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About Weekly chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Ga.) 1866-1877 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1869)
Chronicle & Sentinel WKOKESDAT MORSIS6. AIGCSTIB. AGRICULTURAL. Mr. Dickson on Immigration. Editort Chronicle & Sentinel: In the August number of the Southern Cultivator , Mr. David Dickson, of Han cock, publishes his views on Immigra tion, and places this now great question in anew light. He is one of the few who are utterly opposed to the schemes of im migration which now agitate the public, and as an eminently practical and thought ful man, his judgment is entitled to high consideration. Some of the propositions he lays down are rather startling to one who has heretofore considered one side of the question only, especially that one in which the scarcity of labor, no much de plored by the planting community, is claimed to have resulted advantageously rather than otherwise to their interests. But this and other equally strong sugges tions are well sustained by facts and argu ments in his letter. Certainly if any man will carefully and candidly follow out, in his own mind, the train of thought upon this subject so clearly indicated by Mr. Dickson, he will conclude there is quite as much to be said against the importa tion of labor to the cotton fields as for it. If the scarcity of labor would induce una nimity among planters in regard to the proportion or area of their several crops, aud lead them all to a common purpose, of producing only so much cotton a3 an ag gregate crop, as would command a certain remunerative price, then certainly the present labor of the country would reap a maximum value in the way of wages and profits to the planter. Mr. Dickson indi cates distinctly that the policy of planting abundant corn and grain crops is wise, not alone because it saves the buying of pro visions from abroad, but also because the area in cotton is thus reduced to a reason able limit on each farm, and the lesser quantity brings the better price. Taking the usual average crop of one bale of cotton to three acres, eighteen acres in cotton to each hand will make less money to the laborer, and less profits to the planter than twelve acres, because the eighteen acres all around would make an aggrega’c crop of say 3,000,000 bales, which would bring not above fifteen cents, and the ten acre system would produce say 2,000,000 bales, worth twenty-five or thirty cents. At these figures there would be a loss on each laborer of ten to fifteen per cent, in money, beside the additional corn and grain he might have had from the six acres. When the right system of agriculture, closely pursued, pays to the land-holder the large profits that he now gets as an av erage from every acre he owns, taking cultivated and uncultivated land together, it is hard to see why he should itch to change his investments, and introduce new settlers around him to compete with the natives of the land in every calling they pursue. There is not more land in the State of Georgia than is profitable to Georgians— not an acre. Nor is there a water-power in the State that Georgians may not bet ter own and improve and enjoy than to in duce Northern capital to come down and fatten upon and overshadow us. We have children growing up, and they will be our new settlers, if we leave room for them, and they our men of enterprise and capi tal if we do not barter away their inheri tance and their privileges- Mr. Dickson claims that the negro race is not decreas ing, as some suppose, and that the next census will show a large increase. How ever that may be, there will be negroes by the hundred thousand in Georgia for many years. They will form a large pro portion of our population so long as we aud our children livo. We cannot lgnoro them, and we must provide employment ’ and means of living for them. If we do not they will prey upon us forever. While they will never make model citizens, they will never become insufferable, as a race, while labor will earn them a living. They will prosper most, aud those who hire them will do likewise, while labor is scarce aud in demand. A Legislature, notoriously the weakest that over sat in Georgia, has burr "and the State into expensive schemes for introduc ing foreign settlers and laborers, and the taxes paid by those who will be most in jured by its success gocß in due proportion to aid the enterprise. If the public will consider this matter, as its importance de mands, and the vox populi can be heard and respected, we may be saved tho ig nominy of paying for the injury of our highest interests. No one objects to vol untary immigration hero. All who come ot their own motion to settle and live among us, are welcomed in proportion to their morits. But we don't care to pay any one’s expenses. Christopher. Bread,K cat and Fodder. Cokesbury, S. C„ July 20, 1869. I). Wyatt Aiken sends the following to the Charleston News. The recent publication in the News of much that interests the plauter, induces me to ask the insertion in your columns of an article more appropriately designed for an agricultural journal. a largo pro portion of your readers are planters, I suggest for their consideration the follow ing inquiry: Does corn planting on up land in South Carotins, or throughout the South (1 mean the cotton belt of the South), remunerate the planter? A negative reply comes this year from all quarters, and the same will be the case two years in three. The twenty-acre field of upland, that will produce this year ten bushels per acre, will be the exception; one-third of this goes to the freedmen, and the remaining two-thirds will be consumed by wear aud tear, blacksmith's biils, inter est, insurance, taxes, and the mule. The planter’s profit will be nothing. Then why do planters persist in cultivating so ex haustive and still so unremunerative a crop? 1 can assign no other reason than the one assigned by the boy who was asked, why he went to mill with a bushel of meal in one end of the bag and a. rock in the other! He replied, he did it because daddy did it. Advisiug against growing upland corn ,1 am not an advocate lor the cultivation of cotton to the exclusion of lorage and pro vision crops. Not at all. Corn should be grown more or less on all plantations, but solely upon such lands as will pay best in corn. In my judgment there is not labor enough in the South to glut the market, were every acre of cultivated land planted in cotton. But it would be ruinous in more ways than one to pursue such a poli cy; breadstufl's would be greately enohaneed, and provender would become an expensive necessity. The quantity of corn, however, consumed by man is but an item in the products of the tarm. It is the stock that arc the costly consumers, and the object of this article is to suggest a method by which stock can be more economically fed, labor more advantageously employed, plantations improved, and, withal, no corn cultivated upon uplands. Any field capable of producing ten bushels of corn per acre, will yield the same number of bushels of rye; and one bushel of rye, ground into meal and made into a “mash" with cut rye straw, will feed a horse or mule one-fourth longer time than a bushel of corn. The same field sown in red oats, any time between the Ist of October and the Ist of April, will produce threshed oats enough (the straw being salted and fed as fodder) to feed a number of animals one half longer than the corn and fodder from the same field. Any piece of land having an admixture of day in its soil, sown in wheat in Novem ber, aud top-dressed with ten dollars’ worth of commercial manures per acre, any time betweeu the Ist of February and the Ist of April following, will yield wheat enough to pay for the manures, bread the tamily. and buy the corn the land would have produced. Any field manured at seeding-time with ten dollars’ worth per acre of commercial manures, and sown in barley, and again top-dressed as suggested above for wheat, wul produce grain enough to pay for the manures, and buy twice as much corn as the land would have produced without manure. Any laborer that can cultivate six acres of cotton and six of corn, can just as easily eultlvate teu acres of cotton and eight acres of either of the cereals. These assertions are not made at random they are the result of my own experience And if these facts be true, each plamer has but to calculate for himself the differ ence in cost of seeding and harvesting a small grain crop, and of cultivating a corn crop. I may be met with the remark that wheat and barley are too costly to be fed to work auimals.. I reply, if they are worth double in market what corn is, and I can grow a bushel of either cheaper thau I can a bushel of corn, they are less expensive feed for my stock than corn would be. If their marketable value would be greatly reduced by being more extensively sown then we would only be the happier people, because breadstuffs would be cheaper. lor al* small grain crops the land should be thoroughly prepared as soon after the Ist October as practicable, aud the grain, brushed or harrowed in, no t plowed in. and the land rolled. Harvesting sh. u’d, it possible, be dons with a reaper, not with a cradle. The best cradler wll, inaluxuri- Int small grain crop, in spite of himself, lose from three to fiive bushels pe acr . If the land is properly prepared, the reajier aves it all. Were a more extended area of thoroughly prepared laud upon all of our cotton plan ta li ins sown in that small grain best adapted to the respective plantations, we oould live more independently, raise more stock, set o-r own price upon cotton, and not be so solicitous about labor. An intelligent la borer, accustomed to improved machinery, can cultivate more land, and harvest more grain than any half-dozen men wl o use the uncouth implement l ! of slavery times. As a p'anjcr, i feel that the great want of the agricu tural interests of our State is the introduction of that class of skilled laborers, who, bringing their improved implements with them, will become land proprietors, rather than the immigration of hordes of illiterate foreigners, who would soon be come as demoralized and uncontrollable as our existing labor. Very respectfully, D. Wyatt Aiken. Immigration. Editori Chronicle & Sentinel: I see, from the perusal of your paper, that the subject of immigration is engaging the minds and attracting the attention of the people of our State. A few plain facts, with a little common sense and reflection, is all that "is necessary to solve our interest in this all-important subject, and these are ingredients that I feel thankful our people are blessed with. Ifyonwillgo into the country among the farmers and planters —who are the foundation, the pillars and the prop of the balance of the world, and without them it could not exist—you will not find one in fifty in favor of Northern immigration, of capital or labor, nor will you find one in one thousand that is a member of an immigration society. If this capital or labor comes here it is with the avowed purpose of making cotton— King Cotton—or manufacturing the same, or its promotion or culture in some shape or form. It is, if you will allow the ex pression, the Morns Multicaulus of the whole world, either in its production, its consumption or in being the basis of labor in this and other countries. Can our peo ple be made to see, to feel, to realize and to exercise their power and independence ? If we will only use our means, facilities and privileges, with all the troubles and trials we have to contend with, it is in our power (I mean the people of the once so called Confederate States) to be the most prosperous and independent people the sun ever shone upon. What obligation in rhe way of bestowing favors arc we under to any power or gov ernment on earth? When wc withdrew front the North on account of unjust treat ment, we only asked to he let alone; but the North pounced down upon us with their nu merical strength, and butchered, burned, robbed and trod usdown, and are now hold ing usundera rodofiron. All other powers stood and looked on, not denying the truth and the right of our position, yet gave us no pity, no helping hand, but suffered us to be outdo and treated as the scum and scut !' of the American Continent, to be cuffed, kicked and domineered over by the Northern Radicals, scalawags and niggers —none from aDy quarter coming to our re -1 es, to help us to he free, but many white lvcred ones leaving and taking sides against us, and since the surrender sneak ing back asking for and filling high places in the government. I say, with a vivid recollection of all this cruelty and unkind ness, what obligation are we under to in vite this Northern and foreign immigra tion and capital, to receive them with open arms, give them a hearty welcome, tender ing them our lands, stock, provisions, implements, passage on railways, and at holds, and helping them to settle at low prices and long credits ? Was there ever such impudence and presumption as that of asking such favors of a people who have been treated as we have been by them ? Now for a common sense view of our duty and our interest. We all know, every one of ns, that a very large number of our soldiers that fought through the war, were the sons of parents, husbands of wives, f, thers of children, who were de pendent upon their resources lor a living. They uid not own a negro nor a foot of laud, while many of our men of wealth, who ought to have been foremost, man aged not to fire a gun or be in the way of a bullet. You men of surplus lands who want