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VOLUME V.
HOOK STORE.
WIKLE & CO.’S
—SHSjBOOK STORED—
(3>tora'rsr or ?oot orricr.)
FOR EVERYTHING IN THE
Sank and. tint,
Their news stands arc kept con lantly supplied with the latest and best paper
and periodicals. Th<*y take subscriptions for every
newspaper ind periodical published.
-* HBB& -- ---— : —
Great bargains in pocket and bill books, ladies’and misses shopping bags, etc
They keep on h and a large sfixfi*; <>f marbles, tops, balls, bats, school satchels, bok
straps, slates, pends, ink, paper, b oks, etc.
All orders by mail promptly attended to. Address,
11111 & C§.,
G A JIT K RSVILLE, GA
agaat:saT* fnr e - c^ci3kaaiicjKss>c£r
StlfflM IllPiWt:
Wholesale and Retail
FURNITURE HOUSE.
bust t:m wmaxomat
I have on h ind ore of the 1 r* ;t stocks of tjnrnifuro ever exhibited in North
Georgia, and c n fit vou up in a handsome suit, of fur
niture for ii Me money. Call and see if [ don’t
DUPLICATE ATLANTA PRICES.
Sanford L. Yakdivere
K)l ■ —IMMIIIII will IH 111 wmrx. r >*-.
BARTOW LEAKE’S
Fire iMittiee Sit lee.
Represents Sams of the Leant i Fire Insurance Companies of ike World.
YV hen you want Insurance in . rst-elass companies and at adequate rates call on
or address me and your orders shad have immediate attention. X also represent the
McCormick II irvesting Machine Company, of Chicago, whose machines for durability
and excellence cannot lie surpassed. I have the exclusive right for the sale of the
ustly popular Glenn Mary Cod, and will always keep on hand a full supply during
k; coming fall and winter.
Feeling very much ene ranged on account, of your past patronage and soliciting
a continuance of the same, with a si 11 greater increase, I am
Very Truly Yours,
BA! TOW LEAKE.
-ft TOA #■
About twenty years ago I discov. red a little sore on my cheek, and tbt doctors pro
noun-,ed it cancer. I have tried a number of physicians, out without receiving any perma
nent bent fit. Among the number vu uj one or two specialists. The medicine tney applied
t 0 Ul ? Sorc ; caumn 2 mb use pain. I saw a statement in the papers- telling-what
’’ ‘ on c°r others sbniimiy .fflicted. I procured some at once. Before I had used
the secon <>tt e the neighbor- conLl notice that my cancer was healing up. My general.
health had been bau for two or i nv. ~ . , . . . . *
„ T . . rnr .'ears— 1 ban a hacking cougn ana spu blood contm
nally. I tied a severe pam m nv, hr. , , ti ,
, . . , l!st - After tanintr six bottles of s. S. S. my cough left
me and I grew stouter than I had been for , , , ~ , . ~ . ,
. .. . , •or several years. My cancer has liealnd over all but
a little spot about the size of a half dime n . „ . ~ , .
~ , „ „ ut -i fi na it is rapidly Uisapi>eann". I would advise
every one with cancer to give I>. S. :■>. a fair trial } '
Mus. NANC Y J. VeCONA' u *l 3
Feb. IS, 13Rf>. ' --'bo Grove, Tipi if canoe Go., Irat.
Swift's Npeclflc is entirely uu> t
‘*ies from the blood. T -at. an.i >, i . * r ;' r 1’- forcing e-ut the Jinpß
x”! ’. . • ~, .. 5 ’-AHU' frvji
'v A - I- -t.f.J 1- 11 ('( \ • ,* , . _
CARTERS VILLE, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1886.
POETS''CHILDREN'.
GENIUS SEEN NOT TO BE INHERI
TED AS A RIGHT.
Literary People Generally Do Not Have
Descendants Who Care For Thsir
Parent’s Tastes—A Few Ex
ceptions to the Rule.
