Newspaper Page Text
**• tt. Moljcnclon,
Attorney at Law,
THOMASVILLE, OA.
Jfcm^omatisaglreateaMaansreeaairaa.
OfflLpo—Ov«r PjN A .C**s Prog Star*
saaiam 3*yT0iq
THOMASVILLE, GA., SATURDAY, MARCH, 31 1877
CHAS. P. HANSELL,
Attorney at T .n
Thoniasville, Qa.
*>•» a, Main In MUI»
TO COUNTRY MERCHANTS.
" ■" O*
Crooliery,
CHINA AND GLASSWARE.
Cbrap Faint.
A good cheap paint far bantu and
oat-homes is made aa follows: Pal
half a bushel of good lime in a clean
barrel, and add sufficient water to
moko a thin whitewash; stir it well
with a flattened stick until ereiy
A Shower of Stones in Georgia.
From Ik, Walton Const, YMotto.1
On Friday of last week, in the
early afternoon, on Covington street,
in Social Circle, there occurred one
of the strangest phenomena that was
ever seen in Georgia. It was noth
ing more nor leas than a genuine
shower of stones, varying in size
A Blue Glass Han.
He was a bine glass man. He
bad read about bine glass and be
lieved in it, and was determined to
be the healthiest individual in town.
‘Have ye any bine glass in strips for
winders?’ inquired he, as he rushed
into a glaring shop. ‘We have,sir,’
was the cheerful reply; jost the
READIHG MATTER OH EVEET PAGE or
A Woman’s Question.
Be lore I taut my late to thine,
Or place my hand In thine,
Before I let thy future give
Color ud form to mine,
Before 1 peril all fbe tbee.
Question thy soul to-night for me
I break all slighter bonds, nor feel.
Aahsdow ofregiet;
la there me link within the past
That holds thy apWtjetr.
Or b thy faith aa dear and flee
Aa that which 1 can pledge to Uu
Does there within thy dimmest drea
A possible fntore shine.
awn. *.«_ n.— lifts rmilil lir>nnr»fiv
body might come along
eight of clnba and take it.
Childiea must have love
the house and fresh air, and
play, and some good company
Episcopal Church, and ' we violate
no confidence in saying it,, take*
the lead in daily household devotion
with her family.
in the memory of the qoaint-Iegged
sexton tor more than “many years.”
—EngliA paper.
— am
A commercial exchange says:—
“Hogs are dull,” We never
thought hogs were very sharp.—
When one breaks into a cabbage
patch you may chase it fourteen
hnndrad tunes around the lot, and it
will try to crawl through every
three inch crack in the fence without
ooee seeing the hole it made to get
What a Woman Can Do.
As a wife and mother, woman
con make the fortune and happiness
of her husband and children; and,
if she did nothing else, surely this
would be sufficient destiny. By
her thrift prudence and tact, she
can seenre to her partner and to
herself a competence in old age, no
matter how small their Iraqinning
when the wind has passed over
them. See, too, bow they help to
support each other. A tingle stalk
would be soon bent to the ground,
but so many growing dose together
to keep each other up. If we keep
together when the troubles of life
ooma on tp like a stormy wind, we
shall keep each other up, when one
trying to stand akmo would fall”
Blaine, on Saturday, spoke to
Ben H. Hill, and suggested what a
ridiculous notion it was that
he ever opposed Hayes' policy.
Hill said he thought so, too; but
added, “I think, Blaine, you might
to confine your attacks stricUy to
Jeff Daria and the Southern Confed
eracy. Tour constituent? will back
yon to any extent on those topics."
Ihe lleUt IlrgiErr aaja - liideu
win be elected President in 1880.
Too many ‘SV If one *8’ defeated
Our Stock and Material is
New and Complete and every
effort will be made to give sat
isfaction to *11 who favor ns
with their patronage.
against two of them in 1880
The first thing the magnet
attracted—Attention.
TSRMS:
ONE YEAR,
SIX MONTHS,
TIIKEK MONTHS
All Subscription* mast be paid InrarUWyi
flTUM. No uUcriin!nation in furor or anybody.
