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OUR DEAD.
Nothing is our own: we hold our pleasures
Just a little while, ere they are fled;
One by one life robs us of our trtasurta;
• Nothing is our own except our dead.
They are ours, and hold in faithful keeping
Safe forever, all they took away;
Cruel life can never stir that sleeping.
Cruel time can never seize that prey.
Justice pale', troth fades; s ars fall from heaven;
Human are the great whom we revere;
No true crown of honor can ba given,
Till the wreath lies upon a furiAal bier.
How the children leave us, and tjo traces
Linger of that smiling angel band:
Gone, forever gone; and in their places,
Weary men and women stand.
Vet we have some little ones, still ours;
They have kept the baby smile we know,
Which we kissed one day, and hid with flowers,
On their dead white faces long ago.
When our joy is lost, and life will take it,
Then no memory of the past remains,
Have with some strange cruel sling, that makes it
Uittcrnes* beyond all present pains.
Heath, more tender-hearted, leaves to sorrow
Mtill the radiant shadow—fond regret;
We shall find, in some far bright to-morrow,
Joy that he has taken, living yet.
Is love ours, and do we dream wo know it,
Hound with all our heart-strings, all our own!
Any cold and cruel drawn may how it,
Shattered, desecrated,overthrown.
Only the dead hearts forsake us never:
Hove, that to death’s loyal care has fled,
Is thus consecrated ours forever,
And no change can rob us of our dead.
a-..;., 'is -.ug'-' t « • io i »„! p"
WU»-i»ri vg. WaJ if:. fl. — 1. -ftiK.iig hen
■]ty of young men in Kicbrai'id, Va., an editor
thereof declares that, as a general thing, the
widows are far more succcrsfnl in winning
husbands than the inaidoutj. In bohalf of the
latter, be pleads thus :
“We do not think, in view of the great
scarcity of men, that it 1b fair for widows to
marry a second time until all the young maid
ens have secured husbands. The Legislature
ought to attend to this matter, and protect the
interest of young ladles, for without the aid ot
legal enactments the widows are sure to play
the grab game. They will therefore have to
be restrained by the strong arm of the law, as
was done in the early colonial history of Vir
ginia, when the Houses of Burgesses passed an
act of the very character indicated. It was
found that all tire young men imported into the
colony were at once caught by the widows, by
superior wiles and strategems; without any
chance being allow and to >he medest and retir
ing young maidens ;so the Legislature took
the matter in hand, and will have to do so
again.”
Disocsti.no. —Thirty years ago Wm. Loyd
Garrison started the Liberator for the purpose
of extinguishing negio slavery in the United
States, and, after continuing it for that period
he brought its existence to a close lately, be
cause the object for which it was originated
was accomplished. On the occasion he re
ceived the following nauseating and blasphe
mous dispatch from the leading editor of the
Independent :
Office ok the Indfpenpfat, )
New York, Dec. IS, 1865. j
To the Liberator, about to ascend into Heaven :
Dear, venerable, dying Prophet and Apos
tle ! Your coming was greeted with cursei,
bootings, and revilings. But your departing Is
followed with benedictions, sweet memories,
and perpetual fame. Hail and farewell !
Tiikooohe Tilton,
The Monhoe Doctrine.— ln the United States
House of Representatives, Mr. Brandagee offer
ed the following resolution, which was referred
to the Committee on Foreign affairs :
Resolved, That in the name of the people
of the United States, and in the language of
President Monroe, in his Message of December
2d, 1823, we hereby declare that we coasider
any attempt on the part of any European
power to extern! its system to any portion of
this hemisphere, as dangerous to our power
and safety.
Scan.—The following receipt is said to be a
sure cure for all ills flesh is heir to, when
strychnine whiskey is used in the preparation!
“Take one pint of whiskey, stir it well with
one fpoonful of whiskey; then add another
pint of whiskey, beat carefully with a ‘spoon
and keep pourirg in whiskey. Fill a large
bowl with water, and make the servants set it
out ot your reach. Take a small tumbler,
pour in tw o spoonsful oi water and fill up with
whiskey and add the above. Flavor with
whisky to your taste. A dose; three fingers
eyery half-hour.”
>IKKI IMi OK IKK HUCI HBUS PRESS A6SO
CIATIORf.
By authority of the Constitution of the
Southern Press Association, and at the request
of several of the members thereof, I her by
convene a meeting of said Association to be
held at Montgomeiy, Ala,, cn Wednesday Feb
ruary 14tb, 1866, to receive the reports of the
officers, consider the measures already taken
and proper to be taken «to advance the busi
ness interest of the Press, and to make the
annual election of officers required bv the
Constitution.
Propreitors of Newspapers published in the
States of Virginia, North Carolina, South Ca
rolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi
and Louisiana, who nuiy not have been mem
bers of the Association, are cordially invited
to attend. Pro|rietors of isewsp'apers in
Louisiana. Mississippi and Tenne see. where an
organization of the Press has been recently
formed for service in a part of the territory
formerly within the field of this Association,
are also iuvited to be present, there being
nothing in its character, .aims or purposes to
conflict with their interests and views.
A full attendance is requested, as subjects of
great interest to the members, and plans of
importance to the future independence and
prosperity of the Southern Press, will be pre
sented for consideration.
„ W. G. CLARK.
President of Southern Press Association.
Mobile, Ala., January 12, 1866.
~ Internal revenue receipts for week ending
(January 8, amount to *11.000,000,
Washington nkwx
Federal officers on the P.io Grande have
been instructed to observe strict neutrality.
Gen. Sheridan thinks the U S t:ocps on the
Rio Grmde had no band in the lato fiihbuEter
iug expedition into JT/ xic >.
It is stated that twelve hundred applications
for pardon are now upon the President’s table
and have been there for month-. Heven hundr and
of them fall under tbo twenty thousand dollar
clause. The remainder are those of members
of the Confederate Congress, United States
army offices, &e.
The Washington Star sa; s that the insult
ing missive to Senator Sumner inclosing a
negro’s finger, was “a stsge trick of some
party wishing to create sympathy in behalf of
the Senator and his measures.
Secretary McCulloch says that he has no re
collection having made the statement that he
had revised Lis estimate or' cotton supp y lor
1865-66, so as to put it at over one miliioa
seven hundred and fifty thousand bale.--.
The Government owned 47,000,000 acres of
public lands at the South.
Williard’a Hotel, Washingten, has reduced
Its prices.
Ex-Gov. Aiken of S U., is in Washington.
He says the negroes in some sections of South
Carolina will not work, lie wants some legis
lation to compel them.
For the six vacancies of Second Lieutenancy
in the U. 8. Marine corps, there are five hun
dred applicants.
Thad Stevens says that if parsons can
preach and doctors can physic without taking
the test oath, it is hard that a lawer cannot
plead without taking one.
The total number of officers and men in the
regular army is 1,120 officers and 23,795 men
making an aggregate of 24 919
Gen. Sheridan has been i structed to put a
stop to the lawlessness now so prevalent along
the Texas frontier.
Speaker Colfax has writleif a letter to Brown
' L, 1 in wiy'ch he declares that he is for the ad
on of the Tennessee Representatives on
round that (he State was organized during
tar and before the close of hostilities, and
because it was the first State restored. He
aes to vouch for his parly,
he Western members ot Congress show
■ >: e disposition to have the high New Eug-
I tariff reduced somewhat.
he leading radicals in Congress are deter
ed that the army shall number at least
■ nty thousand.
oi ty-three members of the U. S. House of
Representatives have announced that they will
sp;- kon the reconstruction question.
jsitive information received by the State
i artmfnt from Paris, encourages the belief
that the French troops will be withdrawn irom
Mexico in a stated period.
