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THE EASTMAN TIMES.
M. L BURCH, Editor & Proprietor
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1879.
MISS MORGAN’S MISTAKE.
'lt** Miss Morgan's money he wants,
not herself.'
Miss Morgan started, and parting
the leaves of a large tropical plant be
hind which she had taken momentary
refuge Irom the crowd of senseless
admirers that hud been pursuing her
for the last two hours, she saw the
apeaker—a tall, weak-looking, blonde
gentleman, the intimate friend ©! her
lover, Godfrey Wynn.
‘But she's a beauty,' asserted an
other gentleman in the group.
‘Ah! but take the moiwy from her,
and I wouldn't give a fig for her pros
pects. A woman worth a hundred or
so, takes well in the inatrim >nial
ket you know,' laughed the first speak'
cr.
‘Sells well, yon mean,' said an elder
ly bachelor, with a slight sneer. ‘But
I think Miss Morgan has other atttac
tions besides her money. Poor girl!
I hope Wynn wdl not marry her for
that.'
‘Wynn is no better than the rest of
mankiuu. He's ambitious, and a rich,
influential wife, and high connections,
help a fellow on in the world. Come
to think of it, a casual remark of his
the other day, (in quite another con
nection you know,) smacked a little of
the views I have just uttered,' said the
blonde speaker, as the group moved
out of hearing.
Cecil Morgan laid her white face
down on the crimson velvet cushions
ol the sofa, and cried. She was a wo
man—a ti nder, loving, true woman,
with a heart, in spite ol her money,and
she had an unconquerable desire of
being won for hersvlf. Godfrey Wynn
had seemed so honest, and so different
from other men, that she had trusted
him fully; although he had nothing
but his profession and a spotless char
acter to recommend him to society’s
favor. But her idol had feet of clay,
after all, and. rising up, she clasped
lr sinal’, jewelled hands oyer her
heart, and said to herself:
•What a curse my money is. God
keep me from the hands of fortune
hunters!’
Half an hour later Godfrey Wynu
entered the heated parlors, his fine
face glowing with h*pe and gratifica
tion, for he had gained an important
lawsuit, and his aaza# was in every
body's mouth.
He went straight to Cecil Morgan's
side. She was standing a little apart
from the crowd, her handsome dark
face looking more grave than usual.
Godfrey glanced at her perfect toilet
—black lace over colored silk, with
great goldhearted pansies in her glossy ;
black hair, and at her tbro.it and gir
dle.
‘You look charming to-night, Cecil/
Godfrey says with a smile. 'Let us go
into the conservatory.’
Cecil took his arm, thinking it was
as well to end all this mockery, for
she saw something in his face that
would have given her unspeakable
pleasure at any other time, They
walked slowly down alleys of perfumed
flowers and trailing vines, Godfre} T
talking modestly of his triumph, Cecil
answering in a mechanical way that
surprised him.
‘You are not well, Cecil/ lie look
ed down into the pale, set face with
.auxious eyes.
'Perfectly well; only tired,' she said
coldly.
‘Let us rest here/ Godfrey seated
Miss Morgau on a rustic seat in the
shadow of a group of magnolias, and
stood before her with folded arms.
Cecil did not dare to raise her eyes;
the love and pain in her heart were
too great, and threatened to overpower
her cool, womanly judgment.
•I have something to say to you, Ce
cil/ Godfrey spoke in a hesitating way,
as if doubtful of success—‘if you will
listen to me.’
‘i will listen to anything/ Miss
Morgan spoke in the same cold, unin
terested voice.
‘Cecil, I have loved you for years;
but you are doubtless aware of that.
I am on trie way to wealth and tame
now, and I would like to have you for
my wife, if—'
Miss Morgan rose with a very white
face and an impatient gesture of the
hand.
‘Godfrey Wynn, I will never marry
&ny man who will make my wealth
and high connections a stepping-stoue
to fiftne/
‘Cppil Godfrey Wynn gazed at
the tall figure in it* trailing robes of
gjlfc and laoe, the dark, scornful eyes,
shining like stars under their long
fashes, in a dazed sort of way. 'Cecil,
you do. not ipean me?'
