Newspaper Page Text
tan
Bt> (tun, in McIntyre’. New
THOMASVILLE, GA., SATURDAY, APRIL, 14 1877
CHA8. P. HANSELL,
Attorney at Law,
Thoinasville, Qa.
“■"•Man i» Utlnjnv najfet.j«.
mb Suwt. m»|.|.
JOSEPH THOMAS
TO COFSTRT MEBCBim
“Go for Him.”
He’s s poor hardworking man
trying topey his honest debts and
support his family hr honest to3; bnt
“go for him.” He is poor, and en
titled to no consideration. Keep
him down.
Help him. He's a rich man, he
lives in a fine mansion pnd walks
leisurely, enjoying life, while his
wife and children are deprived of
none of the luxuries of wealth or
in a minute, and cause hint 'to bel
low for salvation as the ox loweth
for its master’s crib.—Chicago Tri-
tmme.
HAS REMOVED TO
RemingtonSi Block,
Whet«hiitnctlvi*|aliUilKk*(
HATS, CAPS, BOOTS, SHOES,
CHINA AND GLASSWARE.
J-AJylES S. SILVA,
(Late of BeUfcaw ft SUva.)
At M* oM Maai re Si. J alias Street a»*l un
ctaad formerly occaptal by K. p. Swjtbr, U
aotr offering rare bargain* to
COUNTRY MERCHANTS;
Who sir -.pmtull.v i.vitol to roll a bc>
UtlSeCHy. rfr will M bc«.,t«»ol<H,y gay.
I’ve wandered tar from thee, mother,
Far from my happy home;
I’ve left the land that gave me birth
In other dimes to rosm;
And time, since then, lias lolled its
years
And marked them on my brow;
Yet I have often Ihonght of thee—
I’m thinking of thee now.
I’m thinking of ihe day, mother,
When at my tender side,
You watched thedawniogofmy youth.
And kissed me in yoor pride.
Then brigbUr was my heart lit up
Wilh Impel of future Joy.
While your bright fancy, honors now
To deck Iby darling bay.
Parents are born to be a great
trouble to their offspring. They
upset all a fellow’s plans. It would
be jolly not to have any. Wheu I
was ever so little, I remember, I
tried to hang up the kitten by my
whip lasb, and mother took the kit
ty, boxed my ears, ami went nnd
I am a firmer. My form is nam
ed Pastarefield. I take great pride
in it and work steadily as I can, for
Uraul aim] KltrUbsr ►u.
TALLAHASSEE FLORIDA
Ojij/Ositi (lu StuU CumtuL
Reuovated. enlarged, sod now open
for tbe reception ot guests.
Accommodations first das*. Best
retort for invalid* Excellent Fishing
ami Hunting—.S
ry high and roll
ilendid Drives- Cooo-
ng. deel4*tf
SAVANNAH, G A.
fcT Watches <vul JotHrj UtyurtL
ALBANY, GEOUGJA.
BOSTON, GEORGIA,
rwHlm* u4 Mbf tbcis Wi
SttaywtflreqAtUwstaw (wire
■ ....
A Lt. Subscription* nut be paid invariably re
OVannt Modlocrimlrertoa In favorer anybody.
crlpUon* are previously renewed.
m thinking of thee day mother,
When trills anxious care,
You lifted up yonr heart to Ueaveu—
Your hope, your trust,' was there.
And memory brings thy parting words,
While tears rolled down your cheeks;
’ni far uway from the mother.
No friend is near me now,
To soothe me with a tender word
Or cool my burning brow;
The dearest tics affection wooed
Arc all now torn from tuc;
They left me when the trouble came:
They did not love like thee.
A SQUARE l.V ONE IJVCII.
Nut'em In local column will be meaanred
Mmratvly—no react counted lew I ban a iqnre
—and rbarged M per eent additional • a regal*r
advertising rate*.
K»tkx» ot Concert*. Exhibitions, Profession*
rl Announcements, »Vc., «c.,of one square
or low, ana Insertion |M0
U>mmna (cat laas of a political character, of
Ihimwrtttea ta adreeary or defence of the
<r«*pirant* toofflcc, IS rents per line.
