Newspaper Page Text
THE GAZETTE
ftWMMKRVII.I.K, OA.
- • -
•T. O. T.OOMIS,
pirn *, or st it>riui’7 ion-
F*r n ynr, ► fFor ft
Pa/ment In
A4vrii*lMK * s*t# arc a<lju*teri to value
<f ihU paper w drcaUting infuilum In
OlitrtkM >rllou of (luargU.
mmd (•rim given On ftpplkutlon.
TeUflUry coMmunleatlon* frnm thnroad
•re af this paper are stway m welcomed. News of
a kind* In profarred, especially ndunty news. If
/ u with ()b improve .yourself in vfiting, prac
tice san aid you. “ Practice make* perfect.”
Communication* must he accompanied by the
writer's name, or they cannot be published.
THURSDAY MORNING, MAH. 21, IH7H.
- - - - -
TN I.ATICBT X,WH MtO.tl EUROPE.
So far as Russil and Turkey are con
eerned, it seems perfectly clear tbut there
will be no more fighting between them.
The Turk* feel completely conquered, and
with that solid resignation which fatalism,
the leading touot of their religious belief,
always induces, are submitting to what
they now think it plain is “the will of
Allah.” But in England, work is carried
on at -Woolwich the principal arsenal, till
eight, n no, or sometimos till ten o’clock
at night, instead of stopping at five, as
usual. All English vessels of war, home
ward bouad, have been ordered to remain
at Malta, to strengthen the Meditor
ranean squadron as much us possible. In
Austria, it is announced that all necessxry
preparations have been made, and that if
war should prove to be the only wo/ of
defending Austrian interests, the aruf is
even now ready for it. It seems to he
altogether uncertain when the conference
will assemble, if at all. The Russian
aoldiar* have been gradually brought
nearer to Constantinople and the Bos
phorus, until now they are stations! on
the top of the range of hills at whose base
are the forts which command the entrance
from the Black Sea from the Bosphorus.
As these forts are only prepared to resist
an attack in front, it will he easy for the
Russian commander to take possession of
thorn without an hour’s delay, ifhe should
think it advisable to do so. In ttygkius
sia is only oarrying out the same policy
which led her to insist upon tho surren
der of the fortresses in Bulgaria, and of
Erieroum, as oue oi tho conditions of the
armistice, It is plain that from the be
ginning of the war Russia h.-. foreseen
that • i toe o!i .<• lu i •<:>.• *• . he ip
* eopditior. to oXiHt.lVou; I’li' -oy terms j
of peace which Hie other giv*t pov r j j
•night regard .is -.lire • ■.nio.: • m
to rests, or as imperiling the oh' '<j oi
power, and hat sho has secured positions
which will givr her an immense advantage
if other natious attempt to prevent her
from maintaining “the esseuiial results
of tho war.” l’oaco may be maintained
in Europe, but the present state of affairs
does not afford much ground tor expect
ing it.
On last Friday, s most of our raiders
tiro doubtUsn aware, (ins Johnson ex
jiitJ his orimes on tho scaffold at Heme.
An immense crowd, estimated by sown
as high as fifteen thousand, witnessed the
execution. To tell of his misdeeds now
that he has passed uwny, cun do no good
to any one, nor can it in any way benefit
aocietr at large.
On the same day the Rev. Brown
Coble, colored, was hUng at Winchester,
Tennessee, for the murder of Felix Gar
diner, colored, Juno 23d, 1876. Brown
cut Gardiner's throat, and afterwards put
a rator Into his hand and tried to make
it appear that he bad committed suicide.
Joseph Lapage was hung on tho same
day at Caucord, New Hampshire, for the
murder of Josie Langmaid, a school girl.
- Robert Molivoy bad been sentenced to
bo hanged on the same day at Aikeo, S.
C., but while the*sheriff was fixing the
nooae for the execution a dispatch was
received that the govornor had respited
him until the 29th inst. The reason as
aigued for this iH that Gov. Hainptou had
soma doubts whether it was legal for tho
judge to pass sentence upon McEvey nt
tho time when he did. McEmy had
claimed to know all about two other mur
ders, aud perhaps a wish to find ut all
that can be learned about thee crimes
may have had some influence upon the
governor.
