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VOL. II.—UO 48.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 16,1885.
yTEcraraecsenrcr
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
EDWIN R. SHARPE, Proprietor
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy one yeaiy
One copy six months,
One copy three months,
CJL.UB HATES:
Ten copies one year,
I'wenty copies one year,
ei.oo
$10.00
$20.00
PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS
J. IF. COLE,
CARROLLTON, G A.
_ Is devoting most of llis time and atten
tion to surgery and surgical diseases, and
is prepared for most any operation. His
el larges are reasonable.
JOS. l. corns.
F1JL1X N. C015I5.
COBB Sc COBB,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
Collections a, specialty. Send us your
claims, we will give them our prompt
attention.
MT. ZION SEMINARY
ill be open for the admission of stu-
buildings, modern improved equipments.
School first-class in all its departments,
objeet teaching a leading feature, Calis
thenics free. No better School in the
State, o ard and tuition very moderate.
A corps of thorough teachers. For par
ticulars apply to
R. JOHNSTON, A. M., Principal, t
Mt. Zion Ca. ^
DE. W, L. HITSHCOOK
Late of Madison Georgia, has located
in the town of Carrollton for the purpose
of practising his profession. He makes
a .specialty of all chronic diseases, more
especially those peeuliar to females.
Will cure cancers when in a curable con
dition. Dr, II. is one of the oldest root
doctors in the State,
and ranks high in tlic eclectic practice.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Call on him
at his ollice one dooi above Wells’ livery
stable.
r. c. McDaniel,
X5SLTTI3T,
Pleaded His Own Case.
A Doetor named Royston sued
Peter Bennett for his bill long over
due for attending the wife of the
latter. Alexander IT. Stephens was
counsel on the Bennett side and
Robert Toombs, (then Senator of
the U. S.) for Royston. The doc
tor proved his number of visits val
ue according to local custom, and
his own authority to do medical
practice. Mr. Stephens told his
client that the physician had made
out the case, and as there was noth
ing whatever to rebut or offset the
claim, the only thing to do was to
pay it.
“No,” said Peter. “I hired you to
speak my case and now speak
it.”
Mr. Stephens told him the¥e wus
nothing to say, he had looked on to
see that it was made out, and it
was.
Peter was obstinate, and at last
Mr. Stephens told him to make a
speech himself if he thought one
could be made.
“I will,” said Peter, “if Bobby
Toombs won’t be too hard on
me.”
Senator Toombs promised and
Peter began:—
“Gentlemen of the Jury—You
and I is plain farmers, and if we
don’t stock together these ’ere doc
tors and lawyers will get the ad
vantage of us.
“Now this man Royston was a
new doctor, and I went for him to
coine an’to doctor my wife’s sore
leg. And he come ’an put some
salve truck on it an some rags,
which never done one bit of good,
gentlemen of the jury. I dont’tbe-
GKA._
Is now inserting full sets of 2S teeth for
$29, half set 14 teeth, $10. Partial sets
and fillings cheap in proportou. Satis
faction guaranteed in even' case. Ollice
in Mandeville building:.
IDIR. 13. W. LOBSETT
PHYSICIAN a n d SURGEON
TIEns/EH?! EL C--A__
Having permane tlv located at Tem
ple I offer my p 1 ofessional services to
the citizens of Cai i oil and adjoining coun
ties. Special attention to Obstetrics and
diseases of Women. Ollice at Campbell
& Bells store. All calls promptly an
swered day and night—all night calls an
swered from B J. McCain’s residence.
TAKE NOTICE.
Having rented Mr. B. A . Sharp’s in
crest in the Carrollton Mills, Gins and
Furniture shop, we arc now ready to
serve the public.
IFTT JERIKri'Z’TTIR.IE
of all kinds manufactured or repaired in
the best of stj-le at short notice.
We have made arrangements with Mr.
T. 31. Chandler to run his saw mill and
are now ready to saw lumber.