' le amount of Bullion in the Treasury is
ab it $47,000,000.
iring Ihe week ending January 21st, $2,939,
9' in national bank cnrrency, was issued by
:Li t’reasu r y to the banks, making the total
no in circulation $245,800,510
is supposed that Senator Dooliltle will be
ered the chair in the cabinet, made vacant
by :ie election of Mr. Harlan to the Senate.
petition signed by Governor Baker and
the Hate officers of Indiana, and 10,000 citizens’
of ttat State, against the pardon ol Jefferson
b.v s, was presented to the President by
peaker Colfax. Mr Johnson took the peti
• ■, smiled and said, “I 11 lay it beside this
"indie,” pointing to an immense pile of manu
it, “which is just as large a petition lor
ou >ardon.”
re number of clerks in the Trea;ury*De
ment is to be reduced from 2,700 to 2,000,
the pay of those discharged is to bo divi
among those retained,
uo United States Senate has passed a bill
og to Mrs. Linooin tjfe franking privilege
mg as she lives
mlhern members are fully recognized by
me Executive Departments of the Government.
They have the franking privilege, aud are
notified to appoint to fill tbo vacancies in tbe
regular army.
Bills of exchange for ono hundred thousand
dollars, captured on Mr. Davis and Postmaster
Reagan, were sent to tbe hcifco of Rothschild
for collection, but they have been returned,
with an endorsement that there was no funds
to meet them.
The Custom House receipts for December
appear to be abcut $11,000,000 in gold.
It is said that tbe President has ordered the
restoration of tbe hebeas corpus to Kentucky,
and tho withdrawal of trooym from the State.
The caso of Mrs Cobb againsb'Ex Gen Baker
is still absorbing considerable attention at
Washington.
The object of the law authorizing the sale of
pastage stamps on endit, is that they may
have greater circulation in tbe Southern States.
Little confidence is felt in official quarters,
in the professed intention of Napoleon to with-,
dtaw the French troops from Mexico.
A resolution was introduced into Congress a
few days since proposing an amendment to
the Constitution, making the Chief Justice o f
the United States the legal successor to the
Chief Magistracy if both President and Vice
President should die or be unable to act.
The Smithsonian Institute, which was de
stroyed by fire in January, 1864, is now near
ly rebuilt. It requires $60,000 to restore it.
The office of Gen Baker, late chief of the
War Department detective force, has been
closed, and the records havo been turned over
to the Department.
Gen. Sherman and Gen Grant are to hold
a militaryconferer.ee in Washington soou.
The Post master General asks Congress for
authority, or to allow him to construe the law,
that he can pay such railroads in the South for
carrying the mails as have officers who cannot
take the oath.
John Minor Botts is pressing his little bill
for firewood burned by United States soldiers
in Yirginia, but with rather doubtful propects
of success.
The resignation of Asistant Secretary of war,
Fox, takes effect on the Ist of March, prox.
It is stated that SIOO,OOO of the new issue of
fractional currency, which are intended to
supersede the old issues of small circulating
notes, will 60on be issued.
There are twenty-eight candidates now pic*
seuted at Washington for the collectorship of
the port of New York.
Thosmas E. Noell, Congressman from New
York, has left the Radicals, and espoused the
Conservative cause.
STATE ITEMS
A canal at Milledgevilie, about a mile and a
half loDg would give a water power of sixty
feet fall.
A Milledgeville correspondent of the Macon
Telegraph writes that the Comptroller Gener
al, Maj Barnes, is assiduously engaged in es
timates of the proper per cent, to be levifU
real estate and other property in the State *to
raise the amount of money necessary for the
support of the Government. Although his
conclusions have not yet been satisfactorily
reached, enough has been ascertained to war
rant the belief that with a poll tax of two dol
lars per capita, alike upon white’and black, and
an ad valorem lax of one-tenth or one eighth
of one per cent., together with the money ne
cessary to be raised by hands for immediate
use, will be all that is necessary for the sup
port of the State Government the next fiscal
year. This will be about as light a tax as
the people ever paid.
It is now thought that the peni entiaiy sys -
tem will not be abolished by the Legislature
Many legislators are in favor of a homestead
bill. ’But the great fear on the matter is that
the Supreme Court of the United States would
hold the bill to be unconstitutional, and that
while, under such a law, the home creditor
might be barred from his claims, under the
Constitution of the United States, the Northern
creditor might be able to recover.
A Milledgeville letter writes wisely suggests
that those" manufacturing companies vchieh
have been started during the war be not ,
hampered with taxes until they can gel upon a
firm footing—that is until they can make up
somewhat the depreciation in their capilal stock j
New Presidential Mansion. —It is said that
efforts are being made by a number of influ
ential gentltmen to pet Congress to purchase a
large and beautiful tract of land, on the north
ern side o| the city, well and favorably known
to the residents of Washington as the resort of
pic nic and pleasure parties, ior the purpose of
erecting thereon a Presidential mansion, with a
magnificent park attached. There is a famous
spring 04 water upon the place, the ground is
well wooded, and is in every way desirable for
the object proposed, having an area of between
three and four hundred acres.
UELIGIOt'B ENTELLIGEXCS-
George Peabody, the London banker, is
about to erect anew church, of the Puritan
faith, in Georgetown, Mass., in opposition to
Ihe new divinity of Rev. Charles Beech; r.-
Anew Congregational Church has beeu <r
ganized in New Orleans, and has bought the
a cond Presbyterian meeting house for
S2O 000.
The Congregational Church Building Fund,
collected on Forefathers’ day amounts as thus
fr reported, to over *IOO,OOO.
Rev. Dr. Stone, of Boston, has decided to ac
cept tbe call of First Congregational Church of
San Francisco.
There are now six Congregational Churches
in Chicago, the first having been formed in
1861.
Rev. Dr. Paxton, of Pittsburg, has accepted
the call of the First Presbyterian Church in
New York, late Dr. Phillips’.
Several of the Methodist Churches in New
ark, N. -J , are rrjoiciDg in extensive revivals
of religion.
The Methodist Church in Oregon appears to
be greatly in advance of other denominations,
and possesses in its ministry an able and earn
est body of work'ng men.
The Western Reporter reports numerous re
vivals of religion in KentucKy. In Pennsyl
vania, also, large numbers are uniting with
the church.
Elder Knapp, the famous Baptist revival
preacher, is officiating at the North Baptist
Church, Philadelphia, where a great revival is
going on.
There are two hundred and seventy-three
Baptists churches, with 19,075 members in
Maine.
*1 be pews in Henry Ward Biecher’s church
were sold on Monday. Two hundred of the
pews sold at premiums ranging from SSOO to
$lO5.
It is stated that there are now four millions
Roman Catholics in the United States.
The Seventh Baptist Church, Baltimore, ot
which Rev. R'chard Fuller, D. D, is pastor,
has a membership of one thousand and twen
to-two, nearly one fourth of the whole number
of 'he association.
The Bishop of Lincoln has come out against
the pew-renrieg system. He thinks that the
possession of pews “leavens devotion with
selfishness.”
POUBIQX ITE.NB.
England is about to reduce her home stand
ing army.
Mazzini at last accounts was dangerously ill
in London.
