The Weekly Sumter republican. (Americus, Ga.) 18??-1889, November 26, 1880, Image 4

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o-nvaiv O . I *'■“ I'eniing of great mnltitodu of ebil- PVUIlVt j dfen j n iHy.ventiUted school-rooms and ■■■ ■ poorly-cqoipped ball* of instruction, in TABERNACLE SERMONS, tanking many of the placet of knowl edge in tbit conntiy a bnge holocaust. | Politic* in many of the cities get into ■T REV. T. OeffITT TALMASE. | tr ‘X • honor*. Jephthah’t daughter perishes. It it ao much so that there are many | schools ia ths. country to-day which are preparing tdha of thousand* of in- I valid men and invalid women for the opened thy month future; *o shat, in many place*, by the 'lb* Uni. do to me Mfordirg to the: j t ; mc child’s edneatton ir finished which hath proceed out of thy “ ou,h —j t |,e child is 'finished! In many places, Judges ii., 80. ; n many cities of the country, there are Jephthah was a freebooter. Karly large a pp r0 p r inti 0 n§ for everything else, turned out from home when he ought aQ j cheerful appropriations; bnt as soon to have been card for, he consorted #g the appropriation is to be made for with rough men and wcnMorth to^eani j ^ ^jncational or moral interest of the MCRDER OF THE INNOCENTS, My father, i struck through spedion We cannot expect onr child- n to be perfect. We mast not see . erytbing. Since we have two or three faults of onr own, we onght not to be too frngh when we discover that onr children may have as many. ^ If tradition bo true, when we* were cliild- we were not all little Samuels, and parents fearfol lest they coaid not raise us because of our premature good ness. Yon cannot scold or pound yonr children into nobility of character. The bloom of a child’s heart can never be seen under a cold drizzle. Above all avoid fretting and scolding in the house hold. Better than ten years of fretting at yonr children, is one good, round old fashioned application of the slipper! That minister of the gospel of whom we read in the newspapers that whip ped his child to death because he would not say his prayers will never cor The arithmetics cannot land, and manufactory to manufactory, I owned half the city, whatever my eye' saw 1 had, whatever I wanted I got,” or on that day to have Christ look yon " “ in the face and say: I was hungry and ye fed me*. I was naked and ye clothed me. I was sick * ‘ prison and ye Visited me;-snas^ Carroway. Property pointed out by B id place, will be sold P. IloUia, Plaintiff"* attorney. A Wo, at the aaiu# lima and . Lot ot land No two hundred and best he could. In those .-onsidered right for a mat to"gc>'o„t onindep.mt.li* military „p,- cottaret.™ . — , ■ . . , ... ,linen,. JephllmH ,» « goo.1 man ac- . . j h| ca ll , he ..tramming" 1 ten ltave bttn ruined forever either tording to the light of his dark age. bill j sv , tem of the common school, end many I through too great rigor or tor. great Ut thiough a wandering and a predatory o y the academies—children of delicate leniency. The heavens and the earth ,^ twe a*yHme.. 211). cmtainmgUtre* hundred life lie became reckless and precipitate. brain t o tasks that might | are alive with the groans of th« sacn- lend. mor. or W«. The grace of Go<l changes a man * appall a mature intellect; children going | fict-d. In this important matter seek epp^on tie south bvclfribe* heart but never reverses his natural ,** , i - th a stran of books divine direction. O father, O mother, j*, d ^Glover. and north by Rafis Books,* temperament half a. high a. themselves. The fact I p ^ a. The Israelites wanted the Ammonites . . goJne 0 f cities parents do not l Chief #111 slice Manstield if she was 11 »t | nijt of Bumterroomy, Georgia. Leved on as of their country, .o .hey rent I tMr cMM „ to gmdojde, forth. ! pjondt.^.v-ejlhm. ,,mh l.rilli.nt ...m, tilling to lie prou>l of, hat delegation to Jephthah, asking him j •1 Income rommander-in-chief.of all tb ranch as ye di£ jt to the leai my brethren, ye didit to Ham tor County. To Whom It Hoj Concern. GEORGIA—Svktxe Cocstt; ■IUL J. C. Gnerry, Executor cn **tato _ P. Gumy, dsesanert.havlng fib petition tor Wsre to sell the real estate bel lag to said estate, i'heeo srs iterator* loeite and admonish aQ td singular.