Newspaper Page Text
. 4 POET S CORNER.
The Colored Sister’s Travail.
Saj's the Macon Telegraph $ Messenger: —
The following lines have been >in 'ur hands
for sg <£■ Hs,-fw4ting a suitable epoch in
thAimOTT oT the conntry for their publica
tion. We believe the time has come, as not
less than half the colored sisterin are in pre
cisely the same predicament as the one re
ferred to in the song :
I *m f>f th* color'd sisterin.
And cant tell whar I’m rwme.
troubled liowl iny ligions faith,
And don't know what church to jitie.
Try on. try on. this poor old heart says try,
For t want to he an angel white
With the good Lord when I die.
Each tells me theirn's the only church,
And tleira's the Christian hand.
That'll take me straitto hebeifa gate,
And to the promised land.
Try on, try on, this poor old heart says try.
liar’s do Methodist —I like their shout,
it lit their sprinklin will not do,
Jtut-doy labs wc sisters mighty well,
And our good fried chicken too.
Try on, try on, this poor old heart says t.ry.
bar's de ’Piscopals—says dey is right,
And they all seem mighty intent.
And tells me I will go to heben,
If I only die in lent.
Try on, try on. this poor old heart says try.
Itnt then, they says—for forty days,
Dis nigger must fast and pray.
.Vo I'll give them upas a hard old case,
And fry lichen anudder way.
Try on. try on, this poor old heart says try.
Now do Pres'terians—is de stocracy church.
And they are mighty quiet and still.
They mout let me ginc tlicir little band,
For f don't live on “The Hill.”
Try on, try on, this poor old heart saj’S try.
be Hardshell baptist —they comes next,
Tim Lost 'people ever horn.
They will humble nagger's feet,
And let her take a horn.
Try on, try on. this poor old heart says try.
Hut J|*ey is opposed to the mission cause,
.Wid%j]l.p%*e to~de Sunday schools,
Then wnat would become of my Lizer Jane,
And IjeT hooks and de reticule.
4a§Yy an. try on, this poor old heart says try,
be. Missionary baptist—still is left, *
For this poor soul to try.
Their good lord went down in the rising stream
Ami as 1 think will I.
I'll try. I'll try, this poor old heart says try.
For I want to he an angel white
With dc good lord when 1 die.
Vo baptist! baptist! is my name,
And will he till 1 die;
I’ll he baptized in dc baptist faith
And eat of the baptist pie.
Now shout—yes, shout; I'll shout till 1 die.
For now I’ll he an angel white
With de good lord in de sky.
GLEANINGS.
Mrs. Nancy Decs, widow of Mr. Benjamin
Dees, died in Sumter county on Friday night
last, aged one hundred and six 3'ears.
The Grand Lodge of the I. O. G. T. meets
in IThlton on the second Tuesday in Septem
ber next.
Mr. Jasper Hopkins, who was shot in the
hand during the late Crawford (Oglethorpe)
riot, has not as yet recovered. One of his
fingers will never be of any service.
The Cedartown Express sa3*s : “The She
rilF sold forty acre lots of land on Tuesday
last at from two and a half cents per lot to
one dollar and fifty cents. Murder !*’
We hear that an injunction against the
'Fax Collector of Chatham county, to restrain
him from collecting the special State tax of
$75 on liquor dealers, will be applied for to
day.—Sav. News 16th.
It was cold enough in Borne on Sunday,
the 10th June, to make fires necessarj* to
comfort all day. This has never been the
case bcTorc in the memory of the oldest in
habitant.
Mr. J. Van Burcn, f)f Habersham county,
claims to be the oldest locomotive engineer
in the United states, he having as far back
as 1832 run an English engine, made by the
celebrated Geo. Stephenson, over the Sche
nectady and Saratoga Railway in New York.
A little child has just died in Jersey Citv
from dog bite. lie was bitten two months
ago. The wound was cauterized and appar
ently healed. The theorists will hardly insist
that this was a case of death resulting from
fright.
