Newspaper Page Text
THE WEEKLY c6N8TI.TUT.TOK: ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1879.
i(f lie 011‘ifUnfion.
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR.
Now ta the time tosobombe forffctaoldand re-
able AgTkfllOml JoomtL It tala its XXXVIII
ninmm and (Uadi at the head of agricultural
published by TwaOoar rrr-
11 an per annum.
sri
DOWN IN DIXIE.
Tu East Alabama fair m a grand nceea.
THE Arkansas penitentiary eontains«7convicts.
A nx uHMD pig la on exhibition at Midway,
Ky.
ra*KK Fates is playing Si Slocum In Charles
has only two republican*
Mntrmutoto, Tenu.. U to hare a new opera j
conference meet* at Hunting-
it, Ala letter near her mV*, 'from her extreme?
fear of crawfish aud water beetles.”
The family of Lambton. in England. hare had
an uninterrupted pnra—irm ot the estate of their
name fmra the twelfth century—a very tare In
stance of continuity. The earl of Durham is the
present head. The family waa only ennobled in
1*28 in the person of the well-known mrvernor-
general of Canada.sou i-.-Uw of » art Grey of re
form bill fame. The flr*t earl waa an anient re-
Cormer, and the present support* the liber, la. His
Lamhto, ca-Ue, a magnificent abode, haa.
bed by
patust nEDiavn.
THE WEEKLY lOXSTITETIOS. !
THE GREAT SOUTHERN FAMILY PAPER. A *nr for one bmOiel of men in Walker. Ala..
I 1 SO per annum. | *»•* la not yet derided.
. « M> •* I Tint cotton crop of Tuakegee. Ala.. U a long
I way* ahead of what waa expected.
. I Laar week a party of Roanoke county. Va..
* 5® V** annum. ^ huntera killed lfdeer.
A racroET with a Clement'* attachment will be
J started in Gadden county, Florida.
a are mid to abnnnd yet tn the moun-
| tains of western North Carolina.
The cotton crop of Tennemeetbia year b the
| largest since the war.
A coxpawy has been organized in Charlotte,
IX.C.to
JtxxTz'a female
tu% ! 3
PILLS
SYIMPTOwS^JF A
< IV.-*.
Atlanta, Ga.
ATLANTA. GA.. DECEMBER 2 U7R
ROUNDABOUT IN GEORGIA.
one of the half dozen greatest ooUiery owners In j Lm of Appetite. Bowel* costive. Pafca in
“ngland. j the Head, w.ilhr.d’riir'numtieai itlusbeck
O* Friday night. October Sl.jthe feetivalaf Hal- ’ Pjfr c '/f 1 ?.
. . _ ... . Irritability of
•, tamper. * o _ i.-.v, . \icpl nRf ffcw-
• inune^lr'-tr’u d-n.*:-, We^rujev;, Dis-
rinoa, Kqt'ctiBj t.~ t -.jlifai t, Pot; bo-
lowe'en was celebrated at Balmoral castle with ne ** f ^ tr ,
reird effect. Queen Victoria and Princess Beat- • ejertoonef
Ice remained interested —— "" * w - s «
Two
_j are booked for Wll-
—Mr.iimn A. Klherid*., jr., bu re- mlntf/m. oo the ztd.
turned from Texas to K.U>n«on. H. i. . I ln T J,SS SUSP** B * P '“ “ ncU,Jo ”‘
converted citizen. I Beam are plentiful in Boort
—Dalton will receive 3.000 bales of cotton I hunter* arffbavLig a fine time,
tbi. yrar. and look, forward u> LooUUo^ -Mb.
10,000 annually. I The state of Texas boasts that she owe* km
-Colonel B. F. Adams haa been «,. than the city of Memphis
pointed dark of tbe ...perfor court of Pot- «£££ 3*5*„ k !jZ^?*** “
rum county to fill tlia vacancy created by I ji*. Jem. N'nairnnD.af HllUborr, offer- one
the recent death of Mr. T. B. Harwell. . *>"" *"• M«ck«t cat la Xorth Catalina.
, W .M _ tM.iI Ma. t-Hirrn, near Charlotte N. C.. rated one
—M. A. Campbell, a Philadelphia cajn-1 naudml buaheU of onrn on one acre of land,
taliat, will purchaac the Arkwright cotton I rae uuivcnlty of Vlnrinm now lack, oalj
factory, and Ihe wheel., of that institution 1 twenty .tudenuof it. lui
.ill abortly tewiin motion. w«
—The Macon Telegraph learna tliat a fire I Text. haa almnat stopped horac-racln, b, Ac
broke out in Cochran at 2 o’clock am. yen- j in* a lax upon It.
erday, which consumed three atorea and a I ortfOdTsor!*?!' 1 ’ 1 * Uto COI1TinUo " meet * ln
a ate house. The Are originated in A. J. I Vnoxs. MIm.. bouts of a child »Uh twelve
tomb's store, from the exptoeion of a kero-1 Anaeta, aix on each band.
I, 1. I Mlauwm'a next lndalalnrc will have a dan-
■ene lamp, it u thought, as there waa one I ocrxtic maioett of ho on Joint »-n—
left burning. Wl.en ftm discovered ttw 1 oaanotanre aelllne at wholeaale fortt.2r.per
I hundred in Gainesville. Florida.
The cotton crop of flouth Carolina is now ex-
h>
a great hna«i». A body of cotgeonaly droned “» eycn, thuevr i am. It«djcb«
figure, with a band of ranalc then appeared. »uh- ‘ gener lly t. c t- 3 r.rhtr_-c. . .e t.cnmena
■enuentlr n witch wm tried and condemned, and scithfitful droiml, i colored Unam
an efflgy burnt. Atterwart there » n •• witch , StTHSZ WXEtVt'Gi^ZZiZl^ZEEi),
I”’"' " n --~— ’SEACCS Villi. SuOil CCCcfcLOPCO.
i- rsTt-Wy u-tapJp ! to
»*?r3.--ft;*oarh itrbunge
of frclin*; &.( to n-^oiakh the ftuilerer.
CONSTIPATION.
Ol'it w'i.U re?u*.AritT of the lwrt-ls 1
beal.lt h J
ef recent
sriil rattler, bat it it has bieoica lialniaat,
cillehuTiUi be t»k-a cr.-ty i' : ^»t.[-»dnai?r le?i*-n-
Kg the frr<jit€ji< y« ;uo:iiaretriuar<kJly
movement m vVett trill soon follow.
Dr. LCuy F.--wi * i :Ix«
r: uJ
; saraso^vniL
ty*s health and sinEing the national aathem. TLe t? i '
weather w.i [wmeularly favorable for full effect
CONST!?
rc^u'.antT of the lwrek cyn perfect
be couYi-d. Ii eonetlpailon Is
7*. flat.*, u s :i? : uixnot TuiT ! 3FILLS
A Poem by Gilmore Simms.
We print below a poem by Wm. Gilmore
Simms. The original, in tbe poet's band-
writing, is in the collection of Juliua L.
Brown. Esq. We do not remember to
have ever seen it in print before.—[Eds.
CoSaTITCTIOK ]
STASZ.%8.
Written to a friend fit despondency.
A NOTED WOMAN.
WHOSE LIFE READS LIKE ROMANCE,
OTHER WIFE!
The Death of tk* Coante** Dj Moat jo, the Mother
of the Ex-Empress Eageais ef Fraaoe—&«r
B -aaty sad B>r Toatbfal Triampka
—F. rtaio of Hor DaigbUn
ta xow heady cc No. 53 or the
entire inner portion of the store
flames, and despite tbe most strenuous ex
ertions of the citizens to nave t be surround
ing property, the fire whs not subdued an
til three stores and a warehouse were re
duced to
—The (Jolumbui Times says that Mr. A
J, Grant, who lives in Valley Plains dis
trict, Harris county has this year cultivated
a crop with one mule from which he ha!> I RtaUoti-house in otic rert-ntly.
gathered eighteen full hales of cotton and I a rtTMMtOi is on exhibition in wheeling. West
ihra. hundred tm.hcia of corn, bvaidv. I ' whl " h ' rilth - va
.bout three thousand pound, of folder. He AI *-
only uiiel one mule in tlie cultivation I Tins year's crop of Dmlsiana ragar will realize
Another farmer. Mr. J. A. White, made j t*.C 0,000 to that industry tu the state,
four hundred bushels of corn and fourteen I Mondayjn Noyenitwr, lKUt. Raleigh
pected to about wjual last year's growth.
. The Fay Templeton troope are at Vicksburg,
| Mias., this week.
Ths receipts of cotton thus far at Vlckabug are
I ahead of any other
Vier.isia conference M. E. church, south, will
| meet in Norfolk. Va, to-day.
Pulaski county. Ky., includes sixty mile*.
| of the Cincinnati railroad.
Thkhk were four birth* in the Owensboro, Ky.
was covered with mow, shoe deep.
Knoxville, Tennessee, has three candidate*
f«»r mayor.
The Alabama Stitc liar association will meet
In Montgomery on the fourth of December.
Dorn fix van played to a crowded bouse iu
hale* of cotton weighing five hundred
liont.dv on a one-h«>rse farm. This was In
side « crop of fodder, |*cas. potatoes, etc.
lie had aix bales of the cotton in the city
yesterday, and Has eight more to bring.
—Forsyth Advertiser: A good proportion
of the cotton cron i» still um»|»*ned in the
fields. It is quite iiufMisaible to nay what
proportion, but there ia probably one-fifth 1 question
«r oi'Miktli. We have converaeil with in- ov« in nraroea have gone from Naeodochea
telligent planters, and their opinion is that I euunty, Texas,
the holla which hail matured previous to I about tw. ivedeal
cho county, Texas, hu* I ►ecu purchased.
