Newspaper Page Text
Hie -Explosion of the Westfield.
r'l-om longer dispatches id the West-
pujicrti we hike tho following inci-
apd 6
near theCfiDH were drowned. The
The firemen niLcame to the rescue,
and right bravely ye in a row-boat
ttvt/f non.ed vicrors nral lives.
The debris'in the fore pancue,
hold was first removed. The erica,
the poor half-boiled victims were
heard rending the ah - . Stimulant was
given them as they struggled beneath
the beams and oil 'was poured npon
their, bums. As fast ns the wounded
recovered they were borne to the deck
of another ferry boat moored alongside;
they were tenderly eared for bv Dr.
HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL
BY J. T. WATERMAN.
J. T. WATERMAN,
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING,
Still Ahead of All Competition ! ! !
PpHOS. WYNNE’S
Improved Open-throat, Curved-breast,
Double X, Self-ribbed-cleaning-seed, Pre
mium and Diploma
Cotton Gins,
EDWIN !Y5. BROWN,
Atttoraey at Law,
FORT TALLEY, GA.,
Will practise in all the Courts of.theMa-
con Circuit, and in' others by special con
tract ' jan!9-tf
‘Thy, don’t yonknow that Redmohd
0'Hanlon's on this road?’
. ‘Redmond O’Hanlon, is -it,’-says
Jerry. ‘Ugh! That for Redmond
O’HimlonPsnapping his fingers.■‘Faia;^
Jerry the Fool is a match for half -a
dozen of the likes of him, any day'
hi the week, and Sunday into bar
gain?’
Th e stranger laughed, and then rode
on in silence, till they came to a very,
lonely part of the road; when he drew
a brace of pistols, and told' Jerry to
hand over all the mouety he had-about'
him, or he’d try if he had any brains
by sen ding a couple of bullets through
hishead.
‘Media MurtkerF roars Jerry, in a
tone of surprise and lright ‘You
don’t mean to say your honor’s Red
mond O’Hanlon?’
‘I do,' indeed- So hand over, my
man, and look sharp about it.’.
‘But, faix, its kilt entirely by the
master Fll be, if I go home without the
rint.’ _
‘■What’s that to. me?, said O’Han-
lonl -
‘Anyhow,’ said Jerry, ‘I must show
them that I had a murdering fight for
it. Perhaps your honor wouldn’t mind
firing a shot-through my old beaver,’
O’Hanlon did so laughing at the trick.
‘And now another through the
breast of iny coat and Heaven bless
you.’ This was done. ‘Row, just one
in the skirt of it, and good luck to
your honor.’
‘But I’ve discharged both my. pis
tols. arid don’t want the trouble of
loading them again for you.’’
‘Faix, I should dearly like a shot
through the? skirt; it would , show I
fought dcsjierate. Are you sure your
honor hasn’t another pistol in your
pocket that you wouldn’t mind firing
for a poor boy’s sake?’
‘Confoundyou! To be sure I havn’t.
Hand oyer the money, or Fll beat you
to jelly with my horsewhip.’
. ‘Well,’ says Jerry, after a good deal
of fumbling, ‘I suppose, considering
the trouble I’ve had in collecting, the
rents, your honor won’t mind the little
bother of going over the hedge after
them?’
And he threw over a sack Apparent
ly filled with coin. ”
As when in low and mournful tone,
I heard them softly say,
Of one so young and beautiful,..
“She’s dead— she’s passed' away,”
These words' Ml heavy on- my ear; . .
I called them o’er and o’er,. '
Yet could not realize their truth,
Bat wondered more and more
If I were not the victim
Or some strange—unhappy dream,
So painful were the solemn words,
"So mystic did they seem,
I went with sad and heavy heart,
Where death’s appealing knell
Had sounded its mysterious note
To bid a long farewell,
To one so early “called away”
From friends and happy home,
To ornament a brighter world,
Above the azure dome.
I heard the mother’s bitter sigh,
A liunsband’s mournful groan,
Asister’s load and thrilling cry,
A brother’s pensive moan;
I gazed upon'the lifdess form,
The cold and placid face, -
Yet could not realize that there
I saw the only trace
Of one, whose heart the day before,
Had heat as quick as mine,
Now stilled, hy, the mysterious hand
Of Providence divine.
