Newspaper Page Text
|p;r
.■ mf i■< t!' > t
nomice* he will tfl
because of ilr
health.
Mr. Gladstone declares that he is un
able to interfere with operations of the
Mormons in England.
A fourteen year old boy in N ew Hamp
shire killed himself because his mother
reproved him.
An order has been issued assigning
to the Division of the
Pacific from the 15th of October.
An aged German lady committed
suicide in Cincinnati last week by
hanging herself to the bed post,
Governor Colquittii,\- appointed J. A.
Ansky, of Aindlieusto sn*-<ned Judge
C. F. Crisp who has resigned, to make
the race for Cong]x*ss. f §
Diseases of tlie eye arc said to be in
creasing in the Southern States says
the New York Herald. This is a mod
est reference to the prevalent sore eyes
in the South.
The cranky cadet Whitaker who mu
tilatcd his own ears and created a sen
sation is now traveling in the state lec
turing, when he tells about the wrongs
perpetrated on him.
r J be Republicans field
with a view to nomina
gHHI to do an,ything ex£) t endorse t lie
■tPpendent.
The aggregate damage to the country
by the recent Septemljir gale is recor
ded by rnilUgßs. The York Her
ald gives account of iArava-
in that section of the eountr^
Phil Thompson the Seer Ary of the
Democratic Congressionar committee
speaks very hopefully about the Demo
crats carrying the HodSfiy-He says
the committee arc about certain
the Democrats will have a good work
| iog majority in the next house.
* .--Hon Thomas Hardeman eloquently
said in his (Savannah speech a few r days
since that Denioeracy.-means the will of
the majority; it meahs free education!
and low taxation. Jt means the right
of sell'government aiW home rule. It
is the party that has given peace
and prosperity to our state and the coun
try.
The independent movement in Geor
gia is nothing more than Repubttmi
ism in disguise. The
its head in the national administration
and the independents in the state
are dictated to from Washington city.
M oney is sent to Gergia by t he national
Republicancommittee. to Mahoneize
Georgia.
Grover Cleveland was
last week by the New York Democrats
in convention for Governor. The Re
publicans nominated Secretary Folger
for Governor and thus tne contestants
stand. It is asserted that important
changes will soon take place ti e
cabinet on account of Folgers nomina.
lion to the Governorship.
It is stated that Jay Gould has with
drawn from Wall Street speculations
and will give the balance of bis life to
teaching his son to understand the great
system of railroads that he will inherit
at the old man’s death. Tho son will
become heir to something over one hun
dred million dollars. to.
Stephen J. Field again looms up
through a reporter of the Xew York
Herald as good timber for a {Democrat
ic presidential candidate in 1884. He
is put out as the representative of the
business interests and the capitalists of
the United States. It is claimed that
there was a want of confidence in Gen.
Hancock and hence his defeat.
lion. X. J. Hammond has an oppo
nent for Congress in a well-to-do farm
er in Fayette county. He has made a
thorough canvass of his county by
speaking at the several district court
Bis and will now have time to
he justice courts in some of the
counties. He is not certain how
hat he will weaken Mr, Ham
mond.
The nomination of Cleveland for
Governor by the Xew York Democrats
ln#s brightened democratic prospects in
Ohio. It is now thought that Oh
will certainly elect seven, and possibly
ten congressmen. So hopeful is the
outlook that already there is specula
tion as to who will be made .speaker,
eric xl l is.-ja.mt-ic-r; m.
To look on the other side of the pict
ure, the officers of the Republican Con
gressional Committee laugh at the idea
of the Democrats seeming the next*
House of Representatives. They are
willing to concede a slight loss in' Ohio
but feel confident they will more than
overbalance it by expected gains in the
South.
Jay Gould's Absorptions.
The Xew York Herald suggests the
propriety of the Government assuming
control of the telegraphs of the country
and managing them as it has the post
offices.
Mothers! Mother* ! : Mothers I! i
Are you disturbed at nlglit and broken ot your
rest by a sick child suffeilng and crying with
the excruciating p ot cutting teeth? It so,
go at once and get w bottle ot MRS. VY UfSLOYVS
soothing It Will relieve the poor
(little sufferer in mediately—depend upon It
there is no mi.- ake about- it. There is not
mother on earth ho has ever used it, who wli
not tell you ator that it will regulate the bow
bis. and glvera; to the mother, and relief and
health to the, olid, operating like magic. 1 1 is
perfectly sate to use in all cases, and pleasant to
the taste, and Is the prescription of one of the
oldest and best female physicians and nurses in
the United States. Seda everywhere. W cents a
bottle
A beautiful line ©f wood and marble
top center tables just received at the
Bartlesville Furniture Store.
We have just received a large and
beautiful stock of Dress Goods, Hosie
ry, Hamburg©. Laces and Ladies neck
wear, at Stafford, Blalock A Cos.
LOOK! LOOKI
Go and look at the pretty suits at T.
B. Lyons. They will fit anybody.
\ TO THU FARMERS.
K I have bought an interest in the lease
hot the Redding where you
■kill find me season.
Han't forget me.
§^et.
. W)!
■An has
*iil j<--.
# ’' Tveiled on 1 >v
jK/F* temperance kg
the Democratic Leg-
HHVfb pass a local option law. In
effort was renewed on a Repub
wi’an legislature with Foster as Gov
| emor, but the resolution as a consti
! tutiona! amendment failed to get a
i three-fifths vote. It provided for the
j amendment of the constitution 30 that
the Legislature would have the power
, to pass laws either to regulate, prohibit
license or delegate the function of local
'Option to the respective townships and
■muiicipal corporations of the state. At
Qhc Republican State Convention in 18-
81, a specific plank was put on the plat-!
form for such au amendment of the I
constitution and the republicans went
into tnefigh’l arried the state ticket by
and elected a Legislature which
was republican two to one in both
branches. The Legislature last winter
however, instead of adopting a resolu
tion for a constitutional amendn entto
be submitted to the people, proceeded
to try to regulate the traffic in liquors
under the constitution without amend
ment and passed what is known as the
Rand law, taxing each saloon in cities
of tne first class 3300, second class 3250
and so on to 3150. The constitution of
the State prohibits theliAsing of the
traihe, and fhe Supreme Court decided
thai this law, implying licence, was
tliererofe uneoustitutmiia, 1 .. The. law, .
therefore, became null and VSd soon.
