Lamentable
Last Thursday morning Mrs. LEA, the aged and respected mother of the wife of Gen. R. P. NEELY, for some time an almost helpless invalid, while attempting to rise from her seat, fell upon the hearth, and was so severely burned about the face and neck that her life is despaired of. The unfortunate lady, owing to the face that she was suffering from paralysis, could not extricate herself from the awful position in which she was place. As soon as possible assistance was rendered, but alas too late to save her from a terrible fate. The sad occurrence has caused the profoundest grief to a large circle of acquaintances and friends, all of whom deeply sympathize with her relatives in this the hour of their affliction. Dr. COLEMAN was called in and is rendering all the assistance that man can perform.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 3. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Married on the 2nd of January 1868, at the residence of the bride’s father, by H. R. DORRIS, Esq., Mr. John FAY to Miss Salina BENSON, all of Pocahontas.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Married on the 29th of December 1867, at the residence of the bride’s father, by H. R. DORRIS, Esq., Mr. S. A. WALLACE to Miss Anna BIGGS, all of this county.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Married at Pocahontas, Tennessee on the 25th of December 1867, by H. R. DORRIS, Esq., Mr. John REDDICK, of Washington county, Missouri, to Miss Rebecca J. REED of this county.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Married at the residence of the bride’s father, Robert CLINTON, January 1, 1868, by the Rev. Dr. ESTELLE, Jesse H. FRANKLIN to Miss M. L. CLINTON.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Marriage licenses issued from the County Clerk’s office, during the month of December 1867. (whites only)

David W. MCANULTY to Martha R. MOORMAN

James P. FERGUSON to Mary L. MOORMAN

John W. NUCKOLLS to Frances P. ANDERSON

W. H. RIGGS to Emily J. GIBSON

Smith C. BELOTE to Fanny WOODS

Robert GALLOWAY to S. A. DOWDY

J. N. MCINTYRE to Caroline P. JOHNSON

J. P. WOOSTER to N. E. SPAIN

John R. JENKINS to N. J. LILLARD

W. B. SHEARIN to Martha J. CAMPBELL

A. J. HOOD to T. A. FARNED

Fred T. MYERS to Mary E. BREZZEAL

S. H. SANDERS to Octavia SADDLER

N. B. CROSS to Elizabeth C. JARMAN

William HAZLEGROVE to Amanda RADFORD

James F. DUNLAP to Maggie Q. WILKERSON

J. J. MCCLENDON to Amanda M. GIBSON

Thomas H. CARTER to Frances A. DONALDSON

J. W. MAYES to M. F. HALTUM

J. A. GRAY to T. C. MYERS

N. E. PATTERSON to Louisa STREET

M. L. HARMAN to L. B. PREWITT

W. P. MACON to Sarah P. HUDSON

R. A. COBURN to Caroline CRAWFORD

Garner D. CAMPBELL to M. A. BLACK

Guy R. SMITH to Sallie E. VAUGHT

W. R. WHITE to A. F. HARDY

T. B. HURT to Mattie E. MCDANIEL

John C. MCDANIEL to Hester A. SAIN

John Franklin HARRISON to Mahalia J. WEBB

Samuel A. WALLACE to Annie BIGGS

Hillery PIPKIN to Sallie M. PIPKIN

David A. MCELWAIN to Ann E. ABRAHAM

John REDDICK to Rebecca J. REED

William G. GUY to Elizabeth A. SHADERICK

R. F. TALLEY to Sarah C. THORNTON

William HENLEY to M. A. DUNN

James A. CARTER to Mary J. REAVES

Smith G. TUCKER to Nannie J. PLEDGE

T. R. Telman to Ellen PARKER

Jesse H. FRANKLIN to Mary L. CLINTON

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

If the boasted friend of the negro will turn his attention for one moment to the condition of the lately freed slaves of the South, he will find that large numbers of them are literally starving to death.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

In order that justice may be done the people who live along the banks of Hatchie river, as well as to our fellow citizens, we call attention to the fact that the General Assembly of the State in 1865, passed an act declaring the river a nuisance from the point where the Memphis and Ohio railroad bridge spans the same, eastward. This action of the Legislature never had the sanction of those who were mostly interested but it is a notorious fact that the bill was engineered through the Legislature by a few who, doubtless, were in the paid service of the railroad in question. Hatchie river from Bolivar to its mouth, is no nuisance; every old citizen knows this to be the plain, unvarnished truth. To our own personal knowledge, steamboats of moderate size, as large as those that navigate the Yazoo, could have made regular trips to Bolivar fully seven months of the year 1867; even now there is eight or ten feet of water from here to the Mississippi. With such facts before us, we would not be doing our duty were we not to call the attention of our representative in the Legislature to the great wrong practiced upon the people of Hardeman, Madison, Haywood and Tipton counties by the act that unjustly declares the Hatchie river a nuisance eastward of the Brownsville bridge. We do not make war upon the railroad, buy only seek the reopening of the Hatchie river, and earnestly request W. M. JOHNSON, in behalf of our people to loose no time in bringing the question before the body of which he is a member. While in Memphis, a few days ago, an old steamboat-man told us that if Hatchie river was opened he would be a boat in the trade and carry cotton from here to Memphis for $1 per bale and in return, deliver freight at Bolivar for fifty cents per hundred. Let the river be opened – competition is the life of trade.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 2. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

From the Holly Springs, Mississippi Reporter of the 3rd inst.; “We saw large numbers of freedmen in town during the recent holidays, and never before have we seen them looking so ragged and friendless. They had no money to enjoy the Christmas with, and stood about upon the corners and sidewalks looking forsaken and pitiful. Their clothing was in patches, unclean, and in many cases scarcely covering their nakedness. They had no homes for the present year, no money or provisions to live upon, and yet they seemed indifferent as to the future.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 11 Jan. 1868, Page 1. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.

Who Has Got It?
At the fire last Monday night some one got possession of a medium sized self cocking Colt’s repeater. Who has got it? It belongs to “ye Local” and he wants it.

The Bolivar Bulletin. (Bolivar, Hardeman County, Tenn.), 04 Jan. 1868, Page 3. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress.