Newspaper Page Text
• 4 *** ** * ■ -
BY WILLIAM CLINE.
A Wonderful Narrative!
UT RANGE DEVELOPMENTS IN SPIRITUALISM !
Hie Dead Xtlslns Ikon* the Grave!
We find the following strange story in the
Urliana (Hi.) Union, otedited to the Crown
l'oiugiegister, Lake county, Ind. The lat
ter paper says :
We have received the following letter
from for. John Morton, a gentleman of ve
racity and high professional for
merly from Cleveland, Ohio, and an old
schoolmate We think its perusal
will convince onr readers of the entire truth
of all that iB said about modern spiritualism.”
o*a*d Traverse, Mich, 1
” . \ May 24,1658. J
Editor Register : I send you the fol
lowing account of a most extraordinary
lor transaction—or wlmt you will—be
cause, in my opinion, it ought not be
but, on the contrary, thorough
ly investigated. In the midst of the excite
ment hero, sncli a thing as calm and unbiased
examination is altogether out of the ques
tion ; nor would it be safe to attempt it, in
asmuch as the determination of the people is
strongly to “ bush up.” As I inyselt am
one of the chief characters concerned in the
iiffirir, 1 dare not attempt, if I possessed the
ability, to determine the character of what 1
-atn about to relate.
i left Cleveland to establish myself here,
as you will remember, some time last July—
a young and inexperienced physician. Al
most the first patient 1 was called to see was
a Mrs. Hayden—a woman thirty-five years
of age, a strong constitution, and a well bal
anced mind, (apparently,) and (apparently)
with little or no imagination. She was, how
ever, a ‘* Spiritualist,” with the reputation of
being * superior “medium.” Her usua.
physician, Dr. J. N. Williams, was absent—
lienee her application to me. 1 found her
laboring under a severe attack of typhus fe
ver, which threatened to ptove fatal. Hav
ing prescribed for her, I left, “ promising to
sent Dr. W. as soon as be returned. This
was on Saturday morning. At night Dr. W.
took the patient off my hands, and 1 did not
.see her again uUjtil Friday evening of the en
suing week. 1 theii found her dying, and
remained with her until her decease, which
took placo precisely at midnight. She was,
or appeared to be, rationaFduring the whole
of my visit, though-I was informed that she
had been delerious the greater part of the
week. There was nothing remarkable about
her symptoms; I should say that the dis
ease had taken its natural course.
At the rime of her decease, there were in
the room, besides myself, her husband, Mrs.
Green (her sister) and Mrs. Miles (a neigh
bor.) Her husband, whom l particularly
noticed, was very thin and weak, then suffer
ing from a quick consumption, already be
yond recovery. He bore the character of a
•clear’niinded, very firm, illiterate but conrte
otts man,, and a most strenuous unbeliever in
Spiritualism.
There had been some subdued conversa
tion, snch as is natural in such scenes, the
patient taking no part in it, except to signify,
in a faint and gradually diminishing voice,
her wants, hntil about an hour before her
death, when a sudden and indescribable
change came over her features, voice, and
whole appearance—a change which her hus-
UanJ noticed by saying, with, as I thought,
wholly unwarranted bitterness:
“ There goes those cursed spirits again.”
The patient hereupon unclosed iier eyes,
dncF fixing a look of unutterable emotion on
her busbaud —look so direct, searching and
unwavering, that I was not a little startled
lit it. Mr. Hayden met it with something
like an unhappy defiance, and finally askeij
of his wife what she wanted. She immedi
ately replied in a voice of perfect health,
44 You know.”
XI was literally astonished Rt the words and
tie Voice in which they were uttered. 1 had
often read and heard of a return of volume
and power of voice just preceding dissolu
tion ; but the voice of the patient had none
of that natural intonation of such—it was,
as 1 have said, perfectly healthy. In a few
moments she continued in the same voice,
and with her eyes still fixed upon her hus
band: , ; •
“ William, in your secret soul, do you be
lieve?”