Harry Milburnc, the escaped convict caught
in Chattanooga some days ago, after a severe
legal contest, has been returned to Georgia
and confined at Dade coal mines. Applica
tion was made from Chattanooga for his par
don, but Gov. Colquitt has refused to interfere.
In Gadsden county, Florida, a little boy
was ordered by his father to put a load of
peas in a gun for the benefit of a horse that
had been foraging on his sugar-cane patch.
The boy forgot that there was already a load
of buckshot in the gun, and the result was a
dead horse.
The highest point yet attained bv any rail
road in this country has beeh reached on the
summit of Laveta Pass, in the Sangre do
Christo Mountains, Nevada, by the south
western extension of the Denver and Rio
Grande Railroad. The altitude of the sum
mit is 9,340 feet.
W4icn Sumter was fired on, Joe Hooker
was a ruined and broken-down gambler in
San Francisco. Two of the subjects of King
Pharoah furnished him with an outfit. He
became a famous soldier and Major-General.
About the same time. Grant roused himself,
according to Mr. O’Conor, from the gutters
of Galena.
The first white Indian peach scions ever
imported to this county, we learn, were
brought here by a Mrs. Brooks, 53 j r ears ago,
from Virginia. Mrs. B. made the journey on
horseback, and brought the twigs in her lap.
They were planted at her home, now known
as the Little-Roane-Jones-Braw T ner place.—
OgleUwrpe Echo.
Atlanta, June 15.—Stephen Brinkley
was hanged to-dav. at Xewnan, for the mur
der of his wife nearly four years ago. The
case has been tried at seven terms, each time
going against the prisoner. Several times
he has been examined by physicians who
were sent to pronounce upon the condition
of his mind, and once by a medical commis
sion.
Miss II ad lock, of Newport, Vt., met in the
Street a man who had circulated derogatory
stones about her. She had prepared herself
for the occasion. First, she took pepper
from a pocket and threw it in his eyes ; se
condly, she took a raw-hide from her bustle
and struck him several times with it; thirdly,
she took a rotten egg from a hand bag and
smashed it in his face..
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Physiology of Corn Crop.
If a stalk of corn l>e taken, just before the
appearance of the tassel or flowering stalk,
an<J acrosscntbe made at each joint, a small
'em 1 ’of corn will be seen at each cut. and if
carefully dissected out will be seen to be per
fect in its parts. If now, another stalk be
taken, a little further advanced, so that the
tassel may be readily seen, and the same cuts
now made, we shall find no appearance of an
embryo at the lower joints, but shall find
some at the upper. A third stalk taken when
the tassel is in readiness to bloom, will show
the ears which are to be developed into the
crop, but none others.
This observation, which was repeatedly
verified last year in various fields of corn, and
explained and demonstrated to many indi
viduals, can receive the following interpreta
tion : Nature has made provision for an ear
of corn at each joint of the stalk ; hut as the
stalk develops, from some unknown reason,
the major number of these embryo ears are
absorbed into the plant, and but one, or oc
casionally more, are developed.
Now if, through human interference, these
embryo ears are to be developed into crop,
the rccpiisitc action must take place before the
absorption takes place, in which these ears
are present in the plant to be developed.
Theory indicates that a check to the vegeta
tive luxuriance of the plant at this period,
would have an influence in promoting the
prolificacy. Experiment has shown that root
pruning the plant does check the growth for
a short season, docs prevent in a measure the
absorption of these ears, and does therefore
increase the crop. Hence deep and close
cultivation, which root prunes, and which is
applied before the absorption of these ears
in embrj’o has taken place, must be benefi
cial.
This root-pruning idea, originating with
ourselves, is receiving development in the
articles entitled, “ A New Theory of Tillage,”
and we shall not, therefore, develop it more
fully here; but will only say that last year
we obtained twenty-three ears of corn from
one kernel of corn planted, and also a large
increase from a small area of a field treated
Unfortunately, the excessive
drought of last season prevented us from ex
perimenting on a large scale, and in an exces
sive and exclusive manner, as wq desired.