All orders for furniture or lumber will
receive prompt attention.
WALKER & HAGAN.
Carrollton Ga.
Teacher of Vocal Music.
J. A. Roberson of Burvvell, Ga., hav
ing taken an entire course in the North
Ga., Normal, of 18S4 under Prof’s. Pound
and Dennington, the most iminent vo
calists in Ga., is the better prepared for
teaching and tenders his professional
services to the public, at one dollar per
week in classes of not less than 25
L’lsases wanted and correspondence solic
ited.
McLendon & co.,
DEALERS IN
Genearl Merchandise,
At the J. M.FIELDS’ STOREf
CHEAP CASH
and v i
BARTER HOUSE.
Se them before purchas
ing ,elsewhere. ‘
TTW "pfor working people. Send 10
.O .III l JT cents postage, and we will
mail you free, a royal, valuable sample
box of goods that will put you in the
way of making more money in a few
days than you ever thought possible at
any business. Capital not required. You
can live at home and work in spare time
only, or all the time. All of both sex
es, of all ages, grandly successful. 50
cents to $5 easily earned every evening
That all who want work may test the
business, we make this unparalleled off
er: To all who are not well satisfied we
wil send $1 to pav for the trouble ofr PT >
writing us. Full particulars, directions;;oixRobert ! loombs r h&,ving passed its
This tribute to Gen Toombs from
the Telegraph is so true and beauti
ful:
As a star that has approached us
in blazing splendor turns again and
fades away into spaee, so the mind
etc., sent free. Immense pay absolutely
sure for all who start at once. Don’t de
lay. Address tins oE t & Co., Portknd
Maine.
FOR SALE
A No. 1 farm, in good repair, good
dwelling and outhouses, good orchard,
two miles from Carrollton, containing
334 acres 1 105 open. Or will sell a part
not’less then 109 acres. Terms one half
cash ,balance in twelve months. Apply
at this oflica.
lieve lie’s no doctor, no way.
“As 1 was sayin’, gentlemen of
the jury, we farmers, when we sell
our cotton, has got to give valley
for the money we ask, and doctors
ain’t none too good to be put on the
same rule. And I don’t believe
this Jam Royston is no doctor, no
how.”
The physician again put in his
oar with “Look at my Diploma, if
you think I am no doctor.”
“His diploma,” exclaimed the
new fledged orator with great con
tempt, “His diploma! Gentlemen
that is a big word for printed-sheep-
skin, and it didn’t make no doctor
of the sheep as first wrote it, nor
does it of the man who now carries
it.”
The man of medicine was now in
a fury and screamed out: “Ask
niv patients if I am not a doctor.”
“I asked my wife,” retorted Peter
“an she said as how she thought
you wasn’t.”
“Ask my patients,” said Dr. Roys
ton.
This seemed to be the straw that
broke the camel’s back, for refer re
plied, with look and tone of unut
terable sadness: “That is a hard
saying’, gentlemen of the jury, and
one as requires me to die or to have
power as I’ve hearn tell ceased to
be exercised since the opostles.
Does he expect me to bring the an
gel Gabriel down to toot his horn
before his time and cry aloud:
“Awake ye dead, and tell this court
your opinion of Royston’s prac
tice?” Am I to go to the lonely
church yard and rap on the silent
tomb and say to um as is at last at
rest from phisic and doctor’s bills,
get up here, you, and state if you di
ed a natural death, or was you hur
ried off by some doctor! He say
“ask his patients,” and, gentlemen
of the jury, they are all dead!
Where is Mrs Beasleys’s man, Sam.
Go ask the worms in the graveyard
where he lies, Mr. Peak’s woman,
Sarah, was attended by him ,and
her funeral was appointed and he
had the corpse ready. Where is
that likely Bill as belonged to Mr.
Mitchell? N<ow in glory—expres-
sin’ his opinion of Royston’s prac
tice, Where is that baby gal of
Hafrry Stephens? She are where
doctors cease -from troubling and
the infants are at rest.”
