The gazette. (Elberton, Ga.) 1872-1881, April 11, 1877, Image 3
Personal. Viscount C. Chedel, has been practic ing equestrianism for the last week, and is rapidly becoming accomplished in the profession, although he worejan overcoat made of mud from having been unable to manage his fiery steed. He is en deavoring now to make an engagement with old John Robson to play “Mazep pa, or the Wild Horse of Tartary.’' Joe Wright, the wood-punisher, is speaking of running the fish market here this season. Ben Flemming is said to be one of the biggest Muuchausens in the county. Mr. D. L. Adams who has been suffer ing for some time with an attack of sick ness is able to be up again. Gone to do Service for the State. The negro Tom, sentenced at the last term of court to the penitentiary for three years for stealing a jug of whis key, was taken out of jail last week by the proper authorities and carried up to the chain gang in tho vicinity of Gaines ville. The same guard had also in charge the negro man sent up for five years at the late term of Hart court. ** CHEAPER THAN PHYSICIAN’S BILLS. “A Thing or Beauty a Joy Forever.”— What is it? Something prepared for woman only, and to be used by woman exclusively. It is adapted especially to cases where the womb is disordered, and will cure all irregularities of the “menses” or “monthly courses,” by restoning the discharge in every instance, whether acute or chronic. Where is it? Dr. J. Bradfield’s Female Regulator—Woman’s Best Friend—is prepared and sold by L. H. Bradfield, Druggist, Atlanta, Ga., and may be bought for $1.50 per bottle at any respectable Drug House in the Union. We, the undersigned druggists, take pleasure in recommending to the trade Dr. J. Bradfield’s Female Regulator, believing it to be a good and reliable remedy for tho diseases lor which be recommends it. W. A. LANSDELL, Atlanta, Ga, PEMBERTON', TAYLOR k 00., Alanta, Ga. RED WINE k FOX, Atlanta, Ga. W. 0. LAWSHE, Atlanta, (-a. W. ROOT & SONS, Marietta, Ga. [4t] EEGAE AiryE2UTIBCMEfITS. SAI.ES. WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC OUTCRY, BE fore the courthouse door in Elberton, Elbert county, Ga., on the first Tuesday in May, 1877, between the lawful hours of sale, the fol lowing property, to -wit: 40 ncres land, more or less, the same being where J E Anderson now lives, jcining lands of Mary A Hall, T J Carithers, and H M Carithers. Levied on as the property of J E Anderson to satisfy a fifa from Justice’s Court, for 197th district, G. M., in favor of J B Almond vs. J E Anderson. Also.levied on the property last above describ ed,.to .satisfy a fifa from said Justice's Court in favor'.of R P Eberhart vs. J E Anderson. The two levies last above desciibed made and turned over to me by H M Carithers, constable. Also, same time and place, the following prop erty, to-wit: One-halt interest in remainder in wo'tracts of land in said county on the head Wat ters of Fallingjand Doves creek, one tract known as the home or house place of Win M Almond, containing 300 acres, more or less, joining lands of W G Wilhite and others, the other tract con taining }DO acres, joiningabove lands and others, said hiiL interest■being the interest of B T Al mond in said lands, and to take effect after the termination of Mis Mary Almond’s life interest in the same. Levied on R3 the property of B T Afinand to satisfy a fifa issued from the County Court of Elbert county in favor of Woody Ecton vs B T Almond. Also same time and place, one 4-horse power engine and boiler. Levied on as the property of Win M Moore and R P Ball to satisfy a fifa from Elbert Superior Court in favor of Bell k Cos. vs. Win M Moore and R P Uall. Sold for the purchas money. W. !L H. ADAMS, Sheriff. ~ Sheriff's Mortgage Sale. WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC OUTCRY, BE fore the courthouse door in Elberton, Elbert county, Ga., on the first Tuesday in June next, within the legal hours of sale, one certain lot of land in the town of Elberton, measuring 56] feet front and running back 70 feet, being the lot on which the Masonic Hall stands, join ing lots of R. F. and E. B Tate, Jr. and others, on the west, and the lot owned by Heard, Cleve land and others on the east Levied on as the property of Philomathea Lodge, No. 25, Free and Accepted Masons to satisfy a Mortgage fifa from Elbert Superior Court in favor of"M P Dead wylcr, Asa Deadwyler and Drury P Oglesby, executors estate of Jno G Deadwyler, dec’d, vs. said Philomathea Lodge, No. 25, Free and Ac cepted Masons. W. H. H. ADAMS, SheiifL_ Postponed Sheriff's Sale. WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC OUTCRY,BE fore the courthouse door in Elberton, Elbert county, Ga., on the first Tuesday in May, 1877, between the lawful hours of sale, the following described property, to wit: 400 acres of land, more or less, joining lands of W H Mattox, Tbos Jones, J W McCall?, and others. Levied on as the property of B C Thorn ton and