Richard Henry Stoddard has but one
surviving child, a sou, who, though his
motile io a poet likewise, and a woman
4 litre intellect, betrays no sympathy
with literature. He manifests, however,
considerable artistic taste, especially in
the Hue of decoration, but he is not dis
posed to develop it. His bias is in favor
•f the stage, albeit be has shown no his
tronic ability whatever. He has been
two seasons with Lawrence Barrett’s
company, though wholly in a subordi
nate capacity, seldom having any words
to speak. He seems to be indolent, and
indolence frequently goes with the artistic
temperament.
Louisa M. Alcott, as an instance, is
trictly domestic. The eldest of a num
ber of daughters, with a transcendent
father—A. Bronson Alcott—irremediully
unpractical, air incessant dreamer and
au invalid mother, the care of household,
even to the earning of money for its daily
needs, devolved on her. He had no
s um, but he imparted to his daughter
L miss some of the qualities of his mind,
oalsr.ced by common souse and an under
standing of the world. For her to have
married when she was young—she is 53
would have been to desert her f imily, to
leave her father either to starve or to the
to starve or to the charity of a few ad
miring and sympathetic souls.
LONGFELLOW S CILILDEN.
One of his frauds was L mgf allow, also j
i genial student, a mur of constant I
u dilution, almost a cloistered spirit,but j
> le who knew money that in essential to j
xisteuce, and believed that the laborer I
; s worthy of his hire. He hid three j
daughters and two sous, among whom 1
there ss not anauthor or pcet of any kind, j
Ernest W. is au artist or repute; and the j
other, Cnaries, was an officer in the j
(Lion army during the civil war. and '
ins since been a gentleman of leisure, I
living on liis income. The sole uumar- j
vied daughter, Miss Alice Longfellow, is
.decidedly if a scholarly turn, pursuing
if. home and abroad various advanced
s' ndies.
Bret Haile has sour, the eldest of
whom is on the stage, having become j
e lamorod of the footlights, without any j
reasonable prospect of ever shining be- |
aid him. Another has. or had, some
kind of contraction with a weekly lie vs- j
paper in the city, but his come no uear- ,
er to auy form of literature. II irte li is !
never, suspect,! tried to cultivate in liis !
, children any disposition toward his chil
dren any dispostion toward his own trade,
which lias ' cot prevented him, when most
'ctively cui ivated, from incurring a
a j eavy burden of and dot. Ha is not paiu
cwomeatic in in.-' habits.
ThonfflC Bailey Aldricnhas so is, twins,
njw about old. They are said
to be
father* but at la/est advices, had exhi
bited no alarming k'udency to manuscript
making. Their papa m;l 7 prefer that
hev should confine .their writing to
oiguatures, of checks. They, a™ u °t like
r> to secure, as he has done, a DCii pa
ram (Henry L. Pieice, of Bostv ,!j )> ' vao >
being a bachelor, is so munificent tu liis
gifts ns to furnish a liberal income. Bu:
j.ir him the world would not go £0
pleasant*y with the Aldricb.es.
IE. c. stedman’s two sons,
Edmund 0, Siedman has also two
8 ms. One of them, Frederick, through
fije imprudence aud overconlidence of a
y oung man admitted to partnership with
his .father, was instrumental in getting
the brokerage firm into serious trouble
tin ec years ago. Since then he lias re
tired from Wall street, pursuing another
sort of business. His nearest approach j
to lit era tin e was nci.mg for a brief time
as sidesman in a Brunei way bookstore. .
His bent is finat.eial, and authorship j
surely has but a slender relation to j
finance. The young sou, Arthur, a
graduate of Yale, Jias been for several
years Ins father’s private secretary and
titerary assistant, and is understood to
hove aspiration in the paternal direc
tion.'-
Wi'Uh-m D. Howell has, I believe, on
son, who may be induced to make writ- ■
mg a profession in du e time by the re
m unberaaice that at present his papa
earns not Tar from $20,000, at least live
hld what most clever ai id noted au liors ;
can e.rn by the greatest diligence and
determination
Joaquin Miller has two daughters by
two wives , but no son on woiomhe m&y
oructice, as he las tried to practice ou
tlio general public, the trail ?oa.vent sham
•>t being a gifted barbarian, all genius
and no kink of education. Ho is really
shrewd and very practical, and liis affec
tation of peculiarity, with _ his perpetual
insistence on his assumed idiueyucrasn-se
do not add to his attractions.
