Newspaper Page Text
DAWSON JOURNAL.
S. E. WESTON, Editor.
W. F. COMBS, Associate Editor.
#> .i »r*s o.», iu
7/i ursday , nary 17, l*?I.
rsr’-w wisf mutter on every
J;if“Tho result of the late election
dispels a gre t deal of gloom that had
1 t^rotoforo been prominent in the fa
res of -a majority of our people, and
ad agree that better times are coming,
politically. That may he true, and
yet there are other tilings necessary
for the of happiness to be as
full as we would all like to s< e it.
The iruth is that, while r. : 'im! inde
pendence is TO.y losirable, wo con
tend that a well tilled crib and smoke
house and a heavy pocket are accom-
panied with an independent tooling
that political victories cannot bring. i
There is not a man »a all this section
of country whose smoke-house and
crib were in Tennessee and Kentucky
last year, hut v ill admit that he was
caused more trouble in Consequence
thereof than by the* politic and situation.
The policy pursued by our farming
palatini; since the war brings want
nearer many doors every year that
passes. As an evidence of the fact,
it is only uccoo.su.ay to mention that in
18€9 the cotton crop was sold at SIOO
per bale of 500 lbs , and this, with a
crop of 3,350.000 bales brought about
$330,000,000. But the crop of 1870 is
selling at not more than S7O per bale;
an-1 estimating the crop as high as
3,750,000 bakis, it will bring only
$26-,000,000 a loss of 808,000,000
to the ISouth as a section. We see by
thes, figures u... r. c .-•■ lass able- to
buy previsions tho number of con
sumers is as great if not more, and
there is nothing in our pecuniary sit
uation to dictate that it would be wise
to continue the policy heretofore pur
>>v >d. To be compelled to buy eyery
f.-ing we Oat and more than we are
able to pay for, will not only keep "s
from prospering, but the final result
will be that those who furnish us with
provisions, will come and take our
lands as part pay for the same, and
hire us, at a nominal sum, to work out
the balance.
Ail I oi inn.
We commend to tho careful perusal
of our planting f'ends the following
article iron u 2’/te Paper,' a Jlamocrat
ic sheet published in Pittsburgh, Pa.,
now that the s< ■■■■ n for “pitching” at
tho new crop is appron. hi. g .
A sufficient number of years have
elapsed since the conclusion of hostii
between the States of the North
and. bui. h to permit a calm survey oi
the causes which conk ibuted to the re
sult. Tho were not made
so by reason ot their superior bravery
nor, as would first appear, from th, ir
numerical superiority, although the
later aided them materially, but !>o
c>. Te was a section of me
chanics and its adversary merely an
agricultural region.
It was not a contest of muscle against
muscle, butoi brains and inventive ge
nius in opposition to personal courage.
The South found a lew staples so pro
ductive of wealth that it confined it
self to the cultivation of these, and al
lowed every other interest to languish*
its cities became only groat ware
houses lor the oDoing of cotton, sugar
and tobacco, and , mi le ot the peo
ple swelled mto undue proportions as
they beheld the shipping ol me world
at their crowded wnarves, eager to
carry off, even to tho uttermost ends
ot the earth, the fruits of their fertile
fields. From this was begotten tho
fallacious idea that cotton was king,
and that his sc pter swayed the desti
nies of America, but that it was not
without force on the other side ol the
„ Atlantic. This was very flattering to
the vanity of a growing people, still
young in the family if States, and was
sufSciunt to dazzle their eyes with a
splendor altogether meretricious The
domination ot cotton should have been
a source ol pride to every American.
That pride, how-vor, should never
nave oven remotely approached idol
atry. The fact that it did become so,
no person will deny, and to this we
aß »ign the subsequent overthrow of
-ts worshippers.
When the war broke out it found the
States of the South rich in cotton,
rich in sugar, in men and in money,
with an enthusiasm amounting almost
to insanity, and a determination to
ach ov vi ton by tl* prowess ol their
arms. The North .v .a.uto tho con
flict with an eu.uestness as terrible,
but with everything the South lacked.
We hud a diversified industry to back
us; we had iron and coal and steel for
tho manufacture of arms and muni-
tion ; we had corn and oats for the
cavalry, wheat and rye for tin so dices,
*nd mdis 101 tlie of cot
ton and woolen iaLncs will? wnich to
fu nisli .aiment to our men in the field.
