Federal union. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1865-1872, September 12, 1865, Image 1

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VOLUME XXXVI.] MILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1865. NUMBER 0. BOUGH TON, N T !SBET, BARNES&MOORE Publishers and Proprietors. * . N JO* RODCHTOK, ; II.NI^BET. 1 Eililora. ©jit i^ibtral ®nion Ts published Weekly, in MUledgevdle, Ga., Corner of Hancock arid Wilkinson Sts., (opposite Court House.) At $3 a year in Advance. advertising. Transient.—Oue Dollar per square of ten lines for each insertion. . \ Tributes of respect,Resolutions by Societies,(Obit j uaries exceeding six lines.) Nominations for office. Communications or Editorial notices for individual benefit,charged as transient advertising. Legal Advertising. Sheriff's sales, per levy of ten lines, or less, $2 5(J j “ Mortgage ti fa sales, per square, « r > 00 ! Tax Collector’s Sales, per square, 5 00 Citations for Letters of Administration, 3 00 *• “ “ Guardianship, 15 00 Letters'of application for dism’n.frorn Adni’n 4 .'>0 .« *« *• “ •• Guard’n 15 00; Appl’n for leave to sell land, Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Sales ot laud, &c , per square, • *• perishable property, 10 days, pel sq. Estray Notices. 30 days, Foreclosure of Mortgage, per sq .each time, I 00 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS. Sales of Land, &c., by Administrators, Ex ecutors or Guardians,are required by law to be held on the first Tuesday in the month ; between the hours ut 10 inthe forenoon and three in the afternoon, atthe Court house in thecouuty in which the propel t> is **Noticeof these sales must be given in a public ga- *ette40 .lavs previous to the day of sale Notices tor the sale of personal—-- given in like manner 10 days j : Notices to the debtors and must also be punished 40 days. . „ , Notice that application will be made to tbe Court of Ordinary for leave to sell Land, &c\ must be published for two months. . Citations for lettersof Administration Guardianship, A<- must he published 30 days—for dismission from Administration, monthly six months-for dismission trom Guardianship, 40 days r, oo; 3d0; r> oo t 1 30 j A 00 l,.w.Wai.r Mark. BV THOMAS MOOD, .TH. I’m sick at heart of Hope deferred— For I have hoped and hoped in vain— Until at last, upon niv word, l hardly hope to hojfe again. While that “eternal want of pence." Which somecan keep in modest bounds Becomes, in my experience, A want of shilling and of pound. My tailor, too, is getting rude. I owe that party, by the way. A boundless debt of gratitude For pnttjng up with such delay : However, gratitude is not The only debt 1 have to meet, Or else I’u pay him on the spot. And make him given stamped receipt. I can't endure the growing ills i if pressing letters, dunning knocks, And downy birds whose little bills Are always in one’s letter box. All nature takes a billious hue; I see large pimples on the sun; And Heaven’s serene, expansive bine Appears to me—a dirty dun ! fords Spiritualized. Tbe following curious article is taken from an English newspaper of tbe year 1774, and is there called : THE PERPETIAI, ALMAlK.lf. OR, Malilirr’a Prayer R*«k BV RICHARD LANE. Prirate Soldier, belonging to the forty- second Regiment, who was taken be fore the Mayor of Glasgow for pluming at cards during Di vine Service Race C°irse.—Jonh BiUinis Discourses Concernin' Mrn of — 1 he announcement of the _. . . Biz Genius. I The Trial ef Jefferran Puri*. j FREEDMAN’S BUREAU.—As yet, we have ) CHICAGO ! A Note from Mr. Gillett, his Counsel—A j bad no such Bureau established in our cilv, Entertainment. Letter from Mr Davis * and consequently know nothing of its work- novel contest between the horses Cooly i * ‘ Gen. Wilde has been here, but has j and Princess, and the Indians Deerfoot *A big genius is generally a phool ; he Albany, N. 1., 1 uesdav, Aug. j not opened his office as yet, although we and Stephens, was sufficient to attract fin knows how to do one or two things so much Mr. R. H. Gillett one of tbe counsel of understand that he will do so at an early ‘ immense crowd to witness the sport at the that lie nin’t lit for ennything else ; he iz ‘ Jefferson Davis, in a note- to