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Chronicle & Sentinel.
WEDNESDAY MOUSING. JILY 21.
Culture or Small fruits.
A correspondent of the New York Fruit
Growers’ Club lately asked the following
questions:
1. Will it do to continue pinching back
the young shoots all through the growing
season until frost, or should we stop in the
Fall? If so, at what time? 2. How long
will blackberry and raspberry plantations
last? I understand that some growers tec
oiiimend taking up the old plants every
four or five years, and getting out plants in
their place. 3. 1 have seen it recommend
ed to plow the farrow up to the plants in
the Fall. Now should the soil be left there
during the next Summer or taken away?
To these questions A. S. Fuller replied
as follows:
1. It is difficult to give directions that
will suit all localities and soils. In regard
to pinching back the young canes of rasp
berries, my practice is to pinch blackberries
but once or twice in the season, according
to the strength of the plants, and then only
the main cane is cheeked, as I prefer to let
the side shoots grow their whole length,
and prune them back iu Winter or early in
the Spring. I usually commence pinching
off the main cane in July, and if the upper
buds start to grow too strong, I check
them again in August, but never later than
the first of September. Late Summer
pinching or pruning is always injurious,
particularly if the plants arc growing very
vigorously, because they are very likely to
produce new shoots which will be killed by
frost. Besides this, she fruit buds which
are relied upon for the next season’s crop,
will sometimes start in the Fall, and of
course be destroyed by the frost. I have
never found it necessary to check the
growth of raspberry plants in Summer, and
I doubt if it is ever beneficial. 2. The du
ration of raspberry and blackberry planta
tions will depend entirely upon the soil and
care 'given them- Probably about five
years is the average duration but I have
known some to be as good at fifteen years
as they were at threo or four years. 3.
Plowing the toil up to the plants in the
Fall, is certainly to be recommended lor
both raspberries and blackberries, but the
soil should be made level again in the
Spring.
How to have a Hood Meadow.
Mr. N. Platt, ofßedfordcounty, Pa., in
a letter to the American Institute Farmers’
Club, gives his experience as follows:
My land is adapted to all kinds of grain
and to timothy grass and red clover. My
practice is, when I sow a piece to grass not
to plow it again in less than eight years,
and I frequently let it lie a much longer
time. I have a meadow now which has
been mowed for sixteen successive years,
and it was never better than now. In fact
rny meadows under the right treatment,
grow better as they grow older. Idoit by
returning to a meadow all the manure the
hay made that was taken from it, and sow
ing a bushel of gypsum per acre each year.
In that way the yield of grass is heavier
and finer and richer as the sod thickens.
I use manure only for top dressing the
meadows; in that way I get double price
for it. ft produces as much worth ofgrass
as it would iu grain, and also lcproduccs
itself again in the turf. My turf, wh n
ready for plowing under, is a solid body of
grass roots twelve inches deep or more,
and so thick on the top that no soil can be
seen. I consider one such turf, when
turned under, equal to 160 tons of first-class
barn-yard manure per acre.
Land so often plowed for grain gives up
to the graiu all the bones, beef and (fallow
it has iu it; consequently the grass crop is
so destitute of nutriment that farm stuck
will not thrive well upon it, without grain
a portion of the season. If furnishes a
plenty of skin and rib, as-tljp cattle arc wit
nesses, but the llcsh is minus. Grassgrown
upon land kept in the right kind of order
for grass will keep stock in first rate order
at all seasons of the year. 1 have seen it
tried in both ways, and know whereof I
speak. Hairing grain on a piece ot'grouod,
three seasons to two of grass enriches it in
the same ratio that paying $3 for $2 would
enrich a man. Like produces like in grass
as in breeding, consequently manure made
of good hay is the best for meadows. It
stauds to reason for meadows to grow bet
ter when their own production is honestly
returned to them. Many of our writers
on agriculture have incomes from other
sources beside their farm, and can follow
any system of rotation and have plenty of
time and leisure. But the man who begins
ai the foot of the hill, runs in debt for two
thirds of his farm, all his stock and tools,
then clears his land of stone atxl stumps,
walls it in, enriches it and puts on the
buildings, and raises a family of children,
must sound all the depths of true economy;
in that case he must not raise too much
grain, if ho dees the sheriff will sell some
of it for him.
A Wine Village In California.
A correspondent of the Chicago Repub
licun writes frotu Lon Angelos, California,
under date of May 1:
Here, on the east bank of the Santa
Anna river, twelve milos from the Pacific
ocean, is a community of Hermans, num
bering forty families, that live without lager
beer. They arc healthy, prosperous, hap
py, without the beverage of the “Fader
land.” In 1857 they purchased one thou
sand two hundred acres of what was consid
ered the poorest land in Los Angeles
county, and in the following year laid it
out into twenty acre lots, and have since
brought it to a high state of cultivation.
These people have shown what results
can bo attained in this country by industry
and perseverance, and a history ot their
efforts wdl boa guide to'those who care to
“go and do likewise,” and at thesame time
indicate to the general reader the producing
capacities of this scotion, therefore it may
bo well for me to give the outlines of what
has been done.
After tho purehnso of the land by the
agent, the families were collected iu and
about Ban Francisco, and moved to the
present site of tbo settlement, Tho first
two years they had a Superintendent, and
all worked together; in which time a water
ditch was dug and sufficient water brought
from the Santa Anna to irrigate the whole
tract. The land was cleared off, plowed,
harrowed, and laid off like corn ground,
exeopt in squares of six instead of four feet,
and tho vines planted.
Alter the second year the superintendent
was discharged, each one by that time hav
ing learned sufficiently to manage his own
affairs, and a division ot the lands made.
Laeh of the forty house-holders got twenty
tores of land, valued from $490 to #I,BOO,
according to location and improvements
made; but each house holder got sl*4oo,
either iu land or money. That is to say, at
the end ot two years the forty families,
working together, had accumulated proper
ty valued at $56,000 in gold, besides tho
improvements made ia the water ditch,
which are yet held in common and very
valuable, and besides supporting and main
taining their families. In 1861, three
years after planting, each house-holder had
otic pipe (120 gallons) of wme from eight
acres of vineyard, the fourth year 4,000 gal
tous aud since then the avarag' has been
10,lHX> gallons. This year 500,000 gallons
of wine will be manufactured by this com
munityi
The people in ambabout Los Angelos,
who laughed at what they called “Dutch
stupidity,” in trying to grow vines and
make homes on a barren waste in 1859,
are now buying up the lauds around Ana
heim for $lO and S2O an acre, without any
water privileges. These plodding Germans
have taught them what presevering iudus
ti v will accomplish.
Men who came here poor, are to day
rich in their twenty acres of will-tilled land.
What hes been done by these people eau
be accomplished in huudreds ot places in
Southern California. Good water can be
bad by digging from fifteen to twenty feet
Twelve miles southwest the steamers from
San Francisco touch once a week,, where
freight is landed cheaper than at San
Pedro, the seaport town of Los Angeles-
Forty acres of the twelve hundred acre
tract were reserved for a town, in which are
two hotels, three stores, schoolhouse,
church, aud other necessaries of a thrifty
town in a prosperous eommuuity.
How Hood Stork Paj s.
A correspondent of the Dixie Farmer
says: I will give a recent occurrence or two,
that has dollars and eents in it, A Ken
tucky breeder recently offered a live propo
sition to a neighbor of mine, $35 per head
for all the calves on his place weaning to
tweDty months old—he declined the offer
-on the adjoinii)2 farms he could have
bought calves of the same age at from #2
to $6 per head. He said he would not
drive them to Kentucky if they were pre
sented to him: why? The improved breed
of calves could be made to gross 1,700 ibs,
at three years old; the other, if ever, at five
or six years; one consuming as much grass,
requiring the same care as the other. Com
ment is unnecessary. I sold last Fall at the
Fair at Murfreesboro, a onejyearoldfiliyfor
S4OO, greenbacks--she was thoroughbred
-cost me no more to raise her to that age
than a mongrel—or a mule-the only addi
cost being $455 paid for her dam.
Hie filly was the first produce. I refused
u 'r *° r - toa ' at months
old. 1 paid $325 for another mare--sold her
two year old and one year old fillies for
f i ' I paid $1,125 fora fine jennet, in
loal to a fine jack-—sold the colt at two and
a half years old for $2,000. All the well
bred pigs/ can raise, are in demand at $lO
Men, at irom two to three months old. Ail
the improved variety of sheep pay- -their
lambs selling from $lO to $25 per head, at
W nuu'rr g r> Ume ' lm Pto?M breeds of
poultry pay-what m u that don’t pay, if
the best ot its kind and well cared for?
What mongrel stock does pay? If any I
b*ve to find it out. y
Ylijslcal Culture.
Much has been said and wfitec in this
subject, ard although there are decided
sign- , f improvement in this direction,
there jit remains abnndam nee! for ad
vance ,'iie ancier ts laid great stress on
phyrict framing, and the highest end to
be atta. oed in their schools was a sound
mind in 3 soand body. In the gymnasium
and athlete schools they grew nimble, tall,
stalwart and strong, large lunged, fuil
breasti courageous and noble. Despite
the attempts in the physical line now. the
brain is cultivated at the expense of the
other members; hence weak lungs and
stomachs, hearts indicating ‘Tatty degen
eration,” and a race of pigmies.
In that mysterious relation existing be
tween mind and body, the body cannot be
ill treated without, as it were, showing re
sentment toward the mind, which in its
turn becomes twisted, stunted and distem
pered with a one-sided growth, and para
lyzed in its search for knowledge. One of
the outgrowths of this mistaken training is
a tendency to low spirits, discontent, inac
tion and reverie, for which no remedy
applies like physical exercise.
Success in life and business depends
largely upon a correct physical training.
The success of business men depends much
on their organic stamina. A well develop
ed thorax is about as necessary to a clergy
man, lawyer and politician as a well trained
intellect, and when we remember that a
thorough ,-oration of the blood, by free
exposure to a large breathing surface in the
lungs, is necessary to maintain that vital
power upon which the vigorous working
of the brain depends, is it not even of
greater importance?
When Sir Walter Scott attended the
University of Edinburgh, he went by the
name of the‘‘Great Blockhead,” but was
singularly expert in all the sports of boy
hood, despite his lameness. In afteryCars,
while devoting himself to literary pursuits,
he p< rservered indhose habits andjpursuits,
which he well knew quickened brain and
thought, and gave him his brilliant power.
Some of our greatest minds have been as
noted for “rolling large stones about,” as
for robing large thoughts upon the world.
Os such were Dr. Adam Clark and Andrew
Fuller.
As it is through the body that the soul
works, of what importance it is that it be
a healthy medium, for, as Burton quaintly
expresses it, “as wine savors of the cask
wherin it is kept, so the soul receives a
tincture from the body through which it
works.”
Would that every parent, teacher, pas
tor and individual would give this sub
ject due thought and weight, and act
accordingly. What strides in intellectual
progress would be the sequence!
T. S. H.
Poultry Breeding.
Breeding to a special end or point, has
accomplished for poultry nearly as much as
it has for neat cattle. The chief marks of
excellence in a chicken arc three—to be a
good layer at all seasons, to yield a tender
and well-flavored flesh, and to fatten
rapidly. There is no breed that excels all
others in each of these points. Such a
combination pi merits is not to bo expected.
In clr o ing among the breeds of fowls, one
can get at least two good qualities com
bined.
1. In the white Leghorn, he will find a
regular and constant egg producer, and
flesh quite good, but a bad mother. They
will not sit.
2 fn the Dorking, he will get fine, deli
cate-flash, a full development of breast,
hardiness, and self-help, the ability to pick
up u living where any hen can live. But they
are not great layers, especially in cold
weather.
3 In the Chinese fowls, especially the
Brahma-, light and dark, he finds a big
boned chicken, a rapid grower, a large and
indilh rent feeder, that bears confinement
well, and gives more weiiht of poultry
meat t;»the food consumed than any other.
4 In the French breeds, La Fleche and
II in Jan, we have fowls that lay well at all
timer of the year, and whose flesh is excel
lent, but they are riot inclined to sit, and
in »1 e pm i met hers.
We r I'oroo crnJ to all who keep poultry,
to iinpH ii the common barn-yard chicken
by the introduction of cocks of some of
the improved varieties.