Taov. Alabama, Li agltadng the water-works
ths a week Is the average for
done in Memphis, Teun., Jin
The buftinei
roiiderful.
The proprietors of the Charleston News an
white cotton. The-e tiolla will oj>en rap
idly and if pickers are lively and will keep
up with their work the cotton will all lie . ...
otit of the fields early in December. The I Courier have decided to issue a Sunday edliiou.
slowneaa with which the bolls o)«ne«l dur-1 Oranges are selling In the strew of Lake City
ing tbe former part of the season discour- I Fla., at fl per hundred.
aged many, and there were numerous pre-1 ,Obka_t n»antiUm W onuige* are now being
We hojie for
' average yield.
— „ work on the
Knoxville, Tenn., water works.
The Rentx-Htanley combination's show in Wll-
boys expected
and if it is had the extraordinary price I vl,,e * Florida, against keno and faro dealers,
should cause us all to feel satisfied with | esute is looking up in St. Augustine,
the year's labor*. No doubt a great many
holla will never open. But it must l-e re
membered that the cotton plants were ful-. _
zi’ ass
conversations with planters. We have heard I cemter3d.
several say that already they had picked I a iter February 1st
out about a bale to every two acres, and I round, Va.. will be reduced
this is certainly a giNsI enough yield to pay ^ ^
handsomely 1 The Cincinnati Bmuhero will he completed ....
... y ', , , , . I the 10thof December. The grand opening will
—Albany Advertiser: At about .5 odock I uke plate January 1.
on Wcalnraday afwrniKin, 13th inal., while A walnut tree within three-qartera of A mile
the fair was still in progress, an aged oout 1 of A tiderwm station, on ihe Chattanooga railroad,
pie appeared at tire gates of the fair grounds. I h " J 11 ** loT DW-
calling for his honor, the ordinary, and I The recent advancc in the price of cotton i
.rating Ural they wished In he ra.rrietl. «‘»^d *tv«o.aiitto thererenue. ..I
Judge Collier, who had kindle accepted the | co " ntt J wb, *rarj to New Orleans,
ruperlntemlenee of tbe houeehold dejwrt |
promptly made his apfiearance. The couple I
were brought into tbe floral hall, and Rev. I
II. R. Felder called upon to perform the I
. . - —, nty, V .
• , _L„ I dead. She meaHiirtil 34 inches acrom tnehboul-
men t, and who was then tu tlie^ building. I demand weighed within a fraction of 61J pounds.
j It is expected that tbe greas earnings of th<
I Mobile and Ohio railroad will aooa reach i2,50>),
ttpmi to |»erforin the 1000 a 3air.
The affectionate old couple I Ftuni on the French Broad rlrer. Tennemee.
teen at least sixty years of age, Isretnrninj— * * -
and ha«l theapfrearanceof IteUmging to tbe I and fewer
better class of country darkies. They I l Thr people of Trenton, Tennessee, will vote on
had likely lived and loved together for I I P,°"‘. h 011 lhl ' .V™?*,"!!”,
thirty yean or ra re, and dec'dcd at I 2 * ,1 '' 00utl1 * Tent>™ee Central rilln ail.
(mil former into the holy eatafeof wedlock. I ,0
Tltcre waa no ".cm,, and circutnarance S^erpT^^^'S'ira 7 ^ B °
no flitter of candlei, no solemn neals,of the
sudden hosvof
merry laughter, the quiet that all at once
pervaded the hitherto noisy building form
ed a fitting acor>ni|»aniinent to the word^
s)*oken by the man of God, as these simple,
untutored hearts were cemented into those
hoods which should endure until their few
reinaining years are ended ard hand in
hand these aged lovers shall |«« across the
dark river. There were some who scoffed,
l*erhaps. at this "negro wedding,” but there
was a pathos in it, nevertheless.
—Berrien Ctmnty News: A few weeks
apt we published an account of a fifty-bush-
el-to-ihe-acre crop of corn in Worth coun
ty, and entertained some fears that we
would have to send that county a hank of
bine ribbon. Fifty bushels to the acre, con
sidering the drought which prevailed in
thiavection last June and July, is an ex
traordinary yield. There is no doubt about
that, and we cheerfully accord Mr. Cravey
the praise «s being a good farmer But
old Berrien has done even better than that
and our hank of blue ribbon will he re
tained at home. About tbe middle pf that
drouth we had the «ppor< unity of looking
over Mr. W. M. Avt-ra's corn crop, aim
we noticed that while the neighbors' corn
was being shriveled up and much -of it
dying, Mr. Avera’s was as green as a leek
from top to bottom But the drouth injured
the corn before it terminated, and he esti
mates that it was cut offat least one-fourth.
From a two acre field Mr. Avera
gathered 1AM bushels to the acre, actual
measurement, and 2,200 pounds of fodder.
He stated to us that the corn was there to
show for itaelf, or rather to verify his re
port, and if there are any doubters he
would be glad to have them come forward
and have their doubts remove*!. We are
not one of the doubters, but we are
unite certain that had it not been for
tire drouth these two acres would have
made considerably over a hundred bushel*
each. From a seven acre field he gathered
forty-three and one .seventh bushels of corn
to the acre, ami gathered seventy five
bushels of peas and six hundred pounds of
seed cotton off the same ground. This field
yielded four thousand pound* of fishier.
This seven acre field was laid off
for corn with a view of planting a row of
cotton between the rows of corn, but th.
corn grew of! so vigorously as to shade the
cotton and almost kill it. This account*
for the small quantity nuule. I-ate in July
he laid off a row on each side of the corn
rows and planted peas, with the result al
ready mentioned.
—Savannah News: There is now in pro
gress before the United States circuit court,
in this city, a very important and interest
ing case. in which is involve*! the validity
of the indorsement by the dtv of Savan
nah of $300,000 of bonds issue*! bv the
Savannah, Albany and Gulf railroad, tn aid
of that enterprise. In consequence of the
embarrassments of the Atlantic and Gulf
railroad, the interest on these bonds was
defaulted some three years ago, and al
though guaranteed by the indorsement of
the dry, has never been paid. In January*
last the bonds reached maturity, and a
demand upon the city for their payment
was refused on the ground that tbe city had
no right to indorse the same, and hence
said indorsement was invalid. Mr. Eugene
Kellv, of New York, a large holder of these
bonds, thereupon brought suit in the Unit
ed States circuit court to establish the le
gality of said indorsement and to compel
the payment of the bunds by the city. There
was a difference of opinion in regard to tbe
matter, and the city council determined to
contest U, and General A. R. Lxwton
and Judge W. S. Chisholm were retained
a* counsel. Capt. George A. Mercer repre
senting the plaintiff. The files of the Mon •
ing News show that in January, 1M9. a
proclamation was ireued by the mayor con
vening a public meeting of the freeholders
of tbe city to take action in regard to the
advisability of indorsing the bonds of the
Savannah, Albany and Gulf railroad to the
amount of three hundred thousand d* liars,
which amount was necessary to enable the
road to carry on its operations. At that
meeting it appear* Ttaolut ions were adopted
authorizing tbe city to give ils indorse
ment. with guarantee of the interest, and
in accordance with this action twenty years*
bonds were issued, with tbe indorsement of
tbe city of Savannah. The liability of tbe
city for said indorsement was never ques
tioned, it seems, until the company de
faulted the interest, and the date o. mat j-
rity waa approaching, and then it was pro
claimed that ihe rights and privileges of
the charter of the city were exceeded in
giving the indorsement. The roalt. as
might be anticipated, was this suit, and the
decision of the court will be looked forward
to with great interest. The defaulted in
terest amounts to something over $09,000,
and if the city's indorsement is decided to
be valid and legal the city will be bound
for $360,0U0, a considerable number of
which bonds are held in this citv. By mu
tual consent the attorneys have waived
jury trial, and *gr* rd n» i*»ve tbe decision
entirely to tbe ciiur,—lb*- question of facts
being all that is in* olved in the suit. It is
ex me no more with idle hope.
Nor deem this struggle all,
I may not with my fortune cope,
1 couquer but to fall.
II.
'Twaaever thus! Each hour that came.
Still unremitting, brought
Some newer form of grief or shame.
Some newer care for thought.
III.
From friendship's bosom cast. I flew. -
And passion shared my breast.
My hours of calm delight were few.
And madness sways the rest.
IV.
I sought for love and found deceit.
I turned to peace, and lo!
Still mocking my pursuing leet,
She bade me fly to wo!
But wo. already, kneto my want,
Aud with a guardian Care,
Still inu-ked my steps through every liaui t.
From sorrow to despair.
YL
She prowled around tuy steps by day.
And from my dreaming hour*.
Still drove the fancied joy away.
And blighted all its flowers.
W. GlLHORE SlMHS.
November ». 1831.
“ ;jtrr
•f *:j j
mediciue
Rev. r. R.'
as good at rep
Ollioe wJ
aa YfiT-J FlLLS. They are
uted.**
Murray Street, New York*
Entrancing Dramatic Story,
By ROSE ASHLEIGH,
Miduo, November 26.—'Tlie Empress j SI,lTH CAROLINA.)
Eugenie, in spite of her rapid j-urney J AUTHOR or “THE WIDOW’S WAHEB’
through Franco, did not reach Madrid in
Uoie to take leave of her dying mother,
who expired Sunday morning. Dona Ma
ria Manuela Kirkpatrick, Counters-Dowa
ger de Montijo, had led an eventful life,
full of ro.nantic incidents. She w&a tbe
daughter of a British consul at Malsga,-
named Kirkpatrick, her father having been
the son of a small Scotch laird of Duntfres-
shire. This Mr. Kirkpatrick, the Malarc
merchant and consul, married a Spanish
girl, by whom he had three daughters, the
eldest of them. Dona Maria, beiug remark
able for her beauty. This caused a cadet of
the family of Montijo, grandees of the first
rank in Spain, to fail in love with her, and.
when the match was objected to because of
the lady's inferior birth, Walter Scott'
friend, Charles Kirkpa’rick Sharpe, of Ed
inburgh. drew up a pedigree for Miss K'rk
patrick which harked all the way back to
the "red Cotuyn,” and to'Fingal and Ossian.
