Newspaper Page Text
THE BAINBRIDGE WEEKLY SUN
p 1»KB ANNUM.
VOL- VII.
the weekly sun
PCBLIRHKD
Saturday
li. M JOHNSTON, Proprietor
Tkrms or Subcriptiox.
One Copy, One Tear., $2,00
Oae Copy, Six Mouths, ..1,00
toe Copy. Three Months 7A
Invariably in Advance
I mini t? ration to the South.
Knfroß or tuf. Plantation :
The New York World contains
4 Tery sensible andopportune article
on the above subject.
The editor refers to the -frequent reference
in the South to the fact that, while immi
grants arc pouring into the West, scarcely
hdy come to the South. He thinks that
should not be sufp-iihed at this result,
Ircatw! not a single Southern State has
ever had published, in a foreign language,
an account of her *oil, climate and re
turns: not one has an accredited agent
iu New York or Europe to give informa’
matioit to-immigrant* or disabuse their
mind*; not ft single railroad has such an
wnt! On the other hand, the Western
.States hi and railroads have intelligent agents
for that purpose everywhere.
Pile Western State* have Government
lauds. The most of the Southern States
have no such lands, but there are planters
who own vast bodies of land which they
csnnot cultivate, and land speculator;; who
,wn their hundreds of thousands of acres,
a portion of which they could very well
afford to sell at Governdfenfc prices.
The remedy for this condition of things
is given in the words of the writer .
• Hut there is a remedy, and it is not too
hte to apy y it. First, the Stales should
mu* k'curate statistical information of
Mil, climate, and product* to be printed in
at least two foreign languages and distrib
uted over Europe. Each State rii.mid
have mum* depository or agency in New*
York when- specimens .of her products,
lniiH-raU. and agriculture, might l>c seen,
and in Ivirope a traveling agent to distrib
ute circulars and -give information. Wo
iin’tl not add that these should lie selected
a poo? iiu
m.rr.inf agent. I hi.-, (loin*, tlx* rest le
iimiin with the people themselvex. 11
tier sell them at moderate r ites ami mv
l*i»|K.s ?J to welcome the stranger, their
Ht|.:ire lands will soon l>e occupied. The
■jitiiK'iple upon which they must act is to
Ivwpi the stranger as a gentleman until
■ proves himself the reverse. We well
■ iiicmlier one of the best men in Georgia
■ tdtw: "Sir. you cannot expect us to
■Tit these people who come among us and
■ wive them into oiir houses until they
B.ve lived hety for years and we prove
Hiem. Su 'li a feeling. we regret to say,
B>sh .-u Inu too common, ami we have
from more than one, who weht to
B»esuuuy l.md for a happy home, a tale
B ,! hmg liesolate days anil social loneliness.
the Southern people expect to draw to
■ any of the tide which now sets in so
to the West, they must iu some
adopt the ideas we have herein
rs I * :, t»excellent good sense in the
B~ ,v; :..arks The remedy proposed is
» wo,tld adopt it. Lufc us
B' s * the particulars separately and dis
■ A hard-hook of the State covering
):B^ f information which capitalists or
,l 1 '* i! light desire to posses*. This
to In? printed in at least two
P°*n languages.
and depository in New
‘ i ; ' cw reach of Castle t ran leu. If
dftduets 0 f ,ieorgia soil—her corn.
B" r,: T ’’ 'tton. iicc. fruits—her iron.
. J stiver, lead, copper —her lime,
tlrl 1 ■'• rau- '° cement, marble, asbestos.
BB ■' - ■• i it? wou[d make an
■ ' n: ' 1 1 products from a single istato
B - trutthl came a Northern man or
B to discredit his eyesight. This
-:B; r >'-hi connection with an agency
< ' ,r haiuls, would be invaluable to
SIBbI - • ' , I
, I 1 e.unii>,ionpr iu Europe, “Not
W '*h remarks; hut a courteous,
|||^B/ 4v r- ' , Uue gentleman, thoroughly
Mtu the resources of Georgia.
