Newspaper Page Text
AUmCUI.TUHE.
Three Horses Abreast.
An agricultural paper gives an ac
count of the method adopted in Iowa:
“Flace the three harnessed horses
abreast; pass the staple of the centre
horse's single-tree through a hole in the
upper end of a perpendicular bar of iron,
said iron to be about the size of a farm
wagon tire, and say nine inches long.—-
Through a hole in the lower end of this
iron pass the clevis or staple of the out
er horses' double tree. Punch an inter
mediate hole through this perpendicular
iron twice,as far from the upper as from
the lower end, and passing a link or cle
vis through, connect the whole with a
plow or other load. The centre horse’s
traces need to be a little than those of
the outside horses, or. what is better, the
perpendicular iron may be curved for
ward in its upper extremity and the
holes punched so that the leverage will
be in about the proportion of three to
seven. By this arrangement the power
of either horse is equally balanced against
that of the other two. The whiffletrees
may he of any desired length, and though
the centre horse’s may overlap the other
t wo, it cannot interfere, but plays con
tinually above them.”
m fc..
To Cure a Dog from Sucking
Eggs.- —Editors Southern Cultiva
tor: —Mr. €r. W. Jefferson can effectu
ally cure his dog from sucking eggs in
the following manner. Take an egg,
punch a hole in it large enough to admit
the littie blade of a knife, and put in
through the hole as much tartar emetic
as he can pile on a dime piece, and give
to his dog, or put in a convenient place
where he can find it, Repeat three or
four times within ten days or two weeks!
I have had a good many suck egg
hounds to contend with, and have nev
er failed to effect a speedy and perma
nent euro with the above remedy.
HUNTER.
Valdosta , July 2nd, 1870.
Farm, Garden and Household.
Large potatoes cut into two to four
pieces, give the largest yield of large po
tatoes.
Whitewash adheres by adding glue
and salt, or using sour milk to mix with
instead of water.
Soda Soap.—Two pounds bar soap;
two pounds sal soda ; ten quarts soft wa
ter; boil till it is all dissolved.
Farm Work.—There is no depart
ment- of farm work but will pay for care,
and it is especially needed in securing
crops. It is the saved load of corn and
the saved ton of fodder that makes the
difference between the successful and
the unsuccessful farmer.
Parsnips and Salsify.—These ex
cellent vegetables are perfectly frost
proof. Indeed, they are better after
they have been subjected to freezing, but
as we wish to use them before spring, it
is better to take up a supply before the
ground freezes and cover with plenty of
sand or sandy loam. We store enough
in boxes with sand to hist while the
ground is frozen.
Mulch for Woodland.—Mr. Hicks
writes to the Farmers’Club: “We often
hear it recommended to go to the woods
and collect leaves and bring them home.
Why, gentlemen, on Long Island we
want all the leaves to stay in the woods
around the trees and make them grow.
We think too much of our woods to rob
them in that way. Wood is voluable,
and when we cut it off we want all the
twigs and small limbs to stay there and
help to hold the leaves, and make a tine
rich mould to assist the growth of the
young trees. The more we cut off our
woods —that is. as often as once in thir
ty years—the deeper the mould and the
better the next growth if all the small
stuff is left on the ground.”
Washing Fine Laces.— Hearth
Home tells us how to wash fine laces as
follows:
Take a common wine bottle, and cover
it as tightly and smoothly as you can
with the cut-off leg of a soft strong stock
ing, securing it firmly above and below.
This is a “permanent institution,” which
may do service for future laces innumer
able. Then winding your soiled collar
or strip of lace smoothly around the cov
ered bottle, you proceed, with a fine nee
dle and thread, to sew carefully all
around its outer edge, catching each in
dividual loop to the stocking net. This
done, you have only to move the bottle
up aud down in a pailful of hot soap
suds, occasionally rubbing the soiled por
tions lightly with a soft sponge. When
the lace is clean, rinse it by pouring clear
hot water upon the bottle; then apply a
very, very weak solution of gum arabic,
and stand the bottle in the sunshine.—
When it is perfectly dry, you may rip
oft’ the laces. They will pr bably not
need pressing; but if they do, you need
only leave them for a few hours between
the lower fly leaves of a heavy book.—
No hot iron should touch them —tho’.
in case of haste; they may be laid on
flannel between a few thicknesses of fine
soft muslin, aud so ironed.