New York
New York
flew York
Weekly
Weekly
Weekly
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION,
A. WEEKLY PAPER FOR
YOUNG PE0PIE AND THE FAMILY.
1SS0. INCREASED IN SIZE. VOL. 53. ELEGANTLY ILLUSTRATED.
It alms to be a favorite in every family—looked fo:
res'i with interest by the older. Its pnn-o.H- is tn Interest whiD it amuses; lo
sensible, and to have really perm tient worth, whll»; it attract* for the hour.
It t* baud* mely ilhistra'M by the be*t artist*, and has for its contributors some of the meat
attractive writers tn the country. Among these are
let tteeelicr * towre, Jam cm T. Field**
fireside. It will give
Serial Stories, Stories far Girl*,
TUTT’S HATE DYE.
GmHukOi VBNrcci rb'aH t-» a. GimsT
Black by»*.n^: jcpfrbo„t:on t i »la» It i.a-
partjaNr.tar.il 0>1. r.r.-TA bit'^re •- -7. r^-i »»
*BHaRate*sx a spring*-: tar. JSald by or
seatbjrezpnMCuiwcwptot (L
Office SS Murray St., Now York.
rablMlythqr wt iwfl rr\T Wat m
Non is Ihe time to get up Clubs for
the Weekly Constitution. Twenty
for $20. <
IN GENERAL.
i and
In KdgefieM, 3- C., there are eight candidate*
lot the senate,- thirteen for sheriff and sixty *
county commissioner.
Mi*» Lizzie Caar, is associate editor of _
Gainesville (Ark.) Press. The only lady editor
the state.
From hi* own c op of cane. Mr. Richard W„
am of Catawba, North Carolina, has manufac
tured this season 2,500 gallon* of syrup.
A rox-«QCiRRKL measuring two feet from th*
end of its nose to the tipof its tall waa killed neat
Lancaster. Ky., last week.
A day or two since a Montgomery county, Ala
bama, farmer solil seventy-five bushel* of ground
pres. Ho says the profit on them beats cotton.
It Is said that there is a greater amount of
drinking in South Carolina at this time than there
has been for years.
The ladies of Wilmington, N. C., reveled in the
snow storm a few day* since. It was the fit
they had seen for years.
The Chesapeake and Ohio railroad company.«
Tuesday last, paid over *90,000 for state taxes
the auditor of virgitiia.
The grand lodge of Knights and Ladies of
lonor, of - . . _
cembcr 3d.
Cars are now
Texararkana. «>n the St. Louis A Waco narrow
Honor, of lexas, are to convene iu Austin De
ling thirty mile* ont from
n tne “* * -* *
gauge railroad.
band.
Me. Joe Mam. of nempstead, Texas, had a
•nr year old Berkshire hog
pounds.
On Monday afternoon, four gentlemen went
out three miles from Gainesville, Florida, aud by
12 o'clock the next day killed 1M squirrels.
Mk. I.xisxcai o, of Jefferson county. West Vir
ginia. raised on an acre of ground, three hundred
uushels of potatoes.
Rev. \V. G. Veal, of Texas, has been debarred
from the ministry on the ground of gro« immor
ality.
ay field for seventeen
in the public
years.
The manager* of a fair in Elizabeth, N. C.. of
fer three prural—one for the biggest married
couple, one for the iaigest lady and one for the
biggest footed geuUemeti.
The colored Baptists, of Alabama, have for the
last year sustained a theological and normal
school at Seims, with five teacher* and 252 etu-
dente without incurring any debt.
Tex a* will a *opt a provision making it a felony
for a railroad coni|*any to give or for any one no
a paid employe of a railroad, or a pauper, to ac
eepl a free pass.
Mrs. Margaret Harrington and her four chil
dren. near Taylorsville. N. C. sliced and dried
rer i.MOymnd* of apples this season, all with
San Saba lathe banner county In Texaa There
is not a pauper or a lunatic in the county and not
a convict ln tbe county jalL And the county i*
one of the healthiest in the state.
Charleston, 8. C.. rejoiccaJn the advance of
naval store*, rice and cotton, which will make a
gain of 9fi.'H>,0U0tn the prices of receipts at tha
market alone.
The sum of $130,000 was paid out at Key West
tirng the year ending November for sponge.
There are 7i veweU iu the trade, manned by 250
r being worked by
North cSSESl” last year, is _.
seven hundred men. Ten blast farnsee*
work, and two thousand pounds of the refined
metal is being turned out daily.
vert beautiful lady who was hurrying
through the streets of Baltimore, turned and in
pathetic accent*, asked a gentleman walking be
side her to knock a pick pocket down who waa
following her. The gentleman obligingly com
plied. As soon aa she saw the fight fairlybegun.
she chuckled gaily and skipped away. The man
knocked down Was her husband.
ROTAL AND OTHERWISE.
The duke of Edinburgh's appointment as "ad
miral superintendent of the naval reserve* " at
$5.0(0a fear, is not univer-ally liked iu England.
The position is an abrolute sinecure.
to a peer or the heir of m peer.
The pope next year, it is said, will visit Bel-
ginifi and Germany as the guest of King Leopold
at BruwrK and. go to Cologne to celebrate the
completion of its peerless cathedral, the work of
632 year*.
Colonel John Frederick Von Weeper, who
died in Baltimore day before yesterday, wa* a
member of the Old Guard, eras with Napoleon in
his retreat from Moscow, and saw his marriage
with Marie Louise, lie larked leas than two
months of being 10$ year* old.
When the Prince** Louise arrived in Liverpool
•be traveled in a Detroit made Pullman oar to
London. Tbe princess deaf red that her move
ments should be considered strictly private.
Neither the queen n«r any of her brother* came
to meet her. as that would not be coorinered
stylish.
of Holland hast
- in the world. It _
we i«lm tree*, the smaller of
a ira» besides
Uooof troiUod^phuus^ T he
died and eighty feet in
orietyia jaat
soidde of one of us b
and lovaly
brightest
eas Vera 1
d two days after her betrothal tot
. *u»d wrote that "she was natag to
probobl*lb*coat «il! ba closed today, and 222^^^225221^5*^^?“
lb*docuiooof tb.court be reodend before u2^baw H «edL^ltbQie^un%<be
fbeeloMoJibewecb. inetraebedrawnberaeudeura
—Spain will have an international exhi
bition in 1881.
—The three degrees of comparison in
Wall street are "stick, stock, stuck.”
—The Zulus may be savages, but Jhc-y
have no national game.
—The first shad of the season has been
caught at Jacksonville, Fla.
—There never was. and never will he, a
better time to let Mock tqtecnlations alone.
—Justice Field looks like Tennyson; but
we are proud, as an American, to say that
Mr. Field never writes poetry.
—An unknown individual rises to remark
that a woman will never button anything
~'liich she qan pin.
—It is rumored that the name of Gilliert
and Sullivan's new opera, now in prejiara
tion. is "I'anl and Mabel.”
# —Mr. Gladstone writes that thenext elec
tion will be the most important of the
twelve in which he has taken part.
—The latest rei*ort is that the Princess
Louise went to England to csca|>e the Han
lan-Coiirtuey row.
—Keep your eye on Grant when he visits
this city. If he j Misses his piste for a thin
piece oi pie it means an empire.
—LoTd Beaconsfield s theatric transporta
tion of 7,000 sepoys into European waters
las! year cost, according to Mr. Lowe, $.1
355,000; $765 per man.
—Ex-Empress Eugenie left Pari* for Mad
rid Friday, an bourfafter Princess Christina
set out for the same place. One went to
the bedside of a dying mother, the other
to become the bride of a king
—Martin Luther, in his "Table Talk
says: "Defects of a preacher are soon sj.
Let a preacher lie endowed with ten virtues
and hut one fault, that fault will eclipse
and darken all his virtues and gifts, so evil
is tlie world in these times.**
yOongressman Money, of Mississippi,
thinks Chief Justice George will he likely
to be elected to tlie senate from that state,
or Governor WaUhal, though Singleton
and Barksdale are working for it most
heartily.
—Professor William Wood, who
watched Courtney through his lioating ca
reer, says that while Courtney i* a fine
sculler he ia not the man he was three
yvarsago. Vertigo and pleurisy have cre
ated their weak spots.
—The last fashionable freak in England
is the giving of concert* by ladies of rank in
public balls. Lady Falkestone and the
marchioness of Waterford, both fine f'ianisis
and fine singers, are at the head of this
‘‘boom/’
—S|»eculatioii is queer. The pric* of
grain has been pushed so high that millers
cannot afford to mr.ke Hour in some cases,
and flour list sold lower in Liverpool than
the price asked in Chicago. All of which
goes to show that speculators may go too
faM.
—Kossuth has just lost his rights as a
Hungarian citizen. The chamber of deputies
has adopted a bill declaring that any native
of the country who voluntarily resides
abroad forati uninterrupted jteriod of ten
years shall _ lose his civil status. The ex
treme left violently opposed this measure,
accusing the government of leveling it di
rectly at KassutL, but it was finally carried
by 141 votes to .52.
—There are two Baptist churches in South
America. Oue is located in .South Barbara,
Brazil, and is chiefly coiii|MMied of after-the-
war emigrants from the southern states.