Ino South had none of these. ’Tis
true, there were iron works in Virgin
ia Mississippi, but these were
crippled early in the w ar by reason oi
the blockade and mechanical novelty
of the South. Histoiy furbishes uc
instance where eight millions of peo
ple, equally united and determined,
have ueeu subjugated. llad the
S >uth pursued a w i-er p Hey in the
past ; had it encouiaged a healthy im
migration and fostered manuiacturos,
it would have bo ui a mo; e formidable
antagonist, and doubtless would have
protmoted. the struggle indefinitely,
eves Q we admit that under timua
stancee victoiy was in its reaoli. The
lesson wo deduce ivtiU the faaure o .
tho South, then, is that, without a
blending of industries, no State or
country cun ever attain true greatness.
When a country can live within it-:
self, it is independent, and not until j
them The people of the South aro
rapidly realizing this, and from nil I
parts wo hear of now manufacturing (
enterprises. Georgia seem* to have
the lead as yet, but Tennosseo with i
her rich miuoral deposits, is putting 1
on the armor of Vulcan, and striding;
rapidly to tho front, while Louisiana
seems to have made up its mind to
send us its cotton in webs, instead ol
bales, as formerly. The mechanic is
invited to go South and co-operate with
the planter. This invitation is being
heeded, too, and a unison of interests
is being formed that will eventually
give birth to great social changes
there, and which cannot fail to lie
productive of much good to tiie whole |
country.
fiuiKi.Ki ni' tiii: M tiiiv
I.A l l lall LLtX'T.
Ncnaiiiri.
There were twenty-two or ono-half
the whole number of tho State Sena
tors elected at tho late election. Os
this number, nineteen aro Democrats
and three Radicals.. Tho list is as
follows :
First I Ustrict—Rufus E Lester.
Third District—J C Nichols.
Filth District -M. Kirkland
Seventh District dark.
Ninth Distiict —Ruben Jones.
Eleventn Distiiit—L C Hoyle.
Thirteenth District—R O Black.
Fifteenth District—D VV Cameron,
Seven teeth District—J S Cone.
Nineteenth District—C Heard.
Twenty-first District— Decaux.
Twenty-third District— l IL Antler
son
Twenty-fifth District—Dr W P
Mathews.
Twenty, seventh District—Colonel E
Steadman
’’wenty-nintli District—W M Reese
Tr'irty-first District—W S Erwin.
Thi ty-third District—M Van Estes
Thirty-tilth District —Geo. Hillyer
Thirty-seventh District Dr. G W
Reddy.
Thirty-ninth District —Colonel J R
B own.
Fur v-iirst District —J A Jarvis.
Forty-third District—LN Trammell
There aro six Democrats holding
over. Ald them to tho nineteen
newly elected and it gives twenty- five
or two more than a majority of that
body.
I? i'pi'eMUi|:i lives.
The following are the members re
turned to tho House of Representa
tives, so far as heard from. Demo
crats in roman, Radicals in italics.—
After names ot colored Representa
tives the letter c appears :
Baker—H A Turner, E W Allen.
Baldwin Peter O'Neal, c.
Banks Wofford
l’,o —J Fitspatrick, II 31 Turner,3l
J ,oek, c. Election contested.
Bryan—Dr. Baker.
Burke—Murphy, Cox, Berrien.
lb ooks—Hunter
Butts - Hammond.
Chatham—J J Kelley, E neiilt,
Is uc llussell.
Campbell—J goodman.
Chattahoochee—D C Cody.
Catoosa—Payne.
Cobb—W D Anderson, WI 1 An
derson.
Columbia—S Lauipkin, G P Stov
all.
Clarke —Davis Richardson, e.
Clinch 11 A Mattox.
Clayton—McConnell
Crawford—Rutherford.
Cherokee—i B Richards.
Dade—E D Graham.
Decatur— Williams, Bruton, c.
Dooley Woodward.
Echols—R W Phillips.
Elbert —W P Edwards.
Effingham—Morgan Rawls
Early Chancey.
layette— Whatley.
Jb’loyd- Ballengor, II A Gartroll.
Forsyth—Dean.
Fulton—Wilson, Hogue, Jackson.
Fannin —Win. Franklin
Glasscock W G Brady.
Glynn —James Blue.
Gordon S C Fain.
Greene —R L 31c H’orlh*)', ■‘lhe Col
h, e.
Gilmer—W Milton.
Habersham McMillan.
Hancock—Geo. F Pierce, Jr., Fred
Butts
Henry—Bryant.
Ilarri.—Murphy, Patillo.
J asper— Walters.
.b lterson—W 1 J Johnson, Abraham
Beasley.
J ackson Hancock.
Laurens—C 8 Guyton.
Liberty—J YV Farmer.
Lincoln—H J Lang.
Lee—A F Lipsey, Ueo. Fago.
Low'rale*— A l on rerun.
Mitchell LA M Collins.