after the adjournment of the Leg! si a-’
; tare, Tills made, the temperance agi
tato)®|iiore furious than ever, ;<A forc
cd {llepublicans openly to avow the
cause of liquor taxation in jio compro
mising manner. The legislature last
wintei passed another law that
loons in the state should beclosed m>m
Saturday night till Monday*
morning , and while this was held to.
be unconstitutional it is violated with 1
impunity, especially in Cincinnati and
other large cities, and is •virtually as
deifc a letter as the Rand law, because
the local authorities of the citjjpx-fuse
to enforce it. Hundreds of the saloon
men in the State aramow having their
cases heard before uie grand juries and
will be indicted prior to the election. At
their State Convention last June the
republicans resolved to use all efforts
to bring about the taxation of theliquo
traffic and amend tlie constitution if
necessaiw to do so, and at the same time
see to ittohat the Sunday Observance
law is strictly enforced. Arhen they
went into the campaign raising the cry
of “No Sunday and free whiskey” on
the noci#gL
The demerits however ignored
temperance question entirely as an is
sue, and held that the
was simply a familtuitarrel among th®
: republicans and they should
be k-t alowe to fight it out. For weeks
tlieTepisibW-ans temper
ance warJPe and tli6democrß> con tin.
vied to ignore it and agitate other issues.
The brewers Associations and liquor
dealers, with the 40,000 Ger
m ans in the Sate, most of whom were
formerly republics, joined hands with
the democrats furnished them a,
campaign fund of 335,000 and they de-*
tnanded that the democrats should quit
ignoring this question and take direct
issue with or they
would not throw all their influence and
money with them. In consequence of
this the past two weeks have brought
about a great temperance campaign
Some of tlie democrats, calling them
selves membflfcj of the “law and order”
element, h3®r jspousedthe cause of the
republicans, and nearly all the prohibi
tionists have over to them. As
things are going now and likely to con-,
tinue of the campaign iM
w ill fight on this line.
TneDemoerats count on gaining
enough to carry the state by 15,000.
In th* congressional contest the issue
of temperance is not made.
The tyio delegation in Congress,
stands 15 Republicans and s,Democrats>
The census of 1880 gives the state one
extra congressman. It is difficult yet
result of this
RHA A JVC) RES TS
S. article *on
“The Plot el ion
American Reviewrmay be regarded as a
summary of the conclusions drawn from
his work at the head of the forestry div
ision of the tenth census. As such it
is oneßf the important contributions of
the literature of our American forests
and affords the most comprehensive sla
vey of the situation yet made. Prof.
Sargent dispel^iiectually some fallacies
regarding tiioHjgsi* notably the belief
that they effect on the rainfall,
and he urges th<Bepeal of tha timber cnl
t-ure act, a step which the Herald has
earnestly advised, since h™ failed en
tirely in accomplished its purpose, and
has already cost the government several
millions of acres of land, without any re
turn whatever. “Apart from its worth
lessnesses a means of securing the
growth of forests, this law is deceptive
and therefore dangerot*. It encour
ages the planting of trees where trees
cannot grow unless artificially irrigated,
and thus entails losses upon honest set
tlers, deceived in the belief that the gov
eminent would not encourage impractic
able apd useless planting.”
As ■four timber resources, we are
told tliK the sorests of the country are
still capable of yielning annually a large
amount of material, and of doing so for
many years. The effect of local exhaus
tion. however, is already felt in many
parts, and the steadily inc Asingjdisance
between the forest and thereat centres
of distribution is ait T ancinhe price of
all lumber. But tiff days or areal tim
ber famine are not very near, Snd “we
can still boast, although in somewhat
less exalted terms of the
forest covering spread o®
* JF
—XotwithstandSHhe care manifest
by Stephen Girard that college bearing
his name should be free from the teach
ings of Christianity, it is now essential
ly a Cbristain institution. After the
late President Allen's decease, neither
his pastor nor any other Christian minis
ter could go within the college walls to
take part in the funeral services. But
the exclusion of ministers seems not to
have accomplish what Girard intended.
The SuudHscholl Times says: “Presi
dent Allen had himself done the work
of a clergyman in that college while liv
ing. and at his Mineral Christian services
were there led by Christian laymen. Af
ter this remains were taken into a
neighboring church, where Christain lib
erality gave freer air, and there a score
or more of prminent Christain clergy
men united with a large assembly in pay
ing another trsbure of respect to the 1
life and work of this distinguished Chris
tain layman.” The Girard heirs and
trustees of the fund are said to be a unit
as to the propiety of teaching Christiani
ty iu the college, while technically obey
ing the will by excluding clergymen.
—Ex-President Hays, following what
seems to be ibe popular current just
now, has bought a great farm in Dakota,
which is said to contain some of the fin
est land in the Territory, and eligibly lo
oaled on theXorthern Paeifie Railroad
s i li le isinaick. This year
he yielding a large
SEli-WJK
“homesick XESS. 1 '
Lukexv.. 18: “I will arise
Hsgo to my father.”
W hen a man is thoroughly hungry his
enwgy is all gone. He, can toil neither
with brain nor hand. Many au army
has been defeated, not through lack of
ammunition, but for lack of bread. It
was this that tamed the high spirit of
the young man mentioned in my text.
He could have got along with a rough
blanket for a covering, the night-sky
for a roof, and might have dropped his
thirst in a public well. But he must
have something to eat. Storm and ex
posure in length of time will weat oufe
a man's life, but hunger
work. This young man must have
something to eat within a few hours or
die. The travelerin Asia Minor to-day
will tell you thanAhere are trees that
bear long beans, or “carobs,” as they
are sometimes called, or bushes as they
are sometimes translated. These long
beans are often eaten by the poorer pop
ulation, hut more often' thev are t hrown
to the swine that crunch ' them with
great avidity. The young man in the
text wants some of these beans or car
obs, but he can not get them without
stealing them. Seated amid the swine
troughs, perfectly wretched, an idea
flashes across him: “I will go home.
These are no clothes for a rich man’s
sou to wear. What business is this for
a Jew—feeding swine? I can
uo longer. I will arise and go to
father.” Not waiting to patch up his
poor clothes, or improve his personal
appearance, away he liies. Homesick
ness gives him a fleet foot. See him,
tlie young man who bad been off a good
while, now is oj Ills homeward tramp.
Are we, my friends, ready to follow him?
Novelists nave thrown around sin ro
mance and fascination, but my text
tears off the disguise. Notwithstand
ing Lord Byron and George
said, sin is a low, mean, con
temptible business, and filling the
troughs for t! herd of iniquities that
root and v V->w in the soul to no occu
pation for men and women A tended to
uesoi. .md daughters of tire Lord A).