immigration, look around you for these landless soldiers that fought through the war to protect your property (not their’s, for they had none), look them up and put them on your lands at lower prices and long credits, and bestow your charity in giving them a start; exhaust this class first; by the time you do this the rising generation at home will be spreading out almost like the grass in a cottun tic-iil in a wet time, and this is a class which comes nearer- the home and the lieait than all others, and for which par ents should certainly make reservations. Again, wo are now raising, say from one and a-half to two and a-half millions of bales of cotton, and if we were to do our duty to ourselves, and act in our own inter est, we would raise at least one-fourth less, and make more money, and be the mostm dependentandhappy peopleon earth. Every planter knows that it takes all ol’one fourth of his cotton to purchase his corn and ba con, anil such as he leaves out to raise cot ton. The more we reduce the cotton crop the more we increase the price; so we get as much money for our cotton crop, though one-fourth less, and raise our corn and meatjjbesides, and when we raise plenty of meat and corn and other grain we are not in tfcat stint and strain, with poor and weak stock. We have some corn and pture, sweet bacon, which is a treat that, under the present system, but few enjoy. We make ourselves slaves for the North and Northwest. We have the lands; we can have the pasturage; we can raise our meat and stock of every kind, and if we would limit ourselves in the cotton crop we would realize just as much money, if not more, and have all tho provisions and stock on hand, without having to pay out our cotton money; and another great item is, we would not be under that great strain from one year’s end to another with the heavy cotton crop. Yet, in tho face of all this, our people are running themselves to death to make all cotton and no corn and meat, enriching their enemies and impov erishing themselves; and besides this a portion of our people are running crazy to get immigration here to do the work in double quick time. A few words as to this class of our peo ple who are so rampant for immigration. They remind me of our greatest and best Generals during our late war. They spent their time at home in the cities, towns and villages, iu tho hotels and drinking saloons; could always tell better what could and should have been done before and during every battle than Generals Lee or Beau regard; and yet they never saw a battle field in their lives. And if you will examine into these immigration societies you will find they are every one made up in cities. I never heard of one outside ot a city, and you will find many of them merchants, traders and jobbers of one sort or other, who knotv no more about the necessities and interests of the country outside of the city than these great homt Generals did about the management of the Confederate forties; and I don’t know that I would be going too far to say that they are looking more to the money to be made out of it than their country’s good. I noticed, a short time since, some man writing under date of the 10th June, from New iork to the editors of tho Chronicle & Sentinel, in which he says the South should bound ; ‘orward with fresh life to grapple with the j i isues of the present, and fashion them to ; her permanent benefit, but for the attain- ; went of such a result prompt and efficient action is needed; the agricultural interests j of the South are prostrated, aud they form the understrata of all national prosperity. To restore them should be the first care of j the Southern people, hut how is the work to be commenced? shall it be entrusted to the negro? No,.he. says, and goes on to give reasons; they are too ignorant and | idle, too much perplexed and deluded and j carried away by the political delusions of ; the day to turn soberly and steadfastly into the furrow of toil; somebody is, therefore, j to be employed, and that somebody is to come from abroad. White labor from Europe and the North is manifestly the instrument needed for the revival of Southern indus try. and for this labor refers us to a house in New York and Washington city. Isn’t this the most impudent dictation that ever fell from the lips of the Devil himself? After cotuiDg here and robbing and dis abling us in every manner and form th-t could be thought of, and freeing the negro, putting the devil in his head, and turning him loose among us to commit all manner of devilment at his will, till he is mentally snd politically deluded— too ignorant and idle for laborers ; yet tot os? and intelligent enough to vote and held office among us. We must set him aside in idleness if we choose and get white labor from the North and Europe. What sort of society would we have here with the Yankees and negroes mixed up ? Our people would ten times rather have negro laborers than Yankees; they are ' more reliable, and if let alone by Yankees and scalawags would make better citizens. Such impudent dictation is charac teristic of the source from which it came. Our people would not be opposed to good, honest, sober, industrious foreign or European laborers, but let them come as such, and work themselves into an in terest identified with ours, and become a part and payee! of our population as others have done, and whom we honor and re spect as such. Let our motto be, for the present at least, hold on to our lands: give our own whites and freedmen the preference as laborers ; raise large crops es grain and meat, and all the cotton we can afterward By doing this we will soon be the top rail of the fence. O. T. A Jerseyman has invented an apparatus for watering horses while at work. By pulling a line, water flows from a tank on the wagon through the bit into the animal’s mouth. i Immigration. Editors Chronicle ife Sentinel : A great deal has been said upon the irn- . portant subject of immigration, and much ( more remains to be said, and while Ido j not desire to force my views upon the pub lic, I desire to ask some of your corre spondents upon immigration a few ques tions that have troubled me to some extent, and with your permission I wilt do so through your valuable paper. Some writer (I do not recollect his signature) when writing upon immigration in your paper is strongly in favor of bringing emigrants into our country, and proposes to give or sell each family of immigrants a few acres of land, say 23 or 50 acres, and calls upon land-owners to know who will do likewise. He states at the same time that the immi grants would be of great benefit to our community, and by giving or selling a small lot of land to each family, so that they would settle amongst us they would be- i come useful citizens and neighbors. Now, : Messrs. Editors, what I desire to know is how will it benefit me or my children if I sell or give away half of my laad to immigrants?- If they become farmers and neighbors will it make any more corn or cotton grow on the half i keep ? Will it make my soil any richer ? Will it make my farm more valuable if it is sur rounded by foreigners who are paid to settle as citizens ? Will foreigners care more for our interest than the freedmen in our midst ? Will it put any more hands iato my fields ? Will my foreign neigh bors aid me to cultivate the land I keep ? Will ithenefit me any way more than by giv ing me a few more neighbors that may turn out to be good or perhaps very bad ? If it will be of any benefit to me in any way I would he happy to learn how, for I have thought upon this important subject long and often since I saw his letter. 1 see no good to me, my children, or my ruined country, in his proposed gift enterprise. On the contrary, I see nothing but ruin to the State, socially, morally, politically and financially in such a wholesale manner of buying people to populate the country. Our society will be overturned. Anew system of morals of the Chicago staedard introduced. Our political system, already bad enough, will become more venal and corrupt. It is passing into a proverb, That every jail delivery in Europe gives birth to an American citizen. Certainly citizens thus born cannot benefit us so cially, morally, nor politically., Now, if the object is simply to fill up the country and increase our population, let us get men who will be of use to the country as citizens. While a great increase of population would be of injury to us as an agricultural people, it might be of benefit to us politically if good men would come South; but this mighty effort by the people to fill up the country with emigrants by contract will be ruin, certain, speedy audeterml. The natural increase of the white and black man in our Southern States and those that will come without such a mighty effort by State and people will, in ten or fifteen years, fill our State full to repletion, certainly to the extent of the capacity ol’ our lands to support. But there is a great cry for an increase of labor in the fields to make more cotton to sell at lower prices to increase the wealth of tho e Northern bankers and factory owners that they may more certainly increase our troubles and grind tts into dust under their moneyed power. Why is cotton selling at ,30 cents in Augusta to-day? Is it because labor is plentiful and we can make five mil lion bales? or is it simply because we can’t command the* labor to make more than two million bales? Does any one suppose that if the country is filled with emigrants to make cotton, and a full crop is made, that cotton will bring 10 cents? Certainly not. Then why strive to fill up the country with a population that cau be of no use to us but to bring down the price of our great staple? I would rather make one bale ot I cotton and sell it for 30 cents than to make three bales and sell them for 10 cents. I will save monty in every way by making one bale at 30 cents. For the life of me I can’t see the point of this great immigration plan, and hope that someone who is so strong in its favor will enlighten me, fori am simply after in formation, and not a controversy. Most especially do I desire to be informed how the plan of giving or selling to each fami ly of immigrants twenty-five or fifty acres of land is to benefit the land-owner. Does ■itincrease the price of his remaining land ed estate by selling half to strangers at low prices, that will comfi in to compete with you in the very business that you desire to : improve; who may or may not be good neighbors, and respect the rights of your stock generally, that must run or graze around his farm as well as your own ? Will it put one single hand more into your field? Will it increase the range or pastur age of your stock by selling off half the land on which they are accustomed to feed? Will it make the cotton that you make on the remainder of your land bring a better price? Suppose that every (arm in the cotton-growing region of the South should have one family of immigrants, and let them cultivate what land they can in cotton in addition to what will be done with the hands the farmers now have at work on theirs, and how much cotton would be made by these immigrants? In a favorable season the crop would bo increased several thousand bales. • Would not this reduce the price? Would not the price of cotton be reduced in the same ratio that the crop is increased ? Besides, these hundreds of thousands of bales do not go into the land-owner’s pocket to help make up for short prices, but they go to the immigrants to whom we have sold or given this land, simply to reduce the price of our great staple. This is the t oint, Messrs. Editors, that I desire to be informed upon; how and by what means can it benefit me to give or sell at low prices a part of my land to strangers to settle close to me and compete with me in every way in a business, that I have expected him to improve. Increased population,except by the natural increase of our native population, will never make this a great country. We are recovering from the effects of the war very fast, and if we are content to sell cotton at 30 cents with the labor we now have we soon will be prosperous agaia. That spirit which actu ated our people to improve their political condition in 1800 and 1861 is now striving with all its force to improve our pecuniary condition. But it seems to me that this State con tract immigration scheme will drive us to pecuniary ruin, and I fear social and political also. But this communication is now already too long, and I will close by asking its publication if you think it will be of any benefit to the country. My desire for information upon the .points above, prompts this communication, and I hope I may be informed of the benefit we may expect from the plan proposed. T. A. W. Pruning Tomatoes.— lt is stated tha gardeners in France cut off the stem of the tomato plants down to the first cluster of flowers which appears on them, thus im pelling the s.tp into the buds below the cluster, which pushes up vigorously, pro ducing another cluster of flowers. “When these are visible, the braneti to which they belong is also topped down to their level; aod this is done live times successively. By this means the plants become stout dwarf bushes, not over eighteen inches high. In order to urevent them from fall ing over, sticks or strings are stretched horizontally along the rows, so at to keep the plant erect. In a'ddition to this, all the laterals thet Lave no flowers whatso ever, arc nipped off. In this way the ripe sap is directed into the fruit, which acquires beauty, size, and excellence, unattainable by other means.”