Newspaper Page Text
<£jjc (©corght
T T ¥aLL * J. I>. ALtIA\DER,
EDITORS.
THOM ASTON, G A., APRIL 2, ’7O.
TUE GEORGIA BILL.
This measure still hangs fire in the
Senate, We infer from telegrams
and correspondents from Washing
ton, that the delay ia caused to give
those who oppose Bingham’s Amend
ment on opportunity to increase their
vote by admitting othar States. We
doubt not, that every scheme of cor
ruption and villiany that can be
thought of by the mischief making
brains of Bullock, Butler, and others,
will be resorted to, for the purpose of
defeating the amendment. Bullock
wants the Legislature to extend the
term for which they were elected,
and give him a negro militia. The
bill which proposes to authorise the
calling out of the loyal militia when
the Governor may deem it necessary,
allows the commanding officer to sus
pend the writ of Habeas Corpus. If
the Governor succeeds he will hare
the life, liberty, and property of any
citizen in this State, in his hands for
two years. The negro militia will
always be found to do his bidding,
and if they prove insufficient to the
task, he. -is authorized to call on the-
Preeident for additional fences. This
is, as one of our exchanges truly re
marked the other dayman effort on
the part of Government to hold
ns down while the negro militia, un«
der Bullock, rob and plunder us/’
Those who remember the scenes that
were daily enacted two or three years
ago in Tennessee, will have a very
good idea of what will be witnessed
in Georgia if Bullock succeeds. This
bill, in our judgment, if it becomes
a law will result in a war between the
races in this State. Arms are what
Bullock and his crowd say they want
and promise to be satisfied with that;
saying they can protect themselves.
We ask wbat is the necessity for
this ? At what place are they im
posed upon ? Are their rights de
nied them?_ If so, how is it, when
both Houses of the Legislature are
largely Radical ? There is no truth
in the statements, that the negroes
most have arms in order to protect
themselves. No community in this
State has ever denied them the full
measure of their sights. All we
have to say is, that if the Govern
ment will back Bullock and his or
ganized band of plunderers and rob
bers, then the people of this State
cannot be made responsible for the
consequences. Our people have
borne a great deal. They have been
misrepresented, persecuted and abus
ed, and have borne it patiently.
There is a point in all histories of
abuse and pioseoution, where “longer
forbearance ceases to be a virtue.”
Those wuo are seeking to place the
State of Georgia under the control
of n-groes and mean white men,
with full power over the lives, liberty
and property of her citizens, need
not be surprised that the people of
G orgia will some day, and probably
not far distant, reach such a point in
her history. We hope, however, for
better things. We deserve no such
punishment, and we cannot believe
that an enlightened Congress will
thus yield to the desire on the part
of Bullock and his crew to insult and
plunder our people. We look, almost
alone, tf-,th§ lower House of Con
gress for protection, which stands as
a niighrjr^reak-water between us
of rfvy; hatred-* and
intuit which tbrtaten^l^, submerge
Mb
goto
•stray, not because there is a want ot prayer
or virtue-a*-home, bu-t-eicnply.because home
lacks sunshine. A child need sunshine as
a flower needs sunbeams. Children look
little keyond the present- moment. If a
thing pleases they are apt to seek it; if it
displeases they are prone to avoid it. If
home is the place where faces are sour and
words harsh, and fault-finding ever in the
ascendant, they will spend as many hours
a? possible elsewhere. Let every father
and mother, then, try to be happy. Let
them talk to their children, especially the
little ones, in such a way as to make them
happy.
The humor the cadetship business in
creases daily, butler appointed a rifegro ;o
West Point. Delegate McCormick, of Mon
tana, ie to appoint an Indian ; Delegate
Nuckolls, of Wyoming, is to appoint a wo
man; and now Congressman Johnson, if
California, says he’ll be— fobversely bless
ed] —if he don't send a Chinaman, It ie
neodlees to My all these gentlemen are
•trong suppdnacs of the law of aauamj ad
If fat Point. *
JORDAN'S REJOINDER.