Here the applause made the
speaker sit down in great confus
ion, and in spice of a logical restate
ment of the ease by Senator
Toombs, the doctor lost and Peter
Bemiett won.
From the St. Louis Globe Democrat.
Sam Small in Missouri.
There is one feature about the St.
Joseph meetings which adds much
to their chances of success, and that
is the presence of Mr. Sam Small,the
well known journalist from Atlan
ta, Ga. People who want to see a
Christian idea succinctly and terse
ly expressed in forcible, yet classic
language, with nothing introduced
to break the continuity of the rea
soning, find all that in Mr. Small’s
discourse. The man who wrote the
“Old Si” sketches was closely listen
ed to this afternoon as he discussed
the lesson of the parable of the fig
tree. His sermon was not the ordi
nary presentation of the doctrine of
seed time and harvest, but’an elo-
quentappenl to mothers and fathers
to do their full duty by their chil
dren as the result should be some
thing more than leaves. From his
newspaper experience Mr. Small
was admirably fitted to tell of the
temptations that beset young men.
He told it in a simple, manly way,
and when he spoke of the allure
ments of political life,and compared
the show with actual reality every
St. Joseph democrat and republican
who heard his words knew and felt
that the picture was drawn by a
master hand. There is a large ele
ment here that admires Sam Jones
earnestness, but do not admire his
roughshod way of handling things
while there is also a class that can
not be reached by any ordinary
smooth-shod rhetoric. By this time
the audience at the Tabernacle has
heard both Sam Jones and Sam
Small, and pretty nearly every one
present has been touched by the
%>eech of the evangelist or that of
his more, literary partner in the
good work. There was the usual
evening service to-night, which was
much better attended than of the
three previous exercises. The good
people of St. Joseph are devoted to
the good work now going on, and
confidently look forward to a great
revival before the big gospel tent is
taken down.
Tlxe Fun of an Advertisement.
My son, there is nothing on earth
so mysteriously funny as a newspa
per advertisement- The prime,
first, last, and all the time, object of
an advertisement is to draw cus
tom. It is not, was not, and never
will be, designed for any other pur
pose. So the merchant waits till
the busy season comes and the
store is so full of custom that he
and perihelion, is vanishing in
the gioom of eternity. It was the
brightest, in the brightest galaxy
that ever rose and set upon a nation.
To those.\fho ,£now it only as a
lessening light there is but little
change; tosueli as beheld it devolop
and witnessed the splendor .of its
maturity, the lesser orbs that yet
remain out twinkle in a darkened
skyq
Good Farming.
If it is essential that the youn
farmer study' thoroughly the prin
ciples governing successful agricul
ture, it is also important that h
carefully consider some of th
causes of failures. The National
Stockmen says good farming does
not consist in in seeing how much
land can be skimmed over without
any reference to its productiveness
but in so farming as to grow the
most on the least possible space,
Herein lies the secret of good and
successful farming—obtaining the
most from the least space; but
how many of our farmers follow
such a policy 7 ? The larger number
of them rather seem to be.trying to
extract the substance from the lar
gest possible surface, without mak
ing a corresponding attempt at re
storing elements of fertility to the
soil. This method of farming is en
tirely too common and is what
has f impoverished so many na
turally good farms. Too much
land, as a rule, is under cultiva
tion on almost every farm to make
it the most productive, Land will
not retain its fertility when crop
ped year after year, without a suit
able return is made in the shape of
manure, and where too much is un
der plow no farmer can find or
make enough manure to keep up
the original fertility of his hand
But there are other means of rob
bing land of its fertility, and so on
making it unproductive, and that
is too close pasturing. This is just
as bad as too much cropping. It is
a deteriorating process, and makes
land hard and unproductive. The
stock run around more on poor pas
ture and tramp and pack the soil so
that the grass will not grow
as well, and the sun beats on the
unprotected roots and burns and
injures them. This can all be
avoided by not pasturing so close
ly, and besides, the growth of suc
culent herbage will increase each
year. Then it is wisdom not to at
tempt to graze too much stock on
a given number of acres nor to plow
any more than cun be kept in,, the
highest state of fertility' by suitable
fertilization.—Tlie Farmer.