— Horticulturist. Caterpillars. —From every quarter we hear the cry of caterpillars, until the whole country seems nothing but caterpillars. When we walk round town, we fiod farm ers from the country string or standing with long faces, talking about caterpillars, and all agree that the truth can no longer be disguised. The insect curse has arrived and already swarm in the cotton fields. The weather, too, has changed from dry hot to cool, cloudy and sh wery weather, as if to afford them facility. The heavy showers have lately beep so frequent that the cotton stalks are casting their fruit, so that, between the heavy showers, rust and caterpillars, the‘‘fine prospect” is likely te be blighted. Let the .farmers remember when the planting season returns again, that they have been assailed with all these vicissi tudes for three years in the cultivation of cotton, and learn that corn, bacon, rice, sugar cane, peas, potatoes, eta, are liable to none of these dangers and cultivated with much less labor and expense.— Thoncuvxllc Enterprise , sth. “ i At Lexington, Ga., Sabbath afternoon, August Ist, 1569, Mrs. MARY A. E. PLATT, wile of Geo. F. Piatt, Esq. Here is recorded the gentle close of a retired, unobstrusive, beautiful life. Her long-eontinued ill-health compelled her to forego the pleasure of social intercourse, to a great extent, as well as the privilges of the House of God ; but did not abate her affectionate devotion to her husband and her children, and did not diminish her love for the Word of God and prayer. Sbe die<l as she had lived—a Ciwistian. Death had no terrors for her, for when he came she was ready, and had been loDg before his noiseless footfall invaded her chamber when he came “to fan the face of the dying.’’ A pure, unselfish, affectionate spirit; a patient, self-denying, suffering life, a no- j ble, lovely, Christian character; a calm, peaceful death. This is her memorial in our hearts, and this her “record on hi^h.” IVotice.-all pERSON sHin DEBTED to the e«Ut« of R- M. FlemmiL flece&std, art requested tc Bake paj merit, acd those Lavlr* claims axaiust ihe same will please present the same according to law. J. H. ECHOLS, unlt>-wf Executor. THE MYSTERY SOLVED. THE TIMES ARE PREGNANT WITH STARTLING events ,- old isms, theories, ana are fast disappear 'mg beneath the gigantic wheels ot pregr.-sa and human development. Change is written with Che iron finger o' time, upon ail matter, seen and uuee n, .material and spiritual. The mighty, omnipotent pcw3r that fashioned the stupendous orbs thatrtvnive in the immensity cf *p r ce, created all things in wisdom and purity. Therasjestic veeae, the deep bine sea, the beautiful efkrth and all thlnjfs therein contained were planned and created by virtue of that uni ."ersai law of harmony, whose power holds sway over all. Intelligent is manifested in &!2 created things, both great an I small—rhe tiny insect, the beautiful butter fly. and God-llke man, are each endowed according to their kind, with that instinct or intelligence ordained by Him wh ■* ‘Hoeth all things well." Wisdom, justice and love are the three great standard bearers whose sumptuous hands mete out to each individ ually the measure of Dlvlae, universe law, designed by that mighty Mind who fisshi *ned alike noble man in his own image and ail lesser created things The beauties and wenders of nature never cease to the progressive human mind. Eternal progress is written with the unert ing-flrger of Deity upon all. The theme of human life is laden with sweet incense to ail who, like angels of mercy and good* ness, are ever busy, ever ready to devise means tor the al leviatlon of human woe and the prolongation ot life. The unceasing march ot individual and national progress is alone due to the bold and fearless thinkers and actors upon the 6taee ot mundane life. The st m exigencies that confront and imperii the gigantic minds of all countries - cannot awe or swerve them in the path of duty power. Disease and death now hold carnival throughout the land; suflfe-ing humanity calls loudly for the “Balm of wilead,” whose snt tle, mystic power can heal and save wre k and ruia. A sav.ng and skillful hand may be found ready to administer* to the suffering at all times. In Prof. Hamilton, at his old medical emporium, where thousands, from.all countries and climes, have received the he ding balm for every ill. Ir Harper's Monthly Magazine for be found ajife es Prat. K. LEONIDAS HAMILTON, M. D„ whose discoveries in reference to LIVER, LUNG AND BLOOD DISEASES are now attracting »he attention of the*whole medical world, ana wh'se success is carrying joy and restored health to thousands. Hi- well-attested cases of liver diseases, lung diseases, > lood diseases, and oiseisesof the kidney, bi»daer, spine rfomach. ana other organs, are now well known ail over tne Uai'ed S'-aiesandUauada, tue West Indies, Europe, Mexi co, Sandwich lalauds, and in many of the tommwcial and missionary settlements in every part of the world. For the benefltot the sick who may wish to know posi tively wiien they have derangements of the Liver « r more or lea severity, acomoioation of the uauai symutonw found in such cases wid he found below : SYMPTOMS OK LIVER COMPLAINT. A sallow or vellow color es the skin, or yellowish brown spots on the f*ci and othe- parts of the b.>dy; dullnesi and urowainess, wuh frequent he tdache ; outer or ccd taste in the mou tu dryness oi tne tnroat, and internal heut: palpi tation of the heart; in unity ctw-es a dry, teasing cough, with sore throat ; uocte dy appetite; sour stomach, with a rising oi the food aud choking .-eusattoa in the turoat ; sickae-aaiid vomiting ; uisUeas, hewmeas, or a bloated or fell teeting about the stomach and sides, which is ofieu at tended wi h and tenderness; aggravating pains in the sides, or bte*sts, and about toe snou ders ; collie id and soreu«as tnrougn vhe bowe'i. with heat; tioti otUieuow is. alternating wun frequent at'acks of diar rhoea; pil-\ flit lence, nervousness, cu.daeas of toe ex tremities ; rush of uood to me head, with symptoms of apoplexv ; numbness of the mafia, etpycially at night coi<; cmils, alternately with hot flushes, with dullness, low spirits, uus tciabuity, and gloomy ’oreoodmg, and with lacjes, female weakness and irregularities. DISEASESCAUaED BY LIVER COMPLAINT. The Human System, the most perfect es all the works of the Creator, tsao constituted that, to be entirely heali y, it must throw ott ne was’e, w m out and poisonous materials as fasc an it takes on new material frem our food and drink. The food is assimilated and made Into nourishing and healtuy blood principally through the oihees of the st' mach. t verand lungs. 'Abe worn out uiutetiai are most ly excreted by the aver, lungs an j kidneys ; out ail medi cal men nave heretofore failed to rtcogmze the vast im p rtanee oi the itver as a blwod-purifying aid excreting organ. The most learned German ph Biologist', who base their assertions upon actual experiments only, state ih t the arnouQ* of bils which should De manufactured by the liver and poured into ihe intestines eacn day is two and out-haft pounds. All persons interested to know this fact, ana the fcxu<>riraents to otove it, may consult Ve r dating s-sae fie >md Stoffwcchsel, L iipxig, 185-2, or they may see a resume oi these iacts in Prof. Dalton’s Physioioxy. Remember one thing more: Tue bile is something more than the natural puyalc of uie Dowel- as has heretof re been thought by eminent medical men. The out* is mostly made up of the waste matter of the blood— e/etc, worn out aud Jnlu.ious materials. If the liver does not make tuts bile and pour it into the intestines daily, it remains in the bleed as a poison. It poisons the blood itself, anu eireulaies us ir ritating aud poisonous matter inihe blood, to every oigan In the system- The blood, poisoned with the daiiy accumulated ex' ess of bile, re urns from the liver to the heart, and the nerves of the heart are alfected, and we have an oppressed feeling at the heart and palpitation ; ana if this cause Is long continued, -we get a cnronic irritation, undue excitement, and morbid nutrition of tae heart, developing many forma of the Heart D.sease. • Just, eo with the The bile-poisoned blood goes from the upper aud right cavity of the heart to the lower cavity, and thence directly to the lun«s, circulating all through those most delicate organ-*. The iung tissues are Eoisoned and irritated, and they invite the scrofulous umors of the blood because they are thus irritated. Hence Consumption, which is local .-crotuia, so defined atm proved by Lugoi and all the most scientific authors. The lungs try to oxygenize and purify the bluod, and they do it iu a great measure; out they ate overworked and irritated, and you smell the blood-poison matter in the mau’s foul breath. Catarrh, Bronchitis, Astnma, Nervous Cough aud con sumption itself,-re the results. Iftne Livdr baa done its uuiy—maoe aud excreted that xina—the Lungs would not have been diseased. J ust so with the Blood, itself. It goes from the lungs back to the upper lrft cavity of the heart, thence to the lower cavity and tbeiice through the arteries aud capillaries to every organ and tissue of the system. Among the most impor ant of those organs are the kidneys, lurutahing the urin ry secretion a most, important excretion. Btt the kidneys themselves are irritated ..ud congested by vne pres ence of tile Dile-poisoned blood, and they become diseased. Every pernon wno has had a liver disease knows that tne urine la Hcanty, high colored aud loaded with red deposits at times, or other diseased products. Hence diseases nol only of the kidney's, but also of the bladder. But this is n i aii—far irum it. The poisonous blood goes to the Bbaih, aud affects the great electrical centre ot all vitality ; aud me brain, stimulated- by unhealthy blood, cannot perform its office hea tufidy. T\e person has dull.’ ness, hegaache, incapacity to keep hid mlad ou asulject, cannot remember, has a crowded and and zzy JeeJiug, is sleepy, becomes nervous, gloomy, easily irritated, anu often has a bilious or neuralgic beucache. And the blood ttseir becom s diseased, as it forms the eweat upon the surface of the skin, it is to irritating and poisouous tnat the person has discolored brown spots pimples, blotches aud other eruptious, sores, buita, car buncles, and other scro'ula tumors. 1 Disease of the Liver it&eit is th° most common of a 1 diseases. The sudden changes or th« New England climate the m.lanal influenced the West, ana the heat of the South, as welt as the dietetic habits of the people of this country, and other causes, all tend to develop me Liver disease, In some ot the varied forms, throughout the United States. Thisis true of both man and beasi, as every butcher knows tnat he anos the livers of cattle, sheep and swine diseased ten times where ne finds any other organ diseased once. A moat every peraon is bilious at some time and many are constantly oilious. It may be mere congest on of the L ver and torpidity of its tuncuon, or this may re sult in aomestiuctural or organic affection. But the Liver can never be i'i«eased without affecting the stomach, bow els, aud the other organs we have spoken ts, and costive ness, piles, dropsy, diarrhoea aud impoverished blood are among the necessary results , CHRONIC DISEASES. Prof. HAMILTON will also inform the afflicted, that having been written to by thousands of patiento, his ouice has became the greatest centre for tne tre ament of nov 1 interesting «iu peculiar cases of any place in the world. No hospital in Europe or America has one-tenth the number of singular and remarkable cas s as are present, either personally or by letter, at No. 546 Broadway. It is, in deed, an Emporium of Clinical Mediuine. Among the thousands ot cases arming from diseases of the Liver, Lungs, and Blood, which he treats, the following receive prominent and most successful atteutioi : Sick and Bilious JBead a me. Nervous and Neuralgic Heawacho. Chronic Diar rhc#a aod Dysentery, C* etiveness and Piles Pim nles, Eiuptions and Brown Birin, Dropsy aud Di- eases of the Kidneys, Consumption of the Blood, bcorfuia iu all its forms, bplnal Irritation, Sal Rheum and Erysipelas, Can cers, Asthma, Epileptic Kirs, Nervous Diseases of the Heart, Diseases or Females, and ail diseases arsing from Impurities or the Blood, Rheumatism,. Catarrh and 'Throat Diseases, etc., etc. SYNOPSIS. For the greater convenience of those wishing to write me about their diseases. I Injert th : following, which em braces neariy all that I require to know in most cas->s • Have you constipation of tne bowels ? Ha e you attacks of Dianne*.i ? Lave you pains In the back, sides or shoul ders ? Have you a paiu, or tenderness about the stomach ? Have you a dry. tea-.scg cough ? Have |you a sallow or yellowish skin ? Have you brown spots on y< ur face or any part ot tue body ? Have you a headaohe ? Are yon dull, heavy, or sleepy ? Have you a bitter or bad taste in the mouth 7 II we you an irritation or dryness in the throat? Have you palpitation of thehflart? Have you cold chi lsor hot flushes ? la y< ur aopetit unsteady ? Is your stomach sour ? Do you raise or spit up your food ? Have you any choking spells ? Are you t oupled v. itli sickness and vomit ing ? Do you feel bioa ed about the stomach ? Have you a tired or sore feeling on rising in the m rning ? Do you have cholic pains ? Have you wind in tho stomach or boa - els? Have yo t piles or fistula? Have you nervous and all-gone feed' gs •> Have you colci feet and hands ? Have you a rush of mood to the h.-a.l ? Hwe you uneasine.