-the kindred and creditors to bs •d appear at this offioe on tha first Mondav — December next, and to ahow cause ir any these 4^ lu*a why .aeW. should aotbaaranUd ' Gireu under mv hand and official signature thiVlh. 4 th day of N ircmberlWO. * t^OB. H. 8TEWABT. OnTy. Sumter SheriII Sales—December. V ILL ba sold Won the Court Boom door ta the city of Americas, Ocorjpa, Baku unty on the first Tueeisy ia I>«c*cnber-mcx e following deecrtbwd property to wit: Lot of land number fire, one hundred sen off of lot numbertwenty-uine, one hundred an forty-five acres off of lot number thirly-eix, be in* the northern pert of raid lot, eontaiun ia all four handled and fort j-flra acree, mm or leae, all lying in the sixteenth diet net of 8am- ter county. Levied on aa the property of Jae Carroway, ta satisfy a 1 fa Waned from Homier Superior Court, in fator of Uriah 8. Locket, Ta all wham it may Caacenp. GEOBGIt—SniTznCovxTT. ... W HEBEI*.Q. W. klcN'rel having filedhL pel it ion ia said Court for letters of admin istration 6a ttmga-aU ot Nepuey C* kar. dre’di These are therefore to cite and admonieh all parties interested, whether kindred or creditor*, to ebow esuea on or before the December ter— or aaid Court to be held on the first Monday December. ISflV wh* eeid letter* of adminWti tionon aaid estate should not be granted the a-dd petitioner as prayed for, Witnessmy band ind offlaial signature, thi< the 4-h day Of November 18W. novff-lm * h T. H. STEWART, Ord y. Ta Wham II may Concern. GEORGIA—^Jditex Cocstt. TTTHEKEA8, E. H Cheek and Janet Alexan dre der. Administrator* upon the estate N. A. Hatfield dec’d. appBre for have the real eetatedK-longinif to eai I ee>ate, — —* • cite and admonish pie ligli •lrove me out when you had no use 1 me, and now yon are in trouble y> want me back,” but he did not k that. He takes command of the arm ►end* messengers to the Ammonites tf tell them to vacate the country, and getting no favorable response, marshall afford n, they the K.ps vow that if the Lord will gi’ he victory, then, on his return whatsoever firet comes out of his av he will offer in sacrifice as a offering. The battle openi ” health 1,1 tution.” Tens of thousands of children ? J educated into imbecility, so connected with many such literary establishments there ought to be an asylum for the rickets. It is posh, and crowd, and cram, and staff, and jam, until the child’s intellect is bewildered, and tlie memory is wrecked, and the health is gone. Thete arc children turned from the schools w romping and laugh children’s I said, order that i something for which to be \ shing on the edges of danger, no unlimbenng of batteries two miles away, hut the hurling of men on the points'of swords and spean fnl. grate- full of d had cheek* with health, who are now turned out in the afternoon pale-faced, irritated, asthmatic, old before their time. It is one of the saddest sights on earth—an old-mannish boy, or an old- , ,. I womanish girl. <iirls ten years of age ine ground could no more drink . tl „|,i„g a lge bra! Boys twelve years of blood, and the horse* reared to leap over rac king their brain over trigenome- thu piled-up bodies of the slain. In t ^ v , ------ iliox* old times opposing forces would • ' broken.j TI 0 * favor of Barney Parker va Joseph Mel Prop*rty poiattd out by pUiotlff. nov3:da J. W. MIZE, Sheriff Administrator’s Sale. GEORGIA—SCMTEB Cocsty. U N DEB and by virtue of an order of the dinary of sail county, will be sold tel oose door in ih-v city of Amriic ity, between the legal hours of si lb* first Tuesday in December next. in said o foUowing real estate, mile* from ite Court-house Tbeartre therefore to cite and admonish a 1 parties interested, whether kindred or eredi tore, to ahow cause on or before the Decent be: term of aaidcqnrt, to be held on tb* first Mon day in DecrmCcr- 1880, why leave to sell eai: real estate -should not be granted aaid apph cart aa prayed for. Witaers my hand and rfiicial signature thi ts 4th day olAovtmber. 