Announcement of Candidates $3.<o. Cash.
Yearly contracts will bo made with Mer
chants for a certain space in oar advertising
calamus, subject to a charge ol style *nd nat
ter at their option. I bis trill lie the lol and
cheapest tnvastmentSor parties wbo advertise
largely and frequently.
WHEN BILLS ABE DUE
.«• advertisements In this paper are daa at any
r Urn first Insertion of the a
*111 ha collected at the pleasure of tbe prapri-
2lor*, unless otherwise arranged by contract.
It AIMS ASH BULKS FOR LF.OAL Alt-
YMUTiMMO.
ClUtbms for letter* of Administration,
•plication for Dismission from AJimIo- i"
plication for Dismission from Uoardl- j
tpidlcatioa for leave to sell Land
t ales of Land, per square— ~~~
tales of Perishable property, j«r sqnsto —
Notices to Debtors and Creditors
Foreclosure nt Mortgage, per square—....
Kstray Notices,at days............ ,
Application for Homestead.......
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
Administrators, Executors, or (Juurdiaoa:—
.ill sales ol Land by Administrators, Kxecator*
or Guard fans, are required by taw In beheld on
the ftrst Teesday In the month, lwtween tbe
honrs of >.en o’clock In tbe forenoon, ami three
in the Afternoon, at tbe Court House in which
the property Is situated. Notices of these sate*
mast be given in a public gazette forty days
previous to the dayof sales.
Sal* of Personal Property;—Not iocs ol tbo
sale of personal property must be given at least
ten days previous to tbe day of sal*.
Estate Debtors and Creditors;—JVetlee to
Debtors and Creditors ef an estate mast be
pebliabed forty days. “
Court of Ordinary Leave to SellNotlee that
application will be made to the Court of Ordina
ry for leave to sell Land*, unit bo published
...r Letters of Administration mnat be published
thirty days; for Dismission from Administration,
athlv for three months
(inardbuisblp; 4# dav*.
Koreelescnre of Mortgage:—Rn!es for Fore
closure ofMortgagetaust l»e published “ *
for four month*.
OUB
Job Printing
Department.
Uaviug supplied ourself with new
AtihiJil Presses
Latest and Host Improved Patterns
\Vo arc now prepared tn execute in ns
GOOJ> STYLE
AND AT AS
JMMV PRICRH
as cau be had in the State,
JOB WORK
OF ALL KINDS,
SUCU AS
Dill Heads, |
LCircurlarr,
Letter Heads,
Statements
Note Heads.)
uviutiou Cards,
VlsUiogCards,
Legal Blanks,
•a ...nr attar daacrlpUon of Job Watt.
Our Stock and Material is
Row and Complete and every
effort will be made to give sat
isfaction to Ml who &vor ns
with dicir patronage.
hr, long, last, loving look told more'
Than ever words could speak.
a**;
Tlic Kind of Preaching that
Moves a Boston Oonfrevallon.
The inimitable Tom Corwin
could, in his day, skip jokes which
would convulse a Western man into
n Boston audience, nnd not provoke
smile. He used to get very much
provoked about it. The trouble
was that he didn't have the precise
straw with which to tickle the ribs
of that peculiar jieople. It has
come now in the person of the Rev.
Joseph Cook, one of whose sermons
appeared in the Tribune yesterday.
Imagine a vast audience of sinootk-
shaved burgers, with bald heads,
spectacles on their noses and her
editary gravity on their faces, sitting
before a preacher and goiug off in
"great applause*’ over such a pant-
grnpli as this:'
We stand before structureless
bioplasm and see it wearing organ
ism; and we are to adhere, in spite
of nil theories, to the Ariadne clew
that every cause is to be interpreted
by its effects, and Jlint * all changes
must have adequate causes.”
