Newspaper Page Text
'--KE-1.
1 HE CARROLL COUNTWtIMES.
VOL. XIV.
The Eighth Kentucky at Pear]
River.
From Southern Bivouack for October.;
After the fall of Vicksburg
General Joseph E. Johnston, with
his little army, fell back to Jack
son, Misissippi.
Buford’s brigade, Loring’s divis
ion, composed of the Twelfth
Louisiana (Colonel Scott), Third
Kentucky (Colonel Thompson),
Seventh Kentucky (Colonel Cross
land), and Eighth Kentucky (Colo
nel Lyon), in the order named,
from right to left, held the exheme
right of Johnston’s army, which
rested on the west bank of Pearl
Ki ver. The river swept round to
the southeast. The three right
regiments, occupying breastworks
in the edge of a cornfield, extend
sti <ll t line duo north and
south, and were faced to the west.
In front of these regiments, in the
woods, i an a deep gully that chang
ed direction near tha left ot the
Seventh Kentucky, making tc the
southwest an angle of about seven
ty degrees with the north and
south line. Across this gully, two
hundred yards southwest from the
point of the angle, was a pass or
defile wide enough to permit a reg
iment in column of division? to
march through. The Eighth
Kentucky, one hundred ami fifty
strong, was thrown forward on a
bare knoll, with orders “to hold
that pass at hazards.”
On July 11, 1863, heavy col
umns of the enemy had massed in
the woods in front of the pass, and,
to unfold r.hoir position, two com
panies of the Eighth Kentucky,
under command of Lieutcnaut-
Colonel A. R. Shacklett, wcie de
ployed as skirmishers five hundred
yards in front of the pass. These
skirmishers found the enemy lying
down in column, with bayonets fix
ed, and when Colonel Shacklett
gave the command, “Skirmishers
in retreat,” the enemy rose, cheer
ing, and charged nt double quick.
Th‘e skirmishers rallied ata run
upon the pass und received a volley
while executing “into line, faced to
the rear,” and formed in the regi
ment on the knoll, without cover.
The enemy advanced, firing. The
Eighth Kentucky held its fire till
the enemy neard the pass ami was
about sixty yards distant, when it
delivered a most destructive volley.
The enemy recoiled under it, but
for a moment only, when they ral
lied and advanced, tiring until
within sixty feet, whore the oppos
ing hues stool fighting fae to fare
and almost ham' to hand for ft a
minutes. The enemy wavered ami
jgtuhbornly retired into tin- pa-s. —
The Eighth Kentucky v>as then
.ordered, “Backward march, ten
paces—-lie down—mad,” which
movement they executed with ad
mirable coolness and stvadimss,
placing tbemselvc.> under cover of
the knoll, on which lay the C- n
federate dead and dying. But
s'oon the enemy showed there "as
more work to be done, and came
rushing forward with loud cheers.
Just as their heads began to pop
up oVcr the Confederate slain, Col
onel Lyon commanded, “Rise up—
forward—commence firing,” which
order Colonel Shacklett repeated,
adding, if the trur’n must be told.
“Charge them, G—d — them! ’
and the regiment did charge into
the pass; and the enemy, thus
splendidly repulsed, fled to the
woods beyond, leaving the
Eighth Kentucky in possession
of the knoll, and seventy-five of
the Second Michigan tying dead
upon the field. The conflict was
between one hundred and fifty men
on one side and one thousand on
the other.
Immediately after the engagement
Lietenant-colonel Shacklett report
ed to General Loring, who intro
duced him to General Johnston,
who to<>|< the gallant Colonel s
in both his own, spying, -‘Colonel
Shacklett, give me your hand; you
have made the most heroic tight of
the war.” It was a merite I com
ment, for that gallant resist mce to
overwhelming numbers prevented
a great disaster, and possibly .-aved
the army of General Johnston.
The Runaways.
7roni “Walmogancli” in Southern Bivfraac.
We ha’-e never seen story i; .
I’Hiit. It is attribut ) Colonel
A. S. Colyar, of Tennessee, and is
illustrative of the force of habit :
A well-to-do old farmer, in one
of the best cou rites of Middle Ten
nessee, owned a large nun)her of
slaves, and among them one old
darky about disown age, and whom
he had known all his life. In fact,
he was one of the “old family ne
groes” brought out from Virginia.