,, 0110 ' nf 'Obligation on the part of
1 U?S to 4 given price for their
Poetical concurrence of the
i
A 'tm ' ' of Ihe.State to secure
htiropeau steamers from our
c* hare.., „* t
>i*m IttttQigration w hich shall
*e . 04 control of the details
£S mov eaeat
•> U laactn ‘tv which is some
'^^^aninactrv-
- It* B-’-W.; <W)I,. Tk,
Wp * V ’ Sl °hd condition which
..kill ■
regards with glassy eye* opportunity pas
sing steadily away, fearful of arousing it
self and seizing the opportunity least it bo
converted into disaster. i
Our white laboring population is disap
pearing, how rapidly, those who live in
the cotton belt eannot %'ell understand.
In the’last “Plantation,” there was a ref-
ereuce to the exodus from our extreme
Northwestern counties. Here in Bartow
eouuty the same process goes on. Within
a small circuit around the residence y>f the
writer, more than twenty families of labor
ing people arewibout moving to the / West.
This is general’in this section of the State.
Our white population is diminishing, our
black is increasing.
Yet, our Legislature looks at our tossing,
foaming streams, that could drive machin
ery the hum of which might drown even
the roar of the water fall—streams now as
idle as when the Indian bathed in them ;
at our mountains, who treasures God has
reserved for this our hour of necessity —
grim monuments of Ills greatness and
man’s apathy ; at our fields once well cul
tivated. now thrown out and converted in
to jungles ; at our Working people, sick
ened and disheartened, seeking the more
inviting West; and, yet, this
awakens no intejggt. provokes no cfclcus
-Bion. evolves relief.
If-'the sense for
a moment aroused, it would he TWrown off
thought, “all these plans cost
motley. We fear our constituents. Our
re-election might me endangered if we fa
vored th°m.” This is the inactivity that
is dastardly. A duty is shunned for fear
of consequences.
It is to be hoped, and in fact there is
reason to believe, that our next Legislature
wiil lie a body superior to its recent prede
cessor. It has in its power to be memora
ble for good in the history of Georgia.
'The wisest expenditure of money for un
accustomed purposes, by legislative bodies,
always jg'ovokes the censure of the short-.'
sighted and penurious. But these clamors
cease like the idle patterhurs of thg rain
drops, and nr. succeeded bt the genial sun
of well- deserved and lasting popular favor.
De Witt Clinton and the legislature
which chartered the Eri ■ Canal were stig
matized as wasteful squanderers of the
public money. Now. what name, in the
; r . JJL — ■ *!■■■'■ T T
is so honored as that o? De Witt Clinton?
What would the City of New York be
without the Erie (’anal?
The legislature of Georgia which de
termined to build the Western and \tlaut
ie Railroad was ridiculed for expending
the public money in constructing a rail
road which “began n -where and ended no
where.” What would < i corgi abe without
tftis road? We may seek to imagine it by
attempting, in our min l. to blot out At
lanta. Marietta Cartersviile. Rome and
Dalton, and the minor villages along its
route, by putting out thefiies of the fur
naces and rolling-mills by reducing the
income from taxation of the rich lands of
Northwi-st-Georgia to *he level of those
lands which are destitute of transporta
tion. The imagination fails to compre
hend the blank. ’The petty querulous
complaints have been long since forgotten
It is now an honor to be able to say. -I
am one of those who voted for the con
struction of the Western and Atlantic
Railroad.”
If the coding Legislature, even expen
diture of money or credit, will inaugurate
a series of measures, which shall bnug to
us capital and the bone and of a
well ordered white populati»n. it will
achieve, and will have deserved, immOrtal
itv. *
These are the views of an earnest Geor
gian. Love for his and .sympathy
with her sinking condition. may bias his
judgment. The article which has given
rise to these remarks was written by oue
who. though not a resident of the South,
is deeply interested in her welfare, Mr-
Colton. the Agricultural Editor of the I
World. Three years ago this gentleman |
received* premium of SSO for his Essay |
on Dairys at the South, from the State
Agricultural Sqcietv. Wth one half of
this premium he made hi nisei> a life mem
ber of the Society, and the other was of
fered as a premium for another i.ssey the
next year. His. therefore, are the words
aud counsels of a disinterested friend, and
we should be wise to heed them.
C. W. Howard, j
State Dinners. —The Piesident will
give 4is drat state dinner ou the *th of
Janunry. The guests will be the mem
bers of the Cabinet and their wives, the
Vice President and Mrs. Colfax, General
and Mrs. Sherman and Admiral and Mrs.
Porter. State dinners will be given at
the vCbite House every alternate Thursr
day during the Season.