• Oh, the wiset thing that that
BBSo man did was to resolve to go baca.
i™ circumstances wouki never get anv
better theSd. He could not sew up the
rags. He could not appease the hunger.
iiis business would never become aiw
more respectable than it was. GohomA
you poor boy. lam glad tu| see you
up such a good resolutren, and the
only safe step for us to take is in the
same direction. .Satan has a great many
herds of iniquity, and lie says he will
give us large wages if we will only
■ watch them. Liar! Down with thee
fin to the pit. “The wages of sin is
death!” Satan covers his employes
with rags; he pinches them with eternal
hunger, and, when they are weary of
tlie business and try to get awitf, he
chases them withjtll the bloodhounds
of perdition. it not a sensible
thing for this yowtig man, when he
found himself in the Atitution and
suffering of that wildernlss, to say, “1
will arise anu goto my father!”
In tlie time of Mary the Queen, amid
the great persecutions, a persecutor
came 10 the iiousejaigniu old Christian
rwoman and demsaped what he called a
heretic that was hidden in the iiouse.
The old Christian woman said: “Open
that trunk and you will find him.” The
persecutor opened and on the
top of some looking-glass,
and the persecutor loolred in it and
“Where is the heretic I am looking for?”
and the old Christian woman said:
“Don’t you see him in the glass?” As
to-day we take up the glass of God’s
word I wobld that instead of seeing the
► prodigal, we might see our lost
I condition by reason of our sin be
•so impressed with it that we shoulcMV
out mightily to the Lord for His uffll
cy- to
I have, iu the first place, to remark
that this resolution of the prodigal was
made in a disgust at liisjfresent condi
.ubn. If his employer-jAuI set him to
tending flowers, or to training vines
over the arbor,, or to keeping an account
of the pork market, or to overseeing the
other young man would
have never gone home
Aou.se. If lie had had
rdothe himself even u.mu
had had salary enough to
ritv, he would have said
along without these s
1 just as a
er young men have
had had money in his ’
would have started home.
have said: “What do I wanAHWpy
father with fifty, a hundred, thousand
dollars iu my pocket? I want
10 go Lome for? 1 will
to the old man. Beside
third of the property any!
how. Besides, if I went know
father would put me He
\vould*not allow such the
v)ld plhce as I like to *C'ome,
fill high, and IffYLdJbk again
■pare good time .Alii
it tvas his utter destitution and .ff®.ftper
ism; it was the fact that they-begrudged
bim even the beans and carobs. It was
because he had come dowE"Hl destitu
tion beneath which there was 110 lower
depth th!He resolved to go to his fath
er. Let lire here say that no man ever
starts for fclod until lie of
his famine-struck condition.
say to ministers: “Why
and talk about tiie lost
For the reason that unless
Aaded of it they don't want
it ! come into your house
well, and 1 talk about
cines and physicians,
is nothing I have AhHHH
neuralgia.
talk to .me about
come into your house and
you are desperately sick, and uHnßffi
get help very soon you
as I begin to tMk about nied
doctor, you say: “Bring me
ly or I shall die.” Now,.#
vince ycUPthat in your
you are lost; that you%e sick JW dis
eased by reason of sin from
of your head to tUpiles of yoiT feet,
then you are ready To hear me A®iile I
speak ef Jesus Christ, the Great Physi
cian, and of the balm that will heal' all
our wounds. And you say: “How are
you going to prove it?” Well, I could
prove it by the assertion of men, or I
could prove it by giving you God’s state
ment. Which shall it be? God’s state
ment, eAtony man says. You shall have
it. Jeremiah says: “The heart is de
ceitful above all things and desperately
wicked.' 1 Job: “Who is man that he
should be clean and he wmeffis born of
a woman thctAfc should he nghteous?”
—Job xv., “How much more
1 _ .1 eui • _ 1 • 1
abominate and filthy is roan which
drmketbfciiquity like water® Go fur
ther arnnad: “fliere is fftme that
doeth gooa; no, not one.” “As by one
man sirn entered into the world and
death bfcsin, so death hath passed upon
all men, Tor that all have sinned. By
every possible Bible sets forth
the truth that we are guilty, and that
there is no help for us so far as human
medicament is concerned.' Sin is a red
hot plowshare that turned up Eden, and
it has prostrated the whole earth with
the exhaustion of death, and unless a
man quits his sin and comes to God for
can not be saved. Prove it.
I will it: “Except a man be born
again he can not see the fingdom of
God.” “There is but one name given
among men whereby we can be saved,
and that is the name of Jfsus.” Do
not some of you begin to feel like that
young man of the text, weary of your|
sins? Do you not feel like, coming to
the wardrobe of God’s in eras and asking
for a garment of Would
you not like to sit great
banqueting table of Are
there not some here like to
be Christians? You cannot be where
you are down in your sin. Go home! go
home! Make some stout resolution like
the young man of my text. A mere
whim, a mere indefinite longing, will
not amount to anything. The voting
man of my text did not say: “I will
wait until the caravan comes tdoug and
get a ride. Xo!” with an emplia-
Bs that sounded through all the ages*
ime said: “I will arise end go to my
'{father!”
I remark furtllbr, that the resolution
of the text was formed in sorrow at his
behavior; it was not a mere physical
plight fit was sorrow at the thought
that he had so badly treated his father.
Oh, it is a sad thing that a
having been watched over bfaHitker
and educated and cared for, shoßu go
away and break that father’s Heart!
“How sharper than a serpent's tooth it
is to have a thankless child. ” That is
Shakspere. “lx foolish son is the heav
iness of his mother: ”
ble. Oh, have we not
er badly? And such a
that you hail apparel suited to the cli
mate and changes of the seasons! Who
fed you this morning when you arose?
Who has sheltered your household? Who
has given you the love of your children?
In whose keeping are the departed
loved ones of your heart? Who pours
golden sunlight by day, and by night
lights up the street-lamps of llleaven?
