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THE EASTMAN TIMES.
M. L. BURGH, Editor & Proprietor
THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1879.
AN INCIDENT OF 1745.
On a-Btonny night of February # 1745,
a young lady wb in wu shill call Miss
*S ott, was <-i ting ii< her dr ssing
loom, iu an old castle in Perthshire,
Scot! ind. She had been occupied all
day tending her emie'n, Miss Hay,
\vh > was ill of lever; and iiow > ere re*
tiring to rest, she thought of the con
test in which many of her r datives
were engaged. The army of Piince
Charles having retreated towards the
.Highlands, several detachments of the
King's troops w. re on the march to
that c nnpaign which ended in the bat
tle of Culloden.
Amidst the roar c f the storm Miss
/Scott fano'ed she heard the hell of the
castle ring; and presently a servant
appeared, saying that an officer wished
to see her alone. On descending to
the dining-room she found her cousin.
Captain who eagerly asked for
.hs s : ster. When he found that she
Avas too ill to be disturbed, he said
that in a vault below Die castle, un
known except to his parents and him
self, were concealed the family plate,
and some papers which it was of the
■ulmost importance he should now
possess As he had only obtained
leave from his commanding officer to
.jgallop before his troop, he had not
dime to select the papers but he would
open the trapdoor, and Miss Scott
must go alone next night and take
.them out, and lie would send a trusty
messenger to receive them. He took
a shovel from the hearth, and a small
dark lantern.
Miss Scott followed him to the low
est story of the castle, through cham
bers ami long dark passages. At
length they reacht and a small vaulted
apartment, the only furniture of which
Avas a strong wooden press, fixed to
the w dl in one corner of the room. In
front of this Captain Hay scraped away
the sand, and Miss Scott saw the ring
.pfan iron trap-door. By united strength
they raised it, and, descending a stair,
Ahey reached the lowest vault, wheie
,thc ch fit stood. Captain Hay gave
his cousin u list of the required papers,
; #nd thcikey of the chest; then he left
the trap-door so that she could raise it
without assistance
Next night when all had retired to
rest, Miss Scott took a small lamp,
and, easily ra sing the trap-door, de*
amended to the chest, and took out the
papers; but oh, horrible 1 the heavy
iron-bound lid of the chest slid from
iier tremb! ng hands. The violent con
cussion closed the trap-door, and threw
open the door of the strong wooden
.press above, s > that it remained im
,movable across the trap-door. She
became aware that she must die of
starvation in that dreadful vault! In
fainting she must have extinguished
her lamp, lor she revived in the awful
.darkness. After praying, as Jonah
might have prayed, she became again
insensible. On reviving, she lay in
bitter agony; at last she beard a sound.
Had a most merciful God heard her
cr\? Surely someone was in the up
per vault! Tne trap-door was slowly
.raised, and Captain Hay looked down
in terror and astonishment.
When she became composed he ex
plained that, having omitted to mark
.in bis list a document of the greatest
importance, he had explained the cir
.cumstancc to his commanding officer
and got permission to return to the
( castle. jt is supposed that Captain
Hay perished at Culloden, for he was
.never heard of more, j
Years passed ,away. Miss Scott was
.mairied to a pious and benevolent med
ical man, but he died of fever three
weeks after the union. In the depths
of despa : r the widow exclaimed, r ‘l
prayed long; I prayed that 1 might
s)e united to him; I will never pray
again, nor see the light of the sun/
For more than a year ..she .refused to
see her friends, and sat in a darkened
room.
The Rev. Hugh Blair, (author of the
well-known sermon.' 3 , and afterwards
professor of rhetor c in the University
of Edinburg,) then a young man, be
.earne interested in her history wrote
her a vt ry sympathizing letter, and
asked leave to pay her a visit. He
found her sitting alone on a sofa, by
the light of a taper. What p isscd is
not known, further than he spoke of
the wonderful deliverance God had
vvouchsafed her that awful night in the
vault. She wept much. 'And now,
jinadam, kneel and join mo in prayer.’