A bill has been introduced in (Jonfrress
proposing to amend the Constitution by
haring three Presidents; one from the
Keelers or Middle States, one from the
Boath, 'fcnd one from the West. Their
term of office is to{be six years. The first
President from tho West is to servo two
years; lhe-first one from the South, four
yean; to that one will go out of office
every two years. They are not to he
eligible to a second term. The bill also
proposes to abolish the office of vice
president, snd let the S note elect some
o.:e not a niemi-ei to pre 'de over their
JellWrati o’ir odr •' ivadort " ill
lie>MU ’.leC<- j'i -j 'SO ; '■.* XH VI i V OXl*
dents; one from the North, the other
from the South.
PEN PICTURE O A. 11. STEPHENS.
A Washington correspondent of the
Pittsburg Telegraph, gives the following
life skotch of Hon. A. 11. Stephens:
Did yon ever see Alex. H Stephens
is he sw.f>< an in Ihe House of Repre
sentatives. 1 ' If- ivo, y.*u .inqnvatingt
gard aad an altutK.t'worn ont iittle creat
urc. A little hit of a ninety pounder,
which seated in iti invalid chair looks a
much lost in immensity as a three weeks
old baby in its grandmother’s chair. He
sits as though it was bat an hour till
resurrection morn, and he was (he ap
! poi nted me.s. engai to catch the first sound
of (he trumpet. He is the embodiment of
absolute physical nothingness c uplud
with gigantic intolligeneo is it, fights the
last battles of earth. When in his place
in the house, he displays his usual nerv
ousness and anxiety, and seems to be not
only crowded hut overflowed wiih work.
Those bright, sparkling eyes, peering out
ofau fleshless skull, are jus’, as bright and
restless now as twenty years ago, when he
was tho idol of Georgia and the pride ol
the south—and he is not far from being
that now. His nose is more peaked, his
lips are ti.inner, his check- more blood
less and wrinkled now than then, hut
there is remaining enouirli of the original
fire and genius to give him not only rank,
but prominence. He is the link connecting
the bloody and tempestuous past w th i ho
peaceful and quiet present. He
always held a high rank in the national
councils asa speaker. He is not an orator
far from it. He lacks the voice, the
declamation, tho magnetic .-kill, the phys
ical force that ..II orators must own, but
yet he is a speaker of large influence and
of wielding power- Did you ever hear him
speak? If so you hoard a little old man
speakiag in a thin, squeakish, semi-shrill
voice, speaking in hurried accents, hut
using choice, well chosen and lining lan
guage; you saw him when laboring under
a spontaneous thought that hurries for
articulation roll uneasily in his chair and
claw the airnervou ly with his long, wast
ed bony arms and hands. You --aw a man
careless of bis surroundings mil associa
tions, at that time evidently all controlled
and absorbed by the then eug ig ng tli oo
You heard a speaker that you will never
forget, not that ho struck you as being a
great speaker f cultu.'ed address, u-mg
polished phi sos and speaking ni: • i il
vered tongue, but a speakoi wh > seemed
to giow through e ury nerve and fibre w tit
tho mag iitu iu and ; ■ > irianco of the
question that iio was creating.
would strike your ear and i mien there.
Me 'ey." - ■ ■ I . ; • . >
. .Ct’gtn and volume hut 1,1 i.liu, -O'
phetls is far from being the lender of he
house, it may be owing to his phydi il
weakness and to his age He stands
simply as great oouiisoll >r, aul planner
and organiaer, no longer as an exeuutive.
He is in reality only one ol tho oig lions
behind the curtain that is sometimes ah
lowed to perform on tho stage. Ho is a
conservative now, as he always has bedn,
and his moderate counsel to his party have
ofttimes been productive of much po:i e
when war and blood would else have held
vuy- His coutiuittco worn is - uad; in
fact ho is not able to attend to much. He
is chairman of the almost iii.-igni‘icaiit
eounniuee on weights and measures, an
import committee lor a man of business,
bui a poor one for an expectant statesman.
When lie speak he seldom use notes,
although he is carefully prepaied with
the subject; he has a contempt for report
ers. snd frequently treats them illy; he is
not especially beloved by a majority of his
colleagues,.though all are friendly to hitn,
and consider him with respoot, and may
be, reveronce, but to a large number he
isquito popular and standsalmost asa ‘Pa
ter l’’awilias.’ It is a wonder how long
he lasts. He has been dying for twenty
yeais, but here he is just the same almost
astbsu, hut some day the string that has
been so lon., strung ou tho bow of life will
snap and Alexander Stephens will follow
his fathers to the cold land of dreams.