Cid “Sam” was a faithful, docile
creature, a great favorite with his
master, and a sort of a privileged
character on the plantation. The
old fellow was industrious and ex
emplary in his behavior all the year
round, except during that period
dating fram the time when roasting
ears begin to ripen and the earliest
appearance of frost. Sam was in
variably seized at that period with
an invincible desire to “run awav,”
It recurred as regularly as a fit of
“hay fever,” was as incurable, and
like that unpleasant disorder could
only be treated by a change of air
and locality. Sam, understanding
this, preferred to take his case in
hL own hands and administer the
treatment in his own discretion.
Os course, in such a case, the usual
punishment inflicted on “runaway
niggers” was not to be thought of.
Remonstrance was unavailing. Sam
declared, “He jes’ couldn’t he’p his
sef,” and it became a settled and
understood arrangement, that he
should go, and that the neighbor
hood should condone his raids on
corn.fields and potatoe patches.—
After many such escapades, his old
master asked him on one occasion,
when the matter was under discus
sion :
“Sam, do you really enjoy run
ning away?”
“'Deed, Marse John,” said Sam,
“I does. Hits de nioas’ fun in de
wurl’. Coon huntin’aint no whars
to hit.”
“Well, then,” said Marse John,
‘•just let me know the next time
you take a notion to start, and I’ll
go with you. and try it awhile my
self.”
Sure enough, in due season Sam
came up, saying:
••Old Marse, de time’s mighty !
nigh when 1 'bleegcd to lite out ;
Es you gwinc wid me, you better
be gittin’ reddy, lor wh m de time I
c .mes I got to go quick.”
“Old Marse” kept a bright look
out. and when Sam started he was
on hand.
They had a. delightful time.—
They fished occa.Jomdly, caught 1
"possums, robbed orchard.- and wa
termelon ami potato patches, pick
ed blackberries for re.-i cation, and I
• !
haunted the greenest and shadiest
cooks of the lore.-r, ail of which •
Sam knew well. “Old Marse” had ,
never enjoyed a summer so much, j
li, fact, he was so much pleased;
that regular!v afterward lie accom- <
par ied Sam when the latter went 1
into annual retreat. At length
Sam died. The old master griev
ed for him sincerely. He was sad
also over the reflection that his
summer pastime would in future
be denied him. But, to the amaze
ment of all his friends, and not
less so to himself, when roasting
ear time came again tiie fit >
seized him as strong as ever, j
and he ran away by himself.
The trial of Ferdinand Ward,
the enterprising financier and part
ner of the Grants, is proceeding in
Ne.v Fork before Judge Barrett,
of the Court of Oyer and Term
iner. He is under indictment for
procuring $71,000 from the Mar
ine Bank under false representa
tions. This, of course, is only one
of his many crimes,but it is enough
to consign him to seveal years im
prisonment, should he be con
victed. His principal victim—Gen.
Grant —is in his grave—dead not I
only fr< man eating cancer, but.
also, a broken heart. Another—
James 1). Fish —fills a convict’s
cell in Auburn State Prison The
colossal criminal who brought fin
ancial ruin and loss of reputation
to so many persons will, doubties.-,
toon receive the sentence that will
be applauded by all right thinking
persons.
CARROLLTON. GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1885.
; Repulse of Wilson at West p O . it.
Georgia.
j liom Bivoaic Octo >.«.•
A noi r one hundred and forty
five old warworn confederates
were at the hospital at
West Point on the 16th of
April, 1865, totally unconscious of
General Loe’s surrender on the 9th
ins . General Tyler, of Tennessee,
j vho had lost a leg at Murfreesboro,
was also there sick. About a
dozen of Waller’s Charleston,
I South Carolina, battery, fourteen
lof the Coupee, Louisiana, battery
were also there. When the report
came that Colonel Griffin, with
two regiments of Wilson,s Federal
cavalry, a battery, and two thous
and men, was marching on them,
General Tyler got out on his
crutches and commanded all the
old soldiers present, who could
stand up, to fall in line of battle.
|He threw up some hasty breast
j works, and divided the ammuni
tion among the men, Which amount
ed to forty-thee rounds apiece. The
enemy charged and were repulsed.