The cattle disease is on the increase in many
sections of England.
A special Session for the trial of Fenians is
being held at Dublin.
Tbe specie in Bank of France is rapidly de
creasing.
The French Senate and corps Legislatiff
have met to consider Mexican affairs.
Three men have been killed in London
while engaged in the manufacture of the so
called “Pharaoh’s eerpents’’—the composition
exploded.
Ia London any person under sixteen is pro
hibited from driving any sort of vehicle, and
any person under fourtsen from having tem
porary charge of any horse in the street.
A manuscript by Copernicus has been dis
covered in a library in Warsaw. It is a treatise
on the revolution of the heavenly bodies.
There is a movement on foot in the princi
pal manufacturing towns of England to make
Saturday a permanent half-holiday.
It is asserted that not a person has been
killed by railroad accident in Germany since
the origin of that mode of traveling.
There are in France 18,741.057 women and
18 615,276 men. Os these 8,579,010 are un
married, 4,479,850 of whom are women.
Dr. Pbilpotts, the celebrated Lord Bishop of
Exeter, England, has had a stroke of paralysis.
He is 87 years old. »
A Prusian North Polo expedition is forming
in Berlin.
A ballet dancer was recently burned to death
at the St. Petersburg Opera House.
John Mitchel is reported yi Paris in a bad
state of health, hut a good state of funds.
An iron theatre, with a hotel attached, is
being constructed at Sydney, Australia
Four hundred and twenty thousand copies
have boen sold in England of a 'popular ballad
entitled “Mother’s Last Words.”
A recent fire at St. Catbrine’s dock, London,
was one of the most disastrous that has occur
red for vears. The loss is estimated as high
as £400,000.
The French are very anxious to resume their
trade.with the United States.
Dumas the elder made a complete failure in
his lecture in Vienna.
Dr. Nelaton’s practice in Paris yields him
SIOO,OOO per annum.
Two newspapers in Paris have been fined for
“defaming” an Actress.
Verdi is writing an opera on the story of
Marion Delorme.
The Duke de Romualda Brascbi has put his
palace at Rome up at a lottery.
Locomotives are used in Paris to draw the
omnibusses.
The Princes Anna Murat’s wedding linen
cost $120,000.
Roberts, the champion billiard player of
England, is coming to this country.
A French critic has been made a Senator for
a favorable notice of “Napolean’s Life of Cte
sar.”
A meeting of German ladies is to take placq
shortly, at Leipsic, to consider the means of
giving girls a more independent position by
educating them for various trades and profes
sions. This has already been done, to a cer
tain extent, in Germany. At Munich there is
a commercial school for girls; art Leipsic girls
are employed as compositors, and in Berlin as
watohmakers.
A famine in Bengal, where the soil yields
two crops a year, and it is said that the return
of a rice crop is often equal to seventeen times
the cost of cultivation, seems -almost impossi
ble, but there is one. The peasantry are eat
ing leaves.
The government has opened two
more ports to*the wor'd- Ossaca and Riago.
The London Times advises England to adopt
the United States method of financiering.
A company has been organized in Spain, for
the purpose of laying a submarine telegraph
cable between Cuba and the United States.
It is again reported that Dumas, the elder, is
coming to America.
A Prussian countess has gone crazy, in Ber
lin. from winning thirty thousand thalers.
The Belgian Government is about to pur
chase the Grand Central Railway of that coun
try.
The Queen of the Sandwich Islands is travel
ing in Fiance.
Rariog, the great Banker, is to be made an
English Peer.
A girl was recently cured of squinting, in
England, by taking galvanic shocks.
Dr. Evans, the American dentist in Paris, has
been appointed dentist to the Prince and Prin
cess of Wales.
They are discovering petroleum in Italy.
A tr vnslation of Bunyaa's Pilgrim’s Progress
into Chinese is going forward at Pekin.'
Miss Burdett Couths, the heiress of the
actress, Miss Mellon, estimates her wealth by
the ton.
Gen. Geo W. Randolph, . late Confederate
Secretary of war, is living in England.
Miss. Frederica Brenner, the distinguished
Swedish novelist, is dead.
Judah P. Benjamin has entered his name at
the temple for admission to the- English bar.
Winkfield, an English thoroughbred, who
won the Ascot cup in 1856, was lately recog
n’zid drawing a butcher’s cart in Lon
don. The butcher had bought him for thirty
shillings.
The Ambassador of Morocco, recently ar
rived at Paris, brought with him as a present
to Louis Napoleon, »'x splendid stallions, as
well as a magnificent tiger.
A court coach of the first Napoleon is now
offered for sale in Paris.
During the last year 17,500 men in the Rrit-
i ish army were convicted of crime. 466 of whom
j were whipped.
i A highly connected lady in Nottingham,
! England has just horsewhipped a manufacturer
in that down for refusing to marry her.
Dr. John Martin Luppenberg, the historian,
died lately at Hamburg.
The Viceroy of Egypt is to have two buckles
from Paris, for his official belt, at a cost of six
hundred thousand dollars.
Ex-Generals Marmaduke, Preston and Walk
er of Texas, are in London.
The reports of the illness of Jenny Lind are
erroneous.
NEWS 3UMMARV.
Grant’s warehouses in Richmond, contain
ing a largo quantity ot cotton, tobacco &c.,
were destroyed by fire on the 15th.
Four thousand European immigrants ar
rived in New Yo-.k duiing the past week.
Pennsylvania asks Congress for SIOO,OOO to
repiy the cost of repelling Gen. Lee’s inva
sion of the State.
One day last week 270 barrels of crude oil
were received at Nashville, and several bun
dred gallons were waiting cooperage and
transportation at the wells
The funded debt of New Yoik city is over
$41,000,000. The tax laid for the vear is
over SB.OOO 000.
Ihe Maryland Legislature declared against
the policy of withdrawing the troops from the
States lately arrayed against the general
Government.
The Detroit Daily Pest is edited by Carl
Schurz, —the mo3t ultra of radical.
Miss Harriet Lane, niece of Ex-President
Buchanan was married at Wheatland, to Henry
E. Johnson, Esq, on the afternoon of the 12th
inst. Mi. J. is a Baltimore Backer of large
fortune.
It is estimated that thirty tons of white pa
per are used daily in the manufacture of paper
collars.
Edward B. Ketchum, who was lately convic
ted of forgery and sentenced to serve a term of
four years and six months in Sing Sing, has
beeu placed in the shoe shop of the prison
The city ct’ Buffalo is having a fire alarm
telegraph coustucted, at a cost of SIO,OOO .
Senator Call, ol Florida, is too young to take
his seat
The Interior Department has just issue! to
the 5-tate of lowa, a swamp land patent cf up
wards of 30,500 acres.
.All the horses loaned by the United States
Government to the farmers in North Carolina
last summer, have been ordered in.
Seme of the richest salt fields in the world
are contained in Nebraska, In Saline and
Lancaster counties, fifty miles from the Mis
souri river, are about 20,000 acres in three
several basins, covered with a thick crust ot
salt.
The Southern commission exploring South
ern Brazil, has returned to Rio Janeiro.
Each freedman in South Carolina is now
required to make a contract with his employer
pledging himself to fulfil his labor agree
ment.
The official stenographic report of the pro
ceedings in the Strong divorce case at New
York takes up over three thousand foolscap
pages of manuscript.