Yet our garden experiments, and house re
sults, were of sufficient promise to carry with
them a conviction that we were working on
an untried and important subject of the most
promising character for practical application.
—Scientific Farmer.
A Southwestern Georgia Sheep Farmer.
The Albany Advertiser says:—Mr. David
Ayres, of Mitchel county, started after the
war had ended with the following property,
viz: 1,330 acres of land, worth $1,500; 650
head of cattle, worth $5 per head, and 250
head of sheep at $2 each, and two old horses.
He has two men to take care of the stock,
which he pays by giving them every tenth
lamb for their care of the flocks under their
charge, and he furnishes them a house each,
and gives them the use of as much land around
the house as they wish to cultivate. He also
pays them 2| cents per head for shearing
sheep. The stock is never fed ; they thrive
upon the native grasses in the pine forests :
they require no shelter, and no extra feed and
care. The cattle roam at large, the sheep are
in flocks of from 300 to 500 in each range.—
The business of the hands is to take care of
the flocks and see after the increase in the
spring. The sheep lamb from the middle of !
December through the spring, and from 500
sheep he gets an average of 300 lambs. The
sheep are ver}' free from disease ; they have
never been known to have distemper, which
is so common and so fatal in other sections.
The rams are kept with the flock the whole
time, and are never separated. Mr. A3*res
has sold every year 100 head of cattle, for
which he obtained $lO per head, $1,000; 100
sheep at $2.00 per head, S2OO, and now he
has over 1,500 head of cattle, and over 3,000
head of sheep. Each sheep averages 3 pounds
of wool, so from his sheep he obtains 0,000
pounds of wool yearly, lie has therefore a
good.income with a continual increase of his
stock. He has only bought 30 head of stock
since the war. lie has sold off enough sheep
to have made them now 5,000 head. 11 is in
crease has been made from his flocks, lie
has never speculated, nor put mono}’ into his
stock business from his farm. 11 is stock
have paid their own expenses by the increase.
Mr. Ayres has two good improved farms of
about 440 acres each, and 1,000 head of cat
tle, and 2,000 head of sheep, which he wish
es to sell. The remainder of his stock he
wishes to retain.
Last Working of Corn.
If corn has been well worked, no large
weeds and grass will be in the field, and the
laying by is simple and easy. A light, though
surface-pulverizing ploughing is all that is
needed. If the field is foul (especially if
bottom land,) much hoeing will be necessary,
a thing which should never happen on a well
conducted form unless excessive rains inter
fere with ploughing. It is extremely impor
tant that this last ploughing should be shal
low, so as not to cut the “brace” or “spur”
roots which have now clustered around the
base of the stalk. These roots seem to play
a vejry important part in the economy of the
plant—the “ bracing” is doubtless a very se
condary consideration. They penetrate deep
into the ground, something like the taproots
of other plants, and send forth numerous
comparatively short fibrous roots in ever}’
direction. One of their functions obviously,
is to absorb the moisture which is collected
by the leaves during heavy dews- and light
rains, and which descending down the stalk,
sinks into the earth immediately around its
base. Thi3 water is usually quite strongly
impregnated with ammonia, a favorite food
of the corn plant. These numerous absorbers
make the manuring of corn in the hill so
generally successful. It is good practice to
sow peas in the corn field at the last plough
ing. We have seen recently an account of
some experiments made to test the question
of how much the corn crop is cut off by the
presence of the peas—the difference in yield
of two portions, one with peas the other not,
was scarcely appreciable—the pea crop and
the fertilizing of the land was shown to be
almost a clear gam. \\ here the seasons are
at all short, early varieties of peas should be
sown in the corn, as they cannot make much
headway till the fodder is pulled.:— So.. Culti
vator, June..
RELIGIOUS.
Hidden and Safe.
