Newspaper Page Text
Mrs. Gaines’ Alligator Story.
[Wash. Cor. Chicago limes.]
Mrs. Game?, surrounded by a group
of interested listeners in the parlor of
tlie hotel, was laughing and carrying
on as merry as a gill of sixteen, tell**
ing strange anecdotes of her most
strange and romantic career.
‘IS that so ?' said a person in the
circle repeatedly.
‘1 never heard any one say ‘ls that
so?’ without thinking of an alligator
story/ said the l : tt!e woman. ‘Have
any of you ever heard it?*
Well, a credulous stranger was go
ieg down the Red river in a small
packet that navigates that stream,
'the man ensconced himself in the pi"
lot house and kept up u continual vol
ley of interrogatives.
‘Are there any alligators in this
stream, stranger?*
‘Hundreds of them; indeed, I may
say millions of them.*
‘ls—t hat—so—stranger?*
‘Never told a lie in my life, sir.
One time we were running a race,
and everything was excitement. To
our surprise the other boat passed.
Throw over the lines, said the cap ain
The lines were thrown overboard and
the alligators took the lines, and the}'
just made tracks, and they shot ahead
of the other boat and run o.ur boat
down the stream so fast that in five
minutes we were out of sight.*
‘ls—t hat—so—stranger?'
‘I never told a lie in my life. An
other time the boat struck on a bar.
Wo worked and worked, but she did
not move a peg. Throw over the lines,
said the captain. The lines were toss
ed into the water, and the alligators
seized them, and drew us oft as slick
as the skin on a boiled potato.*
‘ls—that—so—stranger?*
‘Never told a lie in my life. One
time all the alligators got sick and
were about to die. Throw over the
medicine, said the captain. The med
icine chest was emptied nto the river,
and the alligators all got well.*
‘ls—that—so tranger?*
‘Never told a lie in my life. After
a while the captain got sick and died,
and the alligators held a meeting and
adopted resolutions, and resolved to
wear mourning for thirty days. Esch
alligator clapped a chunk of mud over
his light eye," and the meeting ad
journed.’
‘ls-—that—so—stranger V
‘Never told a lie in my life. Read
about George Washington and the
hatchet in my infantile career.*
Tne story told in Mrs. Gaines* rap"
id and dramatic maimer brought down
the house.
A Remarkable Man.
Many years ago, Col. Lehmanousky,
who had been twenty yea r s in the
army of Napoleon Bonaparte, arose in
a temperance meeting, tall, vigorous,
and with a glow of health on his face,
and made the following remarkable
speech:
‘Mon see before yon a man seventy
years old. I have fought two hundred
battles: have fourteen wounds on my
body; have lived thirty days on horse
flesh, with the bark of trees for my
drink, the canopy of heaven for my
covering, without stockings or shoes
on my feet, and only a few rags f r
clothing. In the desert of Egypt I
have matched with the burning sun
upon my head; feet blistered in the
scorching sand; and with eyes,
trils and mouth filled with dust, and
with a thirst so toi meeting that I have
opened the veins in my arms and suck,
my own blood. Do you ask how 1
survived all these horrors? I answer,
that under the providence of G >d, I
owe my preservation, my health and
vigor, to this fact, that 1 never drank a
drop of sjnritmus liquor in my life;
and/ continued he, ‘Baron Lariy,
chief surgeon ot the French army, has
stated as a fact, that the six thousand
survivors, who safe’y returned from
Egypt, were all of the n men who
stained from ardent drinks. *
Some of the leading Republican
journals of the West assert positively
that the feeling out there generally
among the Republicans is that they
now would rather see Tilden in the
White House than Hayes. They are
beginning to find out that fraud does
not always pay. Well, they put H ryes
in the White House. Lot them get
him out.
If a young man wants to see h?s
name in the paper let him get married.
He will never enjoy his death notice.
Keep an Account.
It is a very good plan for farmers
to keep a strict account of their labor.
We know very well that tho majority
of people dislike to be faced down by
columns ot figures, when the sum
total shows a decided balance against
tir m; but if accounts are kept, the
result will be that greater economy
will be practiced in the long run, and
that efforts will be made on every
hand to make the balance favorable
This is time of the vear to begin. The
fii st thing you ought to do is to make
an inventory of every thing you have.
