Newspaper Page Text
Wortli Georgian.
SKLl.roa, GA.. APRIL 1, mi. !
■*'L ■•• ■ - ,
JOHN T. WILBON, JR., Editor.
ffT* 7* any pmon rending ue ni nihecri 1
Irri a)>d THE MONEY, the paper will 6«
mt grot it one gear. We want the Co-aper- ■
at ion of every ofthiemd uAjein
ng Countia to help ewell our eubeeription
IM. If yeu are Mereeted in Ute Welfare of \
your county, patronite the Georgian, <u it la
bore irweeeantly for pour advancement. .gg ' ]
Good stand* of corn are reported <
around Albany. ,
Commodore Vanderbilt’* widow j
ha* $50,000 a year. j
The meningeti* in prevailing at the
agricultural college of MiMiraippi; j
live atudente have died.
The Georgia Pre** Association will j
meet at Rome on May 1 Ith.
The firemens tournament in Athens
cornea off May 18th and 19th.
r e t
Carlyle said that Washing wo* a
woode-bead and a land j >bber.
The Prince of Wales has conferred
upon the Czar the Order of the Gar
ter.
The wheat prospect in the West is
said to be considerably below the
average.
The Prince of Princess of Wales,
nnd the Duke of Edinburgh, have left
fit. Petersburg for home,
Mr. Gai field to Blaine and Conkling:
“Well, by George,gents 1 Imust have
time “to sit down nnd reflect.”
■ ' o-W-a .
The Minnesota legislature hns voted
to build a plain brick State House to
replace the capital building recently
burned. J
A southern pnper subjests that
David Davis be hired to sit on Mahon e
instead of on the fence.
■* ♦ *
Mr." George J. Seney has Increased
his gift to Emory College to $50,000
to the Wesleyan Female College at
Macon, Ga.
The old and prominent firm of
James Adger & Co., bankers nnd
shipping agents, who suspended in
1879, have settled with their creditors,
and resumed bnincss.
The Dahlonega Agricultural Col
lege hns been forced to suspend oper
ations on account of the mumps.
About fifty of the students are down
with the disease.
Michael Tracy was shot and instant
ly killed m a drunken row in * bar
room in New Orleans, lately, by John
Callahan. The murderer has been
arrested.
—— ■—a •
Tennessee and Alabama have fol
loweiP the example of Georgia in
establishing a railroad commission.
Tuesday a bill passed in the Tenues
see legislature creating a board of
commissioners to regulate freight and
passenger tarriffs.
Although last year the government
sold 293,000,000 postal cards, their
fuse has not decreased the sale
of writing paper at all, showing that
cheap facilities for correspondence
have increased it, as is always the
case in any business of life.
Rev. 11. A. Duncan, at one time
president of the female seminary at
Greenville, 8. C., and for twenty
years a Baptist clergyman, died in
Augusta lately, at the residence of
his son-in-law. Mr. W. C. Jones, aged
sixty-eight. lie was much esteemed
nnd respected in a very laigecircle of
friends and acquaintance*.
-<-*—
The Governor of Wisconsin has
signed the bill recently passed by tbe
legislature prohibiting the practice of
treating in that State. It provides
that any person who shall ask anoth
er to drink at his expense, or any
person consent to drink at another’s
expense, shall be liable to arrest and
punishment.
There is more need of a revival in
medical than in religions circles, says
tbo Augusta News. We look conii- ■
dently forward to the day when a i
man can get his tongue examined, his I
pu]se felt, his case diagnosed, and bis I
litttle pill pul into his mouth, all for
the charge of 81. As the matter now
stands, sickness in the family is more .
expensive than a divorce suit.
-W-o ■■■
The Atlanta Phonograph says edi-!
tonally, that Gov. Colquitt will be a j
candidate for the United Mates senate
to succeed Ben Hill, and that a recent !
conversation with a friend the gover- ;
nor said.. “I do not care at present to i
commit my elf, but you can do me a
great deal of good, and I wish you :
would drive in .* wedge for me when-1
ever yrm get a chance,"
The Supreme Court is idle for ’
want of a quorum, a number of mess-I
ages from the President lie upon the '
Senate table unopened, end one hun
dred and twenty-five nominations to
important offices are unacted upon,' 1
all because of a struggle over a few I
paltry offices at the disposition of the
Senate.
