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Site :^(livn1fen' i3
Published Every Saturday Morning.
Office—Tn tko Court llouso, room, North
East, down Stairs, Cleveland, tin.
ODll AGEN L’rf !
The followin" named gentlemen aro
*U
you have not paid your subscription
and it is couvenont to hand it to either
of those gentlemen, you will much
oblige Yours Truly.
Ai.ex. CjjUj'ecu, Publisher.
Rev. W. 11. McAfee, Dablonega, Ga.
J W. Mekks, Blairsville, Ga.
C. 11. Kytle, Mossy Crook, White Co.
Rev. J. C, Bell, TesenteoDist., White
Co.
G-USS Lyon, Burton, llabun County,
Ga.
3 ,;Ocal Items.
Will it rain?
Mighty dry in these parts.
Would bo glad to sec rain just now.
The camp meeting boom is oa hand.
Pick them chicken bones clean. You
don't know wheu you’ll get ‘‘some
more."
Mr. C. P. Craig baa completed his
ditch and the water comes along most
charmingly.
Mossy Creek camp meeting ia now in
progress. It is procooding mo3t inter¬
estingly and usefully.
Loudsville Campmeeting will begin
on Wednesday night and embrace the
first Sunday in September.
The communication from Burton; Ga.
was unavoidably crowded out this week.
Wo will give if a place next issue.
Mr. C. L. Pitnor and family, of
Athens, passed through Cleveland last
Wednesday, on their way home from
Naeoocbee Ya'ley, where they had been
visiting friends and relatives.
The free schools of the county are
full. We hope they will do something
more than consume the school-fund.
But a teacher has a poor chance to do
much good in a throe months school.
To Reece and the ladies wo aro iindor
obligations for that dunn-sceded water
melon. It was first rate. If Mias Mary
and Miss Emma will call again, and
Reeeo will bring in another watoraielou
wo shall bo pleaeed to participate in the
feast, and don't you forgot it.
We hope the revivals reported iu ev¬
ery direction will help the finances of
the Churches. A religion that prays
but don’t pay when it. can, is mighty
poor stuff of the ninth chapter of first
Corinthians means anything.
Mr. Thos, M. Boll is now traveling iu
the interest of Geo. J. Howard & Bro.,
wholesale druggists, Atlanta, Ga. Tom
is a good and reliable salesman, and
hopes to receive a liberal patronage
from his old customers.
Mr. C. L. Pitner of Athens gavo the
Advertiser a pleasant call on Tuesday
last. Wo were pleased to make his
acquaintance. Ho is from The mercan¬
tile House of his father, Mr, Jonu Pit¬
nor, one of the leading dry goods es¬
tablishments of the city of “learning.”
Call again, Mr. Pitner.
Flirtation.
The Augusta Evening News talks to
the point in the following plain aud sen¬
sible editorial; ‘Can there bo such a
thing as innocent flirtation/ Is not
flirtation itself essentially wanton aud
prone to evil? Where is the young wo¬
man who caa indiscriminately pick up a
beau on the highway without degrading
herself and proclaiming a reckless disre¬
gard in the rules of society, which is
the jewel in a woman's character which
is essential to all other female virtues
and she can only retain it by chastity
of action aud thought.
The very moment she advertises to
the public that her acquaintance is pub¬
lic property she becomes a practicable
free lover. The least diversion from
the strict part of propriety and decorum
is dangerous,—People do not generally
go to crime by leaps; they go gradually
and by imperceptible, and to them,
harmless divergencies. Young ladies
should remember that no worthy young
man will encourage liirtation. and even
the unworthy have no respect for tho
foolish young woman who recklessly
throwslierself away.
For IIn; Ailvertiscr.
INTEMPERANCE.
It is an astonishing fact, but never'
theless a true one, that intemperance is
the direct means of giving employment
to hundreds of courts, resides having
in its direct communication many offi¬
cers delegated to execute its wishes.
