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VOLUME XXXVII.]
MILLEDGEYILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, I860.
NUMBER 18.
jOU(lHT5X,NlSBBT,BARXESfc MOORE
paMisiers and Proprietors.
h. *■
JOM
nor jut *x, >
Ef. S
II.
EIii«n.
Jjtbcral (Snmn
fs published Weekly, in MilledgeviUe, Ga.,
Corner of Hancock 3f Wilkinson Sts.,
in Advance.
At $3 a year
advertising.
One Dollar per square of tenlinesfor
eaob in^rti" 0 ^ R . 9()1 „ ti „ n8 by Societies, (Obit-
‘"sex"--** I'm-' ** lines,Nomination*for officeCom-
■* rl ' ,r Editorial notices for individual benefit,)
cT^adM^-^^vortiaing.
Legal Advertising.
ifTg nalcs, per levy often lines, or less,
Mortgage fi fa sales per square,
Tax Collector’s Sales, per square,
Citations for Letters of Administration,
„ «. •* Guardianship,
T etters of application fordism’n from Adm’n
„ .« “ “ Guard’n
Soerir
%2 50
5 00
5 00
3 00
3 00
4 50
3 00
*» 00
3 Ot
5 00
] 50
3 00
1 00
Appl’n for leave to sell land,
Notices to Debtors and Creditors,
Sales of land, 4*c., per square,
•• perishable property, 10 days, per square
]£<tniy Notices, 30 days,
Foreclosure of Mortgage, per sq.. each time,
legal advertisements.
f^rdiaL^equiVed t^wKe bejj
EE2S ■ k ““-
Ltli - county iu which the property is situated.
XVtioe of .„*<e sales must be given in a public ga-
KH.te Id da vs previous to the day of sale.
N itices for P the sale of personal property must be
given in like manner 10 days “f le .J a ^ tllte
Notices to the debtors audcredltois of an estate
must also be punished 40 days. r . f
V iticethut inolieatiwn will be made t) the Court ol
ofr l.»«, &«.»»*«»«p>“
&,(• niust be published 30 days-for dismission from
A dm i nistratiini, monthly „x month,-tot dismission
monthly for fmr month,—for establishing lost papers,
fur the Jnlt,pace o/ three month,—for compelling titles
from Executors or administrators, where bond has
been given oy the deceased, the full space of three
"‘Habitations will always be continued according
these, the legal requirements, unless otherwise or-
dereu.
NEW FASHIONS 1866.
J. W. BRADLEY'S
CELEBRATED
DUPLEX ELLIPTIC
(OR DOUBLE SPRING)
Baak an 1 Job work, of all kinds,
promptly and neatly executed
at tkib officii.
ry When a subscriber finds a cross mark on
his paper he will know that his subscription lias
expired, or is about to expire, and must be renew
ed if he wishes the paper continued.
{IT We do not send receipts to new subscri
bers. If they receive the paper they may *uow
that we have received the mouey.
ry Subscribers wishing their papers changed
fro n one post-office to another must state the
n im* of the post-office irom which they wish it
changed.
T HE Subscriber has just recoived his stock of
F A Ij Xj and
w x nsr T E H.
House Furnishing Goods,
CONSISTING OF
COOK AND PARLOR STOVES
Of Improved Patterns.
A Large Stoek of Croekery «*d
tin WARE-
ALSO
TUBS, BUCKETS, &«., &«•
Together with a coir lete assortment of
CARRIAGE,
BUGGY and
WAGON HARNESS,
8ADDLE8,
BRIDLES, <Skc.
Harness repaired and made to order.
THOMAS T. WINDSOR.
MilledgeviUe, Oct. 8, 1866. 10 Ht
BRADLEYS
Duplex Skirts
Has printed in RED INK on the band
J. W. BRADLEY’S DUPLEX SKIRT.
DONT BUY A.VF OTHER.
You can always find a full assortment at W. G.
LANTERMAN and H. TINSLEY’S.
Ask for
J. W. BRADLEY'S DUPLEX SKIRT,
ANI>
“SEE THE NAME ON THE BAND.”
For Sale in MilledgeviUe by
W. G. LANTERMAN, and
H. TINSLEY.
ASK FOR
S. W. BRADLEY'S DUPLEX SKIRT,
And
“ SEE THE NAME ON THE BAND.”