General Tyler hobbled on his
I crutches along his lines, cueourag-*
| ing his men to stand their ground
i aha never surrender. Tie took no
thought of himself. Seven of his
men were killed- The enemy re
peated their charge and were
driven back again, ami commenced
firing from a distance. First ser
geant Hearn, the only man there
of the First Louisiana Infantry
Regulars, C. IS. A., who was then
sick and wounded in the log, had
his arm shot off. A minie ball
struck the noble old General Ty
ler, who was standing a few paces
in the rear of the Sergeant, and
passed through the center of his
forehead, killing him instantly.
Then Captain Gonzales, of Pensa
cola, fell. Colonel Gillespie then
took command and fought with
this poor little remnant of the
Confederacy till their ammunition
gave out, and the Federal?, finding
there was no return to their fire,
charged over the work and its
biavo defenders. They then heard
for the first time, from their cap
tors, that they were fighting after
the war was over. Th :r loss was
about twenty killed and wounded:
the encmj ’s about forty five.
Ihe I ederals, on finding who
they were fighting, took good care
of the wounded and returned the
sick to the hospital. There was
not a man among them who had
not borne the hardship of four
years of war, and had faced death
in many shapes. Ibis was only a
little skirmish; nobody ha thought
it worth while to mention it till
now, some twenty years afTr.
This tale is told by one of tho old
boys,
How to Administer Medicine to
Swine.
If the medicine can not be given
in his food, as when he has no ap*
petite, or is in great pain, it must
be administered direct. To do
this is quite difficult, and most
farmers give it up, or adopt the
Homeopathic treatment, because it
is so much easier. When properly
managed, it is not very hard cither
for the pig or the attendant. The
pig is caught by a slip-nodse in a
strong lope, which goes through;
the mouth, and holds back of the
tusks. He will pull back with all I
his might, and the rope must Ijp ,
made fast quite short, to the top of (
a post or fence, I hen Ins lev’s ’re I
secured so that he can not spring
forward. N »wif an old shoe with
a hole in the toe is given to him to
chew upon, he will champ away
upon it as angrily as possible, and
the medicine <tan be poured into
his mouth through it—a littk at a'
time, or he will choke, ami stran
gle, and cough. Another way is
to hold the pig in the same wav. or
as for ringing, and to pour the
medicine into one nostril, through
an oil can,such as is used for oiling
machinery. Either of these meth
ods render it possible to give medi
cine to a pig as effectually as to
any animal, and it is not probable
that his rage will have any evil
effect, as in the case of a strugglm o '
child. Ameiican Agriculturist for
November.
, The Bwagger of
! Newspapers.— The Jaiion of good
bTeeding whica requires that a man
snail not pe,ic ! U’vte himself is evi
demly susp. hded in the case of
newspapers, which do certainly
blow the laosl prolonged blasts
upon their own tmmpets, and in
the most resonant manner tell a
listening world of their en terprise
and pulliu spirit, and their super
iority to all' competiorj. We learn
from the papers themselves of the
immense interest which their artic
les awaken, and of the general re
cognition of tyc fact that their
news is fresher and more spicy
than that of any rival, and that the
social or other movement which
they have initiated is proceeding
prosperously to trumyh, and that
the President, or the Governor,
or Congress, has wisely heeded
the advice which they have given.
The excellent jour.mis attest their
own fidelity to principle ‘and re
ligon, and t give ns their word that
they act upon the highest motives.
Now the boaster, as we have al
ready seen, may be the hero that
he describes. The Gascons gave
their name to gasconade, but they
were doughty fellows notwithstand
ing, and if Pinkney was solicitous
about his frills and cravats, he was
none the less peeiless in debate.
The journal which trumpets its
own energy, enterprise, and pros
perity may be merely telling the
truth, and there is is one considera
tion which seems to absolve the
proprietor or the editor as such
from the obligation of social comtiy
wliieb rests upon him as a man. The
sainc person who, as editor
prietor. brags and boasts like a
quack doctor or cheap jack upon |
the comic stage, shall be in private
intercourse a very Mercutio, the
most urbane and modest of gen
tlemen. He brags professional! v,
not personally. He swaggers and
dogmatizes not as Snug the joiner,
but as the lion, in the play that he
has undertaken to perform. As
your guest he would shrink and
blush to assert truculently that he
is superior to anybody at the table.
But as the editor or proprietor he
does not hesitate to announce in
the most strident type, so to speak,
that he altogether outstrips all his
comrades of the press.