In many of the English colleges, and in
some in this country, tho sophomores
claim tho right to “hazo” the freshmen.
Princeton, New Jersey, is quite excited
over a case of this sort and its conso
quenees. Some time in last month several
sophomores hazed Lane, a freshra in,
stripping and spanking him with a paddle,
clipping his hair, ete. About a week
afterwards eight persons, masked, went
to the room of Atterbury, tho leader of
tho party of sophomores, tied httu and
Carter, another sophomore, to their
chairs, and treated them in tho same
way. Atterbury and Carter, being un
tied, pursued the freshmen, firing ou
them. The freshmen returned the fire,
wounding Atterbury dangerously. The
college faculty, after much trouble, learn
ed who the eight freshmen were, and ms
ponded them all. The sophomores de
termined to mob them as they left., and
only stratagem and cour.-.e e.vnr iiie-1 on
the part of the oolleg. proem and
. and hod. Ail the soph-.
took y.. 0; it. the l -n. j, >■
mo suspcuhco '.cs.oucu haw o-hi, iiieui
selvcs suspended. About fifty studeuts
| in all have been sent borne.
On Thursday, the -I-’ nit.. Ml ■ Mat
tie Culpepper, of doaoii, was walking
about a mill, looking it th • unohinery,
when tho cogs on one of the wheels caught
her dr as iltvl drew her thro iglt a spacr
only six and a hilf it, h”H wide b:tween
the ' ift . I Min wall. The blood gushed
>it IV . Ii yes, mouth, and ears, and
do dead; but when
ihe doctor.- irriw • they found only one
wri-t dislocated, and numerous flesh
bruise*. She was able to ride home ou
the six’ll day after the accident.
—HP*--
It is nothing unusual to hear the say
ing, “One half the world don’t know how
the other hall lives.” We have been
frequently reminded of this within a few
years, but never more forcibly than when
reading the late accounts of the arrest
and trial of Madame Kcstell, alias Dr.
Lehman, in New York city. Fpr many
years she iiat advertised herself as an
abortionist, wording the notices, arid
c; rryir.g on the business, in such a way
as to evade the clutches of tho law, into
which many less guilty, but less cunning,
than she is, have fallen. Shu has amassed
an immense fortune; but the heavy hand
of justice has at last been laid upon her.
Those wlto have charge of the a ifferent
mints are already hurrying the prepara
tions for coinin* silver dollars. It is
thought that the Philadelphia mint
would be ready by the middle of this
month, and those at San Francisco and
Carson City by the fiist of April. They
will coin about $11,500,000 or $4,000,000
per month. Opinions differ as to the
effect of this now" coinage upon the
volume of the currency. Some contend
that it will diminish tho quantity of
money in circulation, or “contract,” while
others think that it will throw more
money into circulation, or “inflate.” The
latter seems moro likely to be the effect.
The Ne w York Herald devotes three
colu :.ns to Owen Adkins, of Pittsyl
vania coi . Virginia. He is iu his
ninety -ixth year, has been married twice,
hi- hid fiver i ■ i • nos. and is tho fa her
of ' verity i*i. h o sixty - : X Of whom are
now ■ M ,nd .oi s itre r h light
t ) . • i and .ifty.
W h .. ml. he ran a race of
five 'a • v. i • y sis annates. the
age of Mg’ >, h” ran eleven miles iu
fifty eight m < lie goes f .hunting
on f it, an I 1... i■he and g-; Mum
any "i*tl wh 1 tde. Pi quently when
the hfr.i- t . a b nee. h • comes
u in ti eto iv.. ' yt ,\tl f them over
il am a pair of
' i- nrh to he
■ ' ; ■ 1 f 'latches;
)> : > ku; uopuikk.'i more upon tITe
in >y wiiiah he could win by horse
rui’iug pitching dol'ars, playing card*,
ruunitig foot-raoes, etc., than upon farm
ing. At the uge of fourteen he fought a
bear hand to hand, and killed him. Ife
hopes to live to the age of a hundred.
OKI MBS.