*; ” Wife,” was the imploring reply, “ that is
the devil which has Btood between us and
heaven for so many months. We are both
At the very verge of the grave, and in God’s
oame let him be buried first.”
Apparently without hearing dr heeding
4i>m,she repeated tier words:
•"■“Yon dare not disbelieve.”
” I do,” he replied, excited by her manner,
■* while you are dying—nay, if yon were
dead, and should speak to me, I dare not be
lieve.”
“ Then,” she said, “ I will speak to you
when 1 am dead I I wilT come to you at
your latest hour, and with a voice front the
grave I will warn you of your time to follow
me!”
44 But I shall not believe a spirit.”
“ I will come in the body, and speak to
yon; remember?”
•vSho thijh closed her eyes, and straight
way sank iuto her former state.
In a few moments—as soon as we had
somewhat recovered from the shock of this
most.extraordinary scene—her two children
were brought into tho room to receive her dy
ing blessing. She partially roused herself,
and placing hand on the bead of each,
ahe’ffet up a feint prayer to the throne of
grace—faint in voice, indeed, but a prayer
111 which all the strength of her great unpol
ished soul, heart and mind was exerted to its
Utmost dying limit —such a prayer as a ser
aph might attempt, but none but a dying
Wife and mother could accomplish. From
that moment her breathing grew rapidly weak
er and more difficult j and at twelve o’clock
shN'fcxpircd, apparently without a struggle.
I closed her eyes, straightened and com
posed hcMhrtbs, and was about to leave the
home, v hen |aeste* me to
send over two young ladies from my - board
ing house, to watch with the dead. All this
occupied some ten minutes,
Suddenly Mrs. Miles screamed, and Mr.
Hayden started up from the bedside, wbeie
he lmd been sitting. . ,
The supposed corpse was sitting erect in
the bed, and struggling to speak! Here
eyes were still closed sand, save her open
mouth and quivering tongue, there were all
the looks of death in her face. With a great
heave of the chest, at last the single word
camejkrth :
“ Remember !”
Her jaw fell back to its place, and she again
lay down as before. I now examined her
minutely. That she was dead there would
be no further possible shadow of doubt; and
so I left the house.
On the following day Dr. Williams made
a careful and minute post mortem examina
tion of the body. I was prevented by busi
ness from attending, but I was intormed by
the doctor that he found the brain but slight
ly affected—an unusual fact in persons dying
of typhus fever—but that her lungs were
torn and rent extensively, as if by a sudden,
single and powerful effort, and suffused par
tially with coagulated blood. .These were
all the noticeable features of tke case. She
was buried on the afternoon of the same day.
• • # • • •
About two p’ceks after the death of his
wife I was called to visit Mr. Hayden. On
my way J met Dr. Williams aud told him
my errand, expressing some surprise at the
preference of the family for myself, as 1
knew him to be a safe and experienced prac
titioner. He replied that nothiug could hire
him to enter that house. He “ had seen
things that—well, I would find out when I
got there.”
I was considerably amused by the Doc
tor’s mauner and warmth, and beguiled my
way by fancying what bad alarmed him, a
physician, from Ins duty.
On my arrival I fouud no person present
with the patient except Mrs. Green, who in
formed me that tlie spirits had been playing
such pi;auks that not a soul, Dr. W. included,
could be induced to retmflu. The children
had been gone for some time. „They were
at her house.
I found tho patient very low, and with no
prospect of surviving the attack. He was,
however, quite free from pain, though very
weak.
While I was in the house I noticed many
manifestations of the presence of that ptfWe.r
called spiritualism. Chairs and tables were
moved and removed, billets of wood thrown
upon Ike tire, and doors opened and shut
without auy appareut agency. I heard
struggles aud uuaceountable uoises, too, and
felt au unusual sensation, caused, no doubt,
by the mysteries which surrounded and
mocked me.
Noticing my manner, the patient observed :
* “ It’s nothing. You must get used to it,
Doctor.” * v 1
“ I could not be content unless I could ex
plain them, as well as become indifferent to
them,” I replied.