The other is at Deniarara. Guiana, and is
composed of Chinese emigrants, gathered
and presided over by a member from the
Canton Baptist church fn China. In 1878
this church numbered 156, and sixteen nr
more have since been added by baptism.
—John C. Keeder, D. D., who is to preside
at tlie present session of the North Georgia
conference, was hum in Baltimore. Md;
educated at Wesleyan Academy. Wilbra-
ham, Ma-s , and at Wesleyan university,
Middletown. Conn., was editor of the New
Orleans Christian Advocate from 1865 to
1870, and was in the latter year elected
bishop bv the general conference, at ite ses
sion in Memphis, Tenn.
—Rev. Dr. Armitage, of New York, says
Spurgeon "makes no bones” of taking what
material he want* from the sermons of
others. But he doesn't become so saturat
ed as to omit the punctuation mark*. In
deed. Spurgeon mill say. half this discouise
1 got from such an excellent divine; and it
is not unusual for him to give notice that
next Sunday the congregation will be in
debted to such or such a source for two-
thirds of the sermon they may expect to
hear, it is very different in a Chicagu.
—The Dowager Countess de Montijo, who
has.justdied, was the daughter of the E»-
ltsh consul at Malaga, and her maiden name
was Do na Maria Manuela Kirkpatrick.
After the death of tlie Count de Montijo
she traveled about Euro|>e on a m<>dera:e
fortune, and in company with her two
daughters, was always coiiridered rather an.
ambiguous party. She married one daugh
ter to the duke of Alba, and hei success in
marrying the other to the emperor of the
French w*s undoubtedly the greatest effort
of her life. The news of her death w»-«
communicated to the ex-empress, on her
arrival, by King Alfonso, wlm was await
ing her at the train.
—Tlie late editor of the London Times.
Mr. John Thaddeus Delane, died on Mon
day at the age of sixty-two. Several year-,
ago Mr. Delauc’s health oonstrainetl huu to
retire from his i*»»t a- resjtouMble editor of
tbe great journal, but the association of his
name with the Times is still vivid in Lon
don and elsewhere. The Times has been
owned by three or four generations of the
Walter family, the first number of that
journal liavingheen published by tin* gra?» I-
father of the present Mr. John Walter. M.
, January 1, 17SS. So likewise its editing
and general conduct ha- run in families to
a certain extent, tbe father of Mr. John T.
Delane, William A. F. Delane, having fora
long lime been the patter’s financial man
ager. Mr. W. A. F. Delane died in 18.58.
His son, born October, 1817, was
educated at Magdalen college, Ox
ford, taking his A B. in 1839. He
studied law in the Middle temple
nd was called to tbe bar in 1847. but never
practiced, ln tbe same year that be left
Oxford be became associated with the Times
as assistant editor under tbe late Mr. T.
Barnes, and when tbe latter died, in 1841,
elane succeeded him as managing ed
itor. Mr. Delane was the originator of the
‘Times bureau,” which, in 1854. during tlie
Crimean war. exposed tbe incapecitv of tbe
British war office and caused tbe fall of the
ministry of Lord Aberdeen. Mr. Delane
noted for his tact, bis knowledge of
of the town and society, and for the in-
Minct and aplomb with which be felt the
! public opinion as reflected in tbe
id tbe great social world of London.
He traveled a good deal—visiting this
^ M country in 1856-and was a keen observer
deliberately ia and close student of men and things.
of which weighs
s wonderful col icc
teas dome of this
ujuieUiNU
O. McLANE’S
C'dcLntterf \mrr»rat»
VVOP.M SPECIFIC
\ ‘ T-VVTFUGS.
c T0M3 OP WORMS.
* ’ «• fintcuaiv.c is prile and lend
j -. . orcii, w:;h occasional flushes
• .--rhi:.-scribed -*|m ; on one or both
•:i- . :*.•» cy\ s b.:i («in e dull; the
up.Is iMi.tc; in axmc semicircle
u;»- ihe lower eve-lid; the
-i i5 .4 : .t..tcU. bwed-. an«f sometimes
a bwcll:ii^ of tlie ujiper lip *
occasif.na 1 be.1d.ichw. with humming
cr thi'.**u:R» of the etirs; an unusual
secrti.tin cf saliva; sliiny or‘furred
:nn~U3 ; br^n'Ii very fou , particularly
ir. the- morning; appetite variable,
sora-3iiir.es voracious, with a gnawing
scns;i;aut of thfc stomach, at others,
entirely gone; fleeting pains in the
stomach; occasional nausea and vom
iting; violent pains throughout the
abdomen ; bowels irregular, at times
Costive; s’rorl.i slimy, not unfrequent-
ly tinged with blood* bcliy swollen
And hasd; urine turbid; respiration
occasionally difficult, and accompa
nied Ly hiccough; cough sometimes
Vy ar»d convulsive; unc.isy and dis
turbed sleep, with grinding of the
teeth ; temper var.ablc, but generally
irril'.blc. ftc.
Whenever the above symptoms
are found to exist,
DR C. Me LANE’S VERMIFUGE
will certainly effect a cure.
IT DOFS NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
in it y form; it is an innocent prepay
^aw-n, not cafHible.of doing the slightest
•njury to the most tender infant
Tlie genuine Du. McLans’s Ver-
ahfugf bears the signatures of C.
McLanf and Firming Bros, on the
wrapper. —:o:—•
D .Z. C. Mol ASS’S
LIVER PILLS
.»:• -.o: re*-oian»<*n«lr-il as a remedy 4, l
. ! li’.v »h;it tUsU is heir to,” but
ffr t,*mi> m the liver, ami in ail Bilious
hj::«p;.v.u:a. Dyspi*psta and Sick Head-
. — nr dj.-case.- of that character, they
\GUE AND FEVER,
\’o !v*itei c>»tnartJC canbe used prepar
atory to, -j? after taking Quinine.
.-*.■» a sintpie puigativc they are ur>
eqoaU-l
fiKWtltK OF IMITATION**.
Tire genuine are never sugar coated.
Eacu uox has a red wax seal c
»Hl, with* *.r,e imurcssiou Dr. McLanC
Each nrapjH-r rears the signatures of
. Mr, Lank Fleming Hkos.
JuMvt upon having the genuine Dr.
- Mi l.ANK’s Livkm Pills, prepared by
K*eim»ig Uru*., -t Pittsburgh, Pa., tin
m-rV-T full of imitations of the
-spered • ! :ff*»» , »*iitlv bn
"nvlfr-S-wtcyJtw lixt read mnt
HIS OTHER WIFE.
Ail ‘ Intensely Exciting • Story
OF
Southern Life and Southern Scenes
Its powerful and artistic situations are devised
with an ingenuity that is both marvelous and
charming. The reader knows not which to prai.-e
This pacified the blue blood of Spain, the I mot, the graceful eegance c>f the author’s die-
nrarriage took_ place, the youn ff count even- ttou , heollgoeUc tomot the donate «n.ra
tually succeeded to all tbe estates and titles I
his father, and the countess was the I or 4110 rwl ^ ralne6 » Ul »t pervades the
mother of two daughters, one of whom be-1 Deeply Interestiiip; Plot,
came empress of the French, and die other ^ . ... .. .
- . , .. , . . D . ’ . ... , I and tha rare combination ot surprising incidents,
married tlie duke of Berwick and Alba, de-1
nt of the natural son of James 11 of I Ieadln K lt * solution.
England. The count and countess of Montijo I The action is brisk, exciting, and intensely
ceased to live together three years after the dnunatic; the convetsaUons are spirited, briiliant.
marriage, and Ihe countess became I ..
‘ .... . . . „ . , I liberally sprinkled with gems of philosophy, and
great traveler, living first In one capital I * 3
and then in another. At one time shelived I ** teree and (!om P ,M ' t “ ,l *e dialogue of a play by
in retirement in London, at oriiers in*Se-| Bulwer—whose graceful style, by the way, Rosa
ville. In 1845 ‘he and bet daughter* occ-u-
pied shabby apartu.ents on a thinl fl<K»r in .
aud were suspected of keeping a son 11 wiU be fo " ,ul ira[ “* fsllj ' c ' ,n nsfat
f private gambling house, the counter 1 d° n
'St'nsDSsi&sa s »p* A »•* t Ration
ter married the duke of Alba, and the 1 •dter tlie readier has seanntd th« opening instal
ment as far as the extremely interesting point,
where
A Happy Ilont^ymuon
TRU niH.
Hop Hitters are the Pnrcst and Best
Bitters ever Jla’de.
They are compounded from flops,
uiiehii, ffsndnibft aud Dandelion—
the oldest, best, and m*»st valuable medicines
;n tlie world and contain all the best aud most
curative properties of nil other Hitters, beiug
«'* Kindest niood Purifier, Liver
RrstiIittor, nod Lite and Health Restoring
Agent on earth No disease or ill health.
possibly long cslrt whore these Bitters
Iona. *° Var ' e ’ 1 •***! perfect are their op
They give hew life and vigor to the aged and
miirm. To all whore employments cause fr-
regaUrity oi the bow-els or urinary organs, or
who require an Appetizer, Tonic and mild
• StimulanL these Bitters arc involuble, being
• *' curative, tonic and stimulating,
. without intoxicating;.