ExSenalor Gordon, of Georgia, who 1
is getting his engineer'' together for ' 1
the building of the Georgia Western 1
Railroad, says that in the North there ,'
has been more interest in the South 1
during the last six months than was •
manifesteu in the last ten years. ‘
Everybody whom Gen. Gordon met! 1
in the North seemed anxious to invest 1 1
in the South. 1
It is just as improper to call the
Primitive Baptists by the name of .
“Hard Shells” asit is to call the Chris
tians, or Disciples, by the name of
“Camphellites,” although the former
are not near as sensitive about the ■ i
matter asare the latter. Nick names |
for sacrad things are never in good
taste.
A Rhode Island woman has brought
a divorce suit against two husbands. !
She was first married eight years ago 1
and at the end of the year the husband
deserted her and has not been heard
of. Five years since she took a sec
ond husband, who turns out a scape
grace. She applied to a lawyer to
get a divorce, when he told her it
was uncertain to which of the men she
was legally married. To make the
mutter sure she has brought adivorce
suit in a bill which includes the names
of both of them.
*. a o
A new society has been started,
en t e.l the So< i< ly <>r the Prevention
of Street Accidents, and the police j
have been notified to telegraph all
such accidents to the rooms of the
organization. Among the prominent
men on its committees are Governor
Cornell, Win. M. Evarts, Judge
Noah Davis and Surgeon Hammond.
Its aims are to make loans or dona
tions to persons injured by street acci
dents, who stand in need of it, to
prosecute offenders and to compel
drivers to have lights on their carria
ges at night.
The cotton exhibition to be held
at Atlanta in October next will doubt
less prove the most important indus
trial exposition of the year. All the
improved machinery devised to facil
itate the planting of cotton and its
preparation for market in the origin
al bale, as well as the process of
manufacture afterward, will he sub
ject to inspection. The cotton lord- ■
of Manchester, as well as New Eng i
land manufacturers and Acuthern
planters, will take this opportunity of
learning their business from an im
proved standpoint. Cotton from
Bombay, Egypt, the Fiji Islands,
Brazil and elsewhere will be planted,
so that it can be seen growing beside
the native variety. The best results
may be anticipated, ami we hope
manufacturers elsewhere may find
their interest in taking an active part
in an enterprise having such impor
tant relations to the trade of the
country.
Bill Arp in a recent lecture says “it
looks like the farmers were getting
rich, but they ain’t. It costs some
farmers ten cents per pound to make
cotton. It costs the majority oPem
about eight, and then there istbe wear
and tear of mules and wagons and
harness and plows to be considered.
Cotton brings the money all in a
lump, and a fellow feels so rich and
! good with it in his pocket he struts
around and buys a nice dress for his
1 wife and something all around for bis
[, children. He has worked hard ami
1 so has the old lady and the boys, ami
it does look like they ought to hav,
something out of it; and cooking
1 stove is about burnt out, and Susan is
obliged to have a new bonnet, and
Jack wants a pair of Sunday boots,
• and there’s lots of things they cant
■ do without any longer. Ami. so. bv
the time the guano is paid, and the
j advances and hired labor, and » > forth,
j there is but little left, ami the corn is
I low in the crib, and the meat won’t
1 hold out for another crop. That’s
I about the way with small farmers till
| over the country, and they make the
j bulk of the crop.”
-♦
Judge Donahue in the New York
| Supreme Court chamber has granted.
I upon the application of Charles H.
| Pond, John W. Garrett and others,
stockholders of the Atlanta and Cha
r lotte Air-Line Railroad Company, an
I injunction prohibiting the dirccliors
j from leasing the road to the Richmot>s
land Danville I'.itiroad Company, and
.also an order l > show cause, re mr li
able April but, why the injunctions
should not l*e continued during the
pendency of an action, commenced
! lately, by Charles 11. Pond and others, ‘
against Hiram \V. Sibley and others,
1 the directors and officersof the Atlan
-Itn Charlotte Air-Line Railroad and f
I the Richmond nnd Danville Railroad.