This Opened the way to a long conversa
tion, during whiph I probed my patient’s
mind to the bottom, but without detecting a
shadow of belief. Speaking of his wife, he
said :
“ You heard Ellon promise to warn me of
my time to die ?”
“ I did—but do you believe her ?”
“ No. If it is possible she will keep her
word, in spite of heaven or hell. But it is
simply impossible. She promised to come
iu the body and speak to me. 1 shall accept
no other warning from her, save the literal
meaning of her words.”
“ And whkt then ?”
“How much of her body is there left,
even now, Doctor l and she has not come
yet. She promised to come from the grave.
(Jan she do it ? No, o; it is all a humbug
—a delusion. Poor Elleu! Thank God,
Doctor, the devil who so haunted her life, aud
stood between her soul and mine, caunot
reach her now.”
“ But if she should come? You may be
deceived.”
“ I caunot. Others must see her, too, and
hear her. I shall believe no specter, if there
are stich things. Her body as it is, or will
be, let that speak, if it can !”
From that day up to the hour of his death
I was with him almost coustautly, and was
daily introduced to some new and startling
phenomenon. The neighbors had learned tu
shun the house, and even the viciuity, as they
would the plague; and strange stories trav
eled from gossip to gossip, acquiring more of
*tbe marvelous at every repetition. Never
theless my practice increased.
On the morning of March 20, I called
earlier than usu&l. During this visit the
manifestations of a supernatural presence
were more frequent, wild and violent, than
eygr before. I was informed that they had
been exceedingly violent during the prece
ding night. Tbeir character, too, had greatly
changed. Beside, the moving of all moveable
articles, the tinkling of glasses, and the rat
tle of tinware, there were frequent and start
ling sounds, ax of whispered conversation,
singing.and subdued laughter—all perfect
imitations of ihe human voice, but too low
to enable me to detect the words used, if
words there were. Still, however, none of
Miese unusual sounds had entered the sick
room. They followed the footsteps of Mrs.
Green like a demon echo, but paused on
that room, as if debarred by a superior pow
er from entering there. o*
I found Mr. Hayden was worse and sinking
very fast. He had passed. a bad night.—
Doubtful whether be would sarvive to see
another morning, I left him, promising to
call at eveniag; and spend the night with
him, resolved, in my secret thought, to be “in
at the death.” If there was to be ghostly
warning, I meant to hear it, and, if possible,
Td telve the strange enigma. „
• • • , .w. • • •
The day had Yrnem*. exceedingly cold apd
stormy, and the night bad already set in,
dark and dismal, with a fiorce gale aud a
driving storm of rain and bail, when It-again
THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA, ‘WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 4, 1858.
stood beside my patient. The moment 1
looked at him I perceived unmistakable indi
cations of the near approach of death upon ,
his features. He was free from, pain, Mr
mind perfectly clear; but his life was ebbing
away with every feeble breath, like the slow
burning out of an exhausted lamp.
Meanwhile the storm rose to a tempest,
and the gloom grew black as death in the
wild night without. The wind swept in tre
mendnous gusts through the adjoining forest,
rattling the icy branches of the trees, and
came wailing and shrieking through every
crack and cranny of the building.
Within there was yet.wilder commotion.
All that had been said, or sung, written or
dreamed of ghostly visitation, was then and
there enacted. There was the ringing of
bells, moving of furniture, crash of dishes,
whispers, bowls, crying, laughing, wknstlhig.
groaning, heavy and light footsteps, and
wild music, as if in very mockery of the in
fernal regions. All these sounds grew wilder
with the rising gale, and toward midnight
they were almost insufferable.
