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HL ! Ihnilß lEdne* pl°*i
■A.daj-tto” y«to r«rf:
EUo©Mtafc* 1,,,ld * WOtd
■L f ,ml!eih!« be * rtC * a
sot , moment toroet,
"bile tonthioe crow at the day,
darkened cloadt arit* j
Ea not that kind <»•*» ® wa^
Eb<l *o mu*t lin P*f« x . V
W Yrm d»r to toy. trow year to year!
Ban n« one'* beart rcs l x>nd to m ' DC '
■ While gloom clouds are lingering near?
doth no one yet respond?
E, t tlis sadfheart sink decper;dowa
K«f. eoid ** ,er * De er t 0 ri8 ®» *‘i
K there In agony to drown?
|§L c t!e band held out in lore
■ ve ]onme one so sad and lone?
no pleasing words,
m ui the thoughts of grief bo gone?
EL m«t l 9tiU to Rlldne,J * P l * l ®
■ fwr day to day, from yehrto years J
E«j> BO one's heart respond to mine
B While gloomy clouds are lingering near?
to ask for pence
Jil» rlowl* no dark are hanging round;
l|jl (jjf sunshine beameth forth
K« tbj \bode be ever found#
Bain to cry, for none are nigh, M f
K*et«they nigh they would not hear;
B m r« are deaf to every cry,
Bjlipt refuse to give the cheer.
B&1 no i must in sadness pine,
■ From day to day. from year to year;
Bor do one * heart responds to mine
■ While gloomy clouds are lingering near.
Hi the last, forgot by all,
Kt»:a in death I’ll find a rest;
■tnmi'kd heart will t ease to moan
Bn irsti'ig on the Saviour’s breast.
Bafail* He b'ds ujo here remain,
■t gh sad, alone, in misery.
L beyond this world of woe
ft isace in all eternity.
■ Bat yet l mult in sadness pine
I Fiomdav to day, from year to year;
■Parao kind heart responds to mine
I Wkikgtanmy clouds are lingering near
k LAST'S ISMS-
BT L TTIE BROWN.
Bs s pale face, with lines of stiffer-
Bringthe otherwise perfect beauty
Briicate mouth and chin. The head
«• of hair, liko tangles of bur-
BoM.tail back upon the dull, dingy
Backed chair, and the great tired
Bfpain of body and of mind load-'
Heir limpid tenderness, werewatch
■ coals iu the grate before her, as if
Bs nothing t lac on earth for her to do. j
B another woman in the room ; I
Straight, handsome woman, with a
■rldly (ace, and a quick, decided air,
Bat now, wa* about twitching the
B thumping up the pillows, and
■ thebulgy cushions of the chairs, es
Bhe owed them a grudge.
B «oou she came around to the grate,
Bod over the rocking chair and its
Bftttg occupant
B> you are iu for it now, as true as
B world. What is going to become.
Bonly knowsand the hot hands
for an instant, and then fell back
B. • * b-■ J I 11
B • somebody coming up her?, Aunt
Bsb« said after a little pause, as the
Bioet came up along the hall. ‘Who
I suppose.'
Bo* didn’t
m you think lam going to let
V- The bill will be paid somehow.’
I no lime for further talk for,
B. v a short preliminary tap, the door
Bgopen and the doctor entered.
Bsed around with a sharp professio
then stepped over to Mabel
B*.ftly,
Bathe patient. What isthe matter?
■*o!k,doctor,’ said that strong voic
■ ‘Anybody might know that
B«*t her.'
B»°rk sand he lifted one of the
■ Unds and held it in his own for a
■j-3er did not have such patients
P*?* There was something a little
ordinary in the exquisite face,
■ ®y e * > sod, being young, and
■ arrrved to those fearful years when
J ®€thod has wiped out every trace
Bee and gentleness, his face at once
■ * womanly and qympathet-
B l! * pecnliar tenderness, at
■ ssical and reassuring.
These very hands look
W: how.yon brought this
B' tQCi c ?—iustonc implottngglaaco
VOL* VI.
from tier heavy eyes, and tfaen'as though
his voice and touch had stirred her pent up
fountain of tears, she broke forth and wept
bitterly.
‘I—I—lr-do not know.’
He held close to her haod until tho fitful
shower had passed, , f
‘By herd pbyisical end mental labor; is
that the wa j’ t V he then asked.