-s on lying on the bKo* ? Have you fainting or epilep ic fits? Have you great lowness of spiri’s? Have gloomy fore bodings ? PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING AND SEE WHO ARE CURED. R. Leonidas Hamilton, M. D—Dear Sir—Duty prompts me to a most grateful acknowledgment of the ast'-msbing success ot your treatuieut iu my case. For nearly three years I ha/e suffered fr m Catarrh, Nervous Rhcu ma ism, Liver Complaint aud Extreme Nervousness, insomuch that life had become an intolerable burdeu, an.l death was looke l for as my only re lease; physically and mentally broken down, I was utterly unable to do the cutusof ain inis.er, aud was preparing to retire from the ranks, when provident ially, u y e\es fed on your advertisement in the New York Methodist. 1 had already travelled far and expended so much m the vain ef fort to secu e a cure, that it was with great reluctance and little hope that I addressed you. lout reply inspired me with hope—your remedies were received aim taken, and the result was as marveltus to these who knew my condition as it was gratift iag to myself. IN THREE WEEKS I was again in the pulpit pre.-ching with unusual vigor, arid if my services are of any value to the church, it is indebted to you, under Ood, for thtir continuauce. You may refer to me at any time at and I shall be ever phased to bear tt sti mony to your extraordinary skill. YouiS.trnly, Rev. JOSEPH JONES, Sa nt Joseph, Mich, CASES OF LIVER CjMPLAINT. It is will mucu satisfaction that I invite particular at I teution to: iLe following vcluntnry statement of ihe emi nent divineann Musi nary, the Rev. A. a. Constantine, i recent y located in me interior o^Africa: No 43 ann rTBEET, New Yckk City. Dr. R. (Leonidas Hamilton, JNo. 546 Broadwa>—Mv Dear Benefactor-A senseo daty impels ce to sty, that ! ycur medicines have cone fir me what no other physician li js been ab:e to do. 1 have Been a tufle er for many years irom qmens a conducted while la’noring as Missionary in Africa. Last Fall I was decln ing fast, and had all the symptoms cf quick consumption. 1 applied toy u for hrlp. \ou rumarkev— r “Before 1 get through w.vh you, i wil mike you feei severil yea's youngtr than you have ever felt *i ce ■o i lelt Africa.” Ith »mrht bu‘ litt e of that and had often received similar assurance* from eminent physicians, both here ano in Europe; but in less than two weeks all my symptoms were entirely changed, and my health and strength improved very fast. In . *ew weeks I found myself i the ei joyment oi better health and able to periqrm more labor, mental and physical, than at any previ ous time since I It ft Afric >. May Uod bless ycu ia all your researches in ltis grext laboratory, and make you His agent in restoring thousands to health. Kj.v. A. A. CONS "ANTINE. STBONULY CORROBORATED. No. 113 Harrison Street. ) Brooklyn, N. Y., January 20, 1869. \ to the afflicted everywhere. During my labors ia publishing and edit n* a nf-w>paper for many years in this city, a?.a also in the perio-muuce of my duties as a cl-rgvmau m >hi» and ether cities, I Lave be come.thormighly and Imima ely acquainted With R Leonidas H&mil on. M D., the'iustly celebrated Liver, Lung, ana “iood Puysici -n, oi this cit>, who 13 loca e<i ai No. 546 Broadway. Tue doctor w«a t r many yvars a regular ; rxc ticing pby. i :iaand also f>r some years a prolassor in one of our best medical rchcoje, and during such exten sive experience, he fully realized the inadequacy ot the ordinary treatment made use cf in all chronic di eases, more especi illy that class ot tr üble arising fn.ni deranged Junc tions ot the Liver and dge live organs. He at once set himself about the study of the class of diseases, determined to m kethem a speciality. Laying ihe vegetable world unaer tribute, be has made discoveries ami compounded specifics on sound philosoph cal principles which have made the most woLderful cures in the annals, f medicine. Liver, Blood, Lung and Nervous ci .-ta-*s are now v.rtuaily uncer h s full control, and > ield to the m tgic, subtle pcwarofMs renacci's. I have myae.f seen numbers of ta« se who have been saved from the hand oi death by his power, when the unfortunate sufferers set mad doomed to an early grave, and all o her treatment was oi no avail. In addition to wn&Cl can vou ch for lersona ly. I have ample ev*dence from other <lergymen, ph>s c.ars and eminent men cf the highest character, wao-tvi also been saved by this wonderful treat ment, and wno spark in the highest pr-iseand gratitude of Dr iJamilienasa an and a gentleman of honor and integrity. It i« but singly stating the po*ittre truth when 1 *ay tliati; is well knowu threugaout tnis country tha wne.e h : s wort? are known and the fruit* of his Hein have be n wi uesitd, he it higuly esteemed by the people as the most eminent and r* m utable pbvsicixn iu the trea mefiC (f car nie disease.-, of the age. As the result of a long person al aid find iir a<*q-iaintance with Fm*. Hamilton and hi< unparalleled succws as a professional man of the highest wider,. I franaly express the hoac ihat and a eased humanity iu every part of our land may avail tnemseives cf his most rvmxakabir' skill, and thus share the nob.e b.efsings so kindly and t eeiy bestowed upon all. Moit respectfully. Rev. W. B JAC OBS. THE WORK GOES BRAVELY ON ! another clergyman cured 11 Thec-m n;nt tiviae, Rev. J. W. Hiaktey, of Athene, Maine, writes: -My healtu nss so far improved from the effects o T your treatment that I am able to r=sume my pastorship. Had it not been for your medicine I should not been living now. To you. with Gou’a biessug, do lew; my w>.r.dy exist eioe. lam a living exponent oi the worth of your matchless remedies, and I shall hereafter deem it a part ot my relig ious duty to recotameno a.i suffering with diseaseri of the Liver or Lungs to speedily apptty toyou. Hay Goa’s blessing attend your worthy eiLns lor the re isf of d.seased And suf feiing humanity/’ ANOTHER CLERGYMAN HEALED! T ANARUS, _ _ „ „ IS COST ON, N J. R. L. F ammos M. D.—Dear S r—lt ts witn pleasure that I otmmanicue toe res lit; f he use of your me*.i.Ties. W hen I first \ offic.’ iu New York, I cculd ecsice ly wa.k into the office without exhausticn. With ail your presrge as asuccess ui pnysiciAn, I had but little hope that you cou.a care me. Icere wl* no hing strange in tikis Four years ands ,ur months had pissed away, but during that period 1 had suffered constantly w tn chronic aiarrlce* ana piles. 1 had seme or the best physiciaes, and used everything Ihea.d of that I cm and procu-e, but aL in vain. Wby shornd I think that you could do me more good than others ? But, sir, iusiice and gratitude compel me to say that alter me use of your medicines the resmt was a c om plete cure. I cannot expect to be freed frem iiabutie* t ■ attacks of disease any more thin other men. 1 wish 1 had the voice of seven thunders, ana culd aa*mole ihe sick in the world, I would direct inem to you, sir, as one fn/v com petent to teal, and whose get erous and ncble nature wcuid not allow exorbitant ecargc s. y ours, trolv. Rev. GEOaUE H. JONES. A CLERGYMAN CUkTd OF RHEUMATISM. _ _ _ „ PoirrrviLLE, N. J. Prof. K. L. Hamilton—Dear Sir—l have pu. de iiytd writing ia o:d»r ioglve you the result of y«.ur reme dies The med clnes came to hand in due time, and I cun me need using them a* ii sti acted, and 1 have pereererfco. F.r the erst w«-k I couid not aee much change; but cue stcond week there s?tme.d to be a giving a wav or tne disease ALd at the end ot the tn id w c ex a deeded caaoge tor the better was manifest. I ‘tn now able to walk about witn ease and canr. rt. I send you my sincere and many tnachs aad pray that God mav b-esa and preierve yoar life for nntv years. I reel that under the b.t-»*.ng of Divine Prov.dence, you have done great tnings ft>r me. Yours truiy. Rev. liAAC HUGG. A CLERGYMAN’S WIFE! Mrs. Rev. Gem C. Haddock, of Rip on, Wi*., writes: "■The remedies you sent me mat Spring woikeu ihta a \ charm threughoat my entire syst* m. Ido not believe I ! have lived unui the present time b«d I not used your j medicines. It is my sinotre prayer that Gtd m.y b ess and spare you many long years t*_> minister to the physicai being or diseased human.t*‘- AH that I can do to extend your ! field of labor sHaH be done earn tally and willingly.'’ A HARD CASE! SPINE, VIDNET&, LIVER AND BLADDER DISEASED. } “Dr. BUMihToH-My best frietd and Brother—You have 1 saved n:.y li c e! This ts not only certain to m? own appfc- j uersioo, but nil in. personal frie: d»who have k iowr tny . suff rites so long ands > well, join in tnis < pinion. From 1 a spinal and »t. s*» 1 Lave suffer*d lor year-* wuat no tongue cau tell. Besides tils disease, 1 have affi'eted wun ag gravated uflectio ncf ibe l.ver xj and tpleen; *cd my k dneys and bladder have been so diseased that other phyaicia- s i a\e tried their ak 11 in vain. I have laid in hosp tala ;or mo jihs, and I have ag .In and ag ia consulted the m st tm te*d puysici-ms ad surgeons in Boston, New York, Charles ton, Cincinnati, Chicigo aLd other cities, without regard to expanse. T-uy were mm of learning at and great reputation, bot in a i honesty I must sty th y d-d me »>o go and. After trying thoroughiv tseir sxiii. they haw hsd f* acknowledge my case as complicated aid hop”- less—* incurable’ as tuev havj term* and it. In nine weeks you n*ve cared ms—made me anew man. I had no hops nor had my friends ; but 1 am now right; I xru wed; and rejoice that, alter eighteen years of aufferirg, 1 know what uis to enjoy the b.eased. joyous feeling of health, vigor, lift, freedom t om pain, ana wit.ithc y wer to work, ih nk aid erjoy myssli. 1-offer you this te Umon.il gladly, I hope tt will ie*d hundreds to you, i know mat whereof l here testify; std l shall ever take the grAttest s»lisraction iu rec mm-.udlngyou to rdlthe efflicxti f t* to you I owe my iife ” Yota- true friend audbro her, A. O. BUT i ERFIELD. Monroe strett, between Btd'oid btd F anhtin Avenues, Brooklyn, N. Y. RHEUMATISM CURED. Willum McNellis, Eagie Rock, Vtsang* County, Penn sylvania writes: “i r turn my sincere thankiJor perminent y cun and me of thiu uaiiam ester heving suffered .-tv.reiy f“r seven years. V» h u i had and 'ctored w.th ct er doctors and t led all ;he patei t medicines taat I <xu and *.e*. with no avail, and wa> so baa tnat i could hatd v *ttou: of mv fctu-e. and part or t-e time not »b e to get i;ut of my b and, ml ws al feettd in nearly every joint, 1 h ugLt 1 wouiu try you as a last reso.t. To my greit joy, mi« as three weeks 1 was abie to go out and jump with the m at «-cttve mad iu the pixie. Ii ore month 1w: $ perfectly tutd, ad hr.d gained s' pou ds; *cd I never had beutr health m mv hie taaa 1 stave enjoyed for ih; last s ; x rn mttae. Mty Gcd biess you and your m rauiiojs remedies." CASE 6 oIFaSTHMA. ». t, , ,r Alton, N.Y. ToPsor. K. L. Hamilton—Dear Dector—iiwoe between six and .-even years i was afflicted w.th trut dire malady the As'hm i,and after emo-oyitg the b -et medial skill tu the c uutry ana taking til the pitent medicines recommended, witaout avail or any peimment relief, 1 b . g*n to mink there was no cure for it; but ni thing an adverttsem nt of yours in oneofth; New York {pipers, it was with the greatest re luctance 1 wrote you,: si then expected it would not benefit me and would be worse than use Le.-s. In th s I was get ly disappointed, as I nad not taken the medicine more than two WWKS before I was üble to do l ght work on the farm. Be fore th\s, I could not attend to my baa ness, being cemplete* ly pr jstrated, and after taking two packages considered my* self p<rrf' Cly cured &Ld my health fullv re-established, tae bronchial difficulties ano all bad symptems beiug entirely removed. All this is attributi b'.e to your unrivalled medi cine, uncer the Diviue sane:ion, which 1 truri, with me wilJ ever be re mem bend with gratitude. 1 cannot clos; this commuuiCit on without expression cfmy heartfelt gratitude anu thanks for the imeiy a;d you rendered my daughter in consumption. The efficiency of the m . dicine ft* h-r case, h&s Le b truly miraculous. The hectic and flush ou her Okie's with ibe other consumptive synintoms, have entirely left her, and now. altera period of five mouths,-he i* erjoy ing goed health and is quite robust, s : much that she nas engaged to tench school th s bummer. You are H liberty to enow thi'*_ latter to any similarly iflFced. or pub ash it, es vou may thiuk proper, a y letter pi u quiry I wifi cheer fully answer. I bin dear Dcctor, with ni*» y thar-ks, Your humble 83i vant. JOSEPH LITTLE. IMPORTANT CASeHf EPILEPTIC FITS. Read the following evidinc't of what my treatment hrs done iu a case ot this disease hitterto cons ids red incurable : Buckhakt, Tt.|, Dm Hamilton : -My w 'e was tfflicted w.th tits for ten years, atteuflkjd with great spinal and tervous cet ility. t>ne doctor, a with several physici-us. but ti no ptr pose. i read one of your c rcuiars an l was so impress -d wito yo*»r re -v and ample t e*.ry of di ease that I de termined to try vour re me* ie« Every one in the neigh borhoonened ‘h .mbug.” tut, thank God, failed to dii gunde ui from our purpose As you know, we sent lor some of your remedies, which, w tli the if God. have completely *:nd iy cured her. j-h • Lai not ha a tit since; her back is s:rong, i.nd her ne vous vital.ty and streng h have returned, as every att.ck she had was sever, r than t ie one previous, it ij »ea onabie to sipposj the could no: have lived long b n t for the ti • eiy inte fer eiceofyour wonderfu ski 1 To God be the jrahe; ror to pee i: yan i nu aculoaely ha/e your remedies worked tha Icnbu re.ogniari vou :u» an ln-trument of i ivine I ower 11 rescuing u y dear companion from a terri le JOHNS. SHARP. CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED. DONS MOBE GOOD THAN ALL SHE PHYSICIANS. Mrs. Ca hdrine Anderson, ol Southampton, Bucks coun ty,. Put a., writes : ♦ ‘•Your medicines have worked woade s in my case. Pre viouito tak ng your remedies, I have docio'e-1 with three different physic ans. all ot whom pronounced my disease cortsum tiou, and incurable. Col Lver Oil and different kinds of syiupa weretakmio great qu&ntili s but io no purpose. 