♦I certainly mean you!'
‘Then you have made a terrible inis
take/ Godfrey Wynn's voice shook
Tfith strong feeling. ‘For I would
given you the love I offer you to
to-night had you been the daughter
pf the poorest man on earth, If you
loved me, Cecil,lvon wuuld'not doubt
me/
‘L ved vour She wrung her hands
and then rushed past him into a wil
derness of flowers, leaving him too
stupid to follow.
‘God help the man who builds bis
hopes mm a woman s love/ was the 1 it
ter comment,as ho went back to ilie
gay throng. Cecil was nowhere visi
ble, and later he In ard someone re
mat k that Misa Morgan had been tak
en suddenly ill, um! gone home. ‘She
loves in spite of her actions to-night. 1
shall win her yet!’ Godfrey said to him
self, as he wandered restlessly from
one group to another.
Before the* year was out Cecil Mor
gan became convinced that Godfrey
Wynn did not need the aid of any wo
man's wealth to help him on the road
to fame. The mau's natural gen us,
energy and honesty wen* aids t at alt
th e wealth on earth could not purchase,
and his decided av. iij .nee ol worm* i
was a proof that hi- love n r her was
deeper thau she imagined* fit' y ne
often, but Cecil's coldness kept ium at
a distance. He noticed that she ur s
fait losing h< r (rob Mo •. and youth
ful vivacity, and rightly 1v n<l th •
cause.
As for Coei ! , her mind was m a >; o •
tinual turmoil. She persistently re
fused all offers of marriage*, b cause
she could not marry with love and was
too pure a woman to marry W’thout i
A thousand times she caugni h rs i
wishing th it her riches would vanish
in some magical manner, h aving h r
poverty and pence; for alter Godfrey
she pouhi not trust any man. -ho n*d
a vague idea that she, or his fr • ml-,
had misjudged his motiy s, yet she w is
too proud to lei him see th * least sign
of relenting in her conduct, and delio
erately cut him on the piazza of the
Ocean House, at Newport, the follow
ing summer.
Feeling like one who had committed
some criminal act she entered the par
lor a few seconds alter the incident,and
weary and dissatisfied with herself and
the world, sealed herself at one of the
many deserted windows, the heavy
curtains concealing her from the view
of any outsider. Two gentlemen sir di
ed close to the window, and Miss Mor
gan shrank farther back into obscurity,
for it was Godfrey Wynn and his
blonde friend. Russel' Armitage.
‘Wynn/ began Russell, T thought
you intended ma<rying M ss Morgan
and her one hundred thousand?'
‘Hang her one hundred thousand/
was Wynn’s impatient reply. ‘I wish
she hadn’t a dollar; I might then hope
to win her some day/
‘Did she refuse you?’ in unfeigned
astonishment.
‘She did; and told me she would
never marry any man who would make
her wealth and high connections a
stopping-stone to fortune/
Russell Armitage burst into a mirth
ful fit of laughter.
‘What are you laughing at?’ de
manded Wynn, half angrily.
‘Wynn,’said Russell choking back
his mirth, ‘will you answer me a que -
tion or two?’
‘Half a dozen if you like/
‘You really and honestly loved Ce
cil, and would have married her under
any circumstances?'
'1 would give my life for her/ said
Godfrey with intense feeling.
‘When did you makeyour proposal?’
‘The night ot Mrs. Duncan’s party.
‘I thought so. Wed, I remember
using the very words she used to you.
A party of us were making some re
marks about you in connection with
M'ss Morgan, and it struck me after
ward that she must have overheard
them, for she was taken ill and went
home, lam sorry I misjudged you,
Wynn, for I hono-tly thought you
were like the rest of us, after the mon
ey •' Armitage laughed good-natured
ly, and walked away to join a gay
young heiress who was coming up
the beach.
Cecil had heard if all tshe was
wild now with doubt ami hpe f and
with ungovernable impulse cried out:
m a yearning pitiful way.