Th* paper will be stopped in all iDstaocos at
ixplration of the time paid for, unique unL-
Tixkx and .
i Enterprise, and will be
•trlctlyadhered to:
sTru YJM.Ti^TTa Mr* M. 3M.5 M• »M.
\ 5300 *500100012 0014 00 1500 *2000
I * 00 12 00 1500 10 00 1000 2000 , 28 00
J 1000 1300 1*00 2000 2200 2500,
»*20Jl«0JJO0J22OOJ3fl
5. M 00 18 00 2*00 J
« 1300 2000 2500
1000 2300 3000
25 00 30 00 3500
3.300 4)00 45 00 50 00-55 00 9000 ItOOO
2200 2500 3000 3500
2500 3000 3500, 4000
3000,3500 4050 45 00
111.00 2.0)1 :i.otH.no ft.uo 6.00 h.oo i:>.o » is.no
21 2.U0I4.00 5.00 6.00 H.OO 10.00 12.00 1.3.00 50.00
3| 3.00,500 0.00 MO 10.00 12 OO 1.3.S0 5»J® 53.00
A SQUARE IS ONE 1.VC1I.
Not re* in local column will be measured
«ei>arutrly—no apace counted lr** tlmn a *q*are
—anti charted 30 per cent additional • n regular
advertising rate*.
Notice* ot Concert*, Exhibit ion*, Profession
al Announcement*, &c.,ofone aqaare
or lore, one la—rtfau... . 40.00
JomauatcatfaM of a political character, el
lick* written In adrocaer or defctM-e «T the
i.ra*plrant» to office, 10 cents per line.
Announcement of Candidate* 45.(0. Cash.
Yearly contract* will be made with Mer
chant* ibr a certain space la our advertising
column*, subject to a charge ot style ami mat
ter at their option. Ibis will lie the lest and
cheapest Inveatmentybr parties who advertise
largely and frequently.
WHEN BILLS ABE DUE
At advertisement* In this paper are due at any
hue after the ftrst Insertion of the same, and
will be collected at the pleasure or tbo propri
etors, utiles* otherwise arranged by contract.
HATES ASH RULES FOR LEtSAL All-
YERTISISU.
Slier in’s sales, ner levy..-.. —— #5 00
•• Mortgage FI Fa salce per square,— 6 0t
Citations for letters of AdminUtcatioM,
•• •• “ Guardianship....—......
•plication for Dismission from .1.1 win- I
’»t rati on —, — I
tdlicatl “ ^
„„„„„ „„ .... 1 henceforth
breathe
Untouched. unshared by mine?
If to, al any pain or cost,
O, tell me before all is lo.ll
Look deeper still, if llioo caul ktl,
IKilhin Ihy inmost soul.
That thou bast kept a portion back,
While I have staked the whole,
Let no lalse pity spare the blow.
But in true mercy tell me so.
Is there within thy heart a need
That mine cannot fulfill?
One chord that any other l.end
Could better wake or still!
Speak now, lest at some future day
My whole life wither nnd decay.
Lives there within thy uaturc hid
The demon-cpirit. change.
Shedding a pressing glory still
On all things new and strange?
It may not be thy fault alone.
But shield mine heart against thine
own.
Couldsl lliou withdraw Ihy hand one
.lay
And answer to mv claim,
That fate, and that to-day’s mistake—
Not thou—had been tohlamc?
Some soothe their conscience thus, hut
thou
Wilt surely warn and save me now
Nay, answer not—t dare not hear,
Ibe words would come too late;
Yet I won id spare thee all remorse.
So comfort llice, my fate;
Whatever on my heart may fall.
It ..member, I would risk it all!
.Wi
I ale* of Land, per square.,
ixle«off Perishable proper! v, peV squsie
Notice* to Debtor* and Creditor*
Foreclosure at Mortgage, per 3qaare~—
Kstruy Notice*,30 day*...—..........
Application far Homestead-- —.—
tbo flrat Tuesday In the month, betwooa tbo
boars of ten o’clock In tbo for*noon, and throe
in the afternoon, at tbo Court House In wblcli
the property Is Kttoated. Aotice* of these sales
n»t bo given in a public gaxette forty days
previous to the day of sales.