Go with me iu imagination tjlu.ro, and
see the trembling wretch at the Ear of
| morseless fiend intemperance has draged **
thither, Hands grim but uuseen beside
bis victim. He had been a man well to
do in the world, we might say respected
by his fellow man until he became tho
victim to tho ravages of intemperance.
Once a blushing bride stood besido him
at tho marriage altar, and the world
seemed one unbreken dream of happi¬
ness, and he there pledged his life to
tho promotion of her welfare and hap¬
piness. But in a dark hour this iiond
invaded the tranquility of that happy
home, and snatched with a ruthless
hand its peace, and in its place leaves
dark despair and eternal misery. Home
soon ceases to be a home to him who
rotur. s to it under tho guilty delirium
of intoxication. There weeping and
starving children appear like spectres
Hitting before his blood-shot eyes, and
reeling brain. Look at yonder desolate
house, a funeral goes out from it in tho
morning. Enter this ovouing. All is
silent and a single candle on the mantel
piece sheds a dull flickering light on a
coffin not yet screwed down. Beside it
sits a murderer, and his bloated faeo
and blood-shot eyes tell a sad tale of
how tko frail tender being now at rest
beneath its lids was brought to her
untimely death by tho cruelty of iho
drunkard wretch at her side. Ay, be¬
sotted husband, let your blood shot eyes
look on that white face—that wreck of
a face, so sweet and pretty when you
married her. Never fear, the eyes are
closed and. will weep aud look mourn¬
fully at you no more. Touch if you
daro those limbs which ofton when
hardly able to move, si ill begged for
bread to support furnishing children.
Daro you take hold of her cold hand
and look at kor wedding ring. Do you
see how her finger is worn with the
needle. During the day, during the
night this poor creature was your wilt
ing slave mending your linou and that
of your poor wronged children, and
what was left of her own, which are
nothing but rags? Do you hear those
children sobbing in the next room? Do
you see the scar oa that chock? Look
and tremble. Have you forgotten the
blow that caused it, given bylyour hand
of drunken and ruffiian violence? Yet
'She never complained, or reproached
you; and when at length worn away
with misery and starvation, she was
forced to givo up the struggle of life
her very last act was to murmur a pray¬
er of forgiveness and ask you to prom
iso her never to touch the cup of misery
again. Can that promise bring back to
life that companion, or eradicate those
years of suffering caused by your indul¬
gence in strong drink? She will come
no more on earth, but you will have to
moot her again, so now close the coffin
lid and go to bod and sleep i£ you can.
Tho funeral is in tho morning, and
you muse follow the hoarse that bears
that poor emaciated body close by your
favorite dram shops, and when it is
consigned to tho mother earth from
whence it came, as each clod falls upon
tho coffin may it strike terror to your
soul and cause you to shed bitter tears
of remorse.
Tho future however plea ant, caa
never redeem the past; but perhaps by
leading a new life, you may partly atone
for the injury you have done humanity.
Is there any one who thinks this pic¬
ture overdrawn? If so let him go with
me and view some unmistakable proofs.
Look at the murderer as he stand before
tho bar of bis country, awaiting their
verdict to send him to tho gallows, aud
ask what brought him there. Go to the
chained convict who is dragging out a
living death amid the kicks anti curses
of his brutal overseer. Go to our in¬
sane asylums and see the V'tifhl objects
there, who perhaps onetime wore bright
lights in their community. Go to the
load mother as she bends over the couch
of her dying boy,and hoar her plaintive
cry as she sees every cherished hope
decay, for that boy was her ouly 6up->
port. Get a response from all aud see
if they, with one voice do uot say in-,
temperance brought us here. Methiuks
if ton thousand victims who now slebp
in the tomb were allowed to raise a
voice of warning in behalf of suffering
humanity it would surely stop the voice
of those men who sit idly by and see
their fellowraen go down by the thou ¬
sand, and still say th;.t intemperance is
not an evil Banish it from the country
and ouce more will happiness furl her
banner over a prosperous and united
people. *
For tho Advertiser.
MORMONISM IN NORTH EAST
GEORGIA.