the Albany day. We a;e anxious to see what an ef-1 Driving Park yesterday afternoon. The lik a greyhound, good for running fast, ) Argus, seys : i feet such an institution will have upon the j day was favorable, though the wind was a that’s all. Yu kant lam him any more S ‘Mr. Davis lias no more information black race in our midst. We are inclined | trifle cool; and the fair sex were ont in ! than you can an eagle ; lio knows how to fli up and look at tlie sun without winking >avi ' ‘ '' " ’ information black race in our midst. We are inclined concerning his tiial than others have.” to give it a fair trial, notwithstanding our force. Altogether the attendance could In a leUer from Mr. Davis, dated the doubts as to its ultimate success. We have not have fallen far short of two thousand because lie was born so, and when he gets I loth inst. to Mr. Gillet, he says : ' two decisions in reference to its workings, persons. * .1 up on the peak of the mountain and gits “I am still ignorant of the charges by two individuals differing widely in so- The race which had been arranged was well lit, you can’t git tew him, nor he j against me, the scource of them, and the c:al position. One is an old African, who one of a new description, and was therefore wan’t cum tew you, but there* ho sits till tribunal before which I am to answer.— was called upon to sign a contract between witnessed with no small degree of interest, the dinner boll rings. After dinner he Your letter gave me the first notice of the ! his former master and himself, lie de- The horses were to go two miles, while Size oph agin, and yon wou't see him till I Washington indictment.” | dined to put his name to any paper, as the Indians were making one mile and ten supper time. They are like mummys, j M r , Davis requests Mr. Gillet to have ; “him and old massa could fix that.” He rods each ; that is, one horse would trot vary curia critters, and keep a long time a conference with Mr. Charles O’Connor, i was insisted upon, and informed that it ■ two miles, and then the other animal was without spileing. If tha only had common his only other counsel, so that they may "’as necessary. He yielded at last, but to take it up and trot another two miles, sense, so that you koubl make fcaylcr§ or i be prepared for the. trial whenever ft may under protest, and avowing that it was ' The Indians were to make a correspond- simmakers.ov them, thare woold be some he brought on, with as little delay as , selling him hack into slavery worse than ; ing change. One was to go a mile and senee in having (be breed more plenty, , the nature and importance of the case will that from which be had been rescued. ten rods, when tbe other would be substi- j but one or two iz aul that iz profitable to i permit. j The other opinion is from Judge Abell, ; tuted, and complete the race with another ■ have on hand tew onst, and ’ha areenough ! A direct application to the proper de-j one of the Freedman’s Bureau, in a mile and ten rods; so that the horses,! to keep enny body uneasy about what tha j parlment asking to be informed, if not im- recent charge to a grand jury, he said : taken together, were to .make four miles, j are going tow do-uext. Tha five about proper, when and where and before what “The Bureau, if continued in time of while the Indians went two miles and ! forty years ahead of the times, and when ! tribuual Mr. Davis is to be tried, remains peace, will go to history as a nursery of twenty rods. The winner w^iuld receive the world ketches up with the last oue, unanswerable, became, ‘as is supposed, j Discontent and a school of vag: mey, alike j the parse of $1000. Of course, there was another iz born, who spends most of his neither has been actually determined by destructive to tbe interests of freeumen, a deal of dispute as to which would carry time iu digging up the old bones that the* State and city, and every honorable means i off the prize—the men or the horses—and, last one buried. About the only* thing that can be devised should be used to in- as a consequence, tbe betting was quite j they sho any common senz in iz, that they duce the Government to remove it at the lively. The prevailing opinion was, that most always die in debt to everybody. the Indians would come off best, but those i The most unfortunate thing about having who thought so did not feel sufficiently con- j a big genus on hand, iz thar so many try fideut to offer odds, and therefore bets ' to imitate them, but they don’t geuerallv ranged about even. 