A. telegram from Berne says that diplo
matic relations between the Swiss Govern
ment and the Vatiean have ben broken
off. The Papal Legation at Lucerne, it is
thought, will be abolished, the Charge
d'Affairsand attaches having hem re
eled. J J •?'
FISK'S MURDFJt.
Stokes Telling His Story
Stokes, the alleged murderer of
James Fisk, Jr., has related the fol
lowing to a reporter :
“ As God shall judge me, I did not
expect to meet James Fisk that Sat
urday afternoou ; I had no idea of
eoming across him at all that da}’ ;
I had not seen him before for some
time, and had heard that he was still
sick of the small pox. I was at the
Grand Central Hotel with some
friends looking for other friends, and
I was rambling to and fro. about the
hotel when IYuet him accidentally—
by the meiest accident, so help me
God!” [This last sentence very
solemn.] “ I had been seldom to
die Grand Central Hotel; only three
times before in my life, I believe, and
only once before in Wie second story;
so that I knew nothing about the
interior of the hotel at all. While
rambling around I met James Fisk,
and he met me ; we met face to face
and the moment lie saw me he put
his hand in his pocket. He had his
pistol ready. I saw it just as plain
as I see that seal-skin cap of.yours
on your knee there. More plainly,
for the light was much brighter and
clearer there than it is here. I
raised my pistol ; he fired and 1 fired,
ami I knew no more, so great was
my excitement, until they brought
me into the presence of Mr. Fisk.—
Even then I did not know that he
was wounded. He seemed calm
enough, and was half sitting on a
sofa. He never said I shot him or
killed him.' or anything of the kind.
He merely said to the officer who
asked him if he recognized me. ‘ Yes,
1 know the man ; it is i\.r. Stakes.'
Nothing more. He even looked at
me somewhat in his old fashion, I
think—-sadly, yet not angrily, almost
ti-.M A »».V' - 1 - *•> M+IT? ItlttßrtTg
"iflends with him then, but he waved
his hand, and they took me away ;
and 1 never knew anything about
that wound in the abdomen so much
about until the next day. I thought
all the time I had only wounded him
slightly, that is was a small matter,
and I wanted.to get on bail at once.
I had not the slighfe t idea ol kill
ing James Fisk, and no man was
more sorry to hear of his Meath, for
with all his faults, Jim had good
stuff in him, and no man knew it
better than I, for I knew both sides
of him. But he was armed that af
ternoon, and I shall prove it this
time ; and shall prove what was done
with the pistol ; prove it to the sat
isfaction of the world this time.
A ORrious Lawsuit-. V. curious case is
now being tried in Lexington, Ky.. which
creates considerable interest in that section.
It appears tlat a lainous Southern bank
not expert, a Mr. Gillette, has raised a
questiou with the Southern Bank of Ken
tucky concern!ng the genuineness of one
of its notes. Gillettee pronounced the
i note genuine and submitted it to the offi
| cers of the bank tor their opinion. They
i stamped the note counterfeit. Gillette
I then goes to work to prove the note gen
! uine by consultation with the Bank Note
Company that printed the note. and. h is
j gathered what he concludes i? so certain
| proof of the penuiueuess of the bill that
he threatens the bank with a suit for pro
nouncing the note counterfeit. It is prob
! able that the matter will be arranged and
!no suit instituted. The denomination of
| the note is one dollar, but Gillette * repu
-1 Ration as an expert is a stake and he seen s
r determined to vindicate his accuracy.
The Gatliug gun is making its way iuto
the armi 'S of Europe, nearly every Euro
.pean nation having adopted it. Russia has
given this gun a fuller approval than any
other country, having introiluotal it as a
distinct arm of the military service- Five
bat tews of these mitrailleuses have al
ready been formed, and more are in prog
ress of format inu. each battery l*ang com
posed of eight guns. The London Broad
Arrow urges tha f a similar distinct organ
ization for the Gatling gun be formed in
En land, and expresses thv hope tjaat iu
th« xeat axtamu it ijmy fin 1 a
place as a separate arm of the service,
each subdivision, batt ry. or brigade of
i Gatlings manoeuvriug uttder its own ra
\ apousibla officers, in this onun ry the
; Gatling gun has also **ad i»s triumphs.
having been lound very effective when
I brought to bear against a Republican Con
; veation ift New Orleans which threatened
i tA resist -rite diction of the President's
i brother in-law,
•" i ' >f \ * i *
FOR THE RIGHT—.TVS TICE TO ALL.
