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THE JESUP SENTINEL
Office in the Jesup House, fronting on Cherry
Street, tiro doors front Broad St.
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TOWN DIRFXTORY.
Town Officers.
Mayor —W. H. Wliaiey.
Councilmeti —T. P. Littlefield, H. W. Wha
ley, Brvaut George, O. F. Littlefield, Ander
son Williams.
Clerk ami Treasurer —O. F. Littlefield.
Marshal— G. W. Williams.
County Officers.
Ordinary —Richard B. Hopps.
Sheriff— John N. Goodbread.
Clerk Superior Court —Beiij. O.[Middleton.
Turk Receicer —J. C. Hatcher.
Tax Collector W. 11. Causey.
County Surveyor —Noah Bennett.
County Treasurer —John Massey.
Coroner— D. McDitha.
County Commissioners —J. F. King, G. W
Haiues, James Knox, J. G. Rich, Isham
Rtddisl .
Courts.
Superior Court, Wayne County—Jno.L.
Harris, Judge; Simon W. Hitch, Solicitor
General. Sessions held on the 2nd Monday
in March and Sente rnber.
|‘R<) FESSION A L C A H PS.
W. 11. RAMSEY,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW
HOMER VILLE, GEORGIA.
Will pi act ice in the Brunswick and South
ern Judicial Circuits. Special nttnetiongiv
en to the collection of claims. Business
solicited, and prompt attention guaranteed.
W A LTER A. WAY,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR,AT LAW
BABIES, GEOIiGIA.
Particular attention paH to the collection
of claims and the examination of land titles.
Will practice in the Superior C< ur'sof the
Brunswick and Easton Circuits; also in the
I'edei a I Courts in cases in Bankruptcy, etc.
JESUP, GEORGIA.
All calls w ill be promptly at
tehded. Those on the Railroad by first
train. Charges moderate. Office at Lester’s
Drug Store. 1 tf
C. T. L A TIME R, M. D
JESUP, GEORGIA.
'l enders his professional services to the
citizens of Jesup and vieiniiy. Can be
foil and at the office formerly occupied by
Dr. R. B.Harris. uov2tf
DU. ALLEN DROWN,
DENTIST,
Blacksiikar, - - * Georgia.
Is prepared to do ail kind of Dental woik
in the most approved style. Ali orders will
meet with prompt attention. Uses all the
late improvements. Charges moderate and
satisfaction guaranteed. jati22-ly
GEORGE LONG,
INSPECTOR AED SURVEYOR OF
Timber and Lumber,
DAIIIEN, - - - GEORGIA.
pO~ Patronage Solicited, "fett
Au M S Tll ONG' S
LINCOLN BUTTER POWDER
Good Fresli Butler nil the Tear Round.
BUTTER IN 20 MINUTES.
Lincoln Butter Pcmlcr is an entirely
harmless article made from a celebrated En
glish receipe, and now in daily use by many
ol the most noted farmers in the butter coun
ties around Philadelphia.
In hot weather this Powder maxes lnitter
much firmer and sweeter than it usually is
and Keeps it from turning rancid. It also re
mov< 8 the strong flavor of turnips, garlic,
weeds, corn stalKs, cotton seed, etc.; and
the increased yield of butter much more
ban pays the trifling expense of using it.
35 ffntH |KT jiaekasrc.
T HE DARIEN TIMBER GAZETTE
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AT rARJEN, KcINTObH COUNTY, GA
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The Cheapest Store in Jesup !
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Cheap DRY GOODS, '
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Fine Liquors of all kinds alwnys on
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M W. SURERNCY.
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Experts and Prosesslonal Bootblacks in
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This brand is made to compete with other
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housekeepers
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S. G U C K EN II KIM Eli ,
WHOLESALE GROCER, LIQUOR AND
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SAVANNAH, - - * GEOKGIA.
JESUP, GEORGIA i WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21,1877
If you. wish to grow Vegetables for sale, read
Gardning for Profit!
If you wish to become a Commercial fiorift, read
Practical Floriculture !
If yon wish to Garden for Home use only, rend
Gardning for Pleasure !
All by PETER HENDERSON.