On the Ist inst, William P. Shel
burne, of New Orleans, married Miss
Ada MeClay, liiinsr iu Clay county, in
th" Vi;-tern part of N >rth Carolina. He
had not ”n her for. about ten months,
but had eorr upended regularly with her.
flint nigh’ fie discover*} that she was
enceinte. She refused at first to tell him
the name of her seducer, but finally by j
bis furious threats he extorted from her
tho confession that Simpson Forrester, a
young man living near b", had ruined her
five months before, and that she had
sworn not to betray him. Forrester had
visited the family as an intimate friend,
and had been one of the gayest among
the wedding guetts. Early next mem
ing Shelburne, armed with a double
barrelled shotgun, went to Forrester's
home, his wife following him, screaming,
and bogging him n it to shoot Forrester,
saying that she had forgiven him. For
rester pretented to be surprised, and
denied knowing anything about the lady’s j
Condition. After exchanging a few words I
ShelburneJired, and Forrester fell, ex
olaiming, “I am killed and have deserved |
it all.” Shelburne lied. HU wife fainted,
and in a few hours gave birth to a child. ;
It is not thought likely, that Forrester :
will recover.
On the 11 tli ult., in Wayne county,
North Carolina, James Worley and his
wife were killed with, an axe, and muti
lated so that they could hardly be identi
fied. Three little daughters, aped one,
throe, and five years, were spared. Noah
Cherry, a negro, his been.arrested, tho
oldo't girl accusing him of the murder,
her statement being enrro‘ rated by the
fact that on occasion ot t previous quar
rel Che ry l;a.t tHreaiei mi to sill Worley.
Quick w .rk—Charles .Vo ids outraged
a cl— ■ years .Id in Oswego, New
York, on nuitiy, F. -nary iTth, and
was on tb- .icxt day -o8te: eefr ,o the
penitenlicry for twenty years.
In St. Loui a . John Guuibringer and
his employer's daughter, Miss Maggie
ly da. love 1 each eijier. Her frther for-'
bad. -r luarryr ft On the lSt’n
It-. ■ went to a ho’ol: ad took a room
...gctin.:, fue next day they were both
found dead, shot through the head, the
pistol being still in his hand.
K Vhlll IN NOTES.
Mexicaine grenadines are revived.
Bonnets are more worn than hats.
Kilt skirts must be of the same length
all amund.
B mrette muslin is anew fabric in
diaphanous goods.
Quantities of pearl beads, white aud
tinted, are u.-i l in spring milli’cry.
Bonnet eorvnets are very li gh, *nd
turned very far hack at the side.
The new styles of dressing the hair are
as varied as tho bonnets and hats.
Dolmans, French sacques and Carriek
capes will all he fashionable spring wraps.
Ahort Csrriek capes appear on'many
of tho spring basques, ulsters and sacques.
Flat oot’.age crowns are given either
chtSe fitting or flaring, cr coronet brims,
according to fancy.
The correct length fur the kilt skirt
allows it to escape the sidewalk two and
a half i chcs all around.
AN INTERESTING CHARITY.
Owing to the densely crowded state of
London, it is imperative on its citizens to
give to the poor ; and the traveler finds
few exp .vlittins more interesting than a
visit to the various charitable institutions
which abound throughout the city. Being
interested in children, one of my moat
plgasant visite was that made to a found
ling hospital, and I was fortunately pres
ent when the children were at dinner. I
visited the boys’ dining room first, and
there saw between one and two hundred
little fellows, all dressed in dark cloth suits
with rod vosts, seated at two long tables
plentifully supplied with beof, potatoes
and bread, eating with with the appetite
which only boys can bring to table. I left
them hard at work, and found the little
girls similarly employed in' another halL
As they finished tire repast, the teacher’s
signal called them to their feet; one of
the elder onus stepped into the open space
between tlie two table*, folded her hands
and said, with reverence, the orphan’s
prayer for heavenly blessings. TV>u they
went out to walk for a few minutes in the
grounds. In the dormitory were long rows
of little iron bedsteads, a separate one for
each child. Nothing fine, but everything
somfortatde. In the galleries I noticed
memorials of the early days of the hospi
tal. There were the “tokens,” which must
l>.; depositod with the child, if ever again
the parent desired to claim it. A curious
doilu.tiontlwy were; some evidently pre
pared with groat care, cut outof brass and
engraved with initials and date; some
simply a bit of paper with a few words of.
writing; some a string of boals. Poor
little ones ! How frail tho link that bimla
them to their mysterious past! Some
tunes, the friends of a child become proa
p.- i-uus, ami claim it; and occasionally the
ones friend) ss orphan becomes a great
Lair or a hit-hand,-1 lord; but, asa rule,
tho inmates of an English Orphan Asylum
only leave it for rospectablo servitude.