No matter what your feelihgs or symptoms
aliment is, use Ho^»
countess and her other daughter went with
him back to Madrid, but next ;
being promised by the duke an
come of 100,000 francs if she
would leave Madrid, the countess returned I ,, rude-y ended by an appalling apparition,
to Paris with Eugenie took apartments in
the Champs Ely sees, and went much int<
society, particularly attending the balls of
the prince president at the palace of the
Elysee, Eugenie received many offers of I ance ol * d " k rol>ed who astounds the
“he I h * Wi -“ U1 ' k b) - ri8ht
emperor himself offered her his hand, which ) bridegroom, as
she accepted and became empress of the
French. The late Countess de Montijo w
A Spectre of the Past
This is the unexpected and startling upi>car-
His Other Wife
The imaginative, reader can fancy the strange
she was well along
•still thought bv many observers to be
handsome, if not handsomer than . ,,
her daughters. She was tall, erect., dig- I wmpHtwtions likeJy to ensue when the youthful
* bridefu " y - ^
- i '• » *- * 1 * - '**■ she has sworn to love, and who
stands aghast before
that she did much not only to engineer her I cry of the
own marriage with the count of Montijo, 1
but the exalted matches also which her two
daughters made. It is certain that one of
her interviews at Saint Cloud with the
enamored Napoleon forced him to a declar
ation, and gave him courage to resist all the
remonstrances and entreaties of Momy and
Persigtiey, warning him against the* lalai
error of a mesalliance As it turned out,
however, the match with Eugenie, instead I y 0 33 c f t j ie
of being unfortunate, became one of the 1
props to the imperial throne.
The Peace Commission.
Washington, November 26.—Secretary I
Schurz to-day received the following: Los I
His Other Wife
t no one neglect to read the opening chapter*
of this grand story, whieh is now ready
New York Week
Companion free 1
that date-
January 1st, ISbO, nnd give 1% tell year**
IILTOIV C OUNTY.
Jamirtry.—Will be wild before tbe Comt-
houredoor, In the town of Alpharetta, Milton
county. Georgia, within the legal hours of sale,
on tlie first Tuesday in January next, the •follow-
ln £ot3ta£l7oS t ti«. 477. 470, 47,. anil Ihf n-vt
half o( lot Nn. 3*3. iu the firstdlhtrict^nd »■ '" l
mvtIon of oridnaltv Oiorokce, now Mliton toii.i-
ty. Levied on a* ti« m«i j of Jav M. t ldsu'uy
to satisfy a fl.fa. issued front 1 he SuperiorOonrt of
sold county, in favor of Ld. Wilkinson_vm. aaM
'»ropert
ry mad
tills
turned over to me
SOI DOVlft—wtds
November 14.1^.^
Sheriff.
JLostise 4 handler .Moulton,
blush Mtalock Craik, Rebecca ilnrilinx Ifavia,
Jnmea Pnrlon, l.nnlHn M. Aleotl,
Dr. Henry I- Bowditch, C. A. Btepbena.
Editorials mi Current Events,
Two Hundred Miort Stories
Valuable Papers on Health,
MtirrlugTaJasoT Adventure,
Anecdotes rand Incidents.
Price, $1.73. Specimen copies rent foe. Please mention in what paperyou read
this a»tvvnf«vmcnt. ' AO,lr^ Y<lcfil^ 'c'ojiPAMIO!i,‘'nomt'u , nrni
000 novlA—wkyiwnoviK drc2 16 -30 nx read mat
t’OllKlhO AND HEATING STOVES-
ISAAC A.SHEPPARD A CO.,B«ltimwuft.
• Manufacturers of the Unrivalled IMPROVED
COLUMBIA
COOK
THE HOUSEKEEPER'S FAVORITE
Combining all Improvement* or Value.
And Perfect In Operation.
ATign A VARIED ASSORTMENT OF SUPERIOR
HEATING STOVES
For saio by Hunnicutt & Beilingrath.
Got. Peach-Tree and Walton Sts.. ATLANTA, 6“
HHHKon st In six-horse Monitor Engine
and fixtures aud one Forty-Saw Cotton Gin and
fixtures, one aet of Gin Belting, one§«it£aOote
t »n Press and fixture*, one Wheat Thresher or
Separator, one Reaper and fixture*, one w alter
J Atwood Mower, one Clod Cri sher, one Seed Drill,
oue Forage Cutter, two Ave»v Cultivator* and
fixtures, two AveIT two Horne Turners, two two-
Uorse Wagons and flames*. Plows, Mow Haras—
and Farm Implement* of every character, one
Hay Rake, one pair of Platform Truck.*, one rrrry
Boat, one Ferry Chain and their fixture*, five
Mules, os follow,, via: Alex, a hay lrorro Mule.
Knen.sta.fCit- t>nj Dlek, all mare Male*, four
Mlleh Coax, eitht Y.arlings Cattle, thiny head
of stock Htmt. Household and Kiteucn Fnrnitnro.
and one aix Horse Power and fixture*, levied
ill ia\Ua ill •* *• IHlIWII.dra ataiii ■* '. ,
Dell vs. Henry C. Foyers. Propertv pointed .
by plaintiff This October the St. IsTtl.
2 4 octlO—wSw tVM. nUlSK. Sheriff.
Atlnilnisfrator’s Sale.
591 norS wkyflura
IIS’. CASK’S StEtll’DVES.
Office of Dr. M. W. CASE, 933 Arch Street, Philad'a, Pa.
—— a tgmm M. M Ph | | It a Terrible Disease. IU fearful effect*—
M — H curruiitlou running down the throat, weak eye*, d«*af-
I ralA ■ II n.hs, loes of voice, loM of smell, dh.Ru»tinK o.Iors, narail
— m ■ M — ■■—■■■ deformities, and finally consumption. From first to
^^Ka last it is ever aggressive. Ordinary treatment* aro worse tlxan useless. If neglected
w hile a cure is possible, it may rapidly develop into quick consumption. The most
thorough, successful and pleasant treatment la.
«KJ9|HtII.CASS CiSBOLUl (f Till HU
WL y-elFOB CATARRH. ASTHMaT
w.
AUiulntstrator’s S;Ue,
Y VIRTUE OF AN OBDFR OF THE II »N-
• orable court “f ordinary of Fulton comity. I
will sell before tire vtnm-hovvxc d *»r In Atlanta
the flrit Tuesday in IKwmlrer wrxt, within the
E il hours of sale, a suburban lot northwest of
*ms, near the corporate limits, frytirizm
Mate street about 50 feet and running back about
n 0 feet and adjoining tire old Macedonia
lot, beiug part of land No. M of the 14th district
of originally Henry now Fulton county, hold a*
th» property of Edward Ch*j*mau. colored, de
ceased, for heir* aud creditor*. Terms ca&h.
Atlanta, NovcmbcrEd, IAT
■ nov4—w4w
no hot water, simply inhaling or brmtking it, and you Teel it* healing power Hi once# Tbi* treat
ment is endorsed by i>hysirians everywhere, and highly commended l.v ftp—!„«, .i. Q._i U_.
thousands, who have need it with perfect satisfaction. FTLLTRFATE E\t UmHaTS, OfDl IITC
sent. Satlsfzrtloa Always gnwirttti Addreraa, DR. M. W. CASE. fW Arrk 81., Philadelphia, Pa.
laOTTERl EM.
^JKPBEi'EDEKTEn ATTRACTION !
Over Half a Mill ion Distribute!.
Every New* Agent veils tire New York Weekly
l*rice mx cents. Sent to any address in th
Pinos, November 24.—We have information
that lire White River Utea areoiPtheir way,
including Jack. We are now of theopin-l United States (postage free) three mouth* In
that we shall be iuecessfnl in carrying
out your wishes—at all events we have pa
tience enough to try ir. So far as danger i>
concerned the commission have not given .
that a thought. They must take the | ‘^peauren copies
har.ces. Hatch, Commissioner.
Denver. Col., November 26.—Los P
reventy-tive cents; four months, one'dollar: rix
months, $1.50: one year, three dollars.
; free. Address ail letter* to
STREET Jt SMITH,
Louisiana State Lottery Company;
This Institution was regulnrh Incorporated by
the Leglatnuire of the Huvre for feltreatio.oti a..d
Charitable purposes, in H6P. for Ihe term of
Twentyr-five Year*, to which contract tlie
invi-table faith of the State is pledged, with a
Capital of SI,000,000, to whh-h it has rfm-e added a
reserve fund of $350,000. Its Grand Single
Nunber Drawing* will take place monthly.
IT >EVKR SCALES OR POSTPONES. Look at
the following Distribution:
GRAND PROMENADE CONCERT,
during whieh will take place the
115th GRAND MONTHLY
ANI> THE
Extraordinary Semi-Annual Drawing,
At New Orleans.
Tucwiay, December icih, IS79,
Tinder tire itcsoiial Miitervision A management
Gon. G.T. BEA U REGARD, of Lonisia tin
and GenJUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia
CAPITAL PRIZE. $100,000.
•wNoliee—Tickets are Ten Dwllura
only. Halves, $5. Fifth**, $4
Tent Its, $|
LIST OF PRIZES.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF $.(W,rt»..... $100,000
1 GRAND PRIZE OF . oU.OlIU 60.0tk
1 GRAND PRIZE OF
RHEUMATISM
TllK OLDEST AND TOE BEST,
‘M’s Anti-RMimatic Powers.
TTtOR TIIF L*8T QUARTER OF A CENTURY
I; this invaluable Remedy hascutcd thousand:
.1 over the land, f om Maine to Texas.
The Afflicted shall have the Remedy and my
Prof- Khioiial advice on rec.ipt of Two Dollars and
description of case, including age, sex, lempcr-
ment, etc.
Any number of testimonials can lie givi
J. GIBSON, AL ,
t00ae|>9 wlm mid in col Katonton, Oa.
YOUNG MEN
PREPARED
FOR BUSINESS.
By attending Moork's Business University
Atlanta, Ga. One of the best practical school in
thecountry. circulars mailed ruse.
*»a»«»»a»»s»s»a«»!
Sra^di«“\ad*L? P return I ed’ <i ^ 0 m? i9 aua 31 *»S*STKEOT. SE1V YORK.
