Newspaper Page Text
MSrjf:'
THE TIMES.
Published every Saturday Homing I
By -Tolin Triplett. :
TERMS:
A 1.1. Subscription* must 1m; ]iiii<l invariably u
viva:ico. NoJiscriiniitatiuti in lavoruf anybody
TtfK naper will Imj stopi*cil in all instances a
lii expiration of the time pah! fur, nni**i aul*
i the publishers of Til
S jrs l M. 2 M. SM. 4 M. M.Oil. 12M.
I ij.'tno *300 10 00 12 00 14 00 15 00 £24.00
■1 MOO 12 00 1500 icon IS00 2000 2000
I04>0 15 00 1800 2000 22 00 25001 :inoo
» 1201 14*0 I 20 0*1 2200 2’*4K» 3000, 35 00
5 11 00 IH 00 20 00 25 00 30 00 35 00! 4<* 00
li 15 00 20 00 25 00 3000 35 410 4000! 4506
S IMOO 2500 3000 35*41 4000 4500 6000
. »] 2500 3000 .1304) 4000 4500 3050 1 fiO 00
I eol 5505 404« 4564) 5000 55(Ml fSUHi 11000
VOL. IV.
TIIOMASVILLE, GA., SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1876.
NO. 17
READING MATTES ON EVERY PAGE
Apple l*l«r-s« inn fair ami h re!>
<)pvmtl will* tUe.lawtmig .lay.
j-h—k Un it fair} lorka ami
l,.ni"hin.2. •!
a.linj? bb*-o
I'layin^ will: the me a in;
Drifting, fliatiitff, falling e
Fairy angel* r*»t**«l in will
of l I.v, sail!; , sigh.-
fur their lieauty He«l,
-hall say «.««-! !
G.ro M.OO 10.00 12.00 15.431244.0
A SQITAISK I.V COCK J.VC1I.
ofCamlHla c**5.«<l
•ilumi
i, Mlhjeet U
■ optioi
change of at vie
I hia will I
■ arlvertiaing
ml mat-
i the
K|M?st inicstmeiil »«r pari lea who mlrcrtise
largely «iul lrr«|itcnlly.
WHEN DILLS A HE DUE
Alt advertisement* in tht*pa)>cr are tine at any
time altar the first insertion or the same, ami
.v i 11 lie collect*:*! at the pleasure of the propri
etors, unless otherwise arrange.! by contract.
KATES ASH 1:17EES EOK LEUAL Alt-
VRIITISIX U.
Sheriff's sales, i*r levy
•• Mortgage FI Fa sales |ier w
* n *,y r ‘\i C ‘ Vluarilianship*!!!^!!*!!.".
Appllcaliutilor DiMulssion from .fdiuiu-1
-Ipplicathui'for liisiiilitshinTroiii GMaiVii* l
aitahip I
. tplilicaiiun lur leave to sell Jatml
Sales of lVri*bat#W5 iwojiexty. |>er w|uam...
Notiers to Delttoraaml Creditors
Mortgage, per r.jinire
. *5 li
otiri
til sales ol latiel by Ailministrat
.♦s tloariliiins, are rr«jtiircfl by 'a
the first Tuesday in the niontl
hours of ten o'elw k in Hu toren
in the atlermsm, at Urn Omit Jl
the property is siluate«l. .Voth-c
uiitsl let Kiven in a public gitxi
in whirl!
li cse rales
i* r»y ilays
rsonal proimrtyt
p evious* *
Debtor*
i V’ropcrty;—N«th
ppli.
a ill
sell 1
naile
.Mministratoi
r betters of Ai
ilnvijavs; lor Dismissl.
miilbiy for three i
uar.liausbip 40 .1
Forecl ose ute of
,*,»ic »lM«.Tt gag.
inistratio
irslon I
utlts-
Mortgag
t leu*
editor*.Votlce t
an estate most 1<
0 HellN<
1 he Com to
must be i>
lliaiitbip:-Citation:
n must Or publishci
rom Administration.
I’orDiemiM
e:- Knle*
i unlit.:i-
onth-
O UR
Job Printing
Department.