Thus are the waifs and strays of helpless
childhood gathered in from the slums of a
large city, and trained to b good, useful
men and women.
BEMAUKABLK IF XU UK.
The following incident of the famine,
reported by the Collector of Monghyr, is,
u.ja the "Times of India,” certainly re
markable :
"A woman of the fishing caste was sit
ting by the side of the G oiges, someone
hundred miles fiom here, in the Patna
District, about daylight of the sixteenth
ot August. Suddenly the bank on which
she was sitting give way, and she fell into
the water, dragging with her a large bun
dle of castor-oil sticks which sho was car
rying at tho time. She managed to sup
port hersolf on those sticks, which formed
a kind of life-buoy, and she was carried
down by tho current, which was then run
ning at a great pace. As each village or
boat was passed, she shouted to the vil
lagers to help her, but no one came to
her relief. In this way she was carried
nearly one hundred miles, and, fortunately
for hor, when sho had been twenty-four
hours in the water, she passed by Monghyr,
and was rescued by Col, Murray, who,
seeing her floating by, sent his private
boat and rescued hor. The woman did not
appear much the worse for her prolonged
stay in the water, but naturally was much
impressed by the fact of her being rescued
by a European, when so many of her own
caste had declined to help her. She was
provided with a railway ticket to Patna,
together with food and clothing from the
relied funds.”'
Much ridicule has been launched at
Delaware, and some abusive language
used because she has not abolished the
whipping post as a punishment for crime.
But as far as we can judge, many persons
in those States where it has been abolish
ed are beginning to feel that humane sen
timents led them astray, and a re-aetiou
is setting it;' which will cause it to be soon
established in most of tho States at One
method of punishmmt for petty offences.
If a man steals a dollar'.- worth of goads a
week after Superim court has a tjourned,
ho is liable to be kept in jail nearly six
mouths at the expense of the county.
Remedy this by giving justices of the
peace jurisdiction over such offences, with
power to punish by public whipping, if
they think advisable. We. firmly believe
this will do more to deter men from crime
than the present system.
We frequently hear fhe remark made
that history repeats itself Tho same
idea is expressed by Solomon in the
words, “The thing that hath been, it is
that which shall be; and there is no new
thing under the sun.” Concerning many
of our inventions it would not be easy to
show that these words are true; but with
regard to disposing of the bodies of the
dead, there are some things which may
indicate that we are about to drift into
what was once customary, but has long
been obsolete. Among the ancient Greeks
and Romuns, burning was the most com
mon method. Dr. Le Moyne, of Wash
ington, Fa., has erected a furnace for
burning corpses. " Mrs. Pitman, of Cin
cinnati, was “cremated” on the loth ult.
Nothing was left but calcined bones, white
as snow, and entirely odorless. We are
told that several other parlies have noti
fied Dr. Le Moyne that th :y wish him to
burn their bodies.
Jill. ■ —L
CRICKET BATS.
In Kent and Sussex, th# stick is callsd ft
“bat,” a term once good English—witness
Shakespeare, “Lover’s Complaint" Thus
of ’he “reverend man”—“snmelims n blus
terer that the ruffle knew, of curt, of city"*
—as he approaches the “tickle maid full
fiale,” whaus weeping by tk# river’s brink,
the poet says:
“So slides he down upon h ! s grained bat
And comely distant sits he by tier side;”
that is to say, he squats down on his heels,
with his stick between bis legs, a mode of
taking rest adopted by weary rus
tics aud others wiih the fear of “rheuma
tics” in their hearts. Cricket, born in tho
south of England, has naturally adopted
the same nomenclature. The cricket bat
is simply the “crooked stick;” it is merely
a development of that game of ball, other
forms of which exist in ball-bias, base-ball,
rounders, hockey, cum multi) aliis. Ori
ginally the peison of the player is aimed at
while he is running frum station to station,
and if struck he and hi* side are “out;”
and hence you have the “i uu” in cricket as
the standard of success. Almost withiu
living memory cricket was played with a
club, something in shape like an old fash
ioned curved knife; and the contest was to
plane the ball in a hole before the batsman
reached it after his “run.” Wickets and
all the subtleties of the game have arisen
within the last century. Cricket no doubt
owes it* development to the wide grassy
commons of the south, just as knurr and
spell, a game that still has its virtues, and
golf, which has found its way to our south
ern heaths, owe their peculiarities to the
rougher uad wihiat' nature of the ground
on which they are played.