‘Yes I* cried Aunt Sarah, coming over
and looking him full in the face. ‘She is
working herself to death to keep her moth*
er end I alive A
‘You V he looked at the stoat brawny
figure. a
‘I care for her mother/
‘Mamma is an i valid, and nobody on earth
ean care of her excepting Aunt Sarah.’
‘Well/ he-leaned over the table and hur
riedly wrote out a recipe. * ‘You must take
care of yourself.’
And this was all ; but Mabel Girard and
Dr. Aylm&r had met and the rest came in
due time.
There was quite a little flutter one mors
ning in the three smalDrooms occupied by
Mabel,; stoat Aunt Sarah, and the helpless
invalid mother. , s
The latter was silently weeping, and
nervously rubbing her thin white hands.
Aunt Sarah, was grim and inflexible, and
Mabel flushed and excited.
'lt is bettef, mamma, than working in the
shop on those terrible coats, that broke me
down with their weight, and I am sure
the pay is far better. Miss Pallas is a
rather easy going body, and I know I shall
get along with her.’ said Mabel.
‘But it's the humiliating position. A
lady’s maid 1 Only think, Sarah.'
‘H’m I Its betet than starvation !»
And so the weak mother's objections went
in the back gronud, and Mabel went out as
a lady’s maid to a rich man’s only and ca
pricious child.
The work was not very hard and the sur
roundings more than compensated for the
low situation, by filling Mabel’s artistic
eyes.
There was something pleasant in behold
ing the harmony and luxuriousr.ess of
this palatial home, even though its posses
sion was veritably a mythical thing. The
wealth of lace, and shining silk, the gleam
of white ra&rble and gold, the rosy fires the
soft carpets, the perfumed atmosphere, the
books, the pictures, the thousand laxuries
spread unsparingly on every hand, were
more than their owners ever dreamed, to
the beautiful lady’s maid.
Bat of all, Annie Dallas was a good wos
man. She had the unfortunate habits of a
spoiled child ; but she was warm hearted,
loving, indolent, aud easily pleased ; and,
therefore, Mabel’s labor became almost a
pleasure.
‘Mabel, do you think that you will ever
marry V she asked one morning, as Mabel
was combing out her iQftg, abundant hair.
‘No, I suppose not.’
‘No ! How cool you ar«. Why, I not only
hbpe to, but mean to marry as soan as ever
1 can ma|£lfefionvenient. Did yonever Bee
Dr. Aylmer ?’
‘l—am I believe I have.*
*Jf you bate you would remember him,
for he ir too handsome for any one to
easily forget. Well, I made up my mind to
marry
Mabel'd face was very red, but Miss Dal-*
Taa could not see it , and after a moment,
she composedly said, ' ;f.* A ‘
‘Yes. WeTl y tUt is nice.* f
‘No, it is not nice at all. He comes here
very often, so, of courge, I have a good op*
portunity to read his character, and I have
made up my mind that he Was ttfe man of
all others, to make me happy. Now listen
Last night, 1h the course of conversation,
we wandeied to that extremely delicate
’subject—marriage, and, although I had
been making beautiful eyes at him jft th
evening, Uetoolly said that he had seen be
one woman in Mb life whom he would marsy.
He said bo should marry her if heever fouu
her, but that she was not accessible just at
present. She asked him where she was,
and he siid he did not know. Very odd,
isn't it.
“Vsry„’’
‘‘And not over comfortable to m&, but then,
there are plenty of others, I suppose ”
Now, of course, all this had nothing to do with
Mabel, bnt ehatook occasion to ask leave of ab
sence and visit home that evening, aud to inquire
if any one ha’d called?
“Why no! Who on earth did yon expect?’*
asked that practical Aunt Sarah. ‘ Oh, yes, Dr.
Aylmer called and asked for yeti. 1 Buppose he
called to get his pay. He asked where you was,
and t 4>lJ him that yon were at work, and he
%tntaway. » ’ j • N
“Without asking where I was?”
“Weit, he did ask in an Indirect sort of bat
* - - -*■ _ * •
m, 2«r|» *bz **jea mu mm jeq jmt, or
A. i,i r v. **. i .. «K *- • "''.A
GA-, MARCH 16th 1872
iwasn’tjgoing to tell him that you/sere actins&g
lady’s maid, so I evaded the question.” JBgm
Mabel went bapk to her lady, 'with an
tented feeling pervading her, and then„£rf
there was another blank in this acquafjtaacj 'W?
tweeu.hereelf and Dr. Aylmer.
