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VOL. V.
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SMONTH
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e paulsbei
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I «ToO $SOO 1000 12 00 14 00 I.'00 $-JU00
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0 5 on 0.U0 f.00 io.no 12 on 15. on snj*t SJ.on
iiiAO;:
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ial on regalai
ndvertlslBg rates.'
Notices ot Concerts, Inhibitions. Profcseiun.
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ef aspirants tooRIcc, lOcents |*er lino.
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•• Mortgage rl Ka sales per aqua re,..
Citations for letters of Administration,.
Uuardlanshlp.
ipUeatloii for Dismission from #4«ltuln- J
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plkatk
ansbip..
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(ales of Perishable property, per sqaaio
Notices to Debtors and Creditors
Foreclosure of Mortgage, per square.....
Kstray Notices, 35 days
Application for Homestead...
All sales ot Land by Administrators, Kxemtors
or Guardians, are require*‘ ■' • - * -
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n be held
ami three
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i—Notkcs «l tbe
itbegivenat least
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Estate Debtors ami Creditors;—Notice to
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published forty days.
Court of Ordinary Leave to SellNotice that
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Adraini.Ur.itorsand Guardianship:—Citations
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thirty days; for Dismission from Administration,
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,-losuio ofMortgsge must lie published m<
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OUK
Job Printing
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Having supplied ourself with new
Latest and Host Improved Patterns
We arc now prepared to execute in as
GOOD HTVEJK
DOW IMUCUH
. cau be had in the State,
JOB FORK
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SVCU AS
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isfaction to all who favor us
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THOMASVTLLE, GA., SATURDAY, MARCH, 24 1877.
NO. 2
“Jiever Mia*.”
What's tb«* u-e of always fretting
At tbe trials we shall find
Ever st icw n along our pathway?
Tiart-lon mid “eerer n.iud.”
Travel unuonl. working,hoping;
Cast nolingcilng glaurc behind ‘
At Ibe trials i nrr « ncountcrcd.
Look alnad, ami “never mind."
tV hat is past ia past forever;
Let all fretting be rrsigncil;
It will never help tbe matter—
Do your best ami “never mind."
And If tbore wlio might befriend yon—
Whom tic tin of nature hind—
Slwuld refuse to do their duty,
Look to liraten, ami “never ndud.”
Friendly uonl« ore often s|mkrn
IThen the feelings are unkind;
Take them for their real value,
|*a*s them by, ami “Hirer mil d."
Col. Tom Hardeman’* Address
Before tbe State siitrirullural
Society.
MiLLKIKiEVILLK, CIa., Mall'll 6tb,
H77.—From the depth of a heart
felt gratitude I tender uiv acknowl
edgements for the distinguished
honor you have eonfeired njxjn me,
selecting me as yonr presiding
officer, and I fervently desire, by a
faithful discharge of official duty, to
retain ,confidence so generously
reposed in me. I am deeply iiqj
pressed l»y the time anil place at
and in which I assume this high
position. Here, in this ancient
city, whose history is so intimately
connected with that of 7roup and
Clarke, of Lumpkin and Millcdgc,
of Gilmer and Early, of Crawford
and Forsyth and a long catalogue
of distinguished dead wlio now
sleep with their fathers, in this old
hall that echoed in the past the elo
quence of Berrien and Dougherty,
of Hanis and Miller, of Meriwether
and Bartow, where the genius of
past glory still hovers, fanning with
its wings the Hentiinent of a pure
integrity and lofty patriotism, I as
sume yonr highest official position
and guided by the example of those
illustrious dead, I lay my humble
sacrifice upou the altar of patriotic
duty, humbly praying tluit the offer
ing may be acceptable to those
whose commendation it is my am
bition to command. How* suitable
the time! How appropriate the
place! Tlie glory of the past lend
ing its lustre to the humility of the
present. 7 he echoes of fonuer
greatness sweetly blending with the
song of present progress and ad
vancement. The Georgia of other
days, proud of her glory aud pros
perity and honor, pointing the
Georgia of to-day to the paths
wherein she should walk if she
would secure wealth and prodne
tivcncss for her hills, and pence,
wealth and contentment for her
volleys. Tlie mighty past, the
struggling present, the liopefnl fu
ture, blending hero their slindes of
joy and gloom, of sunlight and
cloud, of hope and despondency, in
sncli harmonious combinations ns
to present a picture admired ns well
for the mellow softness of its dark
grounds ns for tho beauty ot its
brilliant colors. How suggestive
that picture! How it awakens
thoughts and memories and hopes
of a glorious noonday—a starless
ight—a dawning morn—years of
prosperity succeeded by the ravages
of war and the desolation of inter
necine strife—the planted tree
growing into beauty, blighted by
the blast or injured by tbe storm,
budding again in the springtimo of
a fresh existence! That tree, my
countrymen, if preserved and nur
tured, will refuse not its fruits of
pleasure and plenty! True, we have
had much to discomfort and embar
rass ns, but, thank God, tho ener
gies of the people have not been
destroyed, for, with unbroken will
and determined resolution, they are
making for themselves a history and
a destiny that will not dishonor
those who made Georgia in the
past, wind she will be in the fature
—the peer of the greatest, the pride
of her daughters and the glory of
her sous. True, war robbed her of
her jewels, destroyed her prosperity,
sacked her cities and desolated her
fields, yet she is not dead—she lives
and will live, for Georgia’s sons wil
not let the grand old mother die.
