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A tqaare l
professional Cards.
J. T. GOODE, I*. S. McSWAIN.
GOODE &M°SWAIN,
Attorneys and Counsellors
ATLAW
. f f .T/I0MA8VILLE, GA.
Office, up aUlra, In Mc/ntjre'a Ken Bull ling,
g2J-i Jackson Street.
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Citation* f«»r letters of Administration
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application for Wamlsdon from GimidL J, #
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Hales of Land, per square. - n
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Notices to Itebtnrs and Creditors
Foreclosure ol Morigago. *>♦» "1“"®
JMray Notices, 30 .lay*.
CHA8. P. HANSELL,
Attorney, at Law,
Thoinasville, : .**- ’6®-
■ Melutyre’s building. Jack-
11. W. IIupkins. T. N. lIoPKiss.
HOPKINS & HOPKINS,
Attorneys at Law,
Jackson Stbket,
Thomasville, : : Georgia.
Special attention given to collections of claims
ai»in*t the U. S. Government. Obtaining Land
warrants bounty claims, Pensions, Xc.
*■ mar 21-1 jr
JOSEPH P- SMITH.
Attorney at Law,
Corner Broad and Jackson Streets,
thomasviwBi a-a..
mar 21-ly
^ipplication for Uomestcsd...
OUR
Job Printing
Department.
OJJ W. D. MITCHELL. B. G. M ITCH ELL.
“ MITCHELL & MITCHELL,
Attorneys at Law.
TIIOIHASVILI.E, - O
mar 21-ly
.1. 11. Alexander:
Attorney at Law,
THOMASVILLE, GA.
mar 21-ly
POETRY.
Lei bard times assail ut,
Let poverty nail us
Like mystical borse-tboes to everyjohl
wall;
Lot deep tribulation
.And fierce desolaticn,
Spread over all lauds like a funeral
pall!
Though empty our purtet.
Though creditors curse us
And quarters are squeezed till the ea
gles all howl.
Lets have merry farts.
And smiles lor all places
Remembering tis better to grin thas
to growl.
What though banks are breaking,
And big houses quaking.
Lot one day undo all they ever have
done.
Our crossness can’t mend it.
Our weepings wont end it,
Why not take the right side and call
it all fuo.
Will forfeited pleasures,
Or imbecile measures,
Bring back our lost confidence, liA the
dark cloud;
No! no! to-days sorrow.
Brings no brighter moriow,
When tilings will go bad let us grin
> and not growl.
But let us keep thinking.
That though we are sinking,
can’t go much further because it
wont pay;
The old saw uot forgctiing,
'I hats cured lots of iretting,
The hour is the darkest just before
day.”
Though vacant our purses,
Though creditors curse us,
And quarters are squeezed till the ea
gles all bowl.
Lets keep merry faces,
And smiles for all places.
Remembering tis better to tjrin than
to growl.
monstrances . unavailing, there. he thatfiall. Qur horne ts ijjl,. And so J
went. The landloM gave Fred, at Tmijlo iiil^Hirtrr*Msawhieife. I am
M. HAMMOND E. T. DAVIS.
HAMMOND & DAVIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
— AND —
COLLECTORS OF CLAIMS,
THOMASVILLE, S. W. GEORGIA.
umes I.. Heivard,
Attorney at Law
niOMASVILl.K,
Having supplied jursclves with i
lacMneMPresses
K. T. MacLEAN,
A t1 o i* »i e y
—AND—
Counselor at Latv
TIIOMASV1LLE, GA.
OFFICE-Tpfto'n Over Meyer A IkwcV.
»R. D. S. BRA&DOX
THOMASVILLE GA.
Office
mar 21-ly
Latest and Mo3t Improved Pattern!
We arc now prepared to execute in a>-
GOOD STYLE
X.OTT emeus
> c.vn be Iin.l in llic Stale,
JOB WORK
OF ALL KINDS
Sl'Cll AS
A. P. TAYLOR, M.D.,
Themasvilte, : : Ga
OFFICE—Trout room over Stark’s
Confectionary.
Invitation Cards
Legal
Blanks
GA
r 21-ly
Back room Evans’ Buildinj
DH. JNO. H. COYLE,
BESiDEST DE&TiST,
THOMASVILLE, GA.