* Warring, editor of Charlotte, N. C. Times,
has teen fined eight hundred dollars, bv a
military commission for publishing certain ar
ticle. He has paid his fine.
Sleeping cars are to be placed on the routo
between Richmond and Wilmington.
A terrible thunder storm passed over In
dianapolis on January 21st. It threw a train
of cars off the ttack, on the Indianapolis and
Cincinnati railroad.
General Joseph Finegan, the hero of Olus
tee, is living at Fernandina, Fla.
Gen. Shermau is re.-idlng in St. Louis.
Louis Aleppa, of Colchester, Va., is 116
years of age.
Communication by steamer has been estab
l shed between Galafomia and the sandwich
Island.
A woman in Rockford, lowa, 'recently
poisoned her child, and then eloped with her
former schoolmaster.
The Indiana Democratic State Convention,
convenes ou the 15th of March.
Southern members elect, are fully recog
nized by the Executive Departments of the
Government. They have the franking privi
lege, and are notified to appoint to fill the
vacancies in the regular army.
The cholera is committing great ravages in
Guadaloupe.
The University of South Carolina has re
opened under very favorable auspices.
In Montreal, Canada, each fireman has a
life policy of SI,OOO insurance given him ysar
iy.
Gen. “Cero Gordo” Williams has gone to
Mexico.
General Lee is in Richmond, raising funds
for the Washington College.
Specie is almost the only currency now used
in Texas.
Tho Mobile and Ohio Railroad is fully open
ed and daily trains have commenced running.
The through time is thirty hoars,
Massachusetts manufactured during the
year eDding on the 30th of May last, 64 000,000
yards of printed calico, valued at $13;000,000.
Capt Coleman, late of the Southern army,
has been tried at New Orleans for steamboat
burning and banished the country. He is a
grandson of Hon. John J. Crittenden and
nephew of Gen. Pillow.
A band of robbers, who had been commit
ting extensive depredations in Texas, was re
cently captured iu that State.
An aiigator six and a half feet long, with a
jaw eleven inches long was found frozm in
uiefeen river near Cincinnati.
A bold editor in Calafornia has married a
widow, a literary lady, whose Nom de plume
is topsy turvy.”
Judge John A Campbell, late 'Assistant
Secretary of War, C S A, has entered into law
partnership with Judge Spofford, of Now
Orleans.
Murphy is about to' publish a work on
chess playing.
Mrs. Lincoln has realized $22,000, from the
resolution, giving her one years pay of her
husband. She immediately invested the
amount in Government securities.
The planters of Barnwell, District S C., have
secured laborers for this year, and have gone
zealously to work.
In the Western part of Massachusetts a
quartz vein has been discovered, which is im
pregnated with gold. Rich ores, it is said,
extend over an era of six miles in width.
The Synod of Nashville is in session at
HuQtsviUe, Ala.
lhe Indiana farmers fear that the frequent
freezes and thaws, they are having, will ruin
the prospective wheat ciop.
Samuel Cowling, only sixteen years of age
has been convicted in Boston of “garroting’’.
A business bouse at Hilton Head, S C., has
agreed to furnish all the planters about Bluff
ton with every thing they require for them
selves or negroes, at twenty percent advance on
New York prices, and seven per cent interest
until the crop is sold.
Theodore Tilton gets $4,000 a year as editor
of the New York Independent.
There is a child in Stanton, Va., seven weeks
old, which weighs only ooe pound and a half.
When born it could be put in ate» cup, and
then weighed only half a pound.
Major-Gen. Sheridan, commanding Depart
ment of the Gulf, has ordered the Quarter-,
master’s Department at New Orleans, La., to
6uppiy the poor ot that city with wood.
Gen. Lane’s resolutions endorsing the Presi
dent were adopted by a large assemblage of
people of Topeka.
A resolution has been offered in the Ken
tucky Legislature requesting the President to
pardon John C, Breckinridge.
Captain Robert B Pegram, has been appoint
ed Superintendent of the Petersburg & Weldon
Railroad, vice B. M. Dunlap, resigned. The
pay is $3,000 per year.
A man named Moore lately died near India
napolis. Ind , from nervous exhaustion caused
by fear of hydro phbia.
There are no less than five hundred cases of
small pox in the pest house in the city of Louis
ville.
The chair in which General Robert E. Lee
sat when he signed the articles of capitulation
to General Grant at Appomattox was secured
at the time by General Whitaker, and is now
in Hartford. Conn.
Ten men charged with murder are awaiting
trial in the Cincinnati jail.
John A. Cooke, late Cashier of the Cateki",
Kentucky National Back, is reported a )de
fanlter to the amount of $90,000.
Generals Heath, Pillow, Hood, Longstreet
and other Southern leaders have been in Cin-
cinnati within the past five weeks, and engag
ed 1,600 white laborers, and purchased 800
cotton ploughs to work plantations in the
South.
The Freedmen’s Bureau has restored to the
proper owners 1.300 acres of land, in Virginia
which had been seized as abandoned property.
There were 7,881 persons arrested for crime
in Boston last rear, 14.527 of whom were resi
dents ofthe city. 4.742 were females.
The net income of Beecher’s Church is $41,-
594.
A negro in Pomfret, Vt., is 130 years old.
The third Michigan cavalry have been dis
armed at San Antonio, Texas, for mutiny.
NEWS SIMM ARY.
One petroleum company in New York has
declared dividends to the amount ot eighty
two per cent since June.
It ;s estimated that every freedman in the
South has cost every white man in tho North
five thousand dollars.
Last week 17,298,23 acre3 of the public do
main were located in the Territories, for set
tlement under the homestead act.
Ihe Treasury Department issued $45,000 in
fractional currency, one day recently.
Col J J Williams, a planter of Florida, with
a force of 100 colored hands, raised during this
year 250 bales of cotton, weighing 500 plunds
each.
C. C. Langdon, elected to Congress from the*
Mobilo district, writes a long letter from Wash
ington, reviewing the whole ground, and ar
rives at the conclusion that the Southern
States will be deprived of representation-dur
ing the existence of the present Congress.
A ra’lroad is to be built from St Louis to Co
lumbus, Ky.
New Orleans is to be lighted with three
thousand petroleum lamps. Gas is too high.
The new iron railroad bridge over the' 'Ten
nessee river, at Decatur, will shortly be put up.
The National Fenian Congress will assemble
at Pittsburg, Pa. February 15.
An attempt was mado to burn several church
es in Washington, January 17.
During the recent intensely cold weather at
the North, large numbers of the fish inhabiting
the waters of Cape Cod Bay, Mass , perished
from cold, and sea bass, black fish and lob
sters were washed ashoieinthat locality tor
miles around.
A Connecticut man is pushing through' the
patent cffi.e anew machine for manufacturing
the coffee berry out of flour.
A St. Louis lady wlo used belladonna to give
briliancy to her eyes at a recent great ball,
is now blind in consequence.
The number of American-vessels lost and
missing during December is fifty-eight.
The Union Pacific Railroad is finished to
Topeka, Kansas.
Five eclipses will take place in 1806, three
of the sun and two ol the moon. Two of them
will fce|partly visible in Paris—one ot the moon,
March 30, and another of tho sun, Oct. 8.
Mr. William Sprague, the Rhode Island Sena
or, and his brother, Amsea Sprague, employ
ix thousand hands at their manulacturing es
ablishment,
Tho steam communication between New
Orle ins and Europe is developing with una
bated energy. The LiverpooUine is building
new vessels to make the trip in eighteen days.