1880 nov4-lm > T. U. STEWART, OrdinarJT* Children unacquainted withtheii tongue ci ving their Latin, i tierman lessons! All the of their nature beaten out of ate is sube lysndc bail, v — „ Haid lot containing nine (9 acres) more Also o..e plantauon lying on earn* it mile* -east or Amtricoa; known as Adam Uobmroo place, embracing lot N.. one hnndrod and eithty-nine V|89 I («4) acres In th. corner—>ot one hundred and nil j beetle of a fireek !* And you doctor them for this, u give them a little medicine foi ndyoi * tight until th and then, with iron grip, each one woum throttle his man until they both fell, teeth to teeth, grip to grip, death-stare to death-stare, until the plain was one tumbled mass of corpses from which that ; .^you wonder what is the mat- the last trace ot manhood has been , t<jr w - th u * em , wiU td | you ghat is . ephthah wins th 3 day. ! lh<j m , tter wilh them . They are fin- lay captured at lus feet. uhinjf their e, lac . tion ! ]„ m y parish in Philadelphia a little child was so push ed at school that she was thrown into a fever, and in her dying delirium, all night long she was trying ultiplication table. In n Again, there arc many who are sac rificing their children to a spirit of worldliness. Some one asked a moth er whose children had turned out very well, what was the secret by which she prepared them for usefulness and for the Christian life, and she said: “This was the secret: When in the .morning, I washed my children, I prayed that they might be washed in the for~ tain of a Savior’s mercy. When 11 on their garments, I prayed that they might be arrayed in the robe of a Sa vior’s righteousness. When I gave \ fort?-i them food, I prayed that they might _ be fed with manna from heaven. When booth I started them on the road to school, I j {^Joi prayed that their faith might be as the | seres 1 ,'lining light bright, nnj brighter to I ,! l SSS:.‘1h‘i*H.‘l“wil2SS2£ the perfect dav. >h!” you say, that uon-sdjoinmg thelsud* of John A. Gobb,8sm- was very old-fashioned. It was quite J «•***; 1 D * old fashioned. But do you suppose child under such a purtnre as ] Whitsett. that ever turned out bad? In onr day J c tys start out with no idea high-1 (i.35( the all compassing dollar. They , Notice to Debtors and Creditors. A LL rcrvms indebted totba estate of D. O. IX Coke r, 1st* or Hunter county deceased, are hereby notified to come forward and make im- msditte payment, and those holding claim* sffainst the aaid estate are hereby notified to preeent them for pavment in terms of the law. This,November 2nd, 1880. * novS-lm ** J. M. OOKFR AdmV. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN and Bar Iron, I Roofing Tile mansion optkes 'Sower Pipe, Fish Plate, Bolts and Spikes, Brass Goods, Light Rail, I Warehouse Elevators, 3SUTS, WASHERS AND LAG SCREWS. \^«bster County. Webster Sheriff Sales—December W ILL be sold before the Court bouse door in tho town of Preoton. WeU er county Picks ail h ovels, Miners* Tools, Boiler Bivets, Antimony* j Differential Pulley Blocks, Foundry Brushes and Riddles Sash Weights. I Cotton waste, INGOT COPPER BLOCH TIN, pelter. Pig and Bar Lead, Sheet Zinc, No. 1 Metal Solder, Sheet and Bolt Copper; I Coil Chain, Carriage Bolts, Hone and Mole Shoes, Boat Spikes. I Hemp packing. THE IRON BOOM IS OVER!! GO TO J. W. Sheffield & Co. FOR LOW PRICES ON STOVES I Wagons, Biffiies, Harness,Etc.EtE„ We have In stock * large and well selected a all kini of HARDWARE, STOVES, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE. BELTING, AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. TINWARE. IRON, STEEL, PAINTS. OILS, GUNS, PISTOLS. WAGON AND BUGGY MATERIAL, WOODEN WARE. SASH. DOORS. BLIND* CHAINS. AXES. PLOWS, BRIIH.ES HOUS* FURNISHING GOODS ’ ETC., ETC. idw brick C.UHU i03 AND WAOI N REPOSITORY v large £S£ h district of said county. Le< ried , on 8 • BLASTING AND SPORTING POWDER, dietrictof BABBITT METAL, FIDE BUKK, imiXBsTONES MAIUIMST TOOLS, HIRE ROl'E, BL At K MOXD STlEL. PLOW ST