I followed to the sacred spot,
Where towering cedars wave,
And saw the coffin slowly placed,
Within a new-made grave.
’Twas nottill then I'realized
The truth of what they said,
That one so dear had “passed away,”
That Nettie Cox was dead.
As thoughtfully I turned aside;
Unwillingly to leave,
X cdulclbut drop, a silent tear
For those still left to grieve;
Yet thought the grave so newly made,
Was but a painful sign, •
To tell us, that another soul
Knelt ’round the “Heavenly Shrine.”
E.-B. A
Morgan county, July 20.%, 1871.
Manufactured by
TJIOS. TFPNY2?,' near Bel Air, Richmond
■ County, 6a.
Short Staple Gin, with attached circle-flue.
Upland Long and Short Staple Gin, with
' attached circle flue.
Common Bibbed Gin, with same attach
ment.
pSr All Sizes Made to Order. ml8-3
H. M. HOLTZCLAV - /,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
PERRY, GEORGIA
One Year,... $2 SO
Six Months, 1 50
Three Months, 1 00
The paper will be stopped at the expira-
BUFORD M. DAVIS,
Attorney a,-t Law,
PERRY, GEORGIA,
Will practise in aH the Courts of thejda-
con Circuit, and in othersby special con
tract ... jan26'
Is the place tofuy Pi
also
$20,000 offered for New Subscribers
The Atlanta Constitution.
c. c. DUNCAN
W. A. Hemphill & Co.. Prou’rs.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
!0X PRICES.
had not been sufficiently hnmbled.—
One of my little sons, who was about
twelve years old, replied, ‘Madam;
how canyon expect anything but bit
terness when we rememberhow we have
been treated? When I think about
their .sending my mother and my
brother here and tuming-us loose in
the swamps of Arkansas, I hate, them,
and always shall. . The Yankees sent
us out of 'Memphis without any cloth
ing or food, away from any house, for.
no reason except that, father was in
the army.’
‘Mrs. Sherman looked up in surprise,
and remarked, Sonny, who could have
been so cruel?’
‘Why, Gen; Sherman; he is the very
man who did it, and Lj’shall. always
hate liiin for it.’
.‘If a shell had burst; it cotdd not
have created greater consternation and
confusion.
‘I did not say a word, and, in fact,
not another word was spoken until we
reached the hotel When. I had gone
t o my room, I said, ‘Son, did you know
the lady to whom you were talking in
the omnibus?’
‘No, sir.’
■Well, I suppose you didn’t, for that
was Mr. Sherman’s wife.
‘He replied, ‘Father, I only told her
the truth, and I am glad of.it.’
‘In a short time afterwards, an offi
cer in. FederaL-uniform called at my
room, and stated that Gen. Sherman
desired me to render my bill. I re
plied, ‘I have no. bilL’. He inristed,
I declined. Gen. Sherman then call
ed in person, and insisted in a very
peremptory manner, whicli I as strict
ly declined, stating to him, ‘General, I
have no bill; I am only too glad to. be
revenged for the manner in winch
yon treated my wife and children.—
'When I was far away, and they, had no.
protector, for no other reason than be
cause my wife sympathized, with the
cause in which I was engaged,, you
drove them out into the woods- to
starve.
Daily, per annum,
“ six months,
Weekly, per annum,
Payable in A dvan ce.
The Great aSedicai Discovery S
Dr. t7A.LSE2’3 CALIPOItNIA
VINEGAR BITTERS,
s§ Hundreds of Thousands _
uZ Bear testimony to their Wondcr- ^
o o ful Curative Effects. — g *3'
|| s’ WHAT ARE THEY?!g
Advertisements discontinued from any
cause, before the time specified, will be
charged 'only for the .time published.
Notices of a personal or private character,
intended to promote any private enterprise
or interest,-, will he charged as other adver-
tiseinents.
Advertisers are requested to hand in their
favors as early inthe week as possible.
tre street Hospital Five of them
died witlrin an hoar. The scenes hero
were -heart Tending. Twelve dead
bodies were removed. from the boat.