'get any farther up than their vices, and the President. A New and Good Invention—The Chicago Tribune says: \Ye have just : been shown a horseshoe which will be very I likely to work a complete revolution in the practice o*f horseshoeing. The shoe con earliest day possible. \Macon Gazette. sists of a binged plate with four or five The seargeaat commanded the soldiers to church, and when the parson, read the i Jjttle fingers or projections extending upon prayers he took his text. Those who had t j ie outside of the horse’s hoof clasping it a Bible took it out; but this soldier Had ; like so many little fingers making a neat ;Tvio P us?o r ‘kle m d U av be i ? eitlier lt . a Bible nor c , omi ? on I )ra y er book j : and perfectly effective, attachment to the contracts f or mail l creditors of an estate | pulling out ft^ack of^cards, he spread j hoot. On tliu bottom of this hinged plate ]jj s willingness to 5 ”~ ’ » 1 ‘ the sole of the shoe, so to speak, or the Country Mails.—We call the attention of the people of every neighborhood that had a postoffice and mail facilities prior to 1*61, to the fact that the Postmaster Gen eral has invited them to propose temporary service. He declares HQ uaaiuioitoinw, * " i li* » Rules for foreclosure of Mortgage must bepublished m .uthiy for fan r months—for e^ablisl.inRl'wt papen* forth? full space of three months forcompellingtitlea j » lie servi ♦v.vt, KreentorHoradministrators.wlierebondbasbeen : b Ie took Richard At 2 o’clock Princess was driven upon ; thus one big genius suckles a thousand the track, being quickly followed by the pbools. They don’t generally liv happy, red men, who were arrayed in their run- befeauso they ain’t hilt right to fit things' ning costumes. Lastly, Cooley appeared, j as they find them. They ought tew have when the course was cleared away, and a grate place* to stop in, whare fhare ain’t : preparations were made for the start.— nothing but big generalitvs to dew, and them out before him. He first looked at j ^ole of the shoe, so to speak, or the j to'Setil ZoTImII dii^nZt "sTihenstok hD A™? H" ^ M one card and then at the other. I he part that comes in contact with the ground. catioils> in this way> t0 neighborhoods now | X!’ l l iwiitpd tlie^Sl Process I '• star f: and k ‘ ack butter " ut and mo,m ' seargeaut of the company saw him, and j is fastened by strong set screws, whereby ; destitute. lt w m thus be seen that the 5 « then driven «n 1 l3n, tie "core ; Tt' “'u?' , the flanged plat* is held firmly to the foot le of locaHty can obtain a rC stora- j was eiven Id hodfstarted — L-J the whole making a handsome, easy, and . fion of mail service if thev take the n-on- ' , was given, and both started Lane without enny bridle on, and stick m durable shoe which can be easilv put on : smy.ee, it tney take me f -i p J be mare evidently was not up to the con- ; the spurs, but a mice nibbling in tbe wan- durauie snoe, w men can uc ta^i.y pm uu er course. We would suggest that they in b<»r nml ' „,:n i • • v i ?, , . • . and taken off and, instead of endangering ca] , neighborhood meetings and see what 1 { be9t mces.and , esent will drive him bareheadded into the the hoof after the mam cr of the bid fash- 1 ° m ? enn S s a “ a se ® " nat her movements were stiff and slow. She street. They kan plant, hut thev won’t the hoot atter the manrer• or me oia m.n they can do in this important matter.— pa8Sed the quarter stretch in 40 seconds, kultivate nor reap e inc i They can, in those meetings, determine , the half mile in 1:21, and the first mile in b° 0 ‘* j for themselves the nearest and best points ! 