EL. FILES, 110HE SPALES, BELTING AND LA* IXG, ■lashed 0 all through the to your wives and children. Homeward j with your glittering rd tu ha all v the ajqdausc of an admir- iWtiM triumphal arches, tg* all over Mizpalt. Open ,. - * : —: the ,— Through every hall spread the banquet. Pile up the viands. Fill high the tankards. The nation is re deemed, th»invaders are routed and the national honor is vindicated. Huzza! for .leplithah, the conqueror! Jephthah, seated on a prancing steed, advances j amid tho acclaiming multitude; but his ; eve is not on the excited populace; re- membering that lie had made a solemn vow that, returning from victorious | battle, whatsoever first came out of the doorway of his home that should be sacrificed as a burnt offering, he has his J anxious look upon the door. I wonder 1 what spotless lamb, what brace of doves will be thrown upon the fires of the burnt offering. Oh! horrors. Paleness of death blanches his cheek. Despair seizes his breast. His daughter, his only child, rushes out the doorway to throw herself in Iter fathers arms and shower upon him more kisses than there were wounds on his breast or dents on his shield. All the trintnphal splendor vanished. Holding back this child from his breast, and pushing the locks hack from the fair brow, and looking into the eyes of inextinguishable afl'ec- tion. with choked utterance he says: ••Would God I lay stark on the bloody plain! My daughter, my only child, joy of my home, life of my life, thou art the sacrifice!" The whole matter was explained to her. This was no whin ing, hollow-hearted girl into whose eyes the father looked. All the glory of sword and shield vanished in the pi ence of the valor of that girl. There may have been a tremor of the lip. rose-leaf, trembles in the sough of the south wind; there may have been the starting of a tear, like » rain-drof shaken from the anther of a water-lily Hut with a self-sacrifice that man may not reach, and only woman’s heart can compass, she surrenders herself to fire * . . the recite the boyhood. I remember that in onr class at school there was one la l who knew more than 1 sll of tt< I'Ht together. If ire were fast iptured onr arithmetic he extricated us. When we stood np for the spelling- class he was almost always the head d the class. Visitors came to his father's house, and lie was bronght ont as a prodigy. At eighteen years of age he COKE AND CHARCOAL FORKS. w. B. LOWE. Patent Wheel Wagons of our own Manufacture! age which boast scratch the Lord’s prayer on aten-c< d the Ten Commandments t pi' Children gar fractions. It seems tanghtto reduce moral: id eternity to vn’ ns to be their chit attainment that and ten dimes make a dollar. Hour to get money is only equaled by the other art, how to keep it. Tell ine, ye who know, what chance there is for those who start out in life with sncli pervert ed sentiments? The money market re sounds again and again with the down fall of such people. If I had a drop of _,i idiot. He lived teu years an idiot, and died an idiot not knowing his right hand from his left, or day from night. T‘ parents and the teachers made him idiot. Yon may flatter yonr pride by forcing your children to know more than any other children, but yon are making a sacrifice of that child if by addition to its intelligence you are mak- nbtraction from its future. The child will go away from such mal treatment with no exuberance to fight the battles of life. Such children may get along very well while you take care of them, hut when yon are older, or dead, alas! for them if thiongh the wrong system of education which you dopted they have no swarthiness or ,rce of nature to take care of tliem- slves. Be careful how you make the child’s headache, or its heart flutter. I hear a great deal about black men’s rights, and Indian’s rights, and wo men's right. Would to God that some body would rise to plead for children’s right*. The Carthagenians used to sacrifi«c their children by putting them into the arms of an idol which thru forth its hand to receive them. The child was put into the