Four" have since been found in the
water, and-five died, .making, so far ns
known, 21 persons killed nearly out
right- Many of those in the water
dung to tiie piles until they were res
cued, but others sank . before aid
cotdd reach-them. At least 35 persons
-must-have been killed and - drowned.
This is basing it on the lowest esti
mates. The wounded will "reach 100.
Many of them were, placed in carriages
and driven to tlieir homes. The drug
stores jjp the neighborhood were filled
with them. Among , the injured was
Sheriff Madden, of . Brooklyn, who
was driven to his residence. .
CROWDS OF SPECTATOBS*
Over 35,000 persons gathered at the
battery in fifteen minutes., after tho
explosion.
THE OFFICERS OF THE BOAT.
John-Mnger-the pilot, was .thrown
from the .forward pilot- house twenty
.feet-in the.air,- falling on the boat and
escaping without a scratch! Jno. Free
hand was captain of the boat,.and Har
ry Robinson engineer. The latter is a
colored man, ahcL the. indignation
of the passengers against him is tre
mendous, thong^ his friends claim he
is not to.blame. The boiler was in
spected by John .Mathews, United
States boiler, inspector, on the 15th of
June, : and pronounced safe.
According to the statement of the
engineer the boiler had been in uso
nine years, and was patched, on tho
cylinder part.. .One . of the firemen
says that;fifteen minutes before the ac
cident he was on the head ofthe cylin -
def wiping it.off, and then went. into
one of the cabiits for a drink of water,
and thence td the fire-room. "While
there he heard ahfasingnoiseproceed-
ing from the rear of the boiler, and
went to sec the cause. He had gone
but about half way of the length of
the boiler' when lie found the steam so
dense that he could proceed uo further,
and turned to comeback, when he was
struck in tlfe face by flying splinters,
and knocked down. He made his way
to the deck as fast as possible. This
hissing noise which Crosson heard
must have been the starting of the
plate of patching on the boiler, and
the first premonition of the impend
ing disaster. A cursory examination
of the boiler as it rested in the bottom
of the boat revealed the fact that the
explosion occurred at the rear, and
that a piece about four feet long and
two feet wide was tom out of the jacket
and thrown a distance of about 100
feet on the deck at the barge office.
Another and a larger portion of the
boiler was thrown directly forward into
the bow of the boat.
THrWAYTO
•Obituaries of more than ten lines-will be
■charged for at regular advertising rates.
Transient. advertisements must he paid-
for in advance.
Job work must be paid for on delivery.
Is tc/buy your Goods .at tie
--“ Set asido a liberal percentage for adver
tising. Keep yourself.unceasingly before
the public; and it matters not what business-
you are engaged in, for, if intelligently, and
industriouSy pursued, a fortune WiU.be the
’result’’—Hunt's Merchants’ Magazine.
“After ! began .to advertise my Ironware
He will spend the first half of each
uiontli in his office in Perry over the
old Drug Store, and one fourth, or the
latter half of each mouth will be given
to his practice n Hawldnsvaiie at Mrs.
Hudspeths.
CHEAPEST AM) BE!
GROCERY HOUSE.
freely, business mcreased witli amazing rii-
piility. For tern yearn past I have spent
£30,000 yearly, to keep iny superior wares
before thepublic. . Had I been timid in ad
vertising, I should never have possessed my
.-fortune, of £350,000.”—McLeod Belton,
.Birmingham.
“Advertising, like Midas' touch, turns
everything to gold: By it yoiir daring men
draw millions to their coffers.”—iiinart
d sweetened i
♦,**“ Appetizer
e tippler on \
true 2ilcdic:nc
drbo of Oaiifo;
IviiY B08YTakes It!
Our Goods come in evejy
day, fresh.