9.40 said “Richard, put up the cards’; this is no j place for them.” “Never mind that,” said Richard. When the service was over, the consta- from Execntbr8oradministraton<.where bond iiat-neen : pig took. Kichard pnsoner, and brought: joued nailed shoe, is a preserver 0 Hiven hy the deceased, the full space ot threeinontlia | jjj m before the Mayor. Piihlic&tioQfl will always be continued according t ... ,, . , , *bese the legal requirements,unlessotherwieeordered. M ell, ^ said the^ Mayor, ^ ^ — „ ... you brought that soldier here for : Book and Job work, of all kinds, ‘what have j PROMPTLY AND NEATLY EXECUTED at THIS OFF£ CK. When a subscriber finds a cross mark on j 1 more than^rnan ever was punished.” ed if be’wishes the paper continued. £5* rye do not send receipts to new subscri bers. If they receive the paper they may know that we have received the money. Subscribers wishing their papers changed from one post-office to another must state the name of the post-office from which they wish it changed. at which they can connect with mail rout; now in operation, and what is the best j proposal they can offer to the Department, ! If they wait for the next regular mail let tings, they may be deprived of the post- offices and mails for nearly a year yet to come. Stephens started at tire dropping of the flag, and ran the twenty rods to the score, where Deerfoot started in on the first mile. The pace at .which he went was very rapid, so much so as to elicit the wannest admiration from the spectators, who sent forth cheer If I was a woman, I would as soon mar ry a porcupine as a big genius : they are hot -az the stove in a distriek skooi- hoitse, or az kold And unfeeling az the shoes on a ded omnibus boss. A geuiuz iz like n big commet, they appear onse about so often, and makes everybody nerveous, and then disappear and tho we time be able to put our BRISCOE & deGRAFFENRlED, Attorneys at Law. JIILLEDGEVILLE. GA„ W ILL PRACTICE iilwn in the Courts of adjoining counties. Mr. deGraffenried will give special at tention to the preparation of applications for pardon under tha President's Amnesty Proclamation of May if a ^ ^ „ lv «H*th 1865. Arrangements are being made with pro- j r •• , 1 i • fesTional parties at Washington City?to attend before j the four Evangelists that pieadied Viz. the Department to all such case#. L. II. liniscoE 1»- I*- deGraefenrii July 16, I860. 51 13t The Great Question in Georgia —The ‘For playing cards in church.” ' Nashville Union, of the 25th makes coj.i- “Well. soldier, what have you to say ous extracts from onr reports of the results j for vonrself?” i of Dr. French’s visit to Southwestern “Much, sir, I hope.” i Georgia. Among other matters noticed is j “Very good; if not, I will punish you tba t of the visit of Dr. F. and oi.r renor- ! c ,,, np : . z , . . 4 . ,, A 1 ter.lo a large plantation near Mar.lialv'iHt*, | C0IBe ' tortb cheer after cheer aa he rapedly drear ..... . I have been,” said the soldier, “about i and t0 ano ther near Montezuma. The! c # ... „ u rfJ r „ , v j «onnd the course. In fact ho seemed to j fir, g «- 8 on the individual good they have six weeks on the march; I have neither Hrst , it will be remembered, exhibited a . of the Result of the Fall Elec- go nearly as fast as the mare, for she did , done us, still them visits is a big one, and Bible nor Common Prayer Book ; 1 have ' favorable condition of affairs; the I f - PU i ^ n Convention ! not draw away from him as rapidly as.it ; thegreat reserveys are pumped up fuller, nothing but a pack of cards, and I hope ! latt er such a state of things as were de- ! of }! ba T S 1 f,,11 - V endo . rsed the i seemed she should. On coming in the , and we poor’men, the rest ov ns, when we to satisfy your worship of the purity of my ; pforable and to be feared Dr. F. fully j I jollc >’ of President Johnson, and has come mare gave way to Cooley, who took up stick our little fountains, find that the wa- iotention” ! coincided with the opinion of the reporter,! ° ut st ! on S for the Monroe doctrine. But , the race from tMs point. ters have been sweetened and freshened “Very good,” said the Mayor. j ; n b; B as to both cases. tbe ^ e 18 aI .^ a 7 s a kl .