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Court of Ordinary jLcavo to 8cllNo
VOL. 1.
THOMASVILLE, GA., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1873.
NO. 26.
professional <£arbs.
etha
rdiiiary
>«>ll la
I Adit;
I*-* pn
i.iihUshcd thirty day* ; tor Dismission fr »m Ad
ministration, monthly for three motiflis-lor D.»-
liilssion from Guardianship, 40 day*.
Foreclosure of Mortgageltulcs for
Foreclosure o| Mortgage must Isj published
monthly for four months.
Establishing Lost Papers Noth-cs e-^
For coni|>clling titles frotr
bond lias l-'cn given by the
Ext
Applical
it for Homestead u
Publication* will
lug b> these, the leg
eiwls* ordered.
ty County Ollic
-IMK.S .Ion OKI
Hire of 24 shec
the Tim
ODll
Job Printing
Department.
Having supplied jurselves with new
MacMneJoliPresses
OF THE
Latest and Most Improved Patterns
Wc arc now prepared to execute in a*
HOOD STYLE
AND ATAS
L4MV lMIH’ES
ns can bo bad in the State,
JOB WORK
OF ALL KINDS,
Legal Blanks,
Mild ever}' other description of dob Work.
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GHAS. P. HANSELL,
Attorney at Law,
Thomasville, : - G“-
OlUce up stair* in McIntyre’* bniklinc. Jack-
son Street. niar 21-ly.
n - F- Hopkins. T. N. Hopkix*.
HOPKINS & HOPKINS,
Attorneys at Law.
Jackson Street,
Thomasville, : : Georgia.
Special attention Riven to collection* of claims
against the U. S. Government. Obtaining Laml
warrant*, bounty claim*, Pension*, &c.
mar 21-ly
JOSEPH P- SMITH.
Attorney at Law,
Corner Broa.1 and Jackson Streets,
TliOXkffA.S'^rXX.lAE, Gr-A.-
mar 21-ly
vr. D. MITCHELL. ILO.il 1TCHELL.
MITCHELL & MITCHELL,
Attorneys at Law.
TIIOiWASVIIAE, - Ga.
mar 21-ly
.1. R. Alexander.
Attorney at Law,
THOMASVILXiE, G-A_
niar 21-ly
\V. M. HAM MONO. E. T. DAVIS.
HAMMOND & DAVIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
— AND —
COLLECTORS OF CLAIMS,
TIIOMASY1U.E, S. IV. GEOltGIA.
.lame* I.. Seward,
Attorney at Law,
TIIOMASVIU.E, - - GA.
K, T. MacLEAN,
A 11 o r ii e .v
—AND—
Counselor at Law,
THOMASVILLE, GA.
OFFICE—Up Stair* Over Drcycr h Isaac’*.
m.». S. BRMD01
THOMASVILLE GA.
Office—Back room Evans’ Building,
mar 21-ly
A. P. TAYLOR, M.D.,
ThomasYiUe, : : Ga.
OFFICE—Front room over Slnrk’s
Confectionary.
mar 21-ly
DR. JNO. H. COYLE,
RESIDES? BESTiST,
; THOMASVILLE, GA.
Owner J;tck*on nod Broad St*.
T’
SAVANITAH.
A. P. A.BAMS,
Attorney at Law,
, Savannah, Ga.
Bay street, over '’Morning News”
Office.
K.-r.-r* T<i lion. .1. T. MacIntyre, Judge A. II.
ILuntclland C’apt. John Triplett,
mar 21-ly
H. J. ROYAL,
SURQtSg DENTIST,
120 1-2 Congress Street, Opposite
Pulaski House!
Savannah, . - Ga.
mar 21-ly.
R. E. LESTER,
; ATTOBNEY AT LAW,
SANANNAH, ga.
Henry B. Tompkins,
Attorney at Law,
BAY STREET, SAVANNAH; GA.
> practice in United State* Courts and all State
- Ketcr to Capt. D'm, M. Hammond, Col. A, P.
mar 21-ly.
G. A. HOWELL, B. A. DENMARK.
IIoaveil & Denmark,
^Utormns at £cuu,
SAVANNAH, GA-
Prompt attention giren to *11 bus:no** eu-
Refcr by jvrniii.5i.in, to Groover
Stubbs. A- €<».. ami U. B. Kejipard. Savannah
Hon. A. H. Hanscll, .1. L Seward and Capt
John Triplett, Tfcomasville, Ga.