Verily, she lives, not os in days of
old, when “she sat by tho fleslipoU
and did eat bread to the fall,” for
she is now journeying in Sknr, and
her children have murmured, saving
“what shall wc drink ?’* Yet, guid
ed by that public spirit which lias
lead and still leads them, they have
reached “Klim, with her twelve wells
of water and three score and tea
palm trees,” and following their
Joshua of duty, they will be pre
served and “brought into their her
itage—even a land that fioweth with
milk and and honey.”
I am not one of those who have
despaired of the State and predict
aa uncertain fature, for her increase
in * all the elemeuts of material
greatness during a decade of years
justifies the prophecy that, by a
proper direction of onr energies, a
wise division of onr labor and prn-
deut husbandry of oar economies,
we will re-establish her upon a ba
sis of permanent prosperity and
greatucss. And to no industry do
I more encouragingly look for this
growth and prosperity than" to the
one in whose interest yon have as
sembled to-day. It is the Star iu
tbe East which is to guide ns to tbe
Bethlehem of a new Redeemer.—
Upon yonr sncccss rests my , well
grounded hope of future prosperity.
Intelligent agriculture, supplying
its own wants, relieving its own ne
cessities, cultivating its ow’n soil, is
tbe foundation stone upon which
rejjts onr social, commercial, me
chanical and manufacturing inter
ests. Ibis the oxygen of the air
that gives them vitality and living—
file life-blood that courses through
their arteries and veins. Stamped
with the signet of Divine approval,
it commends itself to the enlight
ened judgment of all classes and all
professions. What nobler occupa
tion ever enlistencd the energies of
a people? What State affordsmore
facilities fin* its successful pursuit ?
Her soil is productive and tliversi
fied ! Her climate is pleasa'nt and
healthful; her productions are va
ried and remunerative; her moun
tains are rich in wealth; her valleys,
under intelligent culture, smile with
plenty; her streams sing the song
of tho mill and the factory: yet all
these agencies aud instrumentalities
are valueless unless properly direct
ed, dcvelo|>ed aud husbanded.—
Cling then, to the soil, where yonr
fathers sleep, and utilize all its
great elements of power aud
strength, and the future of your
State will be as bright as the past
has been glorious.
This is an age of activity aud
prtigress in the various walks of
life. Industries arc multiplyin;
and facilities for accumulating
prosperity aud wealth arc increas
ing, and that industry, which dots
not keep step to the music of prog
ress, will not share iu the distribu
tion of tli -• troplrics of victory.
Away, forever, with the idea that
there is uo progress iu agricultural
science! Contrast the preseiit with
its intelligent husbandry, its scien
tific culture, its increased’ produc
tiveness on diminished acreage,
with the agriculture of the nucicuts,
and tell me, ye croaking sceptics, if
it is uot better understood as a sci-
erted- and becoming more advanta
geously, practiced as an art? Yes,
uiy countrymen, uudpr the enlight
ened and progressive iufiucncc of
societies bke your own and kindred
associations, agricultural science is,
to-day, working au epoch tn tho
history, of progress that.’ will tell
most favorably upon the productive
industries fincT the wealth produ
cing agencies of the land. Day af
ter day adds to its victories, and the
triumph of new principles aud the
success of useful experiments, mul
in removing the prejudice against
the raSch ridiculed idea of “book-
tvmWg”—* prejudice which has
materially retorted a healthy growth
of your crowning industry.