If one wishes to breed mainly for poultry
we recommend a Dorking cock as a consort
to Brahma hens. If in eggs there is more
profit, let him get a Houdan or a Leghorn
eock. The Black Spanish is a good layer,
but not so remarkable in that respect as
the Leghorn, and its flesh is usually dry
and hard. If he respects flavor, and full
ness of breast, the Dorking blood should
predominate. If he raises poultry for
market, and wishes to sell the greatest
numhi r of |" unds, and especially, if he
wi.-b-i- to cunv rt his eggs into Spring chick
ens in the shortest time, the Brahma
fowl will be found the most profitable.
Ollt TRAVELLING CORRESPONDENCE.
SPit'lAL H UHiCsPJNOfJiOE OF TSB CHRONICLE A SENTINEL
On the Wing, July 9th, 1869.
Editors Chronicle <fc Sentinel:
Perhaps the Georgia Hoad has been tho
scene of more life and excitement for the
last few months than any other in the
Southern country. Scarcely a week but
excursion trains may be seen flying over
the track, crowded with old men and
women, youDg men and maidens, little
boys and girls, with their banner's flying
in (lie breeze, and the air ringing with the
music of their songs. Flowers and ribbons
of ail colors, badges of the various, institu
tions they represent, pointing, we trust, to
an illustrious era in our moral, social aud
intellectual future. Stone Mountain is the
point where all parties from above and be-,
low assemble to celebrate their festivals.
The sublime and majestic seeneiy from
the mountain top will amply repay lor the
expense and trouble of the excursion.
I found Atlanta in its usual state of ex
citement. Crowds of people rushing to
and fro, bells ringing, trains thundering,
fire balls leaping into the air, sky-rockets
streaming away and bursting near tho
clouds, gilding tho visions of the night,
with scenery sublime.
Atlanta is tru'y a fast city. The popula
tion is estimated at thirty-five thousand
and rapidly increasing. In a few years
this will be the largast city south of the
Potomac, or cast ot the Mississippi.
L spent uiy brief sojourn at the United
States Hotel, one of the best in the city.
AU its departments are amply supplied
with the very best accommodations, and
deserves tho liberal patronage it receives
of the public. 1 left the next morning
tor LaG range, and on my arrival found
the commencement exercises of the South
ern Female College progressing. The
Rev. Dr. W. T. Brandy, of Atlanta,
preached tho commencement sermon on
tho Sabbath previous to a very large and
intelligent audience. The effort was spoken
of as combining the masterly ability, ora
t< ry and eloquence, characteristic of the
distinguished divine.
I was present only at the commencement
exercises on Wednesday, and was cordially
i invited to a seat on the stage to fully enjoy
tiie intellectual least of the occasion.
The com positions of the young ladies of
the graduating class evinced a depth of
research and power of thought that re
fl> eted great credit upon their Alma Mater.
They were well received and frequently
cheered by the audience. 1 cau con
gratulate the parents on the return home
of daughters so highly accomplished and
pre oared for the varied relations of life.
Tlie address of President Cox to the
graduating class abounded with sound
aud wholesome advice and met
a response fijim the class that showed
lheir confidence and appreciation. The
President conduc'ted the exercises with
great redit to himself, and, doubtless,
satisfactory to the friends of the institu
tion. The annual address by Henry Jack
on. Esq., of Atlanta, was rcceiv-d with
enthusiastic cheers. "Women in the Past
and Present was his theme. He was
aware that the subject had inspired the
’ poets and orators of all ages, and tho dif
ficulty of discussing it alter them, but
thought the sun would set to rise no m ire,
the mountains turn to valleys and valleys
to mountains before the time arrived when
nothing new otiuid be said of Woman. He
referred to the heroines of history, those
who figured iu the social, domestic, and
iui lie affairs of Greece and Rome.
He paid a glowing t ribute to the patriotism
and Christian {.lhilantbropy of the uo’ole
woieen of the South during the late war,
an ! also to those who, by energy and per
< v ranee, had distinguished themselves in
literature and the arts and sciences. He
J Ir. .ted any desire on her part to
trc.«p:i>- on the peculiar provinces
■ i in in. thought she was only potent
Hr s in the sphere to which na
t ir. i.ad gned her, and invoked the dif
lusi, n and cultivation of the principles of
virtue, purity and grace as the forte of her
influence and power.
The speaker seemed quite at home on 1
the stage, aud acquitted himself with great
credit.
The exercises of the day were, in every
respect, a complete success, and an augury
of prosperity to'the Southern Baptist Fe
male Coliege. Traveller.
From Cuba.
Havana, July 14, p. ui.—The steamer
o>h6nbia has arrived. Weather hot and
dry,and there was much sickness through
out the Island.
Eo&bible Actidkst.—This morning
about hali-past one o'clock, Mr. Wm. EL
Jefiere. of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, who
was stopping at the Battle House, fell
from the window of his room and was in
stantly killed. His body was horribly
mangled.
Mr, Jeffers came to this city from Paw
tucket on the 6th instant with No. Seven's
new steamer.
Owing to the lateness of the hour, we
are unable to give further particulars, but
will do so in our evening edition of to- j
morrow.— Mobile Reffister, June 11. 1
From the New York World.
The World and Sickles.
Tne World was perfectly aware, when it
undertook to display the character and
career of that there would be an
unpleasant effluvia from the mass of
mouldering muck which it felt compelled
to stir u;> with the pitchfork of exposure.
It was alto aware -for had not Mr. Horace
Greeley told it ?—-that the rural Radical
journals were mostly under the control of !
“narrow-minded blockheads.” But it did
not dream that any of those perrons could
be narrow-minded enough, or blockheaded
enough, to blackguard it, as if it were re
sponsible for the moial cesspool which it
had only uncovered. “When Hercules
“turned the purifying river into King
“Augeas’ stables's’ Thomas Carlyle ob
“serves, “l have n > doubt the confusion
“that resulted was considerable ail around;
“hut I think it was not Hercules’ blame ;
“I think it was some other's blame.”
Something like that the World may say of j
itself and the very disgusting, but very
necessary, piece of work it has lately felt
compelled to perform.
Why, piteously inquire thebucolic prints
in question---wby bring to light what has
passed into oblivion to inflict pain and dis
grace upn a man whose recent record, at ;
ieast, has not been discreditable to him ? ;
Why mention that a gallant soldier of the
| Union, under the impulses of hot youth,
i pursued the profession of pandarism and
| iived in open, concubinage with a public
I trull ? If Sickles was a mail-robber, he
; has since been made a major-general. If j
l he once casually murdered a-man, did he
not get his leg shot off at Gettysburg? j
And if fA forged notes in the piping times, I
did he not fight bravely in time of war ?
We answer that the World showed that I
all the acts of Sickles' life were of a piece.
We shewed how the impudent chicanery
by which he got temporary credit for hav
ing organized a brigade was the same im
pudent chicanery by which he got a disrep
utable woman presented at the Court of
St. James, and another and still more dis
reputable woman admitted to pollute the
floor of the Legislature of this State, while
that body was yet capable to be polluted.
We showed that the mutinous and unscru
pulous temper which led him to betray his
j benefactor when he was a blackguard boy
was the same quality which led him in the
■ ripeness of his manhood and his major
! generalship, to intrigue against the supe
| rior whose orders he had disobeyed, whose
| victory he had imperilled, and who had
| treated him with only too much forbear
ance. We showed that the same con
scienceless callosity which led him to take
the life of a man who had dishonored him
(dishonored him!), and so bruit his dis
( grace to all the world, led him, years after
ward, by taking back a faithless wife, to
i brand that disgrace indelibly upon himself.
; He is the same man now that he was then,
for anything that appears. If he had
changed, the remorse and disgust which
would follow his first and faintest percep
tion of himself in his true character would
drive him to a wilderness for life-long peni
tence and penance, if so be his memory
might be blotted from the minds of his
fellow-men.
What sort of men can those be who are
j so eager to condone such crimes as these of
Sickles without even a profession of peni
tence from him? Do they think that a
military command, got by trickery and lost
by treachery, ought to make us forget a
life of infamy ? Uati a man atone by laying
his leg upon the altar of his country (not
that Sickles would have laid it there if he
had had the disposal of it) for laying his
manhood at the altar of a wanton ? It is
better, the Bible metaphorically tells us,
to enter into life halt or maimed than hav
ing two hands or two feet to be cast ; nto
everlasting tire. But our censors give us
to understand literally that this man walks
heavenward on crutches, although his logs
always carried him in the diametrically op
posite direction. What these people mean,
if they mean anything, is that political
perfidy is an ample atonement for personal
infamy, and that if a man is only a Radical
he • may be whatever other scoundrelly
thing ho pleases.
Some exceptionally stupid papers call
our account of Sickles “malignant.” That
account was a mere and unadorned state
ment of the facts of his life. In another
article we drew what may be called the
immoral of that life. There is a malignity,
and there is an indignation. It was the
latter that we felt and expressed: Private
citizen Sickles is a disgrace to himself.
Major General Sickles is a disgrace to the
United States army. But Minister Sickles
is a disgrace to all the people of the coun
try which sends him, and an insult to all
the people of the country to which he is
sent. In this capacity, all citizens of his
country are involved in his infamy, and
we meant to give notice, and ws mean to
give notioe, that there are some citizens
who do not intend tamely to partake that
infamy. We mean to prevent the eleva
tion of other Siekleses to any post where
they are in any way officially to represent the
hundreds ofthousands of readers whose sen
timents, in this matter, wo know we speak.
And we hereby give notice that we shall
serve every such scoundrel as we have
served Sickles, with a view to the suppres
sion of SickleseS and the purging of poli
tics.
But the Radical journals are not all so
stupid or so perverse as those whose com
ments we have been considering. The
Nation has taken advantage of tho oppor
tunity for a display of po ideal independ
ence which this Sickles business gave it
in tho article which we reproduce. The
article is so just and so temperate that wo
are in hopes it will carry conviction in’
quarters‘where any arguments or assevera
tions that might appear in this journal
would he logically and courteously received
as effusions of copperhead spite.
Josh Bluings on the Rote.
The gote iz a koarse woollen sheep.
They have a split hoof and a whole tail.
They have a goo 1 appetite and a good
digestion.
They swaller what they eat, and will eat
enny thing they kail bite.
I Their moral karakters are not polished;
[ they had rather steal a rotten turnip out
of a garbage box than cuui honestly by a
peck of oats.
The male goto haz two horns on the
ridge ov hiz hed, and a mustach on hiz
bottom lip, and iz the plug ugly of the na
berhood.
A maskulinc goto will site anything from
an elephant down to hiz shadder on a ded
wail.
They strike from their but end, instead
ov the sholder, and are as likely tew hit az
a hammer iz a naillied.
They are ahi seasoned animal, as much
| so az a pound ov assifidity.
They are faith critters; and will stick
j tew a friend az longez he lives in a-shanty.
| They kan klime ennything but a greast
| pole, and kno the way up a rock az natural
az a woodbine.
They are az certain tew rais az young
i ones—sum families are half gotes and the
| other half children. They are good eating
when they are yung, but they leve it oph
; as they git stronger.
They are alwus poor in the body, but
| phat in the stumick; what they eat seems
to all go to appetight. Yu might az well
agree tew phatt afl injun rubber over shu
by filling it with klam shells az tew raise
enny adipoze membrane on the outside
! bust of a gote.
A phatt goto would be a literaiy curi
-1 osity.
They use the same dialekt az the sheep,
and the yung onus speak more fluently
| than the parients do.
There are only two animals of the earth
that wiil eat tobakko—one iz a man and
tothor iz a gote; but the goto understands
it the most, for ho swallows it—-the spit,
j chaw, aud all.
The male gote, when he iz pensi7, is a
venerable and philosophic looking old cu-s,
and wud not make a bad professor uv
arithmetick it) sum ov our colleges.
They are handy at livin a loug time,
reaching an advanced age without arriving
at any definite konkiusion.
How long a gote lives without-givin it
up, there iz no man now old erniff tew tell.
Methuzeler, if hiz memo~y was had at
forgetting, mite give a good-sized guess,
but, unfortunately for science and this
essa, Methuzeler aint here.
Gotes will live in enny klimateand r,
enny Tittles, except tanbark, and if they
ever cum to a square destL it iz a pro! U ..u
sekret, iu the hands ova few, to this day.
I wouldn’t like to believe enny man un
der oath who had ever seen a maskuline
gote aektualb- die* and stay so.