Now this is what the Boston men
call “fun.” Such a statement brings
down the house. Again the sacred
orator pntit thus: “Throughout the
whole series of living beings, we
find agatnogenesis, or non-sexoal
generation.” He applied this fact
of science to the theological doc-
trino of the miraculous conception,
nnd the audience was stirred with a
‘‘profound sensation.” A quotation
from Huxley stating that “a mass
of living protoplasm is simply a
molecular machine of great com
plexity,” produced a “sensation,”
and the added observation that, if
Hermann Lotze wero living he
would tear tho Hnxleyan statement
to atoms, brought out “great ap
plause.” “What right have I to
know nuything about physiological
and microscopical research ?’ cries
the Rev. Cook, and ho is answered
by “laughter.” “I regard Hermann
Lotze ns the living, and Herbert
Spencer the setting, star in philoso
phy,” remarks Cook, and “great ap
plause” succeeds. “Elanto xummalui
panics! shouts Cook, and tho Bos
ton men shat up like jack-knives,
convulsed with emotion. “Genera
tion by fission and gemmation are
not confined to the simplest form of
life,” he insinuates, and each son of
a Puritan tncks his thumb into the
waist of his neighbor and all “go
off” together. “The protoplasm or
Sarcode theory that albuminous
material is the active substratum of
all vital phenomena,” serenely re
marks Brother Cook, “is sound to
the core.” “Are you shy about ac
cepting it?” he archly asks, and
forthwith seventeen of the 'solid
men of Boston have to be carried
out in apoplectic shivers where the
fresh air will revive them. The fact
is that these people have always
been like other men, mirtlifnl and
enthusiastic, bnt nobody has known
how to rouse them. It takes proto
plasm, bioplasm, and all that sort of
thing, to awaken them. Let West
ern ministers of oratorical ambition,
who contemplate visiting the mod
ern Athens, moke a note of this.
Give the Habites no ordinary hu
mor, approach them with no com
mon arguments, but put it to them
thus; ‘True morphological units,
without cefl-wall or primordial utri
cle, but endowed with bioplosmic
entity and protoplasmic longevity,
filled with the giowing possibilities
ol agamojrenesis, dad in nucleated
shell aggregated by tho eternal
affinity of morphological units, sanc
tified by fission and gemmation
glorified by molecular attraction!
and bom in Boston, shall alone
heritlifeeverlasting.” Sacha sen
tence os that will dean the buttons
off a Beacon street burgher's vest
quicker than lightning. It will
knock his skepticism into flinders
So she had all the fan herself; and
father's worse than mother. He
told me to take care ortbg pennies
and the dollars would take care of
themselves; so I and Ben Smith
formed au Anti-Swearing Club.
We hod a rule that for every pro
fane word we used we should pay
a cent into the trcasuiy. We had
seventy-five cents in the first day,
bnt when we divided, nnd I fetched
thirty-seven nnd a half cents home,
father said it was a bad business,
whipped me nnd broke np the club.
How is a fellow to know when he is
doing right ? If I had no parents
to hound me round I'd beat Geo.
Washington all holler, for I’d cut
down every cherry tree in the gar
den, and own it too. If I was an
orphan, I know what I’d do to-mor
row. Ben Smith nnd me would go
straight to a desolate South Sea Is
land and stir np the goats and mon
keys and other things, crack cocoa-
nuts, fiy toad-stools, eat oranges a
spell, then we’d make a ship and
sail round the world. What’s the
use of drying up -in one place ? I
told mother one day when she
wouldn’t gire me ten cents, that I
meant to go a whalin, and I hoped
a whole would swallow me, ns one
did Jonah, and then she would
uever see me again, for I can’t swim.
She said I wouldn’t bo likely to
make much of a visit, for I would
turn tho whale’s stomach mighty
quick oft^r I got there. Wasn’t
she bully? If I were a parent I
know what I’d do; I’d keep still,
and mind my own business, and Jet
my children have some fun. There’s
Tom Cutts lives with his aunt, nnd
hgs a bully time. He goes wood-
chucking and eeling Sunday, lias
no best clothes nnd no pocket-hand
kerchiefs to bother him, crawls un
der the canvas of every circus tent,
earns money at the theatre, sleeps
in the stable when he likes, and al
ways has his pocket full of peanuts.
He says he wouldn’t be bothered
with parents, if he could have ’em
for nothiug, and he thinks if I
hadn’t any it would bo money in
my pocket Them's my sentiments.