Why docs he do it? Simply be
cause nobody else will do it for
him.. It is essential for the success
of his journal that its character
should be known. But beyond
quarrelling with an esteemed
contemporary, aid complimenting
it upon a new font of type, one
journal takes little notice ot an
other, They arc rivals, and as
their profits arise largely from the
receipts for advertising, they do
not advertise each other for noth
ing. and consequently each must
advertise itself. All the blowing
of the journal’s trumpet in honor
of its own energy, enterprise, su
periority, etc., etc., is advertise
ment. The brag and boast are
meielv professional, like'the swag
ger of the actor in ids part; and
as the player lays swagger aside
with the costume of the character,
and appears to you, as he essenti
ally is, the most quiet and retiring
of men—like the admirable come
diau, Fmn, tor in tanee, fifty years
ago—so the editor leaves rhe robes
of his flaming—self-puffery behind
him in his office, and emerges the
most genial and simple of men. <
It is plainly as unjust, therefore,
to suppose that the editor who cel
ebrates his paper so exuberantly is
the most ridiculously conceited and
ill-mannered of men, as to suppose
that, because Mr. Jefferson is Rip
Van Winkle upon the stage, he is
constantly sitting about upon ta
bles in private life, and drinking'
your health and your family’s in
evxu’-renewed bumpers.—George
sVu'iam Curtis, in Harper’s Maga
zine for November.
How a Home May Be Started.
As a rule, wealth is the result of
industry, and attention to business;
and, as a rule, poverty is the result
of idleness, extravagance, and in
attention to business, though to
these rules there are thousands of
exceptions- The man who has
wasted his time, who has thrown
away his opportunities, is apt to
envy the man who has not. For
instance, here are six shoemakers
working in one shop. One of
them attends to his business; you
can hear the music of hie hams
mer late and early; he is in love,
it may be. wit h a girl on the next
street; be has made up hip mind to
be. a man, to succeed, to make
somebody else happy, to have a
home; and while he is working,
in his imaginatic mhe can see his
own fireside, with the light falling
upon the faces of wife and child.
Tne other five gentlemen work ar
I little as they can, spend Sunday in
dissipation, have the headache
Monday, and, as a result never
advance. The industrious one, the
one in love, gains the confidence of
his employer, and in a little while
he cuts out work for the other fel
lows. The first thing yon know he
has a shop of his own, the next a
store, because the man of reputa
ton, the man of character, the mau
of known integrity, can buy all he
wishes in the I nited States upon
credit. The next thing you know
he is married, and has built him a
house. He is happy and his dream
is realized. After a while the
same five shoemakers, having
pursued the old course, stand
upon the corner some Sunday
when he rides by. He has a car-
riage, his wife sits by his side, her
face covered with smiles, and they
have two children, their faces
beaming with joy and their blue
ribbons fluttering in the wind, and
thereupon these five shoemakers ad
journ to some neighboring saloon
and pass a resolution that there is
an irrepressible conflict between
capital and labor. The editor
of the Wayside says:“A friend
hands us the following table.
Who complied it, we know not.
It teaches us a wonderful lesson as
to the value of little saving:
Cts. a day. Per Year. Ten Years Fifty Years
SIO.OO $130.00 $2,900.00
20.00 260.00 5,800.00
11 40.00 520.00 11,600,00
27| 100.00 1,300.00 29,000.00
55 200.00 2,600.00 59,000.00
SI.OO 400.00 5,200.00 116,000.00
“By the above it appears
that if a person saves onlj 2| cents
per day. from the time he is twen--’
ty till he is seventy, the aggregate,
with interest, will amount to $2,
900, and a daily saving of 27|cents
reaches the important sum of $29,
000, A sixpence saved daily will
provide a fund of nearly $7,000.
There are few employed who cannot
save daily, by abstaining from the
use of tobacco, cigars, liquor, etc.,
twice or ten times the amount of
the six cent piece.” One very good
way for a family to save is to have
a good and economical cooking
stove and plain and wholesome
food, well prepared. The stomach
performs a very important part in
the economy of humanity, and
wives who are forgetful of this
fact commit a serious mistake.
Should Orchards Be C.ultayated?