She was growing out of the dull apathy which
hadjsettled over her life, and there w&s color com
ing back into her cheeks, and light into her won
drous eyes.
&Tbls life, with it's ugly title—“Hrfjr’s. maid”
qad health andwarmth in.it, and/ehe-fiked it.
It whs almostjlike going back to ‘the old child,
hood days qWressing dolls, only that herj doll
now livid and had a being, and] a will’ u of it’s
OWU;
All this while she was, prudently, hoarding her
wages, and'dealing outlajliberal portion to the
dear ones athome, andj“putting.aw»y” the re st.
When the “rest” had accumulated to a satisfacto.
ry amount, she donned her bonnet, and walked
traight Aylmer’s office.
Not/however, without a little trembling and
nervoußnass; but she overcame this after a little,
and bravely’mounted the marble steps, crossed
the marble paved vestibule, and entered.the warm
luxurious room.
‘‘Ah! Girard 1” he said. “Are you ill
again?”
“No. I came to settle my bill.”
“Oh, you did? You’are hardest work again?”
“Yes.”
‘ “Where Miss—Mabel?”
‘‘l am'Miss Dallas maid."
“Annie Dallas! Are you the paragon of whom
she has so frequcntly’spoken?” *
“I think so.”
Then there was an awkward pause. Dr. Ayl
mer broke it by saying:
‘ ‘You never saw me but ~once before] ,'Mabel?’ ’
“No.”
' “I have thought of no one else since I saw you.
“Indeed!”
“Do jon believe in lcvc at first sight f
“1 —dont know.
“Well I do. I didn’t a short time ago, but
well, Mabel, I am in love with you.
And not knowing whether to laugh or cry, Ma
bel stoob up, looked at the door, and sat back
again.
“You are all alone; Aunt Sarah cannot love you
and care for you as I can. Come,‘Mabel, can you
love me well enough to bo!my wife?
What else could she do, but just what she did
and that was to sob out, with a great lurst of
tears.
“Yes—l suppose so.
“So it is you, Mabel, you fly puss, said good
natured Annie Dallas, when Dr. Aylmer brough t
back his beautiful little affianced. Well I had
rather give Dr. Aylmer up to you than to any
body else, and to show you that I dont care I*ll
give you a wedding dress and be first bridesmaid
“l think 1 had an impression when I first saw
thuman, said Aunt Sarah. “Somehow I felt that
something good would come out of it. and some
thing better whenshe went out as lady's maid
Synopsis of the Public School Law
of Georgia, as Amended.
[From the Chronicle and Sentinel,
The State Board of Education is com
posed of the Goveinor, Attorney General,
Secretary of State, Comptroller General and
State School Commissioner. The last
named official is the chief executive officer
of the Board’
DUTIES AND POWERB OF THE STATE BOARD
Holds in trust all devises, etc., for fdu
calional purposes; deposits educational
funds with the State, Treasurer for safe
keepiug; shall report to the legislature, at
the annual meeting of that body, an ac
count in detail of the acts aud doings of
said Board.
THE STATE SCHOOL COMMISSIONER.
is appointed by the Governor and confirm
ed by the Senate; is charged with the ad
ministration of the system of public in*»
etrqction; prescribes suitable forms and
regulations for making reports and con--
ducting necessary proceedings under the
law; shall visit as often as possible the
several Senatorial Districts for the purs
pose of counseling with school officers and
the peopte iu the interest of popular educa
tion; apportions equitably the school mon
eys upon the basis of the aggregate of
youths between six and twenty-one years
of age; makes an annual report to the Leg
islature; has authority to require copies
of all reports at the bands of local Boards
of Education,school officers, clerks and
treasurers of counties, recorders and
treasurers of cities and villages; receives
a salary of $2,500 per annum; traveling ex
penses incurred in the performance of his
official duties paid out of the school fund;
shall send to the Ordinary of each county,
immediately after adjournment of tha Leg
ielatnre, a correct statement of tbs fund
standing to tjie credit of the State for edu
cational purposes, is not allowed a clerk.
The Ordinary places this statement before
the County Board of Education at its fiist
meeting after the election of the members
thereof:
SCHOOL DISTRICTS.
Each county constitutes a school district
under the control of a
COUNTY BOARD OT EDUCATION.