Office, Corner Jaekwn ami Broad St*,
mar 21-ly.
s-A.-VA.NosrA.i3:-
A. P. ABA.MS,
Attorney at Law
Savannah, Ga.
lay Street, over ’-Vomiu;
Otfiec.
Refers t j lion. A. T MacIntyre, Jtt-ljp
1 anwdlnail Cap!. John Triplett.
»«*»'
R. E. LESTER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
SAX ANN All, GA
lenry B. Tompkin'
AttoraeY at Law,
BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, GA,
rrncticc in CiilteJ State* Orurta nn.l all Slat.
< Re!«r to Capt. fl’ia. 51. llammon I, Col. A,
Vright.
mar 21-ly. '
. and every other tlcsriiplion of Job Work.
Our Stock nnd ‘Material
New and Complete and ever
ellin t will be made to give au;
idiiction L -W) *11 -yylip^J.ivor
with thi
H Patronize your Home Entd
prison, and dont send off for Job
.‘Wjrk, bring it _ to tho iiuis
Joa Ofkke. jriuod a
1. A. HOWELL, B.A.DE
Howell & Denmark,
^ttornfita at £aiu,
SAVA3STNAH, G-A-
< J-
Prompt nttentlon giien to nil ba«inv*o
ra>te<l to tbe>ir care.
Refer by |«rmMe«, to lliwn. Groover,
vtubbs, A C«».. au.l K. B. Ut p|-ar<l Sa
Ion..I. It. IUbmII.J. I. want nn<
t«»in Triplett. Tbou.a.-viUc, Urn.
mnr2l-ly
4. B. SMITH. - W. C. BEfcKS
' SMITH & BEEKS,
Attorneys at Law
Corner Bay and Ball Street.,
MittLoll nn l >:Rebel.
beat bedroom. K«».
r in-mentioning tlx
Urii
LOOK 1'NDF.It THE BED.
habit ol many persons to take
look under the bed before retiring
the night.. Mrs. Evergreen, my
beloved wife, indulges, if indulgence it
can be called, in this peculiar prac-
I have often remarked to Mrs.
Evergreen, when I have seen her pry
ing under tho bed, that it was a silly
■ibil, nnd that the sooner she gave it
thc.bctter. Tolbis gentle admoni
tion my better half invariably rejoins:
La, Evergreen, what harm does it
do? It is a kind of a satisfaction to
kuow that nobody is uuder there, and
then I don’t think ol such a horrible
thing after l*m in bed.”
I think, my dear, you might just
well pursue your investigation fur
ther, nnd look in (lie bureau drawers
nnd the cloth* s-baskel.”
Evergreen,” si e will rejoin, “ don’l
mention the idcu. or J shall crrtainly
nroe lo think of it, a man
could easily get into the clothe.vbas
ket.”
Cerlniuly he could, my dear, quite
cosily as FalstnlV. You should cer
tainly include Iho cIothes-baSKct, and
the-by there's the chimney—why
it look up that as well?”
Now, Evergreen, you’re laughing
mo. But 1 can’t leave oiVthc habit
anil 1 never will. It’s a comfort for me
know that there’s nothing wrong
about it, and 1 don’t see why yon
iiuld deprive me of it.”
So under the bed goes the candle,
and uo signs ot humanity being dis
covered, Mrs. Evergreen is aide to re-
peacc.
If it were not for increasing this
ntal idiosyncracy oil tljc part of
in. Evergreen, bj giving her some
imI reason to apprehend dan,
.hould relate to her ivlial I ntn about
lo lay before the reader. In tltis nar
ration, therefore, I ask the public to
bear in mind that Mrs. Evergreen is
slightly supersiltious, and that what 1
have to say must, under no circum
stances he imparted to that lad}’. I
•r two-aml-twenty years (that is the
period of our wedded life, nnd happy
years have they been)—if, 1 say. 1
have for this long period refrained
from imparting U|c matter to the he
ed sharer of try Jov» and pfertak'
of my sorrows, surely the public will
keep the secret.
I was rot bad looking when 1 was in
ly twenties. I think 1 may go further
id confidently say that Gus Ever
eon was a decided favorite among
ie girls of Oakville, and I belive I
ould have had any of them for the
isking. As I before remarked, Mrs.
