Cedartown advertiser. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1878-1889, October 16, 1879, Image 2
THE ADVERTISER.
ADVERTISER PUBLISHING CO.
Cedartown, Ga., October 16.
"WM. BRADFORD, - Editor
The Treasurer’s Acquittal.
Absence last week prevented our
giving our readers the current news
on the trial of the treasurer. He was
-acquitted by a vote of 17 to 25—the
-constitutional two-thirds mcessary
to convict saving him. This action
of the senate, or a minority of it.
has called forth much earnest discus
sion and comment. A large majori
ty of the expressions we have seen
and heard on the subject are, very
properly, we think, strongly adverse
to this decision. After confessing
that he had been guilty of numerous
violations of law and of official pr>
priety and offering to resign his office
and make restitution, it certainly was
but a very reasonable expectation on
the part of the people that the senate
would properly punish the offender.
This failure to do so leaves the State
:in a much worse condition than i!
the,proposition of tha Trsasuer had
"been accepted. We thought then,
and still think that the acceptance
of this proposition would have been
the shortest and best solution of the
.question. In order that the State
might not be left entirely at the mer
cy of the treasuer and his bondsmen
the house pased a resolution reques
ting the Governor to issue fi fas
against them for the amount of in
terest on the public monies that had
found its way into their private
pockets. After some pretty sharp
debating m the eenate it pass’ d that
•Vdy also, with an unimportant
amendment, which was agreed to by
.the House.
The Fairs.
The Atlanta Fair opens next
Monday and continues during the
week. The Macon Fair begins the
Monday following. Both have fine
prospects of being largely patronized
and of having fire displavs.’Tl
$1.00,.Worth tor 5 Cent ■
We think we do our readers a fa
vor wo advise each of them to pro
cure and real a copy of the Savan
nah Morning News of October 9th.
It is a large eight page sheet and is
brimful of matter of more than pas
sing interest, especially to Georgians.
On the first page is a largo map of
the plan of the siege of that city in
1779 drawn by Lord Rawdo.n of the
British army at the time. On the
fourth page are splendid portraits
of Couut D’Estaing, Count Pulaski
and Generals Pinkney, McIntosh
and Lincoln ; also an illustration of
Jasper and Lew ton rescuing tin
prisoners from the British at the
spring.
For reading matter it has a com
plete history of the seige, by Col. C.
C. Jones; sketches of Sergeant Jas
per, Count D’Estaing, Generals Lin
coln, McIntosh and Pinkney; a
graphic sketch of the imposing de
monstration aud ceremonies on the
occasion of the laying of the corner
stone of a monument to Sergeant
Jasper; a list of the relics and other
articles deposited inj-the corner stone,
and the masterly, scholarly, elo
quent address of Cm. John B.
Gordon on the occasion. Besides
all these and more referring to the
late Centennial celebration, in that
city, of the 'death of Jasper it con
tains quite a variety of articles and
sketches upon other topics of inter
est—and all for live cent3. Address
J, II. Estill, Savannah, Ga.
Massachusetts has already appoint
ed delegates to the National Demo
cratic Convention that is to meet
some time next spring and nominate
. a presidential ticket. A strong
Tilden man is at the head of the
delegation and it i.s said that all the
delegates are of the same persuasion.
.Wo go to press J before defi
nitely news car. be had from the Ohio
, election of Thuesday, |but i t. is
th night the R-nublioons have car
ried rt by a small majorPy.
Savannah Centennial,
The Andre monument, which Mr.
Cyrus W. Field, apparently in order
to please Dean Stanley, Eome time
ago, ordered to be made, was put in
its place on 'Printer's Hill, Tappan,
on Thursday la3t, on the ninety-
ninth anniversary of Major Andre’s
execution. The m-mortal shaft was
erected on the very spot where An
dre was hung. The monument is of
Maine granite, six feet eight inches
high, and bears appropriate inscrip
tions oti all four sides. The placing
and dedication of the monument
was witnessed by Mr. Field aud sev
eral representatives of historical so
cieties, The New York Herald, in
speaking of the occasion, remarks
that “now that honor has been done
to the memory of a gentleman who
Wise Saying of Jewish Sages.
The path of duty in this world is
the road to salvation in the next.
Happy is he w'ho fears God in the
prime of life.
Who is powerful ? He who can
control his passions. Who is rich ?
He who is content with what he has.
Associate not with the wicked
man, even if yon can’t learn from
him. . .
Tie who dgnies his guilt doubles it.
This is the penalty of the liar:
He is not believed when he tells the
truth.
It is a sin to deceive the fellow- _
man, be he Jew or Gentile.
Improve thyself, then try to im
prove others.
Beatifr 1 are the admonitions of
A committee of Democratic ladk ■
of Columbus, Ohio headed by the
wife ol Senator Thurman, have en
tered the campaign in Ohio, and of
fer a two hundred and fifty dollar
banner to the Democrats of that
county which shall show the largest
increased Democratic vote over that
caBt at’the last Presidential election.