Price $1.50 each, postpaid, by mail.
Com bided CATALOGUE
OF
FOR THE
GARDEN
Numbering 175 pages, with 1 colored plate, sen
F It K E !
to all our customers of past years, or to those
who have purchased any of‘the above books;
to others on receipt of 25 cents. Plain Plant
or Seed Catalogue without plate; free to all
a, pliennts.
PETER HENDtRSON & C 0„
fcfeedmen, Market Gardeneis Florists.
35 Cortland St., New York
LESTER’S DRUG STORE,
BROAD STREET, JESUP, GA.,
Keeps constantly on hand a full assortment of goods usual
ly kept in a Drug Store, such as
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PATENT MEDIGINES, OILS, PAIN S,
FRESH GARDEN SEED, &C.
I can always be found at the Drug Store, except when ab
•tent ou Professional duty, where Medical advice can be ob
tained. ’ R. F. LESTER, M. .
Webster’s Unabridged
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each of your schools.
\ebster now is glorious.—it leaves nothing to he
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ll'veryI I'very scholar k nows the value of the work.
W. H. Preston, the Historian
TJelieved to he the most perfect dictionary ol the
li language. Ur. J.O. Holland,
auperier in most respects to any oilier known to
vi me. George P. Marsh,
n'hc standard authority for printing in this office.
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Wxcels all others in giving and defining sccientific
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ryemarkable compendium of human knowledge,
be W. 8. Clark, Pres'; Agricultural College
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Icl>l4-(>m Fust Olllce li\ r,IS.
The Savannah Morning News
For 1877.
On the Ist of January, 1877, the Mousing
News enters upon its twenty-seventh volume,
and, it is hoped by its conductors, upon a
prosperous year. Every returning anniver
sary has witnessed its extending influence,
and to-day it is the text of the political faith
of thousands of its readers. Its uniform
consistency' end steadfast devotion to princi
ple has gained for it the confidence of the
public, thus enabling it to contribute large
ly to the triumph of the Democratic party.
In the future, as in the past, no pains w ill
be spared to make the Moening News in
every respect still more deserving of the con
fidence nn.l patronage which has been so
liberally extended to it by tin- people, of
Georgia and Florida. Tbe ample means of
the establishmentvvjll bedcvoled to theim
provement of the paper in all its departmen t
and to making it a comprehensive, instruct
five and reliable medium of the cun on
news. Its statfof special correspondents—
at Washington,Atlanta, Jacksonville, Talla
hassee, and other points ot inteiest—has
been reorganized with a view of meeting
every possible emergency that may arise,
and pains will be taken to make its commer
cial news, foreign Whd domestic, complete
and reliable.
POSTAGE FREE.
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ing to mail subscribers, thus making the
Moeni.no News the cheapest newspaper of
ts size and character in the South.
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Remittances can be made by Post. Office
order, Registered Letter, or Express, at my
risk, Letters should be addressed,
J. H. ESTiLL, Stmtnueb Ga.
N UMBER 29.
THE TRUE MOTHER OF THE
CHILD.
[From Representative Davis’ Speech
ou tbe Ooegou Decision] We tnko
the following; Tho Presidency is
eluitned hy Air. Tildeu and his friends
and by Mr. Hayes and his lricnds.
Tho commission has not decided vvi e
ly ns Solomon did when the two
women appeared before him, each
claiming to be the mother of the child
before him. Each claimed the child,
aud they went to Solomon for judg
ment, and he said, ‘'Let the chi <3
be divided between you.” But tho
true mother, with the maternal in
stinct of a mother said, “Net so; let
her take the child.” And so in (his
case, rather than that civil liberty
shall perish and law aud order die, w r
saylo you that if it he so that this child
must bo divided or given up to you,
it shall uot ho destroyed, it shall not
he divided, tnko tho child hut you are
not the true mother, you are the
false, fraudulent eluimant; take the
child, we commit it to your foul bosom,
but we will watch you and guard it,
and it any attempt is made to muti
late it* or destroy it. or dwarf its fair
proportions, we will with the courage
of the true mother spring to its res
cue, and you shall be destroyed and
not it.
