9ite..Gru.
Tfca^sfcnonor S. ft_Hnll wili be ready te receive
freight: in New. York on or aWt-th» ttth of. Au-
gnst,jwl tiro G. E-.Bnidley about Its 20tk Au
guide. -
AT® hove every facility for- MMtifeg) storing an*
forwarding freigbtt.and all freight! shaped by tide,
lirii.vrili -receiv*-prompt attention.
WABBEN RAY, A** ffew Turk, 1*0 Wall it,
8. O. Ll'mEFIJtUD A.CO-
auicSwtf
Brunswick. Rk
ICjagB-g^gt
teed. Respectable employments* home, tar- or
levelling: ns,capital rwtftirmb Ml hutractwnsand
|a valuably package goodsvent by merit' Ad
dress, wiki, six cent return stamp,
XL YOUNG ta CO
mar2E.Stw UTS Greenwich street- H Y
Agent a Wanted lor Professor Wise's -great Book.
TV ROUGH THE AIR.
A NARItATlYB. of forty .vemn adventure*
the Clauds. Complete history- hslioenK awl
how. to make sad assMt them. Bull-of thriving
laments and hairbreadth em-apts- Proteasty if
Wtratod with full pose engravings. A beads that
wiB sell ire tbe bordsti dte
scription usd tents, or send at once tl-tatar out
fit, to VuiH Prs’s Co-CrecuwAM.Si.LapS.
orWavOgutAws. . / .jriV,: .nrtri
TOXK38HKRIFF S AT.RS.-Win hetoM. befete
SJ Ur» Court-house door-, in the town of Cbnton.
loote county, on tbe fits* Tuetdap tn Bsunnbsr
next, the following property,, fcxwit •
Nias thousand pounta of seed cot ton. more or
tiM. Sold s* the property <H Onw TwS* torcrisfy
a distress warrant in tivor- ot WUttsm Little, m
agent for Elisabeth P TwHs- -foH tBnitaM
mtby Willtam Littfo.; ateowo* bfoek mare,one
htick mule, and OJK-gray rente. Levied on as tbe
property of Orrs. Twain satisfy s fi fa iscnsd from
plaintiff's attorney. ..--TT-TL
jUs* at item to-, time,and ptee*. 260 acres of
tend, ream ep lens .Levied saJks the mntv
of Willi^tC Bntar-sditinte* fSSTi
Messrs. RoRand. Phelps snd oti
pounds ei seed ootton, more or
satisfy » fi to issued from dopes
toy?* st Barths B Ambrose.
Wdham C Butler. Property
ptiintilTs counsel.
ADO.at tbe same time snd itirr.toS sum sf'
SVtoSSSd&IR
deceased, vs William bEm*?, aad R » Worn
security. Said land pointed out by alaftntoff’s
pottnsel. Said lands Mjoins Steuben MCulneo-
per, N 8 Glover and others.
novttdx W J ^HAB.fcfcutyg^.
■vTACOX COUNTY SHERIFF SALE.—'Will be
1VJL gold, on tho first Tuesday ini December next,
before the Court heusedoor,.in the town of Ogle
thorpe, Georgia, during tlie legaubhows of sale, the
following described p»perty,to-wit:
All that t mot of land lying ii> the 8th district of
originally Houston,but now Macon county, con-
sbting of lots No droid 27, and SSastes off the south
part of lot No 5, c-ont:iiniug, in.bll, tM» acres, more
nr toss. Levied mat the l—drty of W C Wins
low, trustee, and Hra E N Winslow, cestui quo
trust underancuinHon. from Houston Superior
Court, in favor oUSterling Neil- vs said W C, Wins
low, trustee, and- Mrs E N Winslow, cestui que
trust, for the purchase money of said lands.
novltds J.C. HUNTER. Sheriff.
M acon county sue riot sales—wm
be sold before tho Coort-boass door in the
town of Oglaihsrpe, , Macon, comity, within the
legal hours of side,.on the- first Tuesday inkDe-
!-«mber next, tis following- property, to-wit:
Unohuudvsdaonsrof lnau, being the west half
«f lot No t>2, ib the seoowd district of originnl’y
Buscogee, n«w>Maoon. caonty- Levied on as the
property »f John Shuugc.fn satisfy a fi fa issued
from tlie County Court ntsairt county in favor of
Thomas Reynolds vs, Morris Grimes nnd John
Shealy.