I consider mormonism one of the
greatest evils in the world. Notwith¬
standing from the day Joseph Smith
conceived this diabolical idea to propa
gato polygamy in this land of freedom
under ifio mask of Christian religion ho
has never failed to find followers.
Though this doetrino promises nothing
of a religious nature; yet it has in a
short time, gained many adherents.
Aud from a cause unknown, unless it
,
! (- sheer ignorance, there me many
to-day being deceived l>> tho mormon
ptiosts who are scouring our country
from “Dan even unto Beorshooa ”
The fact that they are rapidly in¬
creasing in the United States, all will
admit, who are conversant with their
present history, aa they now number
about twenty thousand iu Suit Lake
City. The cause of their succors max
be attributed to the--indomitable spirit
of perseverance they seem to possess;
striving with an energy unequaled, to
furl their banner in all parts of tho
world. They sond their shrewdest and
most energetic men as missionaries into
the darkest corners of our land where
they labor with the /.cal of an Apostle to
convert meu to their faith. Employing
both time and talents to the very ut¬
most of their ability iu making prose¬
lytes—they have never failed where
they have been permitted to teach for
any length of time, to load Borne astray.
Allured by the flatteries of these “imps
of darkness” th,.t now infest our coun¬
try, a few women have already gone
from this Stato to Ut.h, whore they
have submitted to the degradation and
misery becoming the wives of a Mor¬
mon Elder.
Think for a moment, and behold
these infamous scoundrels whoso deeds
are dark as night, sitting down in tho
very midst of a people who claim to bo
tho light of the world, teaching their
detestable dogmas—carrying on a Sab
bath school—poisoning tho minds of
the youths of our country. Eton in
this day of light and knowledge, while
our country is filled with religious liter¬
ature and the world filled with tho word
ot God, tboso ignoble licentious knaves
aro laboring to draw over mir beads
the dark and misty clouds of supersti¬
tion, ignorance and immorality, as a
pall of eternal darkness, aud thereby
threaten tho religious institutions of our
land with irretrievable ruiu. 1 ask ev¬
ery candid reader if this is not enough
to cause the people of our country to
arouse from their lethergy. Let us not
bo cold and lifeless. Let us bestir our
selves to diligeuce; for it seems now
1 that tho demon of opposition to all that
is elevating, pure and holy, has shown
itself in this civilized land in the most
appalling shape imaginable—in tho
snape of mormonism.
If we could for a moment draw aside
tho veil that has so long partially cover¬
ed their deeds; awful indeed would bo
tho scene. There we would behold iris
noceneo and virtue dethroned forever;
there wo would gaze with astonishment
on the most heart-rending at.d blood
Curdling outragos that were ever per¬
petrated by man.
And uow these dociples of Smith aro
making an effort iu Northeast Georgia
to create a little hell of misery similar
to tho one they have out West.
It is a shame to speak of mormonism
in its true light. To destroy such an
evil let all who aro friends to suffering
humanity and the cause of Christ labor
earnestly. This is no brutal or impure
dream. It is a living horror. 1 am
sorry to see the American ilag floating
over a whited sepulchre like that of
mormonism, haunted by the memories
( f sin—full of i a veiling w ickedness and
all manner of uucleunuesd
W, J. E.
Uouiicldo In El&oi-t
Elborton News.
Yesterday morning tho road jvork rs
of that section of the county assembled
at ibo bouse of the Goes place,' about
two miles from Rnckorsvillo. While
tho crowd was together, Mrs. David
Lowis stated that Governor Harper, a
negro at work ou tho Goss place, had
taken some fruit which Airs. Goss had
forbidden, Governor said it was not so.
David Lewis, who was present paid no
attention apparently to this. One of
Lowis' children said that Governor’s
children had been throwing rocks at
them. Governor said that was not so.
Lewis told Governor that “this thing
had gone far enough, and he did not
want to bear anything more from Gov¬
ernor.’'
Governor told Lewis that if he would
walk out with him they woulo Governor, settle it.