THE FATTED CALF,
A good story is told concerning n
town-bred curate, who bad consented
to do duly m Sunday for bis friend
tho reeb rof a country paiish in the
midlands. Ibe supject of the morn
ing pennon was the parable of the
Prodigal Son, and in hopes of impres
sing upon his bearers the joy which
patriarch felt on the return of his
son, ns iustanerd by his’ ordering the
fatted calf to bo killed, the young
curate felt a pardonable pride in
dwelling upon a sublect which could
not fail to be comprehensible to the
dullest plough-boy in the congrega
tion. “Remember,” be said, “this
was no ordinary dalf which was to be
killed: it was no common galf or
hrnbt suffering form nmrrniiij no half
starved calf, slowly awaiting death.
No! it was not even merely a fatted
calf; but, becoming more ilnprossive,
it was the fattest calf, which had been
prized atid loved by the family for
many years! A sea of wide eyes and
gaping months arrested for n moment
the eloquence of the fledgling parson,
and in the next there was such a
chucking and grins and fluttering of
old bends below as hud not beeu~wit
nesfed even in the memory of the
quaint-legged rexton for more than
“many years.”— English paper.
An Alabama Jury’s Astonishing
Veriict —A jury in Alabama bad
been impaneled in the ease of a Mr.
Johnson, charged with killing bis wife.
The evidence was positive and con
clusive, leaving no doubt of his speedy
conviction. To the amazement of all,
the jury, after a short absence, return
ed a verdict; “Guilty of horse steal
ing. ’ Tho Judge astonisbi and, asked
an explanation, stating that the in
dictment was not for horse stealing,
bnt manslaughter. The foreman with
his hnnd upon a huge law book, nnd
with an amusingly dignified air, in
formed the court that “it wai not a
case of manslangter, hut wotmn
slaughter, for which the law made no
provision; hut being satisfied the nfan
deserved to he hanged, they had
brought in a verdict of horse stealing,
which in that country, would be sure
to swing him.” —llunburg News.
A naiuliilisl walks boldly to the
front and announce that (ho preserva
tion of Jonah in the whale’s belly was
not a miracle. The throat of the
whale is large, and is provided with a
hag or intestine. so considerable in
size, that whale frequently ttake into
it two of their young ones when weak,
and especially during a tempest As
this receptacle is furnish with two
vents that serve for inspiration, it is
claimed that Jonah could have lived
there cornfoitably, and with a reason
able amount of furniture, for many
years, provided he could obtain food
and drink.
The young ladies of New Castle, Pa ,
have signed a pledge to the effect that
they “will not court nor marry any
yung man who drinks any intoxicating
liquors or use tabaeco.” And now a
more lonely set of girls on Sunday
nights, these New Castle damsels, you
would’t want to soe.
Grasshoppers have made their ap
[earanc in lUckdale county.
A commercial exchange says: “Hogs
are dull.’’ We never thought hogs were
very sharp. When one breaks into a
cabbatic patch you may debase it four
teen hundred tiroes around the lot, and
it will try lo crawl through every tbrec
ii ch crack io the feuce without once
seeing the bolo it made to get !n.
THRILLING SCKNE>—DEATH 't&
THE BRIDAL ALTAR.
A sad occurrence tok place in the
Town of Tbomasville. North tJurOlijSs,
on Tursday evening, Fibruai'J 2'i, 1877,
the like of which is seldom if aver, re
corded in the annals of history, or ever
known to have taken place in Hie course
qf human events, where deefh earns in
<*n uubiddeu, unlookcd-f ir m< meß*, ntia
snatched away the bride from the side
of the I rid g oom while the roinJetlf
w.is performing the marriage lef.tuony,
Tue history is this; A number of
guest had assembled at the house cl
Mrs. Forney, widow of the late Tnomas
Foruev, former y, of Montgomery coun
ty N <J., to celebrate her marriage
with William Thomas, son of the late
lion. J. W Thomas.
’1 be appointed hour came, the j >yous
tone ot luughii r had ceased, wulo the
friends and relatives took their places
around lo awa t with eager interest the
approach of tlie two who were soon to
take the solemn vows that wouil hind
tluir h arts together, “f r weal or woo.’'