Smiles. —Nothing on earth can smile
but human beings, (reins may flash
and re flash compared with an eyefash
ami mirth flash • A face that cannot
smile is like a bud that cannot blossom;
Laughter is day and sobriety is night,
a smile is the twilight that hovers gen
tly between both, and is more bewitch
ing than either. It is possible for us
all to wear a smile or a frown at our own
option. Either becomes habitual from
frequent repetition.
Putting a Fine Point. —A gen
tleman visiting Barbadoes relates as part
of h?s experience in dining with a high
toned colored family, that when the tur
key was carved, he was asked if he
would have “some of de insertion,”
which, after some thought, he discover
ed to be a delicate invitation to take
some stuffing,
~ if »"»-•
A grammarian’s thought. —What
a contrast there sometimes*]? between th e
udyective and its adverb. Reflect, for
example, uu the wide difference that ex
ists between a man who is constant n
and love, the man who is constant y in
love.
The ,Emperor’s Prison.-**'l have
given him Wilhomshohe,” says the
King of Prussia, in that telegraphic
| dispatch to the Queen, his wife, which
! briefly but eloquently depicts a great
I scene in the drama of There
! is, indeed, something highly dramatic
in this gift to a broken man. “"W here
and what manner of place is W ilhelms
hohe ?” many of our readers will ask.
It is the Versifies of Cassel. It is a
chateau and pleasure park on the east
slope of the Habichtswald mountains,
and it has for the captive Emperor as
sociations of peculiar interest, forasmuch
as it was once the favorite residence of
his uncle Jerome, sometime King of
Westphalia. This palatial retreat and
its surroundings are in the luxurious
taste of the last century. There are
hot-houses on an amazing plan; there
are temples of Apollo and Mercury;
there are waterfalls, pheasantries, lakes,
and a Chinese village. There is a great
fountain—perhaps the greatest in the
world, for its column of water, rising to
a height of 190 feet, is 12 feet in thick
ness. And lastly, at the farthest and
highest point of the grounds nearly
1,400 feet above the Fulda, there is a
strange if not preposterous building of
octagonal shape, with a series of cascades
descending from its foot, through five
basins, to a “grotto of Neptune.” The
building at the top of the cascade is
named the Reeseusehloss, from a colossal
statute, which is an immensely enlarged
copy of the Farnese Hercules, the club
having a cavity in which nine people
can sit. Such is Wilhelmshohe, whose
precincts are reached from Cassel by a
straight avenue of lime trees.
An old bachelor stepped into one of
our dry goods stores, a day or two ago,
and called for about half a dozen but
ton-holes.
Mrs. Pugg, a widow, having taken
a Mr. Price for her second husband,
and being asked how she liked the
change, replied “Oh, I have got rid of
my old Bugg for a good Price.”
A well known journalist hung up his
stocking on Christmas, and his wife put
a baby in it; whereupon he said, “My
dear, darn that stocking.”
“I say, friend, your horse is a little
contrary, is he not?” “No sir.” “What
makes him stop, then ?” “Oh, he’s
afraid somebody will say whoa, and he
shan’t hear it.”
To Make Purr Yeast Powder.—
Take one part cream tartar, and two
parts soda ; should be sifted in with ma
terial to be cooked in small quantities
and baked well.
Enjoyment not Confined.—“No
enjoyment says Sydney Smith, “howev
er inconsiderable, is confined to the life
from having made once au agreeable
tour, or enjoyed any considerable inter
val of innocent pleasure.”
Misuse of Talents. —lt is a
mighty shame and dishonor to employ
excellent faculties and abundance of wit
and humor, and all to please men in
their vices and follies. The great enemy
of mankind, notwithstanding his wit and
angelic features, is the most odious be
ing in the whole creation.
The Salm-Salm killed at the battle of
Gravel otto, it seems, is not the Salm-
Salm that figured in our army during
the war. The one killed was a youth
only nineteen years of age. while the
one who figured in the federal army was
the husband of the somewhat notorious
princess Salm-Salm.