>She did so, and when they arose from
their knees, lie said: ‘Now, madam, I
T s\’ill show you the light of the sun;'
,u”d lie opetre l the shutters.
.From that day she admitted her
friends, attended the house of God, and
b’cauie exemplary for piety and sub
tnisiou. Jt is not surprising that, to
.the close of her life, a shade of melan
choly tinged her countenance, and she
was unwilling to speak ,of the thrilling
incidents of her youth.
How lo manage ;> wife--remain sin-
Afraid She’d he Kissed.
A rna i was once walking along one
road and a woman along another The
roads finally united., and the man and
woman reaching the junction at the
s ime time walked on together. The
man was carrying n largejro* kettle
on his back, in ope hand lie held by
the legs a live chicken, in the other a
cane, and he was leading u goat.. Just
as tiny were coming,to a deep, dark
ravine, the woman said to the man :
‘I am afraid to go through that ra
vine with you ; it is a lon< ly p'aco and
you might overj ower me and kiss me
by force.’
‘lf you were afraid of that/
man, ‘you shouldn’t have walked with
me at all. How can I possibly over
power you by force when I have this
great iron kettle on my back, a cane
m one hand, and a live chicken in the.
other, and am leading this goat?—
I might as well be tied hand and
f.ot !'
‘Yes/ replied the wpipan, ‘but if
you should stick your cano into the
ground juid tie the goat to it, and turn
the kettle bot'om side up and put the,
chicken into it, then you might wick>
edly kiss mo in spite of my resist
ance/
‘Sucress to thy ingenuity, oh, wo
man !' said the rejoicing man to him
self ; ( I should never have thought of
such expedient.,
When they came to the ravine he
stuck his cane in the ground and tied
the goat to it, gave the chicken,to the
woman saying : Tloldqt while I cut
Home grass for the goat/ and then low
ering the kettle from his shoulder inr
prisoned the,chicken.undej-r itapd wick
edly kissed the woman, as she was so
afraid lie would.
A Distinguished Postal Card.
i
A striking illustration of the extent
and exce'lence of the uirangement for
the international mail service, which
has resulted from the Postal Union is
given in an official publication receiv-,
ed by our superintendent of foreign
mails from the Berne Central Bureau.
A resident of Chemnitz, Saxony, mail
ed at that place at 7 p. m. on the 24th
of May lust a postal card, addressed
to hirnselt carrying a request to all
postmasters, to dispatch it successive
ly, and without loss of time to Alex
andria Singapore, Yokohama, San
Francisco and New Y"rk, and thence
to Chemnitz—his object being a wager
that with the existing postal arrange
ments, the circuit of the world coaid.
thus be made by postal matter within
120 days.
The request was complied with and
the card arrived in Chemnitz from New
York on the 117th day after the date of,
original mailing.
The Postmaster Qenerdl of Germany
has caused this card to be photograph
ed, and transmitted acopyAo the Bl‘i>
no International Bureau, with the re
mark that had it been posted one hour
earlier it would have accomplished its
journey in 96 days, instead of 117.
The First AVedding.
We like the short courtships, and in
this Ada.n acted like a sensible man—
lie fell asleep a bachelor and woke up
to find himself a married man.
He appears to have popped the
question almost immediatelyafter meet- 1
ing Miss Eve, and She, without flirta
tion or shyness gave him a kiss and
herself.
Of that first kiss in the world we
have ha 1 our thoughts, however, and
sometimes m a poetical mood wished
we were the man that did it.
But the deed is done,-the chance was
Adam's, and he improved it. We like
the notion of getting married in a gar
den. Adam's was private.
No envious aunts and grumoling
grandmothers The birds of the heav
ens were the minstrnls, and the glad
sky flung its light on the scene.