^ m tb , e Proceedings , _ By the time he had reached las first b y somebody Then, spreading the cards before the Mayor, he began with the Ace : “When I see the Ace, it reminds me i^liis statement as to both cases. We are rejoiced the Union lias noticed this matter. It thinks ‘ Dr. i rexch may there is but one God. * “When I see tlie Deitce, it reminds me of Father and Son. “When I see the Tray, it reminds me cf Father, Son and Holy Ghost. When I see the Four, it reminds me of NEW STORE. Confectionaries, Fruit, Groceries and Country Produce, for sale at fair prices. CFGivc us a call at the old Bakery. C. B. MUNDAY .V Co. Milledgeville Aug. 14th, 1865. . ^ Matthew, Mmk, Luke and John. “When I see the Five, it reminds me of i the five wise virgins that trimmed their ; lamps. There were ten, but five, were j fools, and were shut out. 1 “When I see the. Six, it reminds me that • in six days tbe^ Lord made heaven and earth. private dispatch received iu this city yes- “Wbcn I see the Seven, it reminds me terday, from Mr. W. B. Johnson, Presi- tbat on the seventh day God rested from j dent of the Central Railroad Co. that all the works he had made and hallowed it. , the iron chairs and spikes, necessary for “When I see the Bight, it reminds me j the completion of the repairs to the Road of the eight righteous persons that were may traverse the whole of Georgia without finding many instances like that of the Marshalville plantation. Nor can he ex pect the negroes on that estate to remain long uncorrupted. They may soon be come as uncontrolable as any lie has seen. Almost every one who has had valuable sen ants since tbe negroes were freed, have realized the fact that through the influence of mean and envious white peo- 'ple, or worthless negioes, they become unreliable and trifling.”—Telegraph. The Iron for the Repairs of the Centred Railroad Purchased.— We learn from a The Kentucky Election.—The re cent election in Kentucky resulted, it is claimed by the Cincinnati Enquirer, iu a great Democratic victory. The Demo cratic candidate for State Treasurer was of the politicians. The weak point in the ! half mile, Deerfoot had reached the end of platform of the Pennsylvania Convention 1 his mile, and had given away, in liis turn, is the recommendation to confiscate the 1 to Stephens, whose long-sweeping pace property of the rebels above ten thousand j took him over the ground at a rapid rate, dollars, and dispose of it for paying pen- He was a good way arouud the course sions to the soldiers. This is the business j when Cooley had completed his first mile, WU uiu«i C w* 1 o jhc«buici w in of the administration, and may be safely j and it was easy to see that the Indian had gleet ed" bv U 00(7*rna joriiy* ' ' xiie "im"i's- left with lberi !> as a P art of tbeir P ol ! c Y the race his own '™Y- _ Tbe S eldiD S W3S , lature is Democratic by twenty-eight ma- of reconstruction, without any suggestion | unable to overtake tbe Indian, who came < j ority _ twenty in tIie House and eight in from the Pennsylvania Republican Con- in the winner, amid enthusiastic acclama-; t ^ e g ena{ej qq^s secures a Democrati- veutio,) - , , | tions, he having completed his mile in j VnheA Sta \ es Senatoi . The constitution- As affairs look now there if every like-j 5:10. lhe time of the two miles ancl ! a | amen dment was defeated, lihood that there will be a greater revolu- : twenty rods was 10:17. tiou in the Central States at the next elec- , Such a conclusion struck every ohe j President Johnson has a double job tions than there was in 1862, when these with surprise, for not even the most san- cf reconstruction on his hands—the recon- States went against Mr. Lincoln on the ! guine had thought that the Indians would striiction of States at the South, and the ground of alleged indecision in his war have been able to win with such ease j reconstruction ot politics in the North.— R. W. CUBBEDGE, (Late with the Marine Bank, at Macon,) Slock and Exchange Broker SCOTT’S ItAIVCE, THIRD ST„ 3IACOS, Cl. saved when God drowned the world, viz Noah and his wife, his three sons and their 1 wives. “When I see the Nine, it reminds me of | the nine lepers that were cleansed by our I Saviour. There were ten, but nine never returned thanks. j “When I see the Ten, it reminds me of the Ten Commandments which Gud hand- • Stocks, Bonds, Bank Notes. Coin. Sterling and; ed down to Moses on a tablet of stone. Domestic Exchange bought and sold: oney ••When I see the King, it remind? me of • invested as parties may direct. 