Also, at ths same time- And place, fi.000 pounds
of seed cotton. - Levied 1 on as the- property of de
fendant!, t* satisfy a tt fa issued from a Justice-
Court of »id county- founded on a merchant's,
lion, in furor of Campbell St Jooe* for tlie use U.
C. vs S. di Tyner. JL a HUNTER,
nov4 td Sheriff.
/SeOBGIA. MACON COUNTY. — Whereas.
IT Cuilin H. Coxapp’.ies for letters Of guardian-,
slvin oMhe person and preperty of James C:
Chtrk-nbiK.rehihlotWm. Jt. Clark, late of said
county, deceased-
Thsail therefow-to cite all persons concerned,,
to bc-and utipcw-at the Court of Ordinary ot said
coutAy.on the first- Monday iu December nextt to
show, muse, it any they have .why said totters
shoaidl not- Ik-granted to- the applicant.
(tiyen-under-my hand and official signature
tEtatbeteMvf i^Nov.isw.
awv4 30d JNft M. GREER. Ordinary.
B ibb coenty sheriff sales.—wni bo
sold, lx-ore the Court-house door, rn the lirst
-Tuesday intaoembec-next, in tho city at Macon,
said county;/within tj>e legal hours of, sale, the
toJlSwinv pmperty. twnt:
All that tract or parcel of land bnowji as lot
(No. 10,o(ftftc rangeeifoor acre lots jalsid off bet
•of the sovtilwwat wrfierof the city of; Macon.ire
{midleouaty of BiMtoanri on the southwest side of
jsaid oily,, if being the- place herelrtote Wguiaed
.-by Lucy A. Carl too. intestate, tes Jonas F. Bess-
'ley. Spiffed on wtheproperty oj Jonas- F. Rats-
litre to. satisfy m a to issued fn«a> Bibb,Superior
iCouckiJi tovoroa Guorge E. Carlton. "dintoSit~i-
tor. v* Jonas V. Beasley. Property pointed, est
by A ttuthertrtrf. plaintiff’s attorney.
fitxise and tot in Viueville. awr the city »f Ma-
ooo.itL said county, lately eqrupied Col A t
Maawell as a residence. Said lot eoateining-
tWee-frartta of an acre, none or teas, kevtod on
a*, the preferty of Charlotte-Y Barker to satisfy
tvu mwrtwsae ti fas issuing from Ijfeh Superior
Court.onw in favor ot (Jetevua Cetost Co. ve
Charlotte Y Barker, thoothcr in favor ot the- Me-
chnniref Building and lk-ou Axxogwfckxu Prop
erty pointed out in wud mortgage fi fa*
nsvtats OKO. F. CHERRY. Steriff
r^SOBGiA DOOLY COUNTY.—To whom it
VJ may concern:; Pleasant H Cnnnuer and
Christian E Crurapcr having- fifed their petition
to proper form to me praying for tetters of admin
istration de borgp non. with the will annexed, on
the tsdate of Bpaty Justice, deceased. Thu is to
cite all legally fotormteri to the exeeatinn of this
apphf-ation.creditors, tegntece. next of kin nnd
any others, totoredbd. to te and appear aJ tor-
next December term at the Court of Ordinary-of,
told counts*, and shew cause, il any they can. wiry A
letter* ot tdntinmtnlScB de bonk non with tto
rill firatotod. wwM not be granted to said *p-
wrtowl
Given <tode»ay hand offkdsHy. ' tor
PtortfiSd - HOEMEA. Ordtosry.
A MKHtraWAVOBB SALTS.-Wm W soW.
A. by virtue Ot an order of the Court
to Orataasy at Jasper county, before the
Oifurt-house door, la ths town of Boa-
tieefio In said county, within the total houraet
rile, on the first Tucgtar in Bocossbor next, lot of
tihi No. fit, to the ts5i district si totmrtrBski-
wto-now Jssprc eounty. onristotog tirtt aerea,
teare nr ties. Sold as ta- property of Theophibis
fipye. teeearcd. for tto benefit ot hu hetreamd
creditors. Terms made known on dnyrt tale.
npr7tds B. T.MOBY. Adminfotmtor.