While passing a house in Virginia,
two drummers observed a very peculiar
chimney, unfinished, and it attracted
their attention, they asked a flaxen-hair
ed urchin standing near the house if it
drawed well, whereupon the aforesaid
uachin replied;—“Yes, it draws the at
tention of all the d—d fools that pass
this road.”
Three Dog Holes for one Death.
—The darkey is stuffed full of supersti
tion. A friend who had a death in his
lot a few days since, had the whole cause
satisfactorily explained to him by his
cook : “I saw dat dog paw a hole in de
yard Chuesday. Next day he scratch
anodder. Yisterdy he cratch the third
one. and don I knowed dar’d be a death
in dis house.”
Five men were raising stone to the
third story by a windlass placed on loose
rafters at Montreal, when the beams
gave way, and men, stone, windlass and
beams, were all flung together into the
basement. Two men. crushed to a jelly,
never spoke; three more are mangled
for life. The cellar was a very shambles
—blood, brains, flesh, all in one pool—
until a workman mingled the ghastly
puddle with lime and the thirsty earth
drank it up.
The way in which the public money
is taken care of at Washington was
illustrated last week by the confession
of an unsuspected clerk of Treasurer
Spinner’s department that he had pock
eted seven thousand dollars, of which
fact nobody was aware until a rare com
punction of conscience led him to con
fess. The cas' affords a further indica
tion of the per ect looseness with wh;ch
the vast reven ics of the federal govern
ment are managed.
A Mtss Li icy Lee advertises in a
Mississippi paper that she is of good
birth and education, and is willing to
marry an editor, believing herself able
to support one.
Tiie Philadelphia Pi 'css after having
vilified Robert. E. Lee during his life,
now has the audacity to attempt a eulo
gy on him when lie is dead.
There is a rumor that Secretary Cox
wifi be appointed Minister to England,
as Morton is afraid to leave home since
the Democrats carried Indiana.
There is only one thing worse than
ignorance, and that is conceit. Os all
intractable fools, an overwise man is the
worst.
The number of wounded French
prisoners in Germany is 3.577 officers
and 123.000 men.
Prussian soldiers are destroying the
beautiful works of art at Vcrsailes.
breach peasants recently arrested a
young nobleman, suspected of Prussian
sympathies, aad roasted him to death.
NEW GOODS
—AT —
New Prices !
Just Arrived and Arriving
From New York I
It MAYt'IUNG
TAKES pleasure in informing the
! Trading Public that he has on hand
A LARGE and LrENERAL Stock of
FILL * WIMER GOODS,
Which he has selected in person, with
special care to the LATEST STYLES
and CHEAPEST PRICES, for articles
combining Beauty of Finish with dur
ability of Texture.
My stock comprises everything in the
DRY GOODS
LINE, usuitsly kept in this market.
FAMILV GROCERIES!!
Java, Laguira and Rio Coffee; Loaf.
Clarified and Brown Sugar ; Bacon,
Lard, Flour, Syrup, Rice,
Teas, Liverpool Salt, &c.
Boote, Shoes and Hats,
HARDY ARE, Iron, Woodware, Oils,
Paints, Drus. Medicines, Dyestuffs, Ilem-
LOCK LEATHER.
Also, a good supply of the Athens
and Roswell-Yarn always on hand.
THE
BAR ROOM,
In tlie Cellar,
Is supplied with every variety of Bran
dies. Wines, Cordials, Rum, Gins, &c.
Pure Corn Whiskey,
Mellow with age, from barrels soiled
with the dust of days agone.
My entire Stock has been purchased
in the best market in the country, at
Greatly Reduced Prices, and will be
Sold for CASH
As Low as the Lowest.
COUNTRY PRODUCE, at the
highest market price, taken in exchange
for goods.
Call and examine my goods before
purchasing elsewhere. Nothing charged
for showing them.
Fisk’s Patent Metalic Burial Cases
For ordinary interments, Depositing in
Vaults and transportation, they have no rival.
Made of most imperishable material. A good
assortment always on hand.
R. M. YOUNG.
Fifteen Distinct Features
OF THE
MUTUAL PROTECTION
LIFE ASSURANCE
SOCIETY.
Ist No Limit to Travel or
Residence. —policy holders being
allowed to travel or reside in any part of
Europe or North America.
