Newspaper Page Text
whatever is perceptible on their sur
face. Omnibus road steamers, with
indift rubber tires, travel easily eight
miles an hour over common roads.—
Other steamers have also been tested
on grass lands, with plows attached
and have been found to work admira
bly.
The invention o f Mr. Thomson
promises to effect a revolution in or
dinary road locomotion and trafic.—
One of his road steamers has already
been tested in Paris, dragging a heavy
French omnibus with fifty passengers,
and leave has been granted by the
Government to ply over two routes,
several miles in length, including some
busy parts of the French c-apitol. An
engine lias been despatched to India
for the transport of troops, stores, and
general merchandise, it being ascer
tained that these engines can run five
or six miles an hour at far less cost
than the bullock teams in use, which
•cannot Iteep up a third of that speed.
Hoad steamers have been also shipped
to Labuan, one of the islands in the
Indian Archipelago, for the purpose of
transporting coal from the mines on
that island to the port on the sea shore
to meet the great demand beiDg cre
ated for the steamers by the opening
of the Suez Canal. The distance from
the mines to the shore is nine miles.
These steamers are, in fact, exciting
great interest throughout the world.
The ease with which they travel over
grass lands has attracted the attention
of artillery officers, some of whom
think they could be advantageously
used in campaigning. To owners of
large farms they are particularly use
ful, and in the prairie lands of the
West they will, no doubt, before a
great while, be most profitably employ
ed. —Baltimore Gazette.
4l T A{iMlJtB OF JHJ IOXT.
Two Prussian divisions Swal
lowed Pp.
The battle of Mars la Tour, fought Au
gust 18, was announced by King William in
a dispatch to his Queen, as resulting in a
German victory. Fer contra, Marshal Ba
zaine claimed it a decided victory for the
French arms; and subsequently, in the
Corps Legislatif, Count Paliako flatly con
tradicted his Majesty, saying; “I affirm to
the contrary. The Prussians were attacked
and driven into the quagmires of Jaumont.’
As murder will out, so sooner or later we
get at the truth of history, And here it is
in this case. The affair is too horrible to be
dwelt upon ;
From La Patrie.]
Our readers will remember that on the
18th, two Prussian divisions were thrown in
to the quagmires of Jaumont by the troops
of Marshal Canrobert.
A surgeon who assisted in that part of the
action gives us the following details:
“Th<e charge, of our cavalry was irresistible.
They first drove the enemy from the woods
surrounding these quagmires, then, arrived
on the limit, they drove them violently into
the hole, which swallowed almost an army.
The men fell one on top of the other, in a
terrible confusion. An entire regiment of
lancers disappeared in that abyss. It was an
awful mixture of arms, men and horses.—
Ranks were thrown upon ranks, and in their
fall the soldiers were killing themselves by
falling upon the arms of their comrades.”
One witness of that horrible scene, says: |
“I have never seen the fear of death reach
such a degree.” Prince Frederick Charles
was beside himself with rage.
The surgeon from whom we have the de
tails, was made a prisoner against the rights
of war. He offered to Prince Charles to take
care of liis wounded. “Let him be shot!”
said the Prince, in a moment of exaspera
tion. Staff officers remarked to the com
manding general that it would be a grave af
fair, and condemned by the rights of men.
The Prince was a little calmed, and author
ized the suspension of the execution until
the next day; however, the surgeon was es
corted to the outposts of the French army.
Le Publico says : “I have seen, relates an
architect who was present at Jaumont, a
frightful spectacle: it is that of that hideous
oauaire (literally, boneyard.) Imagine an
immense abyss, in which are stagnating a
mass of bodies in decomposition, cut, hack
ed, a mass of brains and hanging flesh.—
There are, may be, ten thousand Prussians
there.”
The Rev. Fuller, of Atlanta, who
does the lying and the howling of the
Northern Methodist Church in this State
says he is met on all sides by the Dev
ii Ku-Kluxes. And if they were to gob
ble up the Rev. Fuller some fortunate
day, it would simply be devil eat devil,
with the odds in Rev. Fuller’s favor as
one of the original imps.— Monroe Ad-,
kktfUeri
Tim Cartersville Express says that
General W. T. Wofford is its first, last
and only choice for Govenor in 1872.