The same objections were urged
by leaders of okl against improve
raent in the mechanical arts. Scep
tical philosophy and ignorant preju
dice ridienled the idea of natural
agencies performing the work of
muscle and of mind; yet thanks to
that spirit of progress, that will not
down at the bidding of harping un-
belief and contented inetmess. sci
ence performs, to-day, with ease
and regularity, the work of human
hands, while mannal labor folds its
arms in snllen astonishment at its
power and proficiency. Element af
ter element has been subordinated
for man’s pleasure, comfort and n<
grandizemeut, until as a great
statesman well said: “The wind
works! The water works! Tlie elas
ticity of metal works! Wheels re-
rolve upon the peripheries of other
wheels! The saw aud the plane are
tortured into an accommodation of
new nses, and hist of all, with
whirlwind sound, comes the potent
agency of steam, which rows :uid
pumps aud carries and draw's aud
hammers and spins and weaves and
prints and says to manual labor give
over your bodily toil,” and enjoy
your ease and comfort as you con
template the result of experiments
and the triumphs of science.
And lias agriculture no new field
to explore? Has chemistry devel
oped all tbe hidden mysteries of the
laboratory of nature? Has mother
earth locked up the treasures of her
forests and hills, her vaUeys and
fields, and refused a farther dispen
sation of her exlianstless wealth?
Are water and air and metal to be
made such mighty agencies in light
ening the burdens of labor and add
ing to human comforts, worldly
emoluments and personal happiness,
and is the visible, tangible dement
—earth—nature’s great laboratory
and storehouse—to afford no in
creased facilities for advancement,
no grand elements of wealth ? Has
experiment folded her wings and
laid down to quiet sleep? Hub
scientific research made all the dis
coveries necessary for the enlight
ened aud enlarged purposes of life ?
I answer, verily, nay! Science, fost
ered aid encouraged, will accom
plish for agriculture what it has
done for architecture, commerce and
the mechanic arts, and sterile wastes
nud impoverished fields, under the
intelligent application of its teach
ings aud its labors, will ripen their
abundant harvests, filliug yonr
granaries with plenty, yonr Louies
witb luxury and your State with
wealth.
To eulist tbe farmers of Georgia
in these grand purposes and labors,
to elevate them to a position of per
fect independence, to instil iuto
their wanly bosoms a more univer
sal desire for an enlightened under
standing and higher appreciation of
their noble calling, to congregate
them together that each may learn
of the other those instructive les
sons which will innre to the welfare
of his profession, is the object of
yonr association and the main pur
pose of this meeting. To this
great cause I give unreservedly my
hand and heart.
With no other purpose, with no
selfish ambitiou, I now assume the
official station with which you have
honored me. I feel, deeply feel tbe
responsibility of my position, and
tremblingly I throw upon my
shoulders the mantle so worthily
worn by Stocks and Cooper, aud
Mercer and Lewis and Yancey, and
last but not least, by him who has
just severed bis official connection
with you to be a ruler over his peo
ple.
Agriculturists of Georgia! Tillers
of the soil of my native State!
Give me your generous confidence,
your wise counsels, your experienced
assistance, and may our united ac
tion, under the auspices of Nature’s
God, redoaud to the welfare of the
people and the evcrlnstiug honor
and glory of the State.
whose unde is a member of the Leg
islature was permitted to make a
trip to Lancing a few days ago in
order to visit the State House. He
came home yesterday noon cback
fall of importance, and when Ins lit-
brother run to meet him at the gate,
William coldly waved him back,
and said:
“I refer you to the committee on
fisheries, bub, and bow’s my dog ?”
His mother was glad to sec him
and when she asked him if he had
enjoyed himself he replied:
Ob, I suppose so, thongh 1 now-
move to strike out all after the en
acting clause.”
What sort of talk is that, Willie,
dear?” she asked, in great sur-
Pri8 ^ Aw
“XevtWfeniml the talk, mother,
but move the previous question and
bring on tbe pancakes.”