Evergreen is not present, and I
in my thoughts somewhat more
freely than would otherwise be the
nse.
Fred Evans, who had l»eeii my
hum at M'hool, came to pay me a
isit at Oakville for a day or two, ai
lie said when he came, but he made ;i
vock or two easily euough after I’d
aken him about a little among the
ladies. Wliou that time hail expired,
said he must go. as he didn’t
what his father and mother
would think of liis long absence; but
inded in relieving their anxiety by a
letter, am* sendiug *for his tiunits. 1
uiew how the matter was, perfectly
veil, and that Belle Bronson had he-
x itched him out of his senses. Fred
li. d to put it onto the “country air
ind the quiet which was henefitting
his health, etc.,” but it was no use try
ing to deceive me and I told him so.—
Then be owned up frankly, nnd 1
promised to help him n% much as 1
could, if he required any help iu the
prosecution of his suit.
She liad a larger share of lieaux
than the other gills, but all their at
tention came to uothing. I feared it
ipisbt he so with Evans, and warned
him accordingly; but Fred said that
“without her lifts was naught to him. 1
Things went on in this way* without
any definite result, until Fred receiv
ed a sudden summons home on ac
count of hit mother’s illness, TV lieu
he came hack to rene w his visit be in
sisted upon storing at the Oakville
20—I am _
number. ** Ho- shall have No. 20^”
said tkanilsiry. “ A uy Iri end of you n-:.
Master Augustus, shall have the best
rtywn I have to give *as long •as I'm
landlord.’’
Belle Bronson, because of the sud
den arrival at bei house of some coun
try cousins, was obliged to give up her
room—her mothers cottage taring %
small one—and to occupy for a single
night a room at the ltoiel. We would
have offtfed her guests accommoda
tion at o\w house, but we were iu a
similar predicament. An agricultu
ral fair had brought maty strangers
into the place, and our own guests,
were so numerous that 1 bad given up
my. room to two of them, and had in
tended asking Fred Evans to let me
pass tbe night with him.
For this purpose 1 went to the hotel
at a late hour, and proceeded at once
to Fred's room, but to my surprise
found no one there. I did not even
notice that his trunk was gone, or sus
pect the fact which afterwards become
apparent, that “To oblige some lady
gtfests for the night only,” as (he land
lord expressed ‘it, Fred consented to
give up “ No 20” nml occupy a small
room in the rear ofttie building The
gas being turned on, 1 look a book to
wait his return, and heariug at last
what appeared to be steps approach
ing the room and suspecting it to be
Fred, ic a momentary impulse to play,
a joke upon him I slipped under the
bed, a large and high one, intending
to imitate a cat as soon as he entered
the room. The door opened, and 1
was ou the point of iudulglng in my
ventriloquial faculty hj giving a long
drawn tncoto, when, from tuy hiding
place, 1 beheld jlelle Bronson take
quiet possession of the apartment.
My astonishment was so great, and
the sense of mortification so inteuse,
that I did not. us 1 should have done,
make myself immediately known to
her. Thus the opioilunily for discov
cry and explanation, was lost I
dared not move a hair, but hoped sio<
cerely that some excuse might take
her out of the room fot a moment, and
so facilitate my escape. She. howev
er, locked the door, removed the key,
and 1 knew by the sound, prepared to
letire. Finally, she kneeled down
beside the bed, and ela pod her hands
aud bowing her head (so fcarfUlly
near to mine that 1 could hear the soft
words in piy ear ») *he offered up her
evening prayer in a in turner lull of
feeling and with such sweet accents of
Aomanly tenderness and devotion,
that 1 felt as if she was an augcl bend
er the vilest of mortals. That
prayer went to my heart; but one por
tion of it went tbr/ugb It, aud held ir
captive. Never ^liall I forget my fuel
ing of surprise aud my deep emutious
when 1 he ard her utter these words:
“Bless my dear mother, sisters an<
friends; bless all around me, aud O
God ! bless him I love, Augustus E
crgxccn, nnd shower down Thy mer
les over him.