THE NEW IN MEDICAL SCIENCE.
At a recent session of the American
Academy of Dental Surgery, Dr. W. A.
Hammond made an interesting experiment
on the efficacy of a powerful cauterizing
battery for the destruction of nerves. The
; objerXof illustration was a beautiful white
rabbit. Dr. Hammond separated the iit
; tie animal’s spinal cord with a knife, at
j which the rabbit whined. Then, after life
was supposed to be extinct, the red-hot
j platjna wire, fired through the battery,
i was applied to one of the little creature’s
! legs. A disagreeable smell arose while the
\ platina, kept at white heat, ate its way
through flesh and bone, and after a lapse
I of ten minutes the leg was severed from
the body without hemorrhage.
SEEKING V SITUATION.
When seeking a situation do not pro
pose to take an advanced post. Ask for
, a chance to work, beginning at the bot
! tom. You may be considered qualified
j for something better, yet bo placed at
| the foot to test your tom per and fidelity
I —to ascertain if you will be '‘faithful over
j a few things.” If you sweep, make ! res,
j dust, do anything and everything prorupt
i ly and cheerfully, you will be advanced
! so fnst as you are seen to have mastered
i your allotted position. Grumbling at
j your lot, and asking to be put forward,
will disgust your superiors, who are per
: haps planning to obtain some o; a*to fill
your place that you may be put for.rani.
Men like to manage their own business—
dislike to have hoys make suggestions as
to their own occupation- or pay. Plants
are not put in large pots until by hecthy
; gnawing they seem to have filled the
small ones. If a puny plant were to
t ia-e the gardener for a large pot, or open
air planting he would wisely -av, “Fid
the plaee you occupy first aud thus show
your adaptation to a larger one,” ot, in
disgust, he would jerk out the ieeble
starveling and put a vigorous successor
in its place. Many a boy has lost his
situation because be whined for a post of
duty beyond his present capacity to fill.
He who, in store or shop, begins at the
bottom and learns how to do everything,
and is competent to every duty, ha* his
position and ultimate success in his own
seeping, and he will bo sought alter by
many, if it is kßowrt he is at liberty to
accept of anew engagement. Wo have
seen a faithful boy take a selfish man’s
place ia a shop or store; having increased
responsibilities, a more elevated po-ition,
and better pay than before. Choice of
Pursuits.
“Since the war, citizens of Georgia
have sent out of;he State $1,252,000 for
the education of their children. ’’ If this
is true, it ought not to be so; we do not
doubt that most, if* not ail, of these chil
dren, could have been educated equally
well, and a umah less expense, nearer
home.
HATFIELD S PATENT CHURN.
I am now prepared to furnish th* public with
HATFIELD'S PATENT CHURN, whtoh i Mild
to lie superior to any now on tho market. Call
and examine P.
TIN SHOP.
I now hare on hand a well assorted stock of
Tin ware, Guano Homa, etc. Store Piping made
to order on short notice, also any other article
desired. STEPHEN GARRETT.
ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
Articles ot agreement betweeu T. 8. Smith
aud C. C. Boyle—ther being the Inventors and
Patentees of Smith Boyle’s Manure grinder.
Distributor, and Cotton seed Planter.
The object of this agreement is to divide the
States and Territories within the United States
between them, preuaratory to the aale of said
Patent. It is agreed by the parties that the said
Bovlo is to take, hold, and have as his own, tho
following States aud portleu of States and Ter
ritories. to-wit: Alabama. Tennesnee, Florida,
North Carolina, Kentucky, Kant Virginia, West
Virginia, Ohio, Kansas, California, New York,
lowa, Michigan, Vermont, New Hampshire. New
Jeray, Colorado: Georgia divided as follows: Ah©
said Boyle is to have Troup county and all the
counties mentioned in the State, south of the
counties named, as a line including said men
tioned counties, to wit: Meriwether, {*ike,
Spalding, Bibb, and thence on a straight line to
th.* south side of Irwin conntv. Texa* divided
as follows: the said Boyle is to have that portion
of said State north and east of a straight lino
from Waco to San Augustine, in said State, in
cluding the county of McClennan. This is to be
understood as a full and Anal division—each
having no interest in the territory of the other.