Mr. R. M. Wilder, one of the
most prominent and influential citi
zens of Warrenton is dead.
VASE V. MILAMS
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
was nevertheless an enemy and a spy, | —, ... t,:.
perhaps some of our mi'lionaires | h.m whose life accords with h.s
will place memorial stones over the
almost forgotten graves of some of
our country’s defenders.”
The amount donated to the Macon
monument by the Central Railroad
teachings. .
The wictced, whilst alive, is like
the dead ; the righteons after death
is still alive.
Costly Campaigning.
STK"S 1 .3 Th, w-i»sa e .
& EORGIA—Polk County.—Harw ell Nunn ha 8
applied for Exemption of Personalty, anu I
will pas* upon tbe same at 10 o’clock, a. m., on the
3rd day of November, 1879, at my office. This
October 11th, 1879. JOEL BREWER,
OctlG 2;v Or inary.
of Personalty, and I
r .... 10 o’clock, a. m., on
the 24th day of October, 1879. at my office. This
2nd day of October, 1879. JOEL BREWER,
beh Term, 1879 : To Martha L. C. P. Nail?
A, C. andWm. A. J. Helton, having applied for
Probate at thta term of the Court, October 16tb,
1879, of the will of Amos Helton to which they
claim to be Executors, being so named in s; id will,
you are required and cited
Ordinary’s office in the Co
county, at the regular November Term, 1879, of
$185.02. Another euch a lift would
have given it a free passage.
During last week the Durham
tobacco manufacturers paid $22,-
887.20 reveuue tax.
A house bill to provide artificial
limbs for confederate soldiers of
Georgia who were so unfortunate as
to lose limbs in the war, passed the
Senntevon the 16th inst.
• The Marietta lemale college, the
property of that delightful town, was
destroyed by fire Sunday night, the
23th nit. It was an eleg.nt two-story
brick. Scarcely tmy of the contents
were saved.
Editor Dupont, of the Dupont
Okefenokean says he will educate
one of Gen, Hood’s children, and the
guardian can place the child where
ho-pleases.
The New York Tribune, having
stolen another cipher dispatch, an
nounces that Mr. Tilden has sent
$15,000 into Ohio to help Ewing.
On the strength of this false report,
ihe Republican managers will bleed
John Sherman afresh, and probably
skin the New York hanks to the ex-
ten of $25,000.—Savannah Ncios.
Dr. Means’ stable and barn at Ox
ford, with all his hay, fodder, etc.,
and several horses and mules were
burned last Saturday morning.
Among the hones lost was ono the
doctor had driven twenty years.
The cotton mop of Mississippi this
year will turn out to be a good one,
more than fifty per cent ol which
will be made by white labor.
The Pacific Express train on the
Michigan Central Railroad collided,
on Friday, with a switch engine at
Jackson, Mich. About twenty-five
persons were killed and thirty woun
ded—mostly emigrants going West.
The interest hill, which the Senate
refused to reconsider, and which now
goes to the Governor, establishes 7
per cent, as the jlegal rati of inter
est, but allows interest by contract
asjhigli as 8 percent.
A bale of cotton from Jonc3 coun
ty, donated to the Hood fund,
brought $90 at auction in Macon.
Two negroes, Torn Jones and Bill
Rearson, who had confessed to the
murder of Dick Woods, a storekeeper
the line of the Cinciuciuati
Southern Railroad, were seized on
the 7th and hanged from the bridge
at White’s creek near Chattanooga
Electricity in tiib Future.—
Prof. John C, Draper, in a lecture
in New York, Tuesday evening, said
that he thought that electricity a3 a
means of light would soon be gener
al, aud that among other means of
its generation, not only waterfalls,
hut the action of the tides would be
employed. It would also he used as
a means of heating and cooking,
and electro-megnetism would be em
ployed for a rapid and economical
locomotion.
A dispatch from Georgia says that
.Slate Treasurer Renfroe, tried by the
Senate on articles of impeachment,
‘•has been acquitted on every charge,
to the great satisfaction of his friends.”
As the vote on the first thre; articles,
which dealt with the main charges,
*was twenty-five guilty to seventeen
not guilty, Treasurer Renfroes’
friends must he easily satisfied.—
New York Sun,
The Post Master General lias is
sued at; order for the establishment
of a free mail delivery service in
Augusta, Ga., to take effect on the
1st of November next.
Nearly eight million dollars was
paid out of the Treasury during the
month of September on account of
pension arrears. But for this the
decrease in the public debt daring
:ire month would have been about
$10,000,000.