At this Lewis followed bis
hoo in bis hand. After going a short
distance the negro stooped and picked
up a rock. As ho raised up Lewis
struck him on cue head with the eye of
tho hoe. Governor fell and never spoke
again. This occurred about 1) o'clock.
The negro died about ouo. Dr. S. T.
Heard was summoned, and did all bo
could for the negro, but without avail,
although he said, after careiul examina¬
tion, that the negro's skull was not
broken.
Mr. Lowis was promptly arrested,
and while uuder guard a crowd of no.
groe3 attempted to take him for tho
purpose of lynching guard, him. They were
resisted by the who took the
prisoner to tho house ot .Mis. Cleveland,
the crowd ot nogroes lollowing to the
gate. They were ordered to disperse
by Mr. John Cleveland, one of the
guard, but they refused, and be fired a
double- barrelled shotgun into the crowd
peppering two of the negroes with
small shot, but doing no particular
damage. Again they were ordered to
lepve, but paid no attention, until a
threat was made to shout iuio tho
crowd again, wheu they loft aud quiet
was restored.
The commitment trial of Mr. Lewis
is to take place to-day beloro Justices
McCaila and G^sk.
The above is about a turn stat * net t
of taers as wo gailn-i them from a n I -
able citizen of that part of tho county,
given hurriedly aud brief!, as they won
given to us just on going to prt ss.
bummer •
Uomp/amts
At this season, various diseases of the
bowels am pre\ ;! sit, mu' , fi'.v.s- are
lost through laek of hnowh doe of n safe
aud remedy. I.’kukv i ' Pain *
sure >a ;
Killer is a ettn’ cure for I'i >.rrh- oa, Dys¬
entery, Cholera, < -holera ' S .rims, Bummer
Complaint, etc., and L /•■ rjaily.snfe.
Read the following:
1! unbuh-iik. N. Y., March 22,1131.
PEItltY 1 >.\yjs’ Paju i'o.i.'cu .it to aii-nl
instant relief i.-■ r cramp arid ikvai v: tin' -U si , li.
Joni.u'i Uumm r.
Nie'roi.vri.i u. S. V.,l-\ n. 1 -I.
Tho very best med-- ■ } Ium\i i-l -»r th -<ntiry,
cholera morlms. and it imps iu i u ‘ -nnu.l). liaio
used it lor years, anil it is ,-ry time.
Julius O l- l-l W. Dee.
Moingon- \, Iowa. a. March M 12 , lssl.
I have tun'll y -or 1 'ai -. Ku.nt'.u is l severe > cares of
cramp, Tamp, oolie.aud colic.nuil cholera cholera mnrbuKnnil morbus.and 0 (rave almost
instant relief. L. E. < • unm.i.
C, 1 IINEKVjr.l.K, Cl,, I i b. as, 1 XS 1 .
For twenty years I ha ve lo-v-l your Pain !'! l.l.K'i
in my family, ttai o u-vd it in my f fim -s lor !>.nvel
complaints, without tui.le and it iF- tho w; ln>u.-»>. .<. i. . Would J. 11 .. li. t lV.lsato Ivin.
a ia
S-U;?0, sic., J; u. y,:, I'-l.
Have used Fprby Davis’ 1 v.i * uu i -c twolvo
years. It is safe, a re, in a r, i, r :l,!■■, Mo mother
should allow it to bo out of th - fated '
il l. Navis.
Onh ’I'A. L'.Y.. i' eh. 19,
We began uuinr it over th >-(y years a A, and it
always (rives bed iiuiiietiir.it; bottle ivlioL Wo ;!d hardly daro
to ;;o to without a in tin- him.-v.
\V. i > IS cut; it y,
Conavaa tavro, if. f'l !). 22, KM.
tu Nearly tho house. every family iu this t-wlion lie.. E. l eepsa bottlo
Morton.
XL S. CoNsur./.Ti:.
C REVET. >>, RltKNt.au Fill s; 1 l.t-Yb. S. 1S81.