Sale of Personal Property«•
sal* of personal property must bo riven at least
ten days previous to the day of sale.
Estate Debtor* and Creditor*;—A olio* to
Debtors and Cioditors of an estate mast be
pabllsbed fort* day*.
Coart of Ordinary Leave to 8otlNotled that
application will bo made * * *
onroaweik for four woeks.
AdmlnDtritor**n«I Guardianship:—Citations
for Lettersnf Admlalotratloa mast bo published
Ihirtv da vs; far DIsmiMtonfroin Administration,
monthly far three months—far Disruissloa from
Unardlanship; 40 dar*.
Forecloseure of MortgageItn'e* far Fore
,do«ure or Mortgage inns" * - -j» * 1 '-
(or four months.
OUR
Job Printing
Department.
Having supplied ourself with uew
-IT TIIE
Latest and Most Improved Patterns
Wo arc uo.v prepared to execute in ns
CrOOD STVLE
A ED AT AS
LOW PRICEM
as col. be had in the Stale,
JOB WORK
OF ALL KINDS,
SUCH A3
BUI Head* f|
^Circulars,
Letter Heads,
Statements
Koto JIeids4
cviUUoa Cards,
Visiting Cards,
Legal Blanks,
Educating Children.
7’iie mind of the child itt a plas-
tic-mouhl, sensitive to the slight
est impression. The unwritten les
sons of home ami home influence
have far more effect in shaping char
acter than the drill and study of the
school-room. What father docs,
wliat mother says* is full license in
the minds of the young to do nnd
say likewise. No school can prop
erly train a child whose home asso
ciations arc positively bad. Healthy
childreu arc full of life, buoyancy,
steam. Don’t depress the youthful
mind; don’t discourage the boy who
thinks he can roll a snow ball, gath
ering size at every revolution until
it shall l>e ns large ns a hogshead-—
Let him try his powers and learn
his weakness His failnre will set
him to thinking, reasoning, know
ing. The little fellow’s education is
well advanced when he has com
mcnced to think, reason nnd argue
for himself.
Parents are too chary of their
confidence. The natural instincts
of most children is to do right
They need encouragement and ex
planation rather than rebuke and
built finding. Their little steam en
gines need regulators rather than
collisions; they need to keep the
track more than they need to smash
up. The instinct of industry is na
tural to children; if yon don’t find
employment for their activity, it de
velops itself into pencil drawing on
point and walls, or destruction of
cane seat choirs. The perpetual
motion of hands and feet and
tongue, so wonderful to the adult
mind, may become a Niagara of
power when balanced and controll
ed.
The impulse of curiosity throbs
in the little fellow's brain; he is full
of new discoveries and searching in
quiries. If yon don’t give attention
to bis little questions, and satisfy
his mental cravings at home, he
seeks the servant, the hostler, the
corner loafer, and from them gains
bis first rudiments of morals, bis
first knowledge of facts, and his
first lesson in living and thinking.
Mothers, did the thought ever
occur to you that your indifference
to their many questions would
drive your little one to questionable
sources of information, to impure
fountains of inspiration, to low
standards of manhood and woman
hood ? Did you ever reflect that the
little mind and heart that yearns for
your caro and love, that is suscepti
ble to your shaping and moultUnj
in its youthful days, will soon pass
on into the cold world, without, be
yond your reach, beyond the gentle
hand, the loving heart that would
fain obliterate some ugly feature
the oucc beautiful image, whose
lines have grown too cold, too hard,
too sordid, ever-again to be warmed
and moulded and fashioned bv
mother’s love, or father's hope ?