Th© story was recently telegraphed
all over the country, says the Con*
stitution, that General Jordan, in
command of the revolutionary forces
ill Cuba, had told out to the Span
iards. Like a thousand and one
other dispatches sent from Havana,
in the interest of Npain, this was
false, and General Jordan himself
takes pain* to nail the lie to the
counter in a sharp and stinging let
ter addressed to the Captain General,
De Rhodas. We quote :
Sir; Y -ur Excellency has not received,
not even upocry |.lmity, any such proposi
tion-nothing that Mould have the least
similarity thereto, and which could have
any other origin than that ot Havana. If
ii ie. net aj, 1 challenge y »ur Excellency to
lay the proofs before the Unittd States
Consul at Havana.
A soldier since my adolescence, proud to
belong to a profession whose member of
all civilized nations I am accustomed to re
cognized as men of honor, to whom it is re
pugnant to fight their enemies with un
worthy arms, l oame t«» Cuba expecting
that even the Spanish oflioers were gen'le*
men. But I soon found, too truly, around
me the proofs that they were tigers rather
than soldiers—but the skunk, not the tiger,
tries to annihilate his enemy with filthy
orders,
iv uen I -have seen ihe subordinates of
yonr Exeellency assassinate aged men,
nejpless women aud children, the sick in
'be hospitals, the wounded on the battle
field, the demented, which even the savage
Indiana respect and honor; yes, when 1
konw that their practices are to inflict ob
scene mutilations on the corpses of their
enemies and commit incredible and diabols
ical atrocities of all kinds, it should not
really surprise me t at Spanich office*s can
be found who gtihan honorable profession
ivith false inventions like the one 1 treat of
in this 1© ter.
But I w**e not prepared, sir, to see a Lieu
tenant General and Vice oy of Spain ine
tend to bespatter bis eoerny with din
thrown by his own hands. Honorable sol
diers do not make use of such arms, and I
leave the sal honor to your Excellency to
be the first to do so. No fo'dy will believe
you ; the result will not recompense even
the small amount cutlayed to give course
to your falsehood.
“THE BIRCHEN SCEPTRE."
We have read with much care and
interest the beautiful little poem of
the above tittle, by Prof J. M. Greene
of this place. It surpasses any pro
duction ot the kind, in elegant style,
beautiful language and originality.
The Prof, has in this little poem dis
played reading and learning enough
to have carried him with safety,
through a volume much larger. The
only objection to his poem is, that
too much is said in a few pages. It
contains ideas—good original ideas,
enough to make a book fiive times its
size. Prof. Greene has not only dis
played a great deal ot book learning
in this poem, but has at the same
time exhibited an abundance of good
practical sense.
He has had very great experience
as a teacher, and knows whereof lie
speaks. He has for many years,
wedded the Birchen(lliekfiry as we
suppose it to bo more plentiful than
the birch) sceptre, and knows full well
its worth as an adjunct, in training
the youths of the land. The Prof,
is very happy in his take.off of North
ern School teachers, who flooded the
country before the war, to teach the
young idea how to shoot, whose acme
in education was a tolerable acquaint
ance with “Dillwoths’ spelling book,
and whose knowledge of using the
rod, far exceded their learning, or
ability to teach. He gives in the latter
part of this little poem, the character,
lot and life, of a teacher. Teaching
according to Prof. Greene— and we
doubt not —is a very unthankful busi
ness. He speaks plainly of anpleas
ed parents, and unthankfull students;
bestow upon thdra all the time and
care you will.