Miltou—Howell.
Morgan— Monday Floyd, e. Abram
Dukes, c.
Montgomery James D Clements.
Muscogee—J M Smith, Jos. F Fou.
Miller —J C Bush.
Marion—Harvey.
Mclntosh — T G Campbell Jr., e.
Newton —Summers, Davis.
Oglethorpe—W A Davenport, J F
Smith.
Pierce—D E Knoles.
Fulaski J A llendley,J E Boothe
Pike Baker
Pickens — Jon. Abred.
Quitman—-Guerry.
Randolph—S A McNeil, RE Crit- 1
teuden.
Rabun—Geo. M. Netherland,
Richmond— Claiborne Snead, J B
Cutinring, W A Clarke.
Seri ven—Dell.
Spaldwin— Dan A Johnson.
Sumter—Wright Brady, Sterling
Glover.
- hley—-C B Hudson.
Taliaferro —Flynt.
Taylor—Bateman.
Taibot-P M Woodall.
Thomas— CiUi.e. c, Andtrtm r.
- Twitrgs— Griffin.
Upson—Halo.
Webster —A C Bell.
Washington—J W Renfroo, ITon
ry Taylor.
Walker-- Wood,
Walton—Bowie,
V' bitfield—Dr. Emoism
Warren---0 L Cloud, T J Barks
dale
Wilkes—S W Wynn, IIT Slaton.
Worth—R R unking.
Appling—Sellers.
Bartow—J W Wofford, J W Gray.
Camden— ll nry I Jlillycr.
Colquitt- -Issac Carlton.
('lay— * B Johnson.
Coweta—-// J Barg nt, S Smith, c.
Carroll—-J S Pentecost.
Chattooga—C C Clcghorn
DoKalb—W B Goldsmith.
Dougherty—/' TPutney, Phil Join-
er, c,
Dawson—-John Palmer.
Franklin—A W Brawner,
Gwinnett—-W E Simmons, G H
Jones.
Ileurd—-Britton Simms,
Houston— Joel li Griffin, G Ormond
Ashury Simmons.
Tlait—J W Jones.
Hall—L A Simmons
Lumpkin—n VV Riley.
Macon--/ Lwanes Wesley Oliver.
Meriwether— Hall, Moreland.
Monroe —G A Glower, c, J Brown e.
Malison—l J Meadows,
urray—S E Fields.
Putnam —Ahrahtim Turner, e.
Polk—M II Bunn.
Paulding—Captain Robert Tram
mel.
' Stewart —J Mansfield.
Tattnall Brewton.
Terrell—J R Jones.
Troup—VV II Clarke, W W Cato.
Wayne—No election
Wilkinson —C II Hooks.
Walton—C I. Bowie
Walker—J Y Wood.
The i lary i ji'i'linii*.
John T. Hoffman, Governor of New
York, thus puts forth his unanswera
ble protest against the National Gov
ernment interfering at State eleeti ns
with Soldiers. We extract form his
able message : .
I deem it my solemn duty to pro
test now formally against these out
rages, which, it is given out, will be
renewed at future elections, with pre
parations looking to a greater degree
of intimidation and coercion. In this
protest the people of this State do, I am
confident by an overwhelming majority
earnestly unite. They are not to lie
misled by the pretence that military
force is necessary to prevent fraud
For they well now, wtiat all history
proves, that military elections are nev
er honest nor free; that military force
at elections has always been used by
ambitions rulers to hinder a lair
expression of popular sentiment in fact,
to perpetuate and cover fraud, not to
prevent it. If elections are not honest,
they sou Id bo made so by the force of
public opinion and by law : military
force asserts its supremacy over both,
and is itself fraudulent and will bo the
final overthrow of a free ballot.
Affairs ix South Oakolixa.—We
make the following extracts from th
Columbia correspondence of the
Charleston Courier, tinder dato of the
Gth instant:
Serious trouble is again reported in
up-country. At Union, last week, a
number of negroes shot a one armed
white man. Five of the murderers
were arrested and put in jail. On
Wednesday night, a hand of armed
men took possession of the town and
carried the prisoners from the scene of
the murder and shot two. The other
three escaped. No clue to the party
discovered.
Last night, Mrs übard, amethodist
minister, was killed in the country, a
few miles from this city, anil robbed
on the highway. No clue to the mur
derer.
The Comptroller’s report is printed,
and shows the State debt to bo eleven
millions dollars.