• 1;t\ ini* supplied ourself' with new
lacliieJobFresses
Ol' THE
Latest nml Most Improved Patterns
M i-arc now pr.'l.aiL'il u> execute in as
KXVU
-i.v/i ,ir
i.o tv i*iuc.):s
as can be bad in the Male,
JOB WORK
OF ALL KINDS,
r llcato,
Staleaui
Visiting Cart*
llaa* Bills,
Legal Blanks,
ua every other Ucscrlpuouof Job Work.
Our Stock and Material is
New and Complete and every
effort will be made to give sat
isfaction to all who favor us
with their patronage.
Democratic Platform Adopted
byibcft. Lonin ( oiunilitin
Wo, the dclognti* of the Demo
cratic party of the United States,
in national convention assembled,
do here declare the administration
of the Federal Government to Ik?
in urgent need of iniinetliatc re
form ; do herehv enjoin
u|>oii the nominees of this conven
tion, and of the Dcnmomtio party
in each State, n zealous effort mwl
co-operation to this end, and do
hereby appeal to our fellow-citi
zens of every former |x>litical
conuetiion to undertake with us
this first ami most pressing patri
otic duty for the Drinnrnicy of
the whole country. We do here re
affirm our faith in the jMimnncncy
of the Federal Union, our d<
tion for the constitution of the
United States with its amendments
universally accepted as a final set
tlement of the controversies that
engenderctl civil war, and do here
record our steadfast confidence in
the perpetuity of Republican self-
government. In alfcolntc acipiie
ccnce to the will of the majority—
the vital principle of Republics;
in the supremacy of the civil
over the military authority ; in the
total separation of church and
State for the sake alike of
civil and religious freedom;
in the equality of all citizens
lxlbrc just laws of their own
enactment; in the lilierty of
intlividual conduct nnvcxctl hv
sumptuary laws; in the faithful
education of the rising generation,
thut they may preserve, enjoy and
transmit these hist conditions
human happiness and hope,
behold the noblest product of
hundred years of changeful histo
ry, Rut while upholding the bond
of our union, the great char
ter of these our rights, ft belioov
a free people to practice also that
eternal vigilance which is the. price
of lilierty. Reform is necessary to
rebuild and establish in the heart:
of the whole people of the Union
eleven vears ago happily rescued
f from the danger of a secession
of States,- but now to ho sav
ed from a corrupt centralism,
which, after inflicting upon ten
States the rapacity of carjxt-
liag tyrannies, h.K honey-combed
the offices of the Federal Govern
ment itself with incapacity, waste
anti fraud, infected States anti mu
nicipalities with the contagion of
misrule. a»nl locked last the pros-
|K*ritv of an indtistriotw* jiCfijilc in
the paralysis of hard-times. Re
form is necessary to establish
A s*>t'Nl»crJSl*KNcY,
restore the public credit and main
tain the national honor. We de
nounce the failure for all thesi
eleven ytviu t.o make good the
promise of the legal tender notes,
which are a changing standard of
value in the hands of the people
and the nojj-pavment of which is
a disregard of the plighted faith of
the nation. We denounce the im
providence which in eleven years of
|x*ace has taken from the people in
Fetleral taxes thirteen times the
whole amount of the legal note
notes anil squandered four times this
sum in useless exjtenses, without
accumulating any reserve lor their
redemption. We denounce the fi
nancial imbecility and immorality
of that party, which, during clev-
sn years of i>eaec, has made no ad
vance towards resumption—that,
instead, has ol»slructed resumption
by wasting our resources and ex
hausting all our surplus income
and while annually professing to
intend a speedy return to specie
jtayments, has annually enacted
fresh hindrances thereto. .Vs such
a hindrance, we dcuouucc the r«>
sumption clause of the act of i?i7
and we here demand its rejieal.-
We demand a judicious system of
preparation by Public economies, In
official retrenchments, and by wise
finance, which sliall enable the na
tion soon to assure the whole world
its jierfeet ability and its perfect
readiness to meet any of its prom
ises at the call of the creditor en
titled to payment. Wc bolieve
such a svstem well devised, and,
above ail entrusted to competent
hands for execution, creating at eo
time an artificial scarcity of cur
rency, and at no time alarming
the puibic mind into a withdrawal
of that vaster machinery of credit
bv which ninety-five per cent, of
all business transactions arc jkt-
formed—a system o|h?ii, public
and inspiring general confidence
would from the day of its adop
tion bring healing on its wings to
all our harrassed industries and set
in motion the wheels of commerce,
manufactures and the mechanical
arts, restore employment to luimr,
inti renew in nil its national source
the prc*s|K?rity of the people.—
Reform is necessary in the sum and
mode of Federal taxation, to theend
that capital may Ik? set free from
distrust and labor lightly burden
ed. Wcdcnoiiui!C the present tariff,
levied ii|Hin nearly four thousand
articles, as a masterpiece of in
justice. inequality and false
pretense. It yields a dwindling,
a yearly rising revenue.
It lias impoverished many indus
tries to subsidize a few. It
prohibits . imports that might
purchase the products of Ameri
can lalxir. It has degraded Amer
ican commerce from the first to an
nferior milk on the high -eas.—
It has cut down the sale of Amer
ican manufacturers at home ami
jhroad. and depleted the returns
of American agriculture, an* in
dustry followed by half our peo
ple. It costs the |>cop!e five film's
more than it produces to the treas
ury, obstructs the processes of
iroduetion and wastes tlic fruits of
almr. It promotes fraud and
fosters smuggling—enriches dis
honest officials and bankrupt.** hon
est merchants. Wc demand that
all custom house taxation shall be
only for revenue. Reform is nee-
ossa rv in
TilK WALK oKW ill.H* KXKKX.sKs,
Federal, State and municipal.—
Our Federal taxation has swollen
from sixty millions in gold in i860
to four hundred and fifty millions
in currency in 1870. Our aggre
gate taxation, from one hundred
and eighty-four millions in gold in
18110 to seven hundred and thirty
millions in currency in 1870; or
in one decade, from less than five
dollars per head to marc than eigh
teen dollars per head. Since the
)M‘accthc people have paid to their
tax-gatherers more than thrice tiie
sum of the national debt, and more
than twice that sum for the Feder
al Government alone. We de
mand a vigorous frugality in every
dcpartmcntuml from every officer of
the government. Reform is nec
essary to puta stop to the profligate
waste of public lands, and their
diversion from actual settlers by
the party in power, which has
(iiaudered two hundred millions
of acres upon railroads alone, and
out of more than thrice that ag
gregate, hits disjnised of less than
a sijftli <)irectly to the tillers of the
soil.
FOKKMJN CITIZENSllll* AND THE
COOLIE qrKsTloN.
Reform is necessary to correct
the omissions of the* Republ
Congress and iiio owor* of unr
treaties and our diplomacy, which
have stripjied our fellow-citizens of
foreign birth, and kindred ra
ces, of the right of recrossing the
Atlantic under the shield of Amer
ican citizenship, and have exposed
our hrctiitcii of flje Pacific coast
to the incursions of a race nr.t
sprung from the same great
[Kircnt stock, and in fact now by
law denied citizenship through
naturaliaur#)! •! s bving neither ae-
ustomed to the tradition,, of a
progressive civilization, nor cxcr-
isc<l in liberty under etpial laws.
We denounce the jKiliev which
thiiA discards the liberty-loving
German and tolerate* »i*e ;YjyiV"l
if the <*oolie trade in Mimgoliuu
women, imj>orted for immoral pur-
jM}ses, and Mongolian men im
ported to tierfbr.'n servile lalmr con
tracts ; and demand such uio«tinea-
tion of the treaty with theCliinese
Km pi re, or such legislation by
Congress wilhiu a eoiutitutional
limitation, as shall prevent further
importation or immigration of the
Mongolian race. Reform is nec
essary and pan never be ef
fected but by making it
the controlling Usuc oU the
elections, lifting it aliove the false
issues with which theotfiev-lioMing
class and the juirty in i>owor seek
to smother it—the false issue with
which they would eukimilu secta
rian strife iu -respect to public
schools, the establishment and sup
port of which belong exclusively
to the several Stated, and which the
Democratic jiarty has cherished
from their foundation, and are re
solved to maintain without parti
ality or preference for any class,
sect or creed, and without contrib
uting front thetreasury to any—the
false issue by which they -eek to
light anew the dying embers of
sectional hate between kindred
peoples oiu£ unnaturally estrangetl,
but now ^united iu one indivisi
ble republic and a common des
tiny.