Well, if nothing else will satisfy that
paper, we suppose we will have to sub
mit.—Monroe Advertiser
In the Radical Congressional Nom
inating Convention, at Kingston, Judge i
Parrot opposed a nomination, and he
and Col. H. P. Furrow withdrew, say- !
X ri that If a nomination was made Re
publicans hod not the ghost of a
chance for success. i
THE SEMI-WEEKLY EXPRESS.
SAMUEL 11. SMITH , Editor and Proprietor
CARTERSVILLE, GA., OCT, 14. 1870 |
For the 41st and 42nd Congress from
the 7th Congressional District of Ga«,
GEN. P. mTb. YOUNG, I
Os Bartow Cjincy,
jhor Hfsnscntatihtk to the HLrjgijflatuxe,
JOHN W, WOFFOED,
JOHN W^G-RAY.
jFor WM. W. RICH.
JAS. KENNEDY,
Jor £lnk, ANDREW H. RICE.
Jot ®ai Hftnhor, W. T. GORDON.
jFor ®ax Collator, ZACH M’REYNOLDS
(Eiorutt# Shtasunr, MILES A. COLLINS,
doitntj JSurhfjor, GEO. W. HILL.
Count# Coroiur, BILL ARP.
GE5f. ROBT. E. LEE is
no more !«•>He Is Dead !
We weep not as those without hope.
He is not dead, but sleepeth. His
pure spirit has, doubtless, winged its
hallowed flight to realms of Eternal
felicity; there, seated close by the side
of his Saviour, with Jackson, Polk, qfid
other blood-washed saints and vet
rans of the Lost Cause, they will sing
t-ud shine forever, while the Nation’s
i
tears gush profusely from all eyes,
I both friend and foe, at our loss which
is their eternal gain.
I Hon. J. It. Parrott’s Speech East
Nighl--Tlie Proposed Sale of
1 the State Road.
The following synopsis of JUDGE Parrott’s
Speech, delivered in the Representative Ilall,
Atlanta, Ga., on the night of the 11th instant,
on the proposed sale of the Western & Atlantic
Railroad, Ave copy from the Xeoi Era of the 12th.
It speaks for itself:
A large and respectable audience assem
bled last night, in the Representative Hall,
to listen to an address from Judge Parrott,
on the proposed sale of the State Road.
Judge Parrott began his address by ac
knowledging the courtesy of the House in
tendering him the use of the Hall. He came
before the audience for the purpose of dis
cussing a very important, subject —a subject
in which one million of people Avere inter
ested. He regretted that he did not come
better prepared for the discussion. The
State Road Avas in danger of being disposed
of, without consulting the people. It Avas
the last vestige of property left to the State,
It had survived the storms of revolutionary
violence and now it was proposed to seize it
with ruthless hands and sell it without the
consent of the people. He envied not the
man Avho would vote for such a measure,—
Such conduct would bring upon him th e
frowns of an infuriated constituency.
Judge Parrott then reviewed the history
of the road from the time Avlien tlie project
was first introduced into a Southern Com
marcial Convention. In that Convention
route after route Avas proposed; the Geor
gia delegation being over-ruled, left the Hall
and reported in favor of the very route
which is noAv pursued by the State Road.
The question was agitated from time to time.
Its importance was urged upon the Govern
ors. A.t last the bill passed. He quoted
from Governors Schley, Lumpkin, Gilmer,
Crawford, and McDonald to show hoAv the
importance sf the road Avas appreciated at
that time. The Road was built, and it stands
a proud monument to the intellects that de
signed it, and the hands that executed it. —
and there it will stand, unless ruthless and
improvident legislation should se ; ze upon it,
as long as our mountains look to the sky
and our rivers roll to the sea. The Judge
read from a message of Governor McDonald
in opposition to a proposed sale of the State
Road under his administration. The bill
passed, but was repealed two years later.
The proposition to sell the road AvasnotneAv.
It had been made as far back as 1839. A
glance at old documents would show how
many battles had been fought over it in the
Legislature, and many of our distinguished
men had opposed it.
Hon. Mr, Fitzpatrick here asked whether
or not the expenses had been more than the
receipts since the completion of the road.
Judge Parrott replied that he thought the
expenses had exceeded the receipts. He
read from Governor Crawford’s message,
urging the necessity of the work. The
message stated that the time would come
Avhen the wisdom of the outlay, lavish as it
was, Avould be illustrated. And the predic
tion of Governor Crawford had been verified.