One morning a teacher went, as usual to
the school-room, and found many vacant
seats. Two little scholars lay at their homes
cold in death, and others were very sick. A
fatal disease had entered the village, and the
few children present that morning at school,
gathered around the teacher and said :
‘Oh, what shall we do? Do j’ou think we
shall be sick and die too ?’
She gentty touched the bell as a signal for
silence, and observed:
‘Children, you are all afraid of this terrible
disease. You mourn the death of our dear
little friends; and you fear that you may be
taken also. I only know of one way of es
cape, and that is to hide.’
The children were bewildered, and the
teacher went on :
‘I will read you about this hiding place;’
and read Psalm xci: ‘Whoso dwelleth under
the defence of the Most High shall abide
under the shadow of the Almighty.* ’
All were hushed and composed by the
sweet words of the Psalmist, and the morning
lesson went on as usual.
At noon a dear little girl sidled up to the
desk and said:
‘Teacher, are you not afraid of the dip
theria ?’
‘No, my child,’ was the reply.
‘Well, wouldn’t j'ou be if you thought j'oq
would be sick and die ?’
‘No, my dear, I trust not.’
Looking at the teacher a moment with
wondering eyes, her face lighted as she said :
‘ Oh, I know! you are hidden under God’s
wings. What a nice place to hide !’
Yes, this is the only hiding-place for old,
for young, for rich, for poor—all.
Do any of you know of a safer or abetter ?
— Dr. Norton.
“I will Heal their Backsliding."
Backsliders alwa3*s feel that it is more
difficult to come back to God than it was to
make the first approach. Then they were
aliens; now the3 r arc children. Then they
had offended against law; now they have
offended against love. Having been adopted
into the family of God and received forgive
ness and many a love-token, they feel that
they cannot have the face to look up to the
Lord. Plead with them. Bepeat all the
promises made to sinners. Show them that
being sinners need not keep them from the
Lord because llis name is Jesus, Saviour, and
llis great business is sinner-saving. “True,”
they repty, “very true; and you may repeat
those great and precious promises to other
sinners, to liars, thieves, adulterers 'and mur
derers ; and on those promises I did go to
Him, and found them true; but after all that
mercy I siuned against Him, and ran away
from Him. I could go once. I cannot go
again.” And 3'ou would have noanswer:
and they could never return if the Lord had
not most mercifully recorded special direct
promises for such cases. “Return, thou
backsliding Israel, saith the Lord ; and I will
not cause mine anger to fall upon you.”—
Jer. iii. 12. “Turn, O backsliding children !
saith the Lord ; for I am married unto 3*011.”
—Jer. iii. 14. And this text in Hosea. Back
sliding is a disease of weakness. lie will
cure it, so that we shall backslide no more.
Now, if he .had said this much only, what a
comfort! But he promises to “love” us
love 11s “freely.” He will not cast up to us
our want of fidelity. lie will not treat us
with a restrained graciousness. “I will love
them freely.” Let church-members take n
lesson of the Lord for their treatment of weak
brethren. Bead Galatians vi. I—s.
“ Even as a nurse, whose child's imperfect pace
(’an hardly lead his foot from place to place.
Leaves her fond kissing, sets lmn down to go.
Nor does uphold him for a step or two ;
But when she finds that he begins to fall.
She holds him up, and kisses him withal;
So God from man sometimes withdraws his hand
A while, to teach his infant faith to stand ;
But when lie sees his feeble strength begin
To fail, he gently takes him up again.*’
No More Close Communion. —The Onta
rio Association has been held in Lockport,
N. Y. A communication from Messrs. Ball
and Dick, Baptist ministers, upon terms of
communion, expressing the sentiment that
“diversities of views on water baptism ought
not to divide independent churches that are
agreed on essential points of doctrine and
practice, *’ and that “the baptismal question
ought not to be longer a dividing gulf be
tween believers,” was answered by a frater
nal overture which recommended tht a cor
dial Christian greeting be extended to these
brethren, and that they be welcomed to the
membership of the Association.