Speaking ov Methuzeler puts me in j
mind ov the fact, if a man should liv now- •
a-daze as much as he did, and oijy have
one eye tew see things with, he would hav
tew hav an addishun built onto the back ;
ov hiz hed tew sto away things into.
The female gote iz either tie mother, or
sister, or cuzzin, ov the male gote, ackord
ing to the circumstances in the case, or
else I labor under a delusion, I forget
which.
They give milk intuitively about a quart,
before it iz watered, in t welve hours.which
is the subject of ov nourishment in various
ways.
This milk, which iz extracted from the
female goto, iz excellent tew finish up yuDg
ones od, but is apt to make them bedycose
and fightful.
It iz not uncommon for a babe, while in
haling this pugnacious fluid, to let oph his
left coileckshun or diggit and ketch the
nurse on the pinnakle of the smeller, and !
up it for claret.
This is a komtnon fakt among Irish ba- ’
bies, and explains the reason whi, in after
life, these same babes make such brilliant
hits.
In writing the history ov the male and
female gote tew adorn the pages ov future
time, I flatter myself that I have stuck tew
the truth, and haven’t allowed my imagi
nashun tew boas the job.
A great many ov our be3t bilt historians
are apt tew mistake opinyuns for facts.
This iz an easy mistake to make, but when
I strike a goose, or a bed bug, or gote,
you notioe one thing, I stay with them.
Finnis. 1
Proce«.;i;jgs of the Convention of Supe
rlor Court Judges.
Tho convention of the Judges of the
Superior Courts of the State on the revis
ion of the rules of Court, was organized
permanently in Atlanta on the 13th by the
election of Judge D. B. Harrell President;
Judge J. B. RobinsoD, Vice President;
and Z. D. Harrison, Secretary.
The Rules of Practice were taken up.
The first rule was amended as follows :
More than two counsel for each party
shall not be heard in a case, except by
leave of the court, and in no case shall
more than one counsel be heard iu con
clusion.”
The following portion of the second rule
WaS f x P an & e d : “No appeal shall be en
tered, unless good Security is given.” The
balance adopted.
The third and fourth were expunged.
The fifth rule was amended and after
ward expunged.
Rules six and seven were stricken out.
Rule eighth, as far as the close of the
oath, was stricken out.
The Convention then adjourned to meet
next day.
Ihe Judges iu attendance are Judges
Harrell, Parrott, Alexander, Pope, Bigley,
Sessions, Green, Gibson, Schley, Knight,
Robinson, Davis, Clarke.
Crops in Jefferson County.—A cor
respondent writing usfrom Jefferson, says:
ery dry and hot-crops looking sick and
rapidly going up the spout.’ How soon
have our prospects and fond anticipations
for a bountiful harvest been blighted?
Quite a number of water courses have
ceased to run, and the question of getting
meal is exciting interest in many locali
ties.”
Lands in North Georgia.—A. letter
to the Rome Courier from Cedartown, Ga.,
says Mr. V m. Peek, of that vicinity, re
cently sold five hundred acres of land for
fifty thousand dollars. The entire tract is
susceptible of cultivation, much of which
will produce a bale of cotton to the acre.
The farmers of that section, however, are
running heavily on wheat, corn, clover and
grasses. Cotton, with them, is merely a
side crop.
Debts Contracted for Slaves.—The
Supreme Court of North Carolina have de
cided that a bond given in 1864 for the
price ol a slave is valid, and can be collect
ed at law. The act of Congress of July,
1862, guaranteeing the freedom of all
slaves employed in the service of the rebel
lion, and the emancipation proclamation of
January 1, 1863, were, in the option of tho
Court, effective only within the military
lines ol the United States, and there was
nothing in the purchase and sale of a slave
at that time in North Carolina which could
be held as opposed to good morals or the
public policy of the State. This opinion
was delivered by Chief Justice Pearson on
the 28th ultimo.
The Savannah, Skidaway & Sea
board Railroad lias been completed to
its terminal point, and temporary equip
ment has been supplied it by the Central
and Gulf Railroad companies. The citi
zens of Savannah can now, during the
heated terms, escapo from the sweltering
heat of oity life to enjoy the cool sea
breeze and the refreshing sea bath. But
while the construction of this road will
minister to the health and oo nfert ol the
citizens of Savannah during the Summer,
it will not be long before the same line
will contribute to tlie growth and prosper
ity of the obliging and liberal roads, by
increasing their freights onward and out
ward bound, hy freeing produce and mer
chandize from [.resent charges for lighter
age, etc.
Our Charleston friends proaoh free
trade and practice protection. Augusta
long since asked Charleston to let her
railroads run down 1 1 tho wharves, to the
water’s edge. The modern demands of
the carrying trade are dispatch and econo
my. The dummy engine which transfers
from the ocean steamer to the freight car
—through freights of corn, wheat, cotton,
&c , and inland freights— meets these de
mands. The carrying trade is the great
element ot a seaport’s, prosperity. Does
Charleston want it?
An. Earthquake in the Southwest on
Friday Morning.
From, the Cincinnati Commercial.
Cairo, 111, July 2.—Three distinct
shocks of eaitliquake occurred at 2} this
morning The first and last were quite
light., but the second was as heavy as ever
remembered since 1841. Furniture was
slightly moved, and windows and crockery
rattled at a fearful rate, but no damage was
done so far as reported. The shocks were
distinguished by the absence of vibration
or rolling motion, the only movement being
a trembling one. It seemed to pass from
northwest to southeast. A dull roaring,
as of a hurricane, was repotted by some,
but; your correspondent heard nothing but.
an unearthly rattling of windows, furniture,
and dishes. The whole time, from first to
last, is variously estimated at from thirty
to ninety seconds, "with a barely apprecia
ble intermission between the shocks. The
weather has been tuitry for several days,
aud storms of greater or less severity are
reported-each day within a circle of fifty
miles.
AT MEMPHIS.
Memphis, Tenn., July 2. —There were
seven shocks of earthquake felt here short
ly after 2 o’clock this morning, shaking
houses (aud some of the largest buildings)
fearfully, causing occupants to seek safety
in the streets, and creating a general con
sternation in th"e city and vicinity. Those
who were up at tho time say the first two
shocks lasted about a minuie, and seemed
as though passing from North to South,
and tbatlhe shocks were immediately fob*
lowed by a vibration, apparently coming
from the East, lasting about half a minute,
and of greater violence than the shocks.
No damage, however, was done to build
ings with the exception of cracking several
walls. As far as ascertained, the same
shocks were felt south of here as far as
Corinth, Helena and Madison, Ark., and
East all aloDg the line of the Louisville.
Railroad to Clarksville, where a general
rush was made for the streets by the
frightened ciiizeus, as also was the case at
Brownsville, Humboldt and Baris. In a
Northern direction it extended to Cairo,
and at all {daces occurred at almost precise-'
ly the same moment. Along the line of
the Memphis & Tennessee Railroad the
shock was felt at a distance of one hundred
miles, and abiut the same distance from
here on the Charleston road. Here in the
city the demand for prayer-books and
Bibles bas been exceeding heavy.
The Xegro Postmaster.
TURNER ARRESTED FOR COUN
TERFEITING.
MUON ASI) AUGUSTA RADICALS IM
PLICATED.
SPJCIU. DISPATCH TJ THE eiIEINICLKi SESTISID.
j Macon, July 14, p m.—The celebrated
counterfeiting case, which for the past
week has created such a sensation over
the whole State, bids fair now to be
: thoroughly iuv. -ligated and ventilated.
!On this afternoon,li. M. 'turner,the negro
, Postmaster i" this city, the report of
whoso former arrest has been published
1 and denied so often, was arrested this ar
ternoon ou a warrant issued, charging
| .him with counterfeiting National Bank
notes. This time there can be no doubt
that he was arrested, for he was taken in
custody by an United States Treasury
Agent, named Neil, who had been sento.ut
, here for the purpose of working up the
| case.
As soon as the Treasury Agent arrested
Turner he carried him before United States
i Commissioner Morrill, in order that the
case might be investigated. The exam
ination of Turner by the United States
Commissioner at once commenced and at
1 the present time is still progressing.
No visitors hive been allowed by the
Uni:ed States authorities to be' present
w here the examination is being carried
on, and it is conducted with closed doors.
Under these circumstances it is impos
sible to discover what is the nature of the
testimony against Turner, or to get at the
■details of the transaction.
It is reported, however, that the two j
parties arrested fpr the crime, Turner and
the woman Marian Harriss, are, by no
means, the only persons concerned in this
counterfeiting scrape. The “ring"’ is
thought to have extensive ramifications
in this State, and whites, also, are accom
plices in the crime. It is said that leading i
politicians, living both in this city and ;
'in Augusta, are implicated in the transac
tion, and rich revelations are soon ex- i
pected.
I will send you more of the details to- j
night if it be possible to obtain them.
H. A. S.
[second dispatch. 1
Macon, July 14, p. in.—The examina
tion of Turner's case before the United
States Commissioner, Morrill, after pro
gressing for some time, has been adjourn
ed over until to-morrow morning, when
it will be again resumed.
In the meantime, the prisoner is at
large, having been released by the United
States Commissioner on bail. The bail
bond required by the authorities was for
five thousand dollars, and the sureties
who weDt on his bond are two colored
men of this city.
It is considered here that the evidence of
Turner’s having been eugaged in this
counterfeiting business is complete and
conclusive.
Turner, this afternoon, at the investiga
tion, told the United States Commissioner
that he wished to procure the testimony of
a witness who was then in Atlanta, and
the witness has been sent for.
As the case progressed, the excitement
and the interest lelt in it increases. As I
stated in my first dispatch, startling de
velopments are confidently expected to be
made public in a short while. Certain
parties in this city and iu Augusta will be
implicated in the transaction.
The arrestof the Postmaster in this city
(Turner) having left the office without a
head, the Postoffice has been placed in
oharge of Mr. Woodward, a Special Agent
ol tho Postoftice Department. U. A. ;S.
FAIT.—WK HUE
*>hat persons of strong constituliona. anti young,
svflf r for d&ys with jtains or the limb*, low cf appetie tnd
feetr, who suddenly get we.l Jtfcer a cholic to lowed iy
Blimy, bt iouj htooLs. Tire relief produced by tiuse evacua.
lions weiethe original guide to ifij idea an 1 practice ot
purgati m, uid which, when enforced by Braudre h’s Pills,
always beaeiits, utuaily cures, aud often prevents disease,
especially Scarlet Fever and diseases ot similar chancier.
I. L. ( ook, publisher of the Stole Banner, B.*nnicgton,
Vt. # says Brttudxfcth’s Pills cured him of Dyspepsia, after
being tffheted with it over live years. HD friends an l
. doctors cuns.deredLis recovery impossible, but fix box so
Brand.eih’s Pills re. tored h's health perfectly.
A young la lv of Mount Peasant was sore'y troubled with
Tape-worm. Ail aavice and medicine failed to help her.
She had no rest. ’Th.n, careworn and unbappy. she looked
the picture ot misery. At last she concluded to try Bran
dreth’s Pills. In one year she took seventy two boxes.
Tney brought away, acccr ing to her computation, over
two hundred yards of tape-worm. At lengta all her bi
symptoms left hei: she slept and ate naturally .and Ler health
became lully restored. junlß—ddcwlrn
GWuniTlU HORSEMEN.”—
DR, TOBIAS’ CELEBRATED VENE
TIAN HORSE LIN IMEAT has been tested ty the first
Horsemen n ihis country, and proved to be sup rior to a y
other. The late Hyram Woodruff, of "trotting fame,’ was
never without a bottle in his stable. It la also used by Col.
Bush, of the J jrome Park Cos rse. at Ford an, N. Y.. who
has over twenty running horses under his care, among which
rank some of the tinest stock in America. It is warranted to
cure Lamaucs-’, SpraL *, Scratcnes, Bruis* s. Gads, (Juts,
Wiud Gills, Colic, dore Tnroat, Nail iu the Foot aud Over
Hrating, whea us id according to the directions.
All who owaor employ Horses are assured that this L'.ui
luent will do all, if not more, in c ring the above named
complaints. No horse need uio of Colic, if, when first taken,
the Liniment is used according to the directions. Always
have a bottle Iq your stable.
Price in Pint uottles, O.e Dollar. Tae genuine Is signed
S. I. Tobias, on the outside wrapper. For sale by the
Druggists, Saddlers and Store-keepers throughout the U.