Make it carefully and val ie all your
property. Let it include your acres,
houses, utensils, stock machinery of
every description, as well as notes
and all other monetary matters. If
there are any incumbrances on your
property, put them down. Then make
up your estimate of operations for the
ensuing year, and start out with the
determination to live op to it. As
the year progresses, set down all your
sales and purchases, of every descrip
tion; don*t let a cent of expense or
income escape.
Your family expenses should have a
separate place in the book, so that
they may be footed into the general
result at the close of the year, and
still be so distinct as to show for
themselves what it costs to clothe
yourself, wife and children, and to
furnish them amuse ments and general
pleasures You will fiud, in keeping
your account of income, that it is a
a good plan to run each field and crop
separate, so that you can at the close
sec at a glance what your profit or
or loss has been on each. Keep dates
of times when fields were plowed, how
they were cultivated, and what the
labor on each has cost. This will
teach tlie farmer in a short time,which
crops are most profitable.
In stock, keep a particular record
of each animal with pedigree, birth
and other remarks of interest. Keep
as well, a general diary of events on
the farm for future reference.
You will find plenty of time in
which to attend to these things.
Keeping an account will take but a
few minutes eacli day, and when you
have once begun you will be surprised
to see how easily it can be done.
There is one great point to be kept in
view always, and that is, to never run
in debt. Shun debts as you would
the fire. Strive to live within your
means, and you will have a net result
when you balance your books at the
close of ihe year that will surprise
and make you glad.—[. PrairieFarmer .
Politeness to Children.
Scores of times m a day, a child is
told in a short authoritative way to do
or not to do such little things as we
ask at the hands ot elder people as
favors, graciously and with deference
to their choice. ‘Would you be so
kind as to close that window?* ‘May
I trouble you for that cricket?* ‘lf
you may be as comfortable in this
chair as in that, I would like to change
places with you.’ ‘Oh, excuse me
but your head is between me and the
light; could you see as well if you
moved a little?' ‘Would it binder
you too long if you stopped at the
store tor me? I would be very much
obliged to you if you would.* ‘Pray,
do not let me crowd you,* etc. In
most people's speech, we find as syn
onyms for these polite phrases: ‘Shut
that window down, this minute.’
‘Bring me that cricket.* ‘I want .that
chair—get up; you can sit in this/
‘Don’t you see that you are light in my
light? Move along.’ ‘I want you to
leave off playing, and go right down
to the stoi e for me.* ‘Don't crowd so.
Can't you see that there is not room
enough for two people here?’ and so
on.
On the other hand, let a child ask
for anything without saying ‘please/
receive anything without saying, ‘thank
you/ sit still in the most comfortable
seat without offering to give it up, or
press its own preference for a particu-
book, chair, or apple, to the incon
venience of an elder, and what an out
cry we have: ‘Such rudeness!' ‘Such
an ill-mannered child I* ‘llls parents
must have neglected him strangely.’
Not at all; they have been telling him
a great many times every day not to
do these precise things which you dis
like. But they themselves have been
ail the while doing these very tilings
to him.
Taxes were paid in Great Br tain
last year upon 1,399,330 dogs.
Useful Family Hints.
Quicksilver on Furniture. —No
housekeeper should put quicksilver on
tier bedsteads. The mineral is ab
sorbed by those sleeping upon them f
causing paralysis and many other se
rious and fatal diseases.
Selecting Flour —First look to the
color ; if it is white, with yellowish
colored tint, buy it ; if it is white,
with a blueish cast, or white specks in
it, refuse it. Second, examine its ad
hesiveness —w r et and knead a little of
it between your fingers—if it works
soft and sticky, it is poor. Third,
throw a little lump of dry flour against
a smooth surface, if it falls like powder
it is bad. Fourth, squeeze some of
the flour in your hand, if it retains the
shape given by the pressure, that too
is a good sign. It is safe to buy flour
that w'll stand all these tests.
Canker in the M uth. —Tannin wifi
cure canker sore mouth, by applying
dry three times a dajn
Ringworm Remedy. —Oil of paper
made b} burning a sheet of ordinary
writing paper on a plate, will cure
a ringworm which is caused by conta
gion or some impurity in the blood.—
The oil will be seen after the paper is
burned in the form of a yellow spot ;
this applied with the finger twice a
day will in a very short time cure the
very worst of ringworms.