At the close of the war the State had nothing
! left, but the road. Everything else had
been SAvCpt aAvay by the storm of revolution.
The people were starving and naked. An
appeal was made to Gen. Thomas, and lie
sent a force to rebuild the road. It was
turned over to the State. Cotton was ship
ped away. Money Avas (he result, and by
means of the road, provisions were distrib-
I uted to the starving people. The road ac
tually gave us life. Keep it and it will con
tinue to give us life. Suppose it is sold ?
What would be done Avith the money?—
Start a central bank with it, as a corruption
fund? The Judge read from a message by
Gov Joseph E. Brown avlio had the charac
ter of managing the road better than any
other man. It appeared from the message
that a proposition was made in 18 8 to leaso
the road at $25,000 per mouth, and now af
ter twelve years, Avhen the income of the
i road is a million and a half per annum, a
| proposition is made to the Legislature to
j lease it for the sum originally proposed.—
Even a lavish expenditure Avould not justify
I the sale of the road. lie could read mes
sages on the subject from 1835 down to tire
I beginning of the war but it was not neces-
sary. The of the road would only en
rich a few speculators at the expense of the
many. The people understood it and took
that view of it. Corporations with brain, .
muscle, money and peculiar privileges,
could easily acquire power and plant their
feet upon the necks of the people. The
Erie Railroad in New York Avas an example.
Hear the thunders of Fisk and Gould They
monopolize the Legislature and plunder the
stockholders It proves the poAver of these
immense corporations. Sell the State Road.
The rich would control it, and tlrere would
be more danger to the liberty of the people
than ever resulted from the East India Com
pany in England, or the Erie Company in
New York. These speculations would con
nectthe road with others, and stretch the
line from Tennessee to the seaboard. They
Avould be able Avith their increased influence
to control the Legislature. On the wftole it j
Avas better to keep the road even if it did
not pay. Keep it to accommodate tlie peo
ple. The same objections, only greater, ap.
plied to a lease. As it now stood the road
was a check on the others, but if sold, the
people Avould have to submit to extortion.— :
The object of these speculators was?to make
money, and they would charge high rates of j
passage an 1 freight. Their influence would 1
be evil. Recollect Macon clamoring year
after year for State aid to build another road
to the sea. The Central Railroad and other
monopolies sent their sharpest men to the
Legislature and through their agency Ma- j
con’s inquest was refused And it never
was granted until the new regime was es
tablished, He believed in letting the not j
income of the Suite Road go to pay the ex
penges of the State.
Mr. Fitzpatrick interrupted Judge Tarrott
by saying that if the road was a burden to
the State he Avas willing to sell it. If the
expenses exceeded the receipts he wanted to
know how the road benelitted the State.—
What was the use of keeping it just for the
fun of running cars backward and forward
betAveen here and Chattanooga ?
Judge Parrott replied that he had ex- !
plained wherein the State would be benefit- j
ted by controlling the road. He had dwelt i
on the evil of monopolies. When the road
Avas managed well it paid money into the :
treasury. All depended upon management.
It Avas safer for the people to control it.
Mr. Fitzpatrick Avanted to knoAV Avbat ,
benefit it was to the State if it paid nothing.
Judge Parrott did not care to continue the
colloquy. If the road was sold the money
would be lost like the investments in the
Central Bank, Darien Bank and State Bank.
The road would become an engine of op
pression. The people were opposed to it,
and the men who voted for it must expect, to
meet the frowns of an outraged constituency.
Thanking the audience for their attention,
the Judge retired amidst general applause
FOREIGN.
Paris, October 10.—Gambetta is
sued a proclamation to the people by
order of the Republican Government, j
and left for Paris to;transmit to you the •
hopes of Parisians and others seeking ,
to deliver France. Paris presents a
spectacle of two million of men forget
ting differences to withstand invaders
who expected discord.