A. li. SMITH. W. C. BEEKS
SMITH & BEEKS,
Aitoi’ijeys at Law
Corner Ray and Ball Streets,
■Savannah, , - - Co.
fer to A. II. //an*cll, Mitchell and Mitchell
x 21-ly,
Written for the Times ]
Lines Written on a Visit to
Wakulla Springs.
Now Sol’s first beam illumes the skies!
Tis come—ihe hour we so much prize;
For at this hour, so calm, so sweet,
We are away the Spring to greet
Our ride must he beneath the trees,
The fragrant pines, where the sea
breeze
Is whispering, with it’s sad tone,
(Caught from the Ocean’s surging
moan)
Strange stories to the leaves on high,
To flowers that bathed in sunshine lie.
And to the clusters of the vine,
It’s grapes all purpling with rich wine.
The birds with songs would cheer us
As on the boughs they warble near us,
And all the air with music fill,
Dork grow the woods, and denser still.
Ah! who, near these dark shades,
would dream
That such bright waters gush and
gleam,
And with their radiant treasures beam.
Near the banks magnolias grow
With foliage bright and flowers of
snow;
The sunbeams pierce the arching
shades,
And stream through the green arcades,
Changing with their magic gleams
The clear waters beneath us rolled.
From silver to rich burnished gold.
Oh! lancy with thy colors gay
Come hither, and assist my lay!
! who guide the maze of song,
To whom all science and arts belong—
But all! why hope the unknowu mute
Will deign to list! I cannot choose
Between tho nine and memory
Who comes, with eager step to me
Hosting from Lathean banks away,
And she ninst help my feeble lay.
On the waves of this great spring
Wc glide, our bark a frail slight thing;
But little we recked of this when there
Amid a scene so wondrous fair;
\nd when wc gazed, with wild delight,
Down through the waters clear and
bright;
And saw the fish playing u hide and
seek ”
With many a glccsorao plunge and
leap;
While far beneath those waters deep
Glittered the rich mosaic floor,
Ah! who could dream of danger more?
On, on our bark serenely glides
While rainbows tremble ’round her
sides.
Each tree, branch and leaf below
With rainbow colors seem to glow;
All things in brightest hues arrayed—
Now gold, then blue, now light, then
shade.
Wo seemed suspended in mid air,
The wave so clear, the sky so fair—
fancy, from the thirst and heat
Of the long chase, this cool retreat
The red chief ol the forest sought,
And when the feast was o’er, ho
taught
His warriors brave the bow to shoot,
Or his great skill, from herb and root,
rhe juice to press, for the healing art,
Or the rank poison for the dart
In days long past the shrill war song
Echoed these lonely hanks along,
Wakiugthc white crane's answering
cries
As, startled, to the wood lie Hies. ,
Then to slake his thirst, came the deer
Of graceful form and eye so clear,
Then bounding to the woods away
He hides him from the solar ray.
Now deep silence reigns around;
Naught breaks it, save the sound
Made I'.y the dipping of the oar
Of our light bark, as on wc row.
Each heart thrills deeply in this hour,
And worships Him whose matchless
power
Made this bright gem, and set it here;
Its beauty these lone wilds to cheer.
One, who had heard of this great
Spring,
Said, (ns did Shjcba to the king.
Blazing in purple, gems and gold)
To me the half has not been told
Yea* language is too weak cold
These rainbow beauties to display,
Or all their dazzling hues portray.
And now to make the scene complete
(As fables tell) a mermaid sweet,
With snowy arms, and streaming curls
Wreathed with sea liowers and white
pearls,
Should glide this limpid spring along
To charm us with her syren song;
Perchance the strain may lull to sleep
Yon scaly monster of the deep.
But wc must go ” tho* loth to leave
This spot, where my light rhymes
reave.
Oh! 1 could forever dwell
Near this bright spring and sweet dell;
And, tho* the vision fades away,
Yet this great Spring, this radiant
day
Shall hang on memory's walls for aye.
Wiiy Siie Planted Roses.—a
blacksmith had in his possession, but
under mortgage, a house and piece of
land. He was oucc fond of the social
glass, but was happily induced to joiu
tho temperance society. About three
months after he observed his wife one
morning busily employed planting rose
bushes and fruit treea.