I Messrs. Pond & Garrett however
’ were too late in securing their injunc
| tion in New York to prevent the
lease and transfer of the Atlanta and
I Charlotte Air-Line Railway to the'
; Richmond and Danville Railroad.
The transfer of all the properly was |
made on the Ist inst., and Messrs
Talcott, Pope and Haas assumed con
trol on the 2nd. Colonel Foreacre
remains General Superintendent for
the present, but all the other prom
inent officials take subordinate rank
as assistants to Messrs. Talcott Hass
and Barber. The headquarter* of the
company will be transfered to Rich
mond, Va. Permanent changes may
be made shortly in all the depart
ment*.
<
ITEMS OF I NTEREST.
Sprinkled with Sober and Facetious
Thought*.
Snow in Dalton last Tuesday was
two inches deep.
The temperance question has enter
iutothe political canvass in Mississip
pi.
The Butler Guards, of Greepville,
S. C., will attend the Cowp a- cen
teuial.
Larger quantities of fertilizers ha ve 1
been sold at Greenville, b. C., this '
year than ever before.
Jackson, Miss., is overrun with ;
tramps, beggars, deaf, dumb and blind
men asking for alms.
Prominent German citizens <>i
Charleston, 8.C., will atari a*IVO,OOU
cotton factory.
Good will, like a good name, is got ■
by many actions and lost by oi.e.
The pretty face of a woman is like
; i clock’s—not much aeount unless
there axe good works behind it.
Planter* have been quite busy late-
I , hence but few of them are to be
s eu on the streets.
The Atlanta Phonograph says : It
is a settled fact that Governor Colquitt
will lie a candidate for the United
Stales Senate at the next election.
The Tribune boasts thats Rome has
received more cotton this vear than
any city of its size in country.
A fire in the southern part ofMa< <>n,
Thusday night destroyed several
frame buildings. Lo*» about $3,000.
According tn the I.awrrncevi|le
Herald, thare is scarcely a bridge i
Gwinnett county.
The Land Department disposed 'of
14,792.371 acre* of the public laud last
year, the largest amount since lttf3,
I 13,030,000 acres were sold.
Governor Colquitt has accepted an
invitation to address the literarv soci
eties of Vanderbullt University at
commencement. May 2.1.
The rain on Friday night wi< n
the Dublin Post, live heviest ever
known in Laurens county, and much
damage was done roads and farms.
The Sotiix Journal says : “The de
mand for burning corn i*c eases, and
one firm alone had three teams out
yesterday supplying the city demand.
The selling price has advanced to 35c
per bushel for burning corn on accout
of the limited supply.”
The President ha* made out the
; nomination of General L rngsirect. of
J Gainesville, as Marshall of Georgia.
I ' Ihe Sparta Ishmclite remarks that
■ | “the farmer who buys Western corn
‘ i pays three seperate profits on the cost
I' of its production- The Western far
‘ I mer gets his profit: and, lastly, the
I I retail merchant make* his per cent.
■ What doe* the Southern farm, r make ?
I i Cotton and ’e*.”
II ~
I Ihe Thomasville Times wishes that
the termer* would commit tomemori
two golden maxims, :is follows; 'All
uotton keeps the South in slavery to
the West,” and no agricultural coun
try has yet prospered that bought its
head.”
The Marietta Journal fears that lite
' construction of Georgia Western Rail
road will materially injure the trade
of that place, and Hunks that the only
thing wtnch can be done to offset the
damage wtil be the establishment
there ot la< tot ies for the miuiiifaciure
I of useful anti salable articles.
1 he lightning of Loudon streets bv
electric light promts well. Tne pen
pie ate delighted with tile new lamp-,
although the price of gas in tile great
i city is only one doilarnthous.uid7eet. I
I he electric light is seadilvcoming to '
the flout, it i» clearly the light of the i
future.
Th.i debt was retlu last tionih
about six millions of uv.iars. Ju
March o. last year the reduction ex
j ceeded thirteen millions, and toe
reccip -w, rc I ugila,, momli tiu,
tl.- y were a year ago. The tiescre
pany of surplus is accounted for by
like large outlay that tire pension!
‘jrrab made neeemry.
THE STATE BOILED DOWN. |
News of the Weik Gathered and Con
densed from our Exchanges.