This little poem, however exhorts
the teaching fraternity, notwithstand
ing the poor encouragement they meet
with in this .life, to push on theTaith
ful discharge pFduiy,7and lookedone~
to th* Great Tas\ Master'of all for
their peward. The poem is a good cmfe,
•fid W*would be glad to kncfwifc was
opned.Mvinytjii? every and
woman in the country. r
♦’ • %
A Case ot Incest—A Man Marries his
Wipe’s Daughter.— Tire Covingfm Exam
inrr informs u$ t: at at the late term of the
Superior Court of Newton county, a man
by th* name of Jesse Lamb (what a dese
cration of the name) was arraigned befbie
that Court changed with the above named
offense. It ss- ms that Mr. Lamb was
old and respectable citizen oi Newton c»mn-.
ty. Many years ago, he married a Mrs
Landers who had at (he time a little daugh
ter. After the death of the mother, the
little girl having grown up to womanhood,
Lamb married her. He was indicted, tried
for the crime of incest, found guilty by a
jury of bis country, and sentenced by
Judge Green to twelve months in the Pen
itentiary.
A True Definition.— ln Georgia, the
bill now before Congress, seeks to turn the
present State government into a little aria
toctihey; with* power to oootinua it&-own
power witl&ut' 'popular
Age.
POLITICAL
The Richmond imbroglio ia oot_yet set
t'ei, but: Mayor Ellison has uow complete
control of thiscity. . .
It is again rumored that a Pomf'cratic pa
n‘*r i» to >e efa ted in Chicago by*some of
the taithiul who don’t like the Times.
John E. ILtlaell, E-q.. a prominent.law
ver of B "vlingirreen is as a
Democratic candidate for Cosgress in the
Third (Golladay’e) district, Kentucky.
The Executive Committer of the Lnniri*
ana Republican Pre«s convent! n m*t
and tv, and elected Hon Ge'irge P. Car*- #
Chairman, and Amos N. Oillih*. S*'cre’ary.
Cincinnati; Ohio, March 24. Returns
from t ie promary elections to'-nignt are not
all in, but the indication 1 * so fa.* are that a
majority of the pro- B b e school trustees
hav» been nominated.
The reconsTn.-riopist* are endeavoring «o
mix up the Tennessee with ;be Georg a
question in the House, and h<»*a that thei
nan ran the reconstruction d“dg a through
in the excitenrent produced by the Georgia
bill.
Columbus, Ohio, March 25 —The
will meet on Saturday to nomination irule
pendent ticket in opposition to the Dim >s
crario nominees Judge Swan one hun
dred prominent citizens, ineluding many
leading Democrats, have srged the cal*.
. Hon. R T-. Vanhorn, a former Cincinnati
j •urnalist. and present meinb-r «f Congress
from the Kansas C ty district, is spoken of
as a candidate fi> Governor of Missouri. B.
(Iratz Brown, f rmer editor of the St. L >u : »
Demorcrat, will be his competitor.
E : ght of the United Sta'es are
natives of Ohio, to^wit; Ross,.pf Kfm«as ;
Warner, of Alabama ; Hoprop-, of Mirme-.
sota ; Drake, of Missouri; Tipton, of Ne
braska; Sherman, of Ohio; Fowler, of Ten
nessee; and Howell, of lowa.
The Oregon Democratic State Convens
tion met at Lime county on the 23d inst.
They nominated J H. Slater, of Baker
c unty, for Congress, by acclamation ; L F.
01 >yer. o« Marion county, for Governoa-; F.
Chadwick, of Dnng'as* county, for Secreta
ry of Sia'e; Louis Fleischerrner, of Mu’*
tonomah coun'y for Sta e Treas rer; ard
L. Patterson, of the Porilaud Herald, for
Stste Printer. „ ,
A large meeting of colored ciCre**# was
held in Newark, New Jersey, on Monday
night, to hear discourses on the 15th Am* n !•
ment, and to make preparations for the eel '
ehrati.on of the forthcoming proclam ati n
by the President announcing its adoption
Hon. John B. Thompson, of Harrods
burg. is spoken of a«~cahdidate for Congress
in the Seventh District. The Cincinnati.