B Thornton to satisfy a fifa from Elbert Superior Court in favor of Mary B F Teasly, guardian, vs. B C Thornton and B Thornton. W. H. H. ADAMS, Sheriff. ’ Adinlnstratoi' , s Sale. ~OY virtue of an order granted by the Coiu-t JLJ of Ordinary of Elbert county, will be sold before the courthouse door on the first Tuesday in May, 1877, between the legal hours of sale, one tract of land belonging to the estate of Mary Bourne, dec’d, containing two hundred and seveatv-seven acres, more or less, adjoining lands of S C Starke, James A Ed wards, Starke and Snellings, and Mrs S A Hill, on the waters of Bertram’s creek. Cold as the property of said Mary Bourne for the purpose of division among the legatees, and to pay the debts of said Mary Bourne. This tract of land will be sold jointly with another tract belonging to the estate of Powhattan B Bourne, deceased, containing 50 acres, the two tracts sold as one. Pos=ession given Nov. 25th, 1877. Terms one-halt cash, remainder to be paid Nov. Ist, 1877, with interest at 10 per cent. This April 2d, 1877. H. W. BOURNE, Executor of Mary Bourne, dec'd. Administrator's Sale. BY virtue of an'order from the Court of Or dinary of Elbert county, will bo sold on the first Tuesday in May, 1877, at public outcry, between the lawful hours of sale, before the courthouse door in Elberton, one tract of land belonging to the estate of Powhattan B Bourne, deceased, containing fifty acres, more or less, adjoining lands of E B Starke, Mrs S A Hill and others. Sold for division among the legatees of Powhattan B Bourne and to pay the debts of said estate. This tract of land will be sold jointly with one tract belonging to the estate of Mary Bourne, dec’d, both sold as one tract. Possession given Nevember 25, 1877. Terms one-dialf cash, remainder the first of November, 1877, with interest at 10 per cent, HENRY W. BOURNE, Administrator of P B Bourne, dec’d. Notice for Leave to Sell Land. Thomas B. Smith, exeentor of Lindsey H. Smith, late of said county, deceased, has rnnde application to the Court of Ordinary of Elbert county for leave to sell a tract of land in said county belonging to the estate of said deceased. This is to notify all persons concerned to show cause why said leave should not be granted on the first Monday in May next. JAS. A. ANDREW, Ordinary E. C. April 11 —td Pencil Points. T .e Oglethorpe Echo gives a graphic account of the Crawford riot. On the night of the 3d inst, sis prisoners made their escape from the jail at Lexington. The jail, it appears, is entirely unsafe as a place of confine ment. None of the escaped prisoners were implicated in the Crawford riot —they were sent to Athens. Caught again ! leading your neigh bor’s paper. Come up and subscribe, and stop this petty pilfering. It is worth $2 a year to have a clear con science. „ “Junius,” in commending Col. Bow man for the convention, makes a state ment which we do not feel like permit ting to go uncontradicted. It is that the Colonel is no speaker. He is not only a speaker, but one of the most forcible speakers we ever heard. He says never a word too much, and his hearers never fail to understand exactly all he wants them to. We have beard him and know whereof we speak. Women govern us; let us render them perfect. The more they are en lightened, so much the more shall we be. On the cultivation of the mind of women depends the wisdom of men. It is by women that nature writes on the hearts of men. Oliver Chapter has its next regular meeting on Friday nigh.t of next week. A considerable hail fell in Deep Creek settlement last Sunday, enough to cover the ground. Thnik of the big issue of The Gazette and send in your orders early. Extra copies in wrappers ready for mailing, at 5 cents. The Town Council has instructed the marshal to rennovate the highways. Mr. L L. Bailey is scorer for the N. N. N. For The Gazette.] Old Bob the Ferryman. Old Bob was a slave of Mr. D. B. Cade, of this county. Prior to the lato emancipation Mr. Cade had owned him during the whole of his life. His mas ter placed him when very young at his ferry at the junction of Broad and Sa vannah rivers as a ferryman. He was delighted with his position, and came to be very successful at his calling, and af ter he was assigned to his position for life, as it was, his master told him that he would pay him for his services on Sundays if he would stay at the ferry and attend to it. Old Bob was proud of the opportunity, for he never left the ferry if he could help it, and always seemed satisfied when he was there. His Sundays’ wages up to the year 1840 had amounted to $403 in silver (Spanish coin) some time prior to the May fresh et of that year. He had buried his sil ver at the root of an old tree which stood on one side of the road which lead to the ferry on the Lincoln side. This tree was a noted place of resort for the people when Petersburg was in its most flourishing condition. The thick and extensive branches of this