States, lepot, 10 Park Place, N. Y. junliJ - ddtwltu
GREAT POLITICAL RKYOLU
w* m ■■ TION was accomplished by the election of
Grant, and a revolu iou of imineisi sicial importance has
been efl'e Jed by the gene al substituLijn if that pure and
harmless prep nation,
Uristadoro’s Excelsior Hair Dye,
forthe deadly (ompound of lead and brimstone, of which
according to the Journal of Chemistry, and the Medica
Gazette, more thuu thirty varieties have been foisted upon
the publicl Crist&doro’s Dye is the only one that
HAS BEEN ANALYZED,
and Professor Chilton, over hie own signature, declares that
it is perferly wholesome,
Uristadoro’s Hair Preservative,
as a dressing, ac*s like ach irm on tho Hair af er Dyeing
Try it.
Sold by Druggists and applied by all Hair Dressers.—
Manufactory No, fiß Maiden Lane. Principal Depot No.
6 Astor House.
iun!B—d&wlm
FOR SALE.
ONE thousand and fifty acres of LAND,
more or less, property ot Elcy Cart
ledge, uecea; ed, in Hie county of Columbia,
about eight miles above Appling and one
balf mile from the Washington Koad, ad
joining lands of John Cartledge, It. H.
Neal, W. S. Dunn, 11. A. llovey (for>*>erly
Juriali Harris’) and Mrs. Mary Taukerly
(formerly William C. Avery’s).
Theabove mentioned land is offered for
sale by the undersigned as Receiver, under
*a Decree in Equity, rendered at the June
't erm, 1809, of the [Superior Court of Rich
mond county, to satisfy a fieri facias issu-'
ing from Columbia (Superior Court, in
favor of Augustus Jonas, Edwin T. Jones
and-MaryS. Jones, by th9ir next friend,
James Cartledge, against John Cartledge
and Elcy, his wife.
Under the discretion vested in the Re
ceive! by the decree, said land can be sold
at private sale, but if not thus sold by
the 28th day of September next (being the
second day of Court week) it will bo offer
ed on that day at Appling, at public out
cry to the highest bidder.
CLAIBORNE SNEAD,
jyl I—3&wld •' • Receiver.
Fresh Peaches, Berries, Corn
Tomatoes, &c n
-A- 1 ! the War liound.
THE
MILLVILLE ATMOSPHERIC
FRUIT JAR
lIAS been usej exleh
sively for several years
with increasing {.opu
larity. It possesses ma
ny advantages, among
which are that you can
determine whether the
fruit is safe or not with
out waiting for it to fer
ment. Nothing butgiass
comes in contact with
the fruit. The Gu in
Rings are heavier than
in most other jars, and
wit. lastfor many years,
instead of having to he
; renewed yearly-. The
ijar cau he opened with
ease.
Fit.] i
These jars are the best and most eco
nomical for family use, for fresh Fruits,
Preserves, Jellies, Jams or Pickles.
Sold wholesale and retail by
PLUMB & LEITNER,
Augusta, Ga.
Agents for the manufacturers,
jell— frtu<few2m
The Best Georgia Cotton Gins,
WE are now offering these celebrated
GINS at the following prices :
For 9 inch Saws, $4 per saw ; For 10 inch
Saws, $4 25 per saw. Warranted to per
form well.
Orders, with satisfactory reference, will
be promptly filled.
J. D. & H. T. HAMMACK,
je4—difc\v2m Crawfordsville, Ga.
FEVER AND AGUE,
from wb’ch in inkin'! eulfar over a lar*e p irt of the gobe,
is the'vnuequence o'a aiaeat-etl ctiou in t.he system, in
duced by the p »is moan musm of vegetable dtuy. This
exaltation is evolved bv toe ao. Ot, o: aular h-’at oh wet oil
aud rises wi,h the w tery v.tpor irorn it. While
below the horizon tins v ip mug ts near the earth’s surface
and the virus ia taken w.ib it thr nigh tie luntts into the
blood. There it: c s h*an i rit »t ng pci-on op the Internal
viscera and «.xcret ng organ. oft e body. The i vtr t>e
conirts toroid an.i isUuu Sjorc'e not on v this v.rus, hut
also the bi«e from tt.e bo« and. Both tie v»r n and the bile
accua ulate intb cheolation ;.ml yro.uviolmt constitu
tional aisorutr. The&pleeii. th kidneys, and tne itomach
svmya'h ze with the liver, and oe erne disort erM also.
Finally the instinct of our o ginisru. as >f au a te-uptto ex
pel the noxious i ousi n. coucentiaiea the whole b: » aof
the body in the intern 1 excretori-s to force them »o enst ir.
cw. 'idle blocd leaves the surface, md r ushes to the c* ntral
organs wi h cougr stive violence. Tht» m tie Chill. But
m til’s effort it fans T -eu the Fever follows, in which the
blood leaves he central organs and rushes to the sa -itce as
b in auo her« Hurt to evpei the irri aMug pol-ou through
'hßt < tner ir j a'exe-ttory-the skin. Ia this a.so >t fails,
and the system abandons he attempt exhausted, end waits
fir the recovery of.-trength t j repaat me Lopel >s effort
another dsv. These are the fits cf p roxvsms of FEVER
AWbiOUE. hQ'-h confltituJoqal disorder win of course
undfrtLine the health if it. is D t removed.
We have labored to find, and have found, an antidote,
AYER’S AGUE CURE.
which neutralizes this malarious poison in the blood, and
stimulates the i.ver to expel ir from the bodr\ At* it s.ould,
so ir UO6B cure this afti ctmg j rwili i e feet certainty.
And.it aoes mo<e, or latter does wh »t is of more service to
those fa-jtct to this inlectlun. It taken in ►eas n it expefa
it from tha system aas i. is absoi bed. ar.a thus keeps those
who use it tree irom Us attack ; toe sya-em iu health
althoufcli expiated .to the else a-. Consequently it no: only
cures, but protects from, the great of affec'ions i
wh*ch induced bv this mslunant i floeice, such a s
Remittent r ever, Chid Fever, Dumb, or Masxed a true,
Periodical Hea-lache, or unions Hea.;*ch*» B.lioua Fevers,
Ae rai«i'> Khea’Qaiism, tint., Ulim'iicß> Toothache,
u* a he Catarrh, As.hma, Pap rations, Pafafrl Atfec ions
> f th- Spleen, Wys encs, a.oi c, Paralysis, ana Painful j
Auevtcniof lie Sion.ach ai.u iiowels. all of wfoeh wn*n
ar sing from this cuiae wll be so tad rd as-u e t ore or (
less tne it term tun type. This “iUuE lUKL” r, j
moves the cause of to,e.e derAnzemeuia auu cures the >
disease. j
This it accompli*be* by stimulatin'* t‘ e excretori ee to ex- l
pe. the virus from the system ; and thes- by ue
*reesbecome habited tod) this their ffloe o- the T 'wn ;
accord. Hence a ises what w c term acclimatatiort. Time
may accomplish ihe ame end out of m u e is no long
16 in the attempt while tli« “AG Ua. j
CLKi. dr.ee itat onC'', and wfh safety. We hive great I
rea-s nto believe tisis a surer as well eaiur remedy for j
the wh r le class or diseases widen are caused by the mins !
mat c 1» fectlon.tli-n ary trier wh eh hasb ea ducove e 1 ; i
and it has ti 1 important advantage to the puhac, i
wuieh is that it is as w li as good.
prepared by
DR. J. C. AYER & CO.,
LOWELL, MASS.
Price One Dollar per Bottle.
Su’d by D*. W. B. We’ amd >-li the Drugg s sin / ugnsta*
A>. by -.1 Hr K U aal JDeale s m Aicd c-ue everywhere
j.. 3—kitfitl & w&u
. JEWELL'S MILLS,
I7ORMERLY ROCK FACTOHY, GA,
J- Rost Office, Culverton, Georgia. We
will manufacture Wool for customers this
season, on the following terms: Wool
manufactured into Jeans (colored warp)
30 cents per yard ;in Keiseys at 20 cents
per yard, in rolls at 12i cents
per pound. Sheetings, Shirtings, Osna
burgs and Yarns constantly on hand.
Wool wanted in exchange tor goods at
market value or for cash. Consignments
by railroad should be directed to Culver
ton. Z. McCORD, Agent in Augusta.
D- A. JEWELL, Owner.
mjT4—dlm<tw3m
WOOL CARDING
AND
EXCHANGING.
THE ATHENS MANUFACTURING
COMPANY will EXCHANGE
CLOTH bOR WOOL on same terms as
heretofore; also, CARD WOOD in the
best manner. All packages sent should
have the senders name marked plainly on
the package. Also, if sent by freight lines
we will guarantee the safe delivery.
K. L. BLOOMFIELD, Agent,
Athens, Georgia, j
mayt>—dA2w3m
SELLING OFF AT COST I
CLOTHING,
CLOTHING,
CLOTHING.
THE
Greatest Reduction of the Season!
FOR 30 DAIS.
I Sf ” c '\ of READY-MADE CLOTHING and
vtent* rUuMsHINU GOOOSat New \ork cost.
It ia an inducement seldom offered to the citizens or Augusta aa l vicinity aid I
trust they will not let it pass without availing themselves of iu benefits.
'I he public may rest assured that the Goods will be sold as advertised.
JOHN KENNY.
juu27 -d&vvlm
TO COTTON PLANTERS.
UNPARALEELEI) SUCC E?«S
OF
WRIGHT'S, ALIM’S AM) BANKS’.
COTTON' SCREWS.
The greatest improvement in these Cotton Packing Screws!
THE 13 BS V T.iST USE I
GIVE ENTIRE SATISFACTION TO ALL WHO USE 'IHEM.
EVERY SCREW WARRANTED.
T AM now receiving orders-daily for these celebrated Screws. Planters are requested
TV to . sendthfcir orders at once, so that their Screws may be ready when called lor.
JVo disappointment as to time promised.
Also GIN GEAR of GRAHAM’S aud other Patterns of all sizes. SUGAR BOIL
ERS, SUGAR MILLS, GUDGEONS, PLANTATION BELLS, Ac., Ac.
< Also, ONE EIGHT HORSE POWER ENGINE, nearly new, with upright boiler
and connections—all complete. Will be cold cheap lor cash. .
I have also on ha*nd about sixty-five PULLEYS in size varying from ' six feet to
ten inches, already finished; and two hundred feet of 2 and inch SHAFTING,
which I will dispose of at greatly reduced prices.
All kinds ot M ACHINEKY and O aSTINGS done at short notice.
The highest price paid for OLD MACHINERY, IRON, BRASS ami COPPER.
ORDERS respectfully solicited.
j£S“Audress
P. MALONE.
At Augusta Foundry aud Machine Works.
Corner Jackson and D’ Antiguacstreets, Augusta, Ga.
.1 • S.—l have also the patterns of the BULLOCK COTTON PRESS, which I can fur
nish entire or duplicate any part to Planters having them now in use.
jy4—d&wtf
Washington Female Seminary.
FALL TERM,
1860.
The exercises begin Tues
day. THE 2otii OF JULY.
Every advantage is had at this Institu
tion, and every effort made by the Board
of Instruction for the proper training of
Young Ladies.
Forfurthef information address
Rev. MORGAN CALLAWAY,
Principal.
references:
Gen. R. Toombs, Washington, Ga.
Judge Wm. M. Reese,
Mr. Milton Robert, “ “
Gen. I) M. Dußose, •' “
Rev. 11. A. Topper, “ ' “
Mr. -Sam’l Barnett, “ “
Bishop G. F. Pierce, Sparta, “
jun22—dAwlm
“ST. CHARLES”
SALE and LIVERY STABLE,
154 Ellis st., two doors East of Mclntosh.
THE undersigned respectfully an
nounce to their friends and the
public generally, that they have opened
the above named centrally located Stable.
- Having refitted and enlarged tho establish
ment, and added all the moderm im
provements, and having furnished it en
tirely with new vehicles of elegant pattern
and of every description, aud supplied
themselves w ith gentle, fast and tine lock
ing animals, wo 'eel assured those who
once favor us with their patronage will be
come our regular customers.
We will furnish close or ..pen Carriages
for
W ED DING- PA RTIES,
PLEASURE EXCURSIONS,
PICNICS or FUNERALS,
on thelnost reasonable terms.