On whose earth do you walk? At whose
fountains do you drink? Whose ey’
hath pitied you? Whose hand hath
helped you? Whose heart had com
passion on you ? Whose voice hath
called you? Our Farther, so lenient
so loving, so generous hath he been Ob’
A\ e have all l>een cruel prodigals. We
have chosen the wilderness to the lov
ing arms of our Father. Have you no
confessions to make? Have vou no
sorrow to express? Have you no par
don to ask for ? Hax r e vou no resolu
tion to make? Oh! if it had been a
stranger f | would nothave been so won
derful that we turned awavfrom Him
If He had maltreated us,'if He had
ffagoMated us unmercifully, if He had
turned us out of doors, if He had starv
ed us, it Avould not have been strange
if we turned our backs on such a Fath
er. But no He has loved us, He has
fondled us carressed us all our life long
Are you sorry that you offended? Is
there iu tliis audience one-man frank
enough to say: “Father, I have sinned’
If you do wrong to a friend you are
willing to apologize. You say 4 ‘Tam
sorry 1 .said that or did that.” Have
you ever apologized to God ? Can it
be that ten thousand times ten thous
and transgressions of ytur life are all
uncancelletl? If it be so, mav God
have mercy upon your soul.
I remark again that this resolution
*d the text was formed in a feeling of
Homesickness. 1 do not knoAv how
long the yoifig man nod'been gone^
uoav mauAweeks, how many vears
from his father’s house, but Tam very
certain front the reading of the passage
that he was homesick- it is a very dfs
agi enable feeling. Youkuoiv what it
is. You have been away off, and al
though you may have had plenty oi
friends around ytu. and all the circum
stances Avere cheerful, you said within
your soul: “I Avouldgive the world if
i could be home.” Well, this young
man otJm> text was homesick, lie
wantepco Avalk old place
*gauM. lib Avantod to#e if the house-,
looked just as if Used to look.- Abo’#
all, he wanted to see his father'
clasp him by the hand again. I thru"
perhaps the thought may have flashed
through his mind, “Perhaps father’s
dead,! ’ You know that many a prodi
gal has come home after a long absence
and has knocked at the door, and a
stranger lias come, and father is gone,
andJriother is June, and brothers and
9irs are- gone. The
into some other pi'session,
with all that anxie
ty that man of the t<rfffsavs:
"1 to my father, 'to
find Are there not
ho would like to go
back to God ? WAild you not like to
nave Christ put hMscarred hand upon
you and press you tMhis heart and ut
ter these melting avls: “I have lov
ed you Avitli an everfcting love.’’ Oh,
f'e theranot those hße who are home
ck for%rod, for heaven?
heard of a Avho came to see
nis parents, and a few days,
and his him not to
go night before h<4
went praying
the him
to
One clambered up
the rat on perilous du
ty.
in
tiling bis
o i < 1 iat
darkness
w ar dice,
JUKI off the Pp-ling; but
through lus soul
'—the very'fra yer he heard Ins mother
utter in the next room. And there aijpd
the ships shrouds, he cried: “God be
merciful to me, a sinner! Oh, if there
be mercy for such a wretch as I am,
help me! Lord, help me!” And I have
thought Avhile standing here that per
haps some prodigal in this audience
flight nave coming into his soul the of
BBknory prayer or mother’s
Wngago that
might press so migWiA on your
that-■you -would this moment sur-
yourself to the Lord w|o bought^
j*T remark again this*rlscSution
text was inmiediately put into
Execution. The text says he arose#nd
came to his father. The trouble is that
nine hundred and ninety-nine out of
the thousand of our resolutions never
Kount to any thing. We do not car-
U|em out. lloav many of us have
Pes of times, resolved upon a Chris
-11 life ? And yet have not entered
it. Here is a man avlio, tAventy-yeurs
ago, in the time of typhokl fever,
said: “O,“Lord,Jet me gßHver this
sickness and 1 will serve all the
rest of my life.” The
he is weli, in the house of God to-day,
and yet h 6 has never espoused the cause
of Jesus. Here is a man who said; If
I can only live to see 1882, by that time
I will get over ths rush of my business
and I will give my time to the Lord,
and all the rest of. my days shall be
spent in His service;*’ and here we are,
Li 1882 and that man hits not kept his
vow.
A resoluthm a
Christian week, or
ki)g to o'clock
The
J-.'? r' r- !.ft) i Ig
Hhusks.
El- ’ 1 A
E\ ||fl
u on
Here
1 to
|||Hji it
Hy n onßFitiiow ? You feel that
need a title to heaven. Why not
get it now ? How many have put it
off? and there are some who say: I must
get my life changed first, and I must
get better first, and then I will come.”
Ah, my brother, you and
worse until you Xo
man yet ever made himself better.
“Not the righteous;
SlnnersJlesus came to call.
“But.’ says one ‘put it off a little lon
ger and I will come.” Ah! that is what
one of olden time said: “Go thy way
for this time. I will attend to it after
awhile. Did he?X*, he went away
and perished. To be almost a Chris
tian is to be no Christian at all. At Ana
gansette, Long Island, a vessel came
ashore'and dashed itself to pieces
in the breakers, and the men on the
beach threw ropes and shot rockets, and
the crew of the wrecked vessel got in a
small boat and pulled toward the beach
and they came alnUfet to the shore, but
the rope snapped a'nd they were swamp
ed. Their“corpses tab next day were toss
ed upon the beach. They come within a
stone’s throw of rescue"and yet they
perished. Oh, how many men there are
who come almost to the beach of heav
en, w ithin arm’s reach of pardon
peace and salvation, yet righto there
they are stvamped forever. Do., you
know, my brother, that eternity is' at
stake in this matter? You would not
risk SIOO on as poor security as you have
foi 1 your immortal soul, If you lend &
man SIOO you take a note for it. If you
take a deed for tt. If you build a house
on it. If you buyproperty you take a
deed for it. If you buiißa house you
get insurance in it. wnd yet for
your everlasting inheritance you have
no title, no promise, no hope. Why
will you starve in the desert w r hen you
might feast in you Father’s house?
God w-ants you to come back;the angels
itant you to come back; the Church of
Hrist w-ants you to come back. God,
infinitely lovely and patient One, leans
from his throne to-day and stoops ov
er with every possible entreaty and
says: “Come now, and let us reason to
get her. Though your sins be as scar
let, they shall be as snow;though they be
red like crimson, they shall be as w-001.
And then God lifts his right hand and
takts an affidavit, saying: “As 1 live,
saMi the Lord God, I have no pleasure
iiprne death of Him that dieth. Turn
turn ye; why will ye die?”