Godfrey heard the voice and cry, and
hastily parting the curtains was at
her side.
‘My darling/ he whispered, taking
the two hands she held up to him.
‘Yes, yonre always, Godfrey, for 1
heard all Russell said. Forgive me
for doubting you, my dear.’
For answer he stooped down an I
kissed her warm, red lips, for his heart
was too full for words.
Iu alter years Cecil Wynn acknowl
edged money was not such a curse
when right'y used.
One day a little girl, about five years
old, heard a preacher of a certain de--
nomination praying most lustily, till
the roof rang with the strength of his
supp'ications. Turning to her mother
and beckoning the maternal ear to a
speaking distance, she whispered: —
‘Mother, don't you think that if he
lived nearer to God he wouldn't Lav®
to talk so loud?*
——
When the trees leave out in spring,
they have anew dress; when the leaves
turn in fal ? , they have another new
dress, aud when the leaves are gone
they have a nude dress,
PROEFSSIONAL CARDS.
John P. DsLacy.
Attorney at Law,
Eastman, - Georgia.
Will practice in the counties ol
DODGE, PULASKI. TELFAIR,
W.LUOX, DOOLY. LAURENS.
Special attention given to all the
bruT.ches of the practice
WILLIAM McRAE,
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW,
Eastman - - - - (jit.
Will practice in the counties ol the
Oconee circuit. ly
WILBUR F. KELSEY.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
COCHRAN, CJA,
Will practize iu Oconee and Brunswick Cir
cuits. Prompt attention givi uto business.
ROLLIN’ A. STANLEY,
ATTO as EY~ ATHLAW
OIiILLY, G.\.
Will j*f;u riee iu all the counties of the Oco
nee ( item: From loug experience in the
Criminal Practice, much of liis time will be
specially devoted to that branch of his profes
sion. augß’7Bn
O. C. HORNE.
AT TORN EY-AT-LA W
HAWKINSVJLLE, GA.
Will practitv in the counties ot the Oconee
Circuit an.l United States Courts of Georgia.
s* ♦ m f
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
AND SOLICITOR IN EQUITY,
McVILLE, : : : : GEORGIA
Refers to Hon. Clifford Anderson, Captain
John C. Rutherford and Walter B. Hill, Esq.,
Professors of Law, Mercer University Law
School, Macon, Georgia.
AIFBED HERRINGTON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
MOL NT VERNON, GA.
Will practice iu Emanuel, Tattnal and all
the counties of the Oconee Circuit. Special
attention given to baying, leasing and selling
real estate, and examining laud titles. Also,
special attention given to the collection of pen
sions of widows and soldiers under a late Act
of Congress. may3o’7B-ly
I>. M. HOBERTS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Will practice in the counties of the Oconee
circuit, Appling, Coffee and Wayne of the
Brunswick circuit, and Tat mi 11 of the Middle
circuit; also, in the United States Circuit court
HARRIS FISIIER, M. I).,
PRACTITIONER OF
Medicine, Surgery,
AND OBSTETRICS,
Office at J. Bishop <fc Cos. ’s Drug Store. Res
idence, Filth avenue.
WALKER & JORDAN,
Physicians&Surgeons
Cochran, Ga.
DR. Y. H. MORGAN.
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN
DRUaaiST,
Cocliran, Georgia.
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MARSHALL HOUSE
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THE 1870
DAILY CONSTITUTION.
We Lave few promises to make for The
Constitution lor 187 it. The paper speaks
for itself, aud upon that ground the managers
offer it to the puolic as the best, the brightest,
the newsiest, and the most complete daily
journal published in the south. This is the
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in* >st critical of our exchange some of whose
opinious we tike pleasure m presenting below.
The managers wid lie pardoned for briefly
alluding to some of the features which have
given The Constitution prominence among
southern papers.
I. It piiuts all the news, both by mail and
telegrauh.
11. Its telegraphic service is fuller than that
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patches placing it npm a looting, so tar as the
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111. Its compilation of the news by mail is
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o’. interest in the current newspaper liteiature
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themes
Y. “Bill Arp” the most genial of humorists,
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Si” and “Uncle liemus” will work iu their
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stitution.