The hired girl came in with the
dinner and wanted to know how he
liked Lancing. He looked at her
with great dignity and replied:
“I now move to lay your petition
on tho table, Haunali, for future con
sideration.”
She got mad about it, aud Wil
liam slyly informed his mother that
it was his opinion that H:umah’s
title should be mode to conform to
the body of the bill. He went out
to see the boys after dinner, and a
honwfepainter asked where No. (157
was.
We’ll have a call of the House
and see,” replied the boy, as he look
ed around.
Whose house ?” asked the pain-
Thc Country Editor.
You see him on the street while
he rambles from point to point, aud
you regard him as one without mon
ey or brains. He reads tbe signs and
peers in at every sbop window’ with
the unsopliisticntcduess of a verdant
youth, but bcueath bis greenness is
au importance that smacks of dig
nity. He may looif like some bela
ted straggler from a flock of sheep,
but upon his broad, generous shoul
ders has leaped many iui obscure
individual iuto the halls of legisla
tion and Congress. It was liis ink-
soiled fingers that placed in solemn
lines she type that recounted liis
irtues and sent forth to the world
his fitness and qualifications for of
fice within the gift of the people,
and yet the poor medium, by which
bis ambition found strength and his
aspirations success, receives only
thanks and oft times not that much
reward!
We love to shake the baud of a
country editor. We find in him the
true working man of the land. He
works not only with Ills hands, but
with his brain. Under his magic
work towns grow into cities, black
smith shops grow into foundries,
and the little bunch of cottages are
transformed iuto palatial mansions.
These changing scenes go on, and
yet the country editor toils on ns he
did when his village was in its in
fancy. There Is uo reward for liis
work other than the satisfac
tion of knowing that he and he alone
wrought tho glorious improvement.
Few know the trials aud troubles
of a country editor. He lives, like
the preacher, upon the charities of
his^iatrous. One day he may revel
in the luxuriance of a load of wood,
aud the next day shiver iu the ab
sence of food. He toils on, never
theless He goes on building liis
town, electing ungrateful aspirants
to office, and give each and every
citizen a shove up tbe bill of life,
down which he is allowed to tum
ble.
Therefore when CoL Tooster
comes into our sanctum, wc feel as
if we were more honored than if
Ben Hill or Chief Justice Bradley
bad visited us. We love tlie conn-
try editor. Aud althongh be
but a trifle worse off in this worlds
goods than the poor scribe of the
city we feel as if he is one of the no
blest works of God, in that he dof
more for his fellow men, and is paid
less for it than any other creature
on earth.—Bridge* Smith.
When the Brcnton mariner puts to
sea his prayer is: “Keep me,my God;
my boat i» so small and Tbj ocean so
wide.” Does not this beantifol pray
er truly express the condition of each
of ns?
Tbe Third House.
A Detroit boy, aged twelve,
“Or, you can rise to a question of
privilege,” continued the lad.
‘I don’t want no sass!” said the
iminter, who thought the bqv was
making fun of bis red nose.
“Of course not. Let’s i>ass the
bill to a third reading, or else 50 iu
to jeommittee of the whole and de
bate it”
“I think you need dressing down !**
growled the painter, aud lie banged
William iuto a snow-bank and
pushed a heap of snow down l>ekiud
his collar.
“Have the minority 110 • rights ?”
yelled the boy as he kickod tho
painter 011 the shin.
He would have been wolloped, had
not liis mother appeared. 7’lie pain
ter moved away at tho sight of her,
but called out:
“I’ll see you again, boy !”
“I refer the whole subject to fath
er, with instructions to report a bill
to walk you into the Police Court,”
replied the representative, aud he
went to tell his mother the differ
ence between suspending tlie rules
and rushing a bill, or referring it to
the committee on cornfields till some
one came around with the cigars.—
IhHroH l*rc«.
Why HU Dog Bit Him.
Frjrn tbe San Autuniu Herald.;
A boat a week ago we heard one
of onr leading citizens bragging
about bis watch dog. He went 00
to say that Nero was u splendid
watchdog; that he would never
even growl at a child, and at night
lie would tear anybody to pieces be
found about the premises. __
‘Ain’t you afraid,' we asked, 'that
he will bite yon some night when
you come home late ?’