No Amvestv this Session.—The fol
lowing; i li-patch puts an end to the Am
no sty this session :
Washington, January 7.—The Her
ald has the following Washington spe
cial : “Those interested in a generel
amnesty bill have, after a thor< ugh
canvass of botli houses, come to the
conclusion that nothing of the kind is
possible this session. The character of
the Pre»i^ ent ’ 8 reply to the resolution
of Gov. Morton, inquiring about the
condition of affairs ni North Carolina
and other Btates, which wn! aent
to the Senate on .Monday, is such U iat
it would have defeated amnesty, even
if it had been well underway. The
President s friends are decided on his
subject. Ben Butler, who claims to
run Grant, has made amnesty his spe
cial 1 lobby, wtiile Morton; who is
known to be on very intimate terms
with the President, regards it as one
of the greatest political heresies of the
day Grant, himself, is not in favor
of amnesty, as was proven in iiis oppo
sition to the Brown-Sehurz movement
hut ho may have been convicted dur
ing the recent visit of Greeley here.
War HcH«.
Washingtok, Jan. 10. Cable ad
vices are to the effect that the siege o;
Paris is progressing to the entire sat
isfaction of the Prussians. So hot
has become the fire of the German
batteries, that the barracks of several
of the French fortifications have been
burned The French forts return but
a feeble fire to this storm of shot and
shell. Prussian shells are said to have
fallen in the gardens of the Luxem
burg.
Sa Patrie represents the financial
condition of France even w irse than
her military situation, and advocates
the issuing of assignats.
The German armies heve been
heavily reinforced, and are concentra
ting on the Paris and Lyons railway
to seep open their communications
and resist the approach of the French
armies.
Severe fighting reported at various
points between the contending armies,
in which both sides claim the victory.
li.
Death has reaped a heavy harvest
during ls 7(). It swept many celebri
ties from the world.
Among statesman : Burling, Pierre
Soul, Cmnt do Montalombort, La
roche, Salnave,-Earl Mayo, Duke do
Broglie, Lord Cleregdon,
In literature : Charles Dickens, A1
exander Dumas, # \lark Lemon, George
1). Prentice, Win. John
E. oad, E. T. Blanchard, John P.
Kennedy, Brough, Villomain, Paul do
j Ca-sonar, Anna Cora, Mo watt Ritchie.
I Artisfer Guile, Wilson, iloschelles’
1 Straus, DVBeriut, Mozier, Luuuitz,
Maclise.
Soldiers : Robert E Loo, Brantley,
Sanford Thomas, Granger, Liddell,
Mower, Hitch oek, Ripley, Count do
Flahault, Evans, I Less, Joan I).. Aug
dy, Lowestine, Duogy, Farm gut,
Gardner, &c.
Lawyers: Justico Grier, Lord Cheif
Baron Pollock, Lord Justice Garfard.
Doctors: Sir Janies Y. Simpson,
Prof' -f Smyne, Sir James Clark,
Sir Wm. C. Hood, Dr. Bright, Dr.
Copland, Dr. Cadarrus, Von Gracfe.
Actors . Airs. Rocliie, Lavassor,
Leigh, Murray, Lo Alurtro, Marie
Tagiioni.
Preachers : Albert Barnes, Dr. Row
land iiliams, Bishop Calvin, Bishop
Kingsley, Bishop Thompson, Bishop
Chase, Dr.- t- 'Mty— n
| Gt-lhjryicelebr. M 1 •/ Jerome Bona
’ parte, Baton I P Y'ilils, Richard
Tattersal, the horse dealer; Roeder,
tho (Jhampagiio man ; Green, tho bal
loonist
Royalties : Lopez, Sultan of Zanzi
bar, Dowacer, Queen of the Sandwich
Islands, Prim, Leopold 11. of Tuscany,
Duchess of Berry, Duchess of Saxony,
Frederick VVurteiuburg, Henry of
Bourbon.
Death has been busy. But ho is
over so. His list of bright victims
l’or 1870 is not unusually large.
The old admonition that we should
be ready for him cannot be tooeften
uttered.
Whitely Concedes His Defeat. Tho
Albany News oflast week says :
“Cononet* R H. Whitely passed
through the city on Wednesday, en
route home from Atlanta. He admits
his defeat, and bears it like a man.
VVe were glad to see him cheerful and
disinclined to subject the people of
Georgia to any futbvr annoyance,
lie think.-, the Calhoun poll, if it had
been canvassed, would have made tho
vote very close between Oononel Tift
and himself, but seemed disinclined
to insist that his majority in it would
have been sufficient to overcome the
five hundred majority against him
outride of that county. He informed
as that the Calhoun managers agreed
upon a report that the ballot, as far a?
counted, indicate the will of t.ie people,
and certified the result accordingly.”
The same paper says tho official
count gives Tift a majority of 500
votes.