A mob in Anderson county, Ky.,
lotely hung Tom Thompson for rob-1
bing a mail carier.
A negro woman named Nancy '
Mathis has been jailed at Daudrige,
Tenn., for carrying a pistol.
Tennessee wagon* sell corn on the
streets of Hnntsyille. Ala., at G 5 cents J
and the mercbauts sell it at 75 cents. ,
j >At Grundy, Ky., last Sunday, sever
al smart young men lighted their ci
gar* and smoked in church during
service.
* Scarlet fever prevails in Bloun i"
county, Alabama, nine children hav-;
ing died in one beat last week.
Mr. R. IL Wynne, who was charged '
with a murder committed near Gads
den fifteen years ago, was tried last
week and acquitted.
Flat Creek,' over in Kentucky, I
claims the finest string band in the >
Stale. It is composed of five in»tru- (
ments, and when they gel in tune the ‘
sinners weep from joy and wag their ,
tail* in delight.
Ou Monday last, near Grre .vill* S.
C , Mr. Lrs. Dili were riding along!
the road, when th* lady was wounded '
in two pl ues in the face b* shot* fired ,
by some sportsmen in an adjoining I ‘
field.
Mr. F. B. Harper, Midway: Kv.,!
has priced his spier,did stallion, Ten
Broeck, 9 years old, by Imp. Phieton,;
dam Fanny Holton by Lexington, to |
a party for $75,000.
Mr. Adams, of Ci.bb county. G»..!
ivm a vanied SSOO damages a few .lavs '
irce, in the superior c 'urt of that,
county, for injuties repaired by » '
bridge giving away with him.
In Bibb comitv Ala., two men were
, committed to jail one day last week
I by a magistrate at Green Pond, upon !
the charge of being common iramps.
' under the new act of the Legislature. !
paid no tox at all.
Rev. Mr. Barnes hns jus tadded 167 .
convert* to the church at Crab Orch- 1
ard Ky., and has gonejto Lancaster to ,
see what the Lord intends to do for!
sinners there.
Miss Sarah Osborne, aged about I
fifteen years, daughter of Isaac Os-j
borne, of Franklin, Tennessee, has I
committed suicide. She was found in ;
a bar n, *u»pen«lid by bridle-rein*.
Oxford Ala., has shipped $13,000 ’
bales of cotton tbi* season, and has;
lost on this not less IhanMO.OO. The
guano trade is unprecedented. Oxford ;
has s new hotel and a new livery >
stable j
War seems to be imminent at Hunt-!
ington, Tenn. The small hoys have I
received a consignment of pistol*, and j
I the Vindicator wants the parents io |
I interfere and prevent diabolical blood-1
shed.
I
Bill Price said Ugly things about
Peter Haines' wife, at Greenwood, '
Ky., and when taken to tusk for it.
*hot Dailies dead. A similar case oc
i curred in that State a few days before.
; Thecity council ofGreenville, Ala..'
; raised the tax on circuses from $lO to
ISIUO, whereupon Dan Rice leased s
j lot just outside the corporation and
I
The negro man elected a member
of the National Association of vete
rans, at the Louisville convention, is
jerow black and proud of it. He was!
given his freedom !> . Henry Clay for
1 gallant condui t at Buena Vista.
The friends of i.rohilii; ion in Nojth i
j Carolina will hold a convention in.
Raleigh, May 4tli, l<> make prepara
! lion for the campaign before the
August elections.
At Paint Rock, Roane county. Tenn, i
i there is a rendezvous for horse swap-,
ping, and every Saturday the gather-;
[mg looks like a picnic occasion or a
camp meeting,
A very sharp and vivid flash of light-1
I ning instantaneously extinguished
every street lamp in Selma, Ala., s
few lights ago.
Added to the mad-dog excitement,'
which exists ii. niany portions of the
country, there Is in some sections I
. great excitement growing out of iudi-1
i cation* of madness on the cats.
; , I
The mail carried carried by horse .
I between Taylorsville. Tenn., amt ■
! Abington, Va.. was lost in South
. Fork river some days ago, the home
falling down w .ile crossing. The'
j rider was saved ; >v persons who eii.nt
jeed to be on the ban* ot the stream.