J
. labors in my early life, bnt
1 to the dry goods business.
Well, no matter for this. I work
and enjoy it When I get tired,
then I cat some, and then Isit down
to the newspaper. Ah, then my
fatigue is forgotten, and I revel in
enjoyment and am recreated. The
great good newspaper! I used to
read good books, but neglect them
now. What becomes of all the books
published? I used to take agricul
tural journals, but there was too
much agriculture. I get hints
enough in the home newspaper to
satisfy me. AH around me are men
who work hard; and are honest nnd
faithful in their aims nnd ways, who
take no newspaper. How do they
live ? I should have died twenty
years ago without them. I lend
and give mine to my neighbors.
And the newspaper grows and
grows, and will continue to grow.
Better and better men continue to
go into its labor**. The best only
will live. O, men of the newspaper,
great teachers of the people, accept
the law “that honesty is the best
policy.” Cast out the cowardly, the
weak, mean, nnd wrong-headed;
and let the brave, the manly, tbe
clear-eyed and courageous help in
making the great and glowing gos
pel—this big book, this early teach
er, this household preacher,his hope,
comfort, help, and enjoyment of the
common people—the American news
paper. Make it clean and true and
faithful.
As I believe the newspaper lum
already lengthened my life, I doubt
not that it willlengtheu.it to the ex
tent, probably of twenty-five years,
which will give me quite a respecta
ble span. And I think of what is
character must be to me! But then
I know the true, the brave, will live
aud flourish, and that the puerile,
the foolish and false will soon die.—
Prisin'* Circular.
Some Good Rales.
A young man just married,and with
little means, wants to know how to
start right in farming. This is im
posing a serious task upon us. We
of course, know nothing of his hab
its of industry, his love of labor, or
his qualifications for the business he
seeks. Above all, we do not know
what kind of a wife ho has selectod/If
ho has chosen unwisely in this par
ticular, no after wisdom will ever re
pair this greatest of steps. Bnt we
will laydown some general princi
ples, which may do for others if not
for him:
1. Buy none but tbe best laud.—
Ten acres is better than a whole
section of poor land.
2. Keep out of weeds.
3. Do nothing slipshod. Plow
well and cultivate thoroughly.
4. Do everything in right season.
5. Procure good implements and
take core of them.
6. Raise none but good animals
suitable to country and climate.
7. Keep out of law.
8. When you go to town never
sit down or stand around the street
corners.
9. Never spend your time with
patent rights or perpetual motions.
10. Keep strict account of income
and expenses.
11. Keep out of debt
12. Keep dear of security note*
and out of rattlesnake dens.
13. When you leave home tell
your wife the exact hour you will re
turn, and if you are not punctual,
do not pray for forgiveness until
you can conquer this propensity.
14 Be charitable bat pay your
debts first.
15. Have nothing to do with trav
eling agents or strolling peddlers.—
Deal with those who have local hab
itation and name.
1C. Take tye best papers, and
keep yoarsdf posted as to markets,
news, literature and poEtks.
17. Read your Bible, instead of
dime novels.
18. Rise early, and quit early in
the evening, so as to have the chores
done before the shade of night
19. Live in peaco with all your
neighbors, wren if you have to make
all tbo concessions and submit to all
the enjoyments of. society. He’s
smart, an enterprising business man.
Don’t say anything to hnrt^he feel
ings, nor expect him to soil liis ten
der fingers with toil. An honored,
respectable citizen and a prominent
"Go for him !’* He's poor—he is
trying to pay cent for cent with in
terest, and his hands are hardened
by toil—his wife and children feel
the pinchings of poverty and the
tightness of the times—he has no
business to be poor or honest He’s
fool for not robbing a bank or
stealing from those wbo would have
trusted him in prosperous days.—
He ought to be poor! “Go for
him !’■’ Keep him down—pile upon
him such a weight of obloquy and
pucuniary embarrassment that he
will never l>e able to rise.—Erchamjc.
Possibilities of an Acre.