If X breuthed sheit Indore, after this
my breath seemed to desert
li rely, and I verily ’ thought that the
beating of my heart w ould betray Inc.
Belle pure a» an angel lo u«e*lben
aud while as a snow-llake, ptoceedi-
to turn off the gas and get into ih
bed. What thoughts rushed tbrougli
m\ brain/ Above me lay a young ihi<
unsophisticated girl, wbo.ly uucou-
fcvious that the one she loved lay
eloselv to her, aud who hod for the
first time been made aware of her in
terest iu him by bearing words, which
sh*2 supposed only went to Heaven.
Belle had laiu period ly motionless
for several minutes, and was, 1 flat
tered my self, losing hoi self iu sleep
wheu suddenly she exclaimed: “There.
1 haveu't looked under the bed
horror ran through mo—all is lost
What shall I do? Belle rose, I hoard
hor feeling for the matc hes, and try
(o light one after the other, as they
failed to (guile; llu.il an “ti, dear,
there arc uo more !’’ whispered
soul to me. Belle gniped back to the
bed, but did not immediately get ia
she stooped and lilted the curtains
which hung around tho bottom, cau
tiously puling her arm around ns lar
as it could reach. I almost kit her
fingers graze ray face, ns I hr Id my-
f fearfully and silently back against
wall, too far, just too tar for her
reach. Apparently satisfied that uo
•laug||r was near hef^she lay down
her bed again, and I counted hex
r spiral ions till she was lost iu slum
ber.
ju?Lgoing home to dr<
“ 1 should say- bo, deewledly
3nr?>p* c H on , I
1 li.il lo put up in
bouse. Ci
about it
•XUiifrt /ct a, jtatbjMJtiktrip
Ihe jktQdJ assure you,’
“Wyell^f not a lark what kiud of a’
bird was it? From the looks of llie
feathery, \ should say it yap p goose.”
^Tw’ie ibfl goose, J’red. But, ao»
riotnly, I’ve a word to say to you ofa
ȣ- important nature. Be a math | j
•ed, nnd.makc up your mind to hear
something excessively disagreeable.—
must'bo told lo you sooner
cr, atxlT razy as well telkit not'
Good heaven*, Gus! how earnest
ly you look at me,. : You d«mt mean
say that—that anything h*s hap
pened to Belle'BrdusOh^ 11
Don’t men liou her name' agaio;
Fred, or think of "her any ‘more, for
shell never be anything to j^ou.,,1
have it from one who knows'aU about
that she has been attached to some
body else, aud that somebody else,
and that somebody else nteaus to mar-
fry Eei^ ^There’s no mistake $ft>0uHt»
ko.bear u(i-ahti-.try ybtir luck-\*lsar
where.”
|S)d Fred Evans was not to be dis
couraged* by mere hearsay, lhat very
day he went to see Belle, determined
usstidn that
clstence blnnan ami wi*-
man too. In : France-Divorce is un
known, and the inner aodal life of the
French attest that they are the happi
est pcgjttoii t|*?)acp ol ttleigfq^d. J
", .ti . yiOl>gS>. , Vu tll
The’prcciousncas brittle things was
never more beautifully expressed than
ip tbo ibllowlug' morceau: “ Lillie
_ mirtlri boxes of homes are geucrally
to know his fttic from 1krawo lips.—* die most, happy and .cozy; little vil-
11 Hog«
iunlfl
* watch-" ” ovc at first sight and love at lore-
t cow; own upfObd fell us
Sx-Majt
New
trasiaamE m
asr
laob.
m
corrox FAtToit ..i tt -
tkj eCStpJ« .W la>.Bss .
i83.41AU.SL. SokoiilL, Oa.
Omtfuawi-
j3it<-iUlo «».iLt. ■
lOvo U meuttop^L,, ,TV, p?cU who
5»it
s he falls dowh stairs—by asxideiiL
of lifefban op any other subject, aud
yjetlt' * Is the quasi idn (h^t affects the
whole future k
ja^.futnsm. . :.|iiiVrA*uw>**.
J|OS; FlNxpqAJf & CO.