11 basotd.
the first Tuesday in Dacambto rtert.ieto^iuupLpc!
t/XBCUTOR-H 8AUB.—By virtu.
Hi itoted from the Hlmorabte
Crawford sounty, Kerch term,
before the Court-home door,
the ftiwt Tuesday in ftonstbto- net
tioaal nuts of. lots of ladfi Not ■
W. AU in the'2d district of orflli_
now Crawford county. Sold as tto
W. T. ftorris. lata of aaM obu
ths brnrSt ot ths btirsKderedi
, SLIfiBA t.
mrKdfi*■
fetoootor
.TS 6ALB.-By virtu £ erf an order
. XWtafli'j; oi MMftm countr,
4wrm
_ ox OKlmorpe, to mid ooiintr, qrt the
YritoUy te fhtosfih ft rem, mnerm of land,
more or totevtefivs nBaorra on the woat vide of
lot Nollfosari inirereaB <dk4 No 114in tto «ec-
Mffmftoa-Oh whtek JoSmB^dBreJSSTrato**! st
We ttm* of bto death, and rmd as the property of
tho Writs to told JOho toy. deoeaaad, tor the
anamee or dtimbutioa. cash.
BfA. BAY, Executor.
ty, wiu oe seized, with these diraVT® 3111 -*'
riiSaaE vaff-SSSB
saatifisssssffi-j^l
BASWArS BEAD! BlgJ
WILL AFFORD INSTANIBask
INFLAMMATION OF THB KIDN'kts
INFLAMIMIONOTTHEbS?;^^
SOBB TH»A?D?SrcuwwKS^
PALPITATION OF
HYSTERICS,CROUP. WPTHER,\
HEADACHE, ^OOTHACHK^'
COLD OHILIB*remfcHaLS. HEWUT,il ‘
ford ease and comfort
Twenty drops in da a tumbler of rater
• fewjnotfirifa cmreCnunpa, *
ach, Heartburp, Safi BeLb*cV*0rikrir?dh
..iU prevent siekpto.riptoWaS
FEVER AND AGUE.
Fever and -Vmia canxiTSy S/ty acts. 1V~
*Z* » remwiinl agent irritfte treriii that
Tb»u aad Ague, mid alf jtifer Mslarion-, Bn* -
5??^ other Term M
^.Rjdway's PUls) so qiaek u Ssdmy’a tZ
H: ALThTsEAUTT !
SYta'NG AND PURE 3TCH BLOOD-ii-1
8BEASE OF PIffiSH >3® WEIGHT-
,.. CLEAR SKIN jPWMUlgU
C03IPLENT0N JECCR-
. . . ^ EDTOA31'
DR. RADWATS
Swsaparillian Icsolvuat
Ha* made the most astonishing cures, touud I
so rapid nrolhechangcs tiieb^utKljraiigonl* I
theintbesce of this truly w-vnhrfnl aeJi-iri
that X7XKT PAT AS l.XCREAM IS FLE4K u;l
wxiain m ssev asd vbit.
TITK GREAT BLOOD FTBIFIEE |
Every dropof the SARS.VPA EJLLIAS RESOL |
VENT eermnunirates thmuvii dtebl«i«v-. I
urine and other fluids iiihI juin- el the*!-terI
the viger of life, for it irpurs tbevruta of thcl
body wwh new snd connd raaterixl. EatoJ
SypMBfo, Cosnimption, (UanJuhr Eisetfcs Ui
cers in- She Throat and Mouth, Tansors, Xci.iil
tho Glands and other parts of the spine, Scsl
Eyes. StSrumorous Discharges front tie E.irssdl
the worst form of Skin Dbeases, Erur-tion, ler |
Sorefc.-Sealil Hear], Ring Worm, Not iUr-n;.