Cooking Eggs. — A teaspoonful of
vinegar put in the water will keep
eggs from breaking when being
poached.
Clear Titles.
Every land-owner should know that
he has a clear title to his real estate
Avery small thing may, in the course
of time, serve as a foundation upon
vvh'cb to set a fraudulent claim. Deeds
are frequently not recorded, which
form an important link in the chain;
and, as time passes away, and circum
stances are forgotten, no one questions
the title, and all is well. Years after
ward, when previous owners are dead,
some question comes up, some widow
of minor heirs puts in a claim, and a
lawsuit, with its expenses and delays,
is the result. There are thousands of
farmers who are not able to describe
their farms by section, town and range,
and if they were called on to do so
before the court, they would igriomin"
iously fail.— Haiciceye.
Cure for Diptlieria.
When the disease was raging in
England, a short time ago, a corres
pondent of a Victoria paper writes :
Q accompanied Dr. Field on his
rounds to witness the so-called won
derful cures he performed, while the
patients of others were dropping on
all sides. The remedy, to be so rap
id, must be simple. All he took with
him was powder of sulphur and a quill,
and with these he cured every patient
without exception. He put a
spoonful of brimstone into a wine
glass of water, and stirred it with his
finger, instead of a spoon, As the sul
phur does not readily amalgamate
with water. When the sulphur was
all mixed he gave it as a gargle,- and
in ten minutes the patient was out of
dange.r Brimstone kills every spe**
cies of fungus in man, beast or plant
in a few minutes. Instead of spitting
out the gargle, he recommended the
swallowing of it. In extreme cases,
when the fungus was too near to al
low the gargle, he blew the sulphur
through a quill into throat, and after
the fungus had shrunk to allow of it,
then the gargle. He never lost a pa
tient from diptheria. If the patient
cannot gargle, take a live coal of fire
on shovel, and sprinkle a spoonful or
two of flour brimstone at a time upon
it, and let tlie sufferer inhale it, hold
ing the head over it, and the fungus
will die.’
This mode of using sulphur has of
ten cured colds in the head, chest, etc.,
and is recommended for consumption
and asthma.
Believers in miracles will read ivith
interest the story of an actual occur
rence at a prayer-meeting near Rocks
ester, Ind. Several young men, in
c uding Robert King and Elias Bidin
ger, went to the meeting to make sport
of it, and to create a disturbance.—
They ivere reasoned with by the pas
tor, but his exhortations w r ere in vain.
Suddenly tlie re came up a thunder
storm, the church was sh uck by light
ning, and B : d;nger was instantly
killed, while the soles of King’s feet
were terribly blistered. As soon as
the latter returned to consciousness he
was converted, and the meeting ad
journed.
Professional Notices.
John F. DeLacy.
Attorney at Law,
Eastman, ... - Georgia.
Will practice in the counties ol
DODGE, PULASKI, TELFAIR,
WiLcOX, DOOLY LAURENS.
Special attention given to all the
branches ol the practice
WILLIAM McRAE,
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW,
Eastman - - - - Ga.
Will practice in the counties ol the
Oeonee circuit. ly
RYAN & MITCHELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hawkinsville, (ia.
Will practice in the counties of the Oconee
Circuit, and elsewhere by special contract.
LAWRENCE C. RYAN. JAMES B. MITCHELL
O, O. HOR.3NTE.
A TTOCRNE Y’S fi T Lfl W,
HAWKINSVILLE GA.
Will practice in counties of Oconee Circuit
and United States Courts o4' Georgia.
CARTER & CARTER,
ATTORNEYS
AND
COUNSELLORS AT LAW.
Baxley, Georgia.
Will practice in the Brunswick, Oconee and
Middle and Eastern Circuits.
O. O. SMITH,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
AND SOLICITOR IN EQUITY
• cVille, - Georgia.
Refers to Hon. Cl'fiord Anderson, Captain
John C. Rutherford and Walter B. Hill, Esq.,
I vofessors of Law, Jiercer University Law
School, Macon, Ga,
WALTER A. WAY.
ATTORNEY
AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW,
OARi EM , GA.
Particular attention paid to the collection of
claims and the examination of land titles.
Will practice in the Superior Courts ot
Brunswick and Eastern Circuits; also in the
Federal Courts in cases in Bankruptcy, etc.