I have known 1 ’khky Davis’ Fai s k i u.iut almost
from the day it was i-.u; dm. i, aud after yi ara of
observation anil n- e 1 regard its presence lu my
household :ut an iniiisj'ensniiU nic - i
I. is. lx it'! in*, it. K. Consul,
livin' in-on-Tiikn i'. End.
I had licen several days ■ niVeriuir severely from
iliurrhica, tried aecompanied Pais whi: iativ e abnostinstant jwhen I
relief. your KU.U8B,and found
H. 3. Noose.
21 XtONTAKTTE St.,Li)M 1IOS, liSli.
I During have yrivou arosiili'r.eo it of tv, c.ty-threc iliarrluea, years iu dysen¬ India,
in mauy ca -os of fail
relief. tery. amt cholera, anft i:e\\ r 1, ..oa o to Clakioi.u. to yj\o
K.
, invaluable No family remedy. "can safely be price without brings this it
Its
within the reach of all.
For sale by all druggists at 25c., fiOe.
and $E()0 per bottle.
BERRY DAVES k SON, Proprietors,
Providence, R. I.
FOR SALE! FOR SALE!/
A T V grout Sacrifice, to close a
concern, and in lots to suit put
j chasors, Lnngstreet th' entire Mining Cleveland, Equipment of Co., the
j tlcoigia, consisting mine, near in of full AVhito setts of
j i Blacksmith’s and Carpenter's part tools, steel
| j drills, and hammers, slodgas, forks, picks,
mattocks, quicksilver, 800 feet six inohe spiral
I galvanined hydraulic pipe, lumber, cook stove,
I kitchen uti-ni and bed-room furniture, all in
i goon order. Terms cash on delivery. Apply
to JAMES GLEN,
Nacoochoc White County. Ga.
Aug. fith IBS 1. 2ivUs.
USE THE
PARR ENGLISH PAD,
Safe and ctToolual at any and all times. A oor
tain euro for all Malarial or contagious Dis¬
eases, without drugging the system. For sale
by JOHN N. SMITH, Tcsnatee, Ga,
July 28, 1881.
BUY
The Royal
St. JOHN SEWING MACHINE!
Why <s>
ECAUSE It will do Light work and
Heavy work, child and all the work you
want it to do. A can use it. It is the
only Machine which is entirely freu from earns,
cogs and springs—will run backward or for¬
ward and do good work.
NO HUEA KING OF NEEDLES !
No trouble to thread it. It cannot ho put
cut of adjustment; runs light, and Noiseless.
It makes a perfect stitch, and an Elastic
seam. It has a Self Setting Needle. It has a
feed on both sides of the nce-lle. It winds
the bobbin without running tho Machine, it
is the
Best Machine
Nmv in uso. New and perfect, Made of the
best matoiials.
Now, if you elon’t believe what l say about.
the St. Johns call and see roe and be ewnviueeu
of a truth, and buy a Machine.
For salo by II. D. K1MSEY.
Cleveland Ga., July 28 1881.
re*
S3 ru fTi
#
Letters 01' Dismission.
GEORGIA, White Count;/.
VI V J HERE AS C. L. Williams, Executor of
♦ if. p. Hollingsworth represents to the
Court n his petition duly li led and entered ou
record, that ho has iully administered if. i*.
Hollingsworth’s estate This is therefore to
cue all persons concerned, kindred and crod'
tors, to show cause, if any they can, why said
Executor should not bo discharged from h.s
administration.and receive letters ('. dismiss
ion on tho hrst Monday > in November next,
G.vcn , Under r , , band , aud . An Ufficial . . , .
; my signai.uc.
HusJuly I8thI8M.
J.S.YAL OAKE>, Orani.try.
’ T ^ . „ 1 Mt
” '
BitUiko o.‘ uli kiuels fur salo at tbld Oifioe
; #
warn: coi ,\i Y SHE LUFF. Tl LE.