siperea. Jk-ne, Black Spots, Womu in thei
Tumors.Canrer-i in the Womb, and all Wesl
nnd Painful Disrlnrces Ni.-ht wests l- I
Spertn„".Tui d) wvtcf' of the life prirrirh.-sl
within rile curalire range of this wonder tf Mol-1
em CRctr-irtry. :R>1 a few dais’ rex will KWi*|
any penson using it for eith r of th.--. '■
discaseitaiiotcnlporvertocuretfctB. a _
If "fie patient, daily ly-.-orainr redneed ht thl
waste and decemr.osition ttat is ssa(nnuBvp»|
grossing. Wntol in arresting t5rte vast'srtl
repairs the sstne with new mst-rml ‘I
heulriiy MoimI—a»i this the SA'.&AFABI!.l.b'l
willJtnd does secure—a cure is icrtxu: try-:J
once this remedy •-ounnen-vs it. cork of ;i
tioru- and sticcccds in duninif'r.irr the Irt ' I
waste--,-ifnrcimirs will he nipid.a.wlevciTdv»
patient will Awthfintelf growing fcctterandftns-
er. tile fwal taresting better, a^jetrte tatr-n-'A
and tiesh end weight in.-rre-i.w. Net 1 n-J
the-SARSAPABULLUN RESJATtSTwmrel
known remtrifcil agents in threnre cf Caw"
Scrofuieirr, Constitutional anu.'SkinW'esg?,
iti* tbe only positive rnre for
Kidney mod Bladder tomplxlnu.
Vrintiry ahV TTonih DL-oascs,. Gravel
dropsy. Suppose u! Water, InsssStirccertBsrt;
Bright’s Diseasr. Albmninur*. and m
where there are brick dic-t duporits. or trie w»hvl
ix thick-gibudy. mixed witfo>ubst»art*
white of an fw. or threads lie white sTtone'I’l
k a morted.dark, bilious snpearaiKe>oa“"
bone dust deposit, and whcaithere a 1 to®"-
fonliiigKlritei when wsrt
in the small of the bt&k andalong the loins. I
Tumor of 12 Years' Growth Oni^l
fey Eadway’a 3esolvent! ^
jthil sifh , L
D*.. Showay: I haw- tad Orarisn Tuwt*l
tlie ivnriesand boweti. *OtasDortoivssijl "■
iruio help for it.” I tried eyciyttine Uu
reewBmentted. but nvrinug helped j
year Rcsolreut, and thought I
hud no faith in IfobaetarirttifijJJgJJJJSI
ycaes. 1 took six bottfcsuf the. c |
Wo£ Ralway’s PiSbjmd two hrttts « . 1
toutiv Rdicf: and ttet- re not a>wn-i “-^,1
te art «felt, and i feel better.
pier tlma 1 have fopSwclv .vrtra. Tte «- J
morwasinthe left ride 1 Irfetb-raP
grata. I-write this to.wiufor tte tenet'
You caw publish KNAPP, j
W DBMS!
Tbe orilj
PRICE SI.Q0 PER BOTTW
Ah l«i|NNrs«tit
'Frem s prominent *enti«*ri
Cincinnati,O^tertte the
to tlie ti-gik piiblishers ituowrhce ■
8Ute ‘ : . ' NzwNoxx,
sente ofofSJto tto^fitotaT3^*2^
trouble in itebteMton" 1 .
tome twetee month* ego SlS.'^wThteri#*' - '
ritilv ntbicong dkrterc. whKh tbc Pg
■aid va a spsiauedie stricture
also infltoumuiiufi
gave it to their oftairc th»t m}
would prevent my ever getting nt gx M
had fitied S number of ]ihyM<'i» w-‘Tjjjpr W
a butte nuentity of meJicme. lkta
home«paitifo;h«t had/ot no relta J—
— tetaig h
atoriiSiriTriire* teiflig
ediea. aad sente fohrTnontfo; nadi
tte l*totoiel|4u» Saturday Ereniri * ^
W«jna> VtiMB fiiWted OTI & 1"^ * J*. K*
DR RAPWAY’S
PERFECT TUBQAffrt -'
beguuting
■ iissRisSSSSr 3
.... iMu&Jnr the turt 1
,f 8 AUL—By virtue «f an
. rider foam tto Court (/TVeHsary of Quit-
esOnto, tog britoM. on tto first '/tKpgfe 1 In
Danreber tout, tp^ra tte Qnot-bnari drcr, to
^ Qmtown ot Geetustown. totwreuShb.-ti
dJtore Jfo.rita tto toUowtae laate tokmsing to
ttaM W5rlatal.fwriA Trii Lot of lend Be. fi*
ritotolf af tot-No. fit. aud 4fik ariri nf tto north
pflotNo.lt. All in tto fob district of rnriri-
tLee, now Qiiilmwi county. Bold for the
m*
UwErinfir.