This is evidently one of those
questions that admit of a variable
answer. In other words, a practice
which may be the best for one or
chard, may not be so for another,
because the conditions are far from
being uniform. To keep the
ground in an orchard constantly
under cultivation, and producing
crops which are removed annually,
will soon exhaust the fertility of
the richest soil, unless some kind of
fertilizer is returned to make good
the amount taken away. The fre
quent stirring of the soil, breaking
up, disintegrating, and pulverizing,
are beneficial operatioFs, for, by
keeping the surface open and loose,
we aid the admission of air and
mosture, both of which contain cer
tain elements which are absorbed
by the roots and go far towards
making up the bulk of aL cultiva
ted plants. But as a rule, or
chardists do not think that they
can afford to plow, harrow, and
keep down noxious weeds in the
orchard for no other purpose than
to benefit the trees and improve
the quantity and quality of the
fruit; consequently, when they
plow, it must be for the purpose of
sowing or planting, and the orchard
is kept constantly occupied with
some annual farm crop, or seeded
down to clover or grass. To sow
grain of any kind in an orchard,
except on very moist soils, or in a
humid climate, seldom fails to check
thegiowthof the trees, because
the growing grain will take the
moisture from the soil at the very
time the trees need it most.
—A. S. Fuller in American Agri
cclturist for Nov.
emiiob.
: Every body run here quick
j bring catnip, roasted onions v;*h
e brimstone in it, bring a sugar tit.
r : bring colic “drape” bring every
, thin e that is good for a black’ eye I
f “gal” baby, we have a right
3 young one at our house. We
. j would portray its beauty, its ncat
, j ness, ita smartness over all other
L j babi' S born as we, of course, think
if we but knew it would corespond
with the description when it arrives
; at the grand old age of eighteen
! years. Then, will she be a flirt?
. Will she be woman like. Will she
be good, kind, and obediant to her
father and mother? Will she be a
model of woman kind? These are
the questions that we would like to
answer in the affirmative eighteen
years hence.
Uncle Anderson Smith the old-
est man we suppose in the county,
is lying at or near the point of
death, he was 97 years old the 12th
of last July.
On the 21st inst. Mrs Sallie
Smith, the widow of Joseph Smith,
and daughter of J. D. Kuglar, a
lady highly respected by all: with
a character unblighted and unstain
ed, was on her way to her fa
thers to visit Mrs. E. AV. Harper,
and had not gone but little over
half way, the whole distance not
being over one half mile when she
was attacked, overpowered and
ravished by an unknown demon in
the form of a man. After the de
mon had perpetrated his brutal
act upon the poor, sick, and help
less woman he broke through the
woods and made his escape from a
large crowd, who soon after the
crime, heard the news, left their
;work and did what they could to
intercept him. The writer ol this,
was in one hundred yards of the
place where the erime was commit*
ed, and was prevented from hear
ing Mrs. Smith’s efforts to scream
bv the demon holding his hand
over her mouth.
Kill a Cranky.
agww—
Take Care of Your Animals.
Live stock are to be our especial
watch and care for the coining four
months at least. We need to win
ter them as economically as possi
ble, yet have them* all the time
gaining. No animal is profitable
at a standstill. Stock wintered on
the warmest side of a corn-stack,
and coming out “spring-poor.” are
in no condition to make good re
turns during the summer. At this
season, look especially to the com
fortableness, of their quarters, that
they may be easily cleaned, warm,
and well-aired when need. Alter
ations that will facilitate foddering,
littering, and clearing out, should
be planned and carried out at once.
Tight board walls, or any others,
are a much cheaper source of
warmth than much feeding, so fal
as neat cattle, horses in use, pigs,
and poultry are concerned. Hors
es and sheep with comfortable shel
ter, out of the rain, and well roofed,
will bear any degree of cold they
ate likely to be subject to, if they
aave enough to eat, and the ques
tion of economy depends on the
irice of hay and corn, and of him*
jer and boards. Food consumed
merely to man tain animal heat, de
ducting the value of the resulting
manure, is a dead loss. Ueevcs,
sheep, and pigs gain very rapidly
if well fed this month. The brac
ing air sharpens apetites, and the
variety of rich feed is greater now
than at any other time-of the year.
They should be crowded, but not
over-fed. Nason C Weld, in A
merican Agriculturist for Nov.