1 was dot fined to my bed for stx months, coughed cont aually, r* S:d gr*.at quantities of n otter. My throat was swelled ou: marly even with mv chin,'and my sufferings were most inters-. I had not taken j our medi cine* more than one w. ek before I ound great re ief; mV couch was much loosen, and, i-nd I bre: tlud wiib gna'er freedom tnd ease. My ap„eiite was better, and 1 felt tha: anew iff; had opentd befoie me. l owe my very ex stence to >our gre.t skill a'd-invaluvb’e remedies.” IN HIS MERCY HE SAVES THE AFFLICTED. Mr. John Lew s, cf Zol’a svilD, Washington Count Pa., writes— “ The medcine you sent me last Spring ac ed like a charm. It relieved me very soon of a deranged state of ihe iver, stem c r ’ and bowels. Tli* marked pecai.arltv of y ur r;njedie< ia, while thevact directly and thoroughly rn the diseased cftrgunj, th;y do not depies* or debiutate the sys tem like oiher Liver Rfnudies I have used. Icr ns'der you fully master of your jrofe si on; and, from your open frir wav of deft.ing witti me, I deem you an uprhlit, con scientious man, as w. ll as an acxjmp isned physician,” CURED AFTEkT'LONG YEARS.” Danebridg-e, Jxffebson County, Tenn. De r Doctcr : It is w.th great Happiness tha: 1 take my pen in hand to inform you of the good effects of your tru.y valuabi; remedies. I really believe that 1 would long ere this nave been In nty greve nad it not bjen «or your timely am. O U only knows the Img years o! tufiarug I endur and previous to adopting your treatment; and, now that I am free from pam.it seems as thoug a miracle hxd been wrought. 1 hive recommenoed s ve’ai to apply to vou, aiul >ou uav res. a surod I will do all I can for you. May Goa aid you in y< u p aisew r liy efforts iu re.icv.i g potr diseased moitalu. Ever trataiuiiy you s, DICY ELLIS <N. CASE OF AGGRAVATED STOMACH DIFFICULTY. Mrs. Mary A.Wbif.rd, <fEfst Florence, New York, “Prof. llam.lton: My Dear Sir: Yru- medicines were hll promptly received, tnd tdn recording m dirtction. Lou's.* L a weh girls g in.- Ineverexp ctedtog-e her s j well as she is. She can do a good > ay’s woik. at.d can walk a mile to Sabb-tu S.h r ol and rnee lug rhe loads h rims sit cere thanks, andsajsyou have io e h rent ihinii’ f r her. Y'- u have r storeu her s nking li a th in a vr*rv short time. We th Hi be graceful to y«.u as long as we live ” “TAKES PLEASURE IN MAKING KNOWN THE GOOD RESULTS.” Mr. J. H Mot hell, of Co'un-bus, G«orga, writ.s: ft “I rtceiv and you- medicine and tookjw diroc ed. The e s . feet was entiiely satisfsc o y. Have handed out the circu larsy.ms. ur me, and take pl i i inak'ng known the g >«"d result.” Mrs. L<thca A. Smith of Evergreen, Avcyell* s Parish, La writes : “I feel and know that. 1 rm gVning rapidly all the time, and know not hew to *-xpress my gratitude to ycu or re lieving me of pain ar.d misery, i have no moie gloomy forebodings; xnemesare regu ar, di»estk n gxxd; in short, 1 Bel like my former elf azain. Any’hing I ran do for you, by influencing others to ap;ly, shall be-doue with carutstress and great plea ure. Bond me sem cftcula s. fo' lied that one th« uld be in the Lands of (very diseased person hreughou our Southern cmiuuy.” RAISING BLOOD CURED IN FOUR DAYS. Mr. Is. C. Woodby, or Miu’ton, Tex*-*, writes : “For two months previous to t*kirg your urdicinrs r hod been ecugh rg up a good dual c f blood ar.d matter gm and day artu ecu'd not 1 ymy htj-d down wi hour this mauer would ru • up tnyihro.u, causing a very un pleaunt »ei sa ion. snd requiring .% a ofcouzhiro and spitting before the throat could be cleared. I tool you i" 6 ®, 01 '°‘j r da y s » when I ceased to cmtgh up either blood or matter. 1 h .ve bren gHLing ever since. My a petite enj sttength are being restored and 1 cons d»r myseif m u fan- way to fully recover, theugh my clue for a .ong time Las b en regard* and as lie pelt ss ” t, , , Tobqance, Yalabusha County, Miss. I)r. R. L. Hamilton: My Dear Sir: Six monihi ago when I re: and your advertisement in the Metropolitan Rec ord, ini’ w.fe w*sandh and been for two yearss flaring with hv r cpnflalnt. colHs and five*-, ai.d other ills so common lu cur low lauds of h; South aud was so reduced, (having been cot tmed to he bed for nearly a year) that i oid n<£ think hoc u and eVt r recover. She comiueuced the use of your medicines and. to my surprise b ganto improve the first week, and h s stead )y ga ned uaii. the p esen’ tltre. Sh e is n. w able to attend to her household duties, and I deem lier permanently cu;ed. She is lively anti cheerful, and fids that your imcdiessh uld fi< and a place in eve y South ern house. lam a'sv happy to ad that y* ur treatment for rheumaf pm In niy owu case has been equally /atis f ctoiy. BetoreuHngy ur mc-ddue I bat been sunid 1 Ve iV ,ac l- S - f? r four yea:s and hav ng tried all the different lan Killers, Liniments, Ac, and despaired cf beipg cured. The ure of your raed-dee promptly, a"d, I b lieve. per manently cured m .. You cm if y u pleas;, make u?e of this letter, ns 1 It'el it my duty te Qu all in my power in th s humbug age >o extend the practice of onewhoml know to Le capable of doing what he c aims. I am we'l known her as is alFo whu: you have done for me, and hava air ady induceds veral to app yto you, and I shall not rest until I have made yjii a nl ycur wonderful cures know-n to all the diseased iq thD tegion. May Ood bless tfu* efforts you put f >rth for the hea ing < f the ,ick and the afflicted. Yours tiu!y. ROBERT E. WILBOURN. ANOTHER APPEAL TO THE INCREDULOUS! Sowell kncwiig tie general customof the Amerlfcin people to denounce all adveiti. ing pi y-ic.ans as “humbug ” witneut knowi g anything at all in regard tt h ir merits, iu aduit on ’o the numerous ana wonderful tesVmania s from i£ l^ e .. c^t k'’ thousands vvfio have been curea by me, I pub lish below the nanftsan j addresses of a few reliable men who know me well as a nun of mugrity and reliabil ty : John Proper, Wuterf ud, N Y; 'ihemas B Mlngerand, Rome, N Y; Timothy Cronir, Attorney at Law No J6l Broadway, New Y(Jk City; J M Emerson, No 83’ bassn* s reet. New ¥® r k City; Nerval M White, Clerk in New York ( lty 1 ostofflee; L'r. Pa'ine , No 78 Fiurth Avenue, New lcrkrii y; Edward Hu lingtine, Troy, New York- Harvi j Wil.fx,Ridge Mills, Jl OMcCreMy! ' ; % i At '? rn ey at Law, Ho 55 Ltl ®* y a .reet, New Yeik Cit*; CLari*s Vnn Bon huyaen & Hl Un a,| a ” Ue / lir j’v. fl A J ba y ’ •?. Joseph Adders n. Ho 81 Adams s tee. 13'v.ck'y,. K Y; R.|e y Merrill, Sanuford, el „? <lwa t !*. tßego. N Y; Martin D ec »er. Roil bury.H Y; Thos Colby M.,ri,v,lie, HY; Tr.omaa Filch, \v-li’ ,a 3vll * •''bids & Cos, Drllggiisis, No 111 V, ill,am «'re,t, Mot York City; John E Vaa E ten. At torney at Law, king.lon, H e w York; Oscar Hamilton. San ord H *; Heniy li err, Chicago, I;], Coliidga & Adams.Drngg.sta, No lOSJobn street, H Y; J. TiUtaom Cfttk m tht New \ork Pcstofhce; E Harmon, Gettysburg. It must be remembered that the above are a’l good re -1 able business in.n, to whom a »iy c-ne may r f c r by letter or oilierw seas to the reliability and honesty cf mys.Vf as a man of business. AI o, below! give ar other ]jet ofre sDorribie iers.nrtwbo havebeen ly mated by me wrh great succ:»s, any of whom w.ll answer any qu-stlcns .by etter or iu person in regard to rr.y t oVm-nc in thet cas.s Fb and I the space, and were it p ssiblo, Iwe U id pub lisn the msxjry and character of each cose in fu 1. Sou.e of them wrem f. wenderful cum butter want of rpace can confer to tin min a g .ne al way. Ido this to give Ihe fkeptlca all 'he e. to.nee in r„y p, wt r of my re iab 1- lty aid rettarkab e aki 1. I further wiah it diatinenv un detatood that I no not olaim to cube all cases, for a'l reaaonabe peoile must real.!- that here its a pooUla otstaoid conditio, a watch no human aid can reacn, how ever wet a;d skillfully itmat he di-ec ed. In miny in. a knees of ih se erave cases ihetrft phy ic an oau and i rntird. to .ootte the , athway totlr grave, and tt.ua cf rreapondlnc iy ertva-e the undeveiored apiri ar.d give time to prepare it for a mgher existence. 'lut-.n Carer. Eq, AHant cvill *, N Y: MrS Lte, Hew Yo.k Mils. N Y; WO Porter, iiiilwood, Mo; Jehu A Y un», Kav.n a, ohtoj Samuel M Wagoner E*q . Dll sburv. Pa: Am C Biajford. Pott*', fa; Mrs F S Wi-inple Gambndxe Vt; hue J F Barest. Pacoi. t Pep- 1, S C;Enri y\Y Reid Ei.tcottvil e, N 'i; L E Fish Eso Moline 111 “Miss El’a M Ratkliff St. Mary’s Ga; Sabina E Westp rt. N Y; Jam s A l’icktft, Fgq, jacksc v lie Ha; Lou saO Cobb, riubbar tou. Vt; Adam Gr,bb, Louis vt le, A la; Mol lie Brooks, West p ft,*, <; a; jj, Higbee, Esq, Cttttarr.w u J , N \; Franc's E Wood, iso, Newß al N 1; Alice Emond , > acke t R ver, NI; Mrs H a Tay lor, Ease Troy, Wis; Mrs Msry E Mitchell, Jersey Shore Pa; i. rs Abirah Dedrick, hterbn.vdie, P ; J H hpeuce-’ Sugar Grov°, Ky; WmFreeburn, Latrobe, Neb; Merman Heariein, Esq. Atlan a, Ga; J M Va-ayck'e, Esq Wa'lula. W shiig on Territory; Wm Walker. Jrsq. w’ellingtau. low-; E- ward Hutchi: sop, Isq. Cha'swortf, IP; P Scfem erhor. , Bluomvi le, N Y; Mis J Laid ow, B<.x No 7rß F rt W r arne. Iod; Marion A Crardall, Ni- e , N 1; E Kate Rodney, Coatesville, Pa: Mrs E W Chaee. Warsaw N Y- M S Hamilton. Pine Biuff, Ark; Chas A Keeier, Esa at tomey at Law, Albion, N Y: Mrs C M We sh, Farmer City, 111; Mss Mattie Lawrerce, North Lecminister Maas; Wm Smith, Etq, P<> Box, No 53, poitland, Me; N’ E Hicks Witumka, Aia; J J Bftel. L ckhaver. Pa- Mrs »amuei Sawyer, Grout’s Corners, Mass; Lfzzie B HarriA, Winchester, Mass: Cornelia A V a n Viict. Jericcr, Vt* the Rev Was i gt. n Midoris, Sr'iuney, Ohir; Mrs H Gaiictt, Kansas City, M-; B nj Berry, Isq, MatDawan, N. J- Alexander, Hugh=>, Isq, Po ghkeeya e, N Y; Wm B Betts, Esq, Noiwa.k, Gone; S o Parker, Esq, Alabama, RIM EMBER ONE THING!!! Pxxdsr : Do not think that joy car not be cured Lc »a-se you t ied aheriemed eu Letit be dis inctly un derstood that many es my rem dfis are known on yto mys'l, for ft an? oi them are oftcoverbs of my own, anti a e compounded acco dirg to my own riLso-im: anu exten sive expedience with the sick. All I wish to kLOW may ca=e is the m at promine r » symi totrs, aud they can jnstas wdl bo wrtteu as told a physician.- and h* can tn at the cas= as easily as tho g the pate twere presmt, please w i e to me at cnee. a’l ye afflicted, and I will an* swer you promptly: and to the point, and state t«l y the ’acts as they ap; ea% and whe.be’ you can or not b sajed. Do co give up. even though your family physicia, done you no good, fori have raved tho 1 sa ds aner a'l hope: ad tied au.i ihe grave was nta'. The wLdom acd goodne.s oi a just Providence will not withh< Id the cob e me; ns rer the sa vationaod hap. iness of Itis sufferinif and erring children. Also, if you expect a fall » n l reply to your lette , a wajs enclose 10 cenu—poata must be paid m ad-ance. NOTICE. Prcf. Ilami ton has n w ready a pamphlet contaioiig a bioeraphicx sketch of uis remarkaole li.ri-, with a lithe gra h picture of liimsalf. This book a‘so conta us a comtdeie bis oy of Prof H.’s wonderful cnris_hi^th.-ory of cis e a:- e aud the only flatura’, sa e. aud p* sit'-ve treatment ’or a 1 ! ctroalc s—a vaiuab'e work to: everybody. SxiiT Fax*. 7 7 Have no hesi arcy in writirg to the Doctor, tnd state to J him y'ur rase in full, and te will d-al noneacly auti ! pr« mpt y w:t i you. All letters to him must be a-dressed K. LEOXIDAS HAMILIOX, M. D., Ho. 546 BROADWAY. Care ofr. sceßoiKo 1954 Hew Yotk. Tbe number of the Ptsfcofficeßox mult be put on each letter to insure safety. aultt—dJ wl WANTED AGENTS FOR BIBLE LYRICS, AN entirely new work that has been in active preparation for over 30 years ; cordially endorsed by leading clergymen of all the principal denominations. Fora 16 page Circular, giving iull particulars, with sample pages, and a sample of the elegant fullpage engravings with which the work will be embellished, address C. F. VENT, Publisher, 38 W. Fourth St., CINCINNATI, O. jy2o—d6tFwq PAUL, WELCH & BRANDES, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN FOREIGN FRUITS, POTATOES, APPLES, ONIONS, Nuts, Oranges, Lemons, . Pickles, Canned Fruits and Vegetables, and all kinds Produce. 