Gazettes “Kentucky contributor” thinks
the Repub'icans and Union men of the
district could unite on him if he should
nake the rac *
Thomas Jefferson said : “This habit of
indulging in ardent spirits by men iu office,
has occasioned more injury to the public
than all other causes. And were Ito com
mence my administration again wiih the
same experience I now have the first ques
tion I would ask respec n g a candidate,
would be: Does he use ardent spirits?’
Mr. Butler is pushing an active inquiry
into D e newspaper o oresjiondence under
the res* lu ion lately adopted by the House
lie has thus far co fined himself to t e
premature tnbbct'ion of testimony ah. |
th» gold cm sp.racy. hut it is expected he
will soon break out into genera probing of
the secrets of the newspaper lobby.
HISTORY OF A DAY.
Everyday eighty six thousand four
hundred mortal* die—some by vio
lence, others of old age, some are
starved, others murdered and some on
beds of sickness. In a hundred per.
sons in the prime of life, about six
die in a year In this country about
one half the rational creaton die un- :
der four years; were th© calculation
universally extended, upon an ever--
age thirty years existence to each,
would equal, if not exceed, the life
of the individual. From these thir
ty, fiftaen years may be deducted for
childhood, during which most all art*
consumers and not producers, this re
duces the possesion of time to fifteen
yeas: and if we allow one half to
sleep and indisposition to labour we
shall have but seven and a half years
to provide for ourselves and our off
spring. If a person, twenty years old
lay aside twenty dollars each year,
it will take fifty years to lay aside a
thousand dollars; if eighteen dollars
a year be invested in life assurance,
he will, beyond a doubt, secure to his
heirs a thousand dollars, let him die
when he will, even if it be during the
first year. When hands and minds
are men’s only estates as thoy are in
most cases now, and where’sub&istenee
depends upon hard toil, ingenuity,
learning rnd business tact, those who
care anythng at all for those who are
„to come after them, should lodk well
into this matter.*
• •• .•* ■ «-.«•.» ■- , -
A Brevet Jortr-It -ia'reljfted in army
circles thut oiT6 ’day neat "the close of thS day
a ed passing along the lirp
of th©>axmy*of the Pntoina©, then ly mg in
front-of Richmond, whose sad -countenance
attracted nnivorsal attention. -Hi#, head'
hung down in meditative mood, his half*-
closed eyes roved in a vacant way along,
the ground, and his long, expressive earsi
vibrated in the peculiar manner that show*!
ed the workings of a busy but mortified
spirit.* The- sympathy ot the idle soldiery
was awaked.
In groups of two or three, oScers and
men* came *frotnr front and rear and bo If
flanks, and looked wonderingly at the
rious sight. lie was an old, a veterah mule*
and his evident distress excited the tribute
of respect. At last, a hardened old team*
ster, who had been known to boast of hav
ing, without whip or spur, sworn a six
mule team up a hill, caught this poor a* le
by his ragged, straw protuding collar, in at
hung in tatters around his ears, and,
roughly jerking him to a dead halt, asked
in thunder tones;
*' “What in the thunder are yon crying
about?”
“Because they won't make mo a Brevet
Howe l” was the reply,-drowned .in sobs,
aniOterjUded by'a bqD|t 9*
™ 7i ■
A ' i
HER i)IC, REMEDY!
II E iv R Y ’ s
CARBOLIC
CONSTITUTION
REN jVATOH!
BA-ED OX SCIENCE.
PREPARED WITH SKILL,
and all the available engenuiry and experts
ness that the art of pharmacy of the pre
sent day can contribute. And combining
in Concentrate 1 Form the moat
Valuable Vegetable Juices
Known in the History of Medicinea for
PURIFYING THE BLOOD,
Imparting
NUTRITION TO THE SYSTEM, TONE
TO THE STOMACH.
And a Healthy actii n to the Liver, Kid
neys, Secretive and Excretive Organs.