No man knows what tlies3 are.—
We know that two hundred bushels
qf com were once grown on an
acre, and that live bales of cotton
have been made on tbe same acre of
soil, bnt we do not kuow that the
limit of production were reached in
either cose. We should try to find
out, not merely how much of any
given crop can be produced on one
acre of land but how cheaply it can
be grown. A big crop may not in
all cases be a profitable one. It
may cost too much to make it Tho
greatest yield with the smallest
outlay of capital and labor is what
we aim at Our farmers ore ofyui
too poor, not so much been quo their
crops are small—and small they are
compared with wliat they might l>o
—as because it cost too much to
make them. We must learn *to
make large crops with less labor.—
To do this we must go over less
ground, and make science and prac
tical skill properly supplement mus
cle and machinery.
Ladies, Misses and Childrens’
Shoes. Youths’ and Boys'
Boots and Shoes, at
Great IlargainH.
(gentlemens and Boys Hats.
CHILDRENS HABS,
Tranks and Valises,
UMBRELLAS, COTTON,
ALPACA AND SILK*
CASH BUYERS
Plain Talk ta Girls.
Your eveiy day toilet is a part of
your character. A girl that looks
like “fury” or a sloven in the morn
ing is not to bo trusted, however
finely she may look in the evening.
No matter how humble yonr room
may be, there arc eight things it
should contain—namely, a mirror,
wosbstand, soap, towel, comb, hair,
uail and tooth brashes. T hese are
just as essential as your breakfast f
before which you should make good
use of them Parents who fail to
provide their children with these
appliances, not only make a great
mistake, but commit a sin of omis
sion. Look tidy in the morning
and after diuncr work is over im
prove your toilet.
Make it a rule of yonr daily life
to “dress up” for the afternoon.—
Your dress may, or need * not be,
anything better than calico, bnt
with a ribbon or flower, or some bit
of ornament, yon can have an nir of
respect nnd satisfaction that invaria
bly comes with being well-dressed.
A girl with fine sensibility can
not help feeling embarrassed and
awkward iu a ragged, dirty dress,
witU her hair unkempt, if a stranger
or neighbor comes in.
Moreover, your self respect should
demand the decent apparelling of
your body. You should make it a
point to look as well as yon con,
even if yon kuow nobody will see
you but yourself.
Tecrs.
There is a sacredness in tears.—
They are not tho marks of weakness
but of power. They are messages of
overw helming grief, of deep contri
tion, of unspeakable love. If there
were wanting any argument to
prove that man was not mortal, I
would look for it in the strong, con
vulsive emotion of the breast when
the soul has been agitated, when the
fountains of feeling are rising and
tears are gushing forth in crystal
streams. Ob, speck not harshly of
the stricken one weeping in silence.
Break not tbe solemnity by rude
laughter or intrusive footsteps.' De
spise no woman's tears; they are
what make her an angeL Scoff not
if the stem heart of manhood
sometimes melted into tears ; they
are what derate above the 'brute—
Iloretoseetcareofafiec&o. They
are psinful tokens but still more
holy. There is pleasure in tears—
an awful pleasnre. If there were
none on earth to shed tears for me,
iahcxdd be loth to lbn; sad if noon*
to weep over my grave, I could
never die in peace.
A juryman was summoned nt a
County Court After replying sat
isfactorily to the several questions
propounded by the solicitor, lie
was accepted and in the usual way
commanded to look upon the pris
oner. After scauniiig the man
closely, the jiuor turned to the
judge and in a firm solemu voice
said, “Yes, I think he’s guiltv.”
The chap had logs liko a pair of
slate pencils. Small boy yelled to
another small boy. ••Say, Billy
that feller’s got a heap of courage
to risk himseJt out ou such legs as
them, this weather.” “Why?
‘Might freeze, break off, stick in
his body and bleed him to death.’’
Among the many useless aud
cumbersome appurtenances of the
nineteenth century that will go
down to posterity Is the man who
laps his spoon with his tongue anJ
then dips it in the sugar.
He held the old shirt up by the
neck before discarding it forever,
bat he wasn’t mourning for the
garment. He only said, “I wish I
had all the drinks again that have
gone through that old neckband!”