BA.INBRIDGI2 GA. {
A Tribute to. the Memory of Gen
Wright, from Glynn.
Gen-Wright whose name is so fa
milar to hundreds of Confederate
soldiers in Georgia as well as
throughout the South is dead. The
following beautiful tribute to his
memory was passed by a citizens
meeting in Glynn County: C
How few the words, and hfiw ra
pid the flight over the telegraphed
line!
And yet these few words announce
to the world that a great heart lias
ceased to beat, and the light of an
intellect lost to us forever..
Upon no one in Georgia at this
crisis was the eyes of her people res
ting more hopefully than upon the
distinguish dead.
But we thank God, he well knew
before he died how great the admi
ration and respect of the State were
for her chivalrous soldiers and bril
liant statesmen.
He lies in his grave but he is
wrapt in the love of the. people of his
District for his winding sheet —a
peoples second to none in moral and
intellectual qualities.
No monarch ever lay in more solemn
state than Georgia’s noble son.
The jewels that glittered on his
coffin lid were the tears of a bereav
ed people.
Linton Stephens is gone and V.
R. Wright is dead !
How heavily has the hand of G ) 1
rested upon os this year. But let us.
say with the old Patriarch humbly
and reverently, “If lam bereaved
lam bereaved.” Unless Thee tdach
us charity and love for the living,
how unavailing are these bitter les
sons.
The jewels are falling one by- one
from our crown. True, Time may
place them with others as bright,
but they are not the oeC i we have
so long watched and loved.
R-wnr ■'*
men now.
“Walk sad and thoughtful ou tliJluelan :
choly shore
Os that deep ocean we must sail so soon; ’
and mindful of these sudden bitter
parting, let us touch even theirfraiH
ties and errors with loving and reve
rent hancs. And if in in tits strife
of conflicting opinions we by chance
wound them let us hasten to make
atonement while words of excuse
may fall on living ears.
In the name of the people of Glyn
enmity, who loved and lionpied Gen
Wright. I humbly lay this tribute ou
his grave. “Glynn.
Brunswick Pec., 25 1872.
Nine thousand Khivese are besieging
the Russian forts on the Emba River and
another force‘of two thousand men is de
predating on the Russian fisheries at the
mouth of the same rive?. The British
Ambassador at Bt. Petersburg has in
formed Prince Gortsohakoff that England
will not interfere with Russia s progress iu
Central Asia so long as it doe* not threat
en Afghanistan
The Duke Grammont has written a
tetter refuting the testimony given bj
President Thiers before the committee to
inquire into the causes of the late was-
M. de Graminout, who was .Minister vi
Foreign Affairs at the beginning of the
late war. slates positively that the Empe
ror had promise of as istance irom Au a
tria in case of hostilities with Prussia.
Quetelet s statistics of crime in I* ranee
and England show that, in the former
country, out' of one hundred criminals,
sixty-oue could not read or write, twenty
seven could read imperfectly, and only
twelve could read and write well. In
Englaud. tbir:y-six could not read at all,
sixty-one could read and write imperfect
ly, and only three could read and write
welL
It is staied that parties are in W ashing
too from Moatana. prei>ared to prove that
tuere is no such tribe of Indians as the
•• i’etou ."kiux, ' for the support of which
a half million was appropriated last year.
Iu the bill which has just passed the House
there is *» appropriation of two hundred
thousand more for the aforesaid leton*.
Theatrical Adv^ci'isihg.—The the- j
atrical umpager» of N«w York, at a
moetmj held last week, decided to
dispense with the use of bills and
posters, and rt»*y for tiieir com mu in- i
itation with the public solely upon
the advertising colums of permanent
ly established and regu-arijr organ
ised newspapers. T uey consider tms
both the dioapest and most effective
way of obtaining publicity.
"What is Trouble ?
! A company of Southern ladies
were one day assembled in a lady’s
parlor, when the conversation
chanced to turn on the subj eet of
earthly affliction. Each had her
stoov of peculiar bereavement to re
; late, except one pale, sad looking
! woman, whose lustreless eye and de
fected air showed that she was a
prey to the deepest melancholy,
i ucldenly arousing herself, sho said,
in a hollow voice :
‘Not one of you know what trou
ble is,’
• ‘Will you please, Mrs. Grey,’ said
the kind voice of a lady who well
knew her story, ‘tell the ladies what
you call trouble ?’