The Grand Jury, at the first session af
ter tbo passage of this ac*, selects five
free holders, who become the county
Board; three lioidfofficefor two years, and
two for four but all after the first
for four years; they arc to
receive $2 per day for sci>
vice rendered; are forbidden to remain in
session loager than one day; no. compen
sation allowed for other than quarterly
meetings; are invested with the title, care
and custody qf all school houses, sites,
school libraries, etc, as now organized,
with power to control the same in such
manner aa may think will best sub
serve the interest of common schools; may
establish such graded schools as they may
think proper, with full power in respect to
such schools to employ, pay and dismiss
teachers, build, repair and furnish school
hordes, etc,, may provide evening schools
for such youth, by their daily occupations
are prevented from attending day schools,
shall with the County Commissioner, make
the necessary provisions for continuing in
operation the Bchools over which they have
jurisdiction, for the tertn of six months in
the year; in case the Board fails in this
duty of continuing the schools in opera
tion, the county is debarred from receiving
any portion of the State fund the next year
must issue an order, countersigned by the
County School Commissioner, upon the
Treasurer for the disbursement of the coun
ty's share of the State fund, which is order
ed to be deposited with said Treasurers;
shall prescribe from time to time such text
books and books of reference as shall be
used in the common schools ot the county.
THE COUNTY SCHOOL COMMISSIONER
is chosen by the Board jof Education; hold?
office for the term of four years, duties
same as under the original -law, shall be
allowed a per diem of not less than $3,
not more than $5.
CvUNTT SCHOOL FUND.
On the receipt of the State School Com
missioner's statement as to the amount to
the credit of the county in the State Treas
ury, the County Board shall make an esti
mate of the pum necessary, in addition to
what will be received from the State, to
carry on the schools six months in the year
there is no prohibition against carrying on
the schools for a longer terra if the Board
so desire, which estimate the Board places
befoie the Grand Jury, who, approving
said estimate shall authorize the Ordinary
or County Commissioner to levy a tax suffi
cient to raise the required amount,
the state fund
arises from the poll-tax, special tax on
shows and exhibitions, sale of spirituous
and malt liquors, and one half the not earn
ings of the Western & Atlantic Railroad,
these funds are to be kept seperate from
other moneys in the Treasury, and must not
be invested in State bonds*
INDEPENDENT ORGANIZATION.
Any city with five thousand inhabitants?
or any county, under authority from the
General Assembly of this State, may or
ganize an independent public school system
may receive their just proportion of the
State fund but the chief executive officer of
speh system must make the reports requir
ed of County School Commissioners.
COUNTRY TAVERNS.
• ; 4
I like country taverns!
That is some of them!
Some of them are good taverns for man
and beast. But not good for a beast un
less it had a man to care for it.
These country tavoihs where a big fat
man plays checkers and sleeps in the bar
room in a chair beside a dog, while his pale,
back aching, overworked wife picks chick
eis, washed dishes, makes dumplings,
sweeps out rooms, empties slops, patches
her husbands breeches and scratches ehis
back for her board and two calico dresses
a year !
There is fun in stopping at some coun
try taverns.
Wflere they have but one towel for two
persons, and that towel a cottdn one.
Where the windows rattle like a bag
fall of- shin-bones struck by lightning.
Where there is a four-quart water
pitcher full of settlings, and only a two.*
quart slop vfessel and no place to empty it
except the stove.
Where the curtains to the windows were
only made by spiders, and all the world
can look in to see you pull off your boots
and things*
Where the pillow is soft and dimpled
like a fat baby's fist, and, if your ear be
not covered with a postage stamp the
darned slimsey thing works into your head
before morning, making you Teel like a
billy goat with the catarrh.
Where the feather-bed is filed with
hens, heads, pigs, toes, necks of paregoric
vials, butternut-shells, broken-up pitcher*
handles, hoot-heels, spelling-book covers,,
broken rooster, tails and bits
of ca-pet-rags.
Where the beadstead weaves to and fro,
like a timothy with a bumble-bee on the
top of it, and the entire contrivances
sqeaks and groans when you get in, turn
over or get out like ag jackass with tho
mumps. - .7-
W here J the under’sheet ? was changed in
J one, and the upper one in January, ail In
the name*: of neatness.
Where the coVSrs are few and two short
everywhere, except’Jn the middle, and the
wind blowing through a broken glass full
and furious onto your threadbare head.
Where the little stove in the corner is
fall of’ashes, the wood top long for the
stove, the sap notjyefc out of the wood, the
kindlingiin the barn and the boy to”build
a fire not yet hired.