“ Mary,’* said he, 44 1 have owned
this cot for five years, and yet I have
never known you before to care to
improve and ornament it in this man*
ncr.*’
“Indeed, replied the smiling wife,
“I had no heart to do it until you
gave up drink. I had often thought
of it before, hut I was persuaded that
should I do it, some strangers would
pluck the roses and cat tbe fruit, but
now, with God’s help and biessing,
this cot will he ours, and we and our
children may expect to enjoy the pro
duce. We shall pluck tho rose and
eat the fruit”
Interesting to the Ladies.
LATEST STYLES IN SILKS, COLOHS, ETC.
Silks for the fall, says Harper’s Ba
zar, are soft groe grains of medium
flue reps, with brighter lustre than
those of last year. The cloth colors
now in vogue arc again brought out
in deep hues so nearly approaching
black that they are well named “ in
visibles.” Conspicuous among silk
importations are the great qualities of
dark blue shades; summer linens,
with cashmere, camel’s hair and other
fine wool fabrics, have become »o pop
ular in these hues that it is prophesied
dark blue silk suits will find special fa
vor as winter costumes; and, by way
of further commendation, merchants
say these French blues are equally
becoming to blondes and brunetts.—
The nowest fancy for arranging
BASHES
worn with evening dresses is to drape
them in a half circle in front, letting
them swing low around the edge of
the over-skirt apron; they ore thou
caught up to the waist on each side
and tied in a long loose bow, with
hanging ends on the left. Watered
ribbon sashes draped in this wav are
admired for muslin dresses, and gar
lands of flowers arc similarly arranged.
Velvet sashes arc rather heavy for
this style, but are worn nevertheless.
Instead of neckties with rutfs
A CRAVAT nOW
with very long ends is worn in front,
and is preferred to a brooch. This is
a simple bow of black velvet ribbon
or of colored gros grain ribbon, two
inches wide, with ends a yard long
hanging straight down in front The
black velvet bows are worn with light
dresses, while colored bows brighten
black costumes. Auotber fancy is to
wear a bow of China crape high on tho
left side of the ruff instead of in front.
Pretty little tri-color clusters of rose
buds are worn in the same way on af
ternoon dresses, and are especially
pretty with black grenadine and white
muslin toilettes. Ladies are also
wearing tiny bouquets of natural,
loose cut flowers stuck in the belt, or
else in the bnttonholc of the double-
breasted polonaises, precisely as gen
tlemen wear their button-hole bou
quets. *
SHORT UMBRELLAS
arc worn stuck iu the belt like a dag-
jer, protruding behind and before in
an incouvenieut way, not nearly as
graceful as the fashion of hanging an
umbrella by a chatelaine. This i9,
however, a ’part of the “ grasshopper
bend,” a summer folly introduced at
Saratoga, where the absurd Grecian
bend first appeared.
A Hundred Tons of Gold Coin.
The New York Sun chronicles at
length the arrival of four tons of gold
coin on Tuesday last, from the Sub’
treasury of San Francisco to the Sub
treasury in New York. It was pack
ed in twelve iron chests and was
guarded by nine armed men. Tho
gold consisted of one hundred bags ot
double eagles, each containing $20,000
and on its receipt at the Treasury each
bag wits emptied and coutcuts weighed.
One million of the sum was in coin
fresh from the San Francisco mint.
The Sun says at the close of the busi
ness on Tuesday the balance of gold
coin in the Now York Subtreasury
was $48,522,04879,—equal in weight
to about one hundred tons. In addi
tion to this, the same depository con
tained ten million dollars in gold bars
—8400,000 in silver coin and $32,000,-
000 iu paper currency.
There are two treasure chambers on
diflerrent sides of the main door in the
Subtreasury. Each has walls of mas
sive stone eight feet thick, built in two
parallel sections. The intermediate
space is filled with boxes of chilled iron
packed with balls of the same materi
al about an inch in diameter. These
will turn the most powerful drill ‘ever
employed by burglars. The floor is
covered with iron plates and solid ma
sonry, which extends thirty feet below
the surface of the sidewalks. These
doors weigh about two and a'half tons
each. The chambers arc divided into
iron copartments. In tho west side
chamber the gold is deposited, each
coparlmcnt containing $500,000 when
tilled.—The gold is packed in smell
canvass bags.
The Kind of WosIen to Marry.
