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THETHOMASTON HERALD.
CJ IIAH. G . 15 EAR CE,
EDITOK AND PROPRIKTOB
TIIOMASTON, GA., DEC. 17,1870.
Tin* TIIOMASTO.V HERALD ha* a Large
< iicir lutioit in l p*on, Pike, Meriwether,
Talbot, Spalding, Monroe, Bibb, Muscogee
a ml Butt*.
FOR OOVOBK9S-FOUITII DISTRICT.
HON. W. J. LAWTON,
OF 8188.
FOR STATE SENATOR— 2Sth DISTRICT,
WILLIAM P. MATHEWS,
OF TALBOT.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE—UPSON COUNTY.
NON. .TOTTTV X. NAIN,.
NOMINATIONS FOB ( OXGitESS.
First District—A. T. Mclntyre.
“ “ W. W. Pa : ne, list Congress.
Second District—Nelson Tift.
Third District—William F. Wright.
Fourth District—Winbnrn J. Lawton.
Fifth District—D. M. Du Bose.
S. 11. Corker, 41« t Congress
Sixth District—William I*. Price.
Seventh District—Pierce M. B. Young.
WATCII THE BALLOT BOXES!
Sec that they are clear before tho
voting begins, and that no tampering
"with them is allowed during the day.
Lord Bacon said more than two
hundred and fifty years ago : “ Usu
ry bringeth the treasure of the realm
into a few hands." We know not
what the wise man would have said
of the present usurious system of the
United States Goveonrncnt. It is said
that the great mass ot the property
of England is owned by less than three
hundred thousand men. Let the
present system go on in this country
twenty years, and almost the entire
property of the land will be in the
hands of less than one hundred thous
and men.
VOTE FOR "COL. LAWTON
And thereby vote for common hon
esty and the interest of the common
people.
A NOBLE FELLOW.
In connection with an extract in
another part of this page, we copy
the following from the Constitution
in relation to our candidate for Rep 0
rcsentative:
John I. Hall, having been nomin
ated by the Democracy of Upson
county for the Legislature, and some
dissatisfaction having been expressed
thereat, he publishes a card offering
to re-submit the matter to the democ'
racy, or do anything that will unite
the party, and secure the people’s
interest.
A noble fellow, this, and worthy of
imitation. And a stunning rebuke
to those whose resolute. desire for
office will be gratified, though it de
feat the party and injure the coun°
try.
All honor to Hall.
VOTEeTrLY !
When your vote is safely deposi
ted in the ballot box, there is no
danger that it will be lost by acci
dent or forgetfulness. Vote Early.
COL. W. J. LAWTON.
Our candidate for Congress is a
strong man, in every sense of the
word. lie is able, energetic and de
termined, yet modest and unpreten
tious. He is a true Southerner—his
interests are indissolubly bound up
with our State. Originally educated
for the bar, he was a successful
practitioner of law for twelve years
in the middle and eastern Circuits of
Georgia—from 1830 to 1861. In
181*2-3 represented Scriven county in
the representative branch of the Leg
islature. From 1815 7he was in the
Senate from the Bth district. Again,
in 1819 he was a Representative of
Scriven county, and in 1850 was
elected a member of the Constitution
al Convention from that county. In
1855 he represented Dougherty
in the State Senate.
Democrats! if you would be rep
resented at Washington by one of
intelligence, culture and wealth, vote
for Col. Lawton.
REMEMBER THEM.
‘ l I wish the Southern leaders were
in the penitentiary of Hell guarded
by bayonets.”— The late Thad. Steph
ens, Radical member from Pennsyl
vania.
“The Southern people are the most
blood-thirsty in the world,” — A. J.
Hamilton , late Radical Gov. of Texas.
Will you vote to sustain such men
as these ?
RADICALISM.
\ote to destroy the party of offi
cial corruption, high taxes, extrava
gance, and high tariff.
PROPHETIC.
“If these fanatics and abolitionists
ever get power into their hands, they
will override the Constitution, set the
Supreme Court at defiance, change
and revise laws to suit themselves ;
finally they will bankrupt, tho coun
try, and deluge it with blood.”— Dan*
iel Webster.
Ilow literally has this remarkable
prophecy of an intellectual giant
been fulfilled. The Radicals have
indeed set all law at defiance,
overridden the Constitution, &c. Not
on’y this, bnt in their infamous at
tempts to acquire and retain power,
they have disregarded the plainest
dictates of justice and decency.