1 want to tell you of the prodigals—
the one came back to his father's house
and the other that did not. In Rich
mond, Ya., there was a young ftnan
who had every advantage in his fathers
house of a Christian education, and he
wandered away. He forgot his father,s
counsel and his mother's love—further
and further lie wandered, nntil he was
a prodigal. One night in one of the fin
est homes in Virginia, w-hile the famu
ly were sound asleep, at midnight them
was a loud ranaing at the door and tne
prying of child® outside. The you^gy,
the householßHß^i^^oWii
.-x• .'J'j Hits broth.
at mime word of ffte wife that offended
him he said; “Out of this house! A
way with the children! I will dash
their brains out! And they fled through
the darkness to their grand-father's
house. The next morning the young
man went out to see the prodigal who
had driven his own family away. He
found him pacing up and down in front
of his house, and he said to him; ‘What
is the matter with you?” and the prodi
gal turned upon him and said; “What
do you think of me?” “Why’l think
you are my brother.” “No.” said he,
•‘I am a brute.” And then he said: “O,
brother, brother, do you think there is
any cure for me? Do you think I will
ever getjover these wanderings ? Do you
uiiiK. a will ever stop tins lire of dissi
pation? I think there is only one thing
John, that will do it.” “What is that*?
said the brother. “oh.’\said the prodi
gal, ■‘there is only just one thing that
will do it.,’ drawing his finger across
his throat. “I will. 1 will, before
night conies. I can’t bear it longer.
Oh, my brain!” He was the prodigal
that returned from evil ways.
I wii tell you of another. Two
young men in England were down
i* to the sea-shore, expecting to embark
Iney could not bear tlie restraints of a
kind father’s house. The father wrote
down to Mr. Griffin, of Portsmouth, sav
ing: “My two sons are down in your
city- I wish you would persuade them
to come back-” He found the two
boys, and persuaded one to go home,
fne other said: "I won’t go home.”
“Then,” said Mr. Griffin, “I will get
you a good place on a very respectable
ship.,’ Hesaid: “I won’t take it. I
want to be a common >ailor, and that
will do me most good.” Some years pas
sed along, and one day Mr. Griffin was
seated in his study, when word came:
••Tbere-ts a man on ship-tßard in irons,
awaiting execution, wants to see you.”
Mr. Griffin did not recognize ” him.
“Don’t you remember me ? 1 was the
young man you tried to persuade mot
to go to sea.” “Oh, yes,” said Mr. Grif
fin, “1 remember you.” “Well,” said
ae, “I committed the crime of murder,
i am goin to die, and I thought I would
ask you to||pray for me before I died.”
Mr. Griffin, thinking of the dear old
udks at home, and of tile father, whose
neart had long ago broken over that
wayward son, said: ‘Twill try to get
you a pardon.” He rushed about by
nay and by night, from city to city, to
the proper authorities, and ‘ sure
'enough lie got the pardon. He
moved the heart of the Judge by the
terrible story of parental suffering,and
he came in hot haste with the pardon,
and as he was coming on the snip he
met the father who had come down
from the country. He had found out
that his boy was in trouble under a dis
guised name, and there Mr. Griffin with
the pardon met the father on dock,
i’hey went on board, and the very mo
ment that Mr. Griffin handed the par
don to that wayward son, at the same
moment the father thrAv his arms
around the wayward boy’s neck ami
the son confessed his crime and his
“Father, forgive
me if I have broken your heart.” And
the father said “I forgive you.” The
chains were knocked off and tks boy
went home free. To-day 1 comHto you
with a pardon—glorious the
Gospel. 1 put it in your right hand,
while at the same moment the Lord God
Almighty, your Father breaks An upon
fcfiie darkness of your soul antim brows
the arms of His compassion arouqffi
your neck and says: “1 forgive you
for all your wanderings,” and there is
joy on earth and joy m heaven. Who
will accept the Father’s embrace?
The Utility of Drunkenness.
A writer in tlie Gentlemen’s Maga
zine, reasoning premises of
Malthus and Darwin ,gravely argues
that drunkenness is performing a ben
elicient work among the human race by
weeding out those who are least fit to
survive. muscular, rav
ing, yelling. Sprang human animal
that formerly led the war dance, the
hunt and the battle, is no longer the lit-*
test for survival, but is, on the contrary
daily becoming more and more out of
place.” Law and public sentiment for
uid that he shall be killed by the means
employed upon oler obnoxious brutes;
therefore it is desirable that he be sup
plied with facilities for self-immolation
and these, the author says, are exactly
■supplied by the alcoholic drinks
present day when used foetpurpflffisof
intoxication. “We knots,” continues
the moralizer, “that such indulgence
away the.red Indian savage
from the America* continent and pre
pared it for a higher civilization, * *
* and agent, if allow
ed to do its natural work, will similar
imremove the savage elements that
stfll remain as impediments to the on
ward progress of the more crowded
communities of the Old World.” The
authors general conclusion is that all
human beings who are tit to survive
will naturally avoid mtemperance ex-
cept when it is occasionally forced up
on them by the artificial pressure of tab
surd drinking customs; the remainder
“will be gradually sifted out by natu
ral alcoholic selection,” unless the law
interferes with their inclinations.
For originality and practicability
this theory certainly is unequalled, and
that it is bound to prove its accuracy
by its works cannot be doubted by any
moralist who studies the classes that
habitually drink heavily. The only
trouble with the plan seems to be that
like breeds like, and the heavy drunk
ard, when he dies, generally leaves be
hind him one or more of his own kind
to be permanent sources of torment to
and of profit to the dis
tilleries.
An Atlanta correspondent of the Au
gusta Chronicle and Constitutionalist
says.
I hate to complain so much about our
postal force, but if no complaint is made
there is no hope of a remedy. Com
plaints come from every quarter, and a
gentlemen here after reading my corres
pondence about it this evening-, said,
“You are right, but you didn’t hit them
half hard enough; they are more than
negligent, and I for one, want to see
them attended to.”
In giving a reason for this delay and
irregularity of the mails, I attribute it
to inefficiency of a number of negro em
ployes. I have information that there
is at present, running on the night ex
press of the Georgia Railroad a negro
postal clerk who can scarcely read. I
learn further that when he strikes a
name he can’t read, he just throws the
letter or package in a pile and carries it
to Augusta. From there, of course, it is
sent back up the road the next day, and
so it sometimes reaches its destination
two or three days late, or a week, or per
haps not at all. These are all facts and
you can most any time hear a complaint
from somebody. A radical reform is
needed in our post office.