2. AMPLE CASH CAPITAL—
Perfectly secured.
3; Policies Paid in Cash.—
No deductions for Notes or Loans.
4. THIRTY BAYS GRACE al
lowed on all payments after the years
premium is paid, and the policy kept in
force during that time.
5. DIVIDENDS DECLARED
ANNUALL Y upon the contribution
plan, in the most equitable manner.
0. All Policies Non-Forfeitable after
the second year, and the assured entitled
to a full-paid policy for the whole amount
of premiums paid.
7. ALL POLICIES INCONTEST
ABLE after five years.
8. Superiority of Manage
ment. —The officers combine strict
financial integrity with successful expe
rience in
ilfE
9. All Policy-holders Mrmbn's of the
Society and entitled to vote for Trus
tees.
10. A CASH SOCIETY.—No Notes.
Loans, interest or other complications to
annoy the policy-holder.
11- Equity and Liberality
shown Policy-holders in the several
modes of applying dividends.
. 12. MUTUALITY —AII profits
divided among the members.
13. Fairness of Contract —embodied
the written Policy in explicit terms.
14 Favorable rate of Mortality, takes
only first-elass risks.
15. All odious discriminations abol
ished.—No extra premiums charged on
Railroad, Express or Steamboat em
ployees.
R. J. MASSEY, Atlanta, Ga,.
Manager Southern Department.
Dr. E. W. Brown, Local Agent.
Dr. W. J. REEVES, Med. Ex., Calhoun, Ga.
0ct13,*70-8m
ANY QUANTITY of “Fine Virginia Leaf 11 1
and Manufactured Tobaccos at
Di JOUR NETT & SON'S.
C*r. Dread A Bridge st«., Rome, G’a.
TIN-YVARE
AN 1>
Cooking Stoves!
W.T.HALL&BRO.,
YITOULD inform the public that they arc
T T prepared to till all orders in the
Tin-Ware Line,
At as LOW PRICES as any similar estab
lishment in Cherokee Georgia.
Our work is put up by experienced work
men. and will compare favorably with any
in the country.
Tn these days of Freedom, every good
husband should see that the “goot * wife”
is supplied with a good
Cooking Stove,
And we arc prepared to furnish any size
or style desired at the Lowest Possible
Prices.
Give us a call. • aull.tf
CALHOUN.'
CHEAP CASH STORE
The undersigned, having purchased the
Stock of
DRY GOODS,
HARDWARE AND GROCERIES
of JOSEPH O. DOBBINS, now offers them
at very
Low Figures.
Come around and give me a call, and
examine for yourselves.
1 solicit a liberal patronage and I propose
to sell for
VERY SMALL PROFITS
FOR CASH.
H. C. HUNT.
Ang 11 1 ts
WAGON&BUGGY
Manufactory!
MHMIAH T. GRAV.
Respectfully announces to the people of
Gordon and surrounding counties that his
Wagon and Buggy Manufactory at
CALHOUN, GA,
is now in full blast. lie is prepared to fur
nish any style buggy or wagon at
SHORT NOTICE,
AND AT
PRICES TO DEFY COMPETITION.
My work is well known to many of the
people of North Georgia, and speaks for itself.
REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS,
DONE AT SHORT NOTICE.
Blacksmith Shop.
In connection with my establishment is a
blacksmith shop, where all work in that line
is promptly attended to.
The best of Workmen
are employed in every department, and en
tire satisfaction always given.
Aug 11 * 1 ts
CHEROKEE
HAM FU RRIMi l'0„
DALTON, GA.
Manufactures all Kinds of
pumriTURE,
Os the best material this country affords,
and very superior in style and workmanship,
which they offer to the public and the gen
eral trade, as low as can be afforded.
Chairs & Bedsteads a Speciality.
Blinds, Doors, Sash and Job Work, to or
der, on short notice.
Dr. D. G. Hunt is our Agent at Calhoun,
Ga., and keeps a good supply of Furniture
on hand. J. W. WALKER, Sup’t,
L. D. Palmer, Secretary. aug2G'7o-ly
SHARP, BOROICHS ;CO.