Savannah distinguished herself
Ia3t week by honoring an humble
private of the Revolutionary army
of 1779 with one of the most bril
liant pageants ever witnessed in
Georgia. October 9th, 1879, was
the Centennial Anniversary of the
death, at the seige of Savannah, of
oargeant William Jasper, and that
city celebrated the occasion by lay
ing, with apropriate ceremonies, the
corner stone of a monument to his
memory. The concourse that
sunhled to do honor to the occasion
is said to be the largest ever gathered
together tti Georgia. The plan of ex
ercises for the day was admirably
arranged and executed, i x* w have
not space for a detailed account of
it. The Centennial edition of the
Savannah Morning News was quite
a feature of the occasion, i nd should
be read bv all who take an interest
■in perpetuatingihe memory of wor
thy deeds of the p; s f .
The New nan Leader thinks the
people ought to investigate the leg
ist!! re.
mentions as a rumor that Senatoi; tge conrt^rorto^for said county, to «..nd
Blaine spent $20,000 of his private
fortune to carry that State tor the !8T0 -
Republicans last Monday. The
same paper asserts that the Republi
can campaign in Maine cost that
party $250,000.
A heavy brokerage business is
done in Washington in Government
positions, it would seem, from the
number of advertisements for Feder
al offices appearing in the Washing
ton papeis. In one editon of one of
these journals, the Cincinnati Com
mercial found a score of notices of
this kind: One man writes from Al
exandria, Va„ offering to give 25 per
cent, of his salary to any one who
will secure him a position of any
kind in one of-t.bc departments; and
another offers $150 cash down ; still
another, his whole first month’s pay
for a position in the railway mail
service ; a far-seeing man warns a po
sition on the understanding that he
is to pay $15 a month a3 long as lie
is retained iu office. There H little
doubt that theee advertisements are
hut the utterances of simple-minded
persons who have little hope of sne
cess. They are evidence, however, of
a great thirst for Federal Ollioe.—
Xcios.
te probate or gam win.
Witness my hand and official signature, Oct. Gib,
J. K. BUTT «£ CO.,
HOME, GA.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
$tOve$, ^iriWciie
AND
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS.
A lso, manufacturers of galvanized
IRON CORNICES, WINDOW CAPS,
Agents for Rouic Stoves and otter first-class facto-
LUMPKIN’S
OLD RELIABLE
LIVERY, FEES ana SALE STABLE.
Cedartown, Ga.
MILLER A. WRIGHT, Propriety.
Keeps constantly on hand to hire. Good Hones
and excellent vehicles. Splendid accommodations
for Diover.- and others. Hor?*.s, Carria&i
Biggies always o * ’ ’
tion guaranteed t
Savs the Milledgeville Union and
Recorder: “The Boston Commercial-
Bulletin speaks of the heavy increase
iu the manufacture ol cotton goods
n the South. It says thi3 increase
_s confined to North and South Gni-
olina, Georgia and Alabama. This
is but the beginning. Cotton mills
ivill rapiuly spring up iu all the cut-
ton States. The northern people
will soon see how their owu interest
will be injured by their insane policy
towards the South. It is that which
.s putting up the cotton mills in the
South, and it will be seen that they
compete with us who can erect them
in cotton fields and manufacture the
goods free of the cost of transporta
tion ol raw material, and tree of the
impediments of the frozen strequis.”
The Sylvania Telephone says that
there is a pious old negro in Scriven
county who lived tor a long time in
a house that had never been struck
by lightning. Finally a lightning
rod agent came along and represent
ed to him th-at if he purchased a
lightning rod, and had it pl.ccd on
his domicile, he would forever he cut
danger from the holts of Jove. Ac
cordingly the darkey invested, and in
a short time his house was sttnek no
less than five times by tbe lightning.
The old man immediately removed
Ihe rod from hisAiouse and buried it
in a neighboring branch, aud now,
despite his piety, it would, says the
Telephone, not be exactly healthy
for a man with a rod wagon to pass
that way.
A Memphis refugee came through
on the Memphis and Charleston rail
road, the other evening, aud was stop ■
pod at Wanhatchie, the qurantine
station for Chattanooga, where he was
met by the quarantine officers of that
enterprising village. After he had
been thoroughly inspected, the refugee
remarked ;
“See, here, mister, do you live in
Chattanooga ?”
“Yes,” said the officer.
“Well, do you propose to stop me
injhat d—d town ?”
“No, sir; we propose to see that
you don’t stop.”
“Well,” remarked the refugee, “I’m
glad of that. I would as soon have a
spell of yellow fever as to stop in that
burg. 1 want to go through thereat
'the rate of twenty miles an hour,
with the car windows down, and I
will hold my nose then. A man may
survive an attack of yellow lever, but
an hour in Chattanooga is certain
death.”
The Okolona man’s lecture tour at
the North was something of a failure.
Not a State shows any symptoms of
secessiou thus far. There must be a
screw loose somewhere in the argu
ment.
Cures Consumption
m Si n other Oil* Fa/l
WILLSON’S CARBOLiTED
(Norwegian) Cod Liver Oil
immediately Arrest* Decay
ufi<l Unfitly Up the System.
W1LLSOIT3 CAREOLATEB
(Norwegian) Cod Liver Oil
Is retained Ity the Weakest Stomach.
la Free from Unpleaaant Tas*«.
laBeadlly Digested. Never gels ilaud!.