Our COUNTRY FRIENDS are assured
that every care will be taken of stock en
t. listed to us, as ample arrangements have
been made to accommodate all.
A. & R. J. WILSON,
(R. J. is hetler known as “Captain Dick.”(
jyl—dl2<fcw2
THOMAS COUNTY, GA,
Plantation for Sale,
r OFFER FOR SALE, A PLANTATION
i- in Thomas county, four miles from
Thotnasville, consisting of Twelve Hun
dred Two and a Half Acres first quality
LAND, with good dwelling, cabins, kitch
en, barns, stables, gin house, gin packing
screw, blacksmith shop, i&e , all under
good fence; live, hundred acres cleured,
balance heavily timbered. There are
three hundred acres of Virgin Hammock
—bounded on the North side by the At
lantic and Gulf Railroad, on the South by
the MonticelJo road, and tho new railroad
from Albany will come within half a mile
of this Plantation.
There is a never-failing creek of fine
water running through the Plantation.
Also five wells and two well stocked fish
ponds on tho premises.
This place is known as the “Seward
Home Place,”, being formerly the property
of Hon. Jas. L. Seward.
The mules, horses and other stock, with
all the wagons and agricultural imple
ments, will be sold with the place on
reasonable terms.
For particulars, apply to
A. STEVENS, Augusta, Ga.
or to A. P. Wright, Thomasville, Ga.
or L. J. Guilmartin A- t 0., Savannah, Ga.
P. S.—There are two churches and two
schools in Thomasville, Ga., lino climate
and good neighbors,
n oi 29—d&wtf
GET THE IJE*T
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The most, useful and remarkable com
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Published by G. tC. MJ- RRIAM,
jelO—thsattuAw2m Springfield, Mass.
Southern Mutual Insurance
COMPANY.
Y. L G. HARRIS President.
! STEVENS THOMAS Secretary.
THE advantages offered by this Com
pany will at once commend them
selves to those seeking insurance. It is
perfectly safe, and Is the only Wholly Mu
tual Company in the State. Since the war
its annual dividends to policy holders
have been from 20 to 40 per cent.
The Dividend Scrip from 1 to 8 inclusive
(except number 7, for which 25 per cent,
of the nominal value is paid) redeemable
in cash, and all other outstanding Scrip
receivable for premiums.
Rates as low as other first-class com
panies.
F. PIIINIZY & CO ,
j un23—wfrAsuow Agents.
Notice.— all persons in
DEBTED io ihe estate of R. M„ Fleming, deceased,
art requester to make payment, arui those Livin* cia'ma
(tgainsi the same will ofease present the rune according to
law. J. H. EOHOLti.
m*. jonlir—Executor.
jEfpl
scmvcri county.
CCRIVEN COUNTY SHERIFF
LJ SALK—B/ virtu.* cf ruorlgui-j fieri facias Imuinc
out of ifie bouoroble Sup lior (,‘oLat «,r to iver. coutuy
Georgia. In whicii Joseph < Jlny id plain*iff mm WilMam T ’
ople in detenffaut, uhave levied no -n, and w 1 B dll mhe
TLESGAY n SUPTKMBsIrC next, within the
usual lours oi sale, before the Uo u house citor. in ilia vil
lage of Sy l vania, for cusb.the foUiwlng valuable property
t* --v it: FiVf-ninth part of a certai" steam smy mill miil
site and appuneuances.near or at ti e Fifty-sixth mile pout on
the pentral Ra lroail in the sa*d c >uutv oi Si.iveu being
the undivided interest of thesai t William T.Opii iu of. and
to the haid mill Bite.ani appurtenances, ami iil-o. at thmo
iliiie ami place tlie twi-thir-famn of ihe lu nbe iute-est l» -
Ion}: n* to he said WilMaoi T. Opie. Sal' l proper!v dis gu »te-l
and pointed out in null n\n,\ , W. T. Opie be
ing in pcs esiioii at tun; of levy.
JOHN W BOSTON,
Sheriff of ;so iveo Couj.ty, Geo.
jdj 9 vtd
ONE MONTH AFTER DATE, TO
WIT: at the July term of tho Oourt of Ordinary of
ttcriven County anpli -a’ on wi 1 : e m do t« r leave to s. 11
the lval estate of Jesse Beard, late of said county, dec *a*ed
t)r the bem fit of the heirs snd creditoxs of said deceased ’
June 14 f h, 18 1).
, „ .. GEO R.BLA K.
Admin str&tor.
Georgia, scriven countY—
\ Wheieas iior. Oliver up* lies to nie for letters o
ad.iiinistraii u on estate of Green W. Oliv-r de ease I
This is. ther -fore, to cte 11 pers ms concerned'to b ; and
appear at the Gn U rt cf Or-Jin rv for 8 M county to be heid
on (lie SECOND MONDAY IN JULY NEXT to show
cause, if.any the/ have, way s.tid nt.ers chould not be
granted the petitioner.
G.veaun er my odic.al sigu tare t is Juno 3.1869
. 0 .. HENKY I’aRKER,
B ^wt l _ . Ofd! ary.
(GEORGIA, SCRIVEN' COUNTY
V J'is. U- Th-m,won, Ailmkiiitrator
? f K - miaou, J,cra erl, tpplieH t.;r Loiters
cf Dlsndssion.
These are therefore to cite and Admonish all pet sons inler
estei to he and appear at my office within the. time in
seribejl by law and show cause, if any. why said L tt-. r.,
Bbm Id not be g'anted.
Done at my office, in fylvania, 1M sth day of January
1869 4 _ 4 HENKY PARK b. K. '
lanß—wum «ordinarv.
FRESH TURNIP SEED.
W E have just received our stock of
WARRANTED FRESH
AND
RELIADLE TDR\Il* SEED,
of the following choice varieties :
Large^Purple Top liUTA BAG A,
Laing’s Improved do.,
Skirviog’s Liverpool do.,
Early White FLAT DUTCH,
Early Red Top FLAT,
Red Top STRAP-LEAF,
Large White GLOBE,
Large ENGLISH NORFOLK,
Yellow ABERDEEN,
•Yellow GLOBE,
Yellow STONr,
HANOVER or TANKARD. *
Merchants sup lied at LOW FIGURES.
PLUMB & UISIT Si 13 U,
Augusta, Ga.
jy.l— fritul2.twG
TO MILL OWNERS.
Mill stones,
BOLTING CLOTH.
SM UT MACHINES,
and all kinds of Mill Findings, for sale at
the lowest cash price by
WM. BRENNER,
107 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia.
mars—wly
IMPROVED CHURN DASH
SAVKS KOUK-f IFTIIS OF TEE LABOB 1 s
CIIUKMNO!
r rHIS IS ONE OF THE CHEAPEST
.5. and heat. OH URN DASHERS ever invented. It, is
pimple An con struct ion and makes eooi but.ter m <> \ v
FIFTH of the time of the old-la-hioned D.SSer. Its sim
plictty, cireapnei-8 aud durahility recommttnd it to every
family. K-tail price #1 each. County RighU for sale, and
those purchasing supplied at low raf ts*.
For sale by JON E.3. SM\ IH E Ar. (JO .
" vl3—dik m A ■un-fn
NOTICE is hereby given tliat I will pros
ecule to the full extent of the law
any or all persons who-may hire or em
ploy tlie following named persons, all
colored, viz:
John P ,jie, about six feet two or three
inches high, of slender build, about 18'
years of age; Green Wiggins, about five
feet eleven inches high, about 22 or 2'J
years of ago. has a slight impediment in
his speech; Jim Gibson, a low, black fel
low ; [Jonry Conley, about five feet eleven
inches high, light colored, bas a large
nose. They have been employed by me
under written contract to serve for tlie
year 1869, and liaveleft my employment?
without provocation.
JOHN R. BYNE.
Burke County, Ga., June Bth, 1869.
jel2—wlm
Western Military Academy,
13. KIRBY SMITH, Superintendent.
THE next regular session of this Acad
emy begins on Ist September, 1869.
All extra session will be held during the
Summer vacation. For further informa
tion address E. KIRBY SMITH,
je9—w3m New Caatle, Henry Co.,Ky.
LOOK AT THIS!
ViriLL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST
VV TUESDAY' in AUGUST, before the
Court house dooriu Warreuton, the i-and
of C. A. Tucker, deceased, for distribution
among the legatees.
It contains three hundred and fifteen
acres, more or less, aud will be sold in two
lots, to suit purchasers of small means,
there being a dwelling house on cacti lot.
Titles is to be made when the money is
paid. Indulgence will be given until
Christmas if desired.
R. E. McGINTY,
jon24—dl&wtd Executor.
S2O REWARD.
I
STRAYED FROM THE SUBSCRIB
ER’S plantation, nine miles South of
Sparta, on the 7th instant, TWO DARK
BAY MULES, one a horse Mule, branded
on the left rump with the letter “O;” the
other a mare mule, branded on the left
jaw with the letter “X.” Both tali, slim
Mules, in good work order, with some
harness marks.
The above reward * ill be paid for the
Mules or for information leading to their
recovery. . H. E. GARRET'!',
jun22—dliwlra Sparta, Ga.
Dr. J. P. H. BROWN, ’
IJentist.
JN» firond Street, next house above John
A 1 hos. A, Hones’ Hardware •■Store.
ARTIFICIAL TEETH IN-
Wfc3&jj»hSERTED with special regar
J I L-I-Jto life like expression, beauty*
comfort, usefulness and durability.
feb24—w6m*
COPPER STILLS.
I AM now prepared to manufacture COP
PER STILLS, BOILERS, KErTLES
aud Copper work generally. Sheet Copper
and Copper Stills constantly on hand at
low prices at C. A. ROBBE’S,
Concert Hail Place, rear 272 Broad St.
Repairing done atshort notice,
j un22—ddtwlffi
JEFFERSON COUNTY.
JEFFERSON COUNTY.
<- me tor an order to s-lUho ™, ‘TT 'j
These i*re to cite an « admJS«„ **l! and d ®7>“ e vd
aid Aop-arat ihe C nrt of t ? to
tN'ijrihousc in L' u'pv lirt f.,, ***'d 8t the
MONDAY In CO i OBEK °" i', be KIHST
cu. wny bam o.Uer alien'd VL'ni'e? ’* they
|u T T--».B W - 11 "ATKINS.
_ Ordinary.
( J.EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY
VX -Wlm s, W illiam T. J. vfesvrr eiecwir ,<
|A-1 WHI u, i ieatameirt of Jo'm W. IV
l>:i .lu n k .or an order to Mil th, re.i Tui fV
C 'lV \ ■ T *"*e •« o o»e and sdaioni.h ali reran , intcrert
ft 0 r '*■?* “»x. obVMd*;
\!|lvmv ,; v n lorn-rue ar wudocuntv.oQ theFIRST
MONDAY in Ot! I OB - It > e rt, to eiiow cause. If any iliev
can, wh> said erdr-rshould not be granted. * >
i u ,- _. W. H. WATKINS,
: DD —r»4m Ordinary.
( GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY"
i riAr •T A- 89 tr '- EH** A. Kobe < son applies Tome t r
lm !, ni^r^on ottbe aaLiL 1 of George W. Rjber-
These are, therefor-, , 0
i is ? a w WJtl sin ffU art he kiLdred aud creditors
th* first"mViVXi"^- au 1 1,1 niv r ®c* on or before
A'tv >h-.V Ao'GlJdTuvXt, to show cause, ii
Tli « rm^’.S h i^V and et er3sliOU ' d n,,r W
I VvV « - 1969 • W. H. WA I’KIN S,
/ 4. KORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY.
, -WOrercas Jobn R Bvne, anministr. tor on the e?-
Isle of O. 11. I . Byne, late of sail county, dtfc as c ap
\ Iks to tne lor leave to *eIJ the lands >i said recessed : ’
1 type are ni cite and acmnrdr. all person* lntereeled to
bo and appear a; t!>-> Com of Orel ia v to I e hod la and for
aaid county on the FIRST MONDAY IN AUOUST next,
to snow ciuro, u any they can, whv aai.l leave shoal' not
t o pointed, W. It. WATKINS.
n Ordinary J. C.
( GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY.