The Fool and the Highwayman,
Never heard of Redmond O’Hanlon,
the Irish highway robber? Well, that’s
surprising. Your English Turpins and
French Duvals couldn’t hold a candle
to our highwayman. But for all his
shrewdness he met his match once,
arid Fll tell you how it was;
"Redmond was a fine, strapping, gen
tlemanly fellow, and a devoted admi-
rei’pf the-ladies—as where is the Irish
man that is not? and what is more a
friend , to tho poor; as you’ll admit
when I tell you that his demands for
cash were only made on persons who
could-well afford to meet' them, and
tnat he delighted in forcing contribu
tions from those who had the name of
hard'landlords to their .tenants. There
was one of this class who Redmond
never lost an opportunity of taxing—
for that was the polite name he gave
to his own robberies. Every quarter-
day, this gentleman, or one of his ser
vants— sometimes more than one used'
to take a journey of six or seven miles
to collect his rents, and as regular as
clockwork there was Redmond O’Han
lon, with some stont companions, if
necessary* to waylay the collector as
he returned home..: Every means was
used to elude him, but to no purpose.
.rryins off all i.olc-ov.oaatat
blood to :: iu aliby co jdtl
;o T.icso Bi s . tors accoriJi ij
-In Ion’s Haw II.
v-uiltory mi ! Chronic
;i (ioa:, i); . <»
i:o::s, Itcaeitt cut li'.ul
ly filled with coin. Half laughing,
half angry, the highwayman—first
at Jerry with bis whip which
aiming
he avoided by ducking—dismounted,
and climbed over the hedge, and no
sooner had he done so than Jerry
slipped off the old hack and mounted
O’Hanlon’s horse.
‘Bad scran to you, Redmond O’Han
lon!’ he bawled. ‘Didn’t I tell yoti
Jerry the Fool was a match for a. doz
en of you? Its a sack of brass but
tons you’re gone over the hedge after,
yon thief of the world!’ And touching ■
the fine mare with the spur, he gab-
loped off, singing at the top of his
voice the old melody, ‘Go to the mis-
O’Hanlon
Our Stock is Large and wtj!
Selected.
“AViat audacity is to love and boldness
to wav, tlie skillful use of. printer’s ink is to
.success in'business.’’—Henry Ward Beecher.
“ The -newspapers- made FLU.”—Jamas
Fifk, Jr.
- “ Without tlie aid .61 advertisements, I
could have done nothing in luy speculii-
tious.' I hav4'-ths-most complete frutli in
printer's ink. Advertising is the royal 1‘oad
ito business.”—P. T. Biiruum:
aa c.iat'c-l £jj V'llart - !! Bt.
:v:iUy jav-anesa by. cleransun
. (Copyright, secured.)
•tatlouB
■ means are ample to fc-
cbiTjmodate on timei 1
iu trtcrcjfiouo of iho Kitlaeys.and
• pAialal symptoms, s.ta t!»o off-
tl the Stomaoli anri slimalaic the
bov.'cls, •.vL-Ich rentier llism of un-
f j , Use biood of all
imparting- new life aad vigor to
We are satisfied witKSm
/ Profits. /
TrnptionV.Tetter,
.fi, PinipUs, Pustulosr
•ms, 3cg1 .i-IIeud,iSore
•:'s, i>;s joioratior.3 of
i fuses oftlic Skin,joi"
ars iitcraliy dug. np
-.a iu a tshors time lr.
Or.c .bottle in such
t incredulous of tlieir/
EE22S3S3Z
chief and shake yonrself I’
couldn’t pursue him on the hack; the
cute fool had made him discharge his
pistols. There was nothing for it but
walk away, -cursing his own stupidity;'
and ever after, if any one wanted to
provoke him, they had only to ask him
when be had last seen Jerry the
FooL ■
STE A^I SASH EACTOItl
WOOD! WOOD!
I have had it in my r power io,
aid materiafiy in restoring .your wife
Tto healtii, and probably in saving her
life. The fact-that you know who I
am is all the .bill I shall ever send.’
‘At dinner a servant came to our,
table, and placing a glass at my plate
audat tiie plate of ; aich of my sons;
returned with a .bottle ofvine,. and
filling my glass stated that ‘Gen. Sher
man requested the privileges of a glass
on wine.’ He was proceeding to fill
my sons’ glasses, when the elder,
placed his hand over the glass and
said, ‘Never. ’
Ulumors
.Tlifi TTmloroigned Arnuia inform the citizonR of
Perry that Lg if now. prnravotl to fnvnisb wood of
vriv Mud a-'.ul.ii! any delivered in Perry,
iw cheap sl< can be bought from anybody. Orders
may be left at the. ClerL's . office, in the Court
House.- GEO. H. WHITE.