WILLSOVS CARBONATED
(Norwegian) Cod Liver Oil
Cure* Consumption, Scrofula,
Emnrlallon, C-oiigli*, Colds,
All Lrsn and Constitutionat. Complaints en<?«la
a remarkably efficient Ulood Punxvnsn and ebc*2l
the Ravages of I>iaomo.
WILLSO.V S CARSOLATEE
(Norwegian)Cod Liver Oil
h sold only In largo wodgo-shaped bottle*. Wllhwn
’ spellto with a double •• L." Itomomber tha word
Cabbolated ’* In ordering from your Drug^kt,
id insist na having tfic ri;:ht kind,
fiend for Circnlara to tho *Toprio*or»,
GUEMP MANUFACTURING CO.,
n PARK PLACE, NEW YORK.
BUCHAN’S
CARBOLIC BALM
OINTMEHT
13 THE
„ , „ Beet Salvj In tho World.
Trede Hark.
Quiok aud Startling Cares.
It Heals Without a Boar.
Allays Pain A Stops Bleeding.
Soothee a Burn or Scald.
Hoals a Cut LHte Magic.
Draws Poison out of u Wound.
BUCHANS’ CARBOLIC
BALM OINTMENT
CONTAINS NO QSSASE AND
WASHES OFF WITHOUT SOAP.
It acts Instantly aud like Magic.
Fob Sait Rheam, Sore Throat., Ulcer*,
9arn«, Scal<ta, Cuts, Wound*, Pile*,
sore Kye*, Pulwacua Sling*.and Hite*,
Barber'* Itch, Chapped.Hands, Scrofu
lous Sore*, and any and every other purpose for
vhich a Salvo or Ointtnont can bo used. Bn-
riian’n Caa hnlio Balm Ointment i» *bs
mly preporati-
I he competitive ex .mination for a
cadetship ,t West 1’oinc from this,
the 7th, Congressional district was
held in Cartorsville last week, and
resulted in the selection of F. L.
Palmer, of Fbyd ; B. J. Conyers, of
Bartow, first alternate; and Victor
J. Smith, o! Bart > v, second alternate.
The Supreme Co 'it of Pennsyl
vania decides m animously that Al
leghany county is liable for the los
ses sustained in the Pittsburg riots.
The amount is several millions of
dollars.
Edison’s scientific agent and min
ing experts declares that North Car
olina is absolutely the best for min
erals in the world ; that nowhere is
there anything like the variety whieh
she furnishes, and, |ss a rule, they
are by far the most perfect specimens
known.
The corn crop of Tennessee
about tho average in nearly every
ioauty in the Si ito.
One nrm in Wilmington, North
Carolina, bus shipped to New York,
since September 1, 1873, 350 stur
geons, an aggregate of 15,000 pound s
It : s t oketi and c ired in New York
and chipped to foreign markets.
The’Hon. George F. Hoar remar
prophetically: “God will tare care of
he negro.” That is what Parson
General Howard said when the
reedman’a Bank broke and scat
tered the colored man’s money.—
Picayune.
Talleyrand is said to have been
be only statesman, perhaps
should say the only individual, wl o
made it-a rule never to burn or write
a letter. He was fearful of the here
after, and did not care to be killed or
wounded by evidence furnished at
home.. His political notions were of-
n inconsistent, bat like a house caf
he never deserted the premises, no
matter how ofien his masters were
changed. So he is the only wise per
son, on the line of never producing
testimony in writing dangerous to
himself.
Mrs. Fossett, of Logan viile, com
mitted suicide recently by barging
herself.
The last legislature in Texas fixed
a tax ou public horse ri cicg which
has almost put a stop to the diver
3ion in that State.
Mr. Jack Gray, of Early county,
raising cassava, a vegetable root
sor.tw'-:-.((similar to the Spanish pota
to.
Oiatrnont
C«j bolio 13aim Ointment
^ i r oration that can always bo relied njxm.
[t la (Tboaatifal Jolly-colored article, Bold la pi as*
xjttloa vAh tho above ” tro»lo-mark.” without
vhloh none la genuine. S o to It tha* your drng-
t gives you Buchan's, aa above Ascribed. Cir-
ara sent froo on application t^Kbo Manufao-
^GUEMP MANUFACTURING CO..
a PARK PLACE, NLW YORK.
ELACK AS THE EAVE1TS WINGS
IS KIDDER'S
Raven Indelible Ink.
Ready ! Perfect Black I No
fuss or trouble 1 It ifl used
without preparation! Sold
by all druggist* and station-
GuciHp 911jp Co..
22 Pah* Place, N. Y.
.In AsTceablo Aperient & Refrigerant.
This wrH-fciKJwn preparation »■* highly nTcmnwncb #1 ftrt
rv>‘t taste make* it cooilii" and n:frvsl:l:!g- i
‘iwri hr A. ROnEPV porq. Chemist* S'. T.