• •
A DYING ZTJAVE
Lay breathing his last on the battle held,
hi3 companions surged on and left him
alone. They knew the cause of his ap
proaching end ft-was. the deadly bullet. No
friendly voice could cheer him to life—no
human skill could save him
THOUSANDS OF PRECIOUS LIVES
are to-day as rapidly sinking, and as sure
ly tottering ou to an untimely end, in Suf
fering, Agony, Wretchedness, an 1 Ignor
ance .of, toe cause which
Science*cao arfest ard assuage,
Nourish into new Life and Vigor,
And cause the B<oom of Health
w To dance once mure upon their wither
ed£stheeks.
DISEASE, LIKE A THIEF,
upon its victims unawares, and be
fore they are aware of its attack, plants
itself firmly in the system, and through
neglect or inattention becomes seated, and
de fies all ordinary or temporaly treatment
.to relinquish its merciless grasp.
?? DO YOU KNOW THE CAUSE OF
The wasted form —the hollow cheek ?
-T.he withered face—the sallow complexion?
Tire teeble Vuics—the sunken, glassy eye ?
The emaciated form—the trembling frame?
The treacherous pimple-tbe tortuting sore?
The repu sive e- option—the inflamed eye?
The pimpled sac rough colorless skin?
and debilitating ailments of the present
age ? .The answer issuuple, and covers the
wuole ground in all its phases, viz: the
Fangs of Disease
AND
HEREDITARY TAINT
ARE FIRMLY FIXED IN TH*
FOUNTAIN OF LIFE—TIIE BLOOD.
The INDISCRIMINATE VACCINATION
during the late war, with diseased Lymph
has
TAINTED THE BEST BLOOD
in the entire land. It has planted the germ
of the moat melancholy di.-ease in the veins
• f men, women ami children on all sides,
and n-’thjng short of a
HEROIC REMEDY
will Eradicate it root and branch, forever.
Such a Remedy is HENRY’S CARBOLIC
CONSTITUTION RENOVATOR.
On reaching the Stomach, it assimulates
ai once with the food and liquids the’ein.
and from the moment it passes into the
Botoa, it attacks disease at its fountain
bead, in its gertn and maturity, and dissi
pates it through the avenues of the organs
with unerring certainty, and sends new and
pure Blood bounding through every artery
and vein. .
The tubercules of Scrofula that some**
times flourish and stud the inner coating of
the alal men, like kernel of corn, are with*
©red, dissolved aud eradicated and the diss
eased parts nourished into life. The Tor®
pid Liver and Inactive Kidneys arc stimu
lated to a healthy secretion, and their
natural functions restored to renewed
health and activity.
Its action upon the blood, fluids of the
body, and Glandular System, are Tonic,
Purifying and D sinfectaut.' At its touch,
disease droops, dies, and the victim of its
violence, as it were,
LEAPS TO NEW LIFE.
It relieves the entire system of Pains and
Aches, enlivens the spirits, and imparts a
Sparkling brightness on the Eye,
A rosy glow to the Cheek,
A ruby tinge to the Lip,
A clearness to the Hr*ad,
A brightness to the Complexion,
A buoyancy to the Spirits,
And happiness on all sides.
Thousands have been resejied from the
verge of the grave by its timely use.
This Remedy is now offered to tbe public
with the most solemn assurance of its in
trinsic medicinal virtures, arid powerful
Healing properties.
For ail Affections of tbe KIDNEY’S,
RETENTION*bf URINE, and of
Wi-.mPn and Children. Nervous Prostra
tion, Weakness, General Lassitude,'- aH'd
LoSß~nf*AyTpytite.~itiß-(mr.wFpmwe4i- -Ifr -cx -
tingorshes Affections of the Bb'nea* Habitual
C stiveness, Debility. Diseases >f the Kuf*
neys, Dyspepsia, Erysipelis, Fen ale Irs
Fistula, ail Skin Diseases,
bjiver Complaint, Indigestion. Piles, PuU
Fmb'nary Diseases, Consumption, Sorofala or
• King’s Evil, SyhiHis.