One thing about the first wedding
b-ings queer tilings to us in spite of
its scriptural truth.
Adam and Eve were rather young
to marry ; some two or three days old
according to the sagest elder ; with
out experience, without a house, a pot
or kettle ; nothing but love and Eden.
A Jones county man who attended
the Macon Fair, and saw a man handle
a swarm of bees, went home and experi
mented with one of his own coveys.—
He tilted the box up so that his wile,
who was at a safe distance, could see
them. Then he tried to put them back,
but this was a failure. Then be en
deavored to shake them off, and this
also appeared to be a failure, for his
wife heard him give a snort, and the
next moment he was tearing through
an orchard of young peach trees, mak
ing as much fuss as a frightened cav
alry company. The place where he
went through the fence looked as if the
band-wagon of a circus had been shot
through it side-ways.
The opium refuge at Shanghai, or
ganized by foreign medical and mis
sionary influence, Has met with so much
welcome from the natives that it is al
ready self-supporting, and many pa
tients are there trying to break from
th; slavery of opium.
()n the-trump—the flea.
The Butter Tree.
There is a free in Africa called the
shea tree, fiom which butter of a most
excellent kind is obtained. It is found
near Ka tba, on the banks of iho Ni
ger. These trees grow in great abund
ance all over that part of Bainbarra.
I hey are not planted by the natives,
but are fund growing naturally in the
wood; and in clearing woodland for
cultivation, every tree is cut down but
the shea. The tree itself very much
resembles the American oak, the fruit
from the kei riel of which, being first
dried in the sun, the butter is prepared
by boiling the kernel in water, lias
somewhat tne appearance of the Span
ish olive. The kernel is enveloped in
a sweet pulp, under a thin green rind,
and the butter produced from it, be
sides the advantage ol ils keeping the
whole year without salt, is whiter and
firmer, and of a richer flavor than the
best butter ever made from cow’s milk.
The growth and preparation of this
article seems to be among the first ob
jects of African industry, and i.t con
stitutes a main .article L >f their inland
commerce.
So Natural.
A boy on a firm in Kentucky, one
day last summer, full to the ground
with exhaustion three times while car
rying an armful of wood from the yard
into the kitchen ; and then he jumped
over the front fence, ran two miles and
a half down the road to catch up with
a traveling circus, fought nearly an
hour with three different nests of bum
ble-bees, went in swimming four times,
ran down a rabbit and treed 2 coons,
made eleven whistles, two bows, and
six pop guns, climbed a tiee one hun
dred and eighty feet high to get u :
crow's nest, lost one suspender, Acre
out the whole after-guard of his pants,
killed a snake four feet long, went al
fishing, set fire to a pile of cord wood J
run a plum thorn through his hand,
had a fight with the boy on the next
farm, was chased by a dog, and got
home to make the painful discovery
that a iarge and select assortment of
new stone bruises on both feet gave
him insupportable agony whenever he
tried to walk just as it was time to go
after the cows.
The Times That Try Men’s Souls.
When he pops the question.
When his wife wants to talk and he
doesn't.
When lie writes to his girl and has
to wait two weeks for a reply
When hash is placed before him five
suee ssive mornings at his boarding
house.
When be p ikes lbs head through his
last clean shirt-and finds do button on
behind.
When be walks twelve miles to sse
his girl and then rinds her out with his
rival
When he buys anew pair of shoes
and discovers two big nails sticking
up in the heels.
When he liurrh s around the corner
and lands square jin the arms of a man
who holds his I. 0. U.
When lie takes his girl out and dis
covers that lie has left Ins pocketbook
in his old trousers.
When he comes home early in the
morning and his wife wants to hold a
little debating society in the lower
hall.
When he goes home at noon, finds
a house full of company, and his wife
blissfully ignorant of the fact that din
ner is not ready.
When in his dreams he is standing
upon the verge of a precipice and his
wife suddenly reminds him that he is
not, but that lie is jerking her “banged
hau•' , all to pieces.