—Rev. H. Henderson's Louisville
Lecture.—The lecture closed with some
advice to young men. They must
eliminate from their idea of women all
her false adornment. Think her
a plain dress of muslin—minus her
rats and mice, panniers and frizes,
seated at the breakfast table. May
you succeed in getting a true girl for a
wife, full of womanly sweetness, one
that will look as well at tbe breakfast
table ns when she bewitched you with
the arts of toiletto; one who will not
demand a carriago when you need a
cart; one that will not require a man
sion when you have only a cottage to
offer; one that will be satisfied with
plain dresses when you cannot afford
brocades; one that will entertain your
friends on a dollar when you cannot
afford a banquet; one that will plant
flowers in your yard and insist on you
white washing the fence; one that will
be to you the ornament, pride and
magnet of that dearest place on earth
—“ Home, sweet home.’*
Twenty Thousand Letters
Opened.
The corruption that pervades every
branch of the civil service is becoming
monotonous. We would like a change
if only for variety’s sake. Among the
recent developments are the'system
atic and long continued embezzle
ments of Brice McLellan, until re
cently chief postal clerk between New
York and Washington. CoL Forney’s
Philadelphia Press—one of the most
loyal kind—states that his thefts
amount to $40,000. ne stole this con
siderable sum, says the Press, in sums
ot over $2 or $3 each, from letters Bent
by Southern subscribers to Northern
publishers. Some 15,000 or 20,000
subscribers to Northern papers and
magazines are therefore, notified to
remit again if they find that they can-
noL get along without such intellectual
food.
There is nothing very strange in a
robbery ot the mails—not by any
means; but the vigorous way in which
the thief was ferretted out and pun-
ishment is what we admire. The
Press says 44 he was peached upon by
one of his accomplices, who still re
tains his place in tho department.”—
At the time of Jiis detection -for ho
was never arrested—forty letters pur
loined from the mails were found in
his possession; and yet ho was allowed
to resign, and for aught wc kuow,
may be biding his time in some other
branch of service for another chauco
to raise a stake. This is quite in ac
cordance with the official spirit of the
times. Tue truth compels us to add,
however, that there were extra and
extenuating circumstances iu his fa
vor; he stole the money from Southern
people, who have no rights that the
truly loil are bound to respect; and
secondly, his father had once been an
Assistant Postmaster-General.
One thief is allowed to resign, but
his accomplice still has charge of the
Southern mails! Send on your money,
gentlemen; the rnaiis are safe. Don’t
grumble because your Northern jour
nals do uot come, but keep on remit
ting until a remittance happens to
slip by the thieves, and you arc ouce
more made happy by the sight of the
dearly loved papers aud magazines.—
Atlanta Constitution.
Not Heady to Die.
The following is no fabrication of an
irreverent secular journal, but from
the orthodox Memphis Presbyterian:
44 Traveling in his buggy alone, not
long ago; in going to one of his ap
pointments, ono of our good brethren
in the Presbytery of Memphis, over-
took a 44 foot pad,” with his carpet
bag in his hand. The roads were
muddy, and lie was just at tho tiino
about entering a miry bottom. With
the politeness for which he is noted,
he asked the pedestrian, who was an
entire Granger, if he would not take a
soat*in his buggy until, at least, they
had crossed the mud and tho mire.—
The invitation was readily accepted,
aud the conversation for a time was
free and easy, about things ordinary
and general. Presently, however, the
good brother, with a view to make the
conversation profitable, asked the
stranger if he was ready to die? Not
knowing the character of the person
who had invited him to a seat with,
and misapprehending his meaning,
and suspecting foul play, he waited
not to reply, but sprang from the bug
gy immediately, and ran for life
through slush aud water. The cleri-
ical brother, wishing to assure the
strauger that he meant no harm,
called to him at the top of his voice
to stop! But this only hastened speed,
and, like a scared hare, he ran until
lie got beyond hearing and sight. In
his hasty flight he left his carpet sack,
which our brother now has iu his pos
session, being the richer for his faith
fulue»a by the addition ot a coarse
shirt, a pair of threadbare trousers,
and a little 4i 'backer.”
Nothing Like a Trade.—A re
turn to the old plan of apprenticing
bays is being advocated. The hosts
of young men iu every large city who
apply for employment and fail to get
it, for the reason that they cannot
truthfully afliim that they arc educated
or specially fitted for any particular
busmen, constitute a potent argument
in favor of reform. Under the ap
prentice system wc should have fewer
ignorant mechanics and incompetent
business men. A trade is half a man’s
fortune.