The Texas Legislature has dele ueii !
the bi 111 il<lil >. i < thliai.uuic.urev i
ind sale of alcoholic iquurs in ih v !
State.
The death rate in New York has!
lso f;i;>, *ully tj, a( Harper's
Weekly iikiso'ai.e* H by the picture of
an ilium;na;.~d skelton upon an etnin-
I ence warning strangers jbat to enter
eh* eUy m d*»>fi.
BELLTON
HIGH SCHOOL.
MALE AND FEMkME.
All the branches of an English and
Classical Preparatory Ecu at:* i taught!
in th* most thorough manti r
RATES OF TUITIOX,
Du* at the e'.p ration of each month.
Primary si (10 I
Common School 1 50 I
Academic..; 2 no ■
High School 2 50'
(LyForcircuii ran |*- i. ularsaddress
J. T. . ;LS Principal.
Bellton, Ga , Ma ch 31 Isol.—tm
it. it.
A TTORNE Y AT I I T.
Gainesvjlle, Ga.
Practices in Hall. Banks, Jackson!
and adjoining countie*. aprlO-ly !
A. J. SHAFFER. M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
GAINESVILLE, GA.
SPRCIAL attention giteu to
• uHinion to womun. 1 will guarantee a ‘
radical cure iu all cftseN of Droj»>y f after
patient*. ma
L. J. GARTRELC
ATTf pxky er L.nr,
ATLAN PA, OA.
Tl R A ('TH' S 8 in the United (J»r
cii't an<l District Court* at Atlanta,
nnd thw Supreme and Superior Courts of
the State. mayts-tf
Gkor'Ha. Bki'K CncNTv.
( < of Caleb’- Mize.
»p’»l ; ej» t» tie Court of Ordinary ter di.*-
mi.’“‘iG'i from ■‘aid guardianship :
'l ai. perHonn interc*»ed will I
i t;ik» notice that letter.* of dismip-don will
i aranted h»m at the April r. rm next
of th<- Court as Ordinary of w.ud couniv.
la ba hold on the tirst Monday of Haiti J
month, nn’e** £O“d raij*e be then Mhown
| to the < ontrary.
jathr-td T F. H ILL, Ord.nary.
Notice ti» Debtors and CreditsJx
GEORGIA, Ra.nks I’ovMTr.
N'itiue in hereby y ven to all peraona
i having demand' against the ••-Lite of
Kusik ;! H• !<•«.’nht. late of ««aid couutv,
i dec’d t<>pre*eir rheai to mo, proporly
made out. w.ihia th** t’mir pre-
| -or •ed b> law, >o mn to .»how their
I character and amouftt; And all
• re*'D> a iabted to .taid deceased.
; are required to make immediate payment
1 to me. R. I’. St HU A I H. AdniT of
mai’O-iif l'u«.wrli Holcombe.
At. EM S W VM EIF/”
Empixiyment for All. —sl,ooo
' mads In thirty days. We want every
I body to write to us for full particulars
! of a business in which money can be
! mode easily, honestly and rapidly,
j We are sellin* n Household article
I that i» needed by every family it; the
: world. Th* profit* co agents are from
i 100 to 500 per cent. Whether you
want to engage in our busings* or
! not, we can impart valuable inform.i-
I tion to you. Either ladies or gentle
i men can conduct the business aiiccess
: fully. It will cost you only one cent
to write to us. Do not neglect this
• opportunity: tne business is light and
j plenMid. Full j articular* frre.
A ddr< *s. /it.cXry, iianuj'acturing Co
' novll-tim Marion, Ohio.
i
Largest
The edition of Webster’s Unabrid
ged Dictionary recently issued, in the
i quantity of matter it contains, is be
lieved to be the largest volume
published.
It will surprise many reader* to
: know that it contains eight times the
Hinoimt of matter contained in the
Bible, being sufficient to make 75 12-
; mo. volumes that usually sell for
!sl.2seach I Its vocabuiarv comprises
I over 118,900 words (4.600 of which
i have reneentlv been added.)
Itha« a new Biographical Dictionary
giving brief important facts concern
ing 9,600 noted persons.