tree made an 'agreeable and pleasant shade, under which the denizens of the ancient city have often met and spent hours of joy and festivity. It was only a few feet from the bank of the river, and during that freshet it was washed up and car ried off, and old Bob’s money left buried where the tree stood. He was there at the ferry at that time and saw and knew of it all, but he was not alarmed in the least about his money, for he left it to rest where he had placed it. He re mained at his post after this, and receiv ed his Sundays’ wages up to the time of the late emancipation. It is not known what he did with that which he accumu lated after the year 1840. After the emancipation of slaves he still remained there, although he was coaxed by his children, who left the ferry after free dom to go with them and leave the fer ry in the bands of someone else; but he positively refused to go, and remain ed there until a few weeks ago, when death separated him and his beloved place. For the last two years he has been helpless and not able to do any thing by which he could procure food and clothing. His kind and generous old master feeling that it was his duty to help him when he could not help him self, has furnished him with the necessa ries of life for the last two years and at his death paid his burial expenses. About ten years ago old Bob inform ed one of his sons that he had some sil ver buried, and a few weeks ago (just before his death) he informed another of the fact, and the place where it was deposited, and told the two boys to go to his old master and get him to go with them and show them where the old tree stood, and for them to dig there and they would find his money. His old master instructed one of his own sons, Mr. D. B. Cade, Jr., to go and show the negroes the place where they might find their father’s hidden treasure. They went with a sufficiency of hands and commenced the search. They had made an excavation in the ground ten feet deep and six feet long, when one of the hands struck a blow with his pick into the side of the excavation, his pick entering the tin box that contained the treasure. When he drew it out prepar atory to striking again the silver came falling down to the bottom of the pit— it was only feet from the surface of the earth. They continued the search in that portion of the excavation until they found four hundred and sixty-three dollars in silver. The money was car ried to Mr. Cade, Sr., who divided it equally among the children, five in num ber. Thus the great secret of old Bob was revealed which created a great merri ment among the darkies. It is evident that the silver has been buried for thir ty-seven years, and there is no telling how much longer. Old Bob died when seventy-five years of age, having spent sixty years of bis life as a faithful ferry man. V. Mb- Editor : Please give me just a lit tle nook in one of your columns to say: “Hurrah for Osborn !” for just as certain as fate he is the “cumming” man. Job. Home Briefletß. April showers. Shad are plentiful. Hunting season is past. Shopping is now in order. Fetch in your advertisements. Another gloomy, dreary Sunday. Worley is now the champion “catch.” The feathered songsters begin to war ble. And again we say, “for a convention, hurrah!” A picnic at an early day wouldn t be objectionable. Never again will we mention anything about blue-glass. Step by step the work on the court house nears completion "Squire Osborn is still struggling with the Con. Con. question. Too sad, but it is a substantiated cer tainty, that striped stocking are still worn. What about the non convention of our City Fathers at the time of their last regular meeting ? Mr. Cotter discourses next Sunday at the Methodist church. He. will also preach the fifth Sunday on the subject of “Temperance” The courthouse park, when completed, will be one of the greatest attractions of the public square. Elberton is destined to see a brighter day. A certain Elberton girl has got such a high staudard for her affections that she loves the man in the moon. A ebromo is offered the Elbert girl who will decline a stick of chewing gum when it is proffered her. The wheat and oat crop is said lo be in a promising condition, and bids fair without the intervention of some future disaster, to turn out well when harvest is come. We have been requested “Just to in timate that there would be another dime party in Elberton next week, at some residence yet to be chosen, of which due notice will be given.” We intimate our wishes of success. W T e gladly correct the assertion that Col Bowman is the President of the County Board of Commissioners. Dr. L. L Clark, of Ruckersville, is the Board’s Chairman, and a more compe tent occupant could not bo found. Sammy Carter, our efficient and hand some Marshal, expects at an early day to begin work on the streets and pave ments, and judging from the ability and sense lie has exhibited since he has held this