Where the "comes into f your
room wi bout knocking, just as .you have
your head hid in the folds of a night-shirt
and: says : ‘"Never mind Jit's only me
or ask if you know of anybody who wants
to buy a good hotel I
Where the matches are to be found and
the only way to cad’a servant Is to throw
a "water-pitcher* down stairs, break a
doorfdown,
pick from the astonished folks, wfco comes
to see what is up.
Where : the’little slice of soap smells of
fish oil, *o your hands washed with it make
you think your grandfather was a uu mbef
two mackeral. • .0
Where there is not a hail in the room on
which to hang clothes or a chair in wbioh
tosit wjii'e your wife is letting down’ her
best back hair.
Where the only glass or tumbler in the
room is an empty soap-dish, and the water
for cleansing teeth in thick and ropy, like
the last will and testament of a drunken
politician.
Where they have rump-steak for ten
der-loin, melted lard for gravy, soggy, po
tatoes and fried pork in chunks.
in a dish of grease, as raw as when it first
came into the world.
Where the pepper-box lid drops off into
your’eggs, the salt is at the other end of
ihe table, the vinegar bottle carpeted inside
with d> ad flies in soak, and the crackers
covered with beriods, so called*
Where the pie crust is a croos between
tripe and juju paste.
Where the pancakes are white as soap
suds soaked thumb, or half-filled with
butter, like a boy's mouth with worms
when he gdeth forth to fish for hullheads*
Where the tablecloth is so soiled and
spotted like a map of the Indian Archpe
lago, or a Chinese sailor juat over the small
pox.
Where the molasses jug has not been
cleaned since the death of John Brawn*
Where the piece of meat brought on
your plate is covered with grease, like a
croß-cut saw on a winter morning.
Where the plates are colder than the
gable end of and ice house.
Where the landlady pours tea with a
pipe in her mouth, and the d’ning ro uaa
help blow their noses on*the napkins*
Where a fire is. never mad? when you
order it*
Where you are not called till the train
has started, because that darned boy for
got it.
Where loafers sit up in the bar-room
under your bed room, telling smutty
stories till midnight—where dogs and
young ones race up and down an uncar
peted hall in the morning while you are
trying to sleep.
Where the one who calls an early riser
next room hammers on the door, and yells
till you would think that Vulcan and
Gabriel had arrived on a drunk!
Where sappy nosed children come into
your room, sp ; ll your hair-oil, i try your
tooth'bi uch, wip? their noses on your coat
tail or breakefast shawl, then bawl like a
young bull Stung by hornets when you ask
(hem to run out ’ike sweet 1 ttle dears.
Yes—Hike country tave ns— that is,
some of them. —“Bkick“ Pomeroy.
Farm -Notes- ‘ *> .
The harden of the farm—Too much land.
A farmer’s life goes often against the
grain.
There mast be instinctive neatness iu a
housewife, or there will be dirt in the
corners.
The day is coming when the fanner will
be the educated man.
The warfare of the farmer mtisl be eter
nal against the weeds.
Nothing is so extremely ridiculons as to
lamest CUT AffKWfalfar
•*£: ■
QfficifJ of Dctaitiir. Courtty
»V ? ABV 1J«BRTBI>
On »ho most Reasonable Term*. Advertisement*
> from e distance must always be *coompani*d .
by the eash, to t w%te insertion, except
the- partita *re well Jtaona .Jg.
the editors or the proprietor.. , T , A
*OB WORK >'EATLY EXECUTKD,
NC 39,
see n man go iniofMs field, all nicely pre
pared and-deliberately cast fort! weed into
it. (How many of us can plead, intiocenoe
here?) . . v . .
The farmer i* constantly sorronnded *by
a miracle of his own “rttfsing'
fool manure into grain,
The farmer's has area * but his own •
erebip also extends,, downward— duwb to *
the fires, in thefeeutre ofjtho globe meet alt
our’deeds. '» : • • v • •*. -A • «-> ,U»* -
»•' 1 ■" 1 U elf.
A machine has bee* invented so TTtafc
for killing grasshoppers. It is drawn by
horses, and cohnists of a 'arge apron, which
P* c ks up t the injects as it is and awn-forward
Behind thejaprou isjajpair of rollers
by the carrying wheels and whaler fiiida
its way in the front of the machine is oblU
ged to'pass betweenlthesel’’rollers.