.1 PBiPAJHCD BT
Prof. M. E. HENRY,
f DIRECTOR-GENERAL
6 OF TFftC
BERLIN HOSPITAL,
M. A., L. L. D., F. R. 8.
HENRY & CO., Proprietors .
Laboratory, 278 Pearl Street.
Post office Box, 5272, New York.
RENOVATOR is
$1 per bottle, six bottles for $5. . Sent anys
where on receipt of price. Patients a*e
requested to correspond confidentially, and.
reply will be made by foHowm.mail..
' by aft respectable Druggist*, *
muhSo-ly ~*
New Store
C. F. TURNER & BRO.,
* .'fk * , *
WOULD respectfully inform the public that they have open a store io
town of THOMASTON, and would say to the citirens of the town and
surrounding country that their stock consists of all kinua of
DRY Gr OOD S ,
Hats, Notions, Hosiery, and Fancy Goods,
THEIR STOCK OF
ILAtDaiBS IDIBIBSS a U 10.2
Is large and well selected, and consist in part of
Black, Figured and Colored Alpaccas and
Poplins, All Wool Detains, Cotton and
Woolen Detains, Shallies, Marinoes, Piaid
Poplins, Plaid and Black- Silks, Scotch
Plaids, Repts, VeWtteues, Ginghams,
Lawns, etc., etc. All kinds of Ladies,
Misses and Childrens W'oolen and Cotton
Hose, Men and Boys Cotton and W'eoien
Half-Hose Ladies Kid Gloves, every quali
ty of Ladies, Misses and Childrens Berlin
Gloves, Hoop-Skirts, Corsets, Furs, Plaid
Shawls, Arab Shawls, Linen and Cambric
Handkerchief. Ladies Marino Vests, etc.
Eor GENTLEMEN wear they have a fine assortment of
FAICY CASSIIERBS,
Suitable for Winter, Spring and Summer.
Black Cloth, All Wool Kersey, Satinets,
Tweeds, Sheep's Gray, Kentucky Jeans, 1
Farmer’s Drill, Blue Demins, Linen Duck j
They call special attention to their stock of
HI 111 BOY’fli HATS, <
Os the Latest Style. They will receive in a few days a complete assort-4
ment of every kind >f SHOES for Men, Boys, Ladies, Misses .j.d Chil
dren. They have always paid particular attention to this branch of their
business, and have generally given satisfaction to their customers, especially*
in Ladies, Misses and Children’s City Made Shoes and Gaiters. Atth«|
same time they receive their Shoes they will have n
SUGAR, COFFEE, AND TEA, *
* IT- I
And all such articles as are usually kept in a first-class Village or Country
Store. In conclusion they would say to the public that they Kftve had oig r
years experience in this kind of business, and have always gained fmto* ■*. ! J I
for the pleasure they take in showing their goods. They respectful! : r teK
the citizens of Thomaston and vicinity to give them a call, *vn ng bjr
strict attention to business to merit a fair shear of their patronage.
O. F. TURNER * BRO. *
rrchs-lT THOMASTON, UPSON. CO. C«A. *
DEPUTY SHERIFFS SALE.
AAfILL BE SOLD before Die Courthouse
door in Thomaston, Upson County,
Ga., on the first Tuesday in April, between
the usual hours of sale, six buudred bush
els of corn, four thousand pounds of fods
der, five hundred bushels of cotton seed,
and one 45 saw gin, sold by virtue of an
execution issued from the Superior Court
of Epson County in favor of Thomas Beall
against Nathaniel F. \Va>ker, the same le
vied on as the property of the said N. F.
Walker, the defendant in fi la. Other fi.
fa-. J. 11. HAYS, Deputy Sheriff.
Feb’y 26, 1870.
SHERIFFS SALE.