office they will be worked well. Several of our young barristers are in attendance on the Superior Court at Carnesville this week. We would sug gest that the Carnesville belles would do well to look to their hearts, as Wor ley is among the number, and he has such a duck cf a mustache, yon know. If there was a row of trees planted in front of the Presbyterian church the aj pearauce of the building and grounds would be much improved. We have al ways thought the location well adapted for a church, and the site a pretty one. The suggestion made herein is free, grat is, for nothiug- A pair of times, yea, thrice, would we rather have a sea tied about our neck, and be cast into a mill-stone, than to tell what we consider a first-class tale to a party of gentlemen, and when the affair is ended have no one laugh butyour self. The narrator in such cases invari ably feels chewed. Now, in vernal sweetnes and budding beauty the trees and flowers begin to take on their bright Spring appearance. The meliflluous bark of the vicious red bug is also heard in woodland stillness, and the shrewdest men of Elbert are growing nails to successfully hold up their end of the line when the charge of the red bugs is made. The most interesting game of baseball that was ever witnessed in Elberton was played here last Saturday afternoon by theN. N. N. Seveial of the gentler sex were out to seo the game, which greatly encouraged aud proved an incentive to the boys, that was very perceptible. Come out again, ladies. Your presence is sunshine, e’en midst clouds. A-hem ! And now we have a Swedenborgian in belief in town, in the distinguished personage of “Little Jim” Sanders. He declares his devotion to the religion he has espoused and under whose banner he has enlisted, and further asserts with a high hand and a defiant spirit that he keeps the best geods that can be pur chased in his line and at the lowest prices. Again we earnestly urge upon onr cit zens the importance of establishing a cemetery in Elberton, believing that if they will give the matter serious thought and due consideration, proper means will be devised to start the ball rolling, and our in opinion no great while will elapse before we can boast a neatly and nicely kept cemetery, that will exhibit a proper reverence and regard for the dead and be the pride of the living. Tho several churches here might do a great act in starting this enterprise, and we trust they will look into it. There is a dozen postmasters in this county who do not subscribe for this paper simply because they can read the copies that come to their offices without paying for them. And he said unto me in burning characters write this : “Woe be unto him thatreadeth his county pa per without paying for it, for the end of that man will be a home where overcoats are never worn and where wood and coal are furnished free of charge ; also, he shall be free from the bleak, chilly winds of this cold, cold world, and whatsoever he doeth shall be done torridly.” A rat got into the church organ last week and gnawed one of the leather straps to such an extent that it broke when the instrument was used last Sun day. Now, there is not asbadowof a reas onable doubt in our mind, but that this rat affair was providential, and is a glar ing argument that the organ should not be used iu church. The fame of the church mouse is too well-known to de serve comment, and its action in the premises (or in the organ) in this in stance is conclusive proof that the in strument is out of order. We intend this for irony Mr Editor : In your last issue is a communication from our distinguished ex-Senator, Mi-. Hester, reviewing and elaborating the arguments used by him self and other speakers during Couit week. In this article, as iu the speecht s referred to, we beg to differ with Mr. Hester upon several points. Why does Mr. Hester, Judge Reese and others contend for a third death of those $8,000,000 bonds ? Do they pur posely withhold the*fact that an amend ment was perfected by our last Legisla ture “to kill effectually and forever the $8,000,000 of bonds which had been fraudulently issued,” and that the Gov ernor’s proclamation has already been issued requiring the people to pass upon it; and that if accepted by the people, it becomes a part and parcel of our fundamental law quite as binding and effectual as if framed into it by a dozen conventions"? Do they contend that there is yet a remaining spaik of vitality bidden in those double killed bonds, which can only be extinguished by a “special commission 1” Do they say that “Bonaparte will be any less dead if buried in Paris, than if left interred at St. Helena ?” This is a rule of economy we confess we cannot understand. Again, have we an element of talent and integrity among us so far above that from which we have been selecting our public men for the last eight years that we can-now resort to and bring forth immaculate characters, in whose presence the