1 0 - - 1 Particular attention psid to the settlement of old in the entire length, have been purchased in New l’oik, and will be immediately | shipped to this port. We understand also | that Mr. Adams, the efficient and energetic j Supcrintendant of the Road, is on his way home from New York, and that the work j of repairs will be pressed forward with all ! possible dispatch. This will be gratifying policy. Tbe change will be all the other way now. The course of Andy Johnson will, in all probability, be sustained by all the Central and Northern States, even including Maine, thus leaving New England—with the single exception of Maine—out in the cold. We should not against two such noted horses. However, i A better man for both parts of the work all expressed themselves highly satisfied j was never born ; lie is thoroughly Ameri- with tli# race, and the losers cheerfully can ; in the deepest love with the princi- yielded up the “stamps” they had invested pies upon which our Government is built; on the result.— Chicago Times July 31. i and devoted to the prosperity and perma- " j nence of the Government. . , . .. | A Woman on “ Waterfalls.”—Mrs. L be surprised to see such a result at the fall Maria C1]i ]d writes a letter to the Hide Repudiation.—Weobserve some writer sends to the Augusta- Constitutionalist an elections, in which even tlfe Jacobins will , dent in tbe cour se of which she uses , ... . r. — ’ . . . , . t j ie ; article, which that journal publishes, argu he howling in outer darkness. (X. I Herald. in regard to the following language ... ^ | ing against the repudiation of all private ... ^test fashions ,n hair: debfs> by tbe people of Georgia, through • T . , T -c • r> • j * I j A bin'ing 0 le gre.i am i.e^se " r j the action of their delegates to the State r r—-- ~ The Irnportancc of the LfeoJ President d°ne dunng these Jast four j ears by wo- : convention Up to the time the article intelligence to the traveling and commer-1 Johnson.—1 be New lork Times opens an | men in the banitary Commissions the hos- a d in tha * journal> we had not hear d cial public throughout the South. editorial under this title with the following | pitals, and the school houses for the e.nan- ^ & il|0n w bi sp ercd, neither do [SV,;.-. Herald 31st ult. estimate of the value of the President s cipated, 1 seemed to see a bright light wp ^ J. et tha( . SU J & &entimt}nt lia9 - | life : “The first duty of President Johnson dawning on our future career. But the obtaincd joothold enough in the State to the Great King of Heaven which is God , New Stamped Envelopes.—A Washing to the country is to take care of bis health, vision receded in the distance, when 1 warrant even a controversial opposition. clalniB "agaius t r Banks or Individuals. Almighty. * , ton dispatch of the 2d inst. says: ; e mean precisely this, lhe very fore- looked from my window and saw a bevy if of the place hunters of the State ryCollections made and promptly remitted for. -When I see the Queen it reminds me : “The Post Office Department has shown f most of his public obligations is to of damsels sailing by, with hen-coops in d rcamof suchathin-asageneralrepu- -kMcio‘7 Aaher^Ayres, John W. of the Queen of Sheba, wjio went to hear I a desire to meet the wants of the business j keep well. No patriot was ever more | their skirts, and upon their beads a rimless diation 6f iyate de ° bts> wc waru th r em 1 B. Koss. N. C. Muuroe, O. G. Sparks. 1 the wisdom of Solomon; for she was as , p ub fi c by the issue of two new varieties ! solemnly called " » 1 ”• ‘ ’ ' References Burke, John B. Koss. Macon, Ga., Ang. 1, 1*65. 51 3m' wiec a woman as L. H. BRYANT, AUCTION AND COMMISSION jMBRCHANT, AND DEALER IN REAL ESTATE, PRODUCE, &c., &c. Cherry Street, Macon, Ga. Aog. I, I860. GEORGIA, Wilkinson county. Ordinary's oficefor satd county. 51 •>)!.