The said parties hereby covenanting with each
other not to be guilty of infringement, and to
'deal each with the other in the strictest good
faith. Each acknowledge that all expenses
heretofore incurred up to this date, are fully paid
and settled between them. Signed aud dated
this March sth, 1878.
In presence of
Joseph J. P. Henry. T T. S. SMITH.
Sum’l Hawkins. J C. C. BOYLE.
Attest
[seal] H. D. C. Edmondson, C. S. C.
. USBE Lt..
* INDIAN ©
< ** lO *E?*v i
? © '
-2 J ' re. JA i % *l. .•v<yi • A *n
-3 ; <if{& £ ;
1 S I
> i> .£* ’> ' ' PI
I \ :
W'SiVM - " 5 •S 1
I . • " 4CI </> I
i "
- Quiver D1^ N J
Dyrpcitaia, Contiptlou cf *bt B; wels, J
In. i:or lt Soar Otoj-.aeli, Fever tc Ague. ■
Cri eff. Sic-: Heftdache, Dropey and
Janac.ice, Sidney Affection#, &<.
PUKP-LY VEGETABLE.
An mm* mli<;htened Cherokee |
i.Tf'i.T . t .'ii...' '. ■, <j ■> **< >n lined in the States
~ t ~, . &>■ Heine^pas
c. ‘id-n n nmly.
MAIiUFiC* U p FD ONLY BY
w. T. BU3SSLL <Sc CO.
■ hattiis< _A t:i n. j
\ I’liH-. - - - ite I>c>llnr'. |
For suit* by Branneh Rro., Thompson Biles,
Hryant Sc Gordon, Summerville, llix & Bryan.
Subligna, and A. P. Alloood, Tnon.
1.. C. NEBKNOER, Manager.
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
THIRTY-THIRD YEAR.
The Most Popular Scientific Paper in the
World. Only |3.20 a Year, including
Postage. Weekly. 52 Number* a
Year. 4,000 book pages.
The Scientific American is a large Fir?t-class
We-kJy Newspaper of sixteen pages, printed in
tbi most beautiful style, profusely illustrated
with splendid engravings, representing new
est inventions and the moat recent Advances in
the Arts and Sciences; including mechanics and
e.-’g net-ring, s'earn engineering, railway, mining
civil, gas and hydraulic engineering, mill work,
iron, steel and metal work; chemistry and chem
ical processes; e ootrieity, light, heat, soifiid;
technology, photography, printing, new machin
ery, new processes, new recipes, improvements
pe*i raining to Textile industry, weaving, dyeing,
coloring, new industrial products, animal, vege
table, and mineral; new no interesting facts ia
agriculture, horticulture, the 1101116, health and
medical progress, social science, natural history
geology, astronomy, etc.
The most v lu&ble practical papers, by eminent
writ era in all departments of science, will bt
found in the Scientific American; the whole pre
sented in popular language, free from technical
terms, illustrated with engravings, and *0 ar
ranged as to interest and inform all classes of
readers, old and young. The Scientific Ameri
can is promotive of knowledge and progress in
every community where it circulates. It should
have a place in every family, reading room,
library, college or scoot Terms. $3.20 per year,
$1.60 half year which includes prepayment of
postage. Discount to clubs and agents. Siagla
copies ten cents. Sold by nil Newsdealers. Re
mit by postal order to Mt'NN & CO , Publisher*
37 Park Row. Now York.
PAT£ HTQ Id connection with the Boi**-
* * C(i l w. tific Aiuericftn, Messrs. Kuna
A Cos., arc Solicitors of American and Foreign
Patent s, and have the largest establi hment in
the world. Patents arc obtained on the bsst
terms, models of n w inventions and tk*tch*s
examined an l advice free. A spcial notic* is
made in the Scientific Ammerican of all inven
tions Patented through this agency, with thn
name and residence of Patentee. Public atten
tion is thus directed to the merits of th* new
parent, and sales or introduction often effected.
Any pefsou who has made a how discovery or
invention, can ascertain, free of charge, whether
a patent can probably be obtained, by writing t©
the undersigned. Address for the paper, or con
cerning Patents, , MUNN & CO.,
37 Park Row, New York.
Branch Office, cor. F. A 7th Sts.. Wasbin r Un,
D. C.