The French steamship line advertises to run
their steamers between New Orleans and the
Island ol St. Marguerite on the coast of France
In 1865 there were 682 murders committed
in the United States, and only 98 executions.
Thera are twenty United States war vessels
in the Gulf of Mexico, distributed from Cape
Florida to the Kio Grande.
A railroad between Colerado and Mexico is
alked of—two thousand miles long.
About three thousand bales of cotton, worth
over half a m’llion dollars, it is stated, were
raised in Southern Illinois in 1865.
A female robber bas been condemned to
death in Jalapa, Mexico.
A large number of fine horses have arrived
at Mobile for the spring races.
New hundred dollar notes of the National
currency have been issued.
Twenty two regiments of soldiers were mus
tered outoi the service, at Galveston, Texas,
■January 8. ,
Sunday night, January 21st, an attempt was
made to burn Pittsville, Penn.
Coi. Morgan, Gen. Pope’s chief of staff,
found dead in his bed January 21st, he having
been suffocated by the escape of gas from the
stove in his room.
Gen. Phil Sheridan in a letter to the New
Orleans Crescent, denies tho truth of the state
ments made by Gen. Early relative to the Val
ley campaigns.
Gen. Early ways at Vera Cruz a few days ago,
en route to the city of Mexico.
A map of the defences of Petersburg and
Richmond is to be published.
Gen. Buckner has quit editing in New Or
leans and gone into the grocery business.
Blind Tom is giving concerts in Buffalo, New
York."
All the real and personal property cf Hon.
C. C. Clay has been libeled by the United
States District Attorney for confiscation.
A white headed eagle, measuring seven feet
and six inches from tip to tip of its wings, was
shot in Fa’.mouth, Mas a, recently, by Mr. Seth
G. Bowerman.
McCormick, of reaper notoriety, has given
Gen. Lee, ten thousand dollars to establish a
McCormick professorship of Practical Me
chanics in the college of which he.is President.
The residents of Maryland disfranchised
during the war are taking steps to regain their
political rights.
Some of the officers of the Freedmen’s Bureau
want all that part of Florida below the twenty
eight degree set apart for freedmen.
Barmnus new book, the “Humbugs of the
world” has been roughly handled by English
critics.
About ninety volunteer companies have
been organized in Mississippi, with about five
thousand men, rank and file. By the army
regulations, these comganies are liable to be
called upon by the military commander of the
department, in all emergencies.
Macdonald, the sculptor, who has been so
successful with his bust of Charles O'Conor,
is about to commence on a bust of General
Lee, which is to be finished, in marble, to the
order of a number of gentlemen in New York.
Illinois has 2,250,000 inhabitants, after send
ing 256,000 men to the war.
_ The Richmond people have held an indigna
tion meeting relative to high rente.
A mau in Illinois inherits from a relative in
Scotland forty-five millions of dollars.
The majority of the California Senate refuse
to change the specie contract law in favor of
greenbacks.
Base ball on skates is said to bo the latest
big'thing on ice at the North.
The surviving members of the “Old Stone
wall” Brigade are going to erect a monument
to Stonewall Jackson.
The thermometers in New Hampshire
marked thirty degrees below zero, one day
recently, and then gave out.
New York papers are ordering a printing pa
per from Belgium.
For finding and returning $25,000 in gold in
the street in New York, a young man was re
warded with two dollars.
The New York Independent accuses Tor
win of being in Maximilian’s pay at his death.
The State debt of New York is $51,041,-
539 86.
The total number of Indians in the United
States is three hundred and seven thousand.*
The war has occasioned to the parish of
East Baton Rouge a loss of over $12,000,000.
The Legislature of Kentucky, during its
present session, has declared vacant the seats
of ten Gr iweiye Radical members, on the
ground that they were elected by military
interference.
The loss of the Missiquoi Bank, at Sheldon,
Vt, by the disappearance of the defaulting
casher, Hubbell, is. stated at about $350,000
The Erie railway has negotiated a loan of
four million five hundred thousand dollars in
England, for the completion of its double
track.
The late Mr. Halloek gave $120,000 to a
church in New Haven.
The National Banks of New York, Masa
chusette, and other “States, which have more
than their apportionment of national currency,
will probably have the amounts of notes which
they are authorized to issue recalled, in order
to effect a fair apportionment in the Southern
States.
An exploring party sent by Maximilian into
the interior of Mexico, found in the midst of a
large forest the ruine of a city built long be
fore the time of Cortez. This city is of consid
erable extent, having its streets paved with
polished stone. Many fine specimens of
architecture were found.
During the war over 2,000,000 bales of
cotton were run out of the Confederacy.
Mississippi is going to furnish her maimed
Confederate soldiers with artifical legs.
Brigham Young, Jr. is in Bristol, England,
recruiting Mormans for Salt Lake City.
Fifty thousand animals have died in England
for the past six months from Rinderpast.
Lamartine’s forthcoming memoir of Lord
Byron will contain the correspondence between
the poet and the Countes3 of Guiccioli, for the
first time made public.
Two gentlemen were killed at Grenada,
Miss., not long since. One of them was shot
in hie doorway, and the other on the street.
Mill Furnishing Ware.
nJIHtc undersigned would respectfu lv irlorm hi*old cus
Jt tom era ana the Millers in general, that he L now pre
pared to furn 8h the.best quality of French, burr. Esopus and
cologne millaton?B bolting cl j h, si. ut ruse ines,boiling, wire
cloth, mill picks, end any o her articles nq *i ed in a good grijfc
ana flouring mill.
Oiders solicited and punctually attended to.
W.\l. BKENNEK,
novlC 52w43 100 Broad street. Augusta Qa.
AME.vA.JONE*. W. O. NORKELL.
JUNKS & MORRELL,
General Merchants,
216 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, UA.
WMTE take pleasure in informing cur friends and he pub
ww liofgcnerally. that we have f rated ao artnership for
che transaction of a General Commission B sines*.
Will give their personal atteation to tne storage and sale ct
tot on and all produce raised on the farm. Cons'gnirents of
we item produc and goot/s of every description solicited.
1 roniDt attention will ie given to the receiving and forward
mgufg^ods.
REFERENCES—John Davison, John & The? A Bines*,
»osiah Sibley Sons, B H Warren,Thos s Metcalf, Hon J
r Ring, \y K Jacason- 6md«26w88
WESTERN FOUNDRY.
ESTABLISHED IB3G.
A. B. HOLABIRD & CO.,
MANUFAUTUKKIiS OF
Portable ami Stationary
steam Engines and Boilers,
Clemens’ Patent Circular Saw Mills, Reid’s
Patent Corn and Flour MUD, Mill Gearing
and Castings of every description.
331,335 and 339 West Front Street,
BETWEEN SMITH AND BOSE ST BEETS, CINCINNATI, OHIO,
pro rculars suit ou application. bct?963w46
SIMOJN SiNYDEK.
TANNER & CUIiRIER,
DEALER IN
LEATHER, HIDES AND OIL,
No. 222 M in St,, Cincinnati, Ohio,
PAYS ESPECIAL ATTENTION TO
Consignments of all kinds of
Hides ami Skins.
OCt29 Uw46
CALCINED PLASTER.
A fresli article. Just received and for safe by
WM. BRENNER.
dcc26 4wl 10!> broad st
notice” ~~
TG DK ITGIIB AKD CKBITOHB.
miOTIOE
late ol Richmond county, deceased, will m .ke immediate pay
ment s o the undersigned: and those hiving claims against s: id
Estate are hereby notified to present tnim. duly aiUsttd,
within the time prescribe J by law.
dec3o 6w2 CAROLINE DOUBET, Adm’x.