THE CIVIL SERVICE.
Reform is neeessan* iu the civil
service. Exjieriencc }>roves that
efficient and economical conduct of
the government business is not
passible if its civil service be sub
ject to cliange at oven* election—lx*
a prize fought for at the ballot-box
—be a brief reward for party zeal,
instead of posts of honor, assign
ed for proved competency, and
held for fidelity in puolic employ ;
that the disi»ensing of patronage
should neither be a tax upon the
time of all our public men nor the
instrument ot their ambition.—
Here, again, professions falsified in
lx*rformanec attest'that the party in
power can work out no practical or
salutatory reform. Reform is even
more necessary in the highergrades
of the public service—President,
Vice President, Judges, Senators,
Representatives, Cabinet officers,
these and all others in authority
are the people’s servants. Their
offices are not a private perquisite,
they arc a public trust. When
the annals of this Republic show
the disgrace ami censure of a Vice
President, a late Speaker of the
House of Representatives market
ing Iris rulings as a presiding officer
—three Senators profitting secretly
by their votes as law-makers—five
chairmen of the leading committee»
of the late House of Rep
resentatives exposed in job
bery—a late Secretary of
the Treasury forcing balances
in the public accounts—a late At
torney General misappropriating
the public funds—a Secretary of
the Navy enriched, or enriching
his friends by percentages levied
oft* the profits of contractors
with his department—an andiassa-
dor to England censured for a dis
honorable speculation—the Presi
dent’s private secretary barely es
caping conviction on trial for guil
ty complicity in frauds on the rev
enue—a Secretary of War impeach
ed for high crimes and confessed
misdemeanors—the demonstration
is complete that the first step in
reform must lx* the |xoplc’s choh-o
of honest men from another |>arty,
lest the disease of one political
organization infect the liodv |M)li-
tie, and lest by, making no change
<»!* men or party, we can get no
change of measure ami no reform.
All these abuses, wrongs and crimes,
the product of sixteen years
ascendancy of the Republican
party, create a necessity for
reform <*onfesscd by Republicans
themselves, hut their reformers are
voted down in Convention ami dis
placed from the Cabinet, ’flic
party’s mass of honest voters arc
powerlessto resist the eighty thou
sand office holders, its leaders and
guides. Reform can only lx* had
l>y a |tenccful eivil revoliition. We
demand a change of system, a
change of administration, a change
of* parties that wc may have a
change of measures and of men.
’flit* Wrong Woman.
Judge. Pittumn is one of the di
rectors of the Plankton public
schools. Last spring the board ad
vertised for a female teacher, with in
struct ions for applicants to call up
on the Judge. A day or two after
ward Mrs. Pittman advertised for a
cook, oil that afternoon an Irish girl
called id the house to obtain the
place. The judge was at the porch
at the time and when she entered he
mistook her for a school mistress,
and said to her:
"Did you come about that place'? - ’
"Yes sir,” she answered
O, very well, then; take a neat.
I’ll mu over a few things in order
to ascertain what your qualifications
are. Round Africa."
‘*If yon please, sir, I don’t know
wlmt vou mean."
"I say bound Africa."
"Ron—bou begorra I dou't know
wlmt ye’re reteriin iu."
"Very strange" said the judge.—
"Can you tell me if amphibious is
an adverb or a preposition ? What
is ;iu adverb?"
•‘Indeed and you bother me (*u-
tirely. I never'hail anything to do
with such in my bust place.” '
"Then it must have been a curi
ous sort of an institution," said tlio
'/'■ ‘‘Probable yon ran tell me how
nigagate tltg Verb to tve,’ «ud
just Mention, also, wimt you know
about Herodotus.”
Vn, your honorV jokiu wid me.
lone wid your fun now."
tint you nr.* muii m H..,o-
dottlH ?"
Never one** iu the whole course
of ray life. Do you make it with
cook’s place, sir, anil tliats’s all of it.'
“Ob, by George! I see now. You
ain’t a candidate for a graiumer
school after all. A*on want to sec
Mrs. Pitman. Maria, come down
here a minute. There’s a thick
headed immigrant here wants to
cook for yon.