SUPERIOR ?3 MI-1LSAL tfiTETS. SEUJLITZP0WDLH3. &C.
..•14!ty
Joseph. A. Blance,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
NEXT DOOR TO MILLAR WRIGHT’S STABLE.
New Fixtures, and Old Goods!
KEEPS THE BEST OE LIQUORS.
The Finest Imported French Brandy for Medi
cal Use.
Champagne and Fine Wines.
The best Triple Distilled Gin on
Record.
MY PRICE LIST ON A FEW GOODS
CORN Will SKY, per quart,
APPLE BRANDY, “ “
PEACH BRANDY, “
2 YEAR OLD RYE,“ “
IMPORTED FRENCH BRANDY, per quart,
AMERICAN COGNAC, per quart,
LINCOLN COUNTY, PURE,'per quart ....
GRAPE WINE, per q uirt,
PORT WINE, per quart,
CHAMPAGNE, per bottle,
.50 cents
.90 Cents
.90 cents
. $1.00
. $2.00
. $120
$1.00
.75 cents
. 75 cents
50 cents
I also keep the best brands of CIGARS and TOBACCO at low prices.
Don't forget to call and s unple.
WISE W. MILAM.
OcllG-ly
PAIL TBAIE OPfflED.
GREAT BREAK IN PRICES
CUSTOMERS ASTONISHED at the Extremely LOW PRICES
asked or Goods.
ELEGANT LINES OF ALL GOODS KEPT IN A MIXED STOCK.
Sole Agents for the Bay State Standard Screw-Fastened
SHOES AND BOOT'S.
TIN WARE AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
TLlo Millinery Department,
Under the supervision of
Miss X ilTiTite Velvln,
Is first-class, and the latest styles are always on hand.
Call and see our magnificent Stock now arriving.
PHIIiPO? & DODDS.
wetOti
After all, no remedy i* so certain to
rwre Consumption at pure Norwegian
'od-LiverOil, Carbolatwl liy Willson’*
xrcllfnt Dr. Watt.
All consuini>tivo ]«*tiont3 arc e&rnwtly invttetWt
ive Willson's Carbole*ed Cod Liver Oil a fair trial
t j* easily end readily digested vfcoro all (Haiku
reparations arc refua*d by the stomach, and im
mediately enter* Into tbe circulation, acting upc
jifically upon tho decaying lungs. Tho nntritim*
properties of the oil sustain and build up tbe Bye
torn, while tha active curative properties of th*
preparation complete the vrerk of healing.
Willson's Car bed it ad (Norwegian) Ood LIvct Ol
njyv v gets rancid, is froo from unpleasant taste, li
retained easily by tho vreokeft stomach and la *ok
at the pries of the o.-dinory Oils.
It onr-ja Con-nnption, Scrofula, Asthma, Bron
chitla. Emaciation, Cough?. Colds. Hemorrhage*
and all iung and constitutional ccmplaluts.
Aa f. Blood Puridcr tho Oarb-alatod Ctl is remark-
*bly . fficicnfev Its use iff Scrofulous Affection*.
Rheumatism, Bickei-b *e , la strongly recommend-
ed. Its pvaifylng power is wonderful in Coneump-
♦I— - depending, as It frequently dot», upon Scrof
xi.OuA
It acts u* " Mm ckiioDol theory of Immediately
Ahbesting Deca" *wxls it Dcied* u? the
enabling it to thi*:. v-'tho Ilsosac.
Sold only i» wedge-shaped hot ties. ' Willson” Is
spelled with a doable ” L.” Remember the word
“ Curbolated ” In ordering from your druggist, and
iaaiofc upon having the right kind.
ISnEW STORE.
ISTEW FIRM,
NEW GOODS.
Dealers in General Merchandise,
MAXIM ST., CEDARTOWN, ©A.
(Next door to Philpot & Dodds’.)
■^TE KEEP ON HAND A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS,
SHOES, HATS, CLOTHING,
FANCY GROCERIES, Etc,
and feel confident that ihe public will find it to their interest to oxam-
ine onr stock before purchasing. Sept25->toJanl
MILLINERY-.FALI, STYLES
SUM. 3X« iDOffUQ,
Over Stubbs cb Go’s New store,
W ILL OPEN A GENERAL ASSORT>TENT OF MlHlnorv anu
Notions, OH MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH1NSTANT 451 D
Old friends, and new, are invited to examine before purchasing
Light Sommer “Straws” colored, re-shaped and trimmed.
Dress-making and Hair Work as heretofore.
ALWAYS UP WITH THE LATEST STYLES.
•EDAKTOWH, GA., September S5,1870.
J. K. Williamson.
PRACTICAL
WATCHMAKER
AND
JEWEIiIjEH.
CEDARTOWN, - GEORGIA.
Office, Bradford & Walker’s.
Lcpt25-tf
Estray Noiice.