COTTOX FACTORS
11. J '.I rr-uto-. .. I.il i! i i'.v
OOMJHSSloy MKM1IA.MS,
94*^81., (Jones* BUtit)
SArAXXAff' oa:
JWuig.uiJ -Eos furnisli,,l ut *!«•
lowest ! Liberal mlesuww
0Ui.lt coan^unit-nK
MIXED. HA
H.J. ROYAL,
SUflfiEOK DENTIST,
Hop*
Savannah,
>u*r 21 tjr.
Soon after he left Oakville, ami 1 did
not see. him.again for several years,
when,^ meeting him in-towu^oue day,
I insisted on brjuging lum” Gome with
me, and presenting him to his old
fiamc, Belle Bronson—the present
ilyi^Etje^re^a. . J ^ ^
Ah, Fred,” said he, after dinner,
when hiy wife and tho Httlo
greens had left^s to ourselves—
Fred,' y6u served me a shabby tnck
when ^you allowed mo to loose my
heart; to tbo girl you were all along
ulendiug to. marry yourself—a very
shabby, trick, one of which I never
suspected you!”
So 1 had to tell him (in strict confi
dence, of course, as I tell you reader,}
all about the bed-room affair at Iho;
Oakville'note], and the love that grew
out of It.
The Valley of Death.
The Beaver (Utah) Enterprise bus
the following, respecting a rcccul visit
to this uoted valley:
he Yallry of death—a spot al
most ns terrible as the proj bet’s Val
ley of Diy Bones—lies just norUl of the
old Moruon road to California, a re-
thirty miles long by* thirty brood,
ami surrounded except at two poioU,
by inart y^siljio mountains. It is total
ly-devoid of-iyater ami vegetation, and
the shadow of a bird or wild beast ucv-
d irkens its white glariug sands.
The Kansas Pacific raihoad engineers
discovered it, and also some papers
which showed (he fate "of the Tasi
Montgomery train, which came south
from Safa Lake in 1839, guided by
nion. When near Deulh Valley
some collie to the eonclusiou that tho
Mormon knew nolhiug about the
try', so they appointed one of their
number as leader, and broke off from
the paitv. Thu leader turned due
west; so with the people and wagons
tnd flocks he traveled three days and
.hen decended into the broad valley
wllqso treacherous. mirage promised
i • n-t; * . ■__* v‘ r il. . :
As for myself sleep was utterly out
*f the question. X never was so wide
twake in my life, llow I lay upon
lhat hard carpet and thought the night
out—thoughtq£her, and her loro for
tne—thought ol myself, and my love
for her.
With the morning light fresh feats
came U|mw me. Ud my unconscious
room-iuute might yet peer beneath the
bed f«*r rubbers before sf e left the
r«>om: hut my fcara were groundless.
She rose au.l drcMed expeditiously,
for she was to join her cousins at an
early hn-akfast, un i t>li« had overslept
herself Vlan at last she took (he
key, uulfekcd Jh? d«*or aud departed,
I lost no time in slipping out ot roy
shameful place of concealment and
caping from the hotel. On the stairs
I met Fred coming out of his room,
who exclaimed t
“Why, what’s the matter with you,
old fellow? You ,look Uke the last
days of .au Ohapeot-lUe. . And your
coal too,—whj U’s all leathers and
water. ’ They 'reached tlte cchtre, hut
ouly.the plains bounded by scorchiB|-
{teaks met their gaze. Around the
Valley they wandered, and one by one
the whites died, and the panting flocks
stretched themselves in death under
the hot sun. Then the children cry log
fur water, died at their mother’s breast
and with swclen tongues aud burning
vitals the helpless mothers followed,
Wagoii after ‘wagon was abandoned,
aud stroug men tottered aud died.
After a weeks wandering a dozen sur
vivors found some water iu the lioft
low of a rock in the mountain. It las
ted but a short time, whi-n aj! died but
two, who escaped out of the valley and
followed the trail ot their foriuei
pauious. Ei,kty- seven families, with
hundreds of animals, perished here:
and now, alter iweuty-threc, years the
wagotuftlanq sltli womplete^-llie iron
work aud tires arc bright, and •*£
"hr.Teled skeletons lie sitle by Mile.”
Gkorgk Washington.—One «!•>
in a fit- of a Us true lion the juvenile
George cut down Bushfunls favorite
cherry ‘roe with a hatchet. His pur
pose was i«rcut ami run.