" I— »Vliereas .1 me- St-pletou. administrator on
the estate ot J unes M. Williams, 'a’e of said county, de- '
api lits to me tor Letters of u emission:
Ihestf are. therefore, t-» ere and a’monish ali and
singular, the kindred ad creditors o scii deceased
to beard at my office in the Cou-t Hou-e. in the
?£t» ,isVl L\ on nr before the. FIRST MONDAY IN
OCTOBER next, to show c i use, if any they cm, why said
letters should uot b.» g anted. W. H. \v ATKINS.
jell—wS n Ordinary J. C.
rj.EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY.
V J W iD-rtMP. Anth w J Williams. Administ-raior on
Hadden, dtceased, applies to me
for Letteis ot Diemistiou :
'! hese are therefore to cite and admonish al’ a id s'nfiular
the kind re . and cr ditors to be and aj.peir *t. my office on
or be ore the FIRST MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER next
to show cause, it any tney cau, why said leave should not*
be granted.
, . • W. H. WATK T NS,
A 4 ~ won Oidiim-y.
{ GEORGIA. J EFFERSON COUNtYT
: 1. • , h r reus , • Toh ; Jordan. Administrate of the estate of
ion^ 7 Jor4 “ l * droe * seU ' applies to me for Le tors of Dismis-
These are, therefore, to cite apd admonish, all and sin
gular, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be
and appear at my office, at -he Court H-ms , iu the town
smpu£L“ n b ‘f' ,re the riRST MONDAY iu
f,, B ' to , sllo ' v if any they can, .why
J said Lette s should not be granted
‘ ' V H U ' AT^y.
I /o V y, E „ TO , SELL.—GEORGIA,
‘ A'V 1 Nl’ Y.— r wu months alter
‘ T,ui:, "o she Honrrab'e the Cmrt
inn il i i' ot&aldcou»t» tor 1 ave to s«ii ihe undivided
teaseif 6 ° n * ir<? tU ,LU eßt ' ile of Jollu F. Mathews, de-
May 20,15C9. ALBINA E. MATHEWS.
may22—-vv2oF efU * nX °* *** al bcws, deceased.
( VEORCHA,'JEFFERSON COUNTY.
- e** vir \ M “,°iL u, ‘ or <ler from Mi * Honorable theOou't
01 urmn nv ot Jefferson c un v. will be solo at the Market
DAVixiVf" L^ v, » 1(1 . OH the FIRST TUEB
- 'b L\ » ext. all the .amis belonging to the »s ate
o. 1 honii.b u. i stow, deceased, for the benefit of the foirs
and creditor.- of said deceased.
r , JOSEPH H. POSTON,
mjj—wtd A‘ministxator.
CV-EORGIA. JEFFERSON COUNTY;
W_he-.e 1?, Sam A Denty, **xecutor of tne ]a,t
win ana testament ot 11 J. Brown, deceased, apM JSto u.e
tor lette.a oldismissidn.
Thistf a e therefore to cite, summon and rdn.onlsh all
and a 1 g ilar, the I indred and creditors, to be and a. pear
bt my office, -1 the C -uri House, in the fowc of Lou.vllle
on or before >h * FIRST MONDAY In NOVEMBER ne t
to slow cuise, if any they can, why add Lwpth should
not tenanted. W.H. WaTKINS,
ap!4—abm Umin’.ry.
.f GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY,
Whereas, Will..- A. Wilki p, Adminihtratir cf the
estate ot B-rrnah S Carswell, deceased, applies to me for
Letters u Dismission.
Iheeca e. therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular
the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear
at my office, within the time prescribed by law to show
cause, it any they have, wny letters of dismissory from said
esiate should mt be granted.
, , , . ’ W. H. WATKINS,
feb2B—w6m Ordinary.
rs -EOKUIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY'.
V.A Whereas, William O. Lyon, Administrator on the
«st»te ot Nicy (Jovicg:.on, deceased, applies to in * for Let
ters of Dismission.
\ , These are, therefore, to c’te and admonish, all and Fiugu
lar, the kindn-d and c edtora of said deceased to 1-e and ap
pear ;.t. my office in the town of Louisville, within the time
prescrib a by law, and show cause, if any they have, why
sad Letters should not be grant and.
„ „ W. H. WATKINS,
feblU -6m ordinary.
, /GEORGIA, JEFUEIiJSOM COUojL
“ 3 Whereas. James W. Carswell Executor of Lavina
: Carjweil.deceised. applies to me fir L'ittirs of Dismission.
, xhete ar , theres.) e, tociteund ar*monish, ail and hlngu
-1 r. the kindred and e»ed torso! -aid deceased to he and ap
near at. my office, iu the town nt uisvilie within the time
prescribed by law. 10 show cause, if any they Lave, why said
Letters should not be gianted.
W. H. WATKINS,
1 feblO—6ol Ordinal v.
TALIAFERRO COUNTY.
f ■iEURGIa' TALIAFERRO COUA-
V A 1 V .—Liitvton B. Tailor, Admim-irator de bn-ie
non ot Jc ho VV. Evans, laie of sai<l county, deceased, hav
ii g e;iii ‘Ltd ter leave t" s 11 the land of sad deceas-d,
/ill pei Sons concerned will appear at the Court ol On'i a-v
of > aid county on the FIRST MON DAY' IN AUGUST
'r' n'el aUHI ’ * aUy * lVB ’ * ,ie shall
This Juu the 1811-,1869.
. „ J. D. HAMMACK,
Junag— yri n Ordi ary.
/''J.EORGI'"", TM.IAFERRO CO UN
TV —Rob-ti t. E :«e»no Ittac C. Kent, Adml-ds
traiorsuf James Ed*ie,l -.te of mid county. decei=ed. lu/
mg petitioneil lor leave to sell the real estate of said de
co 180(1.
All |o s in c« n'enied.w 1 appear at the Court of Ord 1 -
narv rfsmd oouusy on tie FIRST MONDAY IN AU
«9L 81 next, ;o slow cause, if any they have, why the same
shah not, be granted.
'lhis Jane the 18 h, IB6J.
. J. D. HAMMACK,
lUP23 ordinary.
jfGEORGIA, TALIAFERRO GOUN
—Jaeon Ki.fker, Adnuuietrat r. with t)>e will
uiii.txed ot George W. Griim lat- if said to inty, • i ceased.
Laving petit oneu f*r:eayetu tell the real estate of said
deceased.
All persons ccucerne l will epneara* t*>e Court of
r- a r7rn rBa,dCO ,ty 0,1 U ' e F ‘ KS l ' MONDAY IN AU-
G ui* 1 next, r,o snow cause, if any they have, why the tame
mill not. t>e granted.
This June me ljth. 18C9.
, no 0 J. D. HAMMACK,
juu23_~w2m ordinary.
( "J.EORG lA, TALIAFERRO COUN-
V J 1 V - ; -| I. II■:<«i A. N ,all an.l Wm. T. Comb., Akiute
isituto*s ■ 1 J t.» Uii't r • (.mbs. lhte'i 1 riuld county, decerned,
having petitioned'for leave io sell the Itnd ot said dece ts<-d.
A)x person* conc rnidw.il appear at the Court of Ordi
nary of vanl (kiunty on the. FIRST MONDAY UN a II
GUM next, to show ciu?e, if any they tiav,-. v hytiie sumu‘
sh-i 1 l« t t'O granted.
. Tha June iheidtli, 1569
. „ • J.D r . HAMVACK.
iun2o w2m Ordinary.
t i EORGIA TALIAFERRO COUN
VJ I Y.—O-orge F. bris on, AdminDtrator t f Wil y
K’nidea 1 t'e of sa’d cou ty, deceased, hiving petl 1071 and for
leLV.t io tel. :i je r on ot t .e re I esrite o* sal 1 deceased,
All nertons eo-ic-rued w and ap >e r at th * Court of Ordi
p.rr otsadroumy on the HKSP MONDAY 'N AU
OUS F 11 xt,t> ii
thail not be gran' and.
Tate June the 18th, 13C9
J. D. HAMMACK.
Jup23 -w2m Ordi. ary.
U.EORGIA, TALIAFERRO LOUN
VJ T Y.-Wh* ; re't«, L Jbu'- Acrceapplies to me forrtr
maiient Letters of Adm u.Dir tioii on the eßute of Susan
cee, lue or s.id comity, decuased:
Tn sis ihereiore, tocVte all jer o s (oncernedto be and
appear a the Court <<f Ordinary o said county, on ti e Ist
MONDAY in July next, o Jiowc me. if any th ’.y h .ve,
why said Le ters shun tl no b - granted 10 S 'burn Acree.
Given uider my official rfanatur- ibis, the JiSt »’ay es
May, 1869. J. D. HaM waCK,
Ordinary.
M WH
/ 1 EURGfIA, 'J’ALIAFEKRO COUJN-
V M —Where, .s iaw ton Stewar, ol sai-l aunty, Ad
mmirttratur de bonis non, on tne Esta eof Owen S ew.ul
applie io me t r Letters of Dlso teslonfrom said trust*
This b there!* re to cte all persons c Deemed, to be and
appear at. the (jo-ut of Ordinary'of sqld county, lobe held
on the FIRST M iNDAY iu SEPTkMHKK n. xt. 10 snfcw
cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be
granted.
Given under my official signature, this the 6h dry of
May, J 869. J. D. HAMMACK.
rny 1 v,h Ordinary.
LINCOLN COUNTY.
U EOKGIA. LINCOLN COUNTY.—
! V-J William S, Tatom Laving applie.to the C urt of
■ Old na-A of said county fur discharge fiom his guardiaii
eb-p ot \\ ane 1 Hameslierger
, Tula is th refore, 10 eit * bll persons concerned to sh w
cau e by filing ob ectiorn* i 1 my offlej why said Willi nn S.
fatoiii 6mi and no-, beds 1 i«( and fro.u lis giaroltn hip of
VV a mn HL,.r.,e-i erge-ana r« ce ve ette'sof d'smi eiou.
j Given uuu rmy iuaid and official .ignature July f* h, 1369.
B. HVTAIOd.
l —w3 j\ Ordinary L C.
/GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY
V A Vv Le-eaT, John M. Sars. Ad min'stmt rof Tnoroas
Sea-Is, represents to the Cv.U'Tmhb pet, 1 ion, duly and
entered on record;thxt he has lu 1/ aCtmniate ed Tnomns
Saris estate.
This iu the' fore, to cite all j error s concerned, k'.ndrei
j • ndc editors, to s ow cause,i- any th v can, why said Ad
nii. istr to* snou and n>t bed scharged from hs huminyst. a
,Aoniran^.re7^J e e,tf ‘ rs of <: 'era sjim ou the fi'et. MON
DAY in NOVEMBER. lß‘-9
I Given sutler my hxnd and cffiiiM sgm’ure J '!y 7 th, 3868.
. B. F TaTuM.
]>ll—w3ci Or 1 nary L. C,
/GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.-
\ " s, Henry J. Lang, Administrator cle 60 nie
non, of William C. Robert*) 1 e-re ets W the U .urt in
► eti.t-hi, duly ni-d aLd n reco and, that he bas
fully a .minister and Wiih m C. Rob• nanus eiiat .
Tuis 16. u e f r*.L ; • iie ail pe.s ns eoucer:i**q, M.idred
and credit.') to show 0 use, it any ti.ev can, why saj Ad
miniaTKtor >i.o .ld nr tbe aiocba gei from his adnmigtra
tion and rec-ive le t re(f alemis ion on the fir.t MON-
Ija Y 11. NOVE A itLK. 1869.
Given vtiHer my hand and dßc'nl si«n tnn* Jdy 7 . 1869.
. ~ B. F TA IOM.
I'rD -wa ,- (j r j r . J.. I '.
4 ;i E(> RGI A. LIN COLN COUNTY. -
\ A A he* H , w.l itm D. Tut, Adm ui-tra or of Ki;h
bm r . t Mini kins, mpres it»t» h • Cot>r. in ius p tition.
dull II *• ! an«i cum re on r«c-»nl, li .. h i lias fully aiim'm
>t-re Ru riar.l t . l’unij k n ’ estate.
rmsi lb -ref re. 1 u*3 al p ;i>o is concerned, k'ndrxl
an 1 c: -d. nr.,, to show cause f *ny they cut, why g -Id a<l
- r,r -houl i noth <ii charged f uni h-s sdpdi Istra
tu,n H i receive ‘P-t.-q of hd.riin straliou ou t etir,t MON
DAY ; a NOV EMB EK, 186 9.
Gi /en under my han j and ulHc'ial. ignature July 7tb, 1869.