arms of the idol, and no sooner touched the arms than it dropped into the fire. £ the art of the mothers to keep the child ren smiling and laughing until th nient they diet!. There may be a fac- ination and a hilarity about the styh of education of which I am speaking, | hut it is only laughter at the moment | of sacrifice. Would God there were I only one Jephthah’* daughter. ; Again there are many parents who 1 are sacrificing their children arith wrong | system of discipline—too great rigor or great leniency. If I had t blood on the tip of a pen I would ^ you by what awful traget’ youth* of this country an of the ned. Fur- thousands and tens of thous ands of the daughters of America sacrificed to taught to be orldliness. They sympathy with all the artificialities of society. They are in- ducted into all the hollowness of what is called fashionable life. They are taught to believe that history is dry, but that fifty-cent stories of ad vent ur- With capacity that might have rivalled a Florence Nightingale in heavenly ministries, or lade the father’s house glad with filial nd sisterly demeanor, their life is a raste, their beauty a curse, their eter nity a demolition. In the siege of Charleston, during the late war, tlie lieutenant of a company stood on the floor beside the daughter of an ex-Governor ol the State of South Carolina. They were taking the of marriage. A bombshell struck the roof, dropped into the group, and were wounded and slain—among the wonnded to death, was the bride. While the bridegroom knelt on the carpet try ing to staunch the woun Is, the hr demanded that the ceremony be ro pleted, that she might take the vo before her departure; and whpn the in ister said: “Wilt thon he faithful u death?" with her dying lips she said, “I will.” And in two hours she had departed. That was the slaugh sacrifice of the body af marriage altars there ar slain for time and slain for death, words of my text, “My father, if thou li,« opettej thy month unto thnLonh | ' Umieicy. TW .re ihiM- ,lo unto me tvh.t.oever hath proeec.le.1, r(m h n fmmi|i<t w ' ho r „, Jtbt h „ nwh „l,l. from thy month She bo*s to the j T| come the auth „ lit j.. The hi B h knife, nd the bloo. . «htch tw often. J . u . h ict the inf.nt .it, i. the the father » voice hjd n»M to 1the ^ chiW „„ mlVr ertm-on cheek, .moke, inithe&*. of Ae parlfataeM, .here father and tlehnrnlofrertnR. , N ‘' °"L‘f ‘ ”” m'other h.ve no vote! Snch children herntme. 1 h ' re -n' come np to miscreant.. Therei.no know her name 1 he garland, that ( thia world for a child that ha. Mupah tw..tcd for Jephthahi. thet « -, ]ear „ eil to Such people nor. have gone '“ l “ *“ .1"*': * ; become the botheration of the church u" t!!!V. h “.^™ lofOodand the post oftlte world— «•«•»•» « "« £ hi | dren ; j iat ,j 0 not i e arn to obey ha- authority. Children will not is well that her for no one can wear it. They may take the name of Deborah, or Abigail, Mil nalTth#amsiiJil! parents’whose authority they do ?Un,Srernf „rr!- not respect. Who are tltese young men daughter of sacri , ,1.....,.t. ,t >n ctmnia n-itii who swagger through the streets with ’ vou I t * ,e ‘ r Months in their vests, talking k/i.*. I about their father as tho old man, the squire, the old chan, s the old lady?” They childhood have the title of this daughter five. Of course, this offering w pleasing to the Lord; br.t bcfoi Intrl your denunciations at Jephthah' crueltv, remember that in olden time*, , - . , when’vows were made, men thought | the,r “ oth they mnat caicut. then., perfom. them, ™ 0,0 a , ltl „, tilv . Kli. h.v- Whether tltcy were w.cked or K oo.l ,h»VhU am. were wicked. Them were two ^ f | f ,ff ov „ b ,ekw.nl. and broke hi. neck Jephthah * vow. Hrst. he ought never , ^ d - |e( , Well, he might. What i. to a father whose sons are debauch- The dust of the valley is pleas- - . anl to hi* smell, and the driving rain* "fJ: II] oouM not ha'c done that , lri throngh the roof of the sepal- th.h did. If to-d.y yon wem.landing , , w « ter ,h,n the wine, of fiel- the bank, of bhm and yon ^ Them men b. harmony