. 0 — >
, she can mould her chil
dren, however adverse their disposi
tion, into noble men and women.—
And by leading in all tniugs a true
and beautiful life sbe can refine,
elevate and spiritualize all wto
come within reach; so that with
others of her sex emulating and as
sisting her, she can do more to re
generate the world than all the
statesmen or reforms that ever leg
islated. She cau do much, alas!
perhaps more to degrade man if she
chooses to do it Who can esti
mate the evils that woman has the
power to do ? As a wife she can
mill herself by extravagance, folly
or wnnt of affection. She can make
demon or nn outcast of a man who
might otherwise become a good
member of society. She can briug
bickerings, strife nnd discord into
what has been a hippy home. She
can change the innocent babes into
ile men and even into vile women.
She can lower the moral toue of so
ciety iuself, and thus pollute legisla
tion at the spring head. She can,
in fine, become an instrument of
evil instead of an angel of good.—
Instead of making flowers of truth,
purity, beauty and spirituality spring
up in her footsteps till the earth
smiles with a loveliness that is al
most celestial, she can transform it
into a black and arid desert, cov
ered with the scoru of till evil pas
sion, and swept by the bitter blast
of everlasting death. This is what
a woman can do for tlio wrong as
well as for the right. Is her mis
sion a little one? Has she
worthy work, os lias become the cry
of late? Man'may have a harder
task to perforin, a rougher road to
travel, but he has none loftier
more influential than woman’s.
A Touch of Pride.
It was a cold night in the winter.
The wind blew and tlic snow was
whirled furiously about, seeking to
bide itself beneath clonks nnd hoodR,
and in every hair of those that were
out. A distinguished lecturer
speak, aud notwithstanding the
storm the villagers ventured forth
to hear him. William Anuesley but
toned up to his chin in his thick
overcoat, accompanied his mother:
‘Couldn’t you walk more easily if
you took my arm ?”
“Perhaps I could,” his mother re
plied, as sbe put her arm through
his and drew up as close as possible
to him. Together they breasted
the storm, the mother and the boy
who had onco been carried in her
arms but who has now grown up so
tall that she could lean on his —
They had not walked far before lie
said to her:
“I am very proud to-night
‘•Proud that yon con take care of
me?”
“This is the first time you have
ever leaned on me” said the happy
boy.
There will be few hours in that
cliild’s life of more exalted pleasure
than he enjoyed that evening if he
shonld live to an old age, and should
in his manhood lovingly provide for
her who watched over him in help
less infancy. It was noble pride
that made his mother love him, if
possible more than ever, and made
her pray for him with more earnest
ness, thankful for his devoted love
and hopeful for his future. There
is no more beautiful sight than af
fectionate, devoted, obedient chil
dren. I am sure that he who com
mended children to love their fath
era aud their mothers must look
upon such with pleasure- May He
bless ever}' boy whose heart i-* filled
with ambition to be a blessing and
‘staff to his mother.”
Help Eoch Ollier.
A father was walking one day in
the fields with bis two children. The
wind was blowing over a field of
ripe corn and making the beautiful
golden ears wave like waves of the
‘Is it not surprising," said one
of the children, “that the wind does
not break the slender stalks of the
grain?”
“My child,” said the father,
how flexible the stalks are! 7hey
bend before the wind and rise again
uimg, os recommenueu >a me
Pleysonton theory. ‘Waal, then/
said Bluey, ‘111 take enough for
four winders.’ He paid the money
and departed, while the glazier
chuckled, ‘Good thing for us fellows,
the bloe glass craziness.’ Bluey
kept ou. He went into an optician’s
and bought a pair of blue goggles
to wear on his eyes. He dropped
into a hat store and ordered a little
round piece of blue glass pat in the
top of his hat in place of the usnal
tiu ventilator. He then partook of
dinner of bine fisb, at a restau
rant with a blue skylight, dipped
his Angers into a bine glass finger
bowl, and refused to drink anything
until the waiter hunted him up
mug with a blue glass bottom. The
day was uow spent, and going home
bine a light street car, the blue
gloss man, meeting bis children at
the door, refased to kiss any but
those having blue eyes, sat down in
blue chair to read a copy ol the
blue laws of Connecticut, and got
into such a fit of the blues that he
took some blue iuk, and writing in
bis will that at bis death the glass in
his coflin should be blue gloss,and bis
monument be made of blue granite,
be grabbed a revolver and blew his
brains out—Xew York Mail.