The Enquirer-Sun sums up its infor
mation with reference to the damage
to crops by the equinoctial storm: “Re
ports from every direction go to show
that the crops have been badly damag
ed, and it is feared that they have been
cut off 33% per cent. A farmer from
Harris county reports that the com
was blown and twisted in every direc
tion and the cotton beat out wherever
ft was open. In some places the bolls
ware whipped off against the ground.
Like reports come from Chattahoochee
county, and it is probably equally as
bad in aiU of the adjacent counties.”
Atlanta Pqst-Appeal: Yesterday Gen
eral Toombs %as unfortunate enough to
lose a roll of bSls containing about 8500,
which was up by one of Barlow,
Wilson & Co’s who immed
iately restored proper owner.
Then it was spirit of
Toombs to stangers
for the the lucky fin
der, Mr. Bob. with a hand
some gold headed<caiie 4 “Honesty is
the best policy. ”
5 b
Some of the warmest
friends say that he has not forgotten
the manner in which Sherman
him and the charges which Shettemn
preferred against him w hen Shernitm
was Secretary of the Treasury and hm
was collector of the port of Is T ew YorEfc,
and that he proposes to have his re
venge. It is alleged that he regards
the late investigation of Sherman’s ad
ministration of the Treasury as a farce
and a fraud* and proposes to institute
an investigation that will put Sher-
of tgfe Treasury be
country in its true light.
Here is the receipt for getting rich bv
farming in the vou^
produce to
sell felKf"
jUHI \vhaj
The reason many parts of the South
are said to be unfavorable to the gl ow th
of tame grasses is simply because the
experiment of growing them has never
been fairly made. Wherever wheat
will mature well, timothy, herd grass
orchard grass, red top, etc., as well as
the clovers; will mature admiisblv. Blue
flourishes on “limestone land,” * wher
ever it has been properlv sown and pro
tected in early growth. Climate and
soils, in all the Southern States are fa
vorable to the agriculture of the day,
but some agency more enlightened than
-negro labor” and more efficient than
wooden plows is requisite to the proof.
Before work commenced on the Brook
lyn bridge, the estimated cost of con
struction was §7,000,000. It is now es
timated by the trustees that 622,000,000
will be required to complete the bridge.
The, Xew Tork World points to
this remarkable state of things and
wants to know about it; but the trus
tees are dumb as oysters. Of course a
grave suspicion rests upon them. It
looks like a gigantic job.
Evening News: A wicked man in
Augusta, being recently taken ill, and
believing that he .vas about to die, told
a neighbor that he felt in need of pre
paration for the next world, and would
like to see some proper person in re
gard to it. Immediately the friend
sent for George Symms. The fire insur
rance agent.
A convict working at the Graysville
lime works, in Catoosa Couuty, was shot
and killed by one of the guards. He
had become unruly, and the guard threat
enedfco whip him, whereupon he became
furious and made for the guard with a
hammer-aad-was shot and killed al
most instantly.
The citizens of Madison, Greene. Oeo
nee, Clarke and Walton counties held a
meeting in Athens on the 19tli, looking
to the building of a railroad from Ath
ens to Madison.
• A lady at Brick Church, FT. .T., has a
fullblood Jersey cow, “a very fine milk
er,” which has not been dry in fifty-six
months. “But she can only be kept un
der full control bv the help'of a kicking
strap.
Anew kind of cotton, called the spi
der-web is being experimented with in
Louisiana.
The telephone is going under the sea,
apparatus that will send the voice
over a thousand miles of wire having
been invented.
A Cough, Cold or Sore Throa
should be stopped. Neglect frequently results In
an Incurable hung Disease or Consump
tion. BKOWN’S BRONCHIAL. TROCH
ES are certain to give relief In Asthma, Bron
chitis, Coughs, Catarrh, Consumptive and
Throat Diseases. For thirty years the Troches
have been recommended by physicians, and al
ways give perfect satisfaction. They are not
new or untried, hut having been tested by wtde
and constant use for nearly an entire generation,
they have attained well merited rank among the
few staple remedies of the age. Public speak
ers and Singers use tham to clear and streng
then the Voice. Sold at twenty-five cents a box
veryvvhere. eca-ly
Money is a good rifcjtor new married people
co have. See advancement of the Men and Wo.
Relfi Fund Association in another
column. ■ auglQ-
The celebrated Millville fruit jars for
sale by T. lA Lyon.
Jars, quarts and hal
galons, atf T. B. Lyon.
T. B. LjTtn wants Eggs, Chickens and
Butter.
Carry all you have to sell to T. B-
Lyon and get the cash or Dry Goods at
New York cost.
Mess Pork, at f T. B. LYON’S.
Goto T. B. Lyon’s to get a good ci
gar.
%000 good cigars just received at T
B, Lyon’s.
* J&STREC&IVED.
I have just received a large
sorted lot of Ready Made Clothing wmcli
I will sell cheap. T. B. Lyon. §
To the Ladies: I have just jpieived
a remnant Jot of assorted Laces at 10
cents a package.
I have also just received my new lot
of notions and Dress Goods.
Giveflle a call Will take pleasure in
showing you.
$ T^B.Lyon.
McBEIDE & 00.
Atlantai&a., manufacturers show ca
ses and%puthern agents for Seth Thom
as clocks, and Lambeth’s fly fans, and
own Ae celebrated Gate city stone wa
ter fixer, and Cherry’s steam fruit and
vegetable dryer for the world. Prices
forwarded on application.
T Our Friends and C u i
We will move September Ist to the
D. J. Evans building now occupied by
the Furniture Store next door to S. F.
Mann’s where we will open a full and
complete line o4Dry Goods <md Groce
ries. Thanking you for past iavors we
rolieit a continuance of the same.
Very Respectfully, *
aug 12tf M. F. COCHRAN & lON^
Young gentlemen and ladies who desire to
marry and start In the world with some read
clias should join fthe Men and Women’s Kelley
undAssociation. See?, adv. 0
I- ■> nri ii l> ll MW—I—
C£NTMI A SO|TUWm£MR. 1
Savannah, Ga., .Tan. 8,1881.
ON and after Sunday, Jan. 9, i#i, passenger
trains on the Central and Southwestern
Railroads and branches will run as follows:
TRAIN NO. I—GOING NORTH AND WEST.
Leaves Savannah 9:20 a m
Leaves Augusta 9;30 a m
Arrives at Augusta 4:45 p m
Arrives at Macon 6:45 pm
Leaves Macon for Atlanta B:lspm
Arrive Barnesville 11.25 p m
Arrives at Atlanta 3:4C a m
Leaves Macon tor Columbus and Mont
gomery, dally 7:20 p m
Arrives at Columbus dally 2:25 a m
Arrives at Montgomery daily 9:40 a m
Making close connection at Atlanta with West
ern & Atlantic and Atlanta Charlotte Air-Line
for all points West and North.