Mark Twain (Clemens) lias Bom' wTio
will be more likely to imitate him in Ins
love of m'onoy getting by mercantile
m ;thods than in being funny at the lugh< s
i prices, . .
I Among all the authors lam acquaint
ed with Hairy James and Julian Haw
thorne vro among the very lew who have
inherited literary talents from tmre
fathers. Julian has made more in a
year than Nathaniel Hawthorne made
•n Lis m hole life, and yet he has never
teen able to meet his expenses wdu
ll i depending on a ye ry elastic credit
-ystenv. He has six or eight children,
mostly giris.
UK KEPT SELLING TILK DAKKEY.
Fourteen Tlmt< That Negro Toole the
I rulerjfrounil Railroad North.
Cincinnati, November 17. —“ There
were many ways to make money in the
old time that can’t be worked now,” said
Colonel Bill as lie sat in the corridor of
the Grand hotel yesterday afternoon
talking to a friend. “B ;ck in 1847 I was
stewart of the Golden Age, as good a
craft as ever suited between this pi ice
and Orleans. One day a colored man
with a good deal of white blood in his
veins came to me and said: ‘Say, massa,
you want to make some money V
‘“Yes I do,” I answered.
“‘Well you can take me down to
Orleans and sell me for $1,400. Use a
likely nigger, and worth dat ”
‘“But do you want to go into slavery?’
“‘Not much. You see me. I can es
cape; come back; we divide the money.
Then you can sell me again.’
“It was not without some misgivings
that I accepted the novel proposition, but
1 took him along with me, and as soon as
the Golden Age readied Orleans I tel him
to the slave market. The- auctioneers
dressed him up in anew suit, put a smart
cap on his head, and the sale commenced,
lie wa3 a likely nigger , sure enough, and
sold for $1,400. I got SI,OOO in cash and
a mortgage for S4OO, Well I came back
to Cincinnati, and in about throe weeks
back came the coon Next trip l sold him
at Natchez for $1,200. Ic was against
the law to sell the same nigger twice
after he had escaped, but eyery three or
four weeks I’d h ive that coon on my
hands again. 1 sold him at Baton Rouge,
Vicksburg, Memphis, aud at every port
on the river.
“At last I traded him off for a terrible
looking nigger, and got SBOO to boot.
Then I sold the nigger I had traded for a
good sum. This time, Fields, ruai was
his name, did not turn up for six. nvonths,
and I thought be was done for sea-, but
he came around one day aud wy divided
up. Then the mortgages came due, nd I
collected them, every buyer siytn’ the
coon had escaped. Well it’s the ii mest
truth. I sold that nigger tburu - tones,
Chen came the telegraph, aud we h and to
-top it, but you can’t imagui how much
money we coined. These days are not
■ike the old ones for making m >:-y ”
“Where is tlio colored mm n.wy”
“I believe he is living at Lay ayette
Lad., or within a hundred miles <>f here.’
“Did he have a family?”
“Yes; his wife died in the insane asylum
at Cleveland, and one son is a barber at
Toledo.”
A VIRGINIA ROMANCE.
Here is a story from Not tow ty county
that will please the most sens tioual.
Two years ago there dwelt in t tis o unity
two individuals. One of the individuals
was a handsome and proapuron j v >ung
farmer; the other was a saucy ; be
witching damsel of eight -o t aers.