Forty thousand National Guards,
now armed, and one hundred thousand
Mobiles and sixty thousand regulars
| are assembled. The foundries are
: casting cannon. The women make one
j thousand cartridges daily. Each bat
allion of National Guards has two mit
ralleuse field pieces prep;:ring for a
sortie. The forts are manned by mar
iners and are supplied with artillery of
greatest exetlltuce, served by the fin
est gunners in the world. The Enti
eate on the 4th nit. had five hundred
cannons, it now has 3,800 with four
hundred rounds for each. Every de
fense has its men at their posts. The
nationals drill constantly behind the
barricades, which are adapted to the
genius of Parisians. The impregna
bility cf Paris is no illusiuii— it cannot
be captured or surprised, nor reduced
by starvation. Anns are Pew coming
from every quarter. of the globe.—
Workmen nnd money are now forth
coming. The provinces must resist
torpor and panic, and all partiztins
must aid the republic. Scon winter
will come, findiug the Prussians far
from home, decimated by French arms,
hungry and naked. France shall nev
er lose its dl. Joe in the vvoikl through
the invasion of half a million men.—
Paris gives the watch wo; d* “Yive Ilc
publique, one and indivisible.”
London, October 10.—Bismarck re
cently informed the Mayor of Ver
sailles that he had no objections to el
ections.
Georgia State Fair !
Ladies visiting Atlanta, duringthe State Fair,
Avill find at J. M. lloi.brook’s one of the largest
and most desirable stocks of
FURS,
consisting in setts complete.
SABLE, MINK,
SEAL SKIN, FITCH,
BROWN & WHITE CONEY,
SQUIRREL & ASTRACHAN:
also, a great variety of CHLLHRLX'S FL r RS &
CLOAKS, Avbich will be sold at prices that will
j defy competition. J. M. IIOLBIiOOK,
oct. 14-lm 40 Whitehall str., Atlanta, Ga.
| Rome, Oct. 11.— Owing to the inclemency
t of the weather this morning, tag Gherokee
Fair at this place is continued to bat. urday
night, and entries until to-morrow night.
Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North and
South (Carolina, Kentucky, Ohio, Illinois,
Indiana, Maryland and New York are re
presented. The attendance is fine. En
tries innumerable.
Georgia Stale Fair !
Gentlemen visiting Atlanta, during the State
Fair, ran find one of the 1 and best select- j
cd Stocks of
consisting, in part, of'Dress-Silk and Cas-dmore.
The Rhine, the Wit?,, and every other, style
known to the fashionable world at
.J. M. tIoT.TtTKK)K,
Sort, U-swtm" 40 Whitehall str., Atlanta, Ga.
The Cartersville Fair.
The Bartow Apicrtlunnl Fair last
week was quite a successful enterprise;
on the kst 4ay, twenty five hundred
tickets were sold sit the gate. The exhi
bition of stock, we understand, was very
fine,Tls was also those of industrial pro
ducts, mechanical and art productions.
The tournament was an interesting
feature of the exhibition and was emi
nently successful ahd worthy of the days
of chivalry. —Home Courier.
The Electian-Plan of Proceed
ings Under ibe Akerman mill.
We clip the subjoined from the Mil
ledgeville Federal Union of the 4th, and
recommend its suggestions to the con
sideration of the people and the Dem
ocratic Executive Committee:
The Akerman Election law has been
forced through the Legislature by
hook and by ciook, by fraud and by
force. The plain object of the law is to
deprive the tax-payers of Georgia of a
fair election, and to retain the carpet
baggers and scalawags in power. It
wili do no good to rail at the law or
curse its makers and abettors from
now until Christmas. Let us rather
see if there is no way in which we can
defeat the plans of these infamous
Radicals, to rob honest men of their
political rights
We will suggest a plan by which at
least a check ma, be put upon their
rascality. At every place of voting kt
the citizens have a box at a legal dis
tance from the Bullock pen, and let
honest men be appointed to guard it.
Let every Democrat be requested, af
ter he has marched up to the Bullock
pen and voted, to deposit a duplicate
of his vote in the citizens’ box. By
this means it can be known exactly
how many Democrat c votes are polled.
Again, let the cLzens appoint a com
mittee of four or more, who shall stand
at a lawful distance from the Bullock
pen, and count, and keep a tally, of
every man who votes. Two at a time
will be sufficient to watch the Bullock
pen, so that they can from time to
relieve each other. Let these men not
only count all who vote but also watch
all who vote, and without saying a
word mark those who vote illegally
and report them for prosecution.
By these means we can know how
many votes are taken at each place of
voting: how man} 7 , and who vote ille
gally and report tin m for prosecution.
If tliis plan is followed, the mana
gers cannot take out Democratic votes
and put in Radical, or rob or stuff the
boxes without its being known to the
whole community. This plan will al
so be a great check to repeated and
fraudulent voting. This plan does not
in the least conflict with the law -will
!
not deprive any man from voting wdio
chooses to risk prosecution, and will
not lead to any dispute or controversy
with managers, so as to give them any
excuse for using their arbitrary power
We think this plan, if carried out,
would, in a great measure, checkmate
the evil effects of Akerinan’s bill. If
any one has a better plan, let him bring ]
it forwaid.