A Balloon I&tter received at. Now-
Yorkfrom Paris, dated the thirteenth
ultimo says : “We have food enough
to last us till Easter. It is only two
days that they gave salt meat. As to
eating rats or dogs, these are infernal
lies gut,ton up by the Prussian hounds.
The letter was written by a gunner on
the Paris rampart to a triend in New
York, wire does business on Pine
street — Exch.
T ie II t si *vs ,o? Type.
A.n editor out West, who thought
the wages demanded by compositors
was an imposition, discharged his
hands, and intends doing his own
type setting in future He says:
owinG To the oX'iabirant Wegns
IE uaN Lp by /ii'lmli.s wE have (bn
eluifed To dour otrß oWn tY ne slitt
ing iN rqe fuxua auEvlt/iouGii
wE never lEmuneJ jq'l o business, we
dO yjot See uxy gßuaj uifsTeryer Y
Y in tppi aRt.
,ii »»* .tit i •]:n t ‘is #:. ni\rts
A PllfF J VHATiON.
GEORG IL
By RUFUS B. BULLOCK,
Governor of said State.
WHEREAS 0 He al inlo-mation ha« been
•ceived a this Dejiartme’ t th it a mu-d'-r
vis committed hi ih» citiptv of Fulton, on
"e night of the I*' J ttiurv, ius'arit, upon
he bodv -;f Douglass Craddock, by one
lharb'3 Coonei, a- is alleged, and that said
' nppr ha- fi and *nrn jn-tice :
Ihav -thoigh p aper, therefore, to issue
~ mv proclamauon, hereb- off it-g a re-,
vard ot 0 R Thou* md D..ltar9 lor the ap
elu-nslon a un J Hwy of the Slid
ty ,t Ui»’f i.O lO O t»11? SilC IT
f aai'f c 'Uiitv and Fta e.
A»-I Ido mor* over charge and n q-,; r e »H
18-ers in 'hi* Statr, civil and militirv, to be
'giUitl in et.doavnr'ttg to apptvfaend the s iifa
’ooper, iu ord.o that hr m.iv be brought, o
rial for tbe uff-nse with which lie stand*
larged.
Given under mv band and thp great seal of
'he iS’ate, »t the Capitol in Ailinta thi*
Die oth day of Jinuirv in the tear of
our Lord. Eighteen Hundred and S-x- ntyl
O’ e and of the I td-p-n 'etc of the U .i'ed
S'ates of A m -tica t •- Nine’' sis h
BUFUS B. BU/LOCK
Sy the Governor :
David G. Cotting, Secretary of State.
Jan. 12 fw
EXECUTIVE DCTMRTVDNT, )
OK GEORG 1,-1 V
A'lanta, Gu, December 6th, lb7o. J
ORDERED : Th u Hon. S. P Myrieh, of
e countv of Baldwin, be, and If s I• tr 1
ontinued i:t office as a Trustee of the Luna -
ic Asylum for a second term, until the firs’
load*? in December, 1872, or until such
me thereafte as his successor may be (July
ppnin’ed arid qml fied ; and
Tint Hnn E ihraim Twerdv, of the conn
v of Richmond : and Uon,‘ Wm Phillips, n
'he county of Cobb, be, and 'her are h> reb*
ippotnted Tiu-tces oi <he Lunatic A whim
until the first J/rnday in Dei finber, 1872 or
until such time thereafter as hot- successors
may be dulv appointed and qualified.
Given under rat Hand and the 8-al of the
Axeeutive Department, at the C<pitot, n
A'ian'a, he day and year first above
written.
nvrvs b. bullocx-,
By the OoTornnr :
11. tj. t ARSON.
■W- . tarj Kxecutive Department.
doc. 2?, lw.
11 HAPPY NEW YEJIB
To Wo si AS!
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE
BY
HILL, JOHNSTON & CO.,
BROWN STATION, GA.
Since mm to man Is so unjust,
We cannot toll whom to trust ;
To save yourself and friends much sorrow.
J*dy to-day and trust to-morrow.
WE reapei-tfulfy 'erxier our 'banks
'o uur manv liberal customers of four
yenrs for the pleasuntn ss vvliioh has
aitsn'ed our business relati ms.
The crisis is upon us, and we fell
sure you are all r«a *y to atroa that
'he credit system will not do. We
have resolved to sell for
CASH Oil PROMISE,
slid flnt'er ourselves tint our knowl
edge of the wants of the people, and
our a '(jiMint.inc with the m st roliit
h e wh'ilestil den it N 'rill, South,
East and .West, will enahl r us to place
goods in y> ur midst at prices
FOR. CASH
that will cause you to exclaim
fefhat a
We earnestly appeal to those who
have enjoyed our luvore to reciprocate
them with
M-O-N-E-Y,
and fav. r us w thy ur CA'GI trade
in future. Uur 1 ehngs toward you
ar as cordial m waer. wo d:d a credit
business.