There is a Memoir of Noah Web
ster. a brief history of the English
language. I’i inciples of Pronunciation,
Lists <>t‘4,OOOSeripture i ro|wr Names,
10.000 Geographical Nait.es, “oft com
! mon English Christian Names, sever
;*l pages of Proverbs. &<•., a vocabul
ary of Names of Fictitious Persons
and Places, and many other valuable
■ featbres, —all of which, in a volume
I of 1.928 pages embellished with 3,000
i Engravings, go tn make up a gteate
. store-house of useful knowledge.
a Poem.
Eureka makes the cotton grow.
And don’t you say it is not so;
To satisfy your anxious desires,
Buy Eureka, Orient, of King and
Myers;
They sclLgttano very cheap.
In Dry Goods, cannot be beat;
i IVhat we’ve said above is true.
To prove the same, you've only
to do,
Bl'Y OF THEM.
Gunnd.
From price® we. judge that Orient
j and Eureka Manufactories have not
. gone into a combination, like other
inanittneturerf s, to raise their prices
on the planter. They sell at last sea
son's prices. Thes" standard brands
!*i-e soldbv. MYERS X KING.
The ’> st, easiest wearing, cheapest
i Truss in use. Circulars sent free <>>.
i appiicatioit to Rev. A. IV. C aldwe i
Gaktesvilie, Ga. 2t.
ABdC9 PtkW. r rW,!,ri,. -»H-<w..
if! cr.« v**t L*a «««ry a . v»/><m.« «•!»»••! w *
B*ugtm«*t Lar/* pl *»h’* prv rata. *
InVsaiK.at* a: tt'. •* s«*- t’r-UKr. wttw U . ■ .
s?a»*ii*-« bewail tut.mu' -‘ :-»■*■* k-U*!****.
FTfi’WW * C«-. Fr.'aA r. K**r X . *
He Hecliile
ATLANTA AND CHARLOTTE AIR LINE
RAILROAD.
On and after Januarv Ifith, train* will
run on this Road a® follows;
DAV rASSRNC.KR TRAIN—EASTWARD.
Arrive at Beltton ri;34 a m
. Crave at 6:50 » m
WKSTWArtD.
Arrive at Bellton
Crave at 9:35 p ui
NKIHT rASSKNOEItT RAI N— B A*TW AID.
Arrive at Bellton 3.59 p n
; Leave at *6 : 15 p m
WBSTWAHD.
I Arrive at Bellton 9.49 a la
Leave at
LOCAL VRBIOHT—BASTa’ARD.
Arriv* at Hellton 12:03 p ia
Ceave at t2:90 p u>
WESTWARD.
Arrive at Bellton It 3S a m
Leave at 1U.04 * n
THROVOH FItKIOHT—EASTWARD.
Arrive at Bellton 5 40 p ia
Ceavo at M
WHSTWAI CD.
i Arrive at Bp 11 ton fl-25 a ra
I Leave at.. &37 » m
< onnpctmg at Atlanta for all points
i West and 8011thwest.
| Connecting at Charlotte for all Eastern
I
I Through tickets on sale at Gainesville,
: Seneca City, Greenville and Spartanburg
to ail points East an.i West.
| G..L FoitKACRR, General Manager.
j W. J. Hocston,
I General Passenger *ud Ticket Agent.
NORTBEASTERX RAILROAD.
r ’v7i l , A ' l; ' n "‘ IL3O pm
Leave Lula ", * M I ™
Arrive at Athens " 10.15 a »
The above evening train also conneets
ciosely at Lula with Northern bound
trains on the Air Line Railway,
reiili Mo'iday® the following additloaicl
train will be run :
Leave Athens 515 am
1 . ? S:ssam
i A -ei!. . at A , "' n " 10:o5a a,
l h!s trvn connects closely at Lula with
. passenger trains, both East and West, en
Air
~n ti'ghts an additional train
will be run:
J Leave Lula ~; w _ „
Arrive at Athens 11:2oS lu
1 assenger trains, both East and West
en A r Line Railway w 11 connect do e V
on Saturday night tor Athens.
Passengers from Geo.gia I:,dread nuke
* •5e eoniiruti tp with uven ng trains, and
Kodirunt through to th- Minniner resort*
>oith Georgia delay in Aiheni
, j \\ CLLS. s ‘uperinteudeni.