As for us three—the patient, Mrs. Green
and myself—we were as silent as Meath it
self. Not a word passed our lips after 9
o’clock. As for the state of our minds, God
only knows. Mine iu the wide whirl of
thought and event which followed; forgot all
the past, save what I have recalled and penn
ed, bit by bit, above. I remember only
looking for the final catastrophe, Which grew
rapidly nearer, with a constant endeavor to
concentrate all my faculties of miud aud
sense upon the phenomenon which 1, at least
had began to believe would herald the loss of
iny patient. * *
As it grew closer on to 12 o’clock, (for up
on the striking of that hour hand my thoughts
fixed themselves for the expected demonstra
tion,) my agitation became so great tlmt it
was with extreme difficulty I could control
myself. *
Nearer and. jbearer grew tho fatal moment
—for fatal I perceived it would be, to the
patient, at least—and at last, the seconds
trembled on the brink of imdnigkt; the
clock began to strike—one —two—three!—
1 counted the strokes of the hammer, which
seemed as though they nevipr would have
done—ten—eleven—twelve! I drew my
breath again. The last lingering echo of the
final stroke had died fairly awagh and as yet
there was no token fff any presence save our
own.
All was silent. The wiud had lulled tor
a moment, and not a sound stirred the air
w.thiu the house. The ghosts had fled.
I arose and*approached the bedside. The
patient was alive—drawing his breath very
slowly—dying. The intervals between bis
gasps grew touger—then he ceased to breath
altogether —he was dead!
Airs. Green was sitting in her*place, her
elbows resting on her knees, her face buried
in her hands.
1 closed the open mouth and pressed down
the eyelids of the dead. Then I touched bet
oi/tlie shoulder.
“It is over,” I whispered.
“Thank God!” was her fervent reply.
• * * • * • * *
Then .we both started. There was a rust
ling of the bed clothes! Mr. Hayden was
sitting eyes wide open, bis chest
heoving in a mighty effort for one more in
spiration of the blessed air. Before I could
reach the bed he spoke:
“My God! she is coming!”
At the same instant the wind caine back
with a sudden and appalling guat aud a w ild
shriek as it swept through the crevices of the
building. There was a crash of the outer
door—then a staggering and uncertain step
in the outer room. It approached the sick
room—tho latch lifted—the door swung open
—and then—my Godl what a spectacle!
I wonder even now, that 1 dare describe
it—think of it—remember it. I wonder 1
believed it then, or do now—that I did not
go mad or drop doWn dead.
Through the open door there stepped a
figure—not of Mrs. Heydeu. not of corpse,
not of death—but a thousand times more
horrible— : -a thing of corruption, decay, of
worms and rottenuess.
The features were nearly all gone, and
the skull in places gleamed through, white
and terrible. Her breast, abdomen and neck
were eaten away, her limbs were putrid,
green and inexpressibly loathsome.*
And yet to those putrescent jaws there
Was born a voice—smothered, indeed, and
strange, but distinct: r
“ Come William ! they wait far you ! 1
wait!” ‘ . eit
. I dared not tnrn my eyes from the intru
der ; I could not, if I dared, though 1 heard
a groan behind ine and a fall.
Then it — the thing" before me—sank down
upon the floor in a heap, dark and loathsome
—a heap of putrescence and dismembered
fragments!
I remembered that I did not feibt, that 1
did not cry oat. H,pw long I stood transfix
ed, fascinated, I know not; but at last, with
an effort and a prayer,"! turned to the bed.—
Mr. Hayden bad fallen npon the floor, face
downward, stone dead. \
I raised and replaced him—l composed
bis limbs; I closed his eyes and tied up his
chin; crossed his hands upon his breast and
tied them there. Then I bore oat the body
of bis sister insensible but not dead, into the
pure air—out of tbe horror and steucb into
the stprrn and darkness—out of death iuto
life again.
CoUnty or Grand Traverse, Mich, ss:
Mrs. Josepha H.Green, being duly sworn,
deposes and says, that tbe letter of Dr. John
Morton hereunto appended, which she has
read, is stxictlv true, so far as it goes, though
much of the history of what toocurred at her
brother’s (the late Mr. Hyden,) bouse is
omWed, and thus sbe deposes of her own
knowledge. Jopbpha H. Grek*.