- tm • ^
Proverbs for Subscribers.
“A wise son niaketh a glad fath
er,” and a prompt paying subscrib
er eauseth the editor to laugh.
“Folly is a joy that is destitute of
wisdom,” but a delinquent subscrib
er eauseth suffering in the house of
newspaper maker.
“All the ways of a man are clear
in his own eyes,’* except the way
the delinquent subscriber bath in
net paying for his newspaper.
“Better is a little with righteous
ness,” than a thousand subscribers
who fuiletli to pay what they owe.
'A just weight and balance are
the Lord’s,” but that which is due
upon your newspaper is the publish
er’s thereof.
“Better is a dry morsel and quiet
ness thereof’ than a long list of
subscribers who clicateth the prin
ter.
•Better is the poor man that
walketh in integrity” and pnycth his
subscription, than the rich man who
continually tellcth thy “devil” to
cull again.
“Judgments are prepared for
scorners, stripes for the backs of
fools,” *the everlasting damnation
for him who pnyeth not for his news
paper.
“Hope deferred maketli the heart
sick,” is a-pro3*erb sadly realized by
the publisher who sendeth out bills.
A righteous man hateth lying, 1
hence an editor waxes wroth against
the subscriber who promises to call
aud settle on the morrow, yet call
eth not to settle.
“It bitetli like a serpent and stiu
geth like an adder” when he gets
through addiug up the amounts
due from his subs.— Whitehall
Time a.
Tlie Failed Calf.
A good story is told- conceruiiij
town-bred curate, who had consent
ed to do doty on Sunday for Lis
friend the rector of a country par
ish in the midlands. The subject of
the morning sermon was the para
ble of the Prodigal Son, and in
hopes of impressing upon his hear
ers the joy which the ]>atriarch felt
on the return of his son,os instanced
by his ordering the fatted calf to be
killed, the young curate fell a WM
donable pride in dwelling upon
subject which could not fail to be
comprehensible to the dullest
plough-boy in tbe congregation.—
Remember.” he said this was no
ordinary calf which was to be killed:
no half starved calf, slowly awaiting
death. No! it was not even merely
a fatted calf; bat,” becoming more
impressive, “it was the fattest calfi
which had been prized and loved by
the family for many year*!** A sea
of wide eyes and gaping months ar
rested for a moment the eloquence
of the fledgling parson, and in the
next there was such a chuckling and
grins and fluttering of old heads be
low as had not been witnessed even
in the memonr of the
genuine
, varying in size
from os large as a hen’s egg to that
of a man's two fists. The stones are
of irregular shape, of a dark, gray
ish color, interspersed with a bright
shiny substance, resembling ising
lass. The shower was very brie&
and extended over not more than
four acres of gronnd, and wosjfol-
lowed by aa explosive sound not utij
like cannonnding. A panicky feel
ing pervaded the vicinity visited by
the shower. Happily every one, ex
cept a negro woman was in-doors at
the time, else some one might hnve
been injured. One rock, as large
as a man’s two fists, came near strik
ing this woman. As many as a do
zen stones fell on the roof of the ed
itor’s house, though without doing
much damage.
An Alabama Jury's Astonish
ing Verdict.
A jury iu Alabama bad beau im
paneled in the case of a Mr. Johnson-
charged with killing his wife. The
evidence was postive and conclusive
leaving no donbt of liis speedy con
viction. To the amazement of all,
the juiy, after a short absence, re
turning a verdict: “Guilty of horse
stealing.” The Judge astonished,
asked ail explanation, slating that
the imlictmeut was not for horse
stealing, but manslaughter. The
foreman with his haud upon a huge
law book, and with an amusingly
dignified air, informed the court
that “it was not a cose of man
slaughter, but for woman slaugh
ter for which the law made
no provision ; bat being satisfied the
man deserved to be hanged, they
had brought in a verdict of horse
stealing which in that country,
would bo sure to swing him.”—
Danbury Nett;*.