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Steadily advancing toward the position of a
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It is one of the brightest, most enterprising,
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Ably edited and newsy always, in its new
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tofore been in matter. AT. 0 Democrat.
The Atlanta Constitution with its new
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betu the best newspaper in the south.— N. Y.
Star.
The Atlania Constitution has been mak
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may now lairl;, claim a place among the first
half-dozen toutUem newspapers .—Springfield
Republican.
To say that The Constitution is one of the
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piper of which the whole south may well be
proud, is but to htate a self-evident fact appa
rent to all.- - Washington Post
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THE EXCELSIOR NEWS.
The Excelsior News is published every
Friday, at Excelsior, Bulloch county, Ga., in
the interests of the
PINEY WOODS.
by Rev. W. L. Geiger.
The paper is filled with good religious, edu
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cles, prepared expressly for its columns.
In additon to its usual interesting original
matter, the publication of a valuable serial
prize story, entitled
Durward Belmont,
-OR,--
The Influence of Religion,
Py Marie Duval,
f. pious and gifted young lady of the “i*iney
Woods,” will be commence' in its columns on
Friday, January 3, 1879. This story will run
through several months, alter which other se
rial stories of interest will follow.
Evety Family in the “Finny
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Now is the time to subscribe iu order to
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April 18, 1878. 15-Iy
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GEORGIA.
RAILROADS
ATLANTIC ft GULF lUILROAO,
General Superintendent's Office,
Atlantic and Gulf Raiiboad, t
Savannah, Nov. 30, 1878.’)
ON aud after SUNDAY, DEC. Ist,
Passenger Trains on this Road will
as follows :
NIGHT EXPRESS.
Leave Savannah daily at 4.45 p
Arrive at Jessup daily at 7.15 p B
Arrive at Tbonuisville dily at 6.50*
Arrive at Bainbridge daily at y.45a m
Arrive at Albany daily at 1015a m
Arrive at Live Oak daily at 2.25 a m
Arrive at Tallahassee daily at 8.00 s a
Arrive at Jacksonville daily at B.o<)a m
Leave Tallahassee daily at 6.50 p m
Leave Jacksonville daily at 6.50 p n,
Leave Live Oak daily at 1225. p
Leave Albany daily at 4.45 p a
Leave Bainbridge daily at 4.40 p a
Leave Thouiasville daily at B.lop a
Leave Jesup daily at 7.45 s a
Arrive at Savannah daily at 10.15 am
No change ot cars between Savannah sad
Jacksonville, and Savannah and Albany.
Sleeping cars run through to and from Sa
vannah aud Albany.
Passengers from Savannah for Fernandina,
Gainesville and Cedar Keys, hike this train.
Passengers having Macon at 7.45 a m daily,
Sundays excepted, connect at Jesup with thia
train tor Florida.
Passengers trom Florida by this train coa
neet at Jesup with train arriving iu Mueou at
6.25 i .m., daily except Sunday.
Passengers trom Savannah for Brunswick
and Darien take this traiu, arriving at Bruns
wick 7.00 a m.
Passengers from Brunswick arrive at Savaa
call 10.15 a m.
No change ot airs between Montgomery
and Jacksonville.
Pullman Palace sleeping cars run through
to and from Savannah aud Jacksonville ; also
through sleepers from Montgomery, Ala., to
Jacksonville, Fla.
Connect at Albany with passenger train*
both ways on Southwestern Railroad to and
from Macon, Eulaula, Montgomery, Mobil*,
New Orleans, etc.
Mail Steamer leaves Bainbridge for Apa
lachicola every Monday at 9:00am; for Colum
bus every Wednesday at 9:00 a m.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily (Sun
days excepted) for Green Cove Springs, St
Augustine, i’alutka, Enterprise, and all land
ings on St Johu'a river.
Trains on the B. and A. R. R. leave jane
tiou, going west, Monday, Wednesday, aud
Friday, at 1114 a.ui., aud lot Brunswick,
Tuesday, Thursday, aud Saturday, at 4.40
p.m.