b. had been rn , y S father’, government and the have l»n throwing tour ehd mn to The father will he the crocodiles. It is not because we -—at riiror Th-moth- am nat,.rally any hotter, hut heean.. j ^ JfJ ^ to J'k, great leniency. e gospel ligh^ ^i ^ |j er tenderness will overcome her. Iler , First, he ought n 3 made ii. Next, having made ’ it, it were better broken than kept. Hot do not take on pretentious i' Sow, I make ven- practi«l voice „ . „„„ (ofter , her till, Otteatm when 1 tell yon that the, fi , , 0 pnl | 0 „ t , , h ,„ sacrifice of .leplithah s daughter , ^ Children wanting anymmg typeofthophyMeal^mental. a^nd.pird-1 J m f t fjl . They hop. dissolve her will with little softer, her hand scent* d soothe wanting anything rifice of ten thousand children this day. There are parents all unwil lingly bringing to bear upon their chil dren a class ol influences which will as certainly ruin them as knife and torch destroyed Jephthah’* daughter. While I speak, the whole nation without emo tion and without shame looks upon the stupendous sacrifice. In the first place. I remark that much of the system of education in onr day is a system of sacrifice. When children spend six or seven hoars in school, and then must spend two or three hours in preparation for school the next day, will yoa tell me how ranch time they will have for sunshine and fresh air, and the obtaining of that exuberance vrLicit is necessary for the duties of coming life? No one can feel more thankful than I do for the advancement Of common-school education. The printing of books appropriate for achoola, th. mnitiplie.tmn of phtlo- eonhical •pp»r»W*. &• wubli.hmeiit of normal aehool. which provide for our children foachera of largeat calibre, am theme, on which cvery phtljmthmp; fat onght to bo congratulated. Dot the mother most not inteifere, must not off, mnst not beg for the child when the hour comes for the assertion of parental supremacy and the subju gation of a child’s temper. There comes in the history of every child an hour when it is tested whether the pa rents shall rule or the. child shall rule. That is the erucial hour. If the child triumph in that hour, then he will some day make you crouch. It is horrible. I have witnessed it. A moth er come to old age, shivering with ter ror in the presence of a son who cursed her gray hairs, and mocked list, wrin kled face, and begrudged he* the crust she munched with her toothless gums. -IIow sharper than a serpent's tooth it is T# have a thankless child:” Bat on the other hand, too great rig or mnst bt avoided. It is a sad thing when domestic government becomes cold military despotism. Trappers on the prairie fight fire with fire, bat rou cannot anccesafnlly fight your ehild’a bad temper with your own bad temper. We must not be too minute in onr in- rottraging you: 1 will be a God to tbee, and to thy seed after thee." And thongh when you lay yonr head in death there may be some wanderer of the family far away from God, and you may be twenty years in heaven before salvation shall come to his heart, he will lie bronght into the kingdom tlnd before the throne of God, and you will rejoice that yon were faithful Come mt last, though so long postponed his coming. Come at last! I congratulate all those who are toiling for the outcast and the wandering. Your work will soou be over, but the influences you are setting in motion will aeverstop. Long after yon have been garnerAl for the skies, your prayers, your teachings, and your Christian influence will goon, and help to people heaven with bright in habitants. Which would you rather ase, which would yon rather mingle in, in the last great day, being able to say, ••I addad bourn to boose, land to thousand) ^ ternity. It is not a marriage, it is a massacre.. Af fianced to some one who is only waiting until his father dies so he can get the property; then a little while they swing around in the brilliant circles—then the property is gone, and having no power to earn a livelihood, the twain sink into some corner of society, the husband an tiler and a sot, the