The farmer war i stern man 1 mest
of old Virginia blood coursed i his
veins. He was a prom'norF, • r of
the village church. He dwelt in a don
able house. Ho had plenty of h u u -and
s- rvants. The y >ung farm v and ! \ t as
sociate with the re it of the vilhg rs. Oh!
no; he was too proud fir that. B n mark
the change. One year thereafter he fell in
love with apret'y girl far beneath him in
social rank and position. He plead and in
vain for her love, bat she told h m she
loved another. This droye the young
farmer mad, and in a few months h had
to be taken to the Eastern lunatic ■ lum
at Williamburg. But the roma e did
not end here. The happy aud expectant
bride was anxiously awaiting in*v nuptial
day, which the fates,it will be s■ u, de
teimined to be otherwise. H r < -'*eet
heart was thrown from a horse aud in
stantly killed. When the sad n was
conveyed to her she became a ravine ma
niac. She was also taken to tin 1 tern
lunatic asylum, where she met *" man
who had wrecked his physical v ■ nen
cal capacites on account of h The
sight of the woman who had spoi his
love drove him into such a frenzy it a
straight jacket had to be put a,,- him,
and the very mention of her na ould
throw him into a violent ra 0 is is
life!—Petersburg Index-Appi* u.
MAKING A MAT*. IT
A young man of Baltimore • Vest
several years ago and curr sp reg
ularly with an elderly ’.any ■ >d in
Washington. About six m u i.- g > he
wrote that he’d get married n f he
knew a nice girl that would a- > >n.
“There’s a clr-uce for you,” ad i idy,
laughingly, to her niece wh s.u re
ceiyed the letter.
“Tell him to write to me,” i the
young woman, also laughing
The aunt did so, the youn m- ote,
the young women answer© : * ■ tter,
and the result ot the correspone nee that
followed was a wedding last we *k. be-
Aveim the young folks who, until ; few
days before, had never seen r..v ■ a her.
Tncir friends say that botii h ' lone
well. —Philadelphia Record.
To conciliate is so lofi fit - .lore
j greoable thau to ofifeud, that > >rth
tome sacrifice of individual WiU
Miss Winnie Davis rear ;ted
j 1 or tress Mour-ae and saw in
which her father was itnpris, >it • oou
j.fter the close of the war.
The New Yrk —bU fe
aalcß are disgnintiod, ■ the
efusal of the aspect- to
hem to register as quahfiod
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
The Philadelphia limes' Man, on Men
and Women Now Before the Public.
Senator Evarls has returned to his
country home at Windsor, Yt., after a
brief stay in New York, aud will remain
there until Congress assembles, lie had
fully recovered his health and spirits, and
save discolored bruises on his body and
a slight limp in his gait bears no mark in
his recent accident. New England pa
pers notice that Mr. Evarts is not over
eager to continue his practice at the bar.
Though not enormously wealthy , he is
comfortably situated and latterly has
yielded more and more to the wishes of
those who urge him to take life easier.
It is said that he will soon devote him
self entirely to his public duties, only
venturing into courts when tempted by
big fees or crises in which he has a special
interest, though his New York friends
scout the assertion. His need for hard
work has passed, however, and the atmos
phere at the capitol, he says, is both con
genial and healthy.
Congressman Morrison courageously
met his deteat last week by announcing
that he would return to the practice of his
profession and unless he should receive
some diplomatic appointment, as liis
friends hope, that is probably what he will
do. Like Carlisle, Randall and many
others who have graced Congressional
chairs, Mr. Morrison will leave public
life as poor if not poorer than he entered
it. Though advocating what is now see a
were unpopular tariff measures, he was
scrupulously honest both in public and
private and he will leave an enviable re
cord at the capital when he retires.
Forced by the wishes of his constituents
to advocate the passage of occasional
measures which it was said he did not
personally approve, it is still remembered
that none of the proceeds of these ever
found their way to his pockets. His life
at the capital was not extravagant or
showy. Neither he nor Mrs Morrison
cared for gaiety of any kind. But, in
spite of their efforts to retrench, the Illi
nois member’s salary went as Congression
al salaries usually go, and the Turkish-
Mission, with its splendid salary, would
doubtless be an acceptional offering now.
Mrs. Morrison, by the way, is reported
as less philosophical than her husband,
and rumor says that she has vowed ven
geance on some of he Democrats who are
known to haye voted for the Republican
nominee.