“ he was a man. * She brought with her fifty boys and fifty girls, all dressed in boys’ apparel, for King Solo mon to tell which were boys and w’hich were girls. King Solomon sent for water for them to wash' themselves ; the girls washed to the elbows, and the boys only to the wrists—so King Solomon told by this.” . “Well,” said the Mayor, “you have giv en a description of all the cards in the pack except one.” “Which is that?” said the soldier. “The Knave,” said the Mayor. I will give your honor a description of public by of stamped envelopes, viz: the ordinary j letter size, with double rate six cent stamp, and the officiaL size, bearing single-rate. three cent stamp. Heretofore, in sending i a letter weighing half an ounce or more in j the letter size Government envelopes, it upon to die for the country | pan of straw, with a feather in than he is to live for the country. Since this republic had an existence, never was there a life of such consequence as his.— This comes not from his special personal qualifications for his office, great though they are, but from the peculiar circum stances in which he holds that office — it—utterly useless for defence against wind or sun. To make the unbecoming bead-gear still to keep their sentiments to themselves.— The people arc honest, aud will spurn any such scheme of robbery. The credit of has been necessary to use an adhesive . stamp to pay the excess of postage, thus j There is no vice president behind him to disfiguring an appearance of the envelope j furnish a successor to his place foi tbe and causing an increase of labor on the I rest of his presidential term, should he be work of cancellation. So in regard to the ! taken away. Senator Foster, the present ■yyilEREAS, Rickard1_TS ; Hatfield appfies to mefOT j tba t, too,' if you will not be angry.” . . letters of administration on the estate of James | II Fountain late of said county deceased. , These are therefore to cite and ' concerned, to be und appear at th ? nu j for said county, within the tune PreafTL should not show cause, if any they can, why said lc be (ji ven mider my^awb and seal of office, this 27tli day of July D**. kp CHAMBERS, D Ord’y. GEORGIA, Pulaski County. PkARLING JOHNSON, has made application U to this Court for letteis of dismission from the estate of Isaac Johnson. ., All persons interested will hie their objections it any they canon or before the 1st Monday in ® e P" tember next, or letteis dismissory wjU be granted the applicant. u . Given under my hand officially tbit March lotli* 1865. 42 m6m- JOHN J. SPARROW Ord y. GEORGIA, Pulaski county. W HEREAS. Richard Linzey applies to me for let ters of dismission from the administration of Alfred Shivers, estate. ...... .... - c All persons concerned will file their objections if any they can, on or before the firstM^idav in October next, otherwise letters of dismission will be gi anted the applicant in terms of the law. . . .. . viiven under my hand, and official signature, this April 1st 1865. _ ,, 44 Kta JOHN i SPARROW, Ord y 1 will not,” said the Mayor, “if you will not term me to be a knave.” “Well,” said tbe soldier, tbo greatest knave I know is the constables hat brought me here.” “I do not know,” said tho Mayor, “whether he is the greatest knave ; but I know he is the greatest fooL” “When* I count how many spots in a pack, I find three hundred and sixty- five—as many as there [are days in the year. “When I count the number of cards iu a pack, I find there are fifty-two—as many as there are weeks in a year. And find four suits—the number of weeks in a month. “I find there are twelve picture cards in tbe pack, representing the number of months in the year ; and on counting the tricks, I find thirteen—the number of weeks in a quarter. So you see, sir, the pack of cards serves for a Bible, almanac and.common prayer hook to ine." official size. With an inclosure of less president of the senate, would succeed tu the things that roust be endured, because j ^ Hig . g the first bHc weight than half an ounce the use of the ! tbe presidential position, but conld occupy nnr hrams arft bct ' stamped envelope necessitated the loss of i it only until a new president could be one rate of postage. Both of these incon- j chosen by the people. Ihe death ot veniencesarc obviated by the issue of the President Johnson would be the greatest new envelope, and will soon be for sale at j of public calamities, because it would force tbe principal post offices throughout the the country into all the fierce excitemcut country. The envelopes arc of a neat and agitations of a personal canvass m iool s dar appearance, having the embossed stamps i this transitional period of reconstruction. , we are, 11 in the u&ual lorm, the color on the letter ) —— 1 iu g ta tne size being purple, and that on the official! — -. , , • T i77.