W »- -r 1 j ' ;,. . hotare tl-o Court 1. -esc
V - th •-< nvn of ( lev eia li ti V» into
. Tne
( viuit)’, U’A , r^t s>lav in Sc 'Umber
id 1 \ : with in i i.e h hours of the fnilow*
iit ■: Droyn-i t v to v it •
l*»rt uf lx»i of an No. 1 -! m the : rd dist.
o f t i* j g i n a ?! 1 • * - • hum u w white ci vim ,
iMiut.dn,;; .. > ! !\t, bj' \u nin* at th . N. W.
corner of v • ai< » 5‘U .L i.“ fine iiith lo a
point from u t u h u j rn .11": g UlfO east l->
ChiiU ’i.i ufiipp ii »< r uni i from m» id r i v. - r
to the original en.'i . l wt* line on tl e N. r;h
si tie, ti mi Ui e net sisiii 1 mo to tt** - begin
tiing oui tier .so as ! ■ make < ! e hum? :< d ai d
fifty ac'e.-i. be¬ ii oh tu sa ti; ,y a !i la . -.'■ULvl
troth the J ustiei • ■ urt vl *h* 21>J xiisl. G . v ..
in fuver of. (L AV r. n v s, W . II. i f: .
l.ovy \\r, g!o au*i a ' a ii,o by j i‘!:d t.
AihkU i<. C. Thi> I u! v 1‘? lb ! .
K. y. C.^TIJIGKUKV Su
J?
(ih Oif, IA, < tuiiiit;/ at WhtU:
L'o the Honorable Sttpcr.of (hurt
Cota ity.
T ,lK I'dition t i-.. K. GSrilib and P.pulu n
Nidker^on .*! tho Y tii , <>l fiarb i’ #a ■ 4
k'iato respeottu v sbt Bcil, that thov pro j-nii
uwuers oi a riaiii tract it h*lid ID the CDUll -
tv ami fcjtuio tirsi- iilievi ntten i.otifi u g »»r
lots uuinbei twenty-three and tw « >*It r.r
(2.”, and 24) in iho third ui.-tiict t
Unburst!, a in miv White county, ii Ma.
both Iula together cop! ,i in- .-ml
live handreu acre more ot ir» lots
are owned by the iollow’i' . n ait i pc,.--.ns as
tennlils ill eoliiliio;;, and * i .•
stnHii below as l--i; w- t.-.-wi-.
John i’. Kenedy anil Lis vvi> Kale 1*.
Kenedy, of the cm nly ot A bd-.'i likt and bni.
i • South Carolina., vn together- one untile i.it d
twentieth part (III). Preston <1. i’aUuti of ti-c
county o. lleinlt: ..oil and Mate .-1 Jv-fib
niiua, owns uundivided live twoulieth pari
(5-20). Edmond L* Patton of the ecu: ty of
Abbeville in the State 1 1 South < amlirm owns
an undivided two twentieth part (2-20.)
Josiah K. Dc.-.n of the county an i State hist
above written, i wns one undivided twentieth
part (1-20). E. 1‘. 1' l.ikuis of tlio i i" ty i. i
Stale lirst above wi i 1 t-u, mv . one* uno i vided
twentieth part (l-ftly. Your p-*i inner* own
together one Undivided ten tw;:,' silt part
(1*0-20). li will thus be seen that your peti¬
tioner* own one half o! this said land, and
the other half is suh iimlod among Iho other
tenants iu common in the pi-.pnsili-.n a!- v
set forth, Your petition i. further ;>
said above dc.-ei i ‘ - h lands are viiiu.ii.-d: i r
mining purposes o.-idau.ing then on a gold
mine wnicb i : situated upon a pari and r
a part of said land so ll-at it is -a - i- t->
mako a divirou of snid premises by u * of
metes aud bounels that will he lair au-t e-iuita -
h!e. Whorcfure your pstili.iners pray liiat
thi- Honorable court shall order a sale of said
lands and tenements, and snail appoint three
I discreet tier.---rut to ci.iieluct -e- i ;;*ic u d.r
such regulations and uj • *. such just ami
equitable tortus as the. court may prescribe, in
order to obtain a iairur.d equitable partition of
thepivmises. And your petitiotic;s fintinr
pray t at sue!) iuio and orde-r iihl. bo ran and
taken for perfecting service upon the tenants
iu coiniunu who reside beyond tho limits of
this State as alnre mentioned, so that they
may bo notified aud bound by the judgment
and salo in the premises aud that sucii other
and alia lurtlier luriner relief tenei in hi tin the pi-c may bo
grantoil your petmouer* a» of the
----------------------- case may require, and as lhey would k ir. i
tIt;-1 to iu a court of equity. A:i-1 y .ir peti¬
tioners 1 ever pray Ac.