A moment's p übi and they mada
their appearance. The officiating Min
ister, Kvv. J, W. Lewis, of the North
Conference, look his stand and began
the solemn service When he got to tho
second paragraph, as wriiteu in the
‘Methodist Disciplin,” which begins
thus: “Into which holy estato these two
persou present come now to he joined,”
us the word ‘ into’’ fell from his lips the
ure ol t he bride began suddenly to
dioop—gently she came down upon flier
knees, aud then, without an exclamation.
Ml buck upon the floor iu a lifeless
swoon 8o great was the consternation
of all presoul that ihcy seemed rooted,
spcllpouod to iho floor, aud fra tno'.
uicnt no one was able to reader assis
tance.
i..eu tbrro was a fueli; she waa
home from the room, restoratives ad
minister! d,and everything that kindness
or human ai t could suggest was dono to
biing her back to life aud consciousness,
but all to uo purpose The edict bad
gone forth, and in less than an hour's
lime bI.o who was to have been a happy,
joyous bride, exulting in tho congratu
lations of tiiends aud participatiug in
the fest.vitics of tho occasion, was tho
“bride ot death. 1 ’
Soon tho news 8| read from house to
house, and the the terrib'o shock cast
a sadness and gloom over the entire
community. Sympathizing friends
gathered round the heart. H'riekfii
mourners, willing to offer oousolmiou
hut tho grief of him hy whose side alio
stood when the mussonger came, aud of
the daughter, who, in the bloom of
youth, was so suddenly bereft of a
mother’s counsel and advice, was
far beyond tho reooh of liotnuu aid or
sympathy —none dure, at such an hour,
to intrude upon tho sueredness of such
grief.— Wilmiiiylon Star-,
DEPTH TO PLANT.
The proper depth to plant seed is a
question of consideratdo import an •i,
and out) which like many other similar
questions relating to plant growth
cannot receive a defiinito answer that
would bo of gonei al or nnivereal ap
plication In dry, sandy soil, situated
in dry climates, a deeper covering will
be required than would bo judicious
wl ere bo'h noil and climato ind'c ta
iBo reverse of these conditions. S-uds
vary in 'heir ability to penetrate
depth of Boil in germinating. Legunin
ous seeds cjo ho planted deeper than
those of a lighter cliaraotor. It has
been given as a general rulo that all
seeds gcrmii are most speedily when
covered with a depth of soil equal to
their own thickness and whero tho con
stant presence of sufficient moisture for
germinating can bo maintained, this
rulo may hold good, but it will not
hold in many cases, however, owing, wo
suppose, to tho fact that tho “constant
presure of sufficient moisture” cannot
be secured. Corn planted by this rulo
would ho a decided failure The truth
is, ope must draw upon his own good
judgement in Ill's matter. The seeds
must he so deep as to render it not
easy fur the pilant to come through tho
ground, nor must they bo so shallow as
to dry out from tho effects of the sun.
Small seeds had better be shaded du
ring warm, drying sunshine.
BALK Y* HOUSES.
There is a good deal said just now
about the balking of hors s, the causes
of it and the remedies. As long as wo
remember, this singular lit of obstina
cy of the lior.se has been discussed, and
all sorts of plans for overcoming it given.
Hut what wilt answer for ono hoisa
may not for another. Tho cause of it
doubtless neglect and ill treatment of
the colt, or when and after it is broken
to h irness. Sometimes stopping a
i moments will be sufficient to start tho
animal opaio ftcely of b s own accord.
Kind woidß patting, a handful of ,hay
or grass, or a little pepper put on the
tongue wid induce him to go ahead as
if nothing had been the matter. Whip
ning at all times, and especially io this
Cise, is the worst revolt. We have
ourselves induced balky horses tojstart
by some of the means above recorded.
Somvt'uies tho mere turning of the
head in a different direction, then rub
biog the nose with the hand, has an
swer dj so has lying around his
to cl g I el >w the knee, di awing it very
iig t. Various royorts of this kml
may he tried, lui never force.— G< - *
mantowii Tvleyrajih.
The Boston Adn rtiser says that too
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