wife a drudge, a slave, and a sacrifice. Ah! spare yoni denunciations from Jeplithah’s head, and expend them all on this wholesale modern martyrdom. I lift tip my voice to-day ag! sacrifice of children. I look out of my window on a Sabbath and I see a group of children nnwashed, uncombed, christened. Who cares for them? Who prays for them? Who utters to them one kind word? Who lifts them to the altar for baptism? Who goes forth suatch them np from crime and death and woe? Who to-day will go forth and bring them into schools churches? No. Heap them up, great piles of rags and wretchedness and filth, l’nt underneath them the fires of sacri fice, stir up the blaze, put on more fag gots, and while we sit in the churches with folded arms and indiff* ami disease and death will go on with the agonizing sacrifice. During the early French revolution, at Bottrges there was a company of boys who used to train every day young sol !i»rs, and they carried a flag, and they had on the flag this inscrip tion: ••Tremble tyrants, tremble; are grow ing up." Mightily suggestive This generation is passing off, and a ^ coming on. Will T# AU HbOl they be tlie foes of tyranny, the toes of | QEO j‘9I sin, and the foe* of death, or will they 1 be the foes of God? They are growing trs'lon upon th# **uto or J**»cD ocard.dec'J.. up! I rongretnUte,11 parent, whoare , doing their best to keep their children - “ from the altar of sacrifice. Your prayers are going to he answered. Your children may wander away from God, but they will come hack again, comes from the throne to-day prayed thfc 4th (ixy of Novt tb* first Monday i wny said letters of administri be granted aaid applicant aa ra<r.al signatnrs, this fTwj&AVERPOBr, Ordy. To Whom it May Concern. GEORGIA—St’MTsa CocarT. W bEIttB W. O. Jrnkina, Adm'r de bonis i of U. I Walker deceased appUsef ‘ sell Forty-Foar Shares of stock in U 'tintricns, and Ten Share* of stock in I Postponed Executors* Sale. W ILL be sold before the Court bone* door, in th* town of EUavJle. Schley county, letwesn the legal hours ol saie.i “ * * lav in Datn-*— *“* in, ecn’aioioK .*• hundred and fifty ar leei; towalots number three and ... - - Also, wood and blacksmith *hop. Alien'd asth* property of W. H- fcniSLltwoH connty deoeaesd. Bold for tbs bent fit heirs aud creditors of tsM deceased. Terms made known on the day of sale W. J. E , J. M. SOOVILL, Application for Homestead, QSOROI A-hcjon Cocstt, TirHEBF. AS, Sarah Harrell her ii* applied to TV me lor Emeption of Personalty and set ting apart and Valuation of Homestead, and I will pass npoo the same at IS o'clock on th* day of December. 1880. at my office in rfocs. THOS. H. STEW ART. To AU Wfcaa It MJ Concern. GEORGIA—tcnuTComm.' , W HEBEaS, W. O. Womack having filed hie petition for letters of administration upon the estate, of findsay Kiilaorew, late of aaid • uTtta!abre to cite and .admonish a0 parties interested, whether kindred or creditors. tj show cause on or by the December term of aaid Oonit, to be held on the first Monday ta December. 1886, wh. said letters ofadmtaistrs- tioo should not he granted to amid petitioner ns P, vK2mfmy hand and official signature, this I Fan tatomn>h£and* th day cf November 1880. Address 8ns*o- * ^ox«OTs«MVgW». VlM|1B#0td% 1 octSswAwly. Tyrif H Yourselves by making mousy when HKLr a golden chtt cs is offered, thereby alsays k edng poverty from your door. Those who alwaystake advantage of the good chases for making money that are offered generally wealthy, white those who do not impi tain in poverty. W# n boys and girls to work ns rent in our own localities. The bush will pay mors then tso timsa ordinary w« We fcnwh an exoMMivs .outfit and all that nred.lre, .ootj-im^dihB, to .lit, «y very rapidly. You can devote your wbnte tune to the work, orooly your spare momcnU. tsths vwk or ooly youri ... information and all that ia ^s-j-u •• Addresu tmssos A Co., Portland, Maine. thoip, Durable, Comlortable, Nolstlea, Don’; Sag iu the Anti-Bed Bug, basily Adjusted, l't j One Before Buj ing- MANUFACTURED AND FOR SALE BY Drs. SEARS, CHENEY & CO.