They have filled the land with the
weeping widows and orphans of
thousands of slaughtered men ; im
posed onerous taxation upon a suffer
ing people; elevated irresponsible
and ignorant men to office ; elected a
partizan administration ; paralyzed
our commerce; created a large stand
ing army ; voted away millions and
millions of acres of land to specula-*
tors; disfranchised intellegent white
men solely for political effect, and
enfranchised a race of semi-barbari
ans to make perpetual the rule
of the dominant party; rolled up
a national debt that may never be
pai I. These are only a few of the
numberless curses inflicted upon our
once happy country by the ascenden
cy of a sectional, party.
Lmless the sovereign people rise in
their might, and throw off the yoke
fastened about their necks by this
despotic party, the foundations of
our government will be undermined,
all our sacred rights as freemen
filched from us, and what is knovvn
as American Liberty will exist only
in name, and in the eyes of the
world will be simply a magnificient
mockery. As surely as night follows
day, the continuance of Radicalism
will bring anarchy and destruction.
REMEMBER THE DAYS.
The citizens of Georgia will be
called upon to vote on Tuesday, Wed
nesday and Thursday, the 20th, 21st
and 22nd of this month.
From the columns of The True
Georgian, we clip the following edi
torial remarks in reference to the
action of our candidate for Represen
tative, in expressing his willingness
and desire to pursue such a course as
will tend to strengthen and unite the
Democracy:
The Right Spirit.—Mr. John I. Hall
having been nominated by the De
mocracy of Upson county for the
Legislature, and some dissatisfaction
having been expressed thereat, he
publishes a card offering to re submit
the matter to the Democracy, or do
anything that will unite the party,
and secure the people’s interest.
This is the right spirit. To place
country above self shows the true
spirit of moral heroism. Such men
are an honor to the party and to the
country. Let this spirit predominate
during the campaign, and the tri
umph of Democratic principles in the
Empire State of the South is as cer
tain as that the sun rises in the east.
Action and unity must govern our
people.
WHERE THE MONEY GOES.
Twenty thousand dollars were paid
for legal services by the present Gov
ernor of Georgia, out of a fund from
which he had no right to draw it.
HOW WE ARE TAXED.
The highest financial authority in
England, the London Economist,
says of the American system of tax
ation : “Every sort of industry—
almost every kind of available and
conspicuous act —is seized upon and
taxed. — A ninety-ninth part of this
interference in England would have
caused a rebellion." It must be re
membered too, that at least one-halt
of our taxes are made necessary by
the extravagance of Congress and its
determination to Africanize the
South. The English people are no
smarter than our own, but they cer
tainly have more spirit.
nexTweek.
Democrats of Georgia. If you
will give next week to the good work,
and get out the full strength of the
party, all our candidates can be
elected. Shake off all apathy, and on
next week work ! work !! work !!!
ONE*VOTE!
May elect the Democratic candi
date in your senatorial or representa
tive district. See that every availa
ble vote is secured and that not one
is lost through negligence.
The Atlanta papers publish a full
list of the managers of election, for
all the counties in the State. We
have not room for the entire list, but
give the appointments for a number
of the counties.
Upson. County —Allen J. Williams,
Josph Allen, Guilford Speer, James
Bell, Charles 11. Corbin.
Harris County —Rolar and A. Russell,
James 11. Huey, J. C. Beall, Albert
Hall, Aaron McAfee.
Crawford CoUnty-&. P. Culver
house, Josiah Ililsman, Eugene W al
ton, Harvey Lacklayer, Austin Per
sons.
Bibb County —W. Krzyzanowski,
J. C. Swavze, Willis Epps, W. Lee
Ellis, W. P. Goorlall.
Monroe County— Monroe Clower,
Jefferson Dumas, J. W. May, W. 11.
DeLvon, Moses A. Potts. .
Meriwether County —M. C. Robert
son, Win. T. Ilevill, D C. Gresham,
C. F. Humphries, J. W. Black.
Spalding County —S. W. Mangham,
Geo. A. Cunningham, Thomas W.
Thurman, Alex. G. Murray, Clark
Gilmore,
Pike County .Hartford Green,
G. W. Milner, Marcus L. Billingsly,
Win. Perkins, William Fincher.
Barnesville Precinct James B.
Hanson, T. T. Huguly, Augustus P.
Turner, John T. Blackman, Charles
Fambrough.
Talbot County —M. Jeter, James T.
Phillips, Me McFarland, Calvin But
ler, Wm. Reedy.