— - «•» — -
Haud ox Forney.—Forneyism is
thus illustrated by the Baltimore
Bulldin:
/The instant any mention is made
of that $*25,000 which he got from
the Pacific Mail, Forney comes out
with a stunning leader about /the
martyred Lincoln’ and the assassin
South. A Marylaud planter, hav
ing killed hogs, suspected that some
part of his butchering had not been
returned to him. At night he
thought he would look around to
see where the pig’s feet and other
such things had gone to. and w ith
that end in view went towards his
negroes’ quarters. Before he got
there, however, his coming was dis
covered, nml he heard nil his hands,
men aud women, strike up a sponta
neous resonant hymn, iu the midst
of which he fancied he detected the
shrill trcblo of the ‘old mammy’ of
the quarters shrieking:
44 -YouTom, you Bill, you Jim, you N«.|,
You kirk 'Inn pig*' fort muter the U-l.
An’ glory hullulujali!’ ”
Origin of Popnlor Sayings.
v Mun proposes aud God disposes
-Thomas A. Kcmpis.
Better late than never—Thomas
Tusser.
A man’s house is his castle—Ed
ward Coke.
Out of niiiul us soon as out of
sight—Lord Broke.
Infinite riches in a little room—
Christopher J/arlowe.
Tlie'eml must justify the means—
Mathew Prior.
Bread is the staff of life--Dean
Swift
He that is down needs fear n<» fall
—John Bunyau.
Pity’s akin to fore—Thomas
Southern es.
By robbing Peter he paid Paul—
Francis Ilabrlias.
Choose an author as you choose a
friend—Earl of Roscommon.
i thin whitewash; stir it well
flattened stick until ereiy
lump of lime is broken up; then add
fifty pounds of mineral paint, fifty
pounds whiting, fifty pounds road
dust, finely sifted; mix to a thick
paste with linseed oil, and thin grad
ually to the proper consistence with
sweet buttermilk fresh from the
churn. The covering quality is im
proved by the addition of a gallon
of soft soap.
The address of the Executive
Committee of the Georgia Grange
has this: “Brothers, we fed we
would fall short of our duty were
we to dose without appealing to
you, in all earnestness, not to be
deluded into excessive cotton plant
ing; let us plaut more brains on
our forms, aud show it by increas
ing our supply crops to tbo exclu
sive of coustant disappointment to
make money out of cotton shonld be
severe lesson to us, and shonld
teach ns to be more discreet mid
wise in planting the crop of this
year.” that's exactly wliats needed.
Lawyers, doctors and politicians
may get along without brain, but
farmers cannot.
m —
A book agent, who has retired
from active lalior upon tbe hard-
earned accumulations of a life of in
dustrious cheek, says that the great
secret of his success was that wheu
he went to a house where the female
head of the family presented heaself
he always opened by saying, I beg
your pardon, miss, but it was your
mother I wanted to see. That al
ways used to get em. They not
only subscribed for my book them
selves, but told me where I could
find more customers.
A young Irish girl, going from
Albany to New York to a situation
lost her written recommendation on
the steamer St. John, and on arri
ving at New York was much troub
led about it Having an old friend
iu the city that knew her tronbb,
he agreed to help her, which he did
by giving her the following cert iff
cate, ‘This is to certify that Bridget
Muhouey had a good character
when she left AllMiuy, bat lost it on
the steamboat coining down.’
Dennis O'Kelly.
JAMES S. SII.VA,
(Lou of BoUltaw 4 Silva.)
AlWsolilsUBaMaJiiUuMtsoiaBdliM
stead facywly wpictl by K. 1>. SuiyUx-, t.
mow sCMsi rare bupiatto
COUNTRY MERCHANTS;
J A5. S. SU.V.I,
Sara* mob, ija.
body.
C4-UI.II
We bare, says tbe New York
Joe mol of iJommercr, the very high
est authority for saying that Presi
dent Hnyet- is not a professor of re
ligion. is not a memlier of the Pres
byterian or of any other ebureb, and
docs not conduct f tniily worship.—
Mr. Hayes is a regular attendant
divine worship in tlie church, and
has “4 high and reverential regard
for the Christian religion.” Mrs.