^ IL &«. w e r .™“ n ™ evid^oj I 70 , “’ V4 ^ U ‘ *•«»*•*.-a nxt ro.dm.1
fearing trouble. Tbe coininissiun do not
expect to accomplish much more. It is
reported that tbe plans of the campaign
are already arranged—one column to march
from Milk river, one from Utah and two
from tbe south. Tbe commission is still
barricaded, and prepared to resist any at
tack.
The National Democratic Convention.
Cincinnati, November 20 —A meeting of
prominent democrats was held to night at
the Grand hotel, to take Kteps to secure tire
'holding of tbe democratic national conven
tion here next summer. Chas. W Woolley,
who waa widely known in connection with
the Florida returning board, presided. A
committee to raise a guarantee fund and
one to invite the attention of the national
executive committee to the desirability oi
bolding the convention here, were appoint
ed.
2«LARGR PRIZES OF
4 LAUGH PiUZKH OF
20 PRIZES OF
20,000 20,000
JOHN HLANNXRY. JOHN L. JOHNSON.
JOHN FLANNERY&C0.
Cotton Factors
* —AND—
Commission Merchants
will be paid fora
help.
Do not suffer yourself
■ but use kud urge them to use Hop
they will uot cure or
let your friends
Bittera.
Remember. Hop Bitter* is no vile, drugged,
drunken nost ruin, but the Purest and Best
Medicine ever made; lire **Invalid'*
Friend niid Hope," and no person or
• f*™iiy should be without them. Trjr the
l Hitler* to-dny.
Try Hop Cough Cure and Pain Relief.
* ir Druggists, and DANIEL &
MARSH. Wholesale and Retail.
3ft* jan21 dly tues thur sat Awly nxt rdxna
CURATINE,
For Blood DMeases.
CURATINE,
For Liver Complaint*.
CURATINE,
For Kidnoy Diseases.
CURATINE,
For Rhsomati
CURATINE,
For Scrofala Diae*
CURATINE,
Inc ii
a ration tbe
power* for the srils
which produce all dis>
ease* of the Morxt, the
Wrer. the Jitfc/wry*.
Harmless In action and
thorough In its effect.
It 1* unexcelled for the
cure of all B/oorf Dim-
ertsejs such as Hrmf*
film. Tu in on. Hoi It.
Tettrr.Sult JZJicmsm.
a eh. Retention of
Crime, etc.
ASX TOUR DRUGGIST
FOR IT.
TSEESOWICHEEU1CO.
BALTIMORE, Md.
r sat tues thur&wkly nxt r
is tbe most economical form of Washing Soap.
All bar or •\uare cakes wear down ia are to
a laree flat piece, too thin to handle and
therefore, wasted while tire OVAL CAKE o
sot only as superior in qui
be most ECONOMICAL >0.
SS* aogS dsn wed sat An
THE SOUTHERN UULTITATvl
This rrlebrated Agricultural Jour
nal isBOWbclDffirabliMltrd br.Thef on-
atitatlon. Srna In ronr aubarriplion.
nail begin irlth the first number of the
new volume. No fanner can do with-
ant it. Price, one dollar and flfijr
cents per annum.
Bnlnbrldge Item*.
Baimibidhe, Nuvetnber 25.—Our sii|»erior
court was engaged the entire week upon
the criminal docket. Henry Ha: I and
Thomas C.iIlioun were found guilty vdib a
recoinmendation to mercy of the court;
were senlencetl to nine months each in tbe
chain-gang. Ellen Screven, tried for at
tempt to poison family of J. D. Tolbert was
found guilty—three years in tbe ireniieu
tiary. Daniel Zeke. Log stealing. Verdict
guilty, and recommendation to mercy—30
days in jail. .Jeff* Low, who was tried for
the murder of William Haygood was ac
quitted. CimU Thomas, assault to murder,
was acquitted. There was a large number
of other small cases tried and disposed of.
During a drunken ouarrel on Monday
Mansico Cloud cut Tobe Phillips with a
pocket-knife under tbe left shoulder. Tbe
wound is not mortal hut very painful.
The Name Old Story
Is fhai some poor mortal lias been suddenly
raised to affluence ami comfort by baving
invested a sjwire dollar or two in tire last
drawing at New Orleans of the Louisiana
•State L-d ery. Address M. A. Dauphin, P.
O. Box C!>2, New Orleans. La., or. same |rer-
son at No. 3l!» Broadway, New York City,
N. Y., before the next drawing, which will
be December 16, when General* G. T. Beau-
iegard and Jubal A. Early aril! lotve sole
management of the distribution of one-
half a million of dollars.
tiuv 25—dik wit
Noir Is the time to get tip Clulji Tor
the Weekly Constitution. Twenty
for $20.
Poverty and Suffering.
*‘I wa* dragged down with debt, poverty
and suffering for years, caused by a sick
family and large bills for doctoring, which
did t’lrem no good. I was completely dis
couraged, until one year ago, by the advice
of my pastor. I procured Hop Bitten and
commenced their use. and in otic month we
were all weP, and none of us have seen a
rick day since, and I want to say to all poor
men. you can keep your families well a year
with Hop Bitters fur less than one doctor’s
visit will cost, I know it. A Workingman.”
( onunmption Cored.
An old physician, retired from practice,
having had placed in bis bands by an East
India uussionary tlie formula of a simple
vegetable remedy for tbe speedy and |>er-
maneiit cure for Consumption. Bronchitis.
4Varrb, Asthma. ai?d all Throat and Lung
Affections, also a positive and radical cure
f.»r Nervous Debility and all Nervous Com
plaints. after baving tested its wonderful
curative jtowers in thousands of cases, has
felt it hhdaiv to make it known to his.-uffer-
i’ig follows. 'Aetuaied by this motive aud a
de-ire i.. relieve human suffering. I will send
free of charge to ari who desire it. *hi?< re-
in German. Frei ch. or KtiglUh. with
full dir»ction< for pre(>aring and using.
Sent by ma ; ! by aildretsing with ••tamp.
000 oct7—w!3w
■ster, N. Y.
—The Early Bird, manafactiuedat Lynch
burg. Va.. by Mr. Carroll is now suirerseding
all other Brands of »Smok ing Tobaceo. bsild
at the same price as Durham** and is three
grades better. When it is remembered that
Mr. Carroll holds the medals for nianfac-
turing tbe best Smoking Tobacco in the
world, you will be eager to try Early Bird,
the best in the market. Address Carroll’s
Early Bird Tobacco Work*. Lynchburg,
Virginia. 000 july22,187lt—wkyly
—Subscribe for The Constitution for tbe
great Presidential campaign year of 1880.
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR.
This reliable Preparation still stand* at the bead
for making sweet, light and nutritious Bread, Bis
cuit-, Roll*. Cake and Pastry.
It is a perfectly health Preiaration and contain*
none of the Injurious ingredients socommonlj
u>ed in ordinary Baking Powders.
It contains in itself the va uable nutritive prop
erties which are 1<mi with the bran in bolting fine
flour. No other Baking Powder or anything else
used for raising bread contains any nutritive in
gredient.
The cost is about fifty percent lcs* than ordli a
ry Baking Powder, and the product Is better.
Tbe*most eminent medical and chemical author
Ities in the world testify to its superior qualities.
to mankind.
DK. H. M. HENRYTThe eminent New York
Physician, rays: "the use of Hanford’* Bread
Preparation offer* admirable mean* for the intro
ductionofa valuable element into the system
with the food of every day life.”
PROF. J. C. BOOTH, of Philadelphia, tliedi*
ubstitute tor cream oi tartar in the preifaration
i»f brefei.”
•euts iu s
S neer ha* not got it send a three cent
e maunfactureren for a sample, or
tamp* for a regular package, wt-t-pad
RUM FORD CHEMICAL WORKS.
Providence, R. I.
REWAKK OP I9IITATIOXN,
'.ill roaylS dGV^m dec»3 tues thur sat&v-ky
Ayer’s
Hair Vigor,
FOR RESTORING GRAY HAIR TO ITS
NATURAL VITALITY AND COLOR.
It is a most agreeable dressing,'which
5s at once harmless and erfectnal. for pre
serving the hair. It restores, with the
gloss an«l freshness c»f youth, fade.I or gray,
fight, and red hair, to :t riel! brown, or deep
black, as may 1»; desired. By its use thin
Lair is thickened, and baldness often
though not always euretl. It dieeks falling
«?f the hair iiatm*dlately, and causes a new
iT»w:b ia n’l casch where tire* glands are
»: decayed; while to brashy. weak, or
• h**rv. ;>.* disease.! hair, it impart* vitality
i.i strci!g!h, and rhi:deis it pliable.
Tin YV;r»n cleanses'1 he scalp, cures and
* t:.c:. .'the f rniaiion of dandruff; and,
by \is eooiing, stiimdatiDg, and smithing
pnqierties, It^mUs io st if not all of the
liituors^wid dismtses |N«uiiar to the scalp,
k<*t‘jH!t£ it cool, clean, and suit, under
-vliidi con*u :o:is diseases of the scalp and
Loir s-r.i i::i{Missii<iv.
As a Dressing for Ladies* Hair,
Tlie Vmou is incfunparablc. It is color-
ies- , contains n -itlit roi! nor dye, and will
not s- .l white cumhric. It imjiarts ait
agroea do and lasting jierfitrae. and as an
article for tbe toilet it is economicil aud
uiufuri > asse«i iu its excellence-.
PREPAREt> PT
AwkylSw nx rti mat
TTfb celebirat^l AericuItnral Jour- DT. J. C. AES & C0-, LOWtiL MSXS.,
“tntion7 &-n3 j r "« ic * 1 "~ 1 Anal, t*.i
and becin witli the first number or the sold bv all iiiccguists i:\-EKVttTiEKS.
new Telume. So former can do with-.
ont it Jfrlee, one dollar and flnj! W**. RAbKtt* As “ u
cents per AUBB. * 4» feb27 <12taw tue* 'hr AwkyJy
10,000 " * 10...