When he dives down into the bot
tom of bis trunk, jerks out what he
supposes is a clean pair of socks, but,
finds only an old table napkin, with
four white neckties, put away for next
summer.
The venerable Richard H. Dana and
the late William Cullen Bryant were
friends iu early life. Tiieir acquaint
ance began with the publication of
“Tlianatopsis." Mr. Dana was ar first
unwilling to believe that any one in
America could have written it, and
when .the author's name we made
public he sought bis acquaintance, and
a friendship began which lasted through
Mr Bryant’s life.
Gratitude toward one's adopted
country is a good thing, but it may be
carried too far. ‘America/ said a Teu
ton, 'is der bestgountry in der vorld.
I haf vailed dree times, und now 1 goes
pack to spend mine vortune mit my
vatnily.*
Stic—“How lovely in the calm still
ness of evening to listen to the ni-rht
in gale's note !" He—“Ye'tb, he’s a
doocid fine fellow is the nightingale ;
but I think he mutht be a beatbly noo
thance to all the other little birdth
that want to thlcep.'
Young writer: Your poem on M he
Flood’ is declined. The lines are too
condensed and the expression is too
constipated. Remember that a de
scription of such a freshet as the last
one should be written iu a .very easy
tlowing style.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
John F. DeLacy.
Attorney at Law,
Eastman, .... Georgii
Will practice in the counties r
DODGE, PULASKI TELFAIH
W.LGOX, DOOLY.' LAURENS
Special attention given to all lh<
branches of the practice
WILLIAM McRAE,
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW,
Eastman ■ - - - <2a.
Will practice in the counties ol the
Oconee circuit: Jy
WILBUR r. KELSEY,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
COCHRAN, GA.
Will practice in Oconee and Brunswick Cir
cuits. Prompt attention given to business.
ROLLIN A. STANLEY.
ATTORN IY-AT-L A W*
DUBLIN, GA.
Will practice iu all the counties of the Oco
nee Circuit. From long experience in the
Criminal Practice, much of his time will be
specially devoted to that branch of his profes
sion. angß’7Btf
O. C. HORNE,
ATTORNIY-AT-LAW
IIAWKINSVILLE, GA,
Will practice in the counties of the Oconee
Circuit and United States Courts of Georgia.
♦
Attorney and 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.
AuFBED HERRINGTON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
HOC NT VERNON, GA.
Will practice in Emanuel, Tattnal and aril
the counties of the Oconee Circuit. Special
attention given to buying, 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
13. IVJ. KOBERTB,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Will practice in the counties of the Oconee
circuit, Appling, Coffee and Wayne of the
Brunswick circuit, and Tatnall of the Middle
circuit; also, iu the United States Circuit court
HARRIS FISHER, Jtt. D.,
PRACTITIONER OF
Medicine, Surgery,
AND OBSTETRICS,
Office at J. Bishop & Cos. ’s Drug Store. Res
idence, Filth avenue.
WALKER & JORDAN,
Physicians&Surgeons
Cochran, Ga.
DR. Y. H. MORGAN.
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN
DRUGGIST,
Cochran, Georgia.
ALSO, DEALER IN
PURE MEDICINES, CHEMICALS,
Perfumeries, Drugs, Paints, Oils,
Toilet Soaps, and all articles sold by druggists
generally. Prescriptions carefully compounded.
HOTELS.
NATIONAL HOTEL,
(Nearly opposite Passenger Depot,)
MACON, ; GMUUUA,
THE Proprietor feeling thankful for the very
liberal patronage he has received for the
last seven months, now begs leave to say that
this
FIRST CLASS HOTEL
Is in perfect order in all its arrangements, and
the most convenient of any in the city, being
only 100 yards from the Passenger Depot of
fice, where are always
ATTENTIVE PORTERS
to receive Baggage and conduct Passengers to
and from the Hotel.