TOBACCO,
GENERAL COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
84 Whitehall st., :::::: Atlanta, Ga.
Manufacturers Agents iw the sale of
Virginia and North Carolina Chewing
and Smoking Tobacco, and Wholesale dealers
in Cigars, Snuffs, Pipes, &c. Leaf Tobacco
a speciality. aug!93m
{ESTABLISHED IX 18-35.)
J.O.MATHEWSON,
PRODUCE
COMMISSION MERCHANT
AVG USTA, GEOR GIA.
aept 22 1870 ly
WOODEN WARES, Willow Ware, Tin and
Crockery Ware, for sale by
dejournett;& son,
Uor, Broad & Bridge eta, Rome, Ga.
Groceries at Atlanta Prices!
0
PITTS & JOHNSON,
Wholesale and Retail
GROCERS
And dealers in
WHEAT, CORN,
And North Georgia and Tennessee Produce
Generally.
Our facilities for Buying are unsurpassed,
and we are enabled to furnish
Country Merchants and Planters,
of this section with
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS
AT ATLANTA PRICES.
We pay the Highest Market Prices In
Greenbacks, for Wheat.
A trial is only necessary to convince
the people that we
Mean What we Say.
gggf’Call and See us, on South side of
Court House Street.
Calhoun, August 11, 1870. ts
T. M. ELLIS. w. M. COLBURN.
ELLIS & COLBURN,
Manufacturers and Dealers in
HARNESS,
SADDLES and BRIDLES,
FINE FRENCH CALF BOOTS
XT'. 1 > SHOES,
AND all kinds of work usually done in a
First Class Boot and Shoe Shop.
We keep constantly on hand and for sale,
Harness and Sole Leather,
Also, a good stock of SHOES and SHOE
FINDINGS, which we will sell
Cheap lor* Cash.
Boots and Shoes made to order at Short
Notice. In this department we employ the
best of workmen, and guarantee satisfac
tion.
We pay cash for all GOOD HIDES.
ELLIS & COLBURN.
Calhoun, August 11, 1870.
GET THE BEST.
Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary
10,000 Words and Meanings not in other Dic
tionaries.
3,000 Engravings. 1840 Pages Quarto.
to add my testimony in its favor.
J [Pres’t Walker, of Harvard.]
IT very scholar knows its value.
J [W. H. Prescott, the Historian.]
fjThe most complete Dictionary of Language.
L [Dr. Dick, of Scotland.]
The best guide of students of our language.
[John G. Whittier.}
He will transmit his name to latest posteri
ty. [Chancellor K<n f .]
"THymological parts surpasses anything by
Jj earlier laborers. [George Bancroft.]
Bearing relation to language Principia does
to Philosophy. [Elihu Burritt.]
1 Excels all others in defining scientific terms.
J [President Hitchcock.]
So far as I know, best defining Dictionary.
[Horace Mann.}
Take it altogether, the surpassing work.
[Smart, the English Orthcepist.]
A necessity for every intelligent family,
student, teacher and professional man. What
Library is complete without the best English
Dictionary ?
Webster’s National PICTORIAL Dictionary.
1040 Pages Octavo. 600 Eng’s. Price §6.
The work is really a gem of a Dictionary, just
the thing for the million.— Am. Ed. Monthly.
Published by G. & C. MERRIAM,
Springfield, Mass.
Sold by all Booksellers. octlStf
DR. J. BRADFIELD’S
Female Regulator,
certificates of its wonderful cures, the reader
is referred to the wrapper around the bottle.
For sale by all Druggists. Price, $1,50
per bottle.
DR. PROPHITT’S
Celebrated Liver Medicine,
ONE of 'be Greatest Reme J ies ol the age, for
all diseases of the Liver Jaundice, B >wel Com.
pla.nt, folic, Chills and Fever and Billions Fe
ver. in fact al, diseases aiising from a deianged
Liver
ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS.
These Pills hare been used for ti e last fifteen
years, and for Headache, Deranged Liver, Ac.,
are without an equal.
DR. PROPHITT'S AGUE PILLS,
A sure CUKE for CHILLS and FEVER.
DR. PROPIIITT'b
Dysentery Coi'dial,
Cures all derangements of the BOWELS.