W. G. lANTIRMAN
HAS OUR NEW SKZKT HOOSS,
And a splendid assortment ot Emperial Trail.
Paris Trail, Pride of the World, on hand, and
has 200 dozen on the way, which will be here in
a few days.
At wholesale by the exclusive Manufacturers
and sole owners of the Patent.
Wests, Bradley & Cary,
Ware Rooms and Office,
Numbers 07 Chambers, and 79 and 81 Reade St.,
New York.
Oct. 15, 1866. II 3m*
“THE LARGEST,
CHEAPEST,
AND
STOCK OF
IIHIIIS
Important to the Ladies!
M XX S - C A B.R.
AT THE DAUIEN BANK BUILDING,
HAS JUST RECEIVED THE
LATEST PARIS STYLES,
And is prepared to make
DRESSES, BASQUES, &e.,
AT SHORT NOTICE.
Ladies received on business
from 9 to 12 o’clock, A. M., and from
2 to 4 t\ M.
MilledgeviUe, Oct. 16, 1866. 11 tf
Big Indian Saloon!
T IIE UNDERSIGNED would invite the attention
of the Member*, and citizen* generally, to the
above sign, at the comer under the Barber shop. Ale
keep* constantly on hand a fine lot of
Whiskeys, Brandies, Wine, Gin,
LAGER BEER, and CIGARS,
and would beg all to give him a call.
-y The TRIM PIIM ALLEY i* now in good
renair and gentlemen ro inclined, can Lave a quiet
game ’and not be troubled with negroes, for they are
not allowed in the Alley only on bun new
AND
GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS.
IN MILLEDGEVIUE,
azz so bb rovns at
H. TINSLEY’S.
MilledgeviUe, Nov. 20tb, 1866.
J6 tf
SCOTT’S MONTHLY MAGAZINE.
SECOND YEAR.
The Oldest and Largest Literary Mag-
T
azine in the South !
HE Proprietor of this Popular Monthly will
MilledgeviUe, Nov. 6,1866.
G. LINCH.
14 tf
A Well Selected Stock
OF FINE
WINES & LIQUORS
H.„ 614 tf At W. 8. STETSOHfcBKO.
And Tobacco.
rpIIOSE who wish FINE CIGAR8 and Chewing
1 TOBACCO, can find them at
Cigars
TOBACCO, can
NICHOLS & MAPP’S Drugstore,
Nov. 2,1866.
Under the MilledgeviUe Hotel.
14tf
Copies in January next, to meet the increasing
demand for it in all portions of the South and
West. Its Corps of Contributors is already large,
and will be strengthened by the
Addition of Several Eioellent Male and Female Writes.
Besides the usual variety of Original and Select
ed Prose and Poetry, there will be contained the
admirable History of the War, entitled Field and
Camp, by an Officer. Also, Arcadie: A Histor
ical Romance of the Eighteenth Century. Also*
the Tropes and Metaphors of the Bible, as Illus
trated by Science. By A. Means, D. D., LL. D
Also, a Series of Articles on Life in the East, by
Rev. R. A. Holland, of Ky., now on a Tour in
Egypt and Palestine.
It will be elegantly Embellished by Steel Plates,
Lithographs and Wood Cuts, prepared expressly
for this publication, consisting of superb Like
nesses Of Lee, Davis, Joe Johnston, Polk, For
rest. Ac-
Its quantity of reading matter will also be in
creased, so that it will contain nearly twice the
amount of either Godey or Peterson.
We shall also introduce a Department of Wit
and Humor, and occasional Wood Cut Illustra
tions of Southern and Western Scenery.
It will be perceived that this plan involves
much additional expense, and we invite the lov
era of a sound and elevated Literature to rally to
this enterprise. It has already received the high
est encomiums of the press : let it now have ma
terial aid, and we promise a Magazine equal to
auy ever before the American public.
TERMS.—Single subscribers, $5* 11 copies,
059; 22 copies. 0100; and at the same rates for
three and six months. Clergymen of all denomi
nations and Presidents and Professors of Colleges
will receive it at 04
The person who will send cs the largest club
of suoscribers, not less than 25, previous to
March 1st, shall receive a premium of Fifty
Dollars. Address
W. J. SCOTT, Atlanta, Ga.
The January Number will be ready for mail by
the 18th of December.
FATHER. TAKE MY HAND.