O RDINARY’S OFFICE. Polk County. C,a.-
All person? interested arc hereby notified lint
John T. Prior, of the 1076 districi, G. M , tolls be
fore me two dark brown estray ponies, taken up
by him on his own freehold in *uid district; one
a horse about fourteen hands hh;h, six or seven
years old, branded with dimond (P) on left shoul
der. Valued by William D. Sparks and Benjamin
F. Bigelow, freeholders, of said disirfct, to be
worth twenty dollars; and the other, a marc
about thirteen hanos high, six or seven years old.
branded with O. on left shoulder, and P. X. on left
forehead, valued by said
Ward, prove property, pay charges, and take said
cetrays away, or they will be dealt with as the law
directs,
A true extract from the estray book. This Sep-
JOEL BREWER. Ordinary,
&, ex. officio Clerk of Ordinary.
Polk Court of Ordinary-for Coun
ty Purposes-Sept.T8rm, ‘879.
I T appearing that the two grand juries empan
eled at February Term Polk Superior Court,
1879. have In part made conflicting recommenda
tions as to assest-mcn: of taxes for county purpo
ses .for said yenr, and the State tax upon which the
same is to bo based being so much less than
was at that time anticipated. It is therefore
ordered, tnat the following county tax for each and
all pun>oscs be, and the same is hereby levied
upon the State tax in behalf of eaid county for
the year 1879, to-wit:
For General County Purposes,.... HO per cent.
For Jury Purposes. 20 “
For Pauper Purposes 2. r » “ •*
For Bridge Purposes, 25 “ “
And for special tax for repairs of
Court House, Privy, and balance
Polk County Sheriff Sale*.
W ILL be sold, before the court house door
in Cedartown, Polk county. Ga.; between
the legal honrs ol sale, on the first Tuesday in
November next ihe following described property,
to wit:
Lot of land No. 511 in the fflghteenth rl8) district
and third (3) section of Polk county, Georgia, us
the property ol John C. Wait* by virtue of ond
mortgage fl fa issued from Polk Superior Court
in favor of Harpold & Qiilycr vs. John C. Wails.
Property pointed oat in said fi fa.
Also, at the same time and place, part of lot No.
1065 and part of lot 1033 in the second (2) district
and fourth section, on the south tide of Cedar
Creek and west of Mrs. Ammon’s land on which
the residence on the E. Pace place i* located^
said two part* of lot* containing twenty (20) acre*
more or less, as the property of Mr*. Martha A.
Chieolm by virtue of one Polk Superior Com: fi'fa
in favor of James 8. Nojc* vs. said Martha A.
Chisolm and A. Unr.tington seenrety. R A.
Wright, tenant in possession waivt.-s notice a«* re
quired by law.
Also, at the same time and place, lot of land
No. 717 in the second district and fourth section • i
Polk county, Ga., as the property of James L.
Jenkins, by virtue of one mortgage ft/a from
Polk Superior Court in favor of A. Huntington, vr*.
said Jenkins. Tenant in possession notified,
Levy made by E. W. Clements, former ehtrilf.
Property pointed out in fi fa.
Also, at the same time and place, 1st* of land.
Nos. 789. 7*), 791, and twenty three acres off of
the north of 796, all in the eighteenth district and
third section of Polk connty. (la., by virtue of
one mortgage 11 fa issued from Polk Superior < 'ourt
in favor of John A. Hentz, vs. BatlrJoucs. Proper
ty pointed out in 11 fa. Tenant iu poereask-n
notified.
Also, at the same time and place, two sorr< 1
mare mules about six y ars old each, and o;;--
brown colored mare mule about nine years old.
and one bay horse mnle abont eight year* old. urn-
cream colored horse about seven year? old. by vir
tue of one Polk Superior Court fi fa. in favor of
L. Q.'.C. Thompson, vs. Jacob 8. Davitte. as the
property of said Davit te. Property pointed out
Cedartown, Polk county, Ga.. on the firi
in December next, between tbe legal hour* m
the-following property, to-wit; One priming
press, twenty-one cases, two stands, four; tables,
and all other luraiture and material and the tjpe
belonginglto the office of the Cedartown Record in
tbe town of Cedartown in said State and county
a* the property of W. J. Waddey, by rirtue ol one
mortgage fl fa issued from Po.k Superior Court in
favor of W. S.D. Wikle A Co., vs. W. J. Waddey.
Property in thelpo«s*-«?iontof said Waddey aud
pointed out inVaid fi fa.
Vi. G. TAYLOR. Sheriff.
E. W. CLEMENTS. Dep. Snor.fl.
Safe*. ..
'V
7
Amounting in the aggregate ti
on the State tax. or forty-five axd one half cent*
on the one hundred dollar* of taxable property ;
ami the Tax Collector of said connty i* hereby au
thorized and required to assess und collect the said
mm* of money and pay over the same to the Coun
ty Treasurer ol said connty in term* of the law.
This 15th September. 1879.
JOEL BREWER, Ordinary.