215 EAST BAY (opposite new Custom House) CHARLESTON, S. C. mar 2b—d3aw6m W-A.IR,:R,:E32sr, Sc CO., COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS ILL CONTINUE TO GIVE THEIR BEST ATTENTION TO THE STOR AGE AND SALE OP COTTON AND OTHER PRODUCE. Agents for the Arrow Tie for Baling Cotton, THE BEST IN USE. .u® Factors l rao»”^OT SBPMDFHOM I jffl.fjfi'l —- i RATES. ORDERS PROM PLANTERS FOR BAGGING AND SUPPLIES SHALL ALWAYS HAVE OUR PROMPT ATTENTION. , , WARREN, L£NE & CO, augl—dAw3m ISAAC T. HEARD. O. M. STONE. ISAAC T. HEARD Ac CO. T WAREHOUSE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Cornei* Reynolds and Mclntosh Streets, (Fireproof Warehouse formerly occupied by Messrs. Bustin & Walker,) AUGUSTA, GA., W ILL . devote their strict personal attention to the storageaml sale of COTTON and othei PRODUCK. I.iberal CASH ADI ANCKS made at all times on Produce in store. Agents for Gullet’s Patent Improved Steel Brush lotion Gins, We refer, as logits itierils, to all those who have tried ttieie, and n> Cotton Factors ■■ N. *|W office. Pamphlets giving' a full’ descrip* lion will be sent to who wish them. on hand, to'which we call atcenUon of ISAAC T. HEARD & CO, ivl7—ddt-wOm m COTTON FLAMERS. UNPARALI a lillaKl > ?4UCCISMS OP WRIGHT’S, ALIM’S AM) MAKS’. COTTON SCREWS. The greatest improvement in these Cotton Packing Screws! the Bnas-r tjst cjke i GIVE ENTIRE SATISFACTION TO ALL WHO USE '.l HEM. EVERY SCREW WARRANTED. I AM now receiving orders daily for these celebrated Screws. Planters are requested to sendtbeir orders at once, so that their Screws may be ready when, called for. No disoppoinmenl as to time promised. Also WIN GEAR of GRAHAM’S and 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 sold eheap tor cash. I have also on hand about sixty-live PULLEYS in size varying from six feet to ten inches, already finished; and two hundred feet of 2 and 21 inch SHAFTING, which I will dispose of at greatly reduced prices. All kinds of MACHINERY and CASTINGS done at short notice. The highest price paid for OLD MACHINERY, IRON, BRASS and COPPER. ORDERS rospeetlully solicited. I Ad dress P, MALONE. At Augusta Foundry and Machine Works, . Corner Jackson and D’ Antignacstreets, Augusta, Ga. P. 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—suwfAwtf C. H. P~hTn iz y 7 COTTON FACTOR AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, QONTINUES TO GIVE HIS ATTENTION TO THE STORAGE AND SALE OP COTTON, at his FIRE-PROOF WAREHOUSE, on JACKSON STREET. CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED. (in) jy2B-d«w3m. J. K. EVANS. \V. 11. lIUSSELI, EVANS & RUSSELL, SUCCESSORS TO GEO W. EVANS & EON, GOTTO IV FACTORS AND Gen’l Commission Merchants, Mclntosh st., augusta, ga. Liberal Cash Advances made on Cotton and other Produce. Orders for Bagging, Rope and Family Supplies carefully ; ml promptly attended to. augl~w3in TO MILL OWNERS? Mill stones, BOLTING CLOTH, SMUT MACHINES, and all kinds of Mill' Findings, for sale at the lowest cash price by WM. BRENNER, 107 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia. mars—wly WOOLCARDING THE UNDERSIGNED TAKES PLEAS UHE in informing the public that 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, junl9—w2m ' Lexington. Ga. Western Military Academy, E. KIRBY SMITH, Superintendent. THE next regular sessiou of this Acad emy begins on Ist September, 1869. An extra session will be held during the Summer vacation. For further informa tion address E. KIRBY SMITH, je9—w.3m New Castle, Henry Co.,Ky. SPRING HILL FACTORY will CARD WOOL into rolls for 12i cents per lb., or I of the wool. All the wool left at Derry & Law’s Grocery store, No. 277 Broad street. Au gusta, Ga.,or at the above-named Factory, on the Louisville Plants Road, 7 miles from Augusta, Ga., will receive prompt attention. G. W. DUVAL. jylf>—wGf Dr. J. P. H. BROWN, Dentist. JM) Broad Street, next hoiiMe above John dc Titos. A, Bones 1 Hardware Store. ARTIFICIAL TEETH IN- with special regar r LJ-Ho life-like exprassinn, beauty* comfort, psefalueas and durability. feb24—w6m* FEVER AND AGUE, from which mankind suffer over a large part of the globe. Is the consequence of a (iisea.-*e<l notion in tne system, in duced by the p Jisiuoiu miasm of vegetable decay. This exaltation is evolved by the acrioa of tolar heat on wet toil and rises with tbe watery vapor from :t. While th ? • sun is below the horizon this vapor ringers near the earth’s surface and the vires is taken with it, through the lungs Into tne blood. There it acts as an liriut ng poi-on on the Internal viscera and excreting organs of t e body. The liver be comes torr-id and tails to Becrc’e not on y this virus, but aSo s he bile from tne b'.oi>d. Both tae virus and the bile accumulate in the. circulation and produce violent conaUtu tional disorder. The spleen, th kidneys, and the ttomach svmvafnize with the liver, and become disordered also. Finally the instinct of oar o-ganism. as if an attempt to ex pel the noxious iuiusion. concentrates the whole bi < aor the body in the intern 1 excretoriea to force them .o cm' it out. The blocd leaves the surface, and rashes to the central organs wi h congfgtive violence. Thi= is the GgiLL. But in this effort it falls. Tnen the Fxvxb follows, in which the blood leave* the central organa and rusnes to the su race as ii In ano’her ettort to expei the i r ri a’ ng poi.-on through that ether great ex6-ttory_ the skiu. In this aso t and the system abandons the attempt exhausted, - nd waits f>r the recovery of strength t> repeat the hopei-rs effort another day. These are the fir-s of p -roxrsms of V EVfc.lt AND AGUE. Such constitutional disorder wiu of course undermine the health if it is n t removed. We have labored, t j find, Mid have found, an antidote, AYER’S AGUE CURE, which neutralizes this malariou3 poison in the blood, and stimulates the liver to expel it from the body. As it should so it does cure this afflicting di ord r wi h i erfect certainty. And It does more, or rather does what is of more service to those •übject to tnis infection. It taken.in tea* nit expel* it from the system a as i* is 3bscjbed. a..i* thus keeps those who Utr°it iree rrom iuattack ; keep* tu* sy ve*n la health although exposed ro the iae s . Oonsequ-nuy it n£*t only j cures, bat protects from, the gr<sal v&y - or affections which are induced bv this malimant i floerce, such as Remittent Fever, Obiil Fever, Dumb, <>r Masked Ague, Periodical Headache, or Bilious Headache, Biiiou.- Fevers, Ne.ralgin. Gout, Blin'-n-ai Toothache. Ea-ache. Catarrh, Asthma, PaJpitatkma, Painful Affections of the Spleen, Hysrerics, Code, Paralysis, ana Palnfor Affections of the Stomach and Bowers, all of which, when arising from this cause, w 11 be found to assume more or less the intermittent type. This < *ALGE CL RE re moves the cause of thete derangements, and cures! Le disease. .. . This it accomplishes by stimulating tre excretonei to ex pel the nni3 from the system : and the*- organs by de grees become habited to do this their office of their acc rd. Hence arises what we term accUmaiation. T me mar accomplish «he eameend, but of.tn lire is not fang enough, or is Facrificed in the attempt, whifathrf “AGUE CURE” does it at once; and with safety. VVe have gria: reason to believe t'is is a surer as weli a.* =ater remedy for the whole class of diseases which are caused by the mias mat:c infedion, than any c ther which has b*en discovered ; and it has ‘ti 1 another, importsni advantage to the public, wnich is. that it Is cheap as well as good. PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS. Price One Dollar per Bottle. Sold by Dr. B. Wei’s md sll Ihe Drams!, in t sgtuu Also by *ll Dro2gikta and Dealers in Medicine everywhere j > 3—satuth A wSm LIQUORS! LIQUORST WISHING to retire from the Liquor business, I will offer for the next thirty days 30 barrels of prime Spirits at cost. All needing would do well to give a call. THOS. M. GOLDSBY, jy3o—d6Awlm 299 Broad Street. jficpl SuUtrrtisnucnts. TALIAFERRO COUNTY. TALIAFERRO CO UN- V A TY.—Whereas Absalom G. Eva s pplies to me for permanent Letters <f Administration on the estate of John E ane, lrte of said county, decease /. This is therefore to cite all person* c ncemed, to be and appear at the. Court of Ordinary of said county*, to be held on the FIRST’ M >NJ)AY in SEPT :■ MBEK next, to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not be granted. Given under my official signature, this the 2Vh day of July, 1869. J.D. HAMMACK, .jy.3o—w6 Ordinary. FOR SALE. ONE thousand and fifty acres of LAND, more or less, property oi Elcy Cart ledge, deceased, in the county ofColumbia, about eiglit miles above Appliug and one half mile from the Washington Road, ad joining lauds of John Cin-tledge, R. 8. Neal, W. S. Dufin, H. A. Hovey (formerly Juriah Harris’) and Mrs. Mary Tankerly (formerly William C. Avery’s).' The above mentioned land is offered for sale by the undersigned as Keoeiyer, under a Decree in Equity, rendered at the June Term, 1869, of the Superior Court of Rich mond county, to satisfy a fieri facias issu ing from Columbia Superior Court, in favor of Augustus Jones, Edwin T. Jones and Mary S. Jones, by tlivir next friend, James Cartledge, against John Cartledge and Elcy, his wile. Under the discretion vested in the Re ceiver by the deereo, 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 be offer ed on that day at Appling, at public out cry to the highest bidder. CLAIBORNE SNEAD, jyll—3*wtd Receiver. FOR SALE. PURE BRED HOGS AND FOWLS WINTER SEED WHEAT. AND other FARM SEEDS, from Deitz’s Experimental Farm, Chauibersburg, Pa. . Diehl’s and Broughton Beardless, Week’s and Treadwell’s Bearded White Wheats; French Wiiite and Bed Chaff; Purple Straw Bearded Red Mediterranean, and German Amber Beardless are the best, earliest, hardiest an > most productive Wheats that can be recommended for general cultivation. Price §5 per bushel, Four pounds of any kind by mail post paid, for * 81. Twenty heads of diffeient j varieties sent post-paid for SI. Twenty j other varieties of Wheat, Barley and Oats, | oflast year's importation. See Deitz’s Ex- \ perimenlat Farm Journal , send and sub- ; scribe lor it; only 8L 50 per year; the most useful journal printed. Address GEO. A. DELTA. jyl7—w6 Ohambersburg, Pa. IMPORTANT TO ZFILJLTSTTIEJIR/S I THE RICHMOND FACTORY (NEAR AUGUSTA, 0A.,) CONTINUES TO MANUFACTURE WOOLEN CLOTH FOR PLANTERS, At 29 cents per yard for Plains, and cents for Twills. IF tbe owners of the Wool wish the same dyed, they are prepared to do so, mak ing a gray—the only color they propose making. The charge for Dyeing the Fill jug will be 3 cents a yard extra. Wool will be carded at 121 cents per lb, AH Wool sent must have theOWNER’S NAME PLAINLY MARKED ON THE PACKAGE. Goods to be paid for on de livery. All instructions to C’HAS. A. ROWLAND, Agent, Augusta, Ga. A. JOHNSTON, President Richmond Factory, June Ist. 1869. may2B—dira<&w2m M P. STOVALL, WAREHOUSE AND Commissioa Merchant, JACKSON STREET, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, CONTINUES to give his persona! at tention to the storage and sale of COT TON and other produce. Orders for Plautation and Family sup plies promptly and carefully filled. • , j? prepared to make liberal CASH AD\ ANCEs on all consignments. jylß—dCiwlm JEWELL’S MILLS. CORMERLY ROCK FACTORY, GA. A Post Office, Culverion, Georgia. We will manufacture Wool for customers this season, on the following terms; Wool manufactured into Jeans (colored warpj 30 cents per yard ; in Kerseys at 20 cents per yard, or.carded in rolls at 12} cents per pound. Sheetings, Shirtings Osna burgs and Yarns constantly on hand, wool wanted .ii exchange lor goods at market value or For cash. Consignments Irailroad should be directed to Oolver ion. Z. McCORD, Agent In Augusta. D. A. JEWELL, Owner, myll—dluiAw.luj JEFFERSON COUNTY^ ( I A \ J EFFERSON COUNTY. the estat? of Jo!s r.'Slggn. ott apn'ie. to me for Letter. “any,deceased. an t creditors <. f sa.d d< cea ed to he and »inn,r ,r„ K n T rea in LouisviHe.on or before the IST MONDAY in DkcEM* BER next, to show cause. If any they can whv nu i should not be granted. 3 ’ ny i^ d L'^ters W * H* WATKINS, au6—wtd Ordiuary j.<j. ( GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY VT By virtue ot an o-tler from the Honorable the Court ofOrdinary of Jefferson o unty, will be sold at the Mirknt H xisejnthe town «f Louisville, cm the FIRST 1 LTtS DAY IK OCTOBER next, a tract oi -'aud belonging to ti e of O. 11. P. BTNE, late of ? Id county, deceased adjoining lands, cf R. Allwel?, J D. Mui ger. Aleut! Biown, and others, containing three hundred and uf'v a res, more or 1e s. Tcrmj c sh. . JOHN R. BY> E, tu.o-wd Adinini.lta.or. ON THE FIRST MONDAY IN"oC IJBLR next. ppUcatiou wi]! be made to the C urt oi Ovuinary of Jefferson cuun v for leav e to sell *ll taeland be.engmg to the es ate o: Qe rge W. Roberson, deetfti-es. , „ ELIZA A. KUBFRSOV, augl—w 2m Atiniaistruirix. saleT-- fj \V i!l be sold at U e Msifcet H. uv- in the town <,f L u I3vtl’« (n tb e HRSTTUKSDAY IN SEPTEMBER neat. f I „ r £. ct ,2 f “ 3 *' l o, »ypiyiuß outim ro«i r om lou- Uville 10 Davidsboro, cont.lr h, K Two H-.ndr«d Acrot. more orle.