A simple-hearted and truly devo
ted country' preacher,' who
had tasted but few of the
drinks of the world, took din
ner with a family where a glass of
milk punch was quietly set down,
by each plate. In silence and hap
piness this new Vicar of Wakefield
quaffed his goblet and then said:
“Madam, you should daily thank
God for such a good cow.”
Interview with Judge Yason in the Cov
ington Enterprise.
“Have Their Teeth Ground Off.”
Question—“Judge, does it not
look hard that the railroads cannot
be allowed to manage their property
free from interference, make their
own ^charges, just as other property
holders do with reference to their
property ?”
•Answer—“It does seem that this
is hard upon the railroads, but it is I can’t get his hat off, and then he
not, when we understand the ques- j rushes to the newspapers and puts
tion. The railroads are not pro r in his advertisement. When the
perty holders in the true sense of | season gets along and there is no
that term. trade, and he wants to sell goods so
“They are the creatures of the bad he can’t pay' his rent, he take3
law, with extraordinary powers out his advertisement. That is,
conferred in their charters, confirm- some of them do, but occasionally a
ing a franchise to collect tolls and level headed merchant puts in a
rates from the people and have a j bigger one and scoops in all the
quasi monopoly, and if unrestrain- business, while his neighbors are
ed could be onerous in their exuc- making m ortages to pay the gas
tions, and as Lord Bacon says, ‘It bill.
is needful that such should have There are times when you
their teeth ground off a little that couldn’t stop people from buying
they' bite not too deep.’ A monopo- everything in the store if you plan-
ly has no competition, if so, by the ted a cannon behind the door, • and
laws of trade the apprehended evils that’s the time the advertisement
would be corrected. Competition, is sent out on its holy mission. It
when it exists, is the governor of all makes light word for his adverti.se-
trades and secures the people ment, for a chalk sign on the side-
against unjust exactions. The rail- walk could do all that was needed
roads, except at a few competing and have a holiday' six days in the
points in our state, are free to do as week, but who wants to favor an
they please, and at these points advertisement. They' are built to
they have protected themselves do hard work, and should be sent
from the competition of each other out in the duli days when a custo-
by sharp contracts called pooling, mer has to be knocked down with
“Thus it was that the framers of hard facts, and sicked insensible
the constitution of 187G provided with bankrupt reductions and drag-
that the Legislature should ged in with irresistible slaughter
regulate the railroads in of prices before he will spend a
their charges so as to secure for cent.
the people protection agains That’s the aim and end of an ad-
monopoly. Let it ne remembered vertisement, my son, and if you ev-
that these corporations derive their er open a store don’t try to get
life from legislative grant. They them to come when they are al-
have been authorized to do for the ready sticking out of the windows,
people that which only could be but give them advertisement right
done by the state itself or its gran- between the eyes in the the dull
tees. They stand in place of the state season, and you will wax rich and
have the right to do the work and to own a fast horse, and perhaps be
collect reasonable compensation for able to smoke a cigar once o? twice
it. This constitutes their property, a year. Write this down • where
and as lessees of the state the great you’ll fall over it every day'. The
landlord is bound to see that its time to draw business is when you
lessees do this public duty on fair want business, and not when you
and just terms, and thus it is that have morebusines than you can at
the railroads have no right to com-1 tend to already.—Bridgeport Post.
$1.00 A YEAR,
How to Hear Children.
Treat them kindly'.
Don’t preach politeness and pro
priety' to them, and violate their
laws y'ourself. In other word.?, let
the example you set them be agood
one..
Never quarrel in their presence.
If you vrant to quarrel, wait until
the children are goqe to bed. Then
they will not see you, and perhaps
by that time y*cu may not want to
quarrel.