„ tvm 7 _! man! size chocdlatc.” Good Advice to Those Who Wish tQ be Propedy Represented in the State Con vention. * * “Chose for this Convention What Mortality.—Onr cotemporary, j on Perry street, has been “semi-officially informed that the number of deaths that your best aud truest men : not those who has occurred among the negroes in the have skulked in the hour of danger—nor different camps near the city, exclusively j those who have worshipped mammon while under the management of the ‘Freedman’s i their country was bleeding at every pore Bureau,' amount to about 400 for the last —nor the politicians, who,after dodging the forty days. When it is recollected that war, dared not encounteV its hardships there are bnt a little upwards, of three more uiurraceful, there descends frdin it, r , . 0 ; „ , , . something called by the flowing name of Georgia as a State, and of her people m waterfall but which, in fact looks more t be,r ,P rivat0 Rations, lms always stood like a cabbage in a net. tricked cut with f f bovc 8U8 f lc ‘ 0n ’ a: f although UK6 a Mtuungt. • , the hour is a dark one, but few will be beads and wampum. . . . found to advocate a measure which, if m western ores s, s ou a ' adopted, would damn public and private »hem for Ojibboway bnt ther, cr J it beJoud ^ 5^ - Wc g elieTe *lresa v.;*, a a mot e . 1 the author of the communication referred tyranny ot ranee in hi 1 j to is lighting a scarecrow-of his own crea- tho things that must be enduroa, because: His fetter is the first public inti- it cannot be helped, till onr hrams are he - #f such „ tbi d J ,(, 0 t e it ter developed In process of fine. 1 trust wj|| be ^ )as( _ TtU ‘ the Empress Eugenie will sleep with lier illustrious ancestors, and that no other Q'j^Tbc Pennsylvania Democratic State fantastic queen of fashion will come after Convention met at Harrisburg on the 34th, her, to lead the civilized world such a and 1JOm ; natcd Col. W. H. H. Davis as fool’s dance. What a set of monkeys ; aud j tor general, and John P. Linton as are, in feathers and furbellows, danc-1 tb(J surveyor general. The Convention tune of that impenar s ioi\-r\o-. p agaed a series of resolutions concurring with President Johnson in his construction ‘ or the status of States recently in rebellion, Took him for a Coon.—The Eufaulaj denouncing negro suffrage as a “high Dailv Xctf s of the 4th inst. says : ! crime against the constitution and an at- * . e , ., . ,, \ tempt to degrade tho white race to a level Shot.—A freedrnan was accidentally ( . / , Lto,.k shot while in the v/oods near this place!" 1 on Saturday last. He was out gathering j muscadines, when a little son ot Dr. Do zier’s who was hunting: came alomr, and not seeing Dvutheria.—We learn that this quite dangerous disease i.-; .prevailing to some extent in the city. have heard of two thousand ‘freedmeu’ in these camps, the surprising mortality becomes apparent. We had heard tho" mortality on the fast day, before the camp was broken up in the bend opposite the city, stated as high as 100 out of 2,400. (Montgomery ledger. the negro distinctly^ m,sl ' or three families with almost every mcm- :oon, aud blazed away. ^ ; her down with this complaint A number of children have died past week.— Telegraph. but those who have laid their all upon the j lor a coon, and Olazca a-. , — , b e r down with this complaint altar of their country. Select such men negro s arm was badly P<TI e - 0 f children have died with it during the and make them serve as your representa- 1 s ^ ot - tives. You will thus be sure that your rights will not he wantonly sacrificed, nor The New York Times says the dis- Frccdmen in North’ Co rolina.—Newborn, N. C., Atig. 2S.—Col. Whitelodey, of the Freedman’s Bureau, '1,7 .1 I »lummy »avr,uve,„ uu. , 0 f United States colored troops I h^'f^od it sectary ti i«u, . oiroolar ,o iofo m , y„„r liberty bartered away for a cess of P““^; n ® oramcnciu „. There are about; that they MM that tli..v pottage. Wade Hampton. one htfndred thousand colored soldiers. are to be presented with ftirin- m&ke con t rue ts foi-labor. jnd nrgintj them to