CITATIONS
fcOlt LETTERS UI?MUSORY
Georgia, greene county.
Where«s. Wiley G. Johnson, administrator de bonis
non with the will annexed, ot the ed te ct Memory W. Stat
ham*deceased, petitions lor le.ters dismlssoiy from said es
tate :
Tfce e are therto cite and roqui-e all nersons cor.cernid to
show cause against che granting of the ditchaise of said ad
ministrator and issuing to lim lette.s dismissory, at-the Court
of Ora inary to be held in and for said county on the flr.t Mon
day in Angus. next.
Given under my hand at office in Creenesboro, January
ICth, 1566. JLUGJCNIUS L. KING,
janl2 2Gwlam4 Ordinary.
CJTATE OF OJKOKOIA, KIOHMOmD COtTNTX. '
$3 Whereas, Mary Ann U. D’Antigna'-, Guardi in of Clira
L D’An'lgnac, minor, applies to me ror letters < t Dismiss on:
These are, therefore,to cite and admonish, all and singular
thekindred and friends of said miner, to be and appear at
my office, on or before the first Monday in in arc next,
to show cause,if any they have, why said Lettersshould not
be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in
Augusta, this 8 h.day of JaDuarv. 1866.
jan9 tSwlam 3 DAVID L ROATH, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas, Edward Rerun and John T Smith. Executors
of William Summerall, decesed, appiy to me for later* of
DDmistion:
These are therefore to cite and admonish allandfingularthe
kindred and creditors of said deceased, to e and appear at my
office, on cr before the first Mo day in August next, to
show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not
be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature at office, in Au
gusta. this Bth day of January. 1806.
jan9 26wlam 8 DAVID L. ROATH. Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Wherea\iCliarlotte M. Davies and Jamesjß. Walker, Ad
ministrators on the Estate of William W. Davies, i ece >B-d,
apply to me for Letters of Ditmiesior.:
These are the efore to cite and admonish, all and singular,
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at
my office, on or before the first Monday in August next,
to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not
be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature at office in Au
gusta, this BJi t.ay of January. 1866.
ianQ 26wlam 3 DAVII) L. ROATH, Ordinary.
OF GEORGIA. RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas, Frank H. MUler. Administrator on the Estate
of Solomon Tobey, c’eceas and applies me for Letters of
Dismss.cn.
i heseaie therefore to cite and admonish, all and singular,
the kindred and creditors of s i 1 deceased, to be and appear at
my office,on or before the first Monday iu August next, to
show cause, if any they have, why said Letters should not be
grafted
Given under my hand and official signature at office in Au
gusta, this Bth day of J ALU-ary. 1566
iany 2*wlam 8 DAVID L. ROATH. Ordinary.
4k*TATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas, Jacob Kauffer. administrator on tue Estate of
David Kauffer, deceased, applies to me for letters of Dismis
sion :
These are therefore to cite and admonish ail and singular
the kindred and C'editors of said and. ceased, to be and appear at
my office oner before the first Monday iu August n xt,lo
show cAuae, If any i hey have, why said letteis should not be
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in Au
gus’a. this 3th day of January, 1866-
jac9 26wlam3 D. L. RO ATH, Ordinary. _
STATE OF GEORGIA. RICHMOND COUNTV.
Whereas. Michael O’Nea l , guardian of Fllen Maher,
(new E len Hastings ) miner, applies to me for Letters of
Dismission.
These are therefore, to cite and admonish all, and singular
the kindred and friends of said minor, t"> be and appear at
my office, on or before the first Monday in December nest, to
show cause, if any they have, why said Letters should not be
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in Au
gusta, this 3d day of October, 1865.
DAVID L. ROATH,
00t3 26w lam4l Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTY.
Whereas, Joseph E Burch, administrator on the Estate
of William B. Green, dece sed, applies to me for Letters ol
Dismission.
These are therefore, to cite and admonish all, and singular
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at
my office on or before tlie first Monday in March next, to show
cause, if any they have, why said Letters should not be grant
ed.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in Au
gusta, this 4th day of September, 1865.
Beps 2*wlam3B DAVID L. ROATH, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA, GREENE C OUNTY.
Wheieas, E.iza A Parham, administratrix of the estate
of Paling P, Parh'm, deceased petitions theCouit of Ordina
ry of said county for letters dismiisory:
These are thereforet j cite and require all persons concern
ed t» ehaw cause, if any they have, why said lett rs should
not be granted at the Court of Ordinary to be held in and for
said county on the first Moßday in June mxt.
Given under my hand at office in Gr°enesb jro, "November
9th, 1H65. EUGENI US L. KING, Ordinary.
LOVI4 26wla_;.4j
ATE OF GEORGIA,RICHMOND COUNTY.
W Whereas, Wiliiaift T G uld and Wi'bam Punter, Exec
utors of Heary 0. Gould, deceased, apply to me for Letters of
Dismission:
These are therefore to cite and admonish, all and singular
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at
my office, on or before the first Monay in July next, to show
cause, if any they have, why said Letters shptld not be
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature,atfiofflcejfn Au
gusta, this 4th day of December, 1865.
DAVID L. ROATH, Ord’y.
decs 26wlam5Q
JXECUTOR’pALEST
EYKCUTORH SALE OF LA AD.
BY virtue of an ordsr from the Court of Ordinary of El
bert County, will be sold at the door of the Court
House of ssid county, cn the first Tuesday in February n*xt,
during lawful h urs, a TRACT OF LAND in said county,
on Broad River, loining lands of Henry R. Deadwy’er, Jag.
G. Eberha, t and JohnG. Deadwyler, containing two hun
dred and six-y-iour (264) seres, more or lees, being the tract on
whieh Benjamin Colvard livid at the time O’ hit de th. The
place has a good dwelling-house and gin-house. Sold as the
I roper.y o f Benjamin Co.vard; dece i*ed. Tern s. cash
dec2o 6*5J JOHN G. DEADWYLER, Executer.
EXECUTOR'S SKI.K
GEORGIA, GREENE <JuUNTY.—Und«*r an order ofthe
(Joint of Ordinary, o* Greene county, will be sold a' the
Court house in Greecestoro, Greene county. Ga., on the first
Tuesday in February, next. 13'6, between the usual hours of
sale, two hundred 2n ' fifty seven (257) acres ot land, more or
lees, on the road leading from Greensboro’ to Uufd Point,
known as tbe Alii on place; adjoining lands of J. H.
Wood,’l homa.- Hart, and ctners, on which is s tuated agood
find comfortable two story h r *uße in good o T der, kitchen,
hoises for seivante stables, tarn and ether houses. Mold as
the pro->prty of Gwyn Allipon, late ol add county deceased,
for the b j'leflt of said estate. Terms cash
W. L. STRAIN.
declO 6w51 Executorof Gwynn. Aliiaon dec’d.
EXECUTOR’* *ALK.
WILL be sold before the Court House door, in the town
of Crawfordvill*, Taliaferro county, im the firs' Tu s
day ia March next, with n the leg%l hours ot Bale, un'er an
oiaer of tr e Court« f Ordinary of said county One tract of
1 rd in sail county, belonging to the estate of John Perkins,
r.te of said county deceased, containing about ninety five
acres., mere or less, adjoining lands of A. 11. btephens, James
Edge, GGbert Kent ana cth-ra.