BAIlllOWA EtlWIN Petitionnrs Alt'y.
April 5th I SSI.
Original filed m office, April 11th 1881.
J. P. Osborn, C.S.C.
Served E. P. Williams and J. i!. Dean with
a true copy of the written application fur par
tnioti,also the following notice appended to
the copy for each take notice, wo have filed
iu the Clerk’ii office . I the Superior Court • f
tin-county of White, the original petition of
irliieh the within is a copy: and on the fir-t
-Monday in May next in said Superior Court
will apply for partition tiiereuutu. This April
12th 1881.
HARROW .t ERWIN Petitioners Atty’s.
li. M, CASTLEBERRY, Sheriff of Whito
county, Ga.
A. K. Childs and j
Reuben Nickerson, ) j
vs.
John P- Kennedy aud ' State of Georgia,'
Lis wife Kate P. Ken- I Partition of lands in
neJy. P r est on J. I White Superior Court,
Pulton, Edmnod L., May Term 1881.
Pattun, Josiah R.'
Dean, aud E. P. Will¬
iams.
It appearing to the Coutt that the defendants
Jchn P. Kennedy and his wife leato P. Ken¬
nedy. and the defendant Edmond L. Patten
do reside without the limits of this State to
wit: in ;he State ot South Carolina, and tho
defendant Preston J. Patton does reside with¬
out the limits of tho State to wit: in tho State
of North Carolina, atul if further appearing
that tho defendants Josiah It. Dean and K. P.
Williams of said county and Stats first above
written have been duly served with notice of
the intention to make application for partition
in this case twenty days previous to this date;
it is ordered that iho said defendants John P.
Kennedy his wife Kate P. Kennedy, Edmond
L. Patten and Preston J. Patton be served
i with due and legal notice of this application
j for partition order by publieafion in-*3th for of the petition
] and this once a four months
I previous to the next term of this court in the
j Cleveland Anv bkti- kU, tho same being the
j Newspaper iu which the legal advertising of
I ! ' i county of White is done, and that the
said application his stand for a hearing at the
next term of f Court without nuy other or
further notice to said, defendants. May 2nd,
1881.
BARROW d,’ ERWIN Alt’ys for Petitioners.
| ALEX. S. ERWIN, Minutes, Judge Page Buperiur Court.
- Entered on 210 and 217
| e HOHGIA, ! J. P. Osborn White Clerk County, of the Superior
; CouTt
i id said county, do certify that the ioregoiug
j petition and order is a true transcript from
l the record in the Clerks office. Given under
my hand and official signature. This May the
J 3rif 1881.
J- P. OSBORN, ClcrkS. 0.
j May 7th, ISsl. 4ms.
————--------
GEORG J A, White Countif:
p tllir aft ., r date hereof application
vvi!1 |»e made io the Mon. Court of Ordinary
of , ai(1 c , lMltv ' par r ol u „ of , and nuB ;.
- u . r fiUy ’, lour ijittK in f„ ur ,q dUiriot of
„ ri a lv Habersham but now While county
to All that part of said let lying north
of a high running through the *aiti lot uf
^ f, |1IU 0Mt west , and conuini.ig one
bundled and fifty acre* more or less, it
i.tiug tho i ulire ical estate of Jesse Turner
deceased, for the benefit t>t tbc heirs aud e red -
Hors ot sai l decease.I- This July 30th 1881.
ALFRED N. HESTER, Administrator.