A Touching ami Beautiful
Prayer.
The following prayer, w ritten by
Miss Harrison, the Columbus s»u-
:*id£, appears in tin; Euquiivr:—
‘Yesterday we were handed a pray
er written by Miss Lilly Harrison,
who ended her life last Monday.—
She wrote and left it at the house of
a friend. The couqxsition is beau
tiful, full of intelligence and pathos.
In it is the “lone rock by the sen,”
an expression which she so often
used. The tone of the whole is
touching and was surely prompted
by a Christian spirit:”
‘Thou hast commanded mo to
come unto Thee. “0,Lamb of God,
I como r a trembling, repentant sin
ner. I come to kneel at Thy cross.
Oh! give me rest, rest, eternal rest
—rest for the mind, body and soul!
Direct mv faltering footsteps: sup
port me by Thy loving arm; let my
weary head siuk to rest on thy wea
ry bosom, and send Thy holy angels
to guide me in the paths of righte
ousness ! Teach me to bear with
resignation and Christian patience
the taunts of my enemies. Help me
to repay with gratitude the loving
kindness of my friends. Oli, help
me, 1113* Blessed Father! help me,
to lift my cruel world to brighter
reams of light above. And when I
at Last am called to die—when the
taunts of mine enemies arc* forever
lmslicd by the presence of Death
(that dread king, who visits alike
the palace and cottage, the glitter
ing throng of gay festivities and the
mourners on “the lone rock by the
sea”)—let me joyfully wing my
flight to liappy lands above; and
there, with the glistening harp and
golden crown sing praises /mvriv to
“Him t'/to (Iitii for vir!”
Mechanics Should Read and
Reflect.
The young mechanic of the pres
ent day should lx* an earnest reader.
Whether learning a trade, operating
a machine, or drafting designs for
the builder, he should he a lover of
useful books. They will serve as
an adjunct to his success. They
will make him a broader and hap
pier man, giving him continually
fresh themes for trought and pleas
ing topics for meditation. Rooks
are to the mind what food is to the
body. They fill and strengthen it.
They add vim, force and vitality to
its even- function. They furnish
that life blood which is/tlio main
spring of all action: and benefit
their admirer in manifold ways.—
Do not then, neglect so rich a boon.
But read much and carefully.
We cannot all be rich, or great, or
powerful; but we can all build for
ourselves inviting palaces of wisdom
where the noblest and best of every
ago may come through the silent
but immortal agency of books, to
store our minds with the rarest sam
ples of their genius. These choice
legacies, too, will stand by us, and
remind us, when trades, fortunes and
friends fail, to comfort and satisfy
oi]r droQpigg Spirits. Who then
would think of living without the
associations of interesting books ?—
Xo young man should.
The world is full of reading mat
ter, and it is utterly impossible to
read all; still every apprentice and
tradesman can find leisure cuough
to acquaint himself with so much as
necessary to perfect him as a me
chanic, broaden him out us a citizen.
Read then, by till means. Read
slowly; read carefully: read with
reflection; and reflect with reading.
— .V. E bnoltrmon.
r t-
OfUiKB; Mfincy.
"This is the most extraordinary
woman I ever encountered,’ mur
mured the judge. “Row eho cv»*r
assot.ialod Hmi>:’Mu3 i t ilh ti+p idea
of eggs is simply ino uumvhenrible.
Well, can you uurac the hemispheres
in which China and and Japan tire
situated ?”
"Don't bother 111c with your fun
now. I can wash the china and
pans a« well ns au\ body, and that's
enough now, isn’t it ?”
"Dumb! awful dumb! Don’t
know the country from the crockery.
/ II try her once more. Name the
limit* oi Ibiitrcpipof C*<q>tiooiu, and
tell me where Asia Minor is loca
ted.”
"I have a brother that’s one.
that s all I know about it."
"One ? one wlmt*?"
"Didn’t you sisk me afthcr the
miners sir ? My brother Teddy
works w id cm.
"And this, said the judge*, "is the
kind of person to whom we are ask
ed to enaittt the education of youth.
Woman, what do you know? What
kind of a school have you been
teaching ?"