I have made such improvements as to enable
me to accommodate all who may be pleased to
give us a call. My fare shall be as good as
the fare of house in the State, and my terms
reasonable. Call and try us.
E. C. CORBETT. Proprietor.
MARSHALL HOUSE
BROUGHTON STREET,
SAVANNAH, - - - GA.
A. B. LUCE, - - Proprietor
TERMS, $2, $2.50 and $3 per Day,
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DIIO I 520 per dy made by any worker
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uiuei icteipia,
In short everything interesting to ladies.
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DAILY CONSTITUTION.
We Lave few promises to make for Thi
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for itself, and upon that ground the managers
offer it to the punlic as the best, the brightest,
the newsiest, and the most complete daily
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verdict of our leaders, and the verdict of the
most critical of our exchanges, some of whose
opinion.- we tike pleasure iu presenting below.
The managers will lie pardoned for briefly
alluding to some of the features which have
given The Constitution prominence among
southern pipers.
I. It priuts all the news, both by mail aud
telegraph.
11. Its telegraphic service is fuller than that
of any other Georgia paper—its special dis
patches placing it upon a footing, so tar as the
news is concerned, with the metropolitan jour
nals.
111. Its compilation of the news by mail is
the treshest of the best, comprising everything
of interest in the current newspaper liteiature
of the day.
IV. Its editorial department is full, bright
and vivacious, and its paragraphs aud opinions
are more wide,ly quoted than those of any
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public interest, and touches upon all current
themes
V. “Bill Arp” the most genial of humorists,
will continue to contribute to its columns. “Old
Si” and “Uncle Remus” will work in their
special fields, and will furnish fun both in
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Steadily advancing toward the position of a
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ard withal most liberal of southtrn journals.—
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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
cational, temperance, and general news arti
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,
By Marie Duval,
f. pious and gifted young lady of the “Piney
Woods,” will be commence' in its columns on
Friday, January 3, 1879. This story will run
through several months, alter which other se
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Eveiy Family in the “Piney
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em OKT?
■ BLACKWELL'S |1 J
M DURHAM ■■
TOBACCO
April 18, 1878. 15-ly
A giBB a Mid Morphine hshltrnred.
J : 1 ak#S Th 'Orlglnalionir
B ISj a Cl IS !*e i for book
H BU3 SWB Opium Katin*, to W A Squirt
W B ■ KW H WuKbiagwa, Green* Ce„ lad.
April tB, 1878. 15-ly
PRESCRIPTION FREE!
For the speedy Cure of Seminal 1\ eaknesa. Lost
Manhood and all disorders brought on by indis
cretion or excess. Any Druggist has the ingre
dients. Or. W. JAQIEM * CO., No. 1M
West Sixth Street, (Tnolunatt, ©.
April 18,1878. 15-ly
job prikthtg
ESTABLISHMENT.
We are now prepared to fill all order
for every description of
JOB PRINTING
at short notice and exceedingly Joe
rates.
%
WE PRINT
BOOKS,
MINUTES,
BYLAWS,
PAMPHLETS,
CATALOGUES,
HANDBILLS,
PROGRAMMES,
BALL TICKETS,
TAGS,
LABELS,
DODGERS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
WEDDING CARDS,
VISITING CARDS,
CIRCULARS,
AND ENVELOPES
BALL,
WEDDING,
CLUB and
PICNIC
INVITATIONS,
PROGRAMMES OF
DANCES, Ac.,
LETTER HEADS,
NOTE HEADS,
BILL HEADS,
STATEMENTS,
LAW BLANKS,
ETC., ETC., ETC.
ESTIMATES
Promptly n?nt by Mail on any work in
our line.
THE
EASTMAN TIMES
will be sent, post-paid, to any part of
the United States, for one year,
on receipt of
Only Two Dollars.
ja. y pjijifjt,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR,
Eastman, Dodge Co*
GEORGIA.
. T " t