SheCnti Hit Hair.
You can aiwaya tell a boy whose
mother cuts his hair. Not because
the edges of it look ajf it had been
chaired off by an absOTf-mindcd horse;
but vou tell it by the way he stops on
the street and wriggles his shoulders.
When a fond mother has to cat her
boy’s hair, she is careful to guard
against any annoyance and muss by
laying a sheet on the carpet It has
never yet occurred to her to sit him on
a bare floor and put the sheet around
his neck. Then she draws the front
hair over his eyes, and leaves it there
while she cuts that which is at the
back. The hair which lies over his
cs appears to be surcharged with
e electric needles, and that which is
silently dropping down under his shirt
band appears to be on fire. She has
unconciously continued to nush his
head forward until his nose p^pteshis
breast, and is too busily engaged to no
tice the snuffling sound that is becom-
dcsirc to blow his nose, but recollects
that his handkerchief is in the other
room. Then a fly lights on his nose,
and docs it so unexpcctdcdly that he
involuntarily dodges and catches the
point of the shears iu his left ear. At
this he commences to cry and wish he
was a man. But his mother doesn’t
notice him. Shu merely hits him on
the other ear to inspire him with con
fidence, and goes on with the work.
When she is through, she holds his
jacket collar back trom his neck, and
with her mouth blow s the shprt bits of
hair from the to;) of his head down his
back. He calls her attention to this
fact; but she looks for a new place on
his head and hits him there, and asks
him why he didu't use his handker
chief. Then he takes his awfully dis
figured head to the mirror and looks
at it. and, young as he is, shudders ns
he thinks of wnat the boys on the
street will say.
The Boy who Wauled to Kuow
••The following is strictly true. A
lady coming coining to this State re
cently stopped at one of tho Chicago
hotels with her little son. The boy
was not perfectly satisfied with mat
ters and things at the diuncr table,
and expressed himself frequently to
that effect. The mother Anally rose
and remarked, in an undertone, to the
youthful offender, 4 * Conic with me up
stairs, and I will attcud to your case.”
The lad understood at oucc what “at
tend to his case” meant, but there
was an important matter of detail
which lie was painfully anxious to
have more fully explained; so, pulling
backwards on the hand of his mother,
he blubbered out, iu a voice loud
enough to be heard over most of the
well-tilled dining-room: “ Say, moth
er, are you going to take your baud
or your slipper?” Tho enthusiasm
with which- this brief address was re
ceived was unbounded. Poor little
fellow, how often have wc wanted to
know that same thing ourself? With
a brief season of waiting wc gener
ally found out, as he undoubtedly
did.
Fire at Pensacola.—A large fire
occurred at Pensacola on the night of
the 27th. of August, supposed to be the
work of an iuccudiary. Glove
Soto, Turton, Myerson, and Joe Col
lins, were burned to the ground.
Stocks all saved, except Myeraons,
which is a total loss, hut covered by in
surance. Buildings occupied by (3. L.
LcBnron & Son , damaged; they have
removed to rooms over Vallett’s con
fectionery until repairs arc made.
Books, papers, safe and everything
saved; slight damage to office fixtures*
Fully covered by insurance. Business
uninterrupted.
The largest clock in the world is in
the House of Parlamcnt, London. It
has four dials, each 24 feet in diame
ter, and every 30 seconds the point ©f
the minute-hand move nearly 7 inches.
The dock will run eight and a half
days, but it only strikes during seven
and halfdays. It takes two hours to
wind up the striking mechanism. The
wheels are of cast-iron. The pendu
lum is fifteen feet long and the hour
bed 19 eight feet and nine feet m di
ameter, and weighs nearly fifteen ton*.
The bell hammer alone weighs more
than fifteen hundred j»ounds.
X. HIRT,
BOOT & SHOE MAKER
S'-Order*, lar-e or mil, promptly 011*1.
ALL WORK WARRANTED.
wrM-ly.
• Importer* a*4 Dearth
Fine Watfhes, A Jewelry
Sicrsm WstMttn
military- an d fancy goods
MUSICAL BOXES, <tc.
S. 'V. Cor. ZMI and BrmMm Su.,
SAVANXAI1, GA.
*’«dK.»d Jmlry ra.atrrd.