Dr. Propliitt’s Pain Kill It
This celebrated Medicine shoo'd be in everv
household. It is a certain cure lor all Pains. and
antidote to Bites of Poisonous insects. Snakes,
Ac. A superior remed> for Rheumatism and
Neura'gia. TRV IT.
All the above articles lor sale bv Dr D. G.
Hunt, Druggist, Call oun, Ga. septa97o-ly
DeJoubnett& Sox, Rome, Ga., will always
pay the very highest market price for Coun
try Produce.
IS one of the great
est blessings that has
ever been given to wo
man. It will relieve
Suppression, M o n t h ly
Pains, Rheumatism.
Neuralgia, and a cer
tain cure for the Whites
and Prolapsus Uteri.
For full particulars,
history of diseases and
ROME ADVERTISBMKWTft
“HomeAgSy
J. C. RAWLINS, Prop’r
choice” hotel
jjjjl BROAD ST., ROME, GA.
Passengers tukeu to and from the Depot Free
of Charge. ocfßTOtf
TENNESSEE HOUSE,
ROME, GEORGfA,
tT. A„ ST AN SBURY, Proprietor.
O’Hfi above Hole is heated within Twentv
I Step* o' the Railroad P Inform Baggage
handled free of Charge. 0 t6’7otf
AI.BKRT G. PJTIIKR. HENRY H. SMITH.
PITNER & SMITH,
Wholesale and Retail
Grocers & Commission Merchants
AND DEALERS IN
PL'RF. KENTUCKY WHISKIES,&c.
No. 25, Comer Broad A Howard a*s ,
ROME , - - GEORGIA.
oet6,lß7(My
Boot & Shoo Store in Koine. Ga.
M. F. GOVAN & CO.,
Manufacturers and dealers in aii
kinds of Boots and Shoes, Calf-Skius,
Leather and Trunks. Our Boots and Shoes
are warranted and will be repaired free of
cost, if they require it before they need a half
sole. Merchants supplied at New York
prices, with freight added. octfi-lni
FINE FARM
FOB SALE.
DR. J. KING offers a bargain in a splendid
Farm, situated on the
VALII OCX & ROME ROAD,
Seven miles from Calhoun, containing seven
hundred and twenty acres—three hundred
acres under a fine state of cultivation. Some
of said land lies within 300 yards of the S. R.
&D.R. R. Said land can be divided into
four different farms to suit purchasers.—
Buildings and fencing in good order. A bar
gain can be had in the above by applying im
mediately to Dr. C. King, on the premises,
or DR. J. KING, Rome, Ga.
oct6’7o-2m
COLCLOUGH,
HARKINS &
GLOVER,
Home, On.,
(lALL the attention of dealers to the fact
J that they have just received the largest
stock of
Dry Goods, Hoots, Shoes, &e.,
ever offered in the Cherokee country, and
can furnish them at exactly New York prices.
Call and be convinced. sept2‘2’7o-ly
Bones, Brov/n &. Cos., j J. &S. Bones &. Cos.,
Augusta, Ga. Rome. (in.
Established 1825. | Established 1800.
J.&S.BONES&CO.
HOME, GA.
IMPORTERS
AND
Wholesale Dealers
HARDWARE,
CUTLERY, GUNS, &C,
\\ ILL offer for sale, the coming season :
37>0 Tons Swedes Tron,
77> Tons “Jenks” Plow Steel,
A LARUE LOT OF
Imported Cutlery and Files,
Together with a full assortment of G EN
EIiAL HARDWARE.
WE are Agents for R. HOF & CO’S. Pat
ent Inserted Tooth Circular Saws; Machine
Belting, Orange Rifle Powder, and Rome
Iron Manufacturing Co's. Merchant Bur Iron
and Nails.
All of above to compete with any Hons* J
South. sepl2'7(t-2m
COTTON STATES
Life Insurance Cos.
OF MACON, GA.
Capital, - - - $500,000.
Deposi'ed with St-te Authorities (or protec
tion of Policv-holders, and realizing
at least S per cent., $150,000.
AH Policies Including “Ordinary Life,”
Non-Forfeiting and so Provi
ded in the Policy.
No Restrictions on Residence
Or Travel.
AS LOW AS IS TOM -- -■ »
WITH SAFETY.-^
R ETC R N PR EM IU >1 ANI»JOfNT LI F F pr> •
ICIES ALSO PARTICIPATE
IN PROFITS.