WL’ILL BE SOLD before the Courthouse
door in Thcmastou, Upson County,
Ga.. on the Ist Tuesday in April next, be
tween the usual hours of sale, the follow
ing property, to wit : One half of lot of
land No 155, and lot 185, in the 15th diel
- originally Monroe, now Upson Coun
ty, containing 301 \ acres more or less, as
the proper y of James Harp, by virtue of
afi »a issued from the Justice’s Court of
the 669 District G M, Meriwether County,
in favor of A. Simmons, against said Jas.
Harp, lety made and returned by R. F.
Partridge, constable.
ALSO—At the same time and plrce, will
be B<ild L»t of land 25 L 80 acres on the
west, side of lot No 244, 20 acres of lot 250.
and 2| acres of lot 245, in the 16'h Diset.
of originally Houston, now Upson County,
levied upon by a fi. fa. issued from the
Superior Court of Upson County, in favor
of B. 11. Zeilner, guardian of Emma L.
Bird, against Phillip Cunningham,
ty pointed out by defendant. And other fi.
fas in'my hands. O. C. SHARMAN,
feb 26, 1870. Sheriff
UPSOiV SHERIFF’S SALE.
WILL be *old on the first Tuesday In May
next, be ore the Courthouse door, in the town of
Thomaston, Up v n county, between the legal hours of
sale, she following property to wit:
One small sorrel mare Mule about twelve years oid.
•s the property of Lemuel T Baker, by Virtue of a
Mffrtg ge fl fa issn'd from the Superior Court of Meri
wether county, in favor of F M. Hoyt, against said L.
T. Baker. Property poin ed out by plaintiff:
mehs-td O. C. till ARM AN, Sheriff.
GEORGIA— Upson Cucwrr-Whereas W. P. Persons i
applies to me for the Guardianship of the persons
and prop rty of J. L Pickard and William Pickard,
orphan children of James L. Pickard, late of said
coun y, deceased.
These are, therefirre, to cite and admonish the kin
dred of said orphans,Ho show cause if any they have,
on the first Monday in April next, why the prayer of
petitioner should not be granted.
Given under my hand this 3d March, ISTO.
meb6-td WM. A. COBB, Ordinary.
Worrill & lining,
Dealers in Stable and Fancy
DRY OOOUS,
BOOTB and SHOEB, HATS and CAPS, CLQTHTNG,
Ac, are offering Inducement* to smA buy era. Call and
hsb fv 4*M.m
THE THOMASTON
CHEAP STORE.
. |
• I
j
The Old Reliable Store is
WEBB'S, i
The Store for tbe People is
WEBB’S j
The Store for Dry Goods and No-J
tions is WEBB’S, j
The store for Boots and Shoes is 9
WEBB’S. )
The store lor Clothing at cost is &
WEBB’S./
The store for Ladies Dress Goods u|
WEBB S. I
The store for the Young and Old L f j
WEBB’S. I
The store for tbe Colored People
WEBB’S. 1
The store for those that use Whisk*
is WEBB S. I
The store for those that us<* TobaccS
is WEBB’S, j
The store for those that use Brandy
is 1 WEBB’S. J
The finest Whisky and Brandy iy
town is WEBB’S. 1
Those that want Leaf Tok tcco go -«
WEBITS. 1
Those that buy Goods for Cash
to WEBB S. I
My friends my bone9t opinion
the most of the goods is sold at.-
WEBFS.I
Thankfulfor past liberal
and soliciting a continuance of
same I am positively your best frien-K
JOHN N. WEBB
and W. A. JOUNSON,
febl9-tf
A NEWPAPERJ?
n lump raws
We propose to publish on the
April next, and monthly thereafter, a
er of thirty-two pages, to be devoted !,| 1
advancement of the Tmtibanc* o*** IB
Georgia. 11l
Wt took to our Upson to
us in our new enterprise. Send in -
immediately. Terms $5,00 per an**
Addreet/ W. E. H. SEARCY F*
nchA Griffin*