M. L. MERSHON,
attorney at Law
—AND
Solicitor in Equity,
Bri nswick - - - Ga
W ill practice in all the Courts cf the Bruns
wick Circuit, and in Telfair in the Oconee Cir
cuit and elsewhere by special contract
JOSEPHUS CAMP,
A1 FORNEY AT LAW,
S aaixsboro, Exianu:. Cos., Ga.
WP practice in the Supremo Court o
Geor ia, in the U. S. District Court for Geor
pia, a id in the Superior Courts of the follow
ng c mnties : Emanuel, Johnson, Laurens
Mont ornery, TatnaJJ, and Bulloch.
G. J. HOLTON.
Attc ney and Counsellor at Law
BAXLEY, GA.
Prat tices in the Counties of Appling, Fiber
Waym , Coffee, Ware, Glynn, Mclntos.ofthe
the Fiunswick Circuit, and Telfair of the
Oconee Circuit
HARRIS FISHER, 31. D.
PRACTITIONER OF
Medicine, Surgery,
AND OBSTETRICS,
Office at J. Bishop & Co.’s Drug Store. Res
idence, sth Avenue.
NATIONAL HOTEL,
(Nearly opposite Passenger Depot,)
MACON, GEORGIA ,
RATES, PER DAY", $1.50.
SINGLE MEALS, 50 Cts.
E. C. CORBETT. Proprietor.
Accommodations good, servants atten
tive. 4tl
WASHINGTON, D. C.
HAS A FIRST-CLASS HOTEL
At $2.50 per dav.
TREMONT HOUSE.
Liquors Sold. lOtf
Dean make money faster at work for us
than at anything else. Capital not requir
ed; we will suut yon. 512 per day at home
made by the industrious. Men, women, boys
and girls wanted everywhere to work for us.
Now is the time. Costly outfit and terms free.
Address True & Cos., Augusta, Maine, x-y
DOUBLE DAILY
TO AND FROM
FLORIDA.
MACON & BRUNSWICK R.R
General Superintendent’s Office, [
Macon, Ga., Mar. 1, 1878. j
On and after Sunday, the 3rd instant. Pas
senger trains on this road will run as follows:
CUMBERLAND ROUTE VIA BRUNSXVICK.
NIGHT PASSENGER NO. 1, SOUTH.
(Daily.)
Leave Macon 7:3opm
Arrive Cochran 9:sopm
do Eastman 10;51pm
do Jesup 3:55am
do Brunswick 6:45am
Leave Brunwiek per steamer 7:ooaiu
Arrive Feruandina 11:00.tm
do Jacksonville 2:45pm
NO. 2, NORTH—Daily.
Leave Jacksonville 11:00pm
Leave Feruandina per steamer 2:4sptn
Arrive Brunswick 6;45pm
Leave Brunswick 7:lspm
do Jesup 10:30pm
do Eastman 4:llam
do Cochran 5:20 am
Arrive Macon 7:45am
Close connection at Macon for all points
North, East and West via Atlanta.
DAY ACCOMMODATION, No, 3-South
Via Jesup and Live Oak—Daily, Sundays
excepted.
Leave Macon 7:3oam
Arrve Cochran 10:28am
do Eastman 11:57am
do Jesup 6:slpm
do Jacksonville 9:25am
NO. 4, NORTH,
(Sundays excepted.)
Leave Jacksonville 3:45pm
do Jesup 6:ooam
do Eastman 12:43pm
do Cochran 2:oßpm
Arrive Macon s:lopm
Connects at Macon for points North, East
and West,
HAWKINSVILLE BRANCH.
Freight and Accommodation—Daily, except
Sunday.
Leave Cochran 10:00pm
Arrive Hawkinsville 10:45pm
Leave Hawkinsville 4:lsam
Arrive Cochran s:ooam
Connects at Cochran with trains Nos. 1 and
2 to and from Macon.
Leave Cochran 10:45am
Arrive hawkinsville 11:30am
Leave Hawkinsville 1:00pm
Arrive Cochran I:lspm
Connects at Cochran with trains No. 3 and
4 to and from Macon.
GEO. W..ADAMS, Supt.
W. J. Jarvis, Master Trans.
a week in your own town. $5 Out
tPUO fit free. No Risk. Reader, it you
want a business at which persons of either sex
can make pay nil the time they work, write
for particulars to H. Hallett & Cos., Port
land, Maine. x-y
CORN vs. COTTON!