But the old gcntlcuiau came sailing
round the corner of Uie barn just as
the dilute ftttlier of our Country Jba*I
star Led on the retreat.
Look here sonny,” thundered the
ro old Virginian, “who'CGI that
free down ?*’
George reflected a moment There
wasu’Uiuother boy or another hatch
et witUf. .fifteen mikC Besides it oc
curred to him lhat to b»* virtu.*Ls is ti
be happy. Ju-t as Washington senior
turned lo go in and gel fils horsewhip,
our little hero burst into tears, and.
oesUmg amoog hit father^ coat-tails,
exclaimed: “Father, I cannot tell a lie.
It must hare been a frost.”
“Vs 900. n>; »p ” 4iaaunet«l
fond parent -as ho made a for hia
<ifrpring««*srhep jom get te W-Gist in
war and first in peace, joat coyer yoor
back pay into the treasury, and the
newspaper press will respect you P
Uges are: nearer being . atoms of a
shattered paradise than anything *we
knbw of;' and' little hopes the least dts-
a|jpojq(fnenl. l^ittle wcrfts arc die
^wpetest^. Tittle tUariticafly the. farth
est, and stay longer on tho wing; little
Ikkes arc the iilllcst^ttle hearts arc
the TuL'cst, aiuI lUtlv ftirms tluj bcat
tilled. LiUie. books are most read,
and little songs - *he most loved; and
when trature would make anything es-
pccially .rare anil beouttfu), she makes
it iitlle—little pearls, t little diamonds.
litUe dews. Everybody caUsthat lit-
tio thal thevluve bost on citrth. We
once heard si. good sort of a iqati
s{>eak of his UlUe wife, and wo landed
lltat she must be a perfect* bijou of a
wife. We saw her, and she weighed
two hundred and teu pounds wc were
surprised. But llten it was mi }oke;
the man meant it. He opuld put Ins
wife In his heart, an.l have room for
other thing* besides;' and what was
she but litlh;.? Multuin in parvo is
the great beauty of all we love best,
hope for most, and , remember
longest. .
-——'♦•fii
Tftp ^wiocitAtic Victory in
Ohio.—Senator Thurman in a very
pertiuent speech i n the Democratic
riciory in Ohio thus sums up the re
sult and its lesson. There is
h\ uo cause for Democratic dtacour*
{c-tnent in his view?
That we achieved n grealatctory nil
must admit. To .elect a Democratic
Governor in Ohio for the fust lime in
twenty years is* a rocm significant
event; to elect a Demorrati,- I^egisln
tore for the firet Ume : U) nix yean* is
not less significant, but to have ac
complished these results Handing
squarely bn a Democratic platform
and with a straight Democrnlie ticket,
is-lhe most significant of all. It showa
1 hat vmr|iayiyj» neither dead nor dy-
‘ g; It dhows ( that the slanders U»a(
have been heaped upon it.for so many
ears have lost their farce; it shown
1 hat many: honest opponents of inis-
ula will, no longer be deterred Uy
prejudfcfc from joining our ranks.
NewRpaper* mako more “bustle” in
ihe world that) all tho .books and ora-
tor»i>uLtogcthcr.
»mJT s JS!
u yOUTIIEKX
J *? OT OOBAPHIO
■ ASD : ' ■'
raaBOTYPE
STOCK depot,
SAVANNAH. .. OEOHOIA
Flret^Ia., Stock »t Xonlwro Prt-
cc«, MV1I , S i im „, frei l,;
Jrayagr, etc. inarJ112ra
s 'i?Wi ,J ^i4ltl< iW'L-
mmAPKtt.vMu
; .;uSS°. , flMSu^¥ A 5i , i , aY' aoo ...
G10f.CE 1'ouiily SRUCERIES •
,iv m-tfjglettiUHMv* • -
,u mmd i Wiwwsi*«l<" ,!a ' T “"-
liiiucr, M^a. v 11 •' - 1
PrckM l.c.-r, B r M..l-'Pi-li‘Pi.Vt- l!i ! -
■IravMiihi Floiir,'f-Saj;. 1 5ilu
« > aittff(.«.C!.rrm.lPruiij. l piHtf -! ' —
lc. JJ.ttkl llaMhL S»r- 1 , 1,1 '
' •■-'.Ifrit-iYdrrflH.&fcn,
(VnJftattfMlIK} 21 ' 1 or.H.i».l
• ,! R"’- 1 0»s •
• KaUM Oil; *w*3 »U ....