Sworn and subscribed before rob a Notary
Public, in and for the county of Grand
4 Traveree. and State of Michigan, on the,
4 • if’
County or Grand Traverse Mich, ss:
James Hueson, being duly sworn, deposes
and says, that he,.in company with George
‘Qreen. Atbgrt J. Baily and HeniyrK. Smead
on the first day of April last past, in tho af
ternoon of said day, did go to tbe house of
Wm.H. Hayden, then deceased.and that they
found npon the floor of the room, iu which
the body, of said deceased lay, and near the
door of the said room, tbe putrid remains of
a tinman corpse—a female as the deponent
verily believes and avers; and that they car
ried away and buried the body of the said
Hayden, deceased) and found the grave of
the wife of said Hayden, deceased in the
mnnth of August last, open at the end of
said grave, and that said grave was empty of
the body of the wife of said Hayden, deceas
ed, being gone from said grave; and that
they returned to said house wherein said
Hayden died; and, after removing tbe furnf
turo from add house, the deponent did, at the
request of Mrs. Green, sister of said Hayden
decoased, and of Mr. Green, brother-in-law
of said Hayden deceased, sat fire to said
house, qd that said house was thereby en
tirely consumed, with all that remained in
said bouse, and burned to ashes. This t
aver of mj own knowledge.
...... . Jambs Hubsox.
Wa aver and solemnly swear that the
above affidavit is strictly and entirely true, of
our owu knowledge. Geo. Green,
ImitteWr . H . K> s MaAI) , *
A. J. Bailey.
Sworn and subscribed before me Notary Fab
ric, iu and for tbe county of Grand Trav
erse, and State of Michigan, on the 25th
• day of May, A. D.,.J858.
James Taylor, Notary Public.
a From the Louisville Journal.
CASE 07 CHLOROFORM—HALLUCINATION IH
> LOUISVmtB.
Our readers no doubt remember the case
of a demist in Philadelphia who Was accused
and convicted of outrage upon a lady under
tbe influence of chloroform, the lady herself
being the only witness against him. There
were many persons who doubted the relia
bility of the testimony of a person as to facts
occuring during tbe influence of the chloro
form, and it was a subject of much discus
sion. Avery singular case has lately occur
red in this city, showing bow little such testi
mony is to be relied upon:
It seems as if several of our most eminent
physicians and surgeons, including Dr. Don
ne, Dr. S. Richardson, Dr. Cochrane, Dr. T.
L. Caldwell, Dr. Golescott, Dr. Hardin, Dr.’
Bayless, and others, met to witness the re
moval by Dr. Goldsmith, the distinguished
Professor of Surgery of the Kentucky School
of Medicine, of a huge cancerous breast from
the person of a lady residing in the lower part
of the city. While an assistant was adminis
tering chtorofrom, and before the patient was
fully under its influence, she was observed to
draw the covering over her breaVt, which was
bared for the operation. Soon after this, she
sprang up aud declared, in the most indignant
manner, that she “ would rather die than be
abused in that way.” And it was only by the
utmost efforts oil the part of Dr. Goldsmith
and the lady’s husband, that shtt could be
induced ta continue the asc of chloroform.
Aftegthe operation was finished and tbe
effects of tbe anesthetic had passed offi sbe
was asked if site remembered anything of
what had taken place. She answered, (eyes,
we are told, flashing with fury,) that she
did not feel the cutting, but she knew well
enough tbe indecent remarks made and the
insulting liberties taken with her in her
helpless state. She said it was of no use to
deny it; that she heard and felt ail that had
beeu said and done; and it was with difficulty
that she could be persuaded that her impres
sious were a hallucination.
Thb Human Heart. —The feelings and
sympathies, the loves and attachments, of
human beings,were implanted in them as the
band of mutual good offices, and they canuot
be purchased with money. You may buy
any man’s labors, and even some men’s words
and praise, but no price that can be paid in
glittering coin jyill purchase tire human heart.