‘None*, sir. WhatshouM / teach
school for?*’
"Totally without experience, as I
supi>osed-” said the judge.
".1/rs. Ferguson had a governess
to teach the chDdrea when I was
cookin’ for her.”
“Cookin"! Aint you a school
teacher? What do you mean, to
stop cooking in order to teach
school! Why. it’s preposter
ous.”
“Begorra 1 came here to get the
Mr. Peduncle and hi* Cow.
Mr. Peduncle went out to milk
thy other day. Now, if then*
thing Mr. Peduncle prides himself
t is his ]>crfcct command of a
cow. With his bucket ou the
ground he milks with both hands,
and sings meanwhile, occasionally
ltestowing n word of warning on
the cow if she whisks her tail at him
•r tries to scratch her back with her
hind foot.
On this 01 easiou lie had nearly
finished, and was singing chocrful-
!y.
"My soul \soh, now ! > lx* on thy
. mini—(What iu the Egyptian
sand-liills ails you now?)
Ten thousand—(thunder and Ih>-
ix ! stand!—foes arise—’
And as Mr. Peduncle raised him-
*lf from the barn floor and wiped
the milk out of his eyes and nose,
up in the loft the wife of his
bosom with a switch in her hand !
with which she had been tickling
the gentle animal's nose and she ;
said in an awful voice:
Olver Peduncle, I reckon you’ll,
put your old tobacco-box in mv |
hondkerobief again next Sunday, t
won’t you and have me to take it to ,
church and sling it out on the floor, i
Jl ?”
When lie milks now, Mr. Pedun
cle sings very softly indeed, and i
keeps one eye on the left.
— m • m —
It is a sad and lonesome fact that j
□me men would rather tell a big 1
lie than tell a small truth. While j
Bijali was wiping the perspiration j
from his halibut-colored head, along |
cauic an old man, looked into the
station and called out:
“Can you lend me an overcoat j
this morning ?”
“Great burdocks!’’ gasjxd Bijay
in amazement. “It’s liott* r’n forty
million furnaces."
“Do yon call this hut ? softly in-
qtiircd the old man. “Why, I’m
shaking with the cold."
Bijali looked at him, gasped iu a
feeble wav*, and the old man sat j
down on the doorstep and went on:
"When I lived in Mexico I used
to find some hot weather. Saw logs
wilted right away when left in the
sun, and the farm I owned used to
shrink seventeen acres from the
first of June to the first of Septem
ber. Sir, you may not belive me,
but I have seen the sun, oloug in
August, pull a tree three feet thick
right up by the roots.”
Bijar groaned.
“Yes, sir, I have," continued the
old man. “I had to rig up a steam
power fun to fan my horse-barn,
and I have seen crow-bars melted
in one hour by the clock. Now, if
you will lend me an overcoat and
tell me where I can borrow a snow*
shovel and a pair of Arctic over
shoes I shall be extremely obliged.”
His Honor came in just then, am]
the four storied liay alid down the
streets.—th troit Fur /*)»>.
Govs. IIkf.d Tins.—Many people
set in to forget the character grows:
that it is not sotncchiu«r I3 put on j
ready t;:r.dc with womanhood or man
hood. but day by day, with here a lit-
lie and there a little, grows with the |
growth and strengthens with the
strength, until good Of bad, it becomes
a coat of mail, book at a man of bus
iness, prompt, reliable, conscientious,
yet clear-headed energetic. When do
you suppose he developed all these
S. C*. McUomlon,
Attorney at Law,
THOJIASVILLE, GA.
,t pmpO-(H«r r>lr* A C..V Dm-Stare
jju» 13-ly
TO fOt.WRY >IKR1 IIWTS.
o
Crock.ery,
CHINA AND GLASSWARE.
SILVA,
COUNTRY MERCHANTS;
n
4!
*
0"
0 .
£
©
©
c$
-§
03
SIS
&
&
I
33
9)
0
45
3
aig
Professional <£ards.
CHAS. P. KANSiELL,
Attorney s»t I.n« ,
Thomas, i lie, {}a.
«•»«< <• np stair* In UrlntjlVt talUinr. J*.. .
►.ti Street. cnfct2l.lt
-I. It. Alexnmter.