Geneva Precinct —Ansell Turner,
Hope 11. Hammock, J. T. Mcßyrde,
Jas. P. Miller, Wm. Cosby.
London , December B.—lt is re
affirmed that Russia lias ordered,
from Ameaica, one hundred mitral
leuses, and one million metalic car
tridges.!*
o
BE PUNCTUAL
Be at the polls early and see that
nil your neighbors are there too.
Remember that “procrastination is
the thief of time.’ 5
RADICAL IIATE.
At Arlington, on the Ist of May
1870 —Decoration Day—private sol
diers were stationed in tl*e Cemetery
to prevent the decoration of the graves
of Confederate soldiers buried there,
and this in the presence and with the
approval of Gen. Grant wnd his Cabh
net.
Will you sustain by your votes,
this wicked, partizan administration ?
TAXATION.
If you are for relieving the people
of burdensome taxation, vote for the
Democratic candidates—Col. Lawton,
Dr. Mathews, Col. Hall and others.
If you wish to be ground to the earth
by monopolists, and have ever} 7 thing
you wear, everything you eat, in fact,
everything that conduces to comfort
bear a heavy tax, sustain the Radical
party by voting for its candidates.
THE DIFFERENCE.
Buchanan’s administration spent
$60,000,000 in its last year : Grant’s
economiccd administration is spending
$300,000,000, just five times as much,
--and this in a time of profound peace.
If you wish this extravagance to con
tinue, vote for the Radical candidates.
If not, vote for Lavrton, Mathews,
Ilall and the other Democratic can
didates.
waste"
The New* Y r ork Tribune admits
that u there is money enough stolen and
wasted by government officials, local
and national, to pay the public debt."
To put an end to this wasteful ex
travagance, let us vote for Democrat
ic candidates, all of w*hom are pledg
ed to an economical adminstration of
the affairs of the county, State and
nation.
The Most Expensive Government in
the World. —Ours, under radical rule,
is the most expensive in the world.
The civil service of this government
costs $10,000,000 per year more than
that of England. The cost of the
War Department, as stated by the
Radical authorities, was $123,000,-
000 last year, while the British army
only cost $71,000,000, and that too,
with a force nearly four times as large
as ours. In round numbers our army
is composed of 60,000 men, while the
British army has 213,000 men. Such
facts as the above explain the neces
sity for high taxes.
Funny isn't it ? —A grumbler ex
plains the present system of raising
revenue as follows: “Now you see,
in the first place, they git the amount
of a feller’s business. That is first
taxed. Then they find out how much
he earns every month, and that’s
taxed. Then they find out all about
his profits, and on that they lav their
tax. Then they manage to get some
tax on what he owes. Next comes
what they call income, and that’s
taxed. Then, if any thing is left, the
preacher calls around and gits it to
sustain the church and convert the
heathen.
PARTY OBLIGATIONS.
Political parties are worth nothing
if they are not able to carry elections.
A creed of principles is but a patch
work of nullities, unless they can be
reduced to practice. Parties are or -
ganized for the express purpose of
practicalizing certain theories of gov
ernment. Party nominees are, for
the time, the impersonation of party
ideas, and their support is as much
an obligation as is a confession of
party faith. Ideas that will not ce
ment an organization are predicated
upon some sort of an error. If the
creed is correct, the man is not so
much a matter of question. Under
our socialism the idea is the primary
consideration, and the duty of parties
is to cling to it in all its ramifications.
A wrong man nominated does not
prove the creed wrong, as it is the
measure upon which the party unites
much more than upon the man.
Our political education has been of
that kind which places treachery to
party v-ery nearly in the same cateo
gory with treason to one’s country.
True, the former is not a crime in the
eye of the law, but it is a gross and
immoral wrong at the bar of public
opinion. Parties are understood to
advocate certain theories of govern
ment—that is, they place certain
constructions upon articles of gov
ernment, and direct their machinery
to the end that those articles may be
mobilized as they are construed.
Hence, faith to party, is, by construc
tion, faith to country. In other
words, it is patriotism. Hence, its
breach becomes a moral wrong, and
is so held in American po'itics.
If, then, the creed of a party is
worth anything, the nominations un
der that party are worth as much. It
is not the individual which claims the
support of an organization, but the
theory of government embodied in
the platform. Opposition to the indi
vidual is hostility to faith under all
circumstances. It is not the minister
upon which a church unites, but the
articles of faith. So, in politics, it is
not the leader, that should be expect
ed to hold a party together, lie is
simply an impersonation —a nucleus
of opinions which are to be supported.