LOUIS JEftGES,
TAILOR.
HAN8ELL & HANSELL,
Fire Insurance Agts.
Representing 01J Hartford, of
HASTPORD CONN.
North British Mercantile,
AND
SOUTHERN MUTUAL.
DBA YING and HAULING 1
I the* rUEi>AR/;D *° for the Public bjr
SIMILE DRAT LOAD,
Or any other quantity that may bo ilniml.
I keep a lot of gnoj Wajuu* ami Team*, wi
CAREFUL DRIVERS,
dnl .ni pt.p.rr.1 In h iulln, to »nd In
the Country at Living lute*.
JOSEPH JERGER&BRO.
Watch-Makers and Jewelers,
LARGE STOCK OP
Jewelry, Watches, Clocks,
AND
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
»ix montli* we will uot he ru*|ioii»ilile for.
B. F. Fudge,
Tinner
John Oliver,
HOUSE* SIGN Painter.
Ott-B ER 4 GLAZIER,
No 3 Whitaker Street, N. W. Corner Pay L*M,
>
SAVANNAH, GA.
DEALER in
Sashes, Blind*,
Doors, Mouldings,
Paints, Oils,
Window Gloss,
Putty,
Brushes, and
all Painters’
and Glaziers’
A. 1RI -A. L S .
MIXED PAINTS OF ALL COL
ORS AND SHADES.
*«-«£_
TORN' M. COOPER & CO.,
for. Whitaker Jfc St. Julian Street*.
Books and Stationery of all Kind*
Copying am! Seal I’rrwrs. Surveyor*’ Coca-
New* and llnok Printing Paper
ami Ink. Oohl Pen*. Pen and /Vu. it
Case*. De»k ami Tockat Knlvc*.
Idtslger, Wilting ami falora-l
Paper*. Playing, Vluting
and Printers* Card*,
Portmonaie*. Ac
School Funri-
School
Kequbdte*
at Schrrraarboni A (V*
Price*, f«»r whom we aro Agent*, llook*
hilcrel or Imported at New York rate*.
We Ml confident that we can sell a* km a* th*
west, either in f li*rlc*t»n, .4ugtn.la, .4tUata,
I noon. ..r any other South.-in City.
Write or call ami learn our /*rtce*.
MEINHARD DUOS. & CO.
Wholesale Dealer* in
Boots, Sloes, Hats,
READY-MADE
CKOTIHlNti.
ANI) DKAI.KI: IN
& Parlor Stoves
All Kinds!
Tin Mini IIn,-«l
ware!
Ml—flssg aud tissUrrtua done Iu the best
•tylc.
SHOP opposite tho Market House
oil Jackson street, at bin new building.
GIVE ME A CALL,
mar 21 dim B. F. Fudge.
Ijsaiali IIoklc
AT HIS OLD STAND,
1* prepared U. plan and • n-et any *t vie
Ifulldiiig*. and solicit* Carpentering (n all Ha
‘ utchvs.
ALSO
Lumber for Sale—all Sorts and
Style.
GRIST MILL
UisGrist Mill is kept In perfect order an
i>akca .Veal ami Hominy Inferior to no vth<
team mill In the country.
GRINDING DAYS.
TUUBSDAT, r*IDAT ASH HITCKIMY
C DFFINS !
Metalie Burial Catttt and Metalie Cat-
kets.
False Steps.—Those Southern
editors who are so swift to abuse Mr.
Davis for his White Sulphur speech,
and so prompt to copy the btutal opin
ions of the Northern press had better
read the latest effusion of the Xc«r
York Times. In that paper it is es
sayed to be proved that Mr. Davis is
not only a “traitor ’ but a thief. We
arc thankful that no one Georgia pa
per has yet truckled to the venomous
crusade o! Radical policy, in this par
ticular.—Constitution.
A Green Bay man called a young
lady hi* “precious darling litQe honey
dew of a booming rosebud,” and then
stood a breach qf promise suit before
he would marry her.
Tekbible Mistake.—An ex
change says: A surgeon was called
the other day to a house up town
to amputate the leg of a woman. He
is near-sighted man. and when he
reached the house he get into the
wrong room, and calmly sawed off the
limb of tte servant girl, who was a
German, and who had come over two
days before. She said nothing until
the operation was completed because
she thought it was one of the customs
of the country which all foreigners bad
to submit to before they could be qual
ified to remain in a land of liberty.