Attorney at Low.
TH01IASVIi.!.E, Gr-/V
mar 21-1 y
JOSEPH P- SMITH.
Attorney at l aw
Corner Ur.**! *n.l .l> l»a Street*,
THOMASVIUil, g /» .
MITCHELL & MITCHELL
Attoraevs at law.
illojHHViu.1; . i, A
...»r a-J,
'VIKukim. T.S.Ha, K . M
HOPKINS & HOPKINS.
.tlurncy-M art l.nw •
rhoinusvillc,
tie
MEW GOODS
AT
CARSON BROTHERS,
DE.M.KUS IN
ItiVr.l^Ht in^vr’ic,' * S j', K jJ‘ j *>••«-, * i .t -
BOSTON, GEORGIA,
holiday <;o()DS
T. H. HOL S HAW’S
•'.1 r.i v.v mi, 1. 1.
In mldiiion 1.1 mv iiau.il r.ill
Croclx.ei*v
CIIIX.I.GI ASSWAItr, **
Stl.VKIt-l-I.ATKK ( AS / |.;|;x
ami K(UtK«
TuMv nii.IV.Kka r«iU i,
• InmoN I.. Sowar,!.
Attorney at Law,
rnoMASVii.1.1:, - 1..
K. .MacLEAN,
■ usolor at I » ,
TIKIMAsvil.I.K. i;a.
DR. D. S. BRAADO^
THOMASVILLE GA.
II AM MUNI) & DAVIS,
ATTORNEYS A.T LAW.
COLLECTORS OF CLAIMS,
1 imi.ma.kv11.1.1:, s. w. A
UR. JNO. H. COTLL,
TliOMASVILLH GA.
T. B. LITTLE
Sni*g,.4»i» iN(.
.7 Yeav-v in the TVjudico.
Al l. woik witiranted, t..,d d..,u*
Wlu
• tin
>y. Let
ot leu
1 just
The most unfortunate day in the
•alt er of any yomjg ;;;r.L i- il.fc day
m which lie fimueH there in somY*
better way to get money than to
earn it; for from that feeling spring
the many extravagant and visionary
schemes which are indulged in for
the pqrpasc of gaining a livelihood
without labor. When a voting man
once liecomes thoroughly infected
with this feeling, he is ready to
adopt any means for the accomplish
ment of his object; and if his plans
are frustrated and he is foiled in
his clftirt*, iqxu the very crest of
the wayp which he has already
mounted, and in full view, i„ the
temptation to crime, to shi« Id him
flora the disgrace which he thinks
must iue\it bly follow in the wake
of defeat To those he yields, and
th« first ]«-> ; ;li—h,»d^ iiiinnilf
tin violate 1 of the law, and a eiiiui-
ual iu the community, and an in-
raate of the prison, awaiting trial,
all brought o;i for want of a little
mauly finun* ss in lb** onts^t life
to prompt t.«: lo t'hoosoau a\oca-
tion in life \< here the penny earned
would bring with it it* sure reward.
Then let our young men scorn the
idea of obtaining monev withuut
reader mg aii eoiUial'ut;' let them
be ready and will in; to occupy \*>-
sitions in life which .. ill gi\e them
the lx-st possible oi»j)ortunity to de
velop their natural talent, ami do
good to others whil^ fajpiug them-
selves. In this wav we may have a
nation of noble men and women,
which will lx a source of profit and
pleasure to us, and an objec
wonder ami admiration to the v d
at large.
Meddlesome people exist in even
community and are olxrat as unpop
ular as any one can lx. They stir
around and abuse everybody, and
try t? decry down and injuie ot!y*r
people in the patronage of their
business. They are full of egotism
and bile as a mule is of meanness.—
What use medlesome people are
in a community we cannot conceive.
way in which a bo\
years gels up in the morning
1 lay-, studies and wo will tell
what kind of a man lie \yi]l
The hoy who U laic* at meals and late
at school stands a jtoor chance of be*
iug a prompt man. The boy who neg
lects his duties, be they eve; email,
and then e^cuH*e hluiself by saying, “I
iorgoi! didn't think!” will never be a
reliable man.