Sdd for the purpose of distribution among the l?gafc-eso:
decs'-sed. 'I erms cash. GILba.RT K b,.nT.
janl7 Gw4 Exe.utor.
£<TATE OF GEORGIA, RICHMOND COUNTT
-25 All persors havit g dexands against the late Col Wm.
M. Bight, of said county, deceased, are hereby nmified and
required to present Uitm properly aitesied to the undersigned
wnhin the time prescribed by law; and sOl persons indebted
to said deceased are hereby req il-ed to n ake immexl ate pay
ment to. J jfcjfcpH P. CARR, /drn’r
j an2o 6 v. 5
mroTicE— "
h 0
Court of Ordinary, of Ri Lmond county,'for leave to ft 1 a-ltne
real esLte belonging to the estate of Anna fchewmike. late of
said county, deceased. JOHN T. SHEW MAKE,
ja2o 6wo A mmistrator.
Blank Books, of all kinds, ruled
in any manner desired, and bound
in the best style at the Chroni
clb & Sentinel office.
CITATIONS
FQK LETTERS OF ADMINISTHATIOX.
EORGIA, TALI At ekko I Ol NTY—
Vff Whereas, John Evans anpliis n me for letters of rd
m nistration on the estate of John T. Ooldc ough la-e ot ;id
county deceased :
Tmse are therefore, toc tea lan’ singular, the kind cd
and creditors of the dec.astd to appear at tlm regu r term of
the court of ordinary tor said county, cn 1 112 tirat Monday ia
March next, to show’ cause if any they have, why said letters
shou.d not be granted
Given under my hand at office in Crawfo dviile. January
15th. 1£66, J. D. HA* MACK, Ordi a y.
3anl7 4wt
GEG KG la,GKE EN a. "CO UNT Y . *
Whereas. Philip B RoMns 11, flu--rdian of BetsvA.
Bark, 1 ovv A Dawson has filed his a* plication in wri
ting, setting forth his full (Discharge of the dut e$ or his trust
and praying for letter cf Dismi won from said gu ir ianship:
'Jlieae arj ’.Lereforcs ocite and require all persons <oncern
ed to show Ciu.-e why said Gua-dian should notCi dischargede
and letters ot dismission giantcd to lim at the urto : Ordib
uar v to be held maud for said county, on th? first Monday in-
Mar h next.
Giv.n under my hand at office In (WenesVoro. January
ll f h, 1856. EUGENIUB L. KING.
ia:»l4 6w4 Ordinary.
iSEO»<GIA GRH.LN*. COUNT A.
Whereas, Ja” es W. Winfield, applies for the Guar
dianship of the per.ou and property ct Finnk L Florence,
orphan u der 14 v« *rs cf age, of Frank L. Florence deceased
i hese are therefore to ci f e and req ire all pereonsicom erned
to show cause why Letters ot Guardianship tor the p rson
ad properly of said orphan thou and no. be granted to said
>arres W, intLU at the Court ot Oroary t> be bdJ in and
f r sal. ccm t) on ’he fir t Monday in March mx .
Given under my 1 and at efflee in Grernesboro, Januiry
*?d, mu. EUUaNTUS L. Kl G.
jan23 4wG Ordinary.
CNKORGIA GREENE COUNTY.
H Whereas, ls*ac a. William* applies for the guerdiansh p
1 ill p r on ;-nd prope tyof Eusiicc L. Bowden, orphan, uu
ut r 14 years of age, of Rob it <). t> wden, deceased .
These are «h(refo’C to cite anil require all pers< ns concerned
to til w caus \ wi hin the tin ep.-e* ribed by law, why letters
ir- i neh p ;or the person ard property of said orphan
shou and not I e granted to said Is ac A. Will sms.
Giv n under my ii.nd at Office in Gmrechuo. January
2d, 186 ft, EUGliNlUj' L KING,
lan J 4w3 Ordinary,
EO KGI A~ GKEhNE CO UN T Y ~~
Whereas, Jan.cs 11. Mapp applies f r the Guardianship
u. the person rind property of Ida johmon, orphan ofKinchen
Johmo 1, deci as"d.
These are the efore to cite and require alipereonfe concerned
t-> show cause, if any they have, why said lett.es should not
be tranted to sa'd Ja*- es 11. Mapp at tbe Court of Ordinary to
beheld in and for said county, ou thefir.-t Monday in Februa
ry next.
Given under my hand at efflee in Grrenesboro. January
lar, 1866. L. KIN G, Ordinary,
u n3 Mk iw3
4 1 ULt.KUiA,'! .VL l AFE aKU >. OUATY.
*JC Wt.er.' as, sUveiter Stewart ',pp:i Kto ref rle'trn ot
aamiristtutioT (le bomscou upon the estate ofStc-ph. a KUius:-
ton, ’ate of said county deceased:
these are therefore to cite aid summers the kindred ard
cr di ors of >cll dece scd. to b“ and appear at the (Jcurt of Or
din .r, to be held on the fir.t Moidv in K'lbrua y m' to
(how (ause. ifaur. why .aid letters honld not Le c arteu'
G.V’ n under my hand and official tignature. this January
Ist. tMti. j D.UAMMAOK.
-v3 Ordinary.
tut’-EJNE COUNTY.
VI Whereae, Wl'lUm w. Brooks applies fot-fie Guardian
ship of the p operty ot W iliam Henry Uupo, minor child ol
James M. Lupo
Th-,e a-e therefore to cite and require all pers ns concern
ed to show cause (if any lhej 1 avij within the time puecti
bed by law. why letters of guardianship tor the property of
said m nor should not he g antid lo said William W Brocks
G yen under my hand et office in Greenest, ri, January Sd'
ISG6 KUUEMUS L. IUPG,
jans 4w3 Ordinary.
OtCuitGia. ULi BERT OOUNTYT
Notice H hereby given lo all pertons concerned. tLat
on the 6th day of Deccrnb r.lSffi, itliam J. Alo'ru.latc of
Elbert county, dep rtid this life intcs’a'.e and no pi son has
applied for a dministmtion on the e<’a'c of s.it . iiiiam J.
Mo >rc, and In terms of ihe la:, admin’t tuition will be vested’
inthet lerk. of the Sur trior Cou t or some othrr fit and prop,
er person, thirty davs alter the pu'ilica'ion of til’s ci'ation, un
les- eome valid oi.lection is made to this appeiutmeot.
Given under mv hand and effliial signatu e. this dtith dav
of December, A. D. 1885. W. H. KUWAIIDS,
jao6 6w3 Ordinary of Elbert couLty :.i and ex officio Clk
4g5T TE OF GEORGIA. COLUMBIA COUNTY.
Whereas, M. Hols mb.ke has made application to me
for letters of uriminif ration t.e b< nis non on tbe ettate of
- bram Holsombake Lte cf sa : d county, deeea r ed.
These are th» refore to summon 1 11 persons interested to be
and appear at my office within the time pr* scribed by law, to
show came, if any they have, why said lettt rs should not be
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at office in Ap
pling, tt is 25ih day of December, 1865.
dec-29 6w2 W. W. SHIELDS, Ordinary.