Jan l’2lm.
LtliAL AQ/ir US. J rtlfj.
'rflttttifLL siai.it-'s f r iilgi,
\\ r I i.L he s> and, b-To e ih<* Cour* House
T V door, in the tavva of on. in siid
couatv, on the ti st Tiic--d.iv in F-bruirv
u.-x f , antiiri tb' !eij > i hours of sale, rhe To I—
lowing p op-rtv t»-wi* :
On- /or, ot Lmd, iiunber one hundred
R-nd fitv-cicht, in 'lie f* Ifili £)\" r-ct o
oriyinnllv LT, now I rrell coua'v, L-.-vii
on n9 the proper' v of W. 11, W dk -r, *o fi •
isfv o JuHliee 'oiin, ft l* in favor of Reuben
J Allen, v J . W II Walker. Levy r.iad
on ) returned to me by Henry L. Green, coa
stibie.
AI«o, at the snnte ’imo-and pface, to the
h'gh.-si (odder, lor 0,.h in hand, one tlark
colored ho>»e mule, ill bushel-- corn, more or
lea-, and l-uoo b* of odder. L-vled oti as
the pros - rtv ol 'V. VV Oook to si isfv a fa
fa is ue 1 bv th > C-rx of til ■ S»j> r o- Oau-t
of sold Oonnf. • . th -so eeiontre of a land
10-d’s hen. in i.iv.r. of 0. O RrowD, vs. sa.d
VV. W. Cook
■V o, at th ■ same tim» and pfaec, One Lo*
of r.m In : nbe- r«ro llond-ol and Thirty
s'x, in the
nallv Le, now Terrel, conn's. Levi, don
as 'he property ' I Writ E BrZ'tntn, o «it
isfy rfi fa ii'sued from tfi.i Superior Coir ; of
sad counts in favor of M tson H. Hush,
Jdtn’r of 8 las VVinz-r, vs. William E. Hoze
man, Januai y 1. th 1871.
S. i>\ LASSr.TEft,
Jan 12 td. Sheriff.
Postponed Siserifl’s Sale.
\\ T ILL he sold before the Court House
v v Door, in the town of Dawson, said
countv, on the first. Toadiy in February
nest, within the legal hours of sale, the lol
loping property :
One House and Lot in the town of Daw
son, and known as the J. B, Aveut, Lot, con
milling one acre, more nr less. L vied ou »s
'he propeny ot J B. Aye nt, to satisfy a 9
fa issued bv Thomas M Juries, Orrtinarv ot
said countv, in favor jf T M Jones, 0 di
nary ol T>- ■ell county, va J B. Ayent
Principal, W. B. Nmman, W- VV. Lee, R. T.
Harper and O B, Wooten, BecH-ities, De
cember Is', 1870. S F LAS&'&'I'ER, Sheriff-
Jan. 5-ls
-
nC. Tucker h(3 applied for exemption
• of personalty and I will piss doou,
the jam* on the 2 >th nf January at 10 o'clock
A if., at niv office in Daw-on, Q.,
Jan 12 2w T. M . JOV£B, O' and
-isr ot i <j k7~
Martha Wu'd applies for exemption of
personalty an . se-ting apart and vain
a on of Homestead, and I will pass upon
the -ame on the 20 h day of January, inst.,
a' In o’clock, A. il , at rnv offie ■ in Diwson
Ha. T. M. JONES,
Jan. 12-2 w. Ordinary.
f.VECnOKV SAI. L.
Dllt'KiilA, Terrell County.
’I Will tie S'.ld on the Is' Teusoay in Feb
lUiirv r ex', wilhin the usual hour of sale, for
cash in hand, at, the cour' hnns ■ door in sai I
c .unty, lo's of land No. 30 & 35 & about 50
.ores ol lot No. 3 in the 11th .District of said
count* of Tern 11, as a nari of the r<-al estate
owned by late B. F. King at the time of his
death, and will be sold for the benefit of his
heirs & creditors
HARY A. KING, Diecutrix.
W. J BOS7MN, E x -cuior.
(1 1 Terrt>ll County:
* I Where--, A/arrin M X“ndnn, Adni’r.
ot Janies Al M .unt, ha- applied fur Letters
of dismission trim said e-'a'e :
These are therefore to cite and admonish
•II persons concerned,, to be arid appear at
ms ofifr.-e wphin the time p escribed bv law,
and -how cause, if anv, »h» said letters
should not be granted- Given under my
hind and official signature, tins 24'h day of
Oct. 1870 T. M. JONES, Ord.
