Nuralisville. I Jl orn on bottom lands badly damaged. 1 °! ; The fanners of this neighborhood have V' 'sold their Wool at 3octs per pound. lj\The nicest tield of corn we have seen is ! , on Wm. Young’s farm, belonging to the % Johnson boys. :John W. Powelson has the best lot of \V.’ sheep we have seen for some time. . :lAlfred Morrison, one of the oldest in- !’“ habitants of Center township, is S4 years :L old and nimble as a kitten. * 1 ,Dr. Win. S. Spriggs and brothers started f,U! Monday for a fortnight visit in Illinois to see their father who is lying ill without much hopes ot recovering. ;Hattie, wife ot Hiram Davis, died June loth, aged 33 years. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. II. R. Smith. She was interred iu the Baker cemetery near this place.There was a large gathering at the Wes-pettra38p€plaley an M. Church last Sabbath to hear the— ^ —1 — ^ v v V U V/ A A \ « I I | Vllfuneral sermon of Armstrong Johnson, by Rev. H. R. Smith, from these word— ‘•Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright, for the end of that man is peace/’ Mrs. Gilkison. the mother of Mrs. Polly Pettay, an aged lady very near 100 years old, is still living alone, and does her own work. It is by her request that she is allowed to do so.David Devolld gathered up a very nice lot of hogs in this neighborhood on last Wednesday at $5 per hundred.Felix.t lull rt1esjtinjecVube;an