EGYPTIAN
TAP ROOT
CCOORINN!!
From the River Nile.
This Corn posseses many advantages over our
common corn. It stands drought much better
—taking such deep root in the ground. It
will mature from five to .six weeks earlier, and
yield at least one-tliird more per acre. It re
quires one-third leas work—growth so lapid it
needs but two plowings. It makes meal al
most equal to flour.
See what those who have tried it say:
Cleveland, Tenn., Oct. 2, 1877.
Being largely engaged in planting, I have
tested the merits of Ibis com, and consider its
introduction fortunate for Southern farmers.
I have raised large, full ears of corn in sixty
five days from the day it was planted, and par
ties in Georg a who tried it, tell me it will ma
ture there as early, if not earlier, as a hot cli
mate suits it best. B. G. WILLIS.
Gbantville, Ga., Oct. 15, 1874.
Mr. B. G. Willis:
Sir—l have planted the Egyptian Tap Root
Corn, and am much pleased with it. I can
recommend it—think our farmers should try
it. It matures much earlier than our common
corn, stands drought better, and takes less
work, its growth is so rapid. Yours resp’y.,
Dr. G. W, Stallings.
Conyers, Ga., Sept. 1, 1877.
Mr. B. G. Willis, Lculd's Springs, Tenn. :
De .r Sir—l planted a smali quantity of
your Egyptian Tap Root Corn last spring, and
am well pleased with it. Think it a very su
perior article of corn to any I have seen,* aud
would advise farmers generally to plant it by
all means, from this fact: —lt stands the
drought admirably, matures five weeks sooner
than common corn, and takes one-third less
work* My neighbors are all well pleased with
it. Yours respectfully,
A. L. Pearce,
City Flouring Mills,
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 28, 1877.
Mr. B. G. Willis:
Dear Sir —I planted a small quantity of
your Egyptian Tap Root Corn, and am pleased
to say it is a very superior article ot corn to
any 1 have ever seen, aud think it is the corn
to suit our country’, from this fact:—lt stands
the drough well, matures much sooner, and
requires much less work than our coornon
corn. I can in all confidence recommend it
to all farmers. Yours respectfully,
W. S. Carroll’
PRICE I One pound, 25 cents; one
peck, $3; half bushel, $5; one bushel, SB.
Pound packages sent by mail when the price
is accompanied with 10 cents to pay pastage.
Larger quantities sent by Express or freight,
as directed.
All orders must be accompanied by the cash.
I guarantee every package sold by me to be
genuine Egyptian Tap Root Com.
Planted about the same time as other corn—
give room according to strength of land.
Order at once, as the supply is limited and
the demand great
Address all orders to
EL.AM CHRISTI AN,
xi4t Sparta, Ga. ,
ATLANTIC & GULF RAILROAD.
General Superintendent’s Office, )
Atlantic and Gulf Raelroad, J-
Savannah, Feb. 14, 1878. )
ON and after SUNDAY, February 17, 1878,
Passenger Trains ou this Rond will run
as follows :
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 4.10 p m
Arrive at Jessup daily at 7.10 p m
Arrive at Thomasville dsily at 5.20 a m
Arrive at Baiubridge daily at 8.10 a m
Arrive at Albany daily at 9.50 a m
Arrive at Live Oak daily at 3.30 a m
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at 9.25 a m
Leave Tallahassee daily at 11.20 a m
Leave Jacksonville daily at 3.45 p m
Leave Live Oak daily at 9.40 p m
Leave Albany daily at 2.30 p m
Leave Baiubridge daily at 3.15 p m
Leave Thomasville daily at 7.00 p m
Leave Jesup daily at 5.45 a m
Arrive at Savannah daily at 8.40 a m
No ehauge of cars between Savannah and
Jacksonville, and Sava inah and Albany.
Passengers from Savaunuli for Feruandina,
Gainesville aud Cedar Keys, take this train.
Passengers leaving Macon at 7.30 a m daily,
Sundays excepted, connect at Jesup w ith this
train for Florida.
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train arriving in Macon at
5.10 p.m., daily except Sunday.
Passe hgers trom Savannah for Brunswick
and Darien take this train, arriving at Bruns
wick 6.45 a m.
Passengers from Brunswick arrive at Savan
nah 8.40 a m.