Oct. -7 3m,
THU
iiITJBBEIA
AJTIOSIATUD UO.VG
SUPER-PHOSPHATE
or—
i* i m w
Is for sale nt
ALL POINTS OF IHPOR/ANfE
IN GEORGIA.
W e have «IJ it five mice's*"ve y nts,
and know it is the very article for
T 3 ] ant ers to TJs e *
David Di-f-r-.n, R*q , of Oxf ni, s.uys
it is superior to- any
COMESSRCIAIt
Ferial izej*
#
Ho evor applied, ami
Recomendsit to Everybody.
We sold over
TWO THOUSAND TONS
IN GEORGIA I.AST TEAR
It has been tried and always
PAID ME PLANTER!
vtr Bend for a Famphlet. An
Ayant may be found at almost very
Depot, but information can always be
had of
F w HI MS & CO,
savassaii, ga.
HARPER & SIMMONS,
_ _ Aymh at Dawson.
Jan. l*2-3m.
m mjk m,
IT i<» well known to
f>rw» p 1n ft tf>
I.odips, tli.it women nre
nubjoet to nnmeroiiHdlH
raHCN potMili T to tlioir
Hex—Much hh pore•-
Hb>n of tlw Meufes,
Wliiten, TANARUS» a Infill month
lv Periods,’ Hhonrnn*
tiMrn of the Haek and
IFomb, frrejrubr Meu-
Ptrnntion, Heinorrntrho
J 1 xeeHHire ‘Flows,’ and
Prolapm-s rterl.or Fall
DHofthe If*omb.
These diseases have
eldom been treated huc
Ciifully. The proses
, ion Ii a sought diligently for some remedy
hat would etuh'o them to 'real these dis
eases with success.
A' las', that remedy has been discavercd
hv one of the mo.t skilful Dhvsieiang in the
State of Georgia. That remedy is
BRADFIELD’S FEMALE
It LR*U I iA I'Olt.
It. is purely vegetable, „nd is nut „„ m
Atlanta. Georgia, bv JSP.ADFIELD & TO
It, will purity the I.'O id and stiangthen’ih*
svslern, relieve irritation of the kidnevs ,„a
is a perfeet specific tor all the above diseases,
a rust as Quinine in (!’hills and fever. ’
For a history of diseases, and certifies,
ol its wonderful cures, the reader is r«fer re 4
to the wrapner around the bottle. Exert
bottle is warranted to give *attsfacii on or
Bioiiey refunded.
LaGrangk, (ta., March 23, 1870.
BraCFUCLP & f7o. A'lanta, Geotg ; a':
Dkaii Sirs: I take pleasure in stating that
I have used for the last twenty years the
medicine von are putting up, known as DR
Bit ADFIKLD’S F/’VtAI.K REGULATOR
and consider it the best c union.t on ever
gotten together foi the diseases for which it
is recommended. I have been familiar with
the proscription, both as practitioner of med
icine and in domestic practice, and can hon
estly sav that I console/ it a boon to stiffs.
ing females, and can but hope that, every la
cv In our land, who am be suffering in any
wav peculiar to their sex, may be able to
procure a bottle, that their si.fferings may
not only be relieved, but thet they may bo
restored to health and strength.
With mv lyinde-t regards, 1 am, respect
fully, W B. FERRELL, M. D.
We, the undersigned Druggists, take pleas,
tire in entnmen 'i. gto ihe '.nde DR J
BRADFIELZJ’S FEMALE REGULATOR-!
believing it to ne a good and reliable remedy
for the diseases for which he recommends it.
W. A. Lansdell, Atlanta, Ga.
r en.berton, Willson, Taylor & Cos., Atlanta
Ga.
Redwine & Fox, Atlanta, Ga.
W. O. Ltwshe, Atlanta. Ga.
W. Itoo' k Son, Marietta, Ga.
niays-ly.
-IIR. PRU PII itt*h
Celebrated Liver Aledieine•
I' is purely vo, etablc, and will act upon the
L ver and Kidneys ns promptly as Calnmal
and Buchu, without anv drnger of salivaiinn
or destruction of the bones.
Forties taking thi3 medicine need not Dar
get ting Wet, or any other reasonable expo
sure.
Symptoms of Liver Diseisc.