‘Not a bit of it; he is too intelli
gent He kuows my step os soon
os I put my foot on the gallery.—
Why, I wouldn’t lake $«U0 for that
dog. He is tlie most reliable bit
ting dog iu San Antonio.*
About three days after the fore
going conversation took place, one
morning early we met a policeman
leading this identical dog out into
tbe suburbs.
‘What are you doing with Major
Jones’ dog ?’ We wanted to know.
'He gave him to me to take him
out and shoot him ?’
‘What for?’ we asked in amaze
ment.
‘Because he tackled the Major
last night on his coming home, and
bit him in thirteen places; he would
not be down town for a week.’
‘But I heard the Major say that
dog was intelligent; that he kuew
his ste)), and wouldn't bite him, no
way he could fix it; that he wouldn’t
take $000 for the animal.’
‘The dog ain’t to blame for it,’
said tbe policeman, gazing sadly at
l^oor Nero, ‘it’s the Major’s own
fault.'
‘How so ?’ we inquired.
‘Well,’ responded tho policeman,
slowly, ‘the dog did know liis step
and never even growled ot him be
fore, but last night, for the first
time since he has had the dog, the
Major came home three hours ear
lier than usual, aud perfectly sober,
and somehow his step was different
from what the dog was used to; lie
didn’t tangle up his legs as much
common, and tho dog was fooled
by it, took him for a i>erfect stran
ger, and bounced him. Tlie dog
ain’t to blame; he missed tlie smell
of whiskey, he didn’t hear the Ma
jor whoop and cuss and fall down
in the cellar as he always docs when
lie comes home, so Nero kept 011
biting the Jfajor in fresh places un
til the family interfered.’
‘Come on, Nero!’ aud tlie sad fu
neral cortege resumed the line of
march for the brush.
Little Tilings by Josh Billings.
A kross word is a little thiug, but
it is what stirz up the elephant
A kiud word iz a little thing, but
it i/ just what soothed the sorrows
ov the setting hen.
11 orange peel on the sidcw:ilk
iz a little thing, but it liaz upset
many a giant.
An oath iz a little thing, bat it iz
rccored in the great ledger in licav-
A serpent s fang iz a little thing,
but deth iz its victor}*.
A baby iz a w ee little thing, but a
constable was once a baby.
A hornet’s sting'iz a little thing,
but it sends the school-boy home
howling.
A star is a little thing, but it kau
hold this grate world in its arms.
A tang iz a little thing, but it fills
the universe with trouble.
An egg iz a little thing. But the
huge krokerdile kreeps iuto life out
ov it
A kiss iz a very little tiling, but it
betrayed the Son ov God into
tbe bands of tbe enemy.
A spark Is a little thing, but it
can light the poor man s pipe, or set
the world to burning.
The acorn iz a little tiling, but
the black bear and his family li\e in
the oak that springs from it
A word is a little thing, but one
word has been menny a man’s des
tiny, for good or for evil.*
A penny iz a very little thing, but
the interest on it form the days of
Cain and Abel would bay oat the
globe.
Animate iz a little thing but it iz
long enough to pull a dozen along
teeth, or to get monied and have
yoar own mother-in-law.
A lap-dog iz a little thing, b:-.‘ he
iz a very silly thing besides.
Life iz made npov little things.—
Life itself iz but a little thing; one
breath less then comes the phuner-
oL
Good Grit.
A11 honest-faced stranger allied on
'Squire Jones not long siuce asked
wlmt his fee was for joiuing a cou
ple in marriage.
' 7 lie fee is two dollars, if }
ac here,” said the justice 1 .
‘Let’s nee,” said the youth as he
pulled out liis nione}, “there’s three
donut's for a bedstead, eight dollars
for a sccond-liaud stove, two dollars
for dishes, two dollars to ran the
house on, and — and that's every
blamed cent?’*
“So you are short ?” queried the
'.Squire.
“There’s my pile,” said the young
man; “but 111 knock the two dollars
off for dishes and give it to you, for
I’m bound to be harnessed to my
girl this week, if we have to bile ’ta-
ters in the tea-pot!’’
T9 C9V5TRV MERCHANTS.
Croolxery,
CHINA AND GLASS WAKE.
JAMES S. SII.VA,
(Laic of BoLhatr A Silt 9.)