Love—a little sighing, a little
crying, a little dying, and lots of
lying.
A Y'ankee editor wishes no bodi
ly harm to his subscribers, but be
hopes that some of them iu arrears
will be seized with remittent fever.
It is estimated that the number
of ladies who cannot pass a mirror
without glauciug into it, averages
about twelve to every dozen.
Brigham young has been broken
down by the death of twenty-seven
mother-in-laws since 1H6L
And win be pleased to wait oo all need-
ng anything in hit line. aep 23-U
SPECIAL BARGAINS!
At Retail
Boots, Shoes and Hats.
C.W. BRUNNER ft SON,
141 Congress Street, SaTrennab, Ga.,
Would ask the attention of purchas
ers visiting Savannah, to their large
and entirety new slock in
OMABAND BoSk rOwSS: ITC
First Premium for best
lUr’s Goods,
Coffin Linings, ' L UESCB1ITI0.VS.
Coffin Handles, SSSLST*-
MASONIC obsa ^?ndlo.
A full Lrne of
EARLY'S
CELEBRATED BURIAL CASES
ALL SIZES,
P. McGLASHAK’S.
"Barnetts Creek Academy,”
J. W. c. Cbitchell, Principal.
The above Acadcmyis situated seven
miles North-west of Thoiuasville, and
two miles from Bold springs Church.
Tho course of instruction will em
brace English, Latin, French, Arith
metic, Algebra, Geometry and Book
Keeping.
Board can be obtained at reasonable
rates in the neighborhood.
To suit tho times, tlic rate of tuition
is placed at $20 for forty weeks.
^ For reference apply to O. D. S<
Scott,
lie Spring Term wiU commence on
or about Monday, February 3th.
For any further particulars address
J W C Critchcll care of Win. Hudson.
Esq., Thomasviile. ja 27-3m
CAIRO ACADEMY!
Spring Term to begin ou the 29th
of January, 1877.
Terms of Tuition :|
Fllivr CI.A-S l*KR l/l AItTEK, I
SM ON D
THIRD
I lassie* uihI liiuber Lnuirbv* of Mulkcmati
tmjrht by *|trrlal rent raft.
leaning aid I'aintiog likowire. if <le»ir**l.
Iwant to be obtained in unr\c«ntionable
private families at moderate rate*.
EOBERT H. HARRIS, Principal
JOSEPH JERGER,
Skn WATCH
MAKER (£K
JEWELER.
ceui-ir
**»nectfullr invited to rail *
. He will red bcvredersoMhr ,
T.BAL-IXrYNE
McDOXOl'GH, BiLLHTYSE.
Iron and Brass
FOUNDERS
Machinists and Pattern Makers.
Iron Front* for (tore, and dwelling,
leranda* and Ccmeterj Hailing, of
vanoua designs a* k>w ns can be nor-
chased in tbo North.
SfHAA* D ««. oiw
Savusih Agnooltural
Association 1873
l**. !U»t Bros.! anil Uteri, Sis,
SAVANNAH. 0A.
P. McGlashan,
DEALER Ilf
Saddles, Bridles,
AND
HARNESS:
SADDLES, From $3,00 and upward.
HARNESS, “ $14,00
BRIDLES, “ *1,00
and all kinJ« of Horse Furniture,
Every description oi|
carriage, gueer.
AND
Wagon Materials,
She© Findings etc.
I have on hand a Large c’teek ol
LEATHER
K. Alexander.
Attorney at Law,
THOMA8VH.LB, O^V
mardl-ly
JOSEPH p. SMITH.
Attorney at X-«tw
Coc»« Brood «hI JrJun Strret*,
THOMA8VUJL£, qa.
MITCHELL ft MITCHELL
Attorneys at lav
TUOSIASVILLE . I.,
H.W. T. X. dors...
HOPKINS ft H0PKIN8,
Attorneys* at l.nw.
Jackson Strkkt,
Thoinasville, : : Gecriji
Special tttention given to «oU*vtk>n»olt-lalr«
•Calaat tho U. S. Oortromrat. Obtaining 1 o*4
HAMMOND & DAVIS,
kTTQRKETS AT LAW.