COSMKG SOUTH AND BAST.
..eaves Atlanta® ?2:20 a m
Arrive Barnesville 4:01 a m
Arrives at Macon 6:30 a m
Leaves Montgomery for Macon dally 5:16 p m
Leaves Columbus dally 12:16 a m
Arrive at Macon dally 6:55 a m
Leaves Macon ; 7:00 a m
Arrives at Milledgeville.-. 9:44 a m
Arrives at Eatonton 11:30 a m
Arrives at Augusta 4:45 p m
Arrives at Savannah 3:45 pm
Leaves Augusta. 8:30 a m
Making connection at Savannah with the Sa
vannah. F. & W. Bailroad for all points In Flori-
TKAIN NO. ■-GOING NORTH AND EAST.
Leaves SavannalT 7:30 p m
Arrives at Augusta 5:40 a m
Leaves Augusta 8:30 p m
Arrives at Mllledgeville 9:44 a m
Arrives at Eatonton 11:30 a m
Arrives at Macon ~ 7:20 a m
Leaves Macon for Atlanta 8:00 a m
Arrive Barnesville .10:04 a m
Arrives at Atlanta 12:50 p m
Leaves Macon for Albany and Eufaula.. 8:45 a m
Arrives at Eufaula 1 4:15 p m
Arrives at Albany 3:53 p m
Leaves Macon for Columbus 8:15 a m
Arrives at Columbus 1 :40 p m
Trains on this schedule for Macon, Atlanta, Co
lumbus, Eufaula, Albany, and Augusta dally,
making close connection at Atlanta with Western
and Atlantic, and Atlanta and Charlotte Air
Line.
At Eufaula with Montgomery and Eufaula Eall
way; at Columbus with Western Railroad; at
Augusta with the Charlotte, Colnmbla and
Augusta Railroad and South Carolina Railroad
for all points North and East,
Eufaula train connects at Fort Valley for Per
ry, dally except Sunday, and at Cuthbert for
Fort Gaines daily except Sunday.
Trains on Blakely Extentlon leave Albany
dally.
COMING SOUTH AND BAST. m
Leaves Atlanta... 2-15 pm
Arrive Barnesville 4:49 p in
Arrives at Macon from Atlanta 6:15 p m
Leaves Albany 12:02 p m
Leaves Eufaula ; • 12:00 m
Arrives at Macoiyrom Eufaula and Al
bany 6;35pm
Leaves
An Ives at M jHm Columbus 5:10 pm
Leaves
Arrives at Augußta 5:40 a m
Leaves Augusta*-. .'. ; S:3O p m
Arrives at Savannah ~*,S 7:15a m
Passengers for Mllledgeville and Eatonton will
take train No. 2 from Savannah, and train No. 1
from Macon, which trains connect dally except
Sunday, for these points.
UPSON COUNTY BRANCH.
Leaves Thomaston . 8:30 am
Arrives at The Rock 9:1 0 a m
Arrives at BamesvUle 9:50 a m
Leaves Barnesville 5:00 p m
Arrives at The Rock 5-40 p m
Arrives at Thomaston 6:30 pm
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars between Savan
nah and Cincinnati via Macon, Atlanta and Cin
cinnati Southern Railway, from Savannah.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars to Washington
via Augusta, Charlotte and Richmond, on 9:20 a.
m.train from Savannah.
LOhal Sleeping Carson all night trains between
SavaiSiah and Augusta, Augusta and Macon, and ’
Savannah and Atlanta.
Passenj®fe-dm Southwest Georgia caD take
either traft£Btan Macon or Augusta, and make
connecyjjLSXwtb Pullman Sleeper from Augusta
to Wasra%ton~without change.
Berths In Sleeping Cars can be secured at Tick
et Office on Mulbdrry street.
GBO. A. WMlteheAd, WILLIAM ROGERB,
Gen,Pa®. Agt. Gen. Supt. C. B. R., Savannah.
’ W. F. BHELLMAN,
e. m ram
MANUFACTUEERS
ATLANTA, - - - GA
ATLANTA, GA..ISSI.
Saw Gin and Self Feede-*,
Exhibited by E. Van WINKLE * CO., awarded
for Best Sample, Best General Results In Gin
ning, and Best constructed Machine, tlie First
Prize, SIOO or Gold Medal.
(B. S. RP’KS. Miss.
Judges: aT. w. SMEDES, Miss,
(W. E. BARROWS, Conn.
H. I. KIMBALL. Director-General.
A1 o. First Premium at the South Carolina
State Fairs and Georgia Fairs.
w 81 1
fH!! $
1 *
ippßfßflP^fesl
Said to >e the best Power Press in the world
Suitable for Horse, steam or Water. Simple and
strong. 1
This Press packs in two irHbtes. Suitable for
large public Glnners.
Send for prices.
E. Van Winkle Cos.,
mayff (Box 83) ATLANTA, Gy.
Hendrix,, Rockhill g* Willingham,
p IN CONNECTION WITH THE DIXIE WORKS, HAVE OPENED A
GENERAL BUILDERS’ SUPPLY STORE,
At No. 40 Cotton Avenue, Opposite Dixie Works,
Where they will keep a full stock of all kinds of Building Material, such as
Sash, Doorg, Blinds, Shingles, Lathes, Lime, Hair, Cement,
Plaster, Weights, Cords, Hinges, Lioclts, GlaSs, Nails, Paints, Oils, I*xitty, and
BUILDERS 6 HrEE _A_ HR RE .
on all kinds of Building Material promptly furnished. mar23-6m
/^BORGIA— Pike County— Application will be
Y* made to the court of Ordinary Pike County
Georgia on the first Monday in October next
thirty days after sale of this notice for leave to
sell all the lands belonging to the estate of Hen
ry Jones of said county deceased, consisting of
the power of the late M. E. Jones Deceased con
sisting of 360 Acres more less In First District of
said County for the benefit of heirs and Creditors
of said Deceased. August 29th 1882.
JOHN M. PHILIPS, Admr, nenry Jones.
GEORGIA— Pike County— J. F. Cauthen and
Mrs J F Bush having applied to me for perma
nent letters of Administration on the estate of
Thomas J Bush, late of said county deceased.