Vi lii* oM *UM<Ioa St. Julian street amlthe
n.l fonucrlr ««rupicl by K. D. Mnythc. U
nuw offerin * rare bargain* to
COUNTRY MERCHANTS;
n. .re -Si -
JCMX SUDOXOI UII. I. BAL-OfTVNB
McDOVOlGH. BALLl.VrY.YE,
Iron and Brass
founders
Machinists and Pattern Makers.
rJ™n/r’ nU i fo £ slore * »n J J-ellinR.
r crania, and Cemetery Railiursol
vanone designs as low as cau be ™r-
cuascd in the North. '
OtN
(or. K**t Rroad anj Liberty Sia,
SAVANNAH. OA.
H. G-. McLendon,
Attorney at Law,
TH0MA8VILLE, 0A. ' 1
aTttVhln ***** *** n t*»i»9«*«uraa>
Pjlft*(V9 Drugstora
CHAS. P. HAN8ELL,
Attorney at Law,
ThomasriUe, (Jo.
-P- U. Alexander,
Attorney nt Law,
THOMASVIE, LE. OA
mar 2l-ly
JOSEPH P- SMITH.
Attorney at Law
Corner Rrna>! *».| Jsckm Struct*,
thomasville, ga.
wii. xrrotKti.. *«. nnviiKu.
MITCHELL & MITCHELL
Attorneys at law
Tiio.nA»vii.i,r
mar 21-ly
H. W. Ilot-kixm.
F* McGlashan,
dealer in
Saddles, Bridles,
AND
HARNESS:
SADDLES, From So,00 and upward.
HARNESS, “ $14,00
BRIDLES, “ £i ? oo
and all kinds of Horse Furniture,
Every description or|
AGE. BUGGY.
AND
Materials,
Shoe Findings etc.
I have on hand a Largo s'lech .1
lkatiikr
act!itst the U. .s'. ll<
Wagon
of ell kind,, for side at lor price..
Enameled Leather and Cloth, and
a r inc amtortment of
(JIIILDKEX3 CAHItlAGES
I am agent for the Mausiiali.,
wood, llunsE-Col.LAit, aud die (Vlc-
btwted DOW DAW. COTTON
1 LANTKit, which I acll at Factory
prices.
Call and see me. Strict allrutiou
paid to orders by mail.
ill'll 'll 1 V
EMJleieily,
Merchant Tailor,
(In the Duards Xc
Hu : l<iing,)
BXJX-3J STREET,
Savannah, Georgia.
Keep* oi. hand llio laictd, aud m?*
elegant styles of
FRENCH and ENGLISH CLOTHS
COATINGS, VESTINGS,
AC. AC.
Counting the Vole.
How are they comm* on countin'
the voles?’’ said a tunu who nover
took a paper in hi* life, the other day,
to i
“Dou l know,” wc replied.
“Well how many vole* oi them i*
they, Mr. Editor?** he asked.
“Only oft) in the whole college,” we
replied.
“Good Jcho*nphat!” lie cxcliitncd,
“why ain't it orful that wc scud rich
d—<1 fools to Congress that can't count
three hundred and sixty-nine ? U*hy
my boy Dave kin do it. Well, tbe gov
ernment ought logo to h— II.”—Ej>
c/iliiVJt.
Cutting doue.md making
latest style*. A perfect lit ;
in every instance.
ocV. 1
JOHN M. COOPEli & CO.,
Ga.
Savaiiunli, f
WhoIcMtlc ai.-l PciaII I
Books and Stationery of all Kind.
>|*«SncaM Seat !’rt~ea. Hurt, j
Xew* And Rook PrtiiUa
uxl fuk, <i»|.l Pen., Pm *tH
Cwei. link and !'■«*«! K>.
I*d»rr, Wilting aud f.'oU.f
I’qvr*. PUylBf, nj
••»d Printer*’ Cvrd*.
Port mon*lea, £
School Furai-
T. X. llorK.M.
HOPKINS & HOPKINS,
Vttome.vK nt Law,
Jackson Str.xt,
rhomasville, : : (jciit;t
8V«i*l
■ntl«*n git r
.s', lioveri
it) claltni
W. M.UAM.40ND. E. T. DAVItf
H.AMM0NP & DAVIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
— AND*—
COLLECTORS OF OLAIMS,
TUOMASV1I.I.E, S. W. GEORGIA,
iu 21-lj
DR. JNO. H COYLE,!