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 A pproxfmfttiou Prizes of $2U>„.
100 “ • l.o..
10» " " 75..
No. 3 KELLY'S BLOCK. BAY STREET,
SI -A. “\7’ W UT
A gents for jewel
and DOMESTICS, eic..
“SSSi RAGGING and TIES FOR HALR AT LOWEH1
rS«' S'H MARKET RATES.
A ’S5: PROMPT ATTENTION GIV
•I j BUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO US.
•ro miiCsi 1 LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGN
leu— couou[ MKNTS - KJ tep5 d&w4m
MILLS YARNS
. $20,000
. 10,000
7,10a
Gen.
.»522,-00
uvu. v. . . ., un ., U a.unau>. .»f L&. 1 CotUIni*
Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Va. f fdonera.
Application for mte^ to club* should only be
made to the office oSthe Company in New Orleans
Write forcirculnrs or s nd orders to-
M. A. DAUPHIN,
P. O. Box 092, New Orleans, La.,
or Same Person at
No. 319 ttroAdlwny. New York,
or P. O. Box No 1SI, AinaiU. ea.
MOUTHERS RKSIEDT.
R OSADAtlS!
o
s
A
D
A
L
I
S
__ dy for the cure of 8crofut», Scrol
ulovulTaint, Rheumatism. White 8we!
Gout, Goitre.Consumption, Bron
chitiz, Nerrouz Debility and all disc*
*** J”* 1 ?* from an impure condition
ot the blood.
The merits of this valuable prepare
tion are ao well known that a pamitu
notice Is but neceoary to remind tb*
reader* of this Journal of the necewdti
of always having a bottle of thb med
iclne among their stock of family ue
““Title*.
tertificate* can be presented from
ny leading PhraicUns, Minister
1 heads oTfamtue* throughout th«
The Fluid Extract of BoJSaU*.
Dr. B. Wilson Carr of Ball
says "he has tued it In
Baltimon
of Her fu
with much sail-
&3 1
saying i; issuiM-
and other
faction."
Dr. T. C.
commends it
with dieeared ,
rior to any preparation he h*> eve
used.
Hev. Dabney Balt, of tbe Balt;
more M. E. Conference, South, says h»
lias been so much benefit ted by Its uat
that he cheerfully recommetidfi it to all
his friends and acquaintance*.
Craven de Co^ Druajists, Gordon*
ville, Va.. say it never has failed u
give satisfy"
Nans’l G
bora, TOnm .
rheumatism when all else failed.
Rosadalls Is not a secret qnack prepa
ration. Its Ingredients are published on
every package. • Show it to your Physl
dan and he wiU tell you It is composed
of tbe strongest alteratives that exist,
and is on excellent Blood Purifier. Dio
oar space admit we could give yon tes
timonials from every State in the South
and from persons known to every man,
woman aa child either personally or
by reputation.
Rosadalls is sold by all Druggists.
J NO. F. HEXRY, CURRAN ft CO
• Gsllsf* Pises,
NEW YORK.
DANIEL A MARSH, Wholesale
Agents, Atlanta. Ga.
70 mchS deowly A weowly
$25 to$5000|f““
*-~k.a*'llrartIrw■*-!*»« r 10.K-wC^lfollV 't
I >trm v>up-fif:»(In .4. lu-leffpUnfftlonrw.fi *•
tiM« to iurat, inoraw.x A Co., lUukffrff,2t proaj SL, ». Y.
UU) oct2 dam thnr sat tne* dtwky^m
‘ t, Itchirr^- or Uicer&fod
. » H 4 ... .•**»» DtiJiBs’aPile
> Proprietor.
. . Htoif-*'—*-
jvo'thorn
DANIEL & MAP. H, Agents, Kimball Hon*,
Atlanta. G»l nov2V—dl2Aw2t
A FORTUNE QUICKLY MADE.
MONET haa been made more rapidly within the
Hst few months in Wall SL than at any period since
1873. Immense profits hare been realised from small
Investments. The following affidavit explains itself:
Pyoorily areWI seftran m-.0~>r*ff A. Faynt.mf m W. Oth
**• M,w Vrok CUy, «• kfo*wn,mm4 mi Ulntc Onlj .worn My*
J****"*J"* ,,,, “ , f* * •*— pUc»4 with Ttifffo-Jxr, Selnraml
a (Wcae4) * Om. a. Paras.
Etat. ©f New Tort, *
dt7«a4CMttfffri(nrV«rk. f**-
Swmb Mn m SM. S4 S-j f-mW, l«?j.
J. A Koaia, PnWic, 91 Dn«M M., H. T.
TBATCHEB, BELMONT <b CO. Butrn.
r.asmuei, wMlrMSMmt, lit*TratCUr.
5TS nnvi.'—rl:<m «wt tnm thur AwkyZm
WRAY'S K FECI PTC MEDICINE.
TRADE MARK Tbe Great TRADE MAR
E ngl« *h
Remedy, An
unfailing cure
for Seminar
potency, and all
Diseases that fol-^
•juence of Self-
_ —_ .Abuse; as L*s A
of Memory. Universal Lassitude, pain ln the B
Dimnesra of Vision. Premature Old Age, and many
other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Consump
tion and a Premature Grave. WFull particular*
In our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by
mail to every one. *«"The specific. Medicine
is sold by all druggists at $1 per package,
or six package* for $5. or will be sent free by m*Il
on receipt of the money by addressing rHE
GRAY MEDICINE C«^ No. 10 Mechanic^
Block. DrraoiT, Mich. jswsoI-i In Atlanta and
everywhere by all druggist* (Mi octll—dAwy
p^Esc^ipri^ ¥m
1 3or the speedy Can* of Seminal Weakness, Lost
tfauhood, Premature Debility, Siervoaraesa,
DeKpondenry, Cuufusiou of Ideas Armios to
Society, Defective Memory, and all Disorders
Brosuht on hy Secret Rahils and Excesse*. Any
druggist has the Ingredient*. Address,
DR. JAQUES ft, CO.,
130 West 8ixth SU CINCIhNATL OHIO.
•jfo r* pi NFW ffM SHraliMe eai
§ra U Ira Ira .M- icfDt.fr®*
t lifol® frro.SVra tr^fThemMM0>* O V
t Ifobllitjr.
From S2 up; other
_ goods in proportion. .
LlPstra^kd CATA
K*oiina n U..a...
CKiO novl 8 1 wLtw
E. MSOX A CO., Ill Aauma htreer
Sew York. —
By Frierson & Lealf.
Ailniin!strat«r’§ Sale.
B V VIRTUK OF AN ORDF.lt OF TH
orahlc fourt of ordinary of Fulton
i will soil before the court-house door in Atiaui
on the fir.*t Tuesday In Dotx mher next, with!
the legal houtM of sale, a city lo» in Atlanta,
fronting on Fair street fifty feet and cxtcudiiu-
lnu-k two hundred feet, being part of land hr **
I(*> of tlie 14 li district of originally ttenrv
Fulton nountv. Sold as the itropertj of \Vin>«ui
of *aid county, deceased, for ben
Alphareua. in said county.
tii first Tues-
dav in December next, within the legal hours of
sale, the follow Ing property, to-wii:
Three lots of Ian l, number* 643 and .Ml, In
the second district « fihe^comJ mttw ol sold
county, containing ortv acres ea h. Sold aa the
prot*erty of Nancv Barrett. l->t« of raid county.
0 0 novfi—wiw
FITlaTuN «:01TNrV.
S TATE OF OE lROtA. FIII.T0S OOrnTTV-.
Ordinary's Office, Novemli r 17th, 1879—Rob
ert Pause has applied for homestead Mid exemp
tion of persons! y, aud I will pass upon the same
at 10 o'clock sum., on the 3rd
1879, stmyniloe. DAM hi. l.ITTMAN, ^
i»U—novlhwiw
Ordinary F. C
I'Ait* vir urAiRviiiv, r ui4i4>'» ,
, Ordinal y’sOlflre, November l7tli, 18^9.—NN m.
Jett, has applied for exemption of personalty
d setting apart and valuation of homestead.
and setting apart
i I will pass
thc.sth day
514—iiov’8 w’vr
> TATE OF GEORGIA. FULTON OOUNTY.-
T Ordinary’* Office, November »7th, 187’j.—s»ra.
Wary J. Witherspoon, wife of Wm. L. Wlthere
MNMin, has applied for exemption of 'H-reonalty.
and setting apart and vGmtion of n homestead
clock o.m. <
at my oaicc.
514—novlRw2\
mg a,
uf I-'—malty ami I win ww awm ihe wune at
- - - * -* , r .tii day of December, 1879,
DANIEL P TTMAN,
Onllnarv F. t*.
FATE ITE COUNTY.
VX ry's Office; Novcmi^r:!, 1879.—Jas. E Spur-
tin, guardian of Mrs. M. A. Goodman, has applied
for leave to si 11 the real cstat • of Ills Raid ward:
This In. ther fore, to notify all persona con
cerned to show cause, if any they have, why
It ave shotil I not Ik* granted the applicant ou tlio
flwt Monday In l>«*mber next
G EORGIA, FAYKTTiC COUNTY, ORD1NA-
ry's Office, N.tvember 15, 1879 S. K. Strick
land. has applied for exemption of |K*raonalty,aud
I will pass upon the same; at 1« o’clock a. in.
<»n tlie 6th day «! December next nt my office.
L. B. UK MGS,
501—nov!8—wiw Ordiaary-B
Admlnlslrutor’s Sale.