Hayes is aa exemplary Christian
woman, a member of.the Methodist
A l»oy came down Linwood Ave
nue on the rush, a few nights since,
and, iu an excited manner, said that
there were a lot of lights in tlie Jew
ish burial-grouml. Half a dozen
scientific men, four loafers and
dog started off to see them. Tlie
graveyard was os dark os such pla
ces usually are. •
“Where are the lights ?” asked a
big man of the boy.
The youngster backed oft' to i
safe distance, nnd yelled out:
“Underground; they arc Israel
ites!”
He then ruu for his life. "
A clergyman was preparing his
discourse for Sunday, stopping occa
sionally to review what he had writ
ten and to erase that which he dis
approved, when he was accosted by
his little son, who numbered bnt
five summers: ‘Father, does God
tell you what to preach ?’ ‘Certain
ly, my child/ 111011 what makes
on scratch it out?’
A citizen of Indiana having occa
sion to go home rather unexpectedly
a few nights since, caught a gentle
man acquaintance in the act of kiss
ing his wife. On relating the cir
cumstance to a friend h« was asked
if he punished the guilty couple,
aud replied: “No, not exactly but
they most have seen from the way I
slammed the door that I was not
satisfied.”
A man bought a gallon of gin to
tuke home, and, by way of a label,
wrote his name upon a card, which
happened to be the seven of clubs,
and tied it to the handle. A friend,
coming along and noticing the jag,
juietlv remarked, That's ou awful
careless way to leave that liquor!
Why? said Tom. Because f
with the
and some good componiondiip
outside—otherwise the young lift
runs the greatest danger in the world
of withering, or growing stunted, or
at best, prematurely old and turned
inward ou itself.
one *8* defeated
him 1877. Wrhat chance will be hive
John McDonough. t. balunttne
McDOYOIGH. WLLWTYVE.
Iron and Brass
FOUNDERS
Machinists and Pattern Makers.
Iron Front, for store* and dwcllin-s
i erandas and Cemetery Hailing.'of
various designs as low ns cau be “.nr-
chased in the North.
wnmuaNma:
ter*
Apicultural aad Mechinicle As-
locution Fur, 18781 also at
Savannah Agnonltnral
Association 1872.
Cor. Ka*t Brn*<! ami Liberty St* ,
—«i-is«. 8AVANNAH, QA
P* BfeGlashan,
dealer in
Saddles, Bridles,
AND
HARNESS:
SADDLES. From $5,00 anil upward.
HARNESS, “ $14,00
BRIDLES, 44 $1,00 •*
and all kinds of Ilorso Furniture,
Every description o>|
eARRotee. buggy.
AND
Wagon Materials,
Sho© Findings ©to.
1 have on haud a I.nrgc Stock jI
LKATIIEU
of all kinds, for *ale al low prices.
Enameled Leather and Cloth, aud
a Fino assortment of
CHILDRENS CARRIAGES.
1 am ageut for the Marshall,
WOOD, House-Collar, nnd the Cele
brated DOW LAW, COTTON
PLANTER, which I sell at Factory
prices.
Call and hoc me. Strict attention
paid to order* by mail.
m b '22 ly
Edward Kennedy,
Merchant Tailor,
(In the (•until* New Hudiiing,)
BTJXaX- STREET,
Savannah, Georgia.
Keeps ot. haud the Intent, aud most
elegant styles pf
FRENCH and ENGLISH CLOTHS,
COATINGS, VESTINGS,
!• R- Alexander.
Attorney at Law,
THOMASVILLE, OA
m»r Sl-Iy
JOSEPH P. SMITH.
Attoraojf at Zr«tw
C«ru«f Bra*! a*J JkIuNSUNU,
THOMA8VHXB, OA.