JMAC OX, GA.
5C the Vitiated Blood whcn2Teryou.1lu/
arttiesbnrKt.ng’ through* the fkin in?\p
rup.yons or Sores-fcicrmce it >rhea re-'
(fhritrnelcd and FlurgiSli in the
it when it ia ford, and your Jfeelings Afls '
.1 when. Keep the blood pure an4 t»'
jf the Hy3tem will foil wf. 7
T A PF. ar.il other \V$} 113£.*?. lunung i*
of g'j :r«anv ilisnsa^ds, ar^c^tnali
~1-SU !r.-uoved. Tor f-lKBroeltoai, rca
- .-ircMiftr nrphiftl cac'tbi’t.e.
---VI, Sarai-W. r.I n. n./ioxAi-r. -
ime, ... Agents FrnneiK
- Ul-C«»w« Stw. - /.-N?w
. - ,Y> nn.-vi.K;.
And we want yoi
Tl,ird St. ne.d to Ariope's Marhle l ard,
Jean fill sniall. orders for Lumber, to be cleliv-
efcd'iu^EeriT. at-marker priees. aud \yin nmm be
■able to furnish it In any quantity, larse or small.
GEO. If. vymi’E.
IFroin the Iaurensvillo Hsrald.]
A Ncble Eevenge on Shenuan.
DOORS,
; SASH, r - - :-
BLINDS,
' ‘ •• .MOULDINGS,
‘ ; ■ BRACKETS
And oil kinds of Builcfin^MateKais.
Sppcud;attantion given Jo the building.o
Cottage find public Houses. Rough -ana
Brdssed Lumber always on hand,' Send us
your orders. Salif action guaranteed.
mufl-if Ak- H C. WILBER fcSON.-
FOR SALE.
.TWO FIXE HOESES aud OXK GOOD MULE,
imlvto GEO. H, WHITE.
Sold by Dr. J. C. GILBERT, Peny.
ing for the rents, he swore at O'Han- ‘In and Out ofthe lanes.’The last nnm- Sioxs akd Tokens.—The Gridiron.
Ion, and said he didn’t see the use of ber, in which she describes the dest To take down, the, gridiron from the
collecting money to hand it over to traction .of: Oassville, recalls forcibly nail where.it is hanging, with the left.
him. to my mind the feeling I had in Sep- hand, is'a sign that there will he a
Now this gentlemaq had on his es- tember, when.I saw the thousands of broil in the kitchen. .
tote a boy called “Jerry the Fool,” helpless and sick women and children The Mirror.—If a inirror is broken
who had the run of the house and at Lovejoy’s, who had been driven out itia a sign that a good-looking-glass
made fun for the family. He had a of Atlanta and tumbled out of the -will be missed iq that house. °
great conceit for himself, andwhenhe edrs without food and witiiout any
heard what the niaster said,; he inime- friendly, face to appeal to. I was des- - R !t . nf
diately asked to be allowed to go after cribing the scene to an old army '
the rente for once, and' declared He friend whom Ihadnqt seen for some ® ... ° ,° Se . a
would know the-way tobrihgthem years, andhetoo, hadliis story^to containing gieonjacs is un
safe home. Of course he was only relate , of Sherman’s barbarity, and ncJs Y - .
laughed at; but when he represented the sweet revenge that came to. him Nails. If a woman cuts her nails
that no harm would come from trying, not long after the war was over. Said every Monday it is lucky for her hus-
as he couldn’tdono worsethanall who: he:’ --- . ; t - - .band.
had gone before him, the master agreed ' Twas a surgeonjn-the Confederate Roosters.—II you hear a. rooster
to .humor him. Upon that, Jerry army. When I left Memphis to join crow when you are in bed, and the
made such-preparations as" he thought thearmyT was obliged, o'f course, to clock strikes a.few times at the same
suitable, chose the wotet horse in the leave my wife and, two littIef;boys, instant, it is a sign of mo(n)ming.