B. F. TATOM.
»yH—’ r 3m O dinary L C.
ATOTICE FOR LEAVE TO SELL
1» >1 LAND.—Application *HIM} made to the Court of
O.di .arv or L'ncoin county. Georgia, ar the fir.-»t regular
Urrn af. (T the expiration of f-ur weelbi from tins uo f ic-;, for
'leave to«e:nl the real estate to the ©rt te of
Haruy Levereii, late of said coiid y. dec med, :or the bene
fit of the heirs and crefitors of said deceased
WILLIAM D.TUTP*
Acm’r of Hardy i.everett.
July 8 b, 1869. Jy 11 _w4
GTATE OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN
►J/ GOI-N'l Y.—Not c* ih herebykiveu pernoDs Lav
-112 at ui tufa .ti.* inst Hardy L *vereu, late of said county,
dec-avtl, to present the-n to me, properly made out. with
in he time prescribed by law to a* o show their chi-acter
aodamouut. An I all perg )n-t indebted to sai l cecea-od
a r e a. r r -hy reo' ired t , make ninieiiafe. payment to me.
J ;!y 7th, 1869. VVTLKIA + D TUT
11—wG Adm’r of llirdy i.e>cre - .t.
/GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.-
\ A Jbn B. K-rnedy having applied to be appointed
Guardiaa of tne persons an p operty of Cora. Wat© 8 and
Jabez V. McfJonJ. n iaori under fourteen years of age, resi
tifen r ot Anid county:
Thfa is to c.te ail perar-ns coLcerned to he and app>a- at
the tenn of the Court of Oral a ry. to held next, after
the exp.ration of thirty days trom the first publication of
♦his notice, a;.a eh vr cause, if they can, vhy stiJ John li.
Keneuy should not be intrusted w.th the guardiansh pot
the persons * and property <( Cora, Waters ano JibezF.
McCord, rri'nojH Os
Witiieg; my hand «ud official stature this June 17Ji,
B. F. .ATOM,
j unite—ws Ordinary.
"VTOTICE FUR LEAVE TO SELL
1* LAND.—Application win be mad to tho Court .f
« ordinary or Line n, Countv, Georgia, at the first regular
term after the expira inn < f lour weeks fr »m this notice, for
le ;ve to sell the lands b lor-g r,g to the estate of Toom e J.
Murray. I «•(• < f «.-i eour.'y dtv; aeed, fir ihe t e-itfit of heirs
Jciit: 22 , mo. HENRY 11. RE'*S )M.
. _ . HENRY l. Ml, KRAY.
tui.JP—w4 Aonuufat rators.
CTATK OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN
kj COUNT) —Whereas Thomas a. Bar.gdale aud
Jam-nit. Wiiiis, Admhifstrators of Nicnolas G. Barlodde.
represents toths Ct urt In their petition, duly filed and eu
reivd ot that «nev have f ally ad nr ms ere • Nichj'w
G. D-r - -(.a e < «iare. 'J'hts ii«, therefore, to cite all per-on*
kindred and creditors, t * ibow cauA>, if >nv
they can. why naid a*tartriL-trators should not d ; rcharged
from admiufairation *-,-1 receive let'**r» of di.nils j
ontheUK'T MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, 38 9.
Ap i) 7, *B;9. B. F. TATOM.
aplO wfi.ii ddinary. L C.
PAUL, WELCH & BRAKDES,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
foreign fruits,
pOTA TOES, A PPL EH, ONIONS Nuts
1 Oranges Lemons, . Jackies, tinned
r ruxls and Vegetables t and all kinds
Produce.
215 fast bay (opposite new Custom
House) CHARLESTON. S. C.
mar2o—d3aw6m
WOOL-CARDING,
The undersignedtakes pleas-
ÜBl’i in informing the public tbat he
is now thoroughly prepared for Carding
Wool into rolls at short notice, and in a
manner satisfactory and on the most libe
ral terms. Address
. G. WATSON,
junlD— w2m Lexington. Ga. j
£fflal
burke county.
ADMINISTRATORS? sale. —IN
Burk-“""r 1 "' f the Ron. Ihy Ordhtry
nSltvcfS^ MV. ■VateofOe , )- K „.. r .„. in . | caV! «, atl |
realty or u, *->t it” of the late Ann* <; Whir had fs 1.
n pt V
the wid ,w'i c . ln ,i, t n< 0 .„ “ ,
countv, c«ntwnln,- 1 200 vre\ morn >r 1 V ,
other? 11 AtUW * 7 ' ph B jZ/;
° Taiins cx-h am! PnA.WtonjjferßW^*^
Jrta-ww A.m-r,
B-URKK SHERIFF SALE —VVILI
hours of .sale, on th« FIRST TUESDAY in AIM' U 5
next, the folio win i prone ty to-wit ; A L (.. Lh 1
♦« Un . e ■•’Vied on as p-opertv of Oec'ge PaMcrs
issued k Mlnrt the a hi P dfe, "! ,’
by 0 * lecl ,pd ~f Burwe cuty f.r the vear •of is
O’orw l-ltt-rjon to. A. Si M ire. T , • j ,?
of 186., and B. F.Dake, T. C. B. O. of 1 ; 68, 1- < .
li.y?-d
(GEORGIA. BURKE COUNTY*—
CUkrlcs S. Hughes i*p, iio- f, r e\ . ~
altj and- j",
wt'lpsjauponthe same at lOo’olccit a M '
Juy7—w2 ‘ ‘ <. T
TXURKE SHERIFF SAJ.!; -\vTTT
JL J besoid before the dor i* . , , ,
waynesbdro, »u ke courtv, vninn th** ■ wf 1 ''
tVEav * v "
Elevea hundred an'* five ftcresrfli-d ftP i
t.d iu Burke count*, 72ml Di-nk-t \t 111 ‘
the wafo’B of Rocky Creek, gem railv k‘. v s th, V ' ‘
pIaCA adjo'ut gland, of •state of H e 'l,'' 1
>srali Dasgh.Mrs. Sarah Fourth a<. , t-.er ‘ 1. 7' ' l *.r*
the property of Robert J. Mo-rison to saliMv’q ‘
sueti from Burke Snpe i.r in f. ,; r
SSSf r i tr i st ? e “ &c KttbertJ Mor Lo , pnnc ;‘V
J ohn A. B asier secu? 1 y
juy6—wtd *
DW^AU^^-t^MWItS
Je eni'ah lamu,deceased, lateo( Bu li ■u» tv ~ ,
quested td make immediatenam,cm 'Y. , ■
piands against sad e.t ifo, me r, q-iVsiel
duly at ested acoording to i.vw. 1 '
ALFRB 1) G. INM* N,
. , . . , , MARY a. INMAN,
j-•y3_w6 Admißtrat^:r »ndAdmiuisiratilxotdec -ißcd.
Debtors and creditors
NOTICE, GEORGIA. iIUKKE COiNFi “
persons indebted to the estate 01 oi-wi, M »tn\ ii -
sdd county, dc -eased. • re herein r. vjrt i ton ak > iin’m. ,1' ,•
payment, ami thostf holding clvm- ag in t - 4 a e-ate w
»n Account dtnclm m.i and. w.thta Uietlu.;
seabed by l*w to
■ . . YVIt.UAM L. IIDXTON,
j 'l; 6 -wC ,1 and , r .
IXURKE SHERIFF SALK—WILL
I* bo sold b*fo»e the C imt 11 ms • .*• in *h - ;
Waynesboro, Burke coun’v. on r» F.K< t* i 1 FSI» \ Y u
AliuLoT next, wiih!n ihe la v u. hours o:' r i ■ th : . low
fog Property, to wU
Tw > b!srk hors3 Mu’-'s, known 1 v f ■ < n r .j , ,
and Bill, levied on aa the »r» rv• f ! \ - 1 ,
8 tWv aji fa issued Ir >iii Burke Sa-. ■ t’j'rr. in i o •
of .1 hn H. t>nuth tw. A. No 1 s ,ro, etx t
defetKi.cf, ( joIIN ! . SMITH.
jyl—wtd D.-| u y Mia,lll' B. O.
fWRGU, BURKE, COUNTY.
7cT W k K A V rH "AV
iihTn under luy lixud u „ l. tu u . , ~.
190 W.-« a
"VTOTICE.—ON THE FIRf f MON-
A> DAY In AUGUST, Is '.I. up TcV ■ . \vi li.
un of O | ary n Bunu jl.uuiv ~.,.'1
a public ou.-crv, th- I . n .l amt ,t ■ .-.ma | J
to Once re of Wm. Joeee ...
,»W coun-y of Bu-k ■•, .1 f or |,. uv , , s , „ ! ' A". 1
saM l*a.ie b-l-owio* utke m , „• >•'*"
June2*. 1869 KO'ISRT A. IMWi.AXI).
Admirutrator \\ tn. J.>u.>4 Liw >
jyl_w4
UliiriTcoUNTyTL
Whoreee. Gilbert AYV rMI, Execi",.- <,r .!, , u
ate of said county, decease*!, applies U- me-< il, ; . r , i '
mirsory Iron- said estate,
Theee are, tlierefure, to cite and odnmii.: a!
tercet-d to by and. anueur. . y .-| •. „„ f
FIKST MONDAY inO TUB CRu ■xt.iam.Vrtl.wJ y.”
ts auj they cau, why raid tuners rhould not 1,0 yrame 1 1
l«h V is,-o n dermv han '' 4nJ " llic;il "fiatu-e tblV June
13t Vuitw.1n _ W*Tr.:
(GEORGIA—BURKE COUNTY^
VJ-, YVCereae, Hi bolt A Stewart, Jlea i» r 1,, ij •.
« .ro.anoh-p of the pyr-ona ml | nu>. rl.y' of Joyw,,.
MiSin and ClmrltM Srewirt, minor ihildren «,t \
Stewart, live of Burke ecu- ty, •!•■ . n ed • ’ 1,1 ‘ 1
1 hese are, therefore to cite and adm-mVi all nersw.s i.
t erected. to l»e and appear at uiv office n or h. fr . m
FIRST MONDAY in oUGI>T next *<» g j. 0 Jau' • u
theycau. why eai.l Let-eis slemld not be xrai te ' >
Given under my baud and official signature t"Lm,..,
Wuynesh< ro, this June 12tb, 186 l». ’ ° 111
jel3— wj Onliaary Bu&eCouitty.
CL EOBGIA, BTptKB COUNTY
J « Whereas, Penjsnrm Buxton, Admini fratrr ot ,M ,
Win b?rly, deceased, applies t. n.e In i. aw t., n ,
the Real Estate of said i e used. C *° bt ft, ‘
These are. therefi re, to cite and admonhh all ner<qn- .
tereated to be and appear a» my « flit-.. ... »‘.■
FIRST MONDAY IN AUGUs P n x ; to s ! JciZl
anv they esn, whv said let erasmUd nit'be^ium!
ol°lSS W «'“ rtaU<l and ' liii Sll, Jay
ol Jure, IS 9. E. E. LAWS, in
w ' ;m Drdirory.
A DMINISTRATOR’S SALE —WILL
tx. 1» rota OB ItoKIRhXTITESI.AV • . AIKiUsT v
Virtue of .Ii Order irom 111 • C u-of O-dinarv'. t I’ Vi
counts, a'l the raal rr pur y b-n.uvin' t . t ,
Joseph Griffin, late of Bike cou-i \ <i*-cet-t* i con i 'in>
one hundred and twentv-r ur ajr. sos laud 'more or Jess
ivng oiiNbvaunah K v rn.sn.l countv, i, ,„*■*. i v l)r tj. . :
Navan-iah River. South ui-d S u‘beast t vvm \ 11 . i. ir
eon. West by Mrs. Itob i neon aid otlio-s LPdkn w..-L
Griffin’s Landing, apa ’ oMb -sa-i;- :,e= - •. . ~ i
a i ine \e.-i s’ lease fi. favor of , f ,-. r Lt, •* r ‘ u , '
St .re House on said tract of In t, v.i,iur Mm . nui»d.vd\-i-‘,i ■
ot Gr.ffin’s Landing on aid »• v r.'eoi-si-t'mr of one’ten- i »o?e
‘•r less. Possession not t>b■gi ■< nos s.«i.* ur • ■ Li’s ~r -
House until t e e'pua'iou ot sid tone p j*, j
«*»®o' n Cay ufsU«. 0.30.'w..;«!»11\
A.u. 'r I . .■ .