light of our former repre sentatives will pale as the moon when the sun appears ? This is the beginning point of every advocate for a conven tion. Will Judge Reese and Mr. Hes ter be any more honest or able in a cou vention than they have in the Senate ? They are both very prominent iu their districts, and if we are to have a con vention, I hope to see them both there. Judge R. tells ns that Legislatures can be bribed. What guarantee have we that a convention whl not be ? It will be composed of an equal or less numier of men, and in a great many instances I dare say of the very identi cal men, and why not apprehend bribery in one instance as well as the other ? And more especially in that of a con vention, because a convention’s actions are final—a Legislature’s may be repeal ed in the ordinary course of legislation. Besides the holders of these bonds would know- and could afford to make their offer much larger and more entic ing to a convention than to a Legisla ture. We regard this as the Judge’s weakest argument. We do not nor cannot believe our Legislatures are so degenerate. Again, Mr. Hester wants a “Special commission” to bring about “retrench ment and reform—not merely in profes sion such as we have been using, but actual, thorough, radical. The Legisla ture to effect it and it can only be dope by a convention for the pur pose.” A convention, we suppose, se lected-#om this higher element, which has been discovered of late yeai s by the friends of convention. Not by such as have made up Legislatures, they would be “powerless.” To us there are none more powerful than a Legislature, un less it be a “Returring Board” or the military; and of both of those we have had enough of late to satisfy the most obdurate, we should think. From Mr. Hester’s line of reasoning we are led to infer that with a Convention he expects to diacoversome hidden treasures among us that are not now taxed, from which we can derive additional means to meet our already “large State debt of over $10,000,000.” Or perhaps a conven tion will annul some more of our bonds. In no other way can we see how a con vention could possibly reduce onr pre sent debt. It would not do to issue more bonds, and place them upon the Atlanta and New York markets, where they are bringing considerably more than par, because the legislature can do and has already done that, greatly to the State’s interest, in its “powerless” capacity. Perhaps a convention would ennance the value of our property so that with the same specific property we would be intrinsically richer, and with a smaller per centum raise a larger amount, and thereby discharge our liabilities easier. This latter is quite as logical ae either of the other deductions suggested by his argument. He tells us that wc lost half of our taxable property in the war. That we know. And we know further, that this same thing be is clamoring Tor—a con vention —signed the death warrant. Will his convention un-sign that warrant, i If so, we are for it. He also tells us of numerous unnecessary attaches about the State House, which a convention would oust- They do not hold their positions by virtue of any express pow er in the Constitution. In fact the Con stitution, after designating the Gov ernor’s Cabinet, says, “The general assembly may, at any time, consolidate any two of these offices and require all the duties to be discharged by one of ficer.” Neither does the Constitution fix the salary of the Governor, nor any cf the officers of the State. It is the fault of the Legislature and not the Constitution, that these unneccessary clerks and expenses are saddled upon us. And Mr. Hester and Judge Reese are and have been members of the Leg islature for Jong terms. There is no need of any new remedies at an addition al cost to the State when we already have ample means at hand to relieve us of every malady. Mr. Hester and Col. Osborn laid great stress upon the pay received by legislators, and wanted a convention to fix it in our constitution. One of the honorable gentlemen offered the State bis distinguished services for $5 per diem. The other was willing t® go on the “great honor.” The writer was a little astonished to hear the gentleman estimate his services as a legislator, for he has some acquaintance with him as an attorney, and candor compels him to say that the exuberance of generosity is not so manifest towards clients as his profession indicates it towards the i State. We can bring the “axe” closer to “the I root of the tree” perhaps in an illustra tion of this kind. Before the war an attorney would collect a claim for you !at law for 5 per Gent, on the amount collected—unless the amount was quite small and litigated. Now, since you are only half as able as before, he will | charge you 10 per cent., which is double | his ante war fees and upon a half ex hausted client, makes it four fold heavier to bear. But this Mr. Hester would bring under the head of “innate selfish 1 