stable-yan old . hack hilf blind and; who ware then aged respectively five
three-quarters lame—and started on and seven, to take care, of themselves,
his. enterpris. Nothing, qccdrreff ? on I devoted/myself, great -eamesfc-
tiie way. He collected a considerable ness to the canse, and my wife Hire
amount of money, . carefully'disposed other Southern women, sympathized
it about Iiis person, and.started home- with me. I gained,.I suppose, some
ward. Toward evening, as he was little prominence,-as my wife and the
quietly jogging along oh the old hack, children were singled out. by Shenhan,
and was jnst entering a long lane with when he occupied Memphis,'for espe-
high -hedges on each ride, a tell, fine ciri. hate. - He had them sent over the
looking man.Tode np to him on a Mississippi .river and.turned adrift in
Perrons TVsntoe hauling an r kind thine, can
be ac-enjumodated atreasunable rates, by ealluig on
febm-tf . - . GEO. H. WHITE.
Our Te»fns are CASH, or
/Draft on tjme.
!R, TlNSLEy & CO
Macon, Ga.
Millinery & Dress Ha;Mii!
Fancy Goods, Notions,
Trimnungs, &s*
All Work done in-the very best style, and
itisfection gnaranteed. Terms reasona-
le. Give, me a ril at my new store, re-
-A Newspaper, of tlio Present Times.
Intended for People Now on Earth,
Tnelnaing Farmers, Mechanics, Merchants, Pro,.'
JtMtonal Men, Workers, Thinkers, and ail'l Man.
aer of Honest Folks, and tho Wives, Sens, and
Latte titers of all such.
OH IF ONE DOLLAR A YEAH J
ONE HUNDRED COPIES FOR S50,
Or leu than One .Cent a Copy. Let there be a
850 Clnb at every Post Office.
BEMI-WEEKLV SDN, 8S A YEAR,
Of the same size and general character as
.THE WEEKLY, but -with & greater variety ol
miscellaneous riding, and furnishing the news
to its subscribers with greater freshness, because
it mine* twice a week instead of once only.
THE DAILY SUN, SG A YEAR.
A pwSmlnsntlv readable newspaper, with tho
lareeat circulation in the world. Free, inde
pendent, and fearless ia polities. All.the news
from everywhere. Two cents a copy; by mail,
50 cents a month, or 86 a year.
TERMS TO CLUBS.. ^
THE DOLLAR WEEKLY SDN.
Five copies, one year,
Ten copies, one year, separately addressed (and
an extra copy to the getter up of club). „
Eicht Dollars.
Twenty copies, one year, separately addressed
(and an extra copy to the getter np of clnb).
Fifteen Dollars,
fifty copies, one year, to one address tsnd the
£eml- weekly one year to getter np of club),
Thirty-three Dollars.
Fifty copies, one 7ear, separately addressed (and
the Semi-weekly one year to getter no of clnb),
- V Thirty-five Dollars.
One hundred copies, one year, to one address
(and the Daily for one year to the getter np ol
clnb). Fifty Dollars.
One hundred copies, one year, separately ad-
dressed (and the Daily for one year to toe vettei
up of clnb), Sixty Dollars.
THE SEMI-WEEKLY SDN.
FivecopIea,oncyear.iieparatd^ddr««£ aM<
Ten copies, one year, separately addressed (and
an extra copy to getter up of dab),
tUxteen Dollars#
SEND YOUR MONEY
In Post Office orders, checks, or drafts on Ksw
York, wherever convenient., if not, tnen registet
the letters containing money. Address ..,-5
< L W.EfGL^D.Pnblhber.
The name of Seven-Up is claimed
by a new.town in Iowa. It is fanciful
and pretty, and suggestive.
A London jeweler has been fivo
years at work on a watch, and it will
be worth 810,000 when finished.
John Habtek, of Saratoga, the
owner of “Longfellow,” fa the man
who plays on a harp of a (hundred)
thousand strings.