-s,adJoiniD*layds ot ».u wjr e . cn tb< North ; West. B. S. Weeks on the Su b. Rheas Boat ck on the East, and known as the place upon which Henry P Wat kins formerly resided. Lev'ed on as the p-op-rtv of Henry P. Watkins to sat afy a Ji. fa issued from the County Court of and county, in favor if James G. Cain, transferee of B. F. Fleming, Executor of A. B. Grcss against said Henry F. Watkins. John B. Watkins, tenant m noaiesaion. , J* T. MULLING. iV2B—wtd Sheriff Jefferson t o nty. EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY. —Whereas, Samuel M. Clark and Mrs. Em ly K. Clark have applied for Letters of Administration on » he es tate of James W. Clark, late of said county, deceased: These are, there.ore, to cite and admonish all and ingu lar, the kindred and creditors of said deceased to oe and ap pear at the Court of Orrtinarv *o be teld at. the C 'urt Hou-e in Louisville, on the FIRST MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER next, to show cause. If any they can, why said .Lct.trs should not be granted. W. H. WATKINS, j 21— w5 Ordinary. JEFFERSON COUNTY. v. J —Whereas Samuel A. Denny executor cf toe last will and testament of Richard J. Brown, deceased, *.ppli°s t« me tor an order to sell the real estate ot said deceased. These ere to cite and admonish all persons Interested to be and appear at the Court of Ordinary tube held »t the Courthouse In Lcntsville, for said county, o i the* IK ST MONDAY in UC I'OBER next, to s iow cause if any they Caii, why said order should not be granted. , „ W. H. WATKINS, luy7—w4m Ordinui'y. JEFFERSON COUNTY. . —Where is, W illiam T. Lafeaver, executor, of the lasi will and testament of John W. Lafeaver. deceased, ap pli sto me lor an order to sell Un re*i eshate of slid de ceased. These are to cite and btlmouiHh all persoi s interest ed to be and appear at me Court of Ordinary, io be h»ld »t the Courthou.e j n Louisvl le for said county,on the FIRST MONDAY in OCTOB R r ett, to show cause, if any they can, why salci ordtr should not be granted. . „ W. H. WATKINS, Juy i— wjrn Ordinary. fU EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY. ' J tVhereas. J a >me3 St-pleton. admlnistratoj on the estate ot James M. Williams, late of said county, de ceased, applies to me lor Letters of dismission: Th.se are, therefore, to c.te aud aiiuonlsh'all and singular, the kindred aid credit»rs of sail ricce.'sed to be and i-ppea r at my ottlce In the Court, n the town of Lsuisvi le, on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN OCTOBER next, to show 7 use, if niiythev cm, w-h,* and let’ers should not beg auted. VV. H. WATKINS, jell—s3ji Ordioary J. C. EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY "NN hi re u--. And r w J W.lllanis Adminlstra’or oti the estue of Newton J. Hadden, diceased, applies t > me for Letteis of Dismission : Theseare therefore to cite and admonish all a id sUnular the kindred aud or ditors to be and appear at my office on orbetore the FIRST MONDAY IN .SEPTEMBER next to show cause, it any they can, why said .eave bhoull mu’ be granted. , , c W. H. WATKINB, Ji’4— w6tn Oidiin-ry. ( JJ.KORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY. \ Wh- re.ia Joha Jordan. Admiulstrator of the.estate of ion t,or< * un ’ ece:4Be tl* applies to me for Le .tersof I),smis- These are, tlierefore, to cite and admonish, all and sin gular, the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at my office, at ihe Court Hous?, in the town Z. t c *nm U i!. B wi!?t n on ,r Leftire the FIRST MONDAY in SEi IhMhhll next, to show cause, if any they can. why said Lette. s should not be granted ... W. H. WATKINB, m Ordinary. I eave TO BELL.— GEORGIA, 1 J OJLEIIIURI’E UOUMTT.-Twu raoa’h, oltpj nat-ap llcat'ou will be made to the Houcrable the Court of Oimnary of eaid count, for l ave to sell the undivided lauds beiotift.rg _lo tae estate of John P. Mathew!, de ceised. May 20,1569. ALBINA E. MATHEWS Executrix of Johnl*. Mathews, deceai>ed. may‘22—w2m / GEORGIA,IIEFFERS'ON'COUNTY. \ Whereas, Samuel A Denny, *xecutor of toe lait wui aDd tehtameut of R. J. Brown, deceased, ap;iies to ine tor letteis ofdismistiou. These a e therefore to cite, summon and cdmonUih all and sing ilar, the kindred arid creditors, to be and Hopear st my office, at the Court Hous *, in the ’owr. of Lmisville on or before the FIRST MONDaY In NOVEMBER ne»t to slow cause, if any they can. why said Letters should not te granted. VV. H. WATKINS, a UTdinury. OGEORGIA,0 GEORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY^ \ Whereas, W.lh in. a. WiJki s, Administrator of the oetate of B a rmah S Carswell, de ceased, appll es to rue for Letters «'t Dismission. ihese are, therefore, to cite and adinouLb, all an 1 singular the kindred and creditors of said deceased, io be aud appear at mv office, wi;km the time prescribed by law to show cause, if any they have, way letters of diamissory Iron said estate should net be granted. , KOQ . W. H. WATKINS, feb2B—worn Ordinary. EORGIA, JEFFERSON COUNTY. V-I Wheieas, William (J. Lyou, Administrator on the estate of Nicy Covington, deceased, applies to m* for Let tore of Dismission. Theseare therefore, to cite and admonish, all and hingu lar, the kindred and c ed tors of said deceased to tie and ap pear at my office in the town of Louisville, within the time presenb and by law, and show cause, if any they have, why said Letters should not be granted. , . in W. H. WATKiNH, feblO-6111 «/rdin».ry. JEFFERSON COUiiiY “ M Whereas. James W. Carswell. Executoi ol Lavina Car-weU,deceased, applies to roe fir Lott irs of Dismiuaion. Ihese an, therefo e, to cite and admonish, all and singu lar. the kindreu and creditors ol taid deceased t o be and ap pear at my office,in the town of Louisville within tin time prescribed by law. to show cause, if any they have, why said Letters should not be granted. „ , , W. H. WATKINK, ____fcblO— 6oa_ Ordinary. -INCO.-N COUNTY. /'VEOKGiA, Lincoln county- V_A William S. Tstom having appHe Ito the Cart of Ordinary of said county for discharge from his guardian ship of Warren Haroesberger. This is, therefore, »o cite all persons concerned to 311 w cause, by filing ob ections ia my offle 1 why said William S. Tatom shculd not be dismissed from lis guardiaiifhip of Wa’ren and rece.ve ette-sof dismitaloi. Given und r my hand and official ilgnature July 6 h, 186&. B. F. TAID.Hi, jyll—’aS u Ordinary LC. LINCOLN COUNTY^ Whereas, John M. 8 ar’s, Administrat >r of Thomas Sea is, represents to the Court in his petition, duly nle J and eniefed on record, thdt lie has lu ly adminicle ed Tuomas Searis’ estate, This is, therefore, to cite all persona concerned, kindrel i-cdc editors, to s ow cause, it'anjr th'*v can, why said Ad ministr tor iliouid not bed sebarged from IPs adrainist.a tion. and receive letters of dismission on the first MON DAY' in NOVEMBER. 1869 Given under my hand and offl;iil s’gnature July 7th, 18G9 B. F TATOM, }yll—W3m Ur l nary L. C. GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.- \ A Wliereaa, Henry J. Lanff, Administrator de 'jonia non, of William 0. Robertson. re«re:e t« to the Court iu his petiiiou, duly Hied aud entered t n record, that ht has fully administered William O. Robertson's estate. Tula is, therefore, tj rite all pors ns coucerned, kindred and credito k, to show cusc, if any thev car, tfhy eait, Ad miuisirator should not be discharged from his administra tion, and receive letters of dismission on the fir.»t HON DA Y in HOVEMttJtK, 1869. Given under my hand and Official sign- tare July Irbi 1869. B. F TATOm, . jyll—w3m Ordinary L C. ra EORGi A.LINCOLNCOUNTY. VX Wliyrea- 1 , William D. Tutt, Administrator of Rich ard F. Tompkins, represents to the Court in his petition, dujy A «<1 and entire i on record, ihat he has fully admin istere . Richard F. Tompkinn* estate. This i*, tlieref rc, to cite al persons concerned, kindred and creditors, to show cause, f any they can, why s»ii)l Ad ministrator should not be di-char*ed from his administra tion, and roc-ive lert.wrs of administration on t e first MON DAY in NOVEMBER, 1869. Gfaeu under my hand and official tisuature July 7tb, 1869. B. F. TATOM, iyll—w3m Ordinary L C. VT OTICE FOR LEAVE TO BFLL Lx LAND.—Ap;licatiou v.ill :,e mode to the Court of Ordinary ot Lincoln county. Georgia, at the first re.jular term after the expiration of f-ur weeks from this notice, for leave, to send the real estate belonging to the e..-t te of Hardy Leverett, late of said coun y, dec ;aeed, tor the bene fit of the heirs and creditors of sai l deceased WILLIAM D. TUTT. Aflm’r oi Hardy i.everttt. July 8 h, 1869. Jyll—wi, UTATE OF GEORGHaTLINCOLN L} WON TY.—Notice is hereby given toali persons hav ing demands against Hardy Luvcrett. late of said cotnty, deceased, to ’present them to me, properly made out., with in the time presented by Jaw so as to show their character and amount. And all uersoni indebted to said deceisad are hereby required to make imme Hate payment to me. July 7th, 1869. WiLKIA vc D. TUT T j) 11—wG Adm’r of Hardy Leverett. /j.EORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY jehn B. Kennedy having applies to be appointed Guardian of tne persf>ns an ’ property of Cora, Wate sand .Jabez P. McCord, minors under faur-ten yearsof age, resi cen sos said county: This is to cite ail persons concerned to he and appear at tbe term of tbe Couft of Ordinary, to b; »ell nex t.fter theexpirdion of thirty days from the first pub kaMoa of this notice, and eh w Cause, ir they can, why ssil John B. Kenecjr should not be intrusted with the guardiant-hip of the persons aid property < f Cora, Waters and Jxher. P. MeOord, minora ot P. McCord, deceased, Witnesi my hand «nd official signature this June 17 h, 1869, B.F. ATOM, junlft—w-5 Ordinary. XT OTICE FOR LEAVE TO SELL i.l LAND.—Application will be mid■ to the Courf. r f ordinary of Lincoln County, Georgia, at the firs - , regular term a'ter the expira ion of tour weeks from thin no* ce, for leave to sell the lauds belong, ng to the estat e of Thorn mJ. Murray, late of said county deceased, for the tenefit of heirs ! and creditor* o «aid dece:sw. June 531, 1869. HENRY 11. FEVfSOM* , 4 HENRY L. MURRAY. jun2G—w4 Adminiftlratont. Li TATE OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN kj COUNTY.— 'A'tife-8 Thomas A. Barkslale nnd James kl. WiJ.is, Administrators of Nicholas G. Bark and tie, represents Toth* Court in tholr petition, duly fii«d and en terfiH "i record, that thev have filly aim: nisi ere • Nicholas G. Bar'*da e’s estate. This is, therefore, to Cite al! per s ons concerned, kindred and creditors, to show r-aus*\ if kny they can, why said administrators should not be db'cbaiged from their admihl-traMon and receive letters of dhmUiios on the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, 189. April 7,1869. J?. F. TATOM, aplC «r6rn Ordinary. L (!. SCRIVErJ COUNTY^ OCRIVEN SHERIFF SALE - WILL LJ be sold on Brrt TUESDAY IN SEPTEMBER ni*xt Withia'he legal boor, of »ale, before tbe Court Hono* in Syltaoia, »ixiy-two acre, of l»od n.oreor lew, bounded \v lands of D. K. Wad'ey nnd Mr». Mounoy Clifton. Levied on as the proyerty ot Ezekiel Clifton to V-tlaly a tax « r.. in foyer of the St»'e o' Oeorgia vs. said "illtor, I ,-vv made and returned '« me by the Constable of th- s’ltb DIL trictG M JOHN W. BOSTON, anet-wM _ __ BherfffS. <!. GEORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY.- F-uIH Jenkins anp ied for exemption of cer soiialty. andsetii g-spa-tand valuation of horn stead, imd I will t-ass up'jn thcH«me at my offle 4 - in Sylvani * at 19 o’oicF k M. on the 16TH DAY i»F A U'HJHT. 1 • HENRY PARKER. jy3l—w2 0.-dinarj’. GEORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY - sWbeseae5 Wbeseae Hardy Parker, administrator on etude of Ma trew Parker, late of sa‘d county, deceased, ap'lies tr, me for leave ti sell thel ,nd" of .ait UKeased. P ‘ * “ This is. therefore, to trie 11 persoos concerned to be i.nd Appear at the f-.-url ofOnliii >ra far s .id cun'v to ta* held .a the SECOND MONDAY IN *EriE«ijEKnext to ?ra"S"toe’ w ‘' s ’ Mid •« « should not be (ivenua er% uiraisiga tu-et I, 1,1, - 6 ifmt HENP.Y PARKER. _ jy*7-wSm ordl arJ GEORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY V-" —Whereas. Robert D Sharp, for Baain' J f^^ n w- S (ira^ia^l • " T, d administrator on the es'u'e of Pa ruk G. D ckey. and f<?minig‘rator on the estate of These are therefore to cite and admonish ail Dersons Inter wKWn t^Ttofe a. by law and show cure, if any whv raid ft.,- should no; be g-an'ed. ’ ’ ia J -- tt,r ’ Done a; my office, in Syivania, tbi. 26th day or July. “•Ww«m HENRY PARKER, urdinary fT^.9 SCRIVEN COUNTY" ndhon W tbJ , SStflf°P 'Ohnutejd, Administrator ds ton J “ uc ' 7 - te?estod to ho'snd ICI1 Cl . t * » nd "imooirb all p' r,ons In tcrfrUf tX £*** ,ny Wltllln -the time pie- SfcSd"- ,f ,hey “■ w “r -M Done at mv office, In Syivania, this 2«'b day of July, 1 , „ , HENRY PARKER, . 1 Z> ~ w ,m Ordinary. ( GEORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY.- * n °* n t 0 iae that S dam Brinson, late of sai i countv. died in e tale, leaving an eriate, aid that said estate is nn rfeDresen-ed. These are. therefore, to cite and admonish all pasons in terested »o be and ap ear at nr>v oifire in SrlvardL on tbe BEC >ND MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER, 1866 fr- show cause, if any they have, why the administration of ea and es tate anon and not oe v-ssted in the Clerk of the Superior Court of Raid county. Witneas my hind and official signature this July 15th, 1869. HENRY PARKER. jv27— w 5 Ordinary, SCRIVEN COUNTY SHERIFF BALE.—Bv virtue, of mortgage fieri facias issuing out of the honorable Bap rior Court of Bc.iven counjy, Georgia iu which Joseph Clay is plaintiff and William T. OpieT* defendant, I have levied upon, and wll sell < n in® FIRST TUESDAY u SEPTEMBER next, within the tiaual hours o; sale, before the Ooar bouse door. «* lage »fS yivania, for ci?h,tfce following valuible property to-wit: Fivf-uintb part of aterUin eteam saw mill, null site and appurtenan:es.near oral the F .ft y-six Him Hep orton tu e Central Kalroad in the »»'d countv of Mven being th*- undivided interest of tbe said William T.Ople in of, and to the paid mill site an J appurtenance*, “and al*o, at Fame time and place tne tw >-third< m*** of the lumber interest be longing to he said William T. Opte. Bald propertv degign&tfed arui pointed out in saJd mortgage fi. fa., W. T. Opie fco lug in positasion at tune of levy. JOHN W. BOSTON, Sheriff of Scrlvea County, Geo. juyd—wtd Xraal BURKE COUNTY. ( GEORGIA, BURKE COUNTY ! Admln^2w^5 ar ?' e " M * Blocker aPP’ie” so- Le ters of t on,s non ' J vpOD ttle wlatQ of Peter of Burke county, deceased. s te rav D <'fflc™ o °o? “g ”i W^tS’! 66 ’ if “*«• 5-hlß6<. U mT hl,ld tolrtur. thi. AnTu.t anYwa E, - U E 0!( ' ~ Ordinary. IV OTICE TO DEBTORS AND CRED- T r h T M? S _ , GE r.UBKK COeXTY-a c ‘ !l!nl r a «t ’-rt , he E.'ats of Ctariw A ‘ Tliomp»or, late ot said county, decerned. w'.l\ prcM-m t h ., ’ duly proven according‘o law an lal) mint** - * Wllleome nrwar'd and m.fc imuetLve “!" isan . ■ it-H. ItKRY. 