A Presbyterian County. —Laurens coun
ty, S. C., is as strongly Presbyterian as
Mecklenburg county, N. C., or Rockbridge
county, Va. There are in the county 12
Presbyterian churches, witli 820 members,
four of which were organized in the last
century, and all of them supplied with the
regular preaching of the gospel. The Pres
byterians have, moreover, a FemalCT College
at Laurens C. H., and the Thornwell Orphan
age at Clinton. The seceders also have
three churches, and the Northern Presbyte
rians a church for the colored people.
There is a newspaper which might have
contained an account of the crucifixion of
the Saviour had there been correspondents
at the time of that great event. The Gazette
of rekin, China, was started 713 years before
the birth of Christ, and is still a journal in
good standing.
Sometime ago a minister accepted the call
of a church, where he understood a small sal
ary would be supplemented by very generous
donations. lie has resigned, reporting one
donation—a worked motto, “The Lord will
Provide.”
A Baptist minister, in lowa, who wrote
pleasant paragraphs about himself, and got
them printed in the local paper, has been
found guilty of “an attempt to gain a reputa
tion as a minister by means unworthy of a
Christian.”
Whispering in company is always offen
sive, and often for the reason, that persons
present,.suspect, that they arc the subject of it
temperance column.
Ciod Templars Directory.
JACKSON COUNTY.
Stonewall Lodge , No. 214,
Meets Saturday nights before 2d and 4th Sundays.
Star of Bethlehem Lodge , No. 305,
Meets Saturday nights before Ist and 3d Sundays.
Harmony Grove Lodge , No. 437.
Meets Saturday nights before 2d and 4th Sundays.
Dry Pond Lodge , No. 444,
Meets Saturday nights before Ist and 3d Sundays.
Union Lodge , No. 450,
Meets Saturday nights before Ist and 3d Sundays.
Mulberry Lodge , No. 451,
Meets Sat. Eve’g 4 p. m., before 2d & 4th Sundays
Sallie Candler Lodge , No. 455,
Meets Sat. Eve’g 3 p. m., before Ist & 3d Sundays
- Kidd Lodge , No. 461,
Meets Saturday nights before 2d and 4th Sundays
Hope Lodge. No. 469,
Meets Saturday night before Ist Sunday ; and 2
p. m.. Saturday before 3d Sunday.
Pond Fork Lodge , No
Meets Sat. eve’g, 3 p. m.. before 2d & 4th Sundays
ADDRESS OF WELCOME,
DELIVERED BY F. A. GLENN, OF STONEWALL
LODGE, TO TIIE BRETHREN AND SISTERS
OF TIIE COUNTY GRAND LODGE,
I. O. G. TANARUS., MAY 19, 1877.
Ladies and Gentlemen—representatives of the
Temperance Cause in Jackson county : —
I rise to word the welcome which Stonewall
Lodge tenders to you on this joyous reunion.
But words fail to express the throbbing emo
tions that well up from so many happy hearts.
This is no ordinary occasion. Fellow-Tem
plars, you come, an army of victors, it is true,
but you come from no blood-stained field —
from no devastated provinces. You come
from the field of glory, from the battle-ground
of right and temperance. You come not with
the spoils of nations ; not with the despairing
cries of heartbroken widows and the sighs of
defenceless orphans ringing in your ears ; nor
do you bring, in your victorious course the
blood-stained Jaurels of some gory contest,
weighted down with the murders of the de
fenceless and weak—wearing on its every lin
eament the dread mark of Cain. You are
not actuated by desire of your own personal
emolument, nor are you striving to gain the
steep where Fame's proud temple shines afar;
but you come from the noblest, the purest
battle-field the world has ever known ; the
contest for truth and reform. You come,
bringing the blessings of wives rescued from
worse than w idowhood ; of children preserved
from pangs far worse than those of poverty ;
of fathers snatched from the dark brink of
perdition into which they would ere long have
hurled themselves headlong! You come,
crowned with the benedictions of all these,
and with a sweeter, a softer, a more exquisite
paeon of triumph than e’er graced the pro
gress of the proudest conqueror of former gen
erations. You come, knowing full well
“ That after ages, as they rise,
Exulting shall proclaim.