ToMcco, ttc.v .tr.' .tK'
L W. Ohw.
SAVANNAH
MACHINE WORKS
8. W. GLEA80N ft CO,
4fut S4»tlin>«iy Kimum K..H-JH, *,t5nrMi|N*ll‘,
I'M) »<
txtaiul IBS a. .lull** Sirert. ♦
aayw.9NAit, im.
, SB*.
Snvnnnali. '*-»• - ' -
■r:i)4 wiihriiivje-i* » , *d r ^ttlNuu
•mmitk •». .«»»•"
Books and Stationery of &1I Kind 1
trtSwwtwm'te'ta.
| IU^^ Now. IL-oV I'rtl.tiutf yk\»t
wi.rft.k; ft .ti H.'w/WdWd /vitrti
*c*ee* ihM mill iWnantr-iltihtaiuit .no
. : **--«*.?*
. I‘iVtn-Ti». Vjfithqc .
, «i.-l rili.n-ni* iViMI. < ,1 ‘ 01 ’ '
N« U.lj
-• • ■ fct-Scl>ci*u.w..** Ai.Gefl
f i
OrJrreJ .»r N^ ntme, ,
fV : T- i .
»i iy.
Atexandee & Russett.
IYgQ&m&LX
grocers.
AND
Liquor 'ihi.'ii.icxts.
Cor. Abercorn aud Bry an Sts.,
SAVANNA If, - GA
AUfxka«l er , Win- A. Ruftacl
Ej Alezeuder, Chu. K. It ax we I
MElNlUltt) nnos. ft 00
Wholesale Dealers in
Bools, Sloes, Huts
ItEAliV-W.UlE
CLOTHING.
-A krit|n hong oot bis abiD(I« in
Go.anua, L. A^lor ..o yean, and
ttmrl«ft,-n*b«ba4. only one raan in
riUWlfefiJIhi was inflamnto.
rj rbsnnislism, and it naariy killed
OWL
1 be'greatest magician, unbe age
|.re the i.apcr-makcr*; tliey tr.uub.rm
life beggars raeabilo tlleetafor odl-
tors to lie on.
-•Why do yon set your cop of enflee
..n the el.air, Ur. .iode« sald a wo>-'
1 by Isa.lUiiy oiip luorniug at breakiaM
- Uiaao wry weak.madam, ( though.
Pwodidlet itrest." ■
-Wi tt, aabl a teacher to a papil,
•uakea yon feel so uncomfortable ultct
liaving dote troug 'r^ ; Jly jiapa’a
lug leather lingiy replied the
•»»|b S’ .
A lawer received ii.e fwiloaiag ntlt
aucotiqciDving a boquet; “Dear
L send -yob bl the boy a bucket of flow
ers. They U tike my lav for u. Tbv
night sludd mtcu* keep dark. Tlic
•log ft nil mcenfc I must shave.’'
Are you very loud uf uovele, Mr.
!ooe»V” “Wry," resfmmled that in
terrugated gentleman, who wished to
bo thought by the lady questioner food
•*f huralure. .“(lava you,” coutuiu«d
tho holy, “ever read ‘Ten Thousand a
War?’ " “No jusdam I-never read
that number iualluv life.”
A tr%'yugfc county N. Y!, mah 'moU
the foliouuig Odmusemcnl to the
■‘yractme Journal: “Mr. Editor pleaae
publtsh that • Wanted a young ts<9v
,fruo» ‘ (Tie age'of 18*16 22 who’ would
likAfo youeite her.ielte in tla. loraof
inatnmoey 1 the writer of due aft. St
rear, of age,5 ICet in hsictit, h. welghi
135 of ocenpatfon farmer.” ,
An.1r.vTXvilbii wL. oiMr MSekll.S
A itmnp spsweo fa awmntry eids-v wi
Vnk iwt We- he -wee reiutsfna
Amos KendniC whom! beside hiss,
whfope.ud.- “Tip -'ssw a HUM lem.