HeuLicbe, Dull Fueling or rhp Sour
Siomii' h. Sirk or nerrnne Ur ducbp,
burn, or J), H ij or H t>
tpr in tit * nioiuh ; r.bo skin haa a rM«*k
rough fppliito*. and darker ».han uhihl,Co*»-
fi v• r’flfo, M latH*b' lv fp» line«, or»«mpi* f
Fold Foot, 6 Y o!ic, 1) y f*ntf*iy, or Di ine.ib,.
v ills ami Fever aod Pikg. n faer, wh**re
I.FiC liver i« Oils. of order, you nre fable to
e 't“>v fh it i j nor couu«rrioi|4,
Props i'i ’a fjv* r M "dicino. I? tdkrn proo*
eriy, il will prevent. Mild r»ir<* any disease
sul-ing from « {f.*r»nff.*d Liver.
I' w ill reguLue hn fi; i-lion-J and tb:i* cure
afl di-e» st*iß Cv list dby the failure of its hral’fy
Hcion
D hjifT heun good for a t numhpr of
t*<, and bus g’v’on miiyp'H.d futile*inn.
Tbi*re Nno ftro'her or son olaiminu to h*»w
’lk* Jr H put up in both'
Powder and F uid form.
FAfr.nuMN YJa, aS- pteGiber-1, ISf»S.
T>r. (> 8 Prop* if:
Mu. VI v w lv h ih been <»n invalid for fif
•priii DtoTO'S hil »tfref'll •'be hud fi : v*'r
I) i.-riySf, Ifi wi«.h fhfir
**fie used vtiicus noted medirincs. none of
whieh poemed ?o <lo anv good. s’’me d'luy
•£TO 1 procured a b t ie of voir ‘ L v r M 1*
ici.ie,” of youp Heent here, C. A.
which briingtrivpn arcordii g to direction*,.
b*Vri * ffected a Complex* cure.
He spec fully, ere., GKO L THOMPSON.
fef. ►jojliitt’j; tester/ CaffiaL
L one of the most valuable compoantis
now put up for fiiatriiea, Dvsenlery, Cholera-,
Infan am, or Oholera Morbus.
This medicirte lots b.-eri in use for year*,
and- ives universal •a'isfaetinn.
Th" rrosf delicate child may use it with iraa
P '"'•*'
PROPHITT’9
5M5\ 1i.11.1t IT.
This thu r<*!«brqtpd mpdipin#* ran
Perrv i)iv>V Pain Kj!!u’* out of rh*e
whorevur it, was fold; rivP r onhiT.
rihangp narti*; from Pain TCilTer to PAIN
KILL TT.
For IChpumfith?un, (Tuts, B'ui^ 9 ,
Burns, OM
Poisonous fnsrigTa, for Folds, (Touffhs, or
Bowel Tomplafrif, it has no rquuf dn«s
inp, hoalor or antidote for pain nf "rv kind.
Manufactured and old hv
FO., Atlanta, Ga., and for sale by all Drug
gists.
DR. PHOpmTT’S
Fever and Ijyue Pi'TSr
The best. Antidote for fiZhills and
known. Cu r ps wfirrun’ed always or money
refunded* Purelv vegetable.
DR. T > Rr>t- > FTrTT’B
►•/.I Tl-ItILLIOUS PILLS.
Will relieve Headache, Nervou»ne*e, J""®*
dice, and all olher derangements of the Lif
er. Purely vegetable.
Certificates.
The following are a few among the h» n ~
dreds of those who have uflfd the a ofe
nam**d medicine**, and who readily testify to
value : *
Col R J Henderson, Covington, Ga ; Pro*
J L Jones, Covington, G* ; M W •,
Georgia Conferen e ; Rev W W Osh’n,
ei4 C’onference; A If Robinson, Sfontice e,
(t . ; Judge J J Fiord Covington. Ga ;
t nekef, D«vis county, Texas, W
- Whatley, Cususeta, Texas.
STATE OF GEORGIA, 1 Know »H
Fulton Copntt. ) men bythrse
presents, that I navi this day, for waht* rs
ceived, sold snd transferred to BRJDr IS
& Cos , the sole right, to manufaeiure ■"\
mv family Medicines, and have forms «
them with the fill* reel es, and have author
ized the said BRaDj*Tp-.D A 00., to P r, “ •
or have primed, auy thing they maT . nre
proper concerning any and all *■”** B _
named .kf-dicin»s. This 15th ds» ® F.yf
1870. [Signpd] O.*- - R0 .
In presence of Thomas F. Jours an
ert Gra-vford, Notary Public. 1“ ‘ ’ _
M inufactured and for sale by BRADFI -
CO., Broad S'reet, Atlanta, Ga., aua
sale by al! Druggists. r
/'or sale bv Dr. J Janes, Dawsos,