In choral union to the skies.
Their blessings on your name/’
You come, bringing in your bosoms the sweet
consciousness of having done your duty, and
that, when life's cares arc ended and your
wearied frames resign their burdens with the
grand certainty of having accomplished your
allotted task,
‘•The soul will mount into the blue domain,
Pass o’er the shining towers, and uncontined.
With angel feet roam o’er the heavenly plain.
Pluck life’s unfading flowers and truth immortal
gain.’’
Ours is a grand, a noble structure. Found
ed on the immutable principles of truth and
temperance, with a grand superstructure of
brotherly love, and crowned with the cardi
nal principses of Faith. Hope and Charity—
imposing indeed must be its appearance, sub
lime its object, grand its success.
Brothers and Sisters, this is a grand, agio-
rious occasion. It is the glad reunion of
many happy hearts, engaged in the noblest
cause that e’er called true men and women
to their duty. Ciesar and Alexander ne’er
commanded an hour like this. Ave, the
proudest conquerors that e'er proudly rode
o’er the bowed forms of subjugated millions,
ne’er enjoyed the pure, holy pleasure that fills
our hearts to overflowing at this happy reun
ion. They, amid all the pomp and luxury of
their triumphant reign, were lashed by the re
lentless stings of a guilty conscience. Amid
all their pleasures the stern Furies filled their
minds with a thousand gorgon horrors, and
pitiless Remorse hurried them on to madness.
But not thus do } T oti assemble here to-day.
The remorseless stings of a guilty conscience,
haunting its victim night and day, ne’er vis
its 3’our downy couch nor rouses you from
} T our gentle slumber. The benedictions of
scores, aye, hundreds, it may be, float round
3'ou and envelop you in a halo of glorj\ The
grandest, the noblest conqueror is he who sa
crifices himself to his fellow-man ; who spends
his fortune, his life, his all. for the elevation
of his fellow-creatures. The poets, warriors,
and statesmen may live in song for ages, but
their glory, their fame is but a passing me
teor to the steady flame of glory that surrounds
him who gives himself to his fellow-man.—
This is your object, the grand climax of your
hopes—the goal to which you direct your
steps. You strive to reform the inebriate, to
succor the orphan, to pour the Balm of Gil
ead into the torn and bleeding heart of the wid
ow. I wish you God speed iu j'our glorious
work. God grant that your efforts may bear
a rich harvest and reach a glorious maturit}'.
The dreams of glory, the fame of heroes,
sages and philosophers shall pass away and
be forgotten, but our glorious order shall live
until the wheel of Time itself shall cease its
revolutions and the universe shall be num
bered with the past.
Then, tell me not that he is only great
Who rides the battle or who rules the State ;
Truth e’er presents a chaplet purer far,
Than civic crown or laureled wreath of war.
He who to man’s advancemeht bends his mind,
And is the benefactor of his kind.
Builds for himself a more exalted fame.
And thousands bless who do not know his name.
Then, Brothers and Sisters, allow me again
to utter a heart}', an earnest welcome. I
welcome you here in the name of suffering hu
manity— whose bene factors you are ; I wel
come you in the name of widows and orphans
of our sunny land; I welcome you in the
name of all that is elevating in the heart of
man; and I bid you welcome in the name of
our Saviour, the anchor of Faith, the embo
diment of Hope, the noblest example of Cha.
rity,
A brother in prayer-meeting in Troy add
ed to his prayer: “And that fellow who
stole my him with a thunder
bolt, 0 ! kord, before he gets over into Ohio.”
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Sin it®.-
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which have been painted six years and now look as well as when first painted. This OllXJIIt’Jt L
‘* k "!I T . RS 7 P, ‘ KMI ,MS at twenty of the State Fairs of the Cnion. SA >1 VIE <' AKl>
OF COLORS SENT FREE. Address.