B y virtue of* an order from this
t’amrt of ordinary t»f Fayette eouniy, will
be sold at the Court-house door. i» nJitm t,
plHjll county Georgia, oil* the Hi t i utaotay iu
December next, in the liisal hours t>l hale. Hi®
following property: Three aorea. more or less, ont
of tlie northwest corner of fifty acres lying south
Sold os the property of \V. L. Williams, deceased,
* the benefit of the cred-
deceased. Term* cash.
CAMPBELL COUNTY.
Qt
» nov4—w4w
E. G. LITTLE,
Administrator.
DM
MANUFACTURERS OF
THEPOOlEi. HtfNT LEFfEt TURBINE
MACHINE MOULDED
MILL CEARINC,
SHATTINC, S0LIIYS AND HANGERS;
STEAM ENGINES AND BOILERS.
FREE TO ALL
FLEETWOOD’S
LIFE or CHRIST.
UNITED STATE* ROOK «V BIBLE CO.
ItaJdNS Ura« HUClaclaaiatl, 0
000 aprt wkyly
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
Pictorial
i HISTORYoFtheWORLD
ft contain* C72 fine historical engravings and
ISCti large double column page*, and ta th»* moral
t oinnlete History of the world ever published,
it kciIk at right. Send for rapeeimen page* and ex
tra terms to Agent*, and see why It sella farter
than any other book. Address
NA TIUNAL PUBLISHING GO.,
000 ocp^l wkynm
Atlanta, Ga.
JAKPEK COUNTY.
Ailmiuistnitor’s Sale.
^JKORGIA, JASPER COUNTY.-BY VIRTUE
order from the Court of Ordinary of said
county, will be wild before the Court-house in the
town of Mnnticello, on the first Tuesday in De
cember next, the house and lot belonging to the
estate of Lucy B. Smith, deceased, contain ing
eigr.t and a half acres, u.ore or lew, adjol ing lot*
•»f G. T. Bartlett, W. L. Zachry, J. J. Campb-ll
and John C. Key. Sold for the purpose of ratali
money to pay m mount *et at art to ibe min...
children of said Lucy B. Smith for twelve month*
support. Terms—Half carii; balance on twelve
months time. S. a FLOURNOY. Adm'r.
Monticello, Ga., Oct. ‘.7,1879. yt31—w«w
Aflminlslrator’a Saif,
>Y VIRTUE OF A* ORDER FROM -T1IF
next, between the legal bom* of >ale. twohun
dred and sixty acre* of land, more or lew. ltelonv-
ing to the estate of William C. Penn, dereared.
with the exception oi the widow’
paid for.
1 nov7—wiw William C. Pc
J ASPER onUNTY POSTPONED Ulr.RIP-'8
Sale.—W'iH be sold before the Court bouse door
iu the town of Monticello. Jasper count'. Georgia,
during the leg** hours of sale, on tbe first Tnes
day in December, 1879, a certain tract or parcel
of land containing four hundred acres, more or
lew, situate in Jasper county. Georgia, bounded
by lands of Jmdah Freeman, C. A. Freeman. John
Wyatt, and others, as the property of L T. Wyatt,
to satisfy a fi fa. from Jasper Superior Court in
favor of A. G. Foster va Isaac T. Wyatt, which
has been levied on said land. Also, at the same
”1 be soW, one hood “ '
_ tofthe IsaacT. 1
bounded by lands of Joha Broughton.
other*, to satisfy the same fi. fa., which bu been
' — ‘".Wyatt,
-»ey.
Sheriff
levied thereon, as the property of Iosae T. W
Property pointed ont bypIaintlCT* attorney.
000 nov9—w4w JEFF. AIKEN. Sber
the first Tuesday.In December next, i
nrMo-vtt:
On southeast bv alley, on northeast by Thomas
Jeffrieo, on northwest by K. S. Stri kland, on the
urtof the
avor of 7,
B. Blalock, Mirviviug partner of W. (tamp dc I fo ,
against Strickland & Vaughn. Lejied on as the
property of Vaughn, defendant, he jointing out
the property. Tenant* in posaewdon notified.
L«-vy made hy 8. W. Reynolds and handed to me.
October 18,1879.
Also, at the wme time and place, part of lot ot
land numt»er iiX'y-four(t>4t,in the thirteenth dis
trict of Campbell county, Ga , containing In all
eleven acre*, more or less. Tenant* in iiossewlon
notified. Aimo, one dnylnnk colored mare mule,
about five year* old, medium - ta*. Also, one cer-’
tain one-bone wagon. ««-v.. d <• i a* the property
of John IL mittie*, Jr., h v . • ne * f and to satisfy
a fi. fa. iwiied from itantpocU «iiperior eourt in
in favor of WotmI, *ober * M«rsc. against John
Suttie*. Jr. Levied on h* the prop«;rty of John
>hu tiles. Property polnUNl out b.. plain tiff's at
torney. Octol»er25, 1879
_ k’ill be add l»efore the courthouse door, in
the town of Falrburn, Campfo-ll county, Ga., ou
the fir-t l uesday iu Dccenn*e- next, between the
Itgnl hour* of vale, the following properly, to-wft:
Seventy-five lu-rc^ "f lau«i. on weal end »-f 1 »t No.
T»ne luiudretl nml t'oiu six (14'd. In the 14th dis
trict of originally tayeUc. *.ow i*amj»l»ell o unty,
Ga., c ntaining fu all one hundted acre*, more
or less. Iacvie«| on an the property of -amuel Dc-
moitey, h, virtue of and to MMitafy two juMtlce
eruirt fi. fas., israiied from the juptlce court of 7.'4th
•liHtricr, G. M., of Mid county, iu favor of J. P.
llciisou, executor of the estate of J. C. Beuxtu de-
ccaaed. ogHinsl said Satuu«-1 lH*money. levied
on aa the prop, rty of mi l Samuel « tmoney, he
IHdiiting ont the same. Tenant* in ix**s -hrion
notified. laevy mule by S. W. Reynolds and
handed to me. This NovemlxT tat, 1879.
JOHN L. CAMP,
91 nov4 w4w • Slier IT of C.O
.Vd iiinistrat ir’s -ale.
Tucal.y
>re or Icmi of lot of liud No. ta*, in the *th dta-
about forty acres of ..■MPMHH
houses and other outbuildings on the tamo, sou
a* tire real estate of Kmma A. let U>erw<Mid. dc
ceased, for the benefit of heir* »u«l creditors
Term* ctt.-h. ROB'T. J. TI'G »I<K.
«'i nov4—w4w • Adminiatrotor.-
I \ DfMON COUNTY.
KOKGIa, MADISON COUNTY.—IN THB
YJT matter of the |.robatu« f the W ill* of Elijah
Williams, deoeH*e*l—In tbe (fourt of Ordinary of
Madison «mnty, Georgia. »*. ptcmlrer Term, 1*79.
’ It apifeariag to the Court that BirdyO. Wil
liam* au : John Y. William*. Executor* of Elijah
W.I lau -, deceased, have Bled their petition that
the ten ia t will* and u-t-iamcnis of mfd dijah
Williams shall lie proven in nolomii form, and
having produ.ed *4id wills inVourt, »uul move
for the probate of samel ■» solemn form Audit
HiiiouiuK .to th. Court that eight of the grand
children tad helra-ln-law of >ol«t Ylljah Williams
reside out of the niate of Georgia, to wit: Pa*me-
lia A. flowse. in Jock*.»n count". Indi um Juda
l‘. Baxter, in the 8tat- of Alabama; Hiram A.
William-, Mary F. Bodkin*. James If. Williams,
George E. Williams, in Sr bastion county, Arkan-
ni>. and Rhoda A. Williams, in the State of
Ili-NOUri,
It btoenfore ordered by the Court that the
strove named |Hirw»na, t«ein»-afc-law of Klliali WU-
llama, decl ared, be and a' licttr at ti»e Court of
Ordinaiy, to lie h 4d m and for the said county,
ou the first Monday in Dcceicbcr next, then and
there to show cause, if any they bare, wn v i
t record in the erm* of the law.
And iti* further one red that the uuTi-re*» ’ent
p«rtie-7 nUive named be served by publication of
a copy of thta order in tbe Southern Wat hman,
of Athens, Georg-a. once a week until rhe first
M- nday in D»«emta;r next, and tn Tn* Weeki.y
Coss rrunosi. riubliriied in Atlanta. Georgia,
for ion; week* prior to said fi otMon-
.is October#. 1879.
ti. c. DASI-L.
NOTICE!
1 DATE THEW
m- nu» .-^per County (hurt — — —
the 2d .Momtay in each month, and ihe Quarterlv
I eims will be held on the tat Monday in January,
July rara ocffraj-JM.
5m nov2f'—w4w Judge J. C. C.
pB
or. St llDM-S HISTORY OF
pages. 100 Engravings of Battle*. Fortresae*. Gen
eral*. Ac.. &c. Price, $x 00. Term* uiiequaled.
AGENTS WANTED. H. S. GOODSPEED & CO.,
New York or Cincinnati. Ohio.
*70 wpftwl»
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A GENTS'. READ TH
We will pay Agent-* a Salary of 81
uiontli and expense*, or allow a
coinmiaraion, to tell <
mentioned amoui
that
, satisfactory proof that
amount is being mode, and
ran be evOT w«k for vrara i
Application for Exemption or Personalt j
O EDiSAEYSS OFFICE, JAFPFE COUNTY,
Monticello, Geoitf*. SoTembi r 19, M7J.—
Jtrae 51. Anni. nultee appHcation for raemptlon
ofxrmnuUtr, uni I will pemopontbe Mune.t CHART.
my office, Monticello. OeoiRlm. on 13th In the United EMM.
d W «.irara-*ra.«aSW^ &i0lJ , lndnn«l.a
589 nov23—wky2w Ordinary. * 000 July* w3m stop Sep20 then 2m
INDISTINCT