Women in Austria perform the du
ties of brick-layers and may be seen
carrying hods of morfer and baskets of
brick up high ladders. More than that,
they dig and wheel barrows of “ bal
last” almost as nimbly as the men.—
They chop wood, they carry water,
they Oder to clean jour boots in tbe
streets, and perform many other little
offices, which according to our notio&a,
do not and should not corae under the
denomination of woman’s work.
Rowells now American Newspaper
Directory reports the existence of 4<j0
religious joutnals in the United State*.
■Forty-seven of these are under control
of the Methodists, the largest number
in the hands of aDy single denomina
tion. Tho Roman Catholics have
forty-one; the Baptists thirty-five; the
Presbyteriaus twenty-nine; the Epis
copalians twenty-one; the Lutherans
and reformed Germans fourteen each;
the Jews nine and the Congregation
al ists eight,
A countryman in Savannah observ
ed a gang of negroe* at work in the
street, each wearing a ball and chain
He asked one why that ball wav
chained to his leg. “To keep people
from stealing it,” said tbe darkey.
“Heap of thieves about here.”
An Irishman's Will—“I will and
bequeath to my beloved wife Bridget
all my property, without reserve, and
to my eldest eon Patrick one half of
the remainder, and to Dennis, my
youngest son, the rest: If anything is
left it may go to Terence McCarty/
An old bachelor says that giving tbe
ballot to woman would not amount to
anything practically, because they
would keep denying that they were
old enough to vote uotil they were too
old to take any interest in politic*.
The last question that has troubled
44 mental philosophers” is this:
“ Which causes a ?iri most pleasure,
to hear herself praised, or another girl
run down?”
•••fcUuitl v i,u Lai./
A\m. WOODCOfKLVH *1 w
PITTMAN BROS,
DEALERS IN
0RY GOODS, BOOTS
HATS,
HARDWARE ETQ..ET0.
Domestic Good*, Brown Home-
spun-, of all kiml*, Bleach
ing*, Ticking*, Pant
Stuff*, Crockery
*ud cvcrytLu* booled bj F*nt*n ; Mck
PLOWS, IIOE.8, TRACES, Etc.
We buy our Good* at the lowest pri
ces aud we intend selling for short
profits. Call and examine our stock
before purchasing.
We are Agents for the Quitman
Factory and we are prepared to fur
nish their Yarns and other Goods, on
as good term* asthe same Goods can
be bought in the State.
mch2I ly
TH0MA8 N. THEU8 ft CO
120 Broughton St.,
Navnnnnlt' (Jo.
N. B. KNAPP,
Whoi. •*!*and lU-Uil lKak raln
Sdjdte*. Rridl«$, H«r-
^ ness.
Uulilicr mid Leather Hulling
mid Ducking,
French aud American
Calf .Skins. .Solo, //arncn*.
Bridle, Band and Patent
Leather, Valines, Trunks,
Carjiet Bag-*, Whip*
ami Saddlery
Ware.
At THE SION OK THE GOLDEN HAD
dle. west end Gibbons’ Bch imno.
JIarkci ftquarr, HA VAN!VAII t OA.
aMortmcttt ©a Lai..I m»! for uslu it O*
|>mua mot 21-«w.
JOHN S. ROGERS. ISRAEL DAS1IK*.
ROGERS & DASHER
Importers,
JOBBEPS and RETAILERS
Dry Goods,
limey Good*, UniBcry, Small
W .'ires, Ribbon* and
H t *• a w C* o o d m |
Order* from the country strictly at
tended and filled at the iowett rafts.
BrvijLt//tj Street, Corner ef fTklUkm,
SAVANNAH, ... OA.
n. i. sr.ws
SOUTHERN
rOOBAl
AND
FEEBOTTPE
STOCK DKI'OT,
■AVA2ISAH. • OEOnolA
Fint-clu. Slock »l Northern I VC
CM. urine time, freight, In.ur.oce,
drmjnge, etc. nwrtil Cm.
FOR SAX.,!
m the svellho house M
telaSMuHMLlMt t» lklMtf(M«Ca
Coke **4 tmm»St*ut/ ates Iks Mae *f (to A.
kO.LE TWMsrnmanmS—tsm*■■■■. —4
■tatM t ‘rrarkni tWi •fitn-wrirrrt r~r*r
lalk yrt Stlntkm *mS!*M(S7mu-