RESIDES! DENTIST
THOMASVTlLE, OA
OBIto, Comer Jiukwii »d<1 llroiwl bb.
I >1*. W. I-\ I >« Wilt,
UESWENCE
SMITH AVENUE, TUnmatvillr, (]<i
Ollice over 1-. McGla.Iian's .tore.
n,.r:«-l y
K.
MacLEAN,
Altonioy
-otniMeloi* sit 1 iU\v,
TIIOMASV 2 LLE, GA.
DR. D. S. BRAADOfl
THOMASVILLE 0A.
lk—Back room Evan*’ Building
lar ‘il-ly
-InillPH I
Hmvurcl f
Attorney at Uaw,
TIlOMASVIU.i;.
I..AT 2|.|jr
SAVANNAH.
IIo\Y t‘ll cV I ><5I» in.l I’lc
Attorneys at Lau>,
SAVANNAH. OA.
•I /
... Trl^kit. TO...
Anything Aliilas ■ touched was
tamed into gold. In these days
touch a man with gold ami he’ll
tom into anything.
Cbe blue light cure cculinue« to in
crease in favor ami has maoj ajvic
cater. Its Uircorerer U General
Plcascnton, of Philadelphia, nbo says
he lias been using blue - glass frames
in his grapery for ten yean anil found
their stimulating agency was perfect-
ly womlcrfuL The well known florist,
Uuist. has used bole frames in
cooversatcrm and found them emi
nently successful in restoring vigor to
dying plant*. The French glass of
Mazarine blue, colored with cobUt-is
i lie kiod used, and A ■* claimed that
■ he clectro magnitiaai developed by
the passage of tho son's toys through
plain glass, asaoriatod with bine glass,
possesses a mysterious curative puw-
tjome persona seem etterly incapa
ble of appreciating a generous set.
Merely because a young nun calls on
a young lady half a dozen evenings
during tbe week, and drops in occa.
slonally between meals, there are peo
ple mean enough to intlnosle that it
meant something besides anxiety
about tbe health ot tKe Bother; -
S.
« ScL«no«ilfora A Co e
Tike*, Ur wbotn »«■ art Agmti. |io«
Or-Jtre-I or Import*.! at Trw York
Welcll -.'jt.t-lent lL»: we cat. *c!i u ]
«e*t,cif Ur in ClkicttM, d ipulti
4*ofw, nr any other Southern City.
Writ# or ulluj Jun oar /view#.
Mi21*ly.
T. N. Theus & Co.
Impurlcr aud Deakrtllu
AValclieH, .IpwcIp.v,
Silverware,
MILITARY
AND
Fancy Goods
•S. IV. Corucr Bull Jt Broughton M*.
SAVAXXAJI, G A.
HVtlcAe* a/ul JtraXrp KtjxtiruJ.
feb .'Mm
NEW GOODS
AT
CARSON BROTHERS
DEALERS IX
Dry-fl—U. Ve<W. lint*. HaU. ClMlnns,
Hv4va-e, «mrki, JMetfkiatl tmrdra
BOSTON, GEORGIA,
Dtrwir.il m4 9pe»l*f tU.r Pafl Ourfc
ffHilh»T9w«ll>tWw4*w rnml-rmh
*r ItM^rihni.
R.W. STUBBS.
Attorney at Law,
Alexander & Russell,
WBOIjESH.LJS
GK OC’EltS
AND
Lmvuu tiKHLEds,
Hot. Alxrcorn ;.ud B/satt Su.’
SAVANNAH, - GA.
Wm. E. A!es9B4«r. W:a A. Ro9*^l
Chao, it. MuvaIi
BR« WWH 110 X Elv ,
HAOON, <>JL.
1- » - P«0*> i *<;>. Pivfftlru.*.hU p.
ill#.- Il '.l, < iUK- r.env.t
loll tt-O tV) l-gtI UWC it> tktr hsru 19
rt.OU, PKIt DAY.
IMsw.iku t-»ret. 1-ts.rer.
slhrrsl Hmup <iw«U Ike Uses, uf
rear tins*; )<#>•. ami mmmr*> Umm ma*9
tsjr us.sjsu*. .
»a-s -ifol -*-■ - J - -Zat . _ _ I , '■