ACCOMMODATION TRAINS
EASTERN DIVISION.
Leave Savannah, Sundays ex’d ut 7.00 am
Arrive ut Mclntosh, “ •• 9.48 a a
“ Jesup, “ “ 12. lOp ih
“ Blackshear, " “ 3.05 p a
“ Dupont, “ •* 7.00 p a
Leave Dupont, “ “ 4.35 pm
“ Blackshear, “ “ 8.25 am
•* Jesup, “ •* 11.55 am
“ Mclntosh, •* “ 1.47 pm
Arrive at Savannah, “ “ 430. p nt
WESTERN DIVISION.
DAILT, SUNDAYS EXCEPTED.
Leave Dupont at 5.40 a m
Leave Valdosta at 8.45 a a
Leave Quitman at 10.35 a a
Arrive at Thomssville at 1.15 p a
Leave Thouiasville at 2.C0 p a
Leave Camilla at 4.40 p a
Arrive at Albauy at 6.50 p m
Leave Albany at 6.10 aiu
I .leave Camilla at 7.40 am
Arrive at Thouiasville at ~. 10.35 a m
Leave Thomasville at 11.10 pm
Leave Quitman at 1.25 p m
Leave Yt.ldosta at 3.10 p m
Arrive at Dupont at 5.45 p a
J. S. Tyson, Muster of Transportation.
H. S. HAINES,
20tf General Superinteadent.
DOUBLE DAILY
TO AND FltOM
FLORIDA.
MACON 8 BRUNSWICK R.R
General Superintendent’* Ornci, j
Ma;ou, Ga., Nov. 30, 1878. f
On and alter Sunday, December Ist, IW
aenger trains on this road will runati fvllaws:
Cumberland rout* via Brunswick.
NIGHT PASSENGER NO. 1, SOUTH.
(Daily.)
Leave Macon 7:4Spm
Arrive Coehrar. ..10:05pm
do Eastman ll;0Cpm
do Jesup 4:liiaa
do Brunswick 7:o6am
Leave Brim wick per steamer 7:lsaai
Arrive Feruandina 11:1mm
do Jacksonville 4 :55pm
NO. 2. NORTH—Daily.
Leave Jacksonville 8:00am
Leave Fernandina per steamer l:O0pi*
Arrive Brunswick 6;45pm
Leave Brunswick :.. 7:lspia
do Jesup 10 .-Copra
do Eastman 3:l9am
do Cochran 4:isum
Arrive Macon R :55am
Close connection at Macon for all paid*
Norlb, East and West, via Atlanta.
DAY ACCOMMODATION, No, 8-South
Via Jesup and Liva Oak—Daily, Sundays
excepted.
Leave Macon 7.-4oam
Arrve Cochran 10:33am
do Eastman 12:02aa
do Jesup I:sopm
do Jacksonville 8:00am
NO. 4, NORTH,
(Sunday* exeepied.)
Leave Jacksonville B:sopm
do Jesup 7:45am
do Eastman 2:25pm
do Cochran 3:45pm
Arrive Macon 6:25pm
Connects at Macon for point* North, East
and West.
HAWKINSVILLE BRANCH.
Freight and Accommodation—Daily, *x*pt
Suuday.
Leave Cochran 10:15pm
Arrive Hawkinsville 11:00pm
Leave Hawkinsville 3:2oam
Arrive Cochrac 4:tsam
Connects at Cochran with trains Noe. 1 and
2 to and frern Macon.
Leave Cochran 10:45am
Arrive Hawkinsville 11:33am
Leave Hawkiusvilie 2:45pm
Arrive Cochran 3:3opm
Connects at Cochmn with trains No. I and
4 to and from Macon.
GEO. W. ADAMS, SopL
W. J. Jarvis, Master Trans.
GEORGE BEGGS,
DEALER nr
Faßcy and Family
GROCERIES,
Fruits, Vegetables, &c.
No. 104 CHE&KT ST., MACON, GA.