Tut 1: Lovi— Of all the myths of
the fairy i»g«*., of its many legends
and enchantments, true low mx-uis
to lx the one great charm which
has come down to in unchanged by
time, untouched by steam engines,
and unexplained by science. Ue-
venge may still • xthl with its dag
gers and Hashes, and mclodraumtic
boots and teeth; but we feel little
sympathy for it, and are glad b> nee
it looking more and more clumsy
ami out of place, except jujoul in a
polic** cotpt »u on thU boards of a
Surry theatre.
Mystery is also M.m-what old
fashioned, and it;
House Fiii’iiisliin^ (;„, !( | s !
I Imvo ,.,,.11.... v.iii.j[\ I
t'.v.x ^ <;ooi).s.
SI-IT.Mil.E roii Ildl.ltiA V I
I'llM-GNT-.
vvi.;
W(
,A- |
T. II. HOLSIIAW.
John E. Robinson,
At hi, .Slav Man I in ihc
McIntyre building,
Ik oflerins» lar,-.: and v.-.i-.-.i ,,
A tx ricn 11 uX'I'l
• I ,-jimmi 1 k
First OiELse
FAMILY GROCERIES.
8AV A.TSI 3SJ
a. i:oWi:i.L, o A .
* «*ll A l ><4tiiii.•
-\ttovimjr> nl Lniu,
a^A-v-yviNriNi yv i-r. oa
Alexader & Russell.
WU OLESiJEE
(i It OC K KS
A Nil
LlQror, WiMLjbrtx,
( < r. Alin.a:. ,hh IJ >.... m.,
SAVANNAH. (; a
l:K0
BOOTS, SHOES;
f . wll ., DOMESTICS AND PRINTS, !
ssaK^£5Sr5 BlKt ShOBS. Hals
High flown Romance Herins out of J t t d j£, t Z ■ ,r4an * ' '
tunc with our modem itl;^s; but ip .. I
true h»v«! bj whatever hignw mid! *11068 tO 8Ult tilt; TilliCIi ! |
language it is iqKjkeU -;ut long as I ^ vcr 3’ plaulcr in ree l J
hearts Lea
whatever a*
ek it.
long
e, ir«>
i life exists,
golden, 4
■ ments, or 1
1 1 not Jail to -jive
- J chasing.
As Mtx—Mr. Brown
you said the defendent was hon
est and intelligent. Wlmt makes |
you think ? Am you acquainted
w ith him.
No, c;. kn.i never keen him.
^ hy, then «l<4 you <x*nie t) hue
conclusion ?
Because li*- lake* ten ncv.*|*ap
and pays for them in advance.
Verdict for defendant.
SPLENDID
JEWEL rv.
< I .< >'»’* it N«V.
\S.) Rr.mrUoo hi., f
>a*"»**v»ab La
R, W. STU.SBS,
1 |W
JOS. JEllOEll.
[ I tiie THOMAHVII.LK JEWElJ'li,
ut the .kin ilii.coiiirin'' j -:m ViAi” r, ' M rA , ,
•f.er ;i l>rui«. take a little Jrj-
sti-r. li nr arrowroot, mer. lv ntoivteu
:t with ml,l water, ami pkee it on
the n.jnr.Kl part. Thu i« le-*t .lone
immultatelv, w, iu to prevent tie-
ai tion of the uir nj.>n tbe.kiu. !«• \ r,
vatoahle for black eves. ' *'!
Pure Silver.
t». limtutrllD. A -j *.. »•;.•! !.
CLOCKS.
Until the reigu uf the Kmprejst
J^cpheuc a handkerchief wav thought j <**11 k»nd..r*,Ufcri.;.' ,*n
in France *0 *bock:ng ao object that a r * 1 , A ?'**
lady would never dare to tus it before ^ • •l-'lTUy.u
any oae. The wont» eret carefully j
avoided iu refined conversation. ! meuitv. .\i«*aianr* awn 05
How it does hurt*some people to! 5. l
tell them the trath. .....
Art.
tf I.;uv,
it»uir>'ff ifOTt:i,
UAOCM, >3A.
1‘EltDAY.
Or;uiHhllfcilk*l«rtk«iro
« UnvfcS ?.> tW ||.«» Ivl
’*"• •“»•** Wftuv twir h.»k}