Major Pangborn, who a few days ago
electrified his friends by resigning his
position as assistant general passenger
agent of the Baltimore and Ohio Company
to become the advertiseing agent for a
patent medicine firm, was regarded as a
rising newspaper man a dozen years or so
ago. He had positions on various
Eastern papers, which were glad to get
Lis services at the time, and left the busi
ness only because railway life offerod a
better prospect for the future. While at
work in his capacity of railway manager
he ran the greater portion of the excur
sions over his road. Under his personal
direction the Washington correspondents
were taken to the last two National Con
ventions at Chicago, and it was on one
of these return trips that the fastest long
distance time was made by his train,
which seven times stopped to change
engines. Personally he is a genial fellow,
who loves a good song and story, anl his
list of friends extend across the continent,
ilis latest step was taken solely because
the salary attached to it was more than
that which he received from the Baltimore
and Ohio, aud it is understood that the
management of that company* regret his
departure sincerely. In recent years he
has done but little writing except to an
nually prepare the “Red-Books” for pub
lication.
Bike all of the most successful men m
Wall street, Russsel Sage never drinks
during business hours. With the means
at hand to gratify every appetite he was
shrewd enough to learn long ago that
drinking and business do not go together,
and his business is reported to have net
ted him many thousands of dollars. He
is a wonderful man in mire ways than
one. When the clock strikes seven in
the morning he leaps from his couch, and
after some vigorous exercise goo3 down
to breakfast, which is a simple meal to
him. Asa general thing it consists of a
chop or steak and roll, washed down by a
cup of chocolate and sometimes prefaced
with a little oatmeal or Iruit. Tnis over
he rides or drives through the park,
catches an elevated train and at tea is hard
at work at his desk, answering telegrams
or letters on subjects that his clerks
cannot treat. At three, unless Cyrus W.
Field or Jay Gould drops in, he ro ;s
smilingly to the chief clerk in the outer
office and goes out for another and more
extended drive. About five he dines
more substantially than -he breakfasts,
and after dinner reads or entertains some
choice friends. By 10:80 he is usually
ready for bed—a system of living all told
that is worthy of imitation aud has much
to do with the excellent health Mr. ..Sage
enjoys.
Allis Brown, a coloid man of Nashville,
Team, recently Hurried aud took his
bride to a well-furnished house, There
was a handsome set of silverware, four
clocks, fine carpets and chairs, elegant
eota of parlor and bedroom furniture; in
deed everythiugshe could desire, includ
ing a firmly Bible. The remarkable
fact was that everything in the h ;t& e
had been stolen.
FOR AIDING HER LOYHR.
THE CURIOUS STORY OF PRETTY
JESSIE CARROLL..
Tii-3 Burglary of tha Champion Knife
Works -The Safe Opened and Books
Stolen— How Jonea Provided
Jessie— The Wife as a Witness.
Spuing field, 0., Nov. 17.—1n March
last the proprietors of the Champion Bar
and Knife works, of this city, were in
formed by the book-keeper, Frank B.
Jones, that the safe had been open
ed and that the cab book, day book and
ledger were missing. The proprietors,
knowing that no one but themselves and
Jones knew the combination of the sale,
had Jones arrested on the charge of steal
ing the books. He has a most estimable
wife, whom he married in Lawrence
ville, Ind., and the couple were boarding
at a prominent hotel here. When Junes
was arrested he denied any knowledge of
the bonks. When he was taken to jail
and stripped and searched $450 in bills
was found in his sock. After remaining
in jail over night Joues confessed that he
was not only a defaulter, but had taken
the books. He directed the proprietors to
go to a certain catch basin in this city,
where part of the books would be found,
and the rest, he said, were at the house of
Jessie D. Carroll, at Spring City, Tenn.
The books, tom from the covers, were
found and fished from the sewer. Jones
Was sentenced to ten years in the Ohio
penitentiary. Before the sentence officers
and members of the firm went to the Car
roll woman’s house to look for the rest of
the books. Miss Carroll was not at home,
but just where Jones said the books were
they were found. Steps were at once
taken for the arrest of Miss Carroll as au
accessory to the crime. The grand jury
indicted her on two accounts —one for
grand larceny in taking the books aud
one for compounding a fellony by assist
ing Frank B. Jones to steal and conceal
the books. It was on this indictment that
the girl had just been tried. Every day
since the trial began, ten days ago, the
court room has been filled.