Never talk “old folks” talk in the
presence of children.
Never speak flippantly of neigh
bors before children. They may
meet the neighbors’ children, and
have a talk about it.
Teach them to think that the lit
tle boy in rags has a heart in him in
spite of the rags—and a stomache
too.
Teach them, as they grow older,
that a respectful demeanor to oth
ers, a gentle toue of voice, a kind
disposition, a generous nature, and
honest purpose and an industrious
mind are better than anything else
on earth. f Teach them these things
and self-reliance a«d intelligence
and capability will come of them
selves. Teach them these things
and your boys and girls will grow
up to be noble men and woman.
IF YOU ARE
"WEST,
NORTHWEST,
Question of Privilege.
Tuesday' afternoon while preach
ing at the Morrison camp ground,
Rev. J. W. Lee, expatiating upon
the beauties of christianiiy, went
on to speak of how religion beauti
fies everything. He said: My
friends religion will make the
homeliest man in the world look
beautiful. For instance, take that
good and noble Christian man, Rev.
plain of interference on the part of
the state in the management of
their so-called property.”
Sam Jones on Whisky.
In a sermon a day or two ago the
Rev Sam Jones said: I would steal
before I would sell whisky.
What! You would steal? Say'y'ou.
Ah! if every man who has stolen
something in the last ten years
There is a touch of sarca sm in this
paragraph from that witty philoso
pher, Mr. Robert Burdette, of Bur
lington. la., which is not unsavory.
But beside the sarcasm it has good I was * a chain-gang there would
sense enough in it to deserve a a powerful thinning out of ray'
place here, that it may be seen and COD o r egation this morning,
read of all men, and especially the If you are sick and a doctor comes
croakers! * j ^ <ui(i SJiys ths,t nothing but-
Yes, my son, I know. I know that whiskey will help y T ou, tell him “he
the churches in the United States p s a har!” There is no disease in
cost many thousands of dollars wor ^ that whisky is good for,
which might be given to the poor. I what there is something that is
I know, my son, that 'our modern
Christianity is much given to
worldly show and grandeur, and
has departed from the simple ways
of the fathers. I appreciate y'our
grief over all this. You are not I coun ^ r y prescribing
alone in your sorrow. You are not I P eo Pj e
better.
It there is a man on earth that I
have a supreme contempt for it is
one of these low-down, simlin-head-
ed doctors running about over the
whisky for
the first man, my son, that lifted up
his voice and wailed, “Why' was
not this ointment sold for the three
hundred pence and given to the
poor.” Come, my son, let us reform
this. Let us sell all the churches
and give all the money to the
poor. Let us bury our dead in un
marked ditches by the roadside,
Whisky is the vilest, worst ene
my to man. Nobody' but an infer
nal scoundrel will sell it, and^no-
body'but an infernal fool will drink
it.
A Cow with a Wooden Leg.
Some time ago a valuable cow,
the property of Mr. Botteriil Hud-
and send the cost of the burial to I son > °f Malton, broke her leg, and
the heathens. Let us paint our legs, Hudson being desirous of sav-
let our hair grow long, and go * n o ^ ie cow f° r the sa -ke of a fine
naked, so that we may send the well-bred calf then running with . , ...
money we now waste in fashionable her > desired Mr. Snarry to amputate in °‘ awyeisanr oc ors ave o
adornment to the perishing millions | th® IDixb. This was done, and the
veterinary then tried the ingenious
homely mail cannot be found; yet
when you come in personal contact
with brother Davies, there is some
thing about the man that makes
him appear grand. It is religion.
And yet brother Davies could take
the prize at the State fair as the
ugliest man in the country.
Just here'Rev. J. W. Lee was in
terrupted by a gray-headed broth
er seated in the amen corner, who
raised up an said: Brother Lee,
I’ll bet you Mr. Davies is not an ug-
lier man that Dr. Felton.