A loan of One-Third the Premium giv
en, when desired, on all kinds of Poli
cies and no Notes Liken therefor.
1.800 POLICIES ISSUED;
LOSSES PAID. $32,b00.
COMPANY MUTUAL.
Dividends Declared Annually After
The Second Year.
Wm. B. JOHNSTON. Pres’t.
W. S. HOLT, Vice-President.
Geo. S. Oukar, Secjetary.
J. W. BURKE, General Agent.
C. F. McCAY, Act’y.
J. MERCER GREEN, Med. Ex.
Dr. D. G. .HUNT, Med. Ex. at Calhoun, Ga
Arr s wanted. Apply to
WM. J. MAG ILL, Supt. of Agencies,
sept. '7O-6m
Established in 1850.
T. R. RIPLEY,
Removed to Peachtree Stree*.
ATLANTA. GEORGIA.
Wholesale Dealer in
CROCKERY & GLASSWARES,
117 ILL duplicate any Bills bought in any
YY Marker., to the amount of One Hun
dred Dollars, and upwards, adding Freight.
P. S. All Goods guaranteed as represented
from (his Hour". \ug 19 Ty
i /GEORGIA, G(jßlX)jr W COtVTY Vv^ N<Vs '
! Reeves, having applied to he
» «f the p, r «on auJ prop, rtw T? 1
|H. and Martha bye. minors, under ft, hn
| years of age, residents of said county I
jis to cite all persons concerned, .o he and * *
i pear at the term of the Court of Ordinn
| be held next after the expiration „f
days from the first publication of tHan*"*
and show cause, if anv they can. wh T T #
Osborn Reeves should not bV entrusted * *
the Guanlianshipuf theatKivenamt I m
This October 2Gt It. 1870.
oct27-4ud D. W. NEEL, Oh
STATE OP GEORGIA, Go* do*
H. K. Iltcks, Guardian of J. C. Cain \
mg applied to the Court of Ordinary of
county for a discharge from his Guardian**'
of J. C. Cain’s person and propertv TANARUS,
is therefore to cite all persons coneVrn*.|
show cause, by filing objections in ttroffi /
why the said H. K. Hicks should not'be .hjl
| missed from his Guardianship of J. c. ty.,
and receive the usual feMeliiof diantission
Given under my official signature tin*
Sept. 2Pth, 1870. * D. W. NEEL ’ 1S
eepf-SMOd Ordinsrv
STATE OF GEORGIA Go*this County
Whereas. F. 11. Cooper, administrator • f
Henry Cooper, represents to the Court of Or
dinary in his petition, duly filed and eiitvrer
on Record, that he has fully administer. *
Henry Cooper's estate. This is. therefore, to
cite and admonish all persons concerned
kindred nnd creditors, to show cans \ if any
they can. why said administrator should not
be discharged from his adtnmistra ion. and
receive letters of dismission, as p "scribed
by law. This August Slst, 1870.
aept2Gm 1). W. NEEL, Oi Unary.
GEORGIA, GORDON COUNT! .
Ordinary's Orncr., Aug.Ll.7o. I
4 LL persons interest ed, arc hereby notified.
iV that Thos. L. Tanner, of the lOolth l> ;s !
trict, G. M., tolls hi*lore Lawson Fields and
(). 11. Davis. Freeholders of said District, m
Estrnys, one yoke of Oxen, taken up by said
T. L. Tanner, in Sugar Valley.
Said ox**n appraised to be worth seventy
ty-five dollars; one of the oxen, dun sides,
white back and belly, and white face, marked
in right ear with an under-bit; in the left ear
with a smoothe crop, and the other ox, black
sides, and black and white speckled back and
belly; the ends of 1 is horns are sawed off;
had a medium size Dell on, marked in right
ear with a swallow fork, the left eur with an
under-bit; no other marks or brands per
ceivable; supposed to be 6 or t> years old.
The owner of said estrays is required to come
forward, pay charges nnd take said oxen
away, or they will be dealt with as the law
directs. A true extract from theestray book.
aoj>to_so,| D. W. NEEL, Ord’y.
To s\*|q
1 f ; ■
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