‘I will, if you desire it,’ she re
plied, ‘for I have seen it. My pa
i rents possessed a competence, and
| my girlhood was surrounded by all
I the comforts of life. I seldom knew
an ungratified wish, and was always
gay and lighthearted. I married at
nineteen, one I loved more than all
the world besides. Our home was
retired, but the* sunlight never fell
on a lovelier one, or a happier
household. Years rolled on peace
fully. Five children sat around our
table, and a little curly head still
nestled in my bosom, One night,
about Bundowfc, one of those fierce
black storms came on, which are so
common to om Southern climate —
For mauy hours the rain poured
dow-n incessantly. Morning dawned
but still the elements raged. The
whole savanna seemed afloat. The
little stream near our dwelling be
came a raging torrent. Before we
were aware of it, our house was sur
rounded by water. I managed .with
my babe to reach a little elevated
spot, on which a few wide spreading
trees were standing, whose dense fo
liage afforded some protection, while
my husband and sons strove to save
what they could of our property.
At last a fearful surge swept away
my husband, and he never rose
again. Ladies —no one ever loved
a husband more, but that was not
trouble.
‘Presently my sons saw their dan-
the struggle for life became
the only consideration. They were
as brave, loving boys us ever blessed
a mother’s heart, and I watched
their efforts to osofipe, with such ag
ony as on!}- mothers can feel. They
were so far off I could not speak to
I them, bpt I could see them closing
nearer and nearer as their little is
h’ii 1 grew smaller and smaller.
‘Tie sullen river raged around
the huge trees ; dead branches, up-,
turned trunks, "wrecks of houses,
drowning cattle,'masses of rubbish
all went floating past us. My boys
waved tlieir hands to me, then point
ed upward. I knew it was a fare
well signal, and you, mothers, can
imagine my anguish. I saw them
all perish, and yet that was not
trouble.. “~
‘I hugged my babe close to my
i e tit.'and when the water rose to
my feet, -I climbed into the low
branches of the tree, and >o.kept re
iving before it, tiil an All-powerful
hand staid the waves, that they
should eome no further. I was
saved. Alii my worldly possessions
swept away ; all my earthly hopes
blighted—yet that was not trouble.
My baby was all I had left on
earth. I labored night and day to
support him and myself, and sought
to train him in the right way ; but
as lie grew older, evil companions
won him away from home. He
ceased to care for his mother’s coun
sels ; he would sneer at her entreat
ies and agonizing prayers. He left
my humble roof t hat he mignt be
unrestrained in the pursuit of evil,
and at hist, when -heated by wine
one night he toos the life of a fel
low being, and ended liis own upon
j the scaffold. My heavenly father
had filled my oup of sorrow before;
nowit ran over. This was trouble
ladies such as I hope His mercy w ill
share you from ever experiencing.
There was not a dry eyp among
her listeners and the warmest sympa
thy was expressed for the bereaved
mother, whose sad history had
taughtfhem a useful lesson.
Undertakers are making a name
sos thems jives as being the architects
of the most fearfnly and wonderfully
made advertisements which appear
in our newspapers. Here is the
latest sample, as taken from the
Willimantic Conn. Journal:
“By industry we thrive! J. E.
Cushman, Furniture Dealer and Un
dertaker. Motto: Equal service and
return without importunity. Pa
tronage is respectfully solicited.”
An exchange sav« that “Mrs. Cady
Stanton in about to deliver the ‘Coming
Girl in a Western city.” To prevent jem
apprebensioc it may b* well to state that
the Corning Girl” is a moral lecture.
Personal.
“Sambo did yon ever see the Cats
kill mountains!” “No sah btft I’ve
seen ’em kill mice.”
An Intelligent grave stone cutter
in Detriot, keeps ready made grave
stones with the name Smith cut
thereon.
Memphis has a city debt of over
$5,000,000, and there ia grievous
complaint because no arrangements
has been made to pay the interest.
An Arab Surgeon has been creat
ed a pacha and rewarded with a fee
of $5,000 for curing the mother of
tua Egyptian Khedive.
The Bishop of Litchfield England
has been down in a coal mnje” hold
ing a l-eligions service.