The way is daik tny Father 1 Cloud ou cloud
Is gathering thickly o’er my Lead and loud
The thunders roar above me. ►ee, Island
Like one bewildered! Father take my baud,
And through the gloom
Lead safely home
Thy cl ild.
The day goes fast, my Father ! And my soul
Is drawing darkly down. My faithless sight
Sees ghost ! y visions. Fears, spectral band,
Encompass me ! O Father 1 take my hand,
And from the night
I.eau up to light
Thy child.
The way is long, my Father! And mj soul
Longs for the-rest and quiet of the goal:
While yet I journey through the weary land,
Keep me from wandering. Father, take my hand,
Quickly and stiaipht
Lead to heaven’s gate
Thy child.
The path is rough, my Father! Many a thorn
Has pierced me ; and my weary feet, all toin
And bleeding mark the way. Yet thy command
Bids me press forward ! Father, take my hand,
Then sate and hlest
Lead to np rest
Thy child.
The throng is great my Father ! Many a doubt
And fear and danger compass me about,
And foes oppress me so. I cannot stand
Or go a! one. O Father! take my hand,
And throng ■ the throng
Lead safe along
Thy child.
The cross is heavy Father ! I have b< me
It long and still do bear it. Let my worn
And taiuting spirit rise to that blest land
Where crew ns are given. FatLer, take my hand.
And reaching down,
Lead to the crown
Thy child.
For the Federal Union.
Would the Great Ruler of events
Award us such a recompense
As to take from us our a'd,
Which was uugodiy put in thrall 7
If pood from evil does come out
’Ti6 wickedtu ss biiops it about—
No matter w hat the preachers say,
Good seldom ever conies that way.
If God alone is understood
To be the author of all good,
Yet sanctions an ungodly deed
I'he same as if it was decreed,
Then would our good with evil bh nd
And meet his sanction in the end,
This would Philosophy det-ct,
N<> cause would have a like effect.
Z.
THE CEMUN, CIIARACTFR AND OR.
OAIMIZATIOIM OF THU CONFEDER
ATE ARMY.
From an interesting and spirited ar
ticle in the September Crescent Month
ly, by J. Quitman Moore, ot Mississip
pi, we make the following extracts,
treating of the genius, character and
general organization of the late Con
federate army:
The army of the late “Confederate
States of America,” (the glorious
name of that bright meteor power,
now quickened, that shook its radiant
splendors on the flaming crest of Mars!)
was an eclectic or excerpted system
from the high military models of Aus
tria, Prussia. France and the United
States. It was a beautiful and com
plete model of thorough scientific or
ganization, full of interest aud instruc
tion to those who wish to learn how r to
make war terrible and destructive,
and, above all things else, that sprang
Irom the master-hand that directing
and all-informing mind that stood at
the head of the Southern revolution,
attested its commanding genius.—
From Austria, was taken the admira
ble organization of the grand field
stall’; from Prussia, the firm and com
pact general military anatomy ; from
France, the model of its field ordi
nance and scientific artillery theory
and practice; and from the United
States, its tactical economy, its infant
ry equipment and drill, its army regu
lations and its theory of military ma
neuver and strategic practice. West
Point confronted YVest Point, and ac
counts in great measure for that phe
nomenon so inexplicable to the criti
cism of the foreign lookers-on—great
battles fought, with no marked or de
cisive results attained. General Lee
and his adversaries made the same
moves on the hostile field that they
learned to make on the chess-board
of the common parent academy. Jack-
son alone repudiated West Point, stu
died Frederick and Napoleon, and as
a consequence, achieved more briliant
results, in a brief career of twenty
months, than the whole array of emi
nent commanders, Federal and Confed
erate, combined, accomplished in four
years of war.
The organization of the Confederate
army was a finished piece of military
mechanism, methodical, harmonious,
composite in all pertaining to its exte
rior, practical arrangement; but there
was a fatal defect in its interior, vital
economy—a morbid, organic derange
ment—that defeated every hope of
healthy bodily action, preyed upon the
seat of life, and caused its ultimate
dissolution. That disease was the ab
sence of discipline. If it had possess
ed this one important quality, the bat
tle of Sharpsburg would have declared
the independence of the South. Gen
eral Lee crossed over into Maryland a
fort-night before the happening of that
battle, with 80,000 troops; but, on
that field, he could only put his hand
on 35,000 of that number. Not that
this more than moiety of his army had
wilfully deserted their colors; but, al
lured from their commands by the
profuse hospitality of the people o
Maryland, they lingered behind the ad
vancing army, thinking to rejoin it in
time to share its laurels.