A large smile passed over the
congregation at this unlooked for
interruption, and for a few minutes
Rev. J. W. Lee looked somewhat
embarrassed, but quickly' recover
ing his equilbrium said; I was on
ly speaking of men belonging to the
Conference.
SOUTHWEST,
IHEI STTIR/CE!
Your Tickets Read via the
N. C. & St. L. R’Y
The Mackenzie Route.
Tne First-class and Emigrant Passenger#
FAVORITE!
Albert B Wrens,
Pas. Agent,
Atlanta.Ga.
W I Rogers,
Pas. Agent,
Chattanooga, Tenn
W. L. DANLEY,
Gen. Pas. & Tkt. Agent,
Nashville, Tenn.
Research
Experiment,
Study.
For fifty years, by Dr. A. L. Barry an
old practitioner, especially in Female
-i rouoies, was at last rewarded in the dis
covery of that ceitain and safe specific
for woman troubles, Luxomni. Luxomni
is a preparation that daily grows in pop
ular favor. Testimonials from responsi
ble persons all pven the country furnish
ample evidence of the wonderful power
°t Luxomni as a remedial agent for the
reuef and permanent cure "of all these
distressing conditions incident to females.
L.J. Davies, than whom a more Luxomnils specially ada^ to HoS
ox pregnanev. It
greatly ameliorates the
pangs or child birth, shortens labor, pre—
vents after pains, and facilitates recovery.
Owing to the strengthening and toning
influence Lnxomui relieves all MEX-
SiRUAL IRREGULARITIES, and is a
Uterine spiiatn-n
uterine sedative and tonic.
J lice $1. If your druggist has not the
preparation, address
THE BARRY MANUFACTURING CO.,
Drawer 28, Atlanta, Ga.
Note Luxomni is no alcoholic mix-
tuie, but a combination of herbs and
plants in paekage form from which a
simple tea is made.
Write for interesting book mailed free •
A n Albany Housewife’s Mistake:
The other day, a lady of our ac
quaintance put a cup and a half of
pearl grits in a boiler, sprinkled
some salt on it, covered
it up and began preparing the oth
er dishes for breakfast. After a
while she made a rush for the boil
er, spoon in hand, to stir it from
Dan to Beersheba. Lifting off the
lid she was almost paralyzed with
astonishment on beholding only
water in the boiler, she applied it
to her tongue, and then the whole
mystery was solved. She had mis
taken granulated sugar for grits.
Being economical, she boiled
down the liquid until it was suita
ble for sugar candy, and the first
installment of it that reached her
mouth tasted like a piece of Mrs.
Lott, late of Gomorrah, deceased.—
Medium.
DO YOU KNOW.
THAT
LOBILLARD’S CLIMAX
TOBACCO
; Rose Leaf Fine Cut
DT TTO
A uUU
vyith Red Tin Ts
Chewing; Navy Clippings, and Black'
Brown and 1 ellow Snuffs are the best
and cheapest quality considered?
WI ]\T m0rft raon9 7 than afc- anything
f» Ail else b}' taking an agency for the
grandly. None fail. Terms free Hallett
Book Co., Portland Maine.
THIS PAPEFO'u ^ un ; 1 on file
. r . . , at Geo. P. Rowell
to s., Newspaper Advertisining Bu
reau, 10 Spruce Street, where advertis-
contracts may yQT^
Hew VILLA EIGA Academy
ENGLISH and CLASSICAL.
Bill Arp says: It’s a wonder to
me that everybody don’t goto farm-
of India. Let us do all this. Then,
you see, the poor heathens will
have everything and we will have
nothing; they will wear clothes and
live in ? houses, and we will wear
rings in our noses and live in caves;
they will be civilized, Christian
men and women, and we will be
wild barbarians, perishing in be
nighted ignorance, lifting up our
appealing voices for the price of the
box of ointment. My boy.when you
are tempted to howl because a
body of Christians builds a churcji
that costs $51 f,000, you sit down-and-
hold your nose and wait .until you
see in hqw many ye*r£>that efturch
sends ou£ $100,000. to the • poor , and
the sick and the'beathefis at home
and abfoad. •" *'* •'
The shapely hand we Y.mdty press,
The glad and winsome smile;
Instead of joy may bring distress,
Or serve to cover guile.