“Worthy and dutiful sons-in-1
law make loving and sweet-temper
ed mothers-in-law.” This rule
holds good in nine cases out of ten,
and certainly that fact makes it a
pretty good one. It would be well
for every young man, who is about
to take upon himself the important
and happy relation of son-in-law,
to write the above rule on the table
of his memory, and redouble the
joys and lighten the sorrows of lite
by so conducting himself as to be
at once and for all times deserving
lof the love and confidence of the
mother of the wife of his
bosom.—Ex.
: rgji |
I fi 101 IjjW I
: I --
IlTfilfj
k BEST TOMIC. ?
This medicine, combining Lroe with ewe
Vegetable tonica, quickly an d cwnplMeiy
< urea Dyarepala* liMUaeettoa, Wail n era.
Impure Blood. Ylalurtn, ChUla and Favem.
ana Neuralgia.
It is an unfailing remedy for Dfeeagw oflbe
Kidnaya and layer*
It is invaluable fbr TMmwuim peaaMar to
Women, and all who lead sedentary lira
11 does not tnJure the teeth. mum beads rite
pnHhicy constipation—/ren <te.
~ *t <a riches and purifies the blood, teimelotea
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food. Be
lieves Heartburn and Belching, and str«nx<i*
ens the muscles and nerves
For Isaennlttent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack e*
Energy, Ae„ It has no equal.
Th* Pennine has abort trade meek and
Crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no otbor
Scmlybr MOWS CBKXICAL CO_ BAITHF
professionaland lawTaris.
W. 0. ADAMSON,
Atto'ncy
CARROLLTON, - - . GA.
Promptly transacts all business confided la
him.
Holding the office of Judge of the City Ceart
does not Interfere with his practice In ether
courts. 6 ~
s. e/grow,
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW.
AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.
\ I S^r\i°*u 8 “‘'P’tiatc'd ou improved farms in
nished 8 t 0 land ’ examiued snd «b*tracts far
yP’Stalra in thejeourt hon»c,
' 4<!tr Carrollton, Ga.
J. W. JONES?
Attorney Xiffvcr
JOEL, - QA.j
A. J. CAMP,
Attorney nt Law
VILLA RICA GA.
WM. c. HODNETT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
y ILLA RICA, - - - - GLORO IA
k’Z Office over Dr. Slaughter's
Drugstore. Prompt attention giv
onto all business intrusted to him.
W. L. FITTS,
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA,
W. R liilOWN,
attorney zkt Xjnw.
CARROLLTON, - -GEORGIA.
c. P. GORDON
ATTOBNEY-AT-LaW,
CARROLLTON, ------ GEORGIA.
W. W, &G, W- MERRELL,
A.tto’noys cvtXjrwtz-
GARROLLTON, - - GA.
Records and Jaud titles .exmiped. Will
collect claims, large or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of managing
estate by Executors, Administrators, Gar
dians &c and other birsirress before the Or
dinary Will practice in ailj. the superior
courts of the Coweta circuit, and always at
tend at Haralson court. frill practice any
wlieie and in any court where clients may
require their services:
n : .
DR. D. F. KNOTT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and tenders kia
PROFESSIONAL SEE VICES
to the citizens of Carrollton and
vicinity.
Office, Johnson's Drug Store.
Residence, Seminary street.l-tf.
DO YOU KNOW
THAT
LORRILLARD’S CLIMAX
PLUG TOBACCO
with Red Tin-Tag; Rose Leaf Fine cut chewin'-
jpTHORNSiB FLESH
Rom * n ce~* view of thu
Answers “X /boffzr-
to’ HUBBAKD e BRO&;
THESAVANKAir
WEEKLY NEWS
The SAVANNAH WEEKLY NEWS is
now a 12-page, 84 -column newspaper. It
contains each week a complex resume of
the world s doings, editorials on the cur
ie.it topics of the day, interesting reading
for the fireside and farm, original and se
lected stories, accurate market reports.—
In fact, it combines, in a condensed form,
all the best features of its daily contempol
vary, the SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS.
It is a carefully edited. Enterprising and
entertaining family journal; not a "local
paper,but one that can be read wich interest
in any locality,
lhe price is .only sl.2p a year, or in
clubs of five or more, SI.OO a year. It is
the cheapest paper of its class'in America.
Sample cop iesand premium lists sent on
application. J. H. ESTILL,
Savannah, G&-
We will send the Tdies and the Savin
nau Weekly News tor §2.00
NO 45.