Texas.
San Antonio, Texas, Oct. B.—The Agn
cultural Pair of West Texas closed to-day.
If was a grand success. The grounds* at San
Pedro were crowded every evening. One
feature of the Fair to-day was a sixty mile
race, to be made inside of three hours, only
Texas horses and saddles allowed. This
eat was accomplished by Mr. Cooke of l'ex
ar county, who rode sixty-one miles. Time,
two hours fifty-six and a half minutes.—
Horses 'were ready saddled for him.
Special to tlic Daily Commercial.
Atlanta, Oct. 12.—The Senate spent this
morning creating new counties.
The House killed the appropriation of fivo
hundred thousand dollars to repair the State
Road, but passed Scott’s bill to lease the
same for a , sum not less than twenty-ffve
thousand dollar a . : pjer month.
Shumate Was the only pro min ont Demo
crat opposing the bill. Tour.
The following resolution was unanimously
passed by the Democratic Nominating
Convcatidn held at Marietta, Wednesday
last:
-Reaoloed, That while we differ with the
mass of colored men politically, we rcc<>g-
tlumi as citizens entitled to equal rights
andproteetion under the constitution and
laws of the land ; and we, therefore, de
nounce the recent arrest of a colored citi
zen of our county, and hanging him up by
the. thumbs, which wag perpetrated by cer
tain of the Radical revenue officers of the
United States, as an unmitigated outrage.
what Tommy & Stewart says in
their Hardware advertisement in this Paper
Btuimt 7
IT and
DRESS-MAKING!
MS, & MISS "RANDALL
Beg leave to eall the attention of the Toadies of t ar.
tersville and surrounding country, to their fine WjOI of*
f, just opened.
The latest styles in BlUmiltf A,\B DRFNN-JI iU„
OT€r exeented with dispatch.
Having Just arrived in Fartcrsvifilc, we solicit your
patronage, feeling confident we can please you in both
branches of our business. Please call and examine our
stock. B e are always glad to show our Ciroods.
\% e may be found at the store oil main Ntreet, recently
occupied by J. T. CSuthrie, Stock’s Building, one door
Fast of S. Clayton «& Won.
CARTERSYILLE, GA.. Sept., 29th, 1870.w1m
STATE FAIR !
.//<««/«. Ga., October I!), 1870.
Qverybody Coming!
Save your FI3AIVCSF for it, ami Buy your
F IT 11NIT IT R E .
or RONDEAU & CO..
1.-> Kti-ect, Oi>i>osito H. I. Kimbln Itousi'.
October 1. 1870-swlf ATLANTA, GA.
■aor-jrei“..j. ii i■— ■iwum—Liqji a,—
DRY-GOODS!
Having just received a large and assorted stock of
DRY-GOODS, Etc.,
I respectfully ask for an examination of the same by the purchasing commuuity, who will
discover that
64 Small Profits 99
arc being asked.
Amongst the stock will be found full lines of
DRESS GOODS,
SHAWLS, FLANNELS,
BLANKETS, CASSIMERES,
EMBROIDERIES, LACES,
HOSIERY, GLOVES,
IRISH LINENS,
V TABLE LINENS,
NAPKINS, TOWELS,
CRASHES,
WHITE GOODS,
c ; 1 SHIRTS,
7 ‘ NOTIONS.