Such conduct the system of Fred
erick and Napoleon pronounced deser
tion, and inflexibly punished with
death. The great body of the rank and
file of the Southern army was com
posed of a social element that, in the
armies of other countries, is seen only
in positions of command and authori
ty ; and the officers elected from a-
mong themselves, and often their so
cial and intellectual inferiors, left mat
ters of authority and subordination to
take care of themselves, while their
only care was to make their reports
correspond from day to day; and
grave delinquencies were connived at
iu the same way that college students
deem it a badge of dishonor to act the
part of informer against their associ
ates. Under such a general relaxation
of authority, discipline was impossi
ble ; and the Southern army w r as noth
ing more than an association of patri
otic gentlemen, animated by the en-
thusiam of a common cause, and re
garding army regulations and discip
line as designed ouly for a race of
slaves. When once in battle, they
[ought with a dash, spirit, resolution
and desperation of valor such as has
never been excelled by any soldiery in
the world, ancient or modern. In the
The cavalry branch of the Confed- practical experience to its former high
erate army Was, strictly speaking, oid\ theoretical institutes, making it a
a part of its infantry army, clothed j complete and finished specimen of
with equestrian powers and offices. It scientific military arrangement, and
was only a body of mounted infantry, | can be studied to eminent advantage
that, as advanced videtfes and daring by all the modern war-bureaus that
scouts, formed the ears and eyes of
that army that never was but once
taken by surprise. The mounted force and appliances,
of the Confederate army resembled the
Russian Cossack, whose office is to
harass and threaten, not to attack ;—
and as guerillas, they became as re
nowned as the famous knights of the
Cid. Ashby, and Stuart, and Forrest,
arid Hampton, and Mosby, and Lee,
recall the memories of.Villars and Fitz
James—of Tancred aud Alva—never
of Rupert and Murat.
But the essential pride and glory of
the Southern army, particularly of that
portion of it that was known as the
“Army of Northern Virginia,” was its
matchless artillery arm. The world
might have been confidently challen-
wish to profit by the experienced re
sults cf novel military formularities
ged to produce such a splendid array
of intelligence, practical skill and < is-
ciplined valor as was centered in that
renowned artillery corps that was
wielded by that eminent patriot chief,
Major-General William II. Pendleton.
As a body it was composed of the
very pride and flower of the Southern
chivalry, and fully attested its lofty
claims to distinction on all those
bloody fields, stretching from Manas-
From the Germantown Telegraph. „
SOI (ABILITY AMONO FARMERS.
Naturally the farmer is an unselfish
man. His labors are mostly out of
doors. His calling takes him much
abroad, and enables him to mingle con
siderably with the world. Yet, look
ing at the very large proportion of the
population embraced in his punsuit,
and the important influence exercised
by it over all our affairs, it is a sub
ject of common remark, even by all
agriculturists themselves, that their
social intercourse should be so much
restricted.
There is no other cause for the se-
clusiveness on the part of farmers that
we can see than the “treading in the
footsteps ot their predecessors.” Be
this as it may, there are other causes
operating which appear to be chang
ing this for the better. Country fairs,
bringing agriculturists together from
districts sufficiently near to each other
to make acquaintanceship pleasautand
lasting, and puttiug them in friendly
emulations in matters and things in
volving their agrestic skill and success,
are clearly working to form more
close companionship between those
whose domestic comforts and family
enjoyments must be greatly promoted
in future.