APRILSHERIFFSALES
Will he sold, before the Court House
door, in the town of Horner, during the
legal hours of sale, on the lirst Tuesday
in April next, the following Dronertv
to-wit: ‘
One tract of land Ivin* and being in
i Hauks count’, adjoining lands of L. F.
Morr.s, .lames Brock ami others, beiu®
I the place wheron uew
resides. ront;»irting'2ig> aer.ns more or less
, end levied on ,*s the property of Perrr
Lewallen te satisfy a justice court tifa in
favor J. W. Goldsmith & Co., vs Perrr
Lewallen. Levy made and returned to
. me by L. P. Hardy, L. C.
‘ A LSI >,
, At the same time and place, one tractor
parcel of laud, containing Fifty acres
' uiore or less, adjoining lands of L. T.
I I Morris. T. C. Westbrooks and others.
-la Vt-d on as the property of .lames Pow
. I ell to satisfy r. tax ilia issued bv P. A.
W attars, former Tax collector, aga ti.st
i.lames Powel, for his state and e iuaty
' tax, fertile years 1072-3, and .outrolle'd
i to L. F. >iurri*.
•» ALSO,
j at th»* Manif* tinw time and Int
us tssTid contu’tiiiij£ Forty scpa* mor* *r
rsi», lyiux »»»<! being in the ?OHth distriar,
> G. M., of mid county, adjoinin« lamb
M-L- RuMsel A.iroa an<i oth-
er*. LpfirJ o»j an the property nf (ree.
('arllr.lg*, to N»t'Mfy two .JiiHtice court ti ;
f.a in Lt/or us «l. M. Chandler, th (saw
( and Goss Ct Co., ▼< Georgo
B (\irtlrd-a. Levy niitde and returned to
me by «J. F. Walker, L. C. Notice given
, to parties in in tcr;ns ol the
MdrlO-tds. K D. OWEN, BheriC
’ I Notice to Debtors and Creditor*.
J GF.ORG IA Banks Cor NTT.
’ ! Notice is hejeby given to all persons
- i having demands against the estate of F.
;<’■ Moss, latcjof said county, dec'd, topre
, sent them to me. properly made out.within
the time prescribed by law, so as to show
their character and amount. And all
persons indebted to said deceased ar*
• required to mak - immediate payment ta
. me. W. C. MOSS, Executor es
F. G. Sloss, dec'd.
nutrlML
' WEBSTLTS USIBRIDIitb?
“ GST TITZ BEST.”
—O x a ZTO < •
(Up }M4, glv-
I . E*m<> of e»d’h Rai!,—ttjtewinjc the vsdu» M
BT ILLVSTKATIONS.
Th* picture* ia Wahetar vader the 19
Baas. Hollar. Caatla.
Maidin'-*. fhMaakry, Ba valla,
nagMff UM and 1319. *»aa Tim
wri, def;ha M 3 werde mh! hrmi far
w. they eeuJd ba dataad ia word*.
Naw EdiU»a WXBSTH, kaa
4600 XEW WORDS *ad
Biographical Dictionary
of over 9700 Hames.
WEBHTBK’«t to th a Dictionary avedTFT
ia Govern** Printing OAca. 1861. jfW
Every State pa re Lane of
for School* ha* bean Webster'*. Jut
in the Pub he Sahaals es the
JO U. 8. are mainly tented an Webster. JO
SalAef Webeter'e ia ©ver JQ tunes the CT
Mde of any ether eerie* of Diet**. O
rMRTY.TWO TWCU3AND have bean put m
in the public *chool* es lha U. 8. JL
£nrh new edition han become more and TT*
more Tita RUtndard. JEt
aeeom«Mnded by State Bupfs Ac to eel* in
M Stawa, and M> College Pree t* XV
an WOT THI BTAXDABDI
HHtaUd by t. • •. MUBlAS.SpriagM*. MM*
j &7Q a week ; 812 a day at home easily
'vv • niade ; coatly outfit free. Address
Tbub 4: Co., Augusta, Maiue.
Stikmn def».. rs. tlsxi. M‘iar.