and other classes of goods usually found in such stocks, These goods ar- all new and
fresh, having no winter goods on baud at the close of the last winter. A large lot of the
celebrated “Eclipse” brand of ** S ng! isll ’’ Qicick. ASp£tCTiS v was opened on
Monday, 26th ultimo, at the Store of JOHN Kfc'. ELY
oc and, 1870.w1m Corner_of Whitehall and Hunter Streets, ATLANTA, GA,
©real LAND. Sale,
fry HERE will be sold at Public Sale at the
I Courthouse' door of Bartow County, in Car
tersville, Ha., on the first Tuesday in November
next, the following valuable Polk and Bartow
County Bands :
NO. DIST. SEC. COUNTY ACRES
1200 21st 3rd Polk. 40
1201 “ “ *•
1244 *• “ “ “
1159 “ “ “ “
1021 “ “ “ "
11 TO “ “ “ “
urn “ “ “ “
1329 “ “ “ “
410 18 3rd “ “
460 “ “ “ “
.157 *• “ “ “
268 “ “ “ “
451 “" “
“ “ “ n
(I U U it
938 “ “ “ “
763 19th 3r<l “ “
234 4i “ “
2:35 “ “ “
236
6t3 20th “ “ “
663 “ “ “
“
204 - Ist 4tli “ “
203 “ “ “ “
592 “ “ “ “
~589 *• “ “
398 “ “ “ “
230 “ “■ •* \ “
480 “ “
481 “
482 “ “
838
o a it o
155 “ o u u
173 “ “ “ “
567 .. “
465 “ “ “ “
470 « - “
74 .. 161 U 4th “
680 • 4th 3rd “ “
3 53 11th „ Ist , “ “
260 22d 2d Bartow. 160
The above represents some exceedingly valu
able Mineral, Agricultural, and Timbered lauds.
The Cartersville & Van "Wert Railroad runs
through a number of these lots, and all cf them
are very near the lino of the Road and its ex
tension'. fn several instances three and four of
the lots lie directly togther, enabling the pur
chaser to locate, for agricultural or other pur
poses, a respectable tern. wjW be found a
Imre opportunity fa invest m PolkUovCnty lands,
which are increasing one hundred per cent,
every year. The titles are unquestionable.—
Terms Cash.
The lands will be sold to the highest bidder
at public out-cry, within the usual hours of sale,
bv W, W. RICH, Sheriff,
'Cavtersville.O Ga.jCl. I,lSTOswlm.
NBW ©OOBS i
r _ .... ■:■ .«
WE ARE daily receiving and opening
a general Stock of
FALL & WINTER
ۤ fl 0 U fH
i Which we offer to to the Trade at fair prices.
■ We invite orr friends to call and examine onv
Stock, and especially to purchase liberally from
us.
NT. ©ILKUATH & NON,
Cartersville, Ga., Oct. 10,1870.
—*...-«■».■ ■■ ■ ■■ ■
Dissolution of Copartnersliip.
UfflllE partnership heretofore existing under
fi. the firm name of Banian, Conant & jUo.,
lias been dcsolved, and William W. Laman has
retired l’yoju the lirm. Arrangements have ijecn
made for resimliug operations ami the work on
the Cartersville A Van Wert Railroad will be
vigorously pressed to completion.
Persons*having claims against the late firm
will please present them at my office in the City
of Atlanta, by the sth of next month. Such as
are found to be due will be paid at Cartersville
on the 21st of next month, or any time thereafter
at my ollice in Atlanta.
Atlanta, Ga., Oot. stk. 11. I. KIMBALL.
Sheriff sales for Nov., *7O.
WiBB be sold, before the Courthouse door in
Cartersville, Bartow CmiritV, GA., on the
first Tuesdjtv in November, 1870, within the vis
ual hon’rs of sale, the following property; to- wit :
; Oho lot or parcel of laud tp-wit : j lot of land
Nq. 155* in
levied on as the property of Thos. F. Jones, to
satisfy a A fa in favor of Z. W. A M. J C. Jackson
& Cos., vs. said Thos. F. .lones, issued from the
.Justice Court 952-1 dis. <4. M. Bevy made and
returned to iiie by Constable.
Also lot of land Xa 89, Wii d||. hd Bar
tow countv, levied on as the property pt Ruben
Hall to satMY a Justice Court fi tft issued from
851stdis., G. 31., in favor of Sam. Shouts, y*. said
Ruben Hall. Levy made stud returned to me by
Constable.
Also lot of land No. 1281, in 47tli dis. 3rd sec.
Bartow county, levied on as the property of XV.
P. Madden ,to satisfy a ll fa issued from* the
Court of Ordinary of'said county, in favor oi
Thos. M. Anstey, Ex’r David Madden ciec’d, tor
'he use of Officers of Court, vs. B. F. Madden
and MVP. Madden. .
W. W. RICH, Sheriff.
jpi EOK GI A, B A RTO W COUNTY.—I
VT Smith has applied for Exemption of
rdty and I will pass upon the.same at ibo doc , .
m., on llic 22.1 %of OetolK.r, SW.»‘
This Oct. 14th. 1870. J. A. HOP Ah ■