And if the opinions are not supported
through him they cannot be supported
at all.
Ours is a government of parties and
always will be. The government is
shaped to the similitude of the views
held by the party in power. There
fore the party is the government;
that is, the country is governed, not
specially by any unequivocal article,
but by a party construction of the
established principles. Therefore, we
find partyism elevated to a greacer
dignity than would be assigned it by
a mere casual observer, and, at the
same time, a breach of party faith
becomes an offense of more important
consideration that it is usually held
to be. It is not only a violation of
an implied obligation, but it is treach
ery to the avowed principles of one’s
government, and a smart assault upon
patriotism.
Policy, if no higher motive, com
mands the strictest party unity. A
party has no object, if its object is not
to win. It can win only by the
closest adherence, not only to pre
cept, but to nominees. The men who
have the favor to receive the nomi
nation, become at once as important
as the organization itself. Their suc
cess of their party, and their defeat.
Personalities have nothing to do with
a campaign. # lt is platforms that run
and are elected, and the member of a
party that goes back on a nominee,
goes back on every principTe of his
faith. —Atlanta Sun.
The Democracy. —If the signs of
the times as set forth in the result of
the recent elections indicate any
thing, it is that Radicalism is defeat
ed and falling back, and Democracy
victorious* and advancing. The ad
herents of the former may indeed have
good reason to sit in sackcloth and
ashes, and beg for another device to
be inscribed on their trailing banners,
but the disciples of the latter are
satisfied with the flag which has led
them to glory, just as it is, bearing
the old legends unmutilated and un
changed. In short, the Democratic
party of the United States, while not
disposed to waste time and strength
on dead issues, want no new princi
ples or new name to assist them in
the future. That name and those
principles they have clung to in days
of fiery trial ; in days of disaster and
persecution ; in days when every hope
of relief and redemption seemed lost;
and they emphatically decline to
abandon them now, when fortune
smiles and the skies are bright. The
triumphs won in Oregon, Indiana,
West Virginia, North Carolina, Ala
bama, Tennessee, Florida, New York,
Illinois, and Missouri were Democrat
ic triumphs—the battles were fought
and gained by and with Democratic
principles, and will contribute to the
advancement of the Democratic cause.
If Messrs. Trumbull, Logan, Field,
Bryant k Cos., are tired of the Radi
cal synagogue, they are welcome to
enter the Democratie church and
bring their friends with them. The
seats are free and the invitation cor
dial.
WHY TAXES ARE HIGH—RADICAL
CORRUPTION AND EXTRAVAGANCE.
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE! UNDER GRANT, COMPARED WITH DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATIONS.
| ADMINISTRATION. PERIOD.I TOTAL COST. COST PER ANNUM, jPOPULATION. j * COST PER CAPITA.
: J ;
Jackson s 8 A ears. $14.>.792. 276 20 $18.224,0.34 52 14.000.000 $1 10, Exclusive of Interest and Principal of Public debt.
|Van Huron's 4 ** 120,729,810 15 30.182.452 5.3 17 “ “ | 1 78, ‘ *
Polk’s 4 “ 147.342,853 34 36.830.713 33 21 u “ 1 75, ‘ ‘ ‘
Pierce's 4 “ 212.000,228 94 53.014.055 78 27 “ “ 1 00, ‘ <■ ‘ *
Buchanan's .... 4 “ 268,661,197 76 66.915.249 44 30 u “ 2 10, 4 4 ‘ *
Total 24 Years $889,592,366 39Dem
y. g, . *‘,H ’ * '
G PANT'S T Year,’ ft 190. 700. 355 00 $100,796,355 00 40.000,000 $4 76, 4 ‘ * *
Average cost per capita for 24 ypars under Democratic Administrations. $1.77, (including expense of Mexican War.) Cost under Republican
Administration, per capita. $4 76, (Excluding receipts for Property and War Material Sold.) Whole cost for 24 years under Democratic Ad
ministrations, $889,592,306.30!
Amounts of Revenue collected
from the people by the present Ad
ministration, per annum, $411,255,-
477,03 for 24 years, $9,870,131,463,-
12.