It calls for reciprocal esteem; and if that be
withheld, however much interst and hypoc
risy may conspire to bide its feeling it turns
away in disgust from the offered price: and,
even though it be so mnch lost and corrupted
as to rake the bribe, and do that for which if
is given, it uniforTly, though sometimes
secretly, loathes and dispises the bribe. Up
on this principle We find that the hirelings
upon whom any person or government lavish
es merely pecuniary rewards, are always the
first to desert and betray evefi the bribers,
w lien .they are reduced to that state to which
they can bribo and reward no more. The
disciple who betrayed our Saviour was not
he who leaned on bis bosom, buU>e who boro
the purse.
An American at Paris went to a restau
rant to get. l)i*-jdinner, Unacquainted with
the French language, yet unwilling to show
his ignorance, he pointed to the first line on
the hill of fare, and the polite waiter brought
him a plate of fragrant beef aoup. This
was very well, and when it was dispatched
he pointed to the second line. The waiter
understood him perfectly, and brought him
vegetable soup. “ Rather more soup than 1
want,” thought he, “ but it is Paris fashion.”
He duly pointed to the third line, and a plate
of tapioca broth was brought him ; again to
the fourth, and was famished with a howl of
preparation of arrow root. Ha tried the fifth
line, and was supplied with some gruel kept
for invalids. The bystanders now supposed
that they saw an nnfortunate individual who
bad lost all his teeth, and oar friend, deter
mined to get as far from soup as possible,
pointed, mi despair, to the hist fine on the bill’
of fare. The intelligent waiter, who sew at
once what he wanted* politely handed him—
a bunch of tooth pieka. This was too mnefa
—our countryman paid his bill and inconti
nently left. T -'W
and nearly 1,000 churches.’
wtihioj) tho 4lnrlioa at their aaprr
changed, will notify mm from what office It!(to be
AOVERTHHOUMTS eonupiomm.Tf inverted at One
Dollar per square for the ft r *t. oad Ffty Cent* for
lished until ordered oat, and charged accordingly.
Sale* of Land and Negroes, by Administrator*,
Executor*, or Guardian*, are required by law to b*
held ob the first Tureday in tbe month, between the
hour* of ten la the forenoon and three la the after
noon. at the Court home in the county In which the
Srty la altuate. Notice* of there ale* mu*t be
In a public gasette forty pats previous to
Notice* for the sale of Personal Property, mn*t be
given at least ten days prevbm* to the day of aale.
Notice to Debtor* and Creditor* of an E*Ute uiuit
be published forty days.
Notice font application will be made to the Court
of Ordinary for leave to Mil Load or Negroes, must
be published weekly for two months.
Citations for Letter* of Administration, mart be
published thirty drtf—for DUmUsion from Adminl*-
tration, sir month* —for DUmbelon from
Guardianship, fort# days.
Rules for Foreclosure of Mortgage must be nub-
Hahed month! y forfour month*— for establishing lost
paper*, for thejull mat* of three, month*— for compel
ling title* from Executor* or Administrator*, where
a bond ha* been given by the deceased, A*full tune*,
of Are* month*.
Publication* win always be continued according to
there requirements, unless otherwise ordered.
All bnilucss | n toe Hue of Panrrrao will meet
with prompt attention at tho .Reporter Owe*. ,
vassal ,11 i!SHLB-J_! L-
Eau> ®arbo.
JAMES C. KO, ’
ATTORNS AT LAW,
THOMASViRe, GEORGIA.
J 23 W ts
ft Ait illS dfc HARRIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Iverson L. Harris, I Charles J. Harris,
Milledgeville, Ga. | Thouuuville, Ga.
march 31 w ts
R. S. BURCH * WI. !HcLE!?OOi?,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
THOMABFILLR, GEORGIA.
oetlt 19 way
BAKER tc BEMRT, ~
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Vroupville, Loicndes Cos., On.
~ tort If . ‘ - w 4f
EUGENE HINES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
THOMASVIf.IE, GEORGIA,
Office over McLean** tore. (Jun 96
iftniii n. di non,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
OFFICE next door to Dr. Brace's, Thotnaeville,
Georgia. jawb-ly.
~" S gTTi. i>aniellT TT!