General: they sroo\ he satisfied wllh-
ootH." The “her®'ol' VnUiksm’
instantly Ihooght oT-a few phnues he
knew, end in a roleeol ibuoder. wound
up Ids speech by >«elnhhioj: -E plo-
ribm weanrlAne qua nnm. Ne |Jos
nltra, Hnltun. hs parvo." Theedect
‘ * : shouts coukr
Uvu: .old) i
l."J Broiigbtou St..
, fsnvanuali, ha.
W. C. BUTLER,
.* J!.-t / ; w ;. * ,/ ma t .
ConjrrfsaSii-Lii; gjsviitMalt, CiC
. 'i'a !«V:r - • -V
I.E.U.KH IN
BOOTS M-SHOES
Or Ev key Desr iumo.N.
PirnLelaw ntoek ahsayeou band.
Order, from tho cotlatiy will bar.
prompt attention. • • rati_'l-ly.
1. J 1JALE . V*VID WELL*.
J. J. DALE & CO.,
STEA.tt_Rft.Yir. HULL,
PLAINING & LUMBER YARD.
Lnllot for idajtfexuiy; iu auy qpaur
ity «]«uiTcd, (iixui.iln:A on thort uo
tice.,
0**tt I¥utaWU«!t fc—«J M»t Lklt) hi a.
. : .ff ga'.
X$Z*r2
m**If •* bet* «k1-cIr.v<«4w
IjtmUrr aidl H^bf U foil
tjio,
POLASMUOBSE,
KAVAKXAJL OA.. .
8. N. WOT * CO.
Jlrerr
Hie House is centrally located
haring been newly mdued and r
nishedii oowaftheta.
"pop*
..if...ti II
•uOtn AQinuilTTiIftiiuiBU h >ihxiwi
tifv^ywu
..lit* ha*,
>1 «mdt«Kt
lUam ^ A 1 ^ .
i-ejri !!i m bna .mileuil J« IfeRi kw
aouiltftrsvtftJ* nut iqiWWh*^n>
Door.% ^
TnJdWifne's em«l>‘j«tirsw»~’It
Iu la-tidttUndqwJ G!k*^,«'dUp-rt ^fl 'T
i!l oilt , ,«!u»fia-»i»
uo sod,^, U bsilao
ol l orn* TfteKj If. n* .-.air,i i-f I i '.n jlw/.
Irui e.!)Cl A’AtaSWl t tul>imU
.tMMtJi'l
■A. x.»s»^r.^..2h &:L i
t ‘. Ie. r.|I.I)J
•I..W.I '
.UVAWf
. -au rdl*i
!•*•» 'htavu,
joitN" jficnoNon
TT!Al;.fNTVNC.
llrnoVGLI.'H. im.Lim.VE.
Iron aud Brasn
F<) II Ni) 12:R; S
Matiijiuite ■ ■ itiiA rat< ai'tiUAk^,;
Iron l'roift*» : thr«'!or#dhhil
Vranili«« nnd I’eim-fjVv'(ffftltnvn-nf
•riptiA ‘U 4 h»w 'i'j ^tift m 1
hiH-if w# N**«VP!b.- e •' ‘ •
First Pr.-m utn for Inst fiumx “
uftd itjrtiJkMktnfGt Ai
Asftfpftfty 4 UTr!.‘ ' /
•*+. tk*t: c«4^t.hi'4 \mA trt Si» .
,*/.
wiAi ^AA'.''
1
..DBALElt kS. . . u. i
Tin Ware*. IIou*e J’nniiM.ln* W *tu,
Th» Roofing; tJutferinf.nn# lUpuhff •
' -e aJ: Ur ux*.{oxuH
n- ^ei tun*, etxmiu.
MMJMJm > . ^
St
K. & Mv' iSSoiATiON,
' 1 op <sfEK>»oaJiBii.-i.-
tun^aisiiwrigp lo nil.::
■rui'iirsi ‘.vt .rJJriry'
>■> ■ ■ 1 - .-i -
Iedfot.snrjfosde issssliiJss ms AUsaiwtk
WrrVrTtS fWr. .WrVr# .
u.i .od nil «>'