No change ot cars between Montgomery
and Jacksonville.
Pullman Palace sleeping cars run through
to aud from Savannah and Jacksonville,* also
through sleepers from Atlanta, Ga., aud Mont
gomery, Ala., to Jacksonville, Fla.
No change of cars between Atlanta and
Jacksonville.
Connect at Albany with passenger trains
both ways on Southwestern Railroad to and
from Macon, Eufaula, Montgomery, Mobile,
New’ Orleans, etc.
Mail steamer leaves Baiubridge for Apa
lachicola every Sunday afternoon ; for Colum
bus every Wednesday morning.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sun
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, St.
Augustine, Palatka, Enterprise, and all land
ings on St John’s river.
DAY EXPRESS.
(Daily, Sunday excepted)
Leave Savannah at 9.15 am
Arrive at Jacksonville 10.00 p m
Arrive at Tallahassee 3.30 a m
Leave Jacksonville 6.00 am
Arrive at Savannah 6.18 pm
No change of cars between Savannah and
Jacksonville.
Passengers for Tallahassee take this train.
Passengers leaving Brunswick 7.0 U a m
(Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays), via B &
A R R arrive in Savannah 6.18 p m, leaving
Savannah 9.15 a m (Tnetdiys, Thursday ami
Saturdays), arrive in Brunswick 8.20 p m.
Trains on the B. and A. R. It. leave junc
tion, going west, Monday, Wednesday, and
Friday, at 11T4 a.in., and tor Brunswick,
Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, at 4.40
P an.
ACCOMMODATION TRAINS
EASTERN DIVISION.
L ave Savannah, Sundays ex’d at 7.00 a.m.
Arrive at Mclntosh, “ “ 9.50 a.m.
“ Jesup, “ “ 12.15 p.m.
“ Blackshear, “ “ 4.00 p.m.
“ Dupont, “ “ 7.25 pm.
Leave Dupont, “ “ 5.20 a.m.
“ Blackshear, “ 11 9.33 n.m.
“ Jesup, “ “ 1.10 p.m.
“ Mclntosh, 44 “ 3.22 p.m.
Arrive at Savannah, “ “ 6 00 p.m.
WESTERN DIVISION.
Leave Dupont, Sundays excepted, at 5.30 a.m
Arrive at Valdosta, “ “ 8.20 a.m
“ Quitman, “ “ 10.28 a.m
“ Thomasville, “ 1.10 p.m
“ Albany, “ “ 6.40 p.m
Leave Albany, “ “ 5.00 a.m
“ Thomasville, “ 41 11.00 a.m
44 Quitman, 44 “ 1.36 p.m
“ Valdosta, 44 “ 3.22 p.m
Arrive at Dupont, “ “ 6T5 p.m
J. S. T yson, Master of Transportation.
H. S. HAINES,
4tf General Superintendent.
PATENTS
F. A. Lehman, Solicitor of American and
Foreign Patents, Washington, D. C. All bus
iness connected with Patents, whether before
the Patent Office or the Courts, promptly at
t< nded to. No charges made unless patent is
secured. Send for circular. 6tf
C. S. BURLING,
Wholesale Commission Dealer in
Berries, Apples, Potatoes,
Asparagus,
AND ALL KINDS OF FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES.
No. 198 DUANE STREET,
Gor. Washington St., NEW YORK.
—REFER TO
Irving National Bank, New York.
Gray Bros., Fort Valley, Georgia.
S. H. ltuniph, Marsliallville, Georgia.
7-29*
.THE
Weekly Constitution.
Within the course of a month we shall be
gin the publication of a story of Southern life
and character, entitled
THE ROMANCE OF ROCKVILLE
from the pen of Mr. J. C. Harris, author of
“Oncle Remus’ Revival Hymn,” and the most
popular writer n, perhaps, all the South. His
abuudant humor and graphic descriptions are
well known in Georgia The new story will
be his most ambitious effort, aud the Constitu
tion confidently promises its patrons a rare
literary treat. The Story will appear in The
Weekly Constitution only, and will run through
months. Clubs should be made up or
single subscriptions sent in without delay by
all who desire this story of Georgia’s favorite
humorist.
The price of the WEEKLY is $2 a year,
postage free. Address
THE CONSTITUTION.
Xitf ATLANTA, OA.