The Rock Island, 111., people are
indignant because some one cut
away their ice bridge, and now they
have to pay toll again.
East India shuffus nuts,” says the
Boston Rost, said to De. a sure cure
for dyspepsia, are a novelty with
metropolitan fruiterers,
For anew Year’s reception
toilette, among other glories, a
Louise Cary overskirt with a “Lucia’
basque, is the px-oper thing.
A thief at Marshall, Ivy., got found
out because, after cracking a store
he generally returned next day to
spend the money with the proprietor
Two years ago, in Augusta, Me.,
four couples were married at the
same time. Since then two have
parted and two have applied for
divorces.
During November the Royal
National Lifeboat Association snved
in Great Britan, 162 lives and seven
vessels. A Good month’s work.
The horse on which Cardigan rode
when he led the famous charge of
the light Bi’igade has just died aged
thirty. He survived his gallant
master four years.
Mrs. Julia YV. Aun} is before the
courts of San Francisco pleading
for a divorce from her husband Oli
ver D, Hunt, brother of Laura D.
Fair the Crittenden killer.
Thirty years ago Mrs. Lydia Wil
son, of Raisin, Midi, stuck a willow
riding whip into the ground. It
now measures tao feet in circumfer
ence, and spreads over eighty-four
feet.
An Indiana man had sixty tur
keys a fortnight ago, but the people
in his vicinity devoutly observo the
festivals of the church, and the boys
stole all but ten.
A testimonial Ims been given to
the Duke of Buoleudi for liis liber
ality in maintaining for forty -five
years “an admirably appointed pack
of fox-hounds.” What is the next
testimonial to be for?
Simon Thomas, a Toledo boot
black and a colored man, having by
industry made a handsome fortune,
has purchased the Lutheran church
in Petersburg, 0., and has given it
to his colored brethren.
Miscellaneous.
Despite the large amount of rub
ber goods destroyed by the Boston
fire, steak remains at 22 cents.
With all our newspapers in the
United States we have only one
newspaper to every 5,633 inhabitants
“Go to America and lecture” is
in London equivalent to the New
York phrase “Go West and dig.”
Daniel Boone's axe, rifle, age sister
ami numerous terrapins are travel
seperately through the newspapers.
A dog with two tails was seen in
Tanton the other day. One belong
ed to an ox and was carried in the
mouth of the canine.
’1 he keeper of a New York grog
ery advertises iu conspicuous cliar
aeters, “The biggest hot whiskey
in the city, for 10 cents.”
A reading notice in Inter Ocean
is as follows: “The chill winds of
adversity kept out by Toffoys wea
ther strips. See Kelly, Tribune b nib
ding.”
An exchange remarks that this is
the kind of weather when a christain
draws close to the stove, and wish
ing every poor laboring mao on the
face of the earth was a clerk in a
store
An enterprising tradesman in Paris
in order to circular* his advertise
ment % has bean pasting then*- upon
the backs of the currency of (he
realm. This is a novel way to make
advetifiing pay.
A young man is San PranoUco
found an old daemon be knew "back*
ing the tiger** in a gambling ball—
“ What," be exclaimed, “deacon jaa
here?” “Yea,** wae the reply, “i am
bound to break down this evil insti
-1 tution.”
LN ADTAJfrm
AN lit SINES*
• —AVL
d&SfCIAL 6
ror. doth skxks.,
~-o
John 11. Featherston.
Principal,
BAIN BRIDGE, G EOROIA
<s»*
Tliis liitf'iiiitio’h will c p n .>i, t'i« Stem and
Wcdnt s<tey in Jr mrj. .bfd
COURSE OF STUDY AND RATES.
First Class -Spelling (\Yib T. rV). raid
ing (<-iolme>), Beinnau.'liij , tritlnm-tic
(Stanford's),tteog'apliy (Monti ith si. t.is*n
tliar (Butler's). Oratory. Per mopt’ii. U
j .Second Or. vs? (TowItA), His
tory (Stopli'Ois' 1 I'uiinmnthij>. Aiiih
melie (Stoddard'.*). Gram law (I idler's),
Geography (MoiWi.hs)'. (’ompofUMou
(Quackeidxis’). I locution. Algebra t
vivs). Lathi ummmar and Lender (inf
lion V), Oratory. IVr Moult, O.