Sepf25 lm
ha? applied to have William Yonng.-tna Lena
loung, both colored orphan children of *aid coun
ty. liound to him. Therefore all persons cor.cerne 1
will app -ar at a Conrt of Ordinary to bo held iu
said county on the 3rd Monday ini October next,
to show cause, if any they have, why said children
sould not be bound out, Thl* >epf. 6, 1879.
scpt&4w JOEL BREWER, Ordinary.
r* EORGfA—Polk County.—William R. Beck,
vJ William M. West, J. W. Brandon and others
having made application for an order converting
into a second-class {oiblic road the private v*v.
commencing and leaving the public road ne*- b r
and opposite the residence of Jesse F. Crool i i
said county and running by the premise* of,W. it.
Beck, John P. Hammock, W. M. West and by
Blooming Glove church and intersecting with tho
public road near the residence of Janie* Garner.
Therefore, all pet sons concerned will be and appear
at^i Court of Ordinary to be held in said connty on
the third Monday in October next to show canso, if
any they have why said order should not be grant
ed. Given under my hand, this this Sept. 8th,
1879. JOEL BREWER, Ordinary.
the Court of Ordinary, will be sold before the
court hou*e door in Cedartown, Polk county. G; ,
within the legal hour* of sale, on the first Tues
day in November next, a town lot in Cedartown .
lying immediately north of the KaiLoed ar.d con -
tiguons to the Railroad right of way, fronting on
Main street 151 feet and running back 230 fe.et.
Also, lot of land in the first district and 4!h sec
tion, known ns No. 1. The property belonging to
the estate of L. n. Walthall, anu sold for the ben
efit of the heir* and creditor*. Terms ca>h.
JOS. A. LIDDELL. Adrn’r.
SUSAN WALTHALL, Adrn x.
Sept. 3, 1S79.
Debtors and Creditors Notice.
required to make Immedi-tte
persons holding claim* against
please hand
law requires, to the ttndersfgi
. and all
.. il deceased will
their claims properly attested as the
Administrator’s Sale.
& E
t
county, will he sold liefore the conrt honn
Cedartown, Ga., oa the first Tuesday In Nover
her next, the followin'; property, to-wit: Oi
house aud lot lying ar.d being in t'hu town of C
dartown, .-aid connty, situated and bounded
follows; Lying on the
leading from Cedartown io« vve spring, nun umrn ,
prirg branch to J. C. Reece*? lot, including I
' by Wade 8. i
he si
.11 tho land described ...
'othran toB. J. Hand thst lie? south of sain road .
and to the centre of said spring branch containing
* •• • At of
ot sale, the following property, to-wit:’Lot? of
land Nos. J129. 1130.1165. 1201 at d the west half
of 1205, and all of 1237.1288 and 1279, all in the 2fot
district and 3rd section Polk connty, Oa., contain
ing 300 acres more or less, it being a part of the
plantation formerly owned by J. D. Morgan, 'on
Enharley creek, five miles from Rockmarr. and
upon which R. C. Wynn now lives. Sold a? the
property of Mary Earl, deceased, for the benefitjof
... . ,.. , the heirs and creditors. Terms made knownton
•r.t n-stne of public road day ot sale. This 25rh dav of ‘L-ntomber, 1879.
r>(.*ve Spring, aud down , E. D. HIGHTOWER. Administrator.
Oct2-1m
Sold for th*
the heirs and creditors
deceased. Term* cash.
W. C. KNIGHT. Administor.
d« bonis non of the estate of J. B. Hand, dec'll,
Sept. 18, 1879.
Administrator’s Sals.
thu cute of B, J, Hand, I I ?,l’ ,l ” n ” OT o( a " " r ; ,or from
©rable Ordinary of Polit county will bo
sold bofora fh* court house 'liar in Cedar-
town, Folk county. Ga, wit-hin tho legil
hours of sale on the first Tuesday in ?f©v.
next the undivided half interest which th;r
estate of Raleigh W. Whitehead, late of
said county «f Polk, deceased, owns in tho
old Dr. Nickols plage, divided by the line
between Polk and Bartow counties*, con
sisting of the fallowing number* to wit :
Noe. 6, 7,8,‘land 10. except aafh port-...*
of said lots lying fleirh of Euh krle© cree/.
as were conveyed to Thomas Deaton for
portions of land lying N irth of said crock,
and that portion of Nos. 06 -snd 04 in sain a
district and section which lies north of frit i
Of OCTOBER Hh will contain the first chapter I creek;lot No. Co,lying on both sides or said
of a story of thrilling interest, entitled J creek, all in the J Hi h district r.n 1
3rd section of Polk county and
the undivided half interest in lots belong
ing to said N ckols place. No*. 1292. 1007 r
1009, 1010, 1079 and the Weal half of 1291;
all the last named numbers being ia tho
i7th district and 3rd section of Iiartow
county. The whole of the said Nickols
place containing 4* 0 acres more or less.