It takes twelve thousand police
men to make the London people
“move on” and otherwise conduct
themselvts according to law.
The softest notes|that charm the >ear,
The sweetest music known;
May serve to quiet guilty fear, 1
Or drown a wretch’s groan.
The subscription of the Free
Press is only $1,00 a year.
plan just carried to a successful is
sue. A rudely constructed wood
en leg was made under Mr. Snar-
ry’s direction, and the cow did so
well on the artificial limb, the
stump of the leg healing so natur
ally, too, that, when all swelling
had subsided, the veterinary had a
more artistic and permanent “tim
ber” constructed, and the cow may
now' bo seen stumping about the
meadows as contented, and appar
ently-almost as actively, as when
supplied with the full complement
of legs intended for her by nature.
Prof. Williams, of Edinburgh, says
he knows of but one case anything
like a parallel to this, and that oc
curred in Wales.—London Field.
“Is the lady of the house in ?” he
asked, as he stood on the steps of a
residence on Monroe street the oth-
•ei? morning.
“Which lady ob de house ?” asked
the old colored man who answered
the ring.
“Why,are there two?”
“Sartin, sah. If you want de
w’hite lady she am out. If you has
biziness wid de cull’d lady purceed
to dewelop.”
set about town and play checkers,
and talk politics and wait for some
body to quarrel or fight or get sick;
clerks and bookeepers figure and
multiply and count until they get
to counting the stars, and the fljes
on the ceiling and the peas in the
dish, and the flowers on the paper
ing. The jeweler sits by his win
dow all the year round working on
little wheels and the mechanic
strikes the same kind of a lick eve
ry day. These people do not belong
to themselves; they are all penned
up like convicts in a chamgang;
they can’t take a day or an hour
for recreation, for they are the ser
vants of their employers. There is
no profession that gives a man
such freedom, such latitude, and
such a variety of employment as
farming.
The second terra of this school will
commence on 27th. of July, and cont inne
tour scholastic months. The attendance
during the spring terra gives assurana
of a large scohlo next term.
Parents should enter their children at
the beginning and continue them con
stantly, if they would reap the greatest
benefits.
Tuition will be charged from time of
entrance of the pupil until close of term
unless otherwise provided.
ed.
A competent assistant will be employ
W. S. FEATHEESON.
Me want 1,000 More BOOK AGENTS
for the Personal History of
U. S. GRANT.
40,000 copies already sold. We wau.
one agent in every Grand Army Post and
in every township. Send for Special
Terms to Agents, or secure agency at
once by sending oOcts. in stamps for out
fit. Address F0RSHEE & McMARIN,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
$200,000L” pr?sent? givcnawaj '-
A young lady who read that hops
were being seriously injured by
wet weather, declared that no
amount of wet weather would pre
vent her from going to a good hop.
“I say, sonny, you’ve got a new
baby at your house, haven’t you?”
“Yes, sir.”
“What’sit like?”
“Well, it’s got a head like a base
ball.”
Send us 5 cents postag
and by mail you will get free a package
of goods of large value, that will start
you in work that will at once bring you
in money faster than anything else in
America. All about the $200,990 in pres
ents with each box. Agents wanted ev
erywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for
all the time, or spare iirne only, to work
for us at their own homes. Fortunes
for all workers, absolutely assured'
don’t delay. Hallett Co., Port
land Maine.
NOTICE.
Gins sharpened with O'neal gin whet
ting machine. Work guarantied. Price
ten cents a saw. Brushes repaired with
out tearing them to pieces, guaranteed
W. E. DRAKE,
Carrolltoa, Ga.,
1 r i
U H