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
„ SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Office, corner of Bull aud Bjr Street•.
jan 12 w 1y
JOHN B. MILLER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,.
MILL TOWN, BERRIEN GO., OA.
WILL practice In all the Counties Os the Brunswick
- Circuit, and Berrien and Lowndes CaanNSS'if
the Sonthefn Circuit. may I‘day
JOHN C. NICHOLES, . “
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WARESBOROUGH, WARE CO., OA.
WILL practice in all the counties of the Bruns
wick circuit, sod Ls wades and Berrien of the
Southern mariiloy ,
OEOBiiE B. WILLIAMSON, ~
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
WARCSaOROUQH, OA. I
WILL PRACTICE in the following Counties ts the
Brunswick Circuit: Appling, Co/foe. Pierce, Warn
Clinch, and Charlton. mar.iltf , ■
SAMVEL B. SPENCER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
THOMASYILLE, GEORGIA.
WILL give bit entire attention to the practice of
Law, in the Counties of the Southern Circuit.—
Office on the second floor of D. A E. McLean’s
brick building. OanßOoy
~ T C. C. MORGAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW*,
NASHVILLE,
WILL practice ifi theeounties of the Southern Cir
cult.and the bounties of Dooly,Worth and Dough
erty of file Macon, and Coffee, Clinch and Ware
of the Brunswick Circuits. *■*.{
Flat Creek, Oa., Oct. 7. ‘ ts
RICE dfc MERSBON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
MACNOLIA, CLINCH CO.. OA. •
ATTEND to all bnsineaa entrusted >o their care, m
the following counties, to-wit : Clinch, Ware, Ap*
piing, Coffee, Chariton, Lowndes and Berrien, Geor
gia. Also, in the counties of Hamilton, Colauibis,
nd Jtfiertpn, in Florida. ,
DAVID P. MCE. | HEKRY M. MMtKKOR,
JAMESMTiFoUffiO*,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
MAGNOLIA, CLINCH CO., OA. -
WILL practice in all the courts of the Brunswick
Circuit cud in the comts of Lowndes and Berrien
(if the Southern Circuit. - -t>
■ NATH. HAULS.V,
COTTON FACTOR AND COMMISSION
Street NEW OwhtikWs.
Ml* /I If it ~1, tj. _ -- ns ~ —L *
VOLUME I-NUSTBM
f iitjorm ffracticeJ
OFFER lit* profe*fiU*ijJ wmccs to the Htbunj
t*i * nu nervtaei to ttys citittm* of
o IlliHMlittfto
**.• m*ji O* O
hi* Ofllrpil tiring fcf*
THE üb*rnWbM been appointed A tor 11*
jt""'d ” 1 **
jtUViw!) KIIWARD RKM INfiTAX
——-j., „*.,*„ i, ’r AMJ - “*-o*>lV*s*a>
•PwBIRf n, pi
Him. P P>’ job* to
mi>i .._j.„ ; ‘. * and _■ j_. .
r l UJi> w*<er*i**MW two opened the ftbop at &f*g
(ibnre of pubtte patronage. i 4^
OP LAWEENCFVTLO!. f^-A
Bondk Homed, gf*4*g ni
Al*o SHOES* of their own ingka.
JAMES H. HAYBB*DO.,TIw^^JW,T^
_ .jbjSSf 1 *
pring the beat and ehe*pf*t to<k of Boot*’ and
it re Jeteriuinod JMflkt
to gfr* entire *ati*fatio.
bM bees prortSedter
store, where he vW be pleased to Wait on those wjbe
may favor him with a call. Garments of all kinds
ffiP• Jr# AnHvlilft
TVTT? T* nT* A “urn rli \ rt*
I* of Tbotitftfgviffa And thv nubile ccn&fil* TPi
call.
i|r<>uiid at slrttees, Ssfefdsy^the
Bofunif RkMUffiflßaht
\ Ijl
’ Also,fortttfttoNi|ii|H^|^ ffilfl>
Dr. AUwisfe - .l.liiii|ifliililaffir Gtmtmwmtj ’
W Ijr
9