The evidence showed that Jessie Car
roll was taken into the Jones’ family as
a domestic when a young girl at a time
when he and his wife lived in Columbus,
Ind. When Jones came here to work he
broke up housekeeping and Jessie Carroll
disappeared so far a? Mrs Joiie& : Knew,
It Was shown, however, that she came to
this city at stated intervals, and remain
ed several days. During the early part of
1885 Jones purchased four and one acres of
Jand and a house near Spring Ci'y,Tetm.,
and made the deeds to Jessie D. Carroll.
Regularly every month Jones sent her a
package of money by express, never less
th an SIOO and never m ire than $l5O, aud
every month she visited this city. Jones
had put sonic Florida property in her
name, too. I was shown that two nights
before the books were missing, Jessie ar
rived at the station in this city and was
met by Jones. That night a trunk was
taken to Jones’ room and the trunk and
Jessie left on the midnight train. It is
the theory that the books were put into
this trunk and taken off to Tennessee.
The confiding wife of Jone3 was on the
stand in the case. She never knew what
salary her husband got or anything about
his business. He provided for her and
treated her kindly. The firm has never
yet made public the amount of Jonea’
embezzlement, but it is at least $20,000,
and has been going on for years. The
defense made a dogged fight tor Jessie,
and she has the sympathy of the com
munity, the -impression being that she
was only the tool of Jones and was afraid
not to do his bidding. Action has been
begun against the property in Tennessee,
the firm claiming that it was bought
with money stolen from them.
Mr. John Tyler Cooper, the anti-
Prohibitiouist candidate for mayor of
Atlanta, Ga., is a grandson of President
Tyler and also of James Fennimore
Cooper.
Methuselah could not have been
prouder of his last child than are a pair
at 81. Joseph, Mo. The mother is 65
years old, the father 71. the boy 1
week.
Teach self-denial, and make its prac
tice pleasurable, and you create for tl e
world a destiny more sublime than ever
issues from the grain of the wildest
dreamer.
“My daughter, you ought toliavesome
aim in life,” said a father to his thought
less 10-yeir-old. “Oh, I am going to,
papa,” was the enthusiastic reply. “I
have got my beau already,”
A Florid i preacher once began liis
sermon by Announcing: “I will divile
mf discourse into three points: First,
I’ll speak of such things as I understand
and my cmgrogratioadon’t, second, such
things as they understand aud I don't,
aud third, such things as nobody knows
anything about.”
Over in Tuscaloosa, Ala., a big reviv
al meeting has stirred things up a-s never
before. Among tho most noted e “ j
verts is a barkeeper. All j
possessions was iu a barrooo ° f 0 ;
tents. He had * o f hl J^ b e sale of rum, :
live but the people raked i
whereupon Vil tae of the stock aud. fix- ;
ss,^7’' ”’Va him the money. Tueu !
- ’ ’tii-e contents of tho saloon were
*l,O a- 11,11 •
tumbled into the Tombigbee river.
NUMBER 28
STrimonx non ixgkrsoll,
lie Kefn-M to l uda Sums of llis Work and
I>ofl*.'S a Hrothor.
When the America:) secular congress
was about to adjourn the other clay it
occurred to one of the brethren that
certain statements made by an infidel
named Mellaue ought to be looked into.
Before anything could be said, however,
Golone: Bab lagersoll, the chairman, de
clared the congress adjourned.
The delegates were about leaving the
lull when 0. A. M ira’a ill, of Newark,
rushed up the aisle and, dashing up to
lagersoll, eaid;
Colonel this session has been ad
journed improperly. It must bo re
convened. ”
‘,lt must? quietly asked the colonel.
“Yes, it must,” replied Mr. Marshall.
“i il bet you iifty dollars it must not. ”
“Well, truly, colonel, I haven’t fifty
dollars with me to bet.”
“I will lend you the cmouut,” said the
colonel, putting his hand into his pock
et.
“I understand Mr. Mellane’s state
meiit has been ignored.”
“It has,’ said the colonel.