“Misfortunes never conte ts Agio,”
And so like birds »f a-fcather,
Thelnamages and th* do*tbs
Are always printed together,,
A brldedn Indianna, after the conclusion of tho
marriage ceremony, stepped forward
and requested the clergyman to giye out tho hymn,
‘This is the way I long have-enrtgbt; L
A lady had,her dress trimed with ‘bugles* before
going to the ball. Her little daughter wanted to
know if the bugles would blow when she danced.
‘Oh, no/ said mother. ‘Ptpa will \do that when
he sees the bill.’ ?I s
i '.PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
—-A-.. . .■■ i . •■■« ±
B< o.Voowis
~
ATTORNEYS! AIT 1 LAW
BAINBRIDGE, GA V
omcs ik the ccrtmr houib.
March 23,. 1871. « 44-iy *
K. W. DAYIS,
ATTORNEY AT LA ,
BAINBRIDGE, GA; : ~
Office over Patterson & McNitir's Store.
•» . 1 -1:> T". i’. r-
CHARLES 0. CAMPBELL r> gHABOJI
CAMPBELL & SHARON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
BAINBRIDGE; GA 9
All business entrusted to cate, promptly at
tended to. - „. f j)
Office Iti Court House. [July 18, ly
DR.'E. J. MORGAN;
OFFICE on South Broad, over J. W; Dcfinarda
"tore. Residence on West! Streqt, <
March 30 ly BAINBRIDGE, GA.
—- -.i «■ „ --.-l-I- j. ... i, '
TO THE TRAVELING PUBLIC I
THE MARSHIa HOUSE.
Savannah, Ga,
TH IS HOTEL, h equated on
Broughton Stjeet, and is convenient* to the
.busiaeqs part of the City. Omnibuses and Bag
gage Wagons wiilal ways ho In »ttendanee at the
various Depots and Steamboat landings, to oonTey
passenger to the hotel. The best
LIVERY STABLE ACCOM MOD
will be found adjoining the House. ; i .
The undersigned will spare neither;time, trouble
nor expense to make his guests COmfortahl'V ‘ and
rendci this House, iu every substantial particular
equal, at least to any in the State.
The Sate of Board has been rednifed to 13 per day,
A. IS. I.ITCJK Proprietor
RULE til SI TO FORECLOSE MQR’FGI
H. W. Haßßixo, 1 Decatur Superior Court,
vs 4 V * April Term 1871.
8. E. Conyers, j ' 1
It being repr««cnted to the Coart by the-petitto*
of Hanson W. Herring that by deed of luortgage,
dated the 27th d/iy of November 1869, Samuel E.
Conyers oou veyed to the said ii. W. Herring, lc4
of land No. three hundacd and two L6o2j, and at*
acres of land of lot No", one hfihdrCd Hind bloety
nine (190), in the 19th District of said oonnty and
State, for the purpose of securing .the payment of a
promisory note, made by the aatd 8. K. Coilyer* to
the said H. W. Herring, or bearer, dated the 27th
day o f November 1869, und due on the l«tday Jan
uary 1871, for tho sum of two hundred and sixty
three del tars, which uoto is now due and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said Samuel E. Conyers do
paj into this Court by the first day of the next
term, the principal, interest and costs, due on a*Ki
tiote, orßhow urate if any be hus to the -contrary,
or that on default thereof, foreclosure be grunted
to the said Hanson VV. Herring, pf said mortgage
and the equity of redemption of the said 8. E.
Conyers therein, he farever barred," and that *er.
vice this rule be perfected on tbo said jB. K, Coui
yers, "y publication In the SoirrnnM Sum once.a
month for four months, according to law.
Panea J. Strom*,
dec7 J S 0 A 0,
RULE NI SI TO FORECLOSE XIOUI'GE.
H. W. Herring vs S. E. Conyers.
Adjourned Oetofctr Term, 1871:
It appearing to by the return of the
Sheriff, that the defendant resides without th*
State, it is ordered that service be perCected by
publication according to law,
P. T. FKfcwfief*, J 8 0 AO.
A true extract from the minutes of the coart,
T| F. Hampton Clerk.
" ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. *
ON the first Tuesday in April next, I will sell be
fore the Court House door ia the city of Beia
bridge, all the real estate belonging to the es
tate of W. N. Averltt, deceased, forms—One
half cash, the balance payable on the Ist January
1878, sccarcd by mortgage.
Jobom-8 Avium, Exec’r.
March 2, 1872-88..td« *
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