This Is to cite all and singular the creditors and
next of bln of T J Bush to be and appear at my
office onthe first MoDday In October next, and
.show cause if any they can, why permanent ad
■mlnlstration shall not be granted to J F Cauthen
and Mrs J F Bush. Witness my hand and official
signature August 30th, ISB2.
HARRY WELLS, Ordinary.
Universityof Georgia
F. H. MELL, D.D., LL.D., Chancellor.
THE 82nd session of the departments at Ath
ens Ga., viz: Frankiin College, Slate College
of Agriculture and Meehan ic Aits and Law school
will open -Wednesday, 4th October next. Full
courses of instruction in Literature, Science,
Engineering, Agriculture and Law. TUITION
FREE m Franklin and State Colleges. For cat
alogues and Information,address the Chancellor.
L. L. CHARBONNIER, Secretary,
aug3-lm Atlanta. Ga.
GEORGIA. — PIKE County— September sth, 1.882
Thosevndebted to the estate ol Mrs. u, E.
smith, l aAe of Pike county, deceased, will make
immediare payment, and those having claims
against the same will present them in terms of
the law. R.J. POWELL,
sepfitf Administrator.
TO LET.
On Saturday the seventh day of October next,
before the court House door in the town of Zebu
lon, Pike county, the contract to build a jail
house for Said county will be given to the lowest
bidder. Said jail house Is to he built of wood tim
bers 12 inches square; to be forty two feet by
twenty feet the walls to be twentv teet high
making a two story building. The timbers are
to be sawed logi#l2 inches square and the walls
are to be weatherboarded.
At the same time and place a contract will be
given by the county Commissioners to the
lowest bidder for building cells for
Sara jail and doing all the iron work thereon. The
two contracts will be separate, but the same par
ty may be awarded one or both.
The building win be required to have an 8 foot
hall running through it For plans and speeifl
i cations apply at county Commissioners office in
Zebulon.
contracts will he let on Saturday October the
7th next.
EORGIA—Fixe County—Notice is hereby
VJF given that unless objections be lUed in the
office by the first Tuesday in October next an
order will be past making public a road leading
from near W, M. Hartleys passing Bluff spngs
camp ground intersecting the Zebulon and Bar
nesvllle road near the residence of J. F. Cauthen
A Iso.a road leading from near ;the residence o'
and passing through lands Ml Mrs-
thn.'n^a^
A
w rut
k t ■■llgllill
A T
zebuH
Prompt aueißJ
courts. crln^Hj
J
AT TO R M
BARNM
Respectfully tend*
nsuring prompt anal
business intrusted tol
ai Courts. JC“Colleql
dairies. jj
T. A. A
A T TO R NM
GREH
All ;busluessS
prompt utter.UH
a yJMJjI
\\ ill %'*’ ci' %.
Cult illllHLjA
B .ijM '
1 >l*.
PH 1 >/C7J
On u s at Gem I>uilHHH|
I >I<OI H
When riot at my ollice^BSHH
resideiieo mi Kullroad s(■■■■■
HT Will use Magneto
sm when desired.
OPERATIVE AND
(Office
Barnesville, -
JOIIII Moytlp
HAVING returned to MBsl
found up Etalrs, neurA^H
warranted. Perfect
me. f.
# BARJ3KkW|
Robert f. miller amiHg
having consolidated iheVH|
the convenience of
wish to announce to the publMjj
ter prepared than ever to
art. Every thing will be l
no pains will be spared toflHH|
1 ize them.
jMilu^E
Wesleyan Female^
STAUNTON, VII(^K
Opens September 20tli,
Schools |k Young
States. Surroundings beautiM
surpassed. Pupils from
TERMS AMONG THE BEST ■
Board, Washing, English course!
German, Instrumental Miisic, AI
year, from Sept, to June, $238. J
write to m
Rev. WM. A. HA RKIS, D. D.J
Va. V
Hit 'il
rflHE undersigned has located in’
X wltli£ view to conducting a j
Merchant Tailoring J
Is prepared tho demand®
English and French cl
Broadcloth, Doeskj
andj such goods. Old clothing repal
and J
MADE ?l§
In short everything In the taUo^Bg
Promptly
A TEST oflH
SKILL AND WOn
Is respectfully askedl^Ej
Satisfaction Guai®
Call at the room opposite
rick building, Respectfully,
jans-lv c.
HAMILTON FL MAI,®l
Well selected course of study. SpecitJßS
rnent for ail the ornamental branches.
large, able and experienced. Lx
for recreation. Excellent buildings, let® t
four stories, containing 125 apartment®*
modious chapel, Nice Recitation, On,*®
Play and Bath rooms. Wanned by ste;lH
lighted with gas. Only two young ladles dH
a room, Charges lower than any school ofh<3
equal advantages in the United States.
begins Sept., 11, 1882. For terms, cataio.fi
and further particulars address J TANARUS, PAT, 3
SON. President, Lexington Ky.
mm Fariii Li
FO ©-ALE.*
By virtue of an order from the court
ry for Upson county will be sold before tifH
house door in the tov.-n of
county on the first Tuesday in Pciobei-Hl
the real estate belonging to the estate®*
T. Rose late of said county deceased, tuwl ■
said county consisting or lots of laud nujß
67, 68, 69 and 70 and half of lot numbrn
the tenth district of said county
of lot number 101 ai.d 177 ~. acres of W,
102 iu the same district the whole ■
1431 acres more or 1 -ss Jji said district®
one of the most valuable and deirab9H|
land in middle Georgia It Is
line of the Upson county Rallioad s flWl
Barnesvlhe ands miles from ThomaJß®-
l.s on the place one eight room fni*Ep
good gin house, barn, stabies and ■■■lflf
out houses in good repair, also a
run by water power, and unite a imUv
tenant houses. There is also on ti. c Wgffe
er settlement consisting or a six
dwelling spb-ndid new burn <g,, t
other necessary our buildings in g
a splendid oichard or select fruit.
The lauds will be sold in parcels tJK; .
chasers. TL. termo of sale w ill bejflfcir
and one hair due la 12 months seeurtHP
I'ae laud. Parties desiring to nnr.i,Jßg
municaie with me at The Rock, t; a MH
parties can also make terms as tflH
meat. All of said laratsWbfesaki
of the heirs and ..•reditqr&-rtPaßßrt#^B|%
August 15 ih,
EORGIA-PlffS
Application
nary of Pike cum®
| term aft ei expire*;, j** '■ hy.-A,;