Little clubs among the farmers of a
European sense of the word, there was' sas to Petersburg; and it is the espe-
no such thing known to the Confeder-' cial glory of the famous Washington
ate army as discipline. The punish-; Artillery to have first wreathed the
men! of desertion by death was the ex- 1 Confederate banner with the smoke of
eeption, rather than the rule; and the 1 its guns on the field of Bull Run, and
hand of the commander-in-chief was | boomed the last hostile defiance on
weakened just in proportion as the se-1 mournful Aappomattox. Waltou,
verity of the discipline was relaxed.— Walker and Long; Poague, Carter
Jackson was the only general officer and Haskell; Peg ram, McIntosh and i neighborhood, to meet once a week to
in the Confederate service who applied Nelson, are names that will ever be I discuss or talk over the innumerable
the rigid discipline of the European honored in the proud pantheon ofj subjects connected with the intelligent
armies to that under his own com- Southern heroism and devotion, and prosecution of their noble profession
mand; and in proportion to its mini- will live as long as the fame oi that produce a decidedly fraternizing and'
bers, and in view of the brief per,od immortal struggle which they so bril- socializin'' efiect. While these local
within which its splendid operations liantly signalized by their own lofty associations should not be too formal
were performed, no army in the world endeavor. I anf ] restricted they should have an of-
ever accomplished such brilliant re- The original organization of the | fi c i a l organization'as better calculated
suits. His severe discipline held his Confederate artillery was into com- to cause punctuality at the meetings,
troops firm, close, compact, in hand, panies. attached to its' infantry brig- as we ]j as | 0 a jj t 0 their permanency
and when he struck, it was with a full ade, and subject to the orders of the. On these occasions, the wives and
strength of his arm, and victory was brigadier; but it was soon discovered daughters of farmers should always
the result. Bragg made some ineffect- that comanders of brigades, the great j accompany their husbands, fathers, or
ual attempts to discipline the army majority of whom were from tire j brothers—not to participate, of course,
of the West; but the Southern blood walks of civil life, were not the class I j n |] ie proceedings that may take
was too high to bend to what it con- of officers to give the artillery arm J place, but to increase the agreeability
ceived to be a degradation, and could that power and effectiveness of which 0 f t j le meetings, and to share in the
not then realize that it was better under skillful, scientific direction, it! pleasure of these delightful mterchan-
than the eternal degradation that fol- w as so eminently susceptible. There- gesofgood neighborhood. Indeed, if
lowed. ’ fore, before the opening of the spring the truth must be spoken—and we are
The infantry service of the Confed- campaign of 1863, a regular artillery rea dy to do it upon accasions, espe-
erate army was the finest body of light and ordnance staff was organized, in j cially uo 0 n such a one as this there
foot, bating the discipline, the world the army of Northern Virginia, with i j s verv little social enjoyment in the
ever saw. It possessed all the tcnac- Pendleton at its head. Battalions were j *'•*--
ity in line of the Austrians, all the formed, numbering from sixteen to
confidence in column, boldness in at- twenty guns each, and operating ini
tack and cool self-possession in defeat, the field with its respective infantry j
of the British, and all the daring in- division, and each under the immediate !
trepidity and fearless dash of the command of its own artillery chief, I
French Corps d' Afriquc ; while the who had been assigned or promoted to j
deliberation and precision with which it by reason of his distinguished fitness
it delivered its deadly rifle fire, inflict- and qualification, as indicated by form
ing nearly a doubJe loss on the enemy er tests of high excellence in the prac-
in almost every engagement, attested tice of the field. And under the di-
its vast superiority over that of the rection of this able corps of artillerj'
enemy. The Confederate skirmishers officers, the grand Southern field park,
were the terror of the Federal army ;, both mounted and horse, proudly as-
and in all combined movements in the ; serted its claim t.o a place in the very
open field with numbers always inferi- front rank of the artillery armament of
or to the enemy, the Southern infant- the world. Pelham’s and McGregor’s
world which is not refined and made
doubly enjoyable by the presence of
woman.
Thu Ktroiiyt-Kt Biiuk in the Werltl.
The Bank of Genoa, which has been in
existence hundreds of years, lias per
haps proved itself the strongest institution
of the kind in the world. It is a remarka
ble fact in ite history that its administra
tion has always been as permanent and un
changeable as that of the republic Las been
agitated and fluctuating. No alteration
ever took place in the mode of governing
and regulating the affairs of the bank, and
two sovereign and independent powers, at
war with each other, have been within the
walls of the city, without producing the
ry has uever failed to win the field.— famous cavalry batteries, that opera-, slightest shock to the bank, or causing it to
The superiority proceeded not from 1 ted with the dashing troopers of Stu- secrete any of its books or treasures,
the greater bravery of the Confederate J art, won a distinction second not even
troops, but from their greater com- j to the celebrity of the famous flying
bined skill and intelligence flowing , artillery of Austria,
from that larger latitude given to in- j For the first two years of the war,
dividual action. Without their offi- i the field metal of the Confederate park
cers to guide and direct them, the Fed
eral troops were little better than an
armed mob. The Confederate troops
acted generally as well without as
with their officers, whose superiority
was only the temporary distinction of
rank. There were men in the ranks
of the Southern army who could have
supplied the places of their general
officers. Gen. Roger A. Pryor, after
gallantly serving his country as com
mander of a brigade, tendered his re
signation, and fought to the end of the
war iu the capacity of a gallant pri
vate of the famous 9th Virginia cav-
alry.