“Thou I demand that that action be
reconsidered.”
“Now, see here, sir. In the first placo,
this Muil.nio is a liar; in the second place,
lie had no grievance, and, iu the thud
place, neither you nor anybody else L
going to bread dissent ions iu this body ”
“In common justice Mr. MulUno
should bn treated as a gentleman, aud
wo ought to have that matter reconsid
ered.”
“I am and and if it will be reconsidered.
This Cleveland dirty water has beeu
stirred up too frequently of late, and
now it comes up again to stifle us with
its stench. If any other action is taken
I will positively refuse to deliver iuv
lenitive in this hsll on Sunrl y
night, Mullano being a liar is bene h
notice, and as his statement was not >■ -
dressed to you, I don’t see where it s
any of yotir business.”
Throwing his overcoat over his a r a
the colon# approached Mr. Marsh. U.
and, as his usually placid face beo.w .3
scarlet with rage, he shouted;
“What object have you in giving a
liar a chance to vidicate himselsf I don’t
care a contemptuous snap of my finger
for the accusations of my enemi s.
Their statements roll of! my back li 9
water off a duck’s. As to my fidelity 11
the cause of liberalism I refer you to ruv
check-book. Now, sir, yon have hea 1
my say, aud having heard it, I will all' • and
you an opportunity of viewing my
treating form.”
The colonel then strode majestically
down the hall, while the audience clip
ped enthusiastically, and Mr. Marsh I
looked as if a pile driver had fallen up .1
him.
Judge—“ Have you anything to srv
before the court passes sentence up a
you? ’ Prisoner—“ Well, all I got to s /
is, I hope yer honor ’ll consider the ex
treme youth of my lawyer, au’ let me i If
easy.”
The Atlanta department of the Mac 1
Telegraph anuouaces that the influx of
judges has begun. It says. “One hun
dred and twenty-seven jugs got ke.e
from Griffin yesterday aud as many m; -o
to-day. How will this do for a et. ?
They were all loaded. I hear that two
liquor dealers, one in Madison and i :e
other in Griffin, have ordered 16,000
boxes to be manufactured in this city for
the tranportation of liquor to Atlanta.”
The tendency of modern education fo<’
girls is too much towards ignorance
ignorance of everything real aud of the
affairs of life. A female ought not o
have to wait until she is married to le., n
the lessons in common sense, aud ti o
real duties and accomplishments that
every woman must possess, in some e
groe, before she is fit to engage in * e
business of being a woman—so says e
Albany News.
Administrator's Sale.
GEORGIA —Bartow County.
By virtue of an older from the Court of Ordiua ry
of Hull County, Ga., ■will be sold before the C,u.-fc
House door in Gainesville, Hall county, Gu., w* in
the legal hours of sale, on the first Tuesday in
cember next, the following in teres* sin lots of i id
belonging to the estate of Mrs. Martha 13. Ba- m
ate of Hall County, and ceased, to-wit: The u. n
vided otie-th rd (>£) interest in lot number two
hundred and ninety (290) in the (4) District and
third (3) section of Bartow County, the same e ,il
luming forty (40) acres Sold for the purpose of
paying the debts and for distribution among’ - ,e
heirs. 'I he original grauts can bi seen at ja
of il. 11. Tony, attorney, Gainesville, (, *‘
cash
oct3-5t . .
GEORGIA— bar to v the citisKfi . of
Wliert ttfl said county for an clee
the W*t* I>iW 'V„ck 1W to be ordered in said T us
tion hereby given that after the exi i
trfcb days from this date au election
a ' ered> unless objections are filed in terms
't‘iha atftute. Said application will be passed
” , n ©n fne'23rd November, 1880. This 3td Ko
mLer, 1886. J. A. HOWARD,
Ordinal
GEORGIA —Bartow County.
IT. J. Gait has applied for exemption of p r-~:
dty and. setting apart and valuation of Hoi r
iteau, and t will pass upon the same at 10 o’clock a
n. on the 18th day of Nov mber, 1830, at my of
lh s 27th October, 1830. J. A. HOW tRD,
Ordmarv.