ness,” a full share of which he “admits.” Mr. Editor, a great many of the wrongs complained of do really exist— some of which are the natural offsprings of our defective Constitution, but the larger part of which is attributable to “the innate selfishness” of man, and you can find no easier remedy for them by a convention than by the means already afforded ua Turn our State over to a convention now, and it will be a fat car cass to a parcel of ravenous vultures Every man would have his own peculiar views to represent. Like the press of the State—no two would think alike: One would be for Milledgeville, another for Atlanta ; one for the whipping-post, another imprisonment for debt; the anti-homestead, reduced homestead, wa ver homestead—aud every other con ceivable change—would have its advo cate. In fact, no convocation since the days of Babylon would represent a great er diversity of tongues, and, after a con sumption of at least “forty days and forty nights,” with more wrangling aud less labor, we would have presented to us a constitution not one whit better than the present one can bo made by amending it in the ordinary way. But our letter has already reached an unintentional length, and we will desist. It is a subject of too much magnitude for one, two, or less than half a dozen sep arate articles. Mr Hester promises to continue the discussion in a future num ber, after which we may again take up the subject. But to make a living now is the uppermost rule of our action, and we cannot justly spare the time for suf ficient reflection to collect our-thoughts. No Convention. Eemoval of Troops from Columbia. The following correspondence shows that, for the first time since tho war, the people of South Carolina are to have a government of their own choosing: Washington, April 3. — Sib —Prior to my entering upon tho duties of the pre sidency there bad been stationed by or der of my prodecessor in the State house at Culumbia, S. C., a detach ment of United States infantry. Find ing them in that place I have thought proper to delay a decision of the ques tion of their removal until I could con sider and determine whether the con ditiou of affairs in that State is such, as to either require or justify tho con tinued military occupation of the State bouse. In my opinion there does not now exist in that state such domestic violence as is contemplated under the constitution as the ground upon which the millitary power of the national gov ernment may be invoked for the defense of the State. There are, it is true, grave and serious disputes as to the rights of certain claimants as to the chief executive cffice of that State, but these are to be settled and determined not by the executive of the United States but by such orderly and peaceable means as may be provided by the con stitution and laws of the State. I feel assured that no resort to vio lence is contemplated in any quarter, but that on the contrary the disputes in question are to be settled solely by such peaceful remedies as tde constitu tion and the laws of the state provide. Under these circumstances, in this confidence, I now deem it proper to take action in accordance with the prin ciples announced when I entered upon the duties of the presidency. You are therefore directed to see that the pro per orders are issued for the "removal of said troops from the state house to their previous place of encampment. R. B. Hates. Hon. Geo. McCrary, Secretary of War. m’cRAKY TO SHERMAN. War Department, April 3. Gen. W. T. Sberman, Commanding U. S. Army: General —l inclose herewith a copy of a communication from tho President of the United States, in which he directs that the detachment of troops now sta tioned in the state house at Columbia, South Sarolina, be withdrawn aud re turned to their previous barracks or camping ground. You are hereby charg ed with the execution of this order, and will cause the withdrawal of the troops on Tuesday next, the 10th of April, at 12 o’clock, meridian. Very respectfully your obedient servant, Geo. W. McCrary, Sec’y of War. IT IS USELESS TO GO FROM HOME TO BUY GOODS CHEAP. GAIRDNER & ARNOLD YILI, SELL THEIR NEW STOCK OF Spring and Summer Goods At prices not before reached in thisTnarket for cash or;to such customers only as know how to be prompt. The stock has been selected with the greatest care for this market and Ml SI BE SOLD. MARCHAL & SMITH PIANOS. ''O? 10 • The Handsomest, the Best Tone, the Most Durable Pianos Made. They are Beautiful Rosewood, Seven and one-third Octaves, with every Improvement aud fully guaranteed. Their moderate price and uniiorui success have won for them the position of a Staudard of Economy and Durability. Acknowledged by all Musicians to be the Best OVER 18,000 NOW IN USE. Agents W anted in Every County, Address, MARCHAL & SMITH PIANO CO., Or, ROBERT W. SMITH, Agent, 4? University Place, Sew York. A Sad Accident. While engaged in the game of base ball Saturday afternoon