A Minnesota man has agents ant
along the Cedar and DesMoines rivers
gathering ginseng, and expects to Ship
250,000 pound.-, of the root to China
this year.
During Lot year 9-10,000,000 letters
passed through the post offices of
Great Britain, and of the whole num
ber Only 27,000 were alleged to be
lost.
Two firms in Natick, Mars., annu
ally consume the skins of two. thous
and horses iu providing envelopes for
the balls used in ihe great national
game.
The Washington Capital fa discuss
ing the momentous question: “Shall
we have a.bettor White House to put
our President in, or a better President
to put in our White House.”
Calais Maine fa a nice plaae for
young men to go to. The tocal paper
there says that two thirds of tbewealtk
of the town fa to be inherited by the
young girls. The rich men do mot
have sons.
Hatt Caps,' Boots, "Shoes, Hardware,
•' Sails, Drags, Patent Medicines,
Ac., EC,,
All of which will he sold very low forCifafi,
CBEDITBAS PLAYEB OUT.
; He;|s drily-receivh^ ; :
ALL' THE GOOB. THINGS : OF THE ;
SEASON.
j -Bhchas put down' Sie prices'to suit the
fimri Gall on him and yoit cannot fail to
be suited. dec28-tf
-WHiSHIP & BRO., Atlanta, Ga.
i printXtoretolly edibd jotiriiai; eadi" issue
contaius an average of ’ "
Thirty Columns of Reading. Matter
It co'mmenas-itseUpafticaiirlyto'ttose
not • enjoy^the facilities of a &uly ma* uuL
acsireto have the currentneivs ofthe day <u
cheap, compact and reliable.form. . ■/
Thh WEEKLY is made ^_-wiai great . P^a
discrim'iiatiau, and coiitauis ube cruau?'
Daily. Elitiou ofthe MOKMNG NEVS S . “
it contains, commend it to all aemre _a-
first-dassfamily-newspaper. . * .
Tlie Weeldv will be sent one ves/to any add^s
Tor *2 00; six months, $1 i.»J. ' - t
Address ; i :- ■'/' j.to Eynii. -
Savannali, Cvcer^ia.-
.Idffle. Thorns.
COTTOd* FACTORS, MAC0X. GA.
rcntleman;-.. ; a - • they had on, and issued orders Ijiai | (,'wn di'aws blood from many
‘God save yonr.honorl’r replied Jer- any boat, which should dare to take ; a ltc-artwlriclx would defy the battle-
•y. ; ! them down ihe river would be confis- j ; ,v 0 of hatred or the keenest edge of
What’s jour name, my man?’ asked j c-ated. There they remained in that i vindictive satire. Nay, the shade, the
he gentleman. | state o: anxiety that you can imagine, ; gloom of the face familliar and dear,
‘Jerryriie-Feol,-and I ain’t ashamed i until they were found by an. old faini- awakens grief and pain. These are
jf it. What's yours?’ ' | ly negro who had managed to elude- the-; the little thorns, whieh, though men
.The gentleman took no notice of the j sentinels in order to go to their relief, 1 0 f rougher form may make their way
question. After a while he says, ‘That’s j By this old negro’s efforts they wore ; through fern without feeling them
j fine animal you’re riding, Jerry? j conveyed down the river to another ; much, extremely incommode persons
‘Faith, I'm glad your honor likes landing, and atone o’clock the next; oi'ssp^ne refined turn in ilieir journey
it,’ said Jerry; ‘but it isn’t myself j morning were taken oh board- of a • tiiS^^Gife, and make their traveling
tiiat’d care to-hike a. lease of his life: ! steamer whose captain had been ap-; j^^^^and unpleasant.
A Hearty- Old Yirgiam Welcome
Awaits yon at
HEWiTT'8 GLOBE- HOTEL,
' \ ' AUGUSTA, GA.,y
G. HEWITT, Proprietor. -
AT J. C. GILBERT'S BR1TG STOKE,
dec 28-tf " -
asaTtONTViNr’S .•bco'eeti
Opposite Passenger Depot,
MACON, GA.,
W. F. BROTTN & CO., Proprietors,
Fbkd. A. Richauds, Clerk.
Window Glass and Putty