Mxrtl.ly
W. D. MITCHELL. n.«j. MITCH El.L
MITCHELL & MITCHELL
Attorneys at Lav
TUOatSTIlLt . . ci Jt
mse ,11,
H. W. I1.HU. T. X. Hors,,I
HOPKINS & HOPKINS,
Aflornej-s at Law,
Jackson Street,
Thouiasvillc, : Gecrgi
St*clalattention gO«n to colWttonsotrlxln
*ff»m»t th* l*. *?. tl.ivcrmu**? ObUiataf IkOl
W. M. 11.4V 40NI*. E. T. DAVIS
HAMMOND & DAVIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
-lAXI'l-
(JOLLECTORS OF CLAIMS,
TUOMASV1LI.K.S. W. UEOUGIA.
mar 21-ljr
DR. JNO. H COYLE,I
RESIDES! DEfcTIS!
THOMASVILLE, QA.
Office, Corner Jsrkeou af.U Hiuad bt/.
]>t*. w. i-’. i».-wni,
KESIDKECK
SMITH .1 VEEUEy ThnuMiiit.U't
Oltlec over 1*. McBla.li:... 1 . .tun*.
i.|» rt-lv
K. V. MacLEAN,
At lul'lll',1
1 'oiniHelor i.t I .11 sv.
TlIOMAbVir.I.t, <i.\.
OKFICK—1’§» Main Over i»r*>.» * treatV.
DR. D. S. BRA&DOfy
THOMASVILLE 0A.
C'uttiim done,and making in the very
latent style*. A perfect lit guaranteed
in every instance.
oct -'Ml
JOHN M. COOPER & CO.,
Cvr. WbiuLcr A St. VoiUn Strret,
Savannah, ? .
Wbolcrelc «u<l Bctoll Dealer* •’-i
Books and Stationery of all Kind.
Copying *i.-l Seal I’rerere, Serve)-*•* (y,ta.
poret*, New* iuti iu*tk trmUuf Ympcr
xnd Isle, G</M l*«n*, l**n *©•! /V no I
Coses. Drek and Bucket Kulvev.
ledger, Wilting auU Colored
Pxpere, Flaring, VUiMng
•n*l Printer*' Cirdi,
Fertaonalca, A.;
bcWI Feral-
ScL*A
tteqal*( too
* »t 5 licrmerhora A 0»>*»
ke», tor wb'rfn Wr are Aget.i*. |W>>,k»
Or .it re-1 or lmp»rtml at lew Y*rk rau*.
i F.vati*’ building
Notvai-<(,
Attorney at Law,
TIIOMASVJLU;.
SAVANNAH.
it. A. MOWKIX. **. \. DfcNMAIHw
I low 4*11 A I IIill*trie
TVttovucns at Law,
SAVANNAH, OA
J ^
l'r-»»|.i-lUmfan gi ur uj Utii.es* etre
tru*t*«| to Ilreir
B»far Dy penal***, f. M*~r*.
Met/t*. A: <>... at»<| It IS ltep-nr-1 *.-*m.*W,
WcfaD c»afl<lcrit tire* w« caa ml] a* l
ee*t, eltberia Clrerlcst//w, .4a*u»t*,
Itanm.or nay other SowUerw CHy.
Write or coll ooJ leva ear /'rice*,
rear 21-1 r.
T. N. Theus & Co.
Importer and Dealer* In
AVati'lifs, .l4!\vi*lry',
Silverware,
MILITARY
AND
Fancy Goods
S. W- Corner Uuil A Brou^ulou m*.
SAVANNAH, GA.
Aqjr •Aldus a-*J Jticdry UtpuUuK
feb re-lm
NEW GOODS
AT
CARSON BROTHERS
DUUU IX
IWy^lW*. SMkmm, IkM, !;.[».
R.W. STUBBS. .
Attorney at Law,
'Alexander & Russell ft
| WHOLESALE
LROCERS
A.VJ>
LlQPQR
Cor. Abcrcoru and B*yan bta.’
SAVANNAH, - GA.
V/ta- E. Ate lander Win A. Ituwil
loo. E. Almoder. Cfcaa. It. Manwnil
moen-lj.
muMrwH mim f
MACON, OA
vSlkl* |‘. I*
Hudtrt, Groceries, IfafficUn * sal OaMn
Are reesMwf
**|1Ma
UOSTOS.GEOUGIA,
. In*,
83.0H, PKU DAI'.