An expenditure of $1,77, (the av
erage per capita under Jackson, Van
Buren, Polk, Pierce, and Buchanan)
with our present population (40,000,
000) would be $70,800,000 per an
num. Grant spends $190,790,355,00
per annum , exclusive of principal and
interest on the public debt I
The total cost, including principal
and interest on the Public Debt, dur
ing the above named Democratic
Administrations averaged less than
$2. per capita. Amount of Federal
J axes extorted by Grant’s adminis
tration during the last fiscal year
$411,255,477,03, (as stated by the
Radical Campaign document styled,
‘•National Finances.” page 1,) which
is an average of $10,28 per capita ,
estimating the population at forty
millions.
Note. —The Lincoln administration
is omitted, for the reason that the
extraordinary expenditures of that
administration were occassioned by
the war, and could not be fairly com
pared with Grant’s or previous ad
ministrations, —although the cost of
the Florida and Mexican Wars were
paid by the above named Democratic
administrations.
WHY IT IS DONE.
Boutwell is said to be frantically
in earnest in bis Presidential aspira**
tions, and hopes to beat Grant “on!
of sight” for the nomination. All
his doctoring on the public debt state
ments is designed to manufacture pub
lic opinion in*his favor.
Taxing Flour and Potatoes. —The
Radical Congress, not content with
the robberies of the people which for
the last four years, they have been
guilty of, are now fiercely engaged in
adding to our food a tax that for
shamelessness is unparalleled.
“Congress is now taxing food.
The House has voted a tax of 25 cts.
a bushel of potatoes; wheat 30 ets.
a bushel ; rye 20 ots ; barley 25 cts ;
oats 15 cts; flour, meal, &c , one
cent a pound. It is called “a bill of
abomination,” and it is. In case of
a failure of any of these crops—the
necessaries of life—in this country,
the taxes imposed would take a vast
amount of money from our people
and put it in the pockets of the Can*
adians, Nova Scotians, and the agri>
cultrists of the Black Sea. The
people of the Lmited States are pa*
tient with tbe set who rule them by
caucus, who are smothering the life
and spirit of free institutions, and
who are now burdening the princi
pal articles of food with heavy and
unnecessary taxation.”
VOTES! VOTES!
See that every town is liberally
supplied with votes, which may be
obtained at this office. Be sure that
this matter is attended to in season.
Buffalo , December 10.—The Na
tional Convention of the Board cf
Trade is discussing tbe resumption of
specie payment.
Item Jfodcrtiscmr&t.
Notice to Teachers.
Oi.imn art’s Orrtrr r^.
r rE.\niEß*„ t ,h.u2;T.; ,n *
I notified tr. file their account* r . ~n' y
on.ro by the lf,h day of -I.no , v n*Vt J* **»'•• " . J
a participation in the Poor , ,
■ declT '* L WM A. coan, Cnih*,
INTERESTING TO ALL;
A oms ! °‘ ° f Be:ect »f DRY
Groceries and Provision?
jnst received and intake*) to s. 1! at p, w . st
Correspond with cheap cotton. Now u . : r,,es - T*
goods very low. Come and see.
deeU-fm 0. A Wk Uk ,
THOS. F- BETHEL
w )
DEALER IN
drv coons m croceimi
WOULD inform 65 customers
▼ ▼ frienfe th:»t I.is fall stock is now conn;,*,
solicits from t hem a continuance of their fori' l . ‘
age. at his new fire proof store un Mttiu street
ton, Ga t
J. J. HECKT.
(Uonticello, Oa.)
'Watchmaker and Jewelb
TIIOMAKTOn,
\\ T OI t LD respectfully inform th#» ciH z n ,
? T "f Upson and adjaeeat mini
located in Thoinaston for the purpose of un vin'- „
Jewelry Business Will keep constantly on (T 5
suppi.v of WATCHES, CLOCKS, etc,‘as the mV:
will justify.
i? ig r* v i is i tv a ,
of all kinds, in mv line made a specialty. A’l »
warranted. A liberal share of patronage
licited. Rooms, fur tho present, at Webb’s tlou-l
decl7 ira
Bcwdon Collegiate Institution,
Bcw&cn' Carrell County, Ga.
r IMIE exorei*Ps of r tis fnatiOrion *i;
1 open January tfith, IS7I fi r tlu* Sir; rT,
and August 17th for the Kali Term
The citizens of Bowdon having assume I nil
by ample endowment, the Trustees have ew; *
lull corps of instructors
We congratulate the friend-of the Ins ftutii n on'
happy consumatlou and ask f r it a c ntlnuance < f
liberal patronage heretofore extended
For t atalogue and Supplementary Circular > 1
all particulars, address Rev F. 11. M IL nIT • '
Fiesidcnt. J J). \|ooi:i: j
di-cIT-tf. Secretary Board TiUm
/ 4 EOR' II A—Upsov county M s Mur
\ S Ann Fertnson of snrfd ronnty, widow of (i
Ferguson, deceased, h *8 this day filed her p.-titl n 5
exemption of personalty and wiling apart an I * ,
tb>n of homestead, ands will p-ms upon the. Time »*
12 o’clock m . on the 27th day of l>.«c.. m |„. r ret
me oihce in Thomaston. w. a (him;
decl? 2t—Rrhrter's fee $2. Oidimry.