Tho undivided bait interest in all the
above described lands having been sold be
fore the court houee door in Cedartown,
Pelk county, Ga., by me os the administra
tor on the estate of Raleigh W. Whitehead,
deed., on the first Tuesday in January last
between the legal hours of galo and Itobt.
a. Whitehead having bid then off at tho
rum and price of Twenty-five hundred
dollars and he having failed to comply with
tbe terms of the sale, tho samo are now
offered for sale at tlic risk of the said
Robert S. Whitehead. Terms cash.
WM. I. TAYLOR, Admr., on the
Estate of Raleigh W. Whiteh.ad, deed.
Morning News Serials.
A NEW STORY
Bv a Lady of Savannah,
The Savannah
Weekly News
AMEEI/S SECRET
BY MRS. J. O. BRANCH.
Wt-^lcrlro not to anticipate the plcaenrc o-lilch
the readers of the Weekly New* will derive from
the porusal mf this charming story, and therefore
will not r-peak Of it here further than to sa» that in
the management of an original and Intensely in
teresting plot, not less than in her powers or de
scription, her life-like delineations ol character,
and the pure moral tone of her reflections, the ac.
complifhed author gives assurance that eke inher-
genin* of her gifted mother, Mrs. Carolina
popular American books ©f their .w
“Anabel’s Secret” is developed In California, of
which State the author was at one time a resident,
and her vivid descriptions of some of the most
wonderful scenery or that picturesque region are
ten number* of the Weekly. Subscriber! who de
sire to have the story complete should send in
their snbscriptlous at once.
Subscriptions $2 a year, fl for six month*.
Money can be sent by Money Order, Registered
Letter or Express, at our risk.
Executors Notice.
GEORGIA—Poi.k County.—All persons hold-
VJ ing claims against the estate ol George W.
West, deceased, are requested to present the same,
ind all indebted to the said <
make immediate ss-ttlemei
JOS. A. BLANCE,
Sept. 18, 1879 11.
$1500 <
Webb’s Restaurant,
Bakery, Lager Beer, & Ale,
Neatly Opposite the New Masonic Temple,
.Vo. 57, Bruml Street, Borne, Oa
MEALS AT ALL HOURS.
Oysters, Birds, Game, Fish, &e., in
their Season, and Always the
Best the Market Affords
Furnished.
Also Lodgings Furnished Strangers.
Meals 25cts eaeh; Lodgings 25cts
per heud. march 27- tf
Tlie nmlav Phonograph,
01 Atlanta, is the Inst weekly pa
per published in the State. It’s col
umns contain something to pleas#
everybody. It is a bold, fearless pa
per ; attacking official corruption in
high and low places. It is a good
family paper, in every senee of the
word. Subscribe for it, if you want a
good paper from the Capital. Terms
$2.00, per year; $1,00, six months;
50 cents for three months. Address
Phonograph, Atlanta, Ga.
day in y©«r own locality. No r
Women do as well aa men. Many make more limit
the amount stated above. Noone can fail to make
money fast. Any ono can do the work. Yon tan
make from 50 cts. to f2 an hour by devoting your
evenings and spare time to the business. It cost*
nothing to try the business. Nothing like it for
money making ever offered before. Business plea
sant and etrictly honorable. Reader, if yon want
to know all about the best paying business before
tbe public, send us yonr address and we will send
yon full particulars aud private term* free ; sam
ples worth $5 also lrce; you can then make np
your mind for yourself. Andres* GEORGE STIN
SON 6i CO., Portland, Maine.
AQAA A MONTH guaranteed. *12 a day at
tpOUv homemade by the industrious. Cap
ital not required: we will start you. Men, women,
boys and girls mako money faster at work lor us
than at anything else. The work is light and
pleasant, and such as any one can go right at.
Those who are wise who sec this notice will send
us their address nt on<-e and see for themselves.
Costly Ontftt and terms free. Now i* the time.
Those already at work arc laying up large sums of
money. Address TRUE A CO.. Augusta, Maine.
ntown, and
| give the but
trial without expense. The best opportunity «
cap-
the busiuesi
plain b» r t. You can devote all your time or only
your si ar • time to the business, and make great
pay for every hour that you work. Women make
as much as men. Send lor special private terms
and t particulars, which we mail free. |5 Outfit free.
Don't complain of hard time* while you have snch
CHEROKEE RAILROAD.
OmcE Chcrokre Railroad. August 27, !8~9.
O N and after Monday, Sept. 1st. 1*79. the trair. !
on thi* Road will ran daily (Sunday* excepted;
as follows ;
No 1. goinp West. | JJtatiowb. J No- 2. going East
“ 9:07. A, M. | Taylorsville I Arrive 4:45, P. M.
“ 10:10 A. M. I Rockmart i .\5rive 3:40, P. M.
Arrive 10:50 A,M. I Terminus } Leave 3:00, P. M.
No. 1 leaves Cartorsville after arrival of day
passenger from Atlanta. No. 2 connect* at
Caner-iviile with pae-enger for Atlanta.
JOHN I’OSTELL, Manager.
Hack to connect with trains at Terminus,