5 jy*J_W* *' Admlnlatrntor O. A. 'i'linmyKn. A DJI INISTRATOR’S Isal'e X7v i V purruance of an onie- fom the Hon. the Ordln-r. Firs’; id« r ™ s r i town of Waynesboro’, of skal rr« ■ * v ' n d<^ r ' n i! ' - h^ursoff-ale, on ?he FIRST TUESDAY iv J. f>..V sn 1 8iR.1869. a‘ : the real estate (f Lict • JN ( b ‘, ll - N! the widows rower) r msist n lo fVne trx : ct " county, ceatmin 2 200 v*ie* more % ,! of John Attaway, J-.s ph B. Jones. Th • '* 1 “ 1 '^ other?. ' • A oou a. and Terms ca.h rnd pmc is to nay fore . jylß-wtd AdmT,.fe Xil . BURKE COUNTY \T Charles S. Hughes ippUes f, r \ ’ , 7* aud setting unart.and v*iu*t , n ,, 1 11,1 of per wiil pass upon the same a’ 10 o’clock A v ' 1 ,ead ’ aad I Waynesboro, on the *2G.h d»y of J.ilv u,y oJice . •teiysß P K « B S5 S ,„, A?, D ,. Je em’ah lumv , decer.se 1, late of Biuk c. iu : v s ' re r quested tn makq immediate raymenr. :<u 1 t a os l a i—> mands against said e.-tite, n e r. q nste i to nr, ‘r, ,**' duly at. ested according to law. U l ALFRED G. INMAN. . , . , MARY A. INMAN, Admlstratcr and Adttii.i&trdtrix of dL'CvU-xd ) uyo—w6 Debtors and or editors G f ORO!A - kvrke coux i-yYat persons li.d*ted to the e.ta’- of Lewi, il Moral late ,e SgSTsitSS; : rendrr u an account oi tneir o mvids within the time pv scribed by liw to . WILLIAM L. BUXTON, j i 6 -wO Administratwr. ( i EORGIA BURK E C OUNTY.— V A Whereas. Gilbert A V, :ud, Executor of J* H Wnn’ ate of said county, deceased, applies to me for Letters L».^- niirsory Iron, taid esUde, These are, theres >re, to cte and admonish all pe-sms ■ terefii°d to le and .<• n y ,>di ■* on oi vs r " FIRST MONDAY in O Toll SR mu :o slmwcaus if any they can, whv wvid leu ora should not :’e granted Given u dermy hand and official sen-.iu-e th-s Jc 18th, 18k®. L. F. LAWSON funlS—w3m Ordinary B. v. . BURKL COUNTY \X Whereas Everett Haymon, Eve-, u\>r of Andera- n Prescott, deceased, applies to me :<>; •. ;, in D : siir.«to v from said deceased’s estate. These aie. therefore, 'oclte and acffin.n’.-h a l p rsnns in terested to be «nd appear at ny ol»; • > on or* 1» v. ■ FIR-iY MONDAY IN SEPTEMBKR next t ' <,■ cause. If any they can, wt.y said L .itt r.-, should not- l».» gran-ed. Given under mv liand and official HK-nafnre, at office i» Waynesboro, this May 3,1869. , , fi*. F. LAWSON, inyG—wCm < )r ,\„\ rv ( 2J.EOR GIAI BlJIt K E COUNTY- Wherea-, Wilson J. Wimbtr y. AdniimstriLir • f •' seph M. Mathes, deceased, applies !>• ha lor Lt' Dhmi •ory from said deceased’s etrate. These are, therefore, to ate and admoi i.-h *M rersons v te rested to be and appear at my offl .• r> - ij„. kißs i MONDAY IN OCTOBER next, toshor/ .-a i urvihey can, why siid letters should not In* gr.ntcd. Given under my hand ami offloi. l;* g:rdtire .at- office in TVaynesboro, March 22J, 1569. mar23—w6m E. F. 1. A MX)N Ordinary. x.IJKKE COUNTY.— A Whereas, Mrs. Sut-an U.ley, Administtutrix of Wi liam Utley, deceased, applies tor Letters DisiLit*st>ry fmm said decaased’e estate. These aie. therefore, to cite au.l admonish all persons In terested ts> be and appear ft my office ou or t * tore th • FIRST MON DA Y IN OCTOBER. 1869, to show cau-e , any they can, why said letters sh uld not be granted. ’ Given under my hand aid official sign tu-r ibis 2*d day of March, 1869. E. F. LAWSON, mar 23 6m Ordinary B. V. OGLETUOHPE COUNTY. A DMINISTRA T O ICS SALE.- . »iu*k codhty - wai t*« w t before the Oou t Houw. door in Lexington on the FIUbT TUESDAY in OCTOBER i ext, the tiactot land bolusg iug to the estate of 8 iphte W. N» li, lying and bang in said county, containing 480 ..ere?, iuoie<r K-h, adjoining lauds of T. B. Goolsby. Mastin Childress. lan<!« of estate t.f Wm.W.EvereU.anlninningaong Sou h Broad River. Sold for bene ‘it of legal'es. Term*—cash Augus' 10. IHC9 NEWTON N<>ELL, Administrator A DMINIBTR Afo R*B 8 A LRU J-jL, GEORGIA. OGLLTHORPE COUNTY—WiII bo s‘-l i before toe Oont Hi u*- and or in <»»j tfi** FIRST TUESDAY lu NOVEMBER next, tlie tract of land belonging to tbe estate or Huidah Noell dertased. con taining 730 acres, more or loss. ly> n g • n li-ad waters .w Indian ijieek in -aid ountv. rdjf.ning land? o' William Cos qnitt and lams of esiitio William Colima. Upon :h,« premises are a good Dwelling House. Gin ID use and other buildings, and me plau r ut,lon i* in good r* pair. August 10, I SGy. D A Vll> W. I’ATM AN, augl2—wtd Administrat or. TDMiNIBTRATORSBALE.--\VILT ,LjL f e uo'd before the Court Mouse door in flu* town o Lexington, on )he MRS l TUES'*AY in OCTOBER next, by leave of the Honorable the C u t- of () din ary of the county of Oglethorpe, *.li trie lands bel * . r g «, ; t,- <*«- tate of JefTereoti M Bradford, d.-r .1 od. lying au l bcin* in said coumv, upon the Wat- rfo : Be iv. rDam C’re !i. Terms marie known on dav ol s de August 7. 1869. JaM Es M CHAN DLE K, Admiuntrator de bonis non with wdl annexed auglO—wld ( GEORGIA, OGLETHOKFK OOIJN VT Ti—APPLICATION' lU;t LEAVE TO SELL. Unity days fer rt.to uppl'cultm will b- node lu tin- Court or Oil!lnarv tifna.il ■. ;r y for leave To . -il titt Lauil beUmglng to the Est.ie of James SI axes-, decern!. . .a .. A. A. 1.E1.L, —w2m Exec ‘.or of J. mes Maxey. deceased. Oglethorpe Sheriffs sale: --Will be soli on ihe IST TUESDAY In SEPTEM BER text, before ihe Court Hou-edoor, in the town ol Lexingtor., Oglethorpe county, wiihln tbe i wful hours of sale, tii • following pr -petty, t -wit • A tract ot land ccirtui .ing one bandied, mil fify a:ret, more or leas, in said cmn'y, adimtiing laud- of J. Darden Mrs. Reid and othf-r*. Levied on by a Ji. fa. issued by George W. Smith, Tax Collect r of Ugh- horpe Couulv vs Edw, rd Moran lor S -te and County tax. Levy made au l returned to me by a Constable. ALSO, At the s. rae time and place, a tract of land containing one thousand acres, more rr iegs, in s id county a j-nu-ng lands of B. a< k ns, Beij F Hardeman and others. Levied on as ihe properly of W m Wray by » fi.fa. .esued by Ge<*. VV r . Smith, 1 .z Collector of Ogletbo pe c unty vs Vvm Wray. Levy m de and returned to me by a ConVab . ’ Also, four fi./ae. hsued from the Court of mUI county. Two in favor of William B Brlghtweli vs Wi» J ohnC.G..Joins vs. Wm.Wrav. Wm. W. Bu li vs. Wm. Wray, as friend otJße »j. V. Willingham, a* en dorser. One mid county in favor of V. r w D. Faust vs. Wm. Wra\ and M F .lack son, endorser. Thr eeji.fas. leaned Inin the Countv Court otsaid county. Two i U favor of K. L. Bloomfield & c .. and o.i»* jn favor ot B. I. Hardeman vs. Wni. Wrav ad fas. ia a y bunds again -ter.:d W'-ny. - BOOKER ADKINS, Sheriff. f GEORGIA, OGLETHORPE COUN- V-d IY. Whereas. Z v:hai\ah H. Giarke appl es to me for Letteri of Administration up .n tlie estate o; Stihicl Glenn, late of said countv. d*oe igeil. These are, therefore, to cite aud admonish all person* in terested to be and appear at my i ffice ai the r g lar term cf the Court of O-i . i-y, to be held ir, and fur ea'U county on the first MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER next, to show cause, if any th€y have, why said .etters th uld not oe grtriu-d. Given under my hand aud official sgnature this 2nd Aiiiru‘t,lß6«. Lexington, Ga„ August 2d, 1869. J w F. J. ROBINSON. tug4—ws O-dinarv o. C. Leave to Georgia, OGLETHORPE COUNTY—Tm in ,1,1 >is .-tfttrdate app.lcdtion will be made to the II mor b o ii f'cu-t <f Or,Unary or s.id o>.mty t"r ieuv,- to sill th -1-,iu! n.,m K u ■ U) the ettule of WUI iui L. Rjiden. ilece.-ut. Martha a. Raiuen, . Admluist ut rlx, *c. August 2d, 18 9. aug4—2m T7XEGUTRIX’B SALE. -VYILL BE J_J «oitl befnra the Gou-t Hous«. . -..wnofLit ington, between th» ur-ual houis of- , ■ b fiist TUES DAY IN OCTOBER next, the un M e : ha sos a tr:ct of mnu, cooiainlng one thousand and . > :,ores, uv ■ o less (the other half belonging t John A. r'uu-l E-n ) lying on Broad Kiv-r, in the cm nty of E - iri’jmrn g lauds Os Enoch Bell and the e-a : l'jo:, Loll, de ceased, and others. S li so- purpose of ]•- ing debts of said estate. ALBINA K. MATHEWS. Ex’trlx of John J*. Mathews, ueceaw»]. August 2d, 1869. fiiL4-40 GLETHORPE BHERIFFTrSALHL —Will be sold on he fi st TUESDAY In SEP DtM- L next, before the C uit Hous.- door, i;. ihe 1- wn of Oglethorpe county, within the lawi .l hour- ».f sale, tlie 10l owing property, to-wit: A lot or parcel cf land in said c ;..nty, contain ng g-vea acres more or Jess, on the waters of Grove Greek, at.i uuing mndsofO Stevens,K. S. Oanth rs.and ov.-th »*uowii u' the Mill Tract; upjn which land then ;s a Grist, M H wj;h one set of ruune-s. Levied on as tuu property ol in-Witt C Smith bt virtue of a A fa. issued trom the Superior Court of said county in favor of Ben brain I liaruemau vs DeWitt C. Smith, Priuc pal. Wm W Evrrft and Gal riel Watson, Securities. Properly poiute.: o„> by p.ain- Lexington, July 30 h, 1859. „ .. J F. CUNNINGHAM, augß—wtd Deputy Sue:iT. Georgia, Oglethorpe c< rjn \ X TY—APPLICATION F K i.ET' E *.s Oi Dig. MISSION.-Mltcheil M.M cUn app. -. <> ,„ e , Letters of Dirmisfion as Guardi; nos SopLr >n:n A. W: .. u iV.; i.-.r Theseare, therefore, to citeaaci admonish a ;; pervms in-' tere ted t*he anl appear tmv « ri! >• on < FIRST MONDAY in NOVEMBER -bow C i V* if any they have, why said Letters -f Di«itfsi.c*t e; . U iu not be granted. Lexington. Ga.. July 24th. JBf9 YJ.EOBG 1 A," Ol i LET ID At FF, fit iU N - TY—Whe .-a-, .] .rue; U. M'Nt. . ier . • ; mo for Letter*ofAdcuiius.ration n:> >a •), E . Power, deceased : Thr*«e are.tt.prcfjre. toe t-: a*i l ~ r . t rfcstcd to ini an- 1 appear at'tie • • u ;:i <d ;■-■ {* , r ofOrolna'V. to belidd in and t<> hi|i< • v r •' l:'-i MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER. *.x • . h ,w - it. - ...y they k*ve, why raid iettcra Hiu;i ' , ,i Given under my hand and ofii :•! sin iu . .Uov J9th 1869. P. J. R'/HINSON, Jy22-w5 Ordinary O. C. Leave to bell—Georgia, OGLETHORSC COUNTY - T v.> m - * c.i date apuotion will be made f>r ie v t.Dii ... -.r. eloi A i . totheefctateofWil i.il li. Mv». . :.» ~•jt<■ t, by deceased, lyin' in Go-.-, j'ouu i> •> py July Gti, Vif/j. 1u,9-a2-n ' ' ‘V.. .!iV. ( GEORGIA, OGLW:puPe UO! N"- TY.—Two mo <th-» aPcr <: . u . .*ion wi i in made for leayeto sell the lands b . . the e.-tut*of John A. Glenn, deceived, l’.i g •• Creek D'.tiici, ? aid county. GKO. W. WHITE . AD,i Executor ofWr.i. W. Everett .Executcrj ASAJ. fIOWAR . ) j ny9—w 2*n fd-EORGIATOGLETHORPECOUN \JT TY. -Two a onths after the and • this notice a - will be made to the Ordinar ' f Oglethorpe count y frx leave to seii ail the real »B'.ate belo g ng to the c.?i:*u* of William W. Everett, Ute of ,ald tp.u tv. dtceaaeri. July 1. 1869. GEORGE W WHITEHEAD, Jy3—w2tn Executor of Win. W. Everett, de e.-.wd. Letters of dismlssion. GEORGIA, OGLETHORPk OOUNTT —lfachel e'tand David A. Baraett. Aiminist-ators upon u. *-s --tateof At.«! M. Ban«e t, dec'-asad, late of eaiil co.im i, «-y to me for Letters of iLsaissOQ from siid A4m ! n «tr • -ion. These are, iher f re, to ci'e, sarnmon and admonish a:i MONDAY IN OCTOBER, 1869, ad then and Ou re.: o ahow cause, Ir any lhuy have, why aaid Letters oi Duoia sion should not be granted. Lexington, June 24ta, 1000. F.J. ROBINSON, jtu26— wßn Ordinary O. C. t GEORGIA',"OGLETHORPE COUN- X TY —Hoi y D. Fleenian. Adm’niatra'rix of James P. F:eeu .w. plied for exempt, on of p?rn >< a!ty and eeU.r.g apart and valustujD of and 1 w 11 pap* unor: the »m> v 10 o’ lock A. M , o- the TEN 111 DAY OF JULY, 1869, a: icy office. F. J. ROBINSON. 11P27—w2 Or dinar «>. C. i GEORGIA. OGLETHROPE COUN VT TY FOR DISMIS.SIO s AS GUARDI AN. Wtiereaa, William W. Davenport. Adn.in .straior upor. the eg ate tCaarifaW Davenport, deceased, late of said cocmy. appUa* to me for Letter* of DLm.u'Kion from said AdmitL-tratio . The*e are therefore ti ci e and adnnnif b all r> s n*inter ested to be am! -pn u- et *nv !li e -u tne FIRST MONDAY IN SE \\ T,Fi'. Im-.li, y-I w us f any they i ave, why . r - - y ’ - Lexington, Gj.,J .i , .8 :. ' ' " ‘"Vdiuary •juii22—w3m fJEORU IAT OGLETHORPE COUN \ X TY.—APPLICATION FOR LETTERS Oi• DI. MISSION.—Pop«- banow app):« to m* <**'*• mission as aCmmistrator upon the estate of Eliaabetb C. Robb, deceased, 1 te of said c'-ny- . .. ThM,»re, therefore, todt* .oi “* •>**“ FIBBT MtkoXr iK3tPT*MBEK OMI. .o »h„w ?iS?lhev°h.?K.hy -kl nu. be gran tod. I J. ROBINSON, Lexington. On., Ji“ c BUl ' lm - liidmary o. U. jelO—vSrn aEORGIA, OGLETHORPE COUN TY— APPLICATION FOR LKTTERS OF Dig. ijOiN. Wh«re*», WhltaDß G. Johuion. Adminiatrator of the of Robert Eberhart. deceased, ia r e of 3%id county, applies f r Letter* of Dismission from grid Ad- I ministration: These are, therefore, to dte aud admonish si! parsons in tere« a ed to beend nnoear at n.y office on tbe FIIfoTTL E-S --DAY IN r EPI'EMBIIR, ih69, to show cause, if any they nave, why raid Le tens of D.emisnoa bhou!ci not be granted. June fat, 1669. F. J. ROBINSON. je*—worn Ordinary O. C. _ COLUMBIA COUNTY. sale.^ Will be sold before the <bum Hau<e. at Appling Cuiumbin county, on the : IRST TUKBDaY' in >EPTEM BER next, be. we ;u the legal hour* of salt, tw-. Ljl-, with im- rovemenu in *aid villjge of Appliue ; cue o r said Lot* km wa as the D ck Jones or fuQ Yard L .t, conta niQg one acre, more ur less; the other known as t e Gaia: Jones L't, co'iUinice ten acre-, m fre or «»-, adjoin IU2 iar d 3 of Mrs. Francis Bailey. Sam iei W. Bi.ley anu others. Lev ed oo asthe property of N. E. Buie/, to satUf. one morl ftage A- fa . issued from Colurn U Superior Court at the instance of hrnuel W. Bailey vs. said N. E. Bailev. ProD ertv poicted out and described in said fi. fa t nia. Juae 28t ' .B. IVEY, Sheriff, ‘ lyl-wtd ’