( A GORGlA—rrsox mrxTY. Crnrt of Ordinary
* December Tenn, 1870. Whereas Atno< Wnrfi
applies for dismission from the administration of i! .
t'late of Barrel VY. Jackson, deceased. It i> tho’
ordered that rule ni si he published in the TWia.-M
Herald fur thrye months, returnable to this t ourt ■ -
the first Monday in April next, that all per-.ns mi,-
Cernetl may have notice thern*>f and act sccniinely.
A true extract lroiu the minutes of said ( «• .n.
W \f. A. COBB, Ordinary,
dec! 7 Bm—Ft inter's fee 1*7,00
$lO K.E'W^IR.D!
[HAVE lost rnv Ror ket Rook containne
papers worth several thousand dollars to r i ; i.t
valueless to any other person. 1 will give the; .fy*
reward to any one safely returning these
declO-tf J \ M hr) SIIATTI.E3.
FLOUR EMPORIUM!
17 RESIT FLOUR reeoived daily from the
Mills, in Quarter, Half and Sacks—guaraoted t.:«
and good—at
MILL PRICES FOR CASE
Il tTe just received another hill of dedrnble M.\
GOODS, Notions, &c. Che;iper than the ch ■!*•- '"t
Gash.
doc3-lm G. A. WEAYF.K.
M-UIiES! mules:
I WILD soy to tfio r ,p„ptn tff -3
and adjoining counties that I will off. r at
PUBLIC OUTCRY,
on the first Tuesday in January m xt.intU hs"
TllO.Vf ASTON, a fine lot of KENTUCKY MI’LKo
a few plug Horses. All you who want stockh
tion to the present price of cotton, come along..'
get them without money and at reasonable pric , *s
Pales positive. t S. H. UAYU-*'
Talboitou Standard copy two times and >«n
llekald. decl •
JAf/iES W. AT WATER.
DEALKIt rsr
DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES.
OF ALU KINDS.
J. K. A.DA3JS, S;i losing"*
West Boom, V. bite’s Iluilding,
THOMASTON, GBOUGH*
oct22-Biu
G. V/. MoKENNEY & CO,
MUVU IJS
GROCERIES, PRODUCE. ETC.
TIIO3I AM ON, GA
-1 r- ' ■
TN this Lire will r.ot Te .
J We wHI ftiwavs keep on hand * ? \n
OOP'FEE, BUG A It, TEA, SYKI
FLOUR, BACON, LAUD, BAGGING,
COS, CIGARS,
WHISKIES, BRANDIES,
Also a large stoek e-f CONFFUI
thing found in a first chest. Grocery
TWO GOOD BOOKS-
Should be Had in every Fami'E
,I^l
Devotional and Practical iff u
FAMILY BIBLE, containing; »
t,'one*,rdHnee. Dtctionary of Biidieal * er: ! '' r .s r(
ical and Historical Index, Ac Fourteen
furnished in three styles of hi ding ,v e f
L V WS of BUSINESS for all the States »««
ByTheophilua i’arsons, L L D Tbit 1 ■
forms for men of every trade or j r ’
deeds, bills of sale, leases, b«*nd, artif i* - -
shi)», wi!L awards, &c I’ub)i»bo*i by tne *
lisiiing ( o , NeotphLs Tenn. ... irtnfU
Mr JOHN A CO< IIICAN has taken the
Upson and I’ike counties, ami wi Ica 1 >o’ Cl r.' f '
with th.se invaluable books iuimcdiat*
r | AIIE Law lirm of Hart Aj
1 day dissolved by mutual consent, s® .
ner having temporanally retired \Lh fV
Nov. .9, IS7«. HAKI
Mr. ALLEN will continue the practice I *‘ y
*iftice oecupitsl bv the firiti Tb**nktu , ~
extended to utyseif, 1 cordially recoiutmj 1 [jyhl
- my friends.
SjOVID-Im