N. Y. .ENAMEL PAINT CO., 193 Chambers St., X. Y., or MILLER BROS BID Water Street. ClmlaaA,fi.
r eb 3
SsJ 5] 5j <*; 5
To file IVorltingClass.—We are now pre
pared to furnish all classes with constant employ
ment at home, the whole of the time, or for their
spare moments. Business new, light and profit
able. Persons of either sex easily earn from 50
cents to $5 per evening, and a proportional sum b} r
devoting their whole time to the business. Boys
and girls earn nearly as much as men. That .ill
who sec this notice may send their address, and
test the business, wc make this unparalleled offer :
! o such as aie not well satisfied we will send one
dollar to pay for the trouble of writing Full par
ticulars, samples worth several dollars to com
mence work on. and a copy of Home and Fireside,
one of the largest and best Illustrated Publica
tions, all sent free by mail. Reader, if you want
permanent, profitable work, address.
sepfi Geo. Stinson &. Cos., Portland, Maine.
TO CONSUMPTIVE*.
The advertiser, having been permanently cured
of that dread disease. Consumption, by a simple
remedy, is anxious to make known to his fellow |
sufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it.
he will send a copy of the prescription used (free
of charge), with the directions for preparing and
using the same, which they will find a sure cure
for Consumption. Asthma, Bronchitis. &c.
Parties wishing the prescription will please ad
dress, Rev. E. A. WILSON,
194 Penn St., Willianisburgh, New York.
QEOfcGIA, Jackson County.
Martha C\ Hawkins ys. W. A. Hawkins. Libel
for Divorce in Jackson Superior Court.
It appearing to the Court that the defendant in
the above stated case resides without the limits of
said county, and it further appearing that said de
fendant resides beyond the limits of this State- •
Ordered, by the Court, that service be perfected
upon defendant by publication in the Forest
News, a newspaper published in said county,
once a month for four months previous to the next
term of this Court. J. B. SILMAN.
Att’y for Pl’ff.
Granted :
GEO. D. RICE, Judge S. C.
A true extract from the minutes of Jackson Su
perior Court, February term, 1577.
March 24th. T. ft. NIBLACK, Cl’k S. C.
Oi'/rf in a l Good if ear s
RUBBER GOODS.
I nlcanized Rubber in every CmteeirabJe /Vrw,
Adapted to fHi renal Use.
ANY ARTICLE UNDER FOUR COCNDS WEIGHT
CAN BE SENT BY MAIL.
WIND AND WATER PROOF
garments a specialty. Our Cloth surface Coat
combines trro garments in one. For stormy weath
er. it is a Perfect 1 Voter Proof, and in dry weath
er. a
NEAT AND TIDY OVERCOAT.
By a peculiar process, the rubber is put between
the two cloth surfaces, which prevents Smelling
or Sticking. even in the hottest climate*. They are
made in three colors—Blue, Black and Brown.
Are Light, Portable, Strong
and Durable.
We arc now offering them at the extremely low
price of $lO each. Sent post-paid to any address
upon receipt of price.
When ordering, state size around chest, OTer
vest.
Reliable parties desiring to see our goods, can
send for our Trade Journal, giving description of
our leading articles;
Be sure and get the Original Goodyear's Steam
Vulcanized fabrics.
for Illustrated price-list of our Cele
brated Pocket Gymnasium.
Address carefully.
GOODYEAR’S RUBBER CURLER CO..
G 97 Broadway, New York Citv.
P. O. Box 5136. fcb24-r,m
Errors of Youth.
A GENTLEMAN who suffered for years from
Nervous Debility, Premature Decay, and all
the effects of youthful indiscretion will, for the
sake of suffering humanity, send free to all who
need it, the recipe and direction for making the
simple remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers
wishing to profit by the advertiser's experience
can do so by addressing in perfect confidence,
JOHN B. OGDEN.
dec3o 42 Cedar St., X Y.
Best in the
MARKET,