Third class spoiling i Wehstet's Dic
tionary), History (< ootlrlcHsttw-ce), IW
maiiship, Arithmetic (ynufords), Gram
mar (dark's), Latin Gram mar, i aisar, Viv
ifil, Rhetoric, (I’.uHtonVl, Trigonometry
(Loomis), NensuYatioti, l•« ro lotus Current
Literature, Oratory. Per .nonth, 5().
jC THOJtOL 1 111 (-Ot’ltSKOF BOOK KKUI'I.NU AND
rtcNMAXamr will be taught at Night, extra.
Per Month, (Mt
»&. All that is asked, is a fair trial,
and a well taught Student is promised iu
return,
400 BUSHELS
BUST PROOF .
Seed Oats
%
JUST Received and fm Sale at
HMDS A. VVlilL*<s.
Dec 14, '72 2 > If
TO F VRMEUS A V D STOCK ItIIKKOEKtS l
300,000
GIVEN A WAV.
To introduce Die Amkkioan SjTck /ora
nal t.» n**w rimltr , we hava put up ho,*
< 00 pa< kagvs, vmhyou ai nmi (!•'« • .lain-,
mils, wlticli wu will stud r,!K‘ t - nil wiio
sends'amp ti» pay po<fAjL r <‘ Address Amcr
Icm Stock JfoiiuMt, luil.c -buxj, Cliestor
County, Pciui,
- ~n --
P. S —All wild wi I ut'i ns Aifents, will
receive n sriKspin 2! i.\ ;i » iucU. s!> 00
I’icmrc, nf iJex er to a If* ad U.-i-ron. lijr
sending Ho oi ftis i«» pav i-x.wwm g nf iuail
iny. Ajivuis lu.iks ju in.>sWuDiy.
Plantation Ibr Rent %
A CHANCE FOR -SOMEBODY
WILL be rented at public outcry on
Monday, the 23d day of December, the
plantation known ;us (he Smallwood price
about 8 miles from B.iiubridge. on the
road leading to Thomoevitle. The place
is under good repair and iu excellent con
dition. Terms made known ou dav.
‘N. N. LESTER, Adm'r. Ert.
•I. W. Smallwood, deceased.
NOTICE.
WILL BE SOLD on the
15th day of January. 1H73, at .public
outcry, between the, hours of ten dVlock
and four, at tin plantation in l%eatur
coupty* Ga ,of thy late A. \V. Cunning
ham. all the perishable property belonging
to the estate of 1? I- l owed, rlei-easttf,
consisting of horses. luuleS, Go k cattle,
hogs, fanning utenrils. coin, foddfir and
one buggy. Bold for ihe Ijem-tit of the
heirs and credit oi>. the aito continue
from duv Jo day until till is ndd. T I'RMo
CASH.
WILLIAM I't>iVELL, Lvec-iPor.
of the (*s f rrte o* I!. E. l*owe|j uV.'d.
January 4, 1H7.:;-2t-V7.
GEORGIA—Pr.c.vrt u Gojntv
.AX she first Mo:id;iv in t-Vfjriiatr ri'-it,
i U we will apply t .D e I ’<vi ri Os I Itdlunry
, of Decalm - comiM fur jeare i« «iil ih«
■ store house and lot on whi, h it h> erii tiil
Mn thedown of .\ttai»nfgrti.. fai l comity,
I belonging to the estate if K. d.-
j ceased, and all the real j roja’v-y.lalonging
jto the estate of E. lain'ter, <h e ‘Xf-ed in
f i-wid countv. fm the benefit of the heirs
and of rai l doeewsed
J. M. GUIFII ) AdmrV of E.
F. B. LASHK’fT'K. ' fassttcr-
January 4, 1873-27-tis
To the Citizen* of Baiubridga
and Vicinity.
PROF. A. SCHCBfcRT,
Graduate «< the Cooservaiory of Mode of
laipiie.
Trim nkatint m iahgmru tha Qtam
of Bajahridu*. that ho has hunted ben for
tho porpoee of gfving Itutraodm fn mu»ie,
both om tho Ana #u4 thrjan. He will
ifrm iommio He hw had
moob expemuceas tvecher. and guanm
fom naiMMtJuß. Ilia rwro* are liberal*
«*»«aa ha Iwind. tt ;ne4W otfeoe hton
LwM-.r *.
Qrn. Y. Bout. < I M. IWafeM,
Baiiibndr^.
28