}eß-wtd Aumr jus. pu Grinin.
1 2J.KORGIA. fiURKB COUNTY
Jl K».r«t lli.yn.on, Eie u-..r or An,;, i» n
Prescott, deceased appiie., to me for Potter. D a.u^otv
Irom said deceased s estate.
These ate. thereto)e, o cite and admonish all p win in -
tcreste-l to b. -nd apeear ct „ v office . i, .i .
nit.T Monday in sepik.uuki. t . 'i,
“nsc. if any the, c.n, v.uy said L it. r .j.uuld i.ot
Given under mv hand -d ••fficiil s •: a » ~r
Waynesboro, this Maj 3, 1869.
~,c ..c E. F. LAWSON,
m)C-w6m OrMnary.
(GEORGIA, BURKE COUNTY.
\ f JVbrrea., Wilson J. VVimbi rv, Aduii-..-tmfor r .!■:
sepliM. Mathet»,deceag< and. applies to me tor I, it lii ...»
sorv from said de -eriwed’g estalc.
These are, therefore, to cit.t .id mlmonirh all rer- 1 - it.
MOW? I v b t / DD P, ‘ Ar ilt my offiiu on or before ill© Fills !
MONDAY IN *-CI OBERnc-xt, to.show ram.-, if a; v,1,.-
can, why add litters should not be gr ntt and.
Given under my h-nd ami offic xl .-guatlire at offlt.
Waynesboro. March 22d. 1F.69.
marJi—wCin pl K. LAWSON. Gnliiiarv.
( 2J.EHROIA, i.URKE COUNTY
.V*., yvliere.w. Mis. M.»«u U-ley. Administratrix of VVO
hani UUev. dPCj.f.d.apjditM lor iy hu Diuij |, U .„
said > estate.
tor. ’J 16 , Uier * j‘ re - 1 a ''' l admonish all persons bi
fercsted to b. j and appear *t my office ~u or b< f n- in
FIHBT MONDAY IN OCTOBER. 1H69, tosI?ow D Jiu-e
any they can, why said l»: te.v m, u:«l ~ot be gn.nt.ed. ’ '
rf G ii Ven . U,^ r lliy faari Ja * official • ign t U re tt q * ;i ( . a
of M arch. 1869. 1 m iaw-hv
mar 23 6m ' oriiUiii y J • <
OGLETMOKPE CPU M .
TKAVK TO SELL—GEORGIA.
WLti liU it It CuUXTY.-t'wr, ,n inlfiß afier d»tc
wi cation w Ii b ■ m-tdc r 1 1 • v- tu r, II tne lan 1» )« 1 iu s i„ e
t« tlwaUtcot tVI! un, b. H.-tOX, late ol Mia corny
deceit?! and. Ivin in tio..e 1 on. Dl.tn '.Oi trd on,inly.
J 'tty Ct... liwj. ’
EURSNE M. MVTroX.
iuyi) —aim Ounroia'i.
( GEORGIA, OGLETHORPE COUN
—Two mo-iths after d.t pleat ion will i».*
mad» forteayeb,. mi the Uiffis b-lomr t„ ti,» cit u. ~,
Jobii A . .Jlenn, Cec.il , Dini- Ini, !',v k Di,tii, :
raid county.
GKO. W.WJIITEIIFADJ
Executor ot Wrn. W. Fy.reti re . Eiecub r
. , m ASA J. HOW All . )
juy9—vUiu
( VgLETHcTrPE iSHER! I-'F'S HALE.
(«kT7 «‘H m ‘"'A *c Ul " r I K-' l ' *' liH-A. ... AI
GUST i ext beiore the Court II >u.e floor, iu Uu- town <-t
LexiugUn , Oglethorpe county, wiiJuu the h g u hours of
sale, th following pr peny, t. -wit: a tract .H' l.nd c. t
talmng six hunure t and s:xiy-«eve .in' o* >f -qu it- -a- re- in
mid county.a- joiningU n «lsof Jonatrim B.i , Wi: fa" Wil
lingham and Rich rd Hots. L-vcio :<g the \, ■ i.- tv < f
James M. Hoff b, virtue of four ti jag. fagu dtr i,n tin-
Svpclor < ! urt M n.-l con.itv-.ii.- l. laver <i 1-1 •at
Moor vs. James M, Hoff. Riming J Smith ex’/, ed Wrn
strony, <icce*M) I. |» June M. H' ff. T. k. .1 1 W.
Tiller ve. Janes M. Hoc. oatiiamie Ifozemac vs. .lame,
M. Halt and Gecrye WV By).on.
Lex ngton, July J, 18)9.
tl J. F. LTN.NT VGH \M,
•Y'-— w ‘ ,, l Depu’y Sue*iff.
/GEORGIA. OGLETHORPE COUN
IT TV. -Two., oil),».(ter tie and 18 <•’ Dr, not.c, a
- will be made to the Or lif.ary ot Oglotn !,,<• countv
for leive to sell all the real (slate belong nv to the < -tat.- of
William VV r . Everett, fate or deceased.
July 1. 1869. GE )R JE W WHITEHEAD,
_ jy3—w2m Execute of Wm. VV'. Everett, tie'eased.
Lei ters of dism issi on .
GEORGIA, OOLETbO '.P • -OUNTy - Richel
e t nut David A.Birie.,- , Admi.r t. mo , ~!* “'
tateofA e’ M. Birne t. dec-r-s *-1, Ineo.’Hiid . ,-v :i p ~v
tome tor Lvtter.. o'D s iiias ou from .*.,d Atm u Hr it ,
■l-hMe are, tlii r-fjie, t i cue, « ii„ in, :.i,.i ...l uonUh a.i
P 'rot g red to ti* and anp -ar H r. y «.ffi e i • lira.
MONDAY IN OJTOBELt, H‘9, arm tb ri ,-b n- t. .
sbowcau«e, if any u .v*-, wuy «*id ol ]),-!ii
sion sho'fla I". i.« ntM.
Lexington, Gs.,
. , r I .ROBFSKrN,
jjq26—w3 n ur llir , o.G
GEORGIA* OGLETIVoiIFJJ COUN
VX TY —Liollv D. Fleeui J . Amm ... • ,o’ .1 ,rn.-
L. FleeruKi and head of aI. uly u u, m , , r <
piled for exemption of p r<i at {J
and Valuator) of Kmestead. 11-i f | r, .
ssm* h: U) o’lock A. -A , o< t fE\ -J [ DAY </F‘
JULY, 1869, a my office. 1
un27— w 2 *’ ’ o V-ary C.
/GEORGIA, OG LET HR* IP,; UOIN
\ J »Tk.—Al*FLlO a i iON FOR Di>Mii> IO . AH
GUARDIAN VViit-reSs, Wi li iio A'. Have r-r.it Adnun
.stra’or upon the estate - Gnarus VV i»;iv» n o.t. ■ ed.--.i,
late of said cocmy applies to nit f r LeUera of i. ! i na e.on
from ra'd Adn-ioi t'a i . .
Tne e are ihereiore t > i e and ndm ■* i li ai i- r
edud to be and •-'pit.-H- mv iti >• l r i-'ijs- i
MONDAY IN SErTFMBER, Ik* .pD n < un, "ai y
they i ave, why -a and Later- m... In ,t granua.
Lexington, Oa., Jane 19. *■■, i8«;9.
t . J. i.OBINSuv,
jun22—w3rn
Administrators halel
OEOIUHA, OGLETHORPE < OI'NTY.-Wi l b
sold before tbs Court Hou-e doer, m th » .wp of n
on the FIRST TUESDAY 1 % A UOl ‘'l i ext. by Jea/e ...
the Honor-bie the Court of Ordinary < : -■ id county, thirty
acres of land, nn-r or le.-r', lying and b ir. - m haid coout.
«,u the wat-niol Grove Creek, a jjoinii g 1 mds of Wrn Vv ’
Bish, Abel E>erb%rt and other*. No •** the proper, yof
,u- estate of John Dav.s, late r.f said co-irty. dc *• i
ud** 7th, 1869. TOLIVER B. GOOLSBY,
j 9—"6 _ _ _ Admin is itcor.
jn EORUIA, OGLETHORPE COU N
(I—»- N KJK J.ETTEH-S of l,l>
MISSION — Vi.m Barrow applies to me lor letters ot and r
mission as administrator upon- the estate of Eiiz-ibe fir.
Kobo, deceased, 1 te of sain c .uniy :
'These ure. therefore, togte amt admonish all
teres*e<l to oe and a- nee*- at. rnv > ffi-je on or bp fo-** ti
Fib NT MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER nei' toshowVa.re
fan/ they have, why said letters of dismiaaiou should no.
be granted.
» , . /t , FJ. ROBINSON.
Ga., J one Bth, 1809. . ;rdmar> u. C.
j elu—w3m
/JJ.EORGIA, OGLETHORPE COUN
TION T )li LLTTERS ‘ F )I«
BiHSlON—Whereat', Whits n G. Job's Adiumfa* ■*
of the estate of R< b-rt l.terhart. deceav.l, a .- ... ,
wunty, applies f r Let tea r,j Jh.-misMon trom sdu Ad
ministration :
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all n rv, H
teres*ed to l*e and nr-oear at *• v office on the l- IR> i j , i„.
DAY IN ftBPTEMBEK, u> ttow cause if a. t , •
oave, why Mid Le tens ol immlssion shou.u not’ be u- anted
June Ist, IW, h u *
• , _ F. J. ROBINSON,
■^~ w3m ordinary O C.
(GEORGIA, OGLETHORPE' COUN
bo^wi; 1, the wn i, „, j „» .v;,.;,..*,"’"::
mission f oni .-ad Aim.. ~ . 0 l>.t-r-u. D.*-
Tbesc are, the e'ore. t , • . .
fere-ted t* l»e and appe-r v ~,v ~ ~ , •;
FIRST MONDA Y
they have, why said Letters -f inrun uoula no U,
granted.
Leiiu<ton. 0»„ Mmv 141 b. is Os
F. .7. ROBINSON.
may—»3m ' Ordnary.
( JJ.EORGIA, O'GLETHORPE COUN
\ J TY—APPLICATION KO < LETTERS OF DIS
MISSi:ON.—Agv.J. H ;v, ru, Execu'cr upon >l e ert oW- <,f
William Glenn, Senr.. <***» aa, fcpp.i st„ me lor Letteis
of Dfariiifr'ioii Irotu siid E»ecn.or.-u r*:
Thfgjare,therefore. t-<cite-*:, i a .ii.. ..s', al • w «icter
I'ted, to t»e ard appear b t mv t-ffic?, om or before tht
FlßfcT MONDAY in fjEFI’EMBSK ■ ex».ia ' Gi >v •
it any taey have why said Laiu*;co4jt Dismission Haouid not
be grantee.
Given under my ba-id aud officia’s at Lexington,
April 20th, 1809
F. J. ROBINSON,
hD'22—w*?m Ordinal v.
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
TtoijCMbia sheriffs sale.—
1/ V-Mllmt sold Before the r Mou < . :o. j
(jZ uul/i* county, on the KIRST TUESDAY in sKuTKM |
HER next.be.weinlhe }«*»’ hours of sale, t w • Lu:», with#
hd rovem*Hit/« in ••aid T j;j u s \- K oni . , L ~.t
known as the li ck Jone* or Tan Var.l L >t. conta ntnY out*
acre, more r lets ; the otlur fen -wn as t e Ga‘e Jon 4
hot, co ta'nlce ten acre s , m >r«- i»-s , arijoiiiiajf lands ■ t
Mrs. Francis Bailey. Sanmel W. Bailey ana other*. Lv j
on aa the nrooenv of N. E. Bti.e/. t> sili-r one rnor*
/L/a . issued from Cilum ia S iimrinr Court at u#
iriaumceof Btrnuel W. Bliley vs. slid X. E. Bflsv.. Pro#
ertvpointed.oQtariide- cr.hed in ttoidjl.j'i June
1369. B. IVEY. Sheri». f
jyi—wtd j
Four months afier date a L
PLICATION will be made to the Honcrahle CJt '
oi Ordinary of Col u r, Lift count/. lr leave to seii the id
eatate of G. W. Martin, late of said c«uutv.
May 24111,1869. W. A. MARTIN;
Admin hjtraf,
»ay2ft-w2m T