EoiGlA, GREEN K CdUmTY. ~
vW Whereas, Mary Cunm gham petitions lor letters of
ai.minis ratiou with ti e wi annexed, on the e.tatc of Thomas
Cunuingham. deceased;
These are ther- so e to cite and re quire all persons concerned
to show cause (if any they h*vc) why said Utters should not
be granted at the Court of Ordinary be h'.'d in and lor said
county, on the that Monday in February next (iS66 )
Given under my hand at office in Grom, sbon, December
*26th, 1865. EIJGENJUa L KING,
dec29 4w2 Ordnaiy,
OKOKGIA, TALIAFERRO COUNTY. *
Whereas, James J. Moore applies to me forl&tteisof
administration upon the estate oi George W. Faile , .ate of
eaid county, deceased:
These are therefore to cite all persons interested to be
and appear at the Tegular term of tie Court of Ordinary h-i*
February. 1866, to show cause, if any they have, why said
letters should not be granted.
Given under my official s'gnature at office in Crawfordville,
this 29th day of December, 1865. J. D. HAMMACK,
dec3l4w2 Ordinary.
Georgia, Taliaferro county.
Whereas, James J. Moore of said county, makes appll
cailon to me for the Gurgianship of J. W, Fallen, minor of G.
W. Fallen, deceased:
These are ’lkrefore to cite and summo s the next of kin of
raid minor, to be and appear at ihe Court of Ordinary for Feb
ruary, 1866. to show came, ifan\ahey have, why said Guar
dianship should not be granted
Given under my official signature at office in Crawfordville
this 291 h day of December, 1865. J. D. HAMMACK,
dec3l6w2 Ordinary,
STATE OF GEORGIA, COLUMBIA COUNTY! “
Whereas, Thomas H. Wallins applies to me for 1 Iters of
Guardianship cf the persons and property of the minors of
Robert Clark:
These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the
kindred and creditors of said minors to be and appear at, my
office witl in the time pr< scribed by law, to sho v cause, if any
they have why said letters should not be granted.
Given under my band ad ofllcla’ signature, at office in Ap
pling, this Sfilh day of Decern tier, 1865
dec29 6w2 W. W. SHIELDS, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, \
JLM" ELBERT COUNTY.} To all whom it nay concern—
Thompson B. Dye having fiied his petition in proper form to
me, praying tor Letters o' Administration, with the will an
nexed, »n the Estate of JesEe Ozley, deceased, this is Incite
all credi* or?, legatees next to kin, and any others interested,
to be and appear at the text February Term of the Court or
Ordinary ol sad Oc unty, and show cause, i; any they cr.b, why
Letters of Adm>nis‘ratii)D, with the will annexed, should not
be granted to said Taorapsumß. Dye.
Given under my hand and nflcial signature, this 16;h De
e mber. 18G5. W. H, EDWARDS. Ordinary.
dec9o 1w52
Georgia, Taliaferro county.
Whereas t'earson B. Mo: k, former Guardian of the mi
nor orphans of Wm. Bell, deceased, has resgned said g*»ar
diansh p and Wm. H. Brooke, of said county, made applica
tion to ■* e. in prop r form, for Letters of Guardianship ot F&id
minors. These are, thereto e, to cite all persons interested to
be at the Court o r O’dinary ol said county, »o be hi M on the
flr.-t Monday iu Feb uary, 1866, to show cause, if any they
can, why said 1 etter f of44aardia r sbip-hould net be granted.
Witness mv hand, as (jfaihary. this 21th December, 1865.
decSl 6w53 J, I>. HAMMAuK, Ordinary.
gJTATE OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY
To oil whom it may concern—Wiley N. Walt' n having
in proper form arp ied to me for pe l maned letters of adminis
tration de bonis non, wiih the will at nexed on the ejtete of
D vid M. Mow, late of s id county :
This is to ci'e-ali and singuhr the creditors and next of kin
of David M. Moss, to be and appear at my office v ithln the
time a lowed #y law, and show came, if tuiy they can, why
permanent adminht atiou de bonis non with the wi 1 annexed
thould not be granted to Wiley N. Walton on David m.
Mors estate *
Given under my hand and official signature December Ist,
1£65. H, F, TaTOM,
6w51 Ordinary L. C,
Georgia, talikerrocounty—
Whereas. John Eva- s appl es to me for letters of art*
111111561’^Ion de bonis non w th the will annexed upon the an
tatr* of Amos Stewart, la‘e of said county deceased :
These are therefore to cite arid admonish, all ad singular the
the kindred an'* creditor-of said deceased, to be and appear
at my office within the time d by law, to show cause.
If any they have, whv said letters shou and no* be granted.
Given under rar official slgna'ure at office, in < rawfordville,
Deermber 2d, 1865.* J. D, HAMMACK, Ordinary.
dec-7 6w5l
TATE OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNT Y-
No’ice ie hereby give n tojal: pe.sous concerned, that on the
divof 1864, Jennings Orodl late of Line >'n county,
departed this lifeintee ate. aud no person.hat applied f r admin -
istralion on-thets'&’e ot siid Jenoingß Cruel], and that in
terms of th- law, administration will be vested in the Clerk of
the Suj erior t'ourt, or some olher fit and propt r person, th rty
(Lys after the publica im of thi? citation, unless some valid
objection is made to his appointment.
Given under my hand a. and official sign lure this Ist day of
December, 1865. B. F TATOM.
Swsl .Ordinary L C and ExOfficio Olerk.
TWO MONTHS NOTICES.
mfoTioß.
iYI Two months af.er date applica'lon will be madeto (he
Uourt of Orflfhary of Ki-hmoni county for leave to sell the
real and peraenal oro"erty ot the Estate of Wlllia-n Eo. lnson,
ate of said county, deceased
n0v;78w43 MAURI E WILKINSON, Executor.
mroTiGK.
Two months after date application will be made to' the
Court of Ordin ry of Richmond county for leave to Fell the
real es’at° belonging to the estate of wlili on H T Walker,
late o; saik county, deceased. ADA * JOHNSTON,
octfrrßw4s Admin Btrator.
]%TOTICE
Two months after date application will be made to the
Court of Ord nary of Richmond county for leav eto sell the
real estate belonging »o the estate of .viarr G. Walker, late of
said county, deceased. WALTER E. JOHNSTON,
oci27 8w45 Acmlnistrator.
(Trick,
(Sixty days after date application •will b 1 madetof’e
c ouit of Ordinary of Taliaferro couLtv, for leave to gel! the
real estate of John Ftrkic s, late of Ta laferro count-, <! cV,
nov3 8w46 GILBERT KENT, Kr’r,
0
OEORGIA GREENS COUNT Y-
Two months after dste, to-wit. «t the February term,
1£66, of the Court of Ordinary, of s.;d cm-.tr, sppiicat on
will te ma :e to said Court for leave to sell ail tne reel esiale
of Fiederick C. Fader deceased.
JULIA M FULLER
Adm’ic of Fr dcnck C. Fuller and c’J.
November 21,1865. fwsl
Notice.
Two months afier date, application will be made to ti t
Court of Ordinary, of Taliaferro co m y, for leave to sell the.
real estate belonging to the eslate < f Ksssn ELington. late of
said county, dreeaaed. AMOS ELLINGTON,
det9 Bwsl Administrator
WJOTTCB.
IX| Two months afterdate application writ be ifade to
ihe Honors! 1 the C urt of Ordinary of Richmond county,
for leave to sell there 1 e» ate belong! gto the estate of
Thomas Henry, late of Richmo: dc.oun'y deceased.
J*n>B Bws BOW. O'DONNELL, Admr,
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