- AND —
COLLECTORS OF CLAIMS,
T1IOMASV1I.LE, S. W. UEOKUIA
DR. JN0. H COYLE,
RESIDES! DESTlSff
THOMASVIlLE, 3 A.
of all kind*, for sale at low prices.
Enameled Leather aud Cloth, aud
a Fine assortment of
CHILDRENS CARRIAGES.
I am agent for the Maiuuiall,
wood, Housk-Collau, aud the Cele
brated DOW LAW, COTTON
PLANTER, which 1 sell at Factory
prices. '
Call and see inc. Strict attention
paid to orders by mail.
ncli 22 ly
EfltarflJ.Kennefly,
Merchant Tailor,
(In the Guards New BuMning.)
BTJ-LL STREET,
Savannah, Geonjia.
Keeps on band the latest, aud moot
elegant styles of
FRENCH and ENGLISH CLOTHS,
COATINGS, VESTINGS,
&C.T AC.
Cut lit) <4 donc^ind making iu the very
latest styles. A perfect lit guaranteed
in every instance.
oct 23-tf
JOHN M. COOPER & CO.,
Cor. Whitaker Si St. J*Xiah Hired*
Bavniinali, f . on.
trbolcfaic .uii l.cU.r.
Books and Stationery of all Rind.
.lid Seal I'rM. bur..,....* Cum.
■ puwa. New. W.A* l*rtul!iig
*»'l Ink, Gnl.1 p*n», V.a an*l /‘.mil
Cm.Hnkn.1 1‘ncjut Knl...,
U-l.tr, Wilting .ml OlOTrl
J'npct., I’Uiir.g, VUiting
.*>•1 Printer.' C.I.,
ronutnnnieA &
KLtnl Porml*
After all, oar woret luinfurtonen
never happen, and most miner-
lie in anticipation.
When Jemima went to itrbool eke
was asked why the noon bachelor
was tdngnlar. “Bec-tuse” she repli
ed, “it is so very triugalar that they
don’t get married."
A dandy ig a chap wbo would lx.
a lady if he could; bnt as he can't,
does all he can to show-the wornl
he's not a man
Cayenne pepper will keep
pantry A nd store-room free from
cockroaches and ants.
Tbe right bower of tramps in a
game of endue is now called “Jo
Bradley.”
These tw3^* will just fill
this column.
Hotel Wakwick,
KfllAN A. DfcUKL, |‘rqtictur (
W« fall coofUemt ih*t«« elk sell a* U« u the
o«cat, eitherlo Cterltso, .lijuu,
Xonoo.or soy other Seothortt CJly.
Write or coil ou*l loam oar Prices.
martl.lr.
TIIE ALBANY HOUSE,
MERRICK BARN E8, Proprietor,
T. N. Theus & Co.
Importer and Dealers lu
WaUihfs, -Itiwelry,
Silverware,
MILITARY
AND
Fancy Qoocis .
S. 'V. Comer Bail A Brougbiun] Su.
I>r. AV. F. I t ,
RESWKycK
SMITH A VENUE. Thoin.i.iiHc, « ■
OlHcc over 1*. MlI.1 la-linn - .lore,
aprll-ly
-K. A. MacLEAN,
A ttoi'u.-x
Coiniwlor nt Law,
T1IOMASVIM.K, (.A.
DR. D. 8. BRA*D0 : <i
THOMASVILLE 0A.
OKMcK-wUuck room Evan*' Bui.'iiiiii
mar 21-1 y
• Iuiiicn If, Hcwan!,
Attorney at Law.
TUOMAHV1M.E.
•■rgl.ljr
IIowHI eV I >011111*1 i'U
TUtonifns at taw,
SAVANNAH, OA
R. W. STUBBS,
Attorney at Law,
■At Third Slffvtl.
MACON - - GEORGIA
Alexander & Russell.
WHQLFSULE
bUO(EUS
AND
ItiQL’QB
Cor. Aberrant rod B-itlt iil>.
SAVANNAH, - Oa.
Sx’jUmtS.i! Cttkio/ute*
ilrntflilmi-