The English refer with just pride
and enthusiastic praise to the solid
tenacity and stubborn courage of
the British infantry at the battle of
Inkerinan, where 8,000 British light-
toot held in check and finally repulsed
15,000 Russian infantry; but it can
not compare with the brilliant and
spirited infantry charges of Ewell’s
and Longstreet’s corps upon the for
tified position of the enemy at Gettys
burg. on the evening of the second
day’s battle, where the Southern in
fantry moved to the assault under a
withering artillery fire, and swept be
fore it three heavy lines of battle.—
And nothing is so forcibly illustrative
of that high intelligence that was the
distinguishing characteristic of the
Southern army, than the fact that it
saw and felt, before the attack was
made, that the assault of the 3d must
prove a failure.
The Editor and the Fortune Teller.—A
Kentucky editor visited a fertune teller
recently. He makes the following report
of the revelations concerning his past and
future:
Thou bast served three years in the
penitentiary for a horse thou didst not steal*
Thou wilt be Governor of the State, ami
afterwards decline a seat in the Senate of
the United States. A wealthy young la
dy, with blue hair, auburn eyes, and verv
beautiful, is now about to graduate from
was greatly inferior to that of the ene
my. The J battles of Bull Rrn, Ma
nassas and the Seven Pines were fought
with six pounder guns, twelve pound
er howitizers and a few three inch i i- j
fles; and it was not until the battle of 1
Chancellor8ville that the Confederate ;
artillery armament was of sufficient ;
heavy metal to cope successfully with j the Ilouse of Correction, whom thou wilt
the formidable Federal field ordnance. S marry as soon as thy present wife diest,
By capture and foreign purchase, the I which will be at the fourth full of the next
artillery of the army of Northern Vir- moon. Thou wilt become possessed of
ginia was strengthened by a full field | ^- v s ^^hh, and elope with the
° i , * r jj. 4 ii wife of a coalboat engineer. Thou wi!t-
complementof ten and twenty pound-1 ” , T ^ , . , , ,
X . . , -V -v- go to New Orleans; and start a keuo hank
er Parrots, the twelve pounder Na-; * h5dl Wlll bring thee in greflt riches. Af-
poleon gun howitzer and a few \\ hit-1 . er an absence of nineteen years, thou wilt
worth and Armstrong rifles ; but the ; return to thy repining wife, lay thy prince-
twenty pounder Parrotts and the j ly fortune at her feet, he forgiven, and af-
twelve pounder Napoleons were the ( ter raising a family of nineteen children,
weapons with which the Confederate ! die happy, at the age of ninety-qine
artillery chiefly won their bloody tro
phies and wrete such a brilliant chap
ter in the records of high artillery per
formance. In nothing was the South
ern artillery inferior to that of the
Federal, save in the ammunition; in
every other particular, it was decided
ly superior, as attested on every field
where the two armies were brought in
direct collision.
The army of the United States,
whether regarded in the light of its
scientific theory or practical arrange
ment, stauds conspicuously among the
very highest models of modern mili
tary organization. It stood confessed
ly high even before the opening of the
late bloody drama, and has since ad
NOTICE.
T IIE mider.signf'd have entered into a limited
partnership, under the finu name of ANDREW
Flynn «!L Co., for the Transaction of the The
atrical business iu the City of Savannah. An
drew Flynn of Savannah is the general partner
and Grantham J. Taggart is the special partner,
and contributes one hundred (1W) dollars to the
common stock.
This partnership is to commence on the 19tli
day of November and continue for 12 weeks from
that date.
ANDREW FLYNN,
GRANTHAM J. TAGGART.
Nov. 19, lcC<6. ]7 tit
NOTICE.
A LL persons concerned will please take notice
that sixty days from date I will apply 1° f h >
Ordinary of Ware county for leave to sell the
real estato belonging to the estate of Earley Da»
vis, late of Ware coumy. deeeaxed.
“ DAVIS, Adm’r.
^ . JOS. H
ded the fruits of a large and profitable j Nov. 5tb, isco. fj eb] 17