Mr. Johnnie Bailey, had the misfortune to have his arm broken by colliding with a runner who was putting in his best licks for the home base. Bailey is a lively player and a clever boy, aud tho accident was greatly regretted by all who saw it, and especially by the club. A subscription was immediately gotten up among tho members of the club to defray his medi cal expenses. We are glad to know that the broken arm is getting on very well. PROF. TYNDALL’S WARNING. In concluding an address to the students of University College (London) Prof. Tyndall, who is unquestionably one of the most indefatigable brain worke: s of our century, said, take care of your health. Imagine Hercules as an oars man in a rotten boat; what can he do there but by the very force of his stroke expedite the ruin of his craft. Take care of the timbers of your boat.” The distinguished scientist’s advice is equally valuable to all workers. Wo are apt to devote all our energies on wielding the ours, our strokes fall firm and fast, but few of us ex amine*or even think of the condition of our boats until the broken or rotten timbers sudden ly give way and we find ourselves the victims of a calamity which could have been easily avoided by a little forethought. What began with a slight fracture, or perhaps even a carcles expos ure to disorganizing influences, ends in the com plete wreck of the life-boat. The disease which begau with a slight headacue or an undue ex posure to cold terminates in death, unless its progress be checked, and the disease remedied. The first symptoms, the heralds of disease, give no indication of the strength of the on-coming foe. and the victim trusts that his old ally, Na ture, will exterminate the invader. But|discase is an old general and accomplishes his most im portant movements in the night-time, and some bright morning finds him in possession of one ot the strongest fortifications ; and when he has once gained a stronghold in the system Nature ignominiously turns traitor and secretly delivers up the whole physical armory to the invader. Like the wily politician,Nature is always on the strongest side, and the only way to insure her support is to keep your vital powers in the as cendant Keep your strongest forts—the stom ach and liver—well guarded. Do not let the fje enter the arterial highways, for he will sle.il or destroy your richest merchandise and impov erish your kingdom. To repulse the attacks of the foe yon can find no better ammunition than Dr Pierce’s Family medicines. (Full directions accompany each package.) His Purgative Pel lets are especially effective in defending the stomach and liver. His Golden Medical Discov ery for purifying the blood and arresting coughs and colds. If you wish to become familiar with tiie most approved system of defense in this warfare, and the history of the foe’s method of invasion, together with the complete instruc tions for keeping your forces in martial order in time of peace, you can find no better manual of these tactics than “The People’s Common .Sense Medical Adviser,” by R. Y. Pierce, M. D., of the World’s Dispensary, Buffalo, N. Y. Sent to any address on receipt of $1.50. It contains over nine hundred pages, illustrated by two hundred and eighty-two engravings and colored plates, and elegantly bound in cloth and gilt. * • Lecture Next Wednesday. We Lave but spaco this morning to call attention to the announcement of a lecture in Elberton next week by Dr. Henry F. Andrews, of Washington. Dr. Andrews is an accomplished gen tleman, and although no professional lecturer, we are confident of his ability to agreeably entertain an audience, and make them the better for having heard him. Millinery.— Mrs. W. H. Harper is pleased to announce to her manyjfriends that she is now receiving her goods, and invites her former patrons and friends to call and inspect them. She is fully prepared to fill all orders for Millinery to suit every taste. Three of the Crawford rioters were captured in Atlanta last week, including Luke Johnson, the ringleader. MAATiLOIU ENTERTAINMENT. ON NEXT WEDNESDAY EVENING, the 18th inst., DR. HENRY F. ANDREWS Will give an entertainment at the Elberton Male Academy, to consist of Readings and Character Delineations, with some remarks on Reading and Oratory. Doors open at half-past 7 o’clock—entertain ment will begin at 8 precisely. Admission 50 cents ; Children under 14 years of age 25 et 11 ., and all children in attendance upon any of the schools in the town or county, regardless of age, 25 cts. 30th Senatorial District. COL. JOHN T. OSBORN, of Elbert will ad dress the people in behalf of the Constitutional Convention at— Ruckersville. May IG, ’77 3 p. m Elberton 17 night Flatwoods Academy.... 19, 3 p. m Gloer’s Store 21, night Mill Shoal Church 22, lOa.m Fort Lamar 22, night Danielsville 23, lla.m Diamond Hill 23, night Paoli 24, lla.m The Glade 24, night Lexington 25, lla.m Bowling Green 26 10a.m Crawford 26, night