The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, April 01, 1886, Image 3

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■- - • THE MONITOR. D. C. SCTTON, Editor lit. VF.KKON GA. APRIL 1. 1886. at the Post-office at Mt. VkKSON. O A., AS SECOND CLASS MAVTKK. ■ n_ji —~~~ ‘ r SUBSCRIPTION RATES. (CASH IS ADVANCE.) Twelve months.: Mix tadntbs. ;..u four mouth*... *Bl If payment is not made iu advance, nr within the Brit month nflkV the nitmo is entered ou <>or it will hr charged for at the rate oi »*\s dollar* per inftiUn. K ATES UP ADVERTISING. One inch one insertion §UOO Each nnbacquent Insertion *y Out* inch one Mouth One inch three months “ One inch six months,... 700 One inch twelve months 10 < » Out- qmuter oolrttnn one mouth 000 O *e ipnirter cnliHtiiitwelvemmitliH.2s.oo t »nc hnlf column one uiont.lt < .>0 t >n«* hnlf column twelve months.. .40 00 t )ne column one month 10 o<| Oue cointuu twelve months .75.00 Advertisements from responsible par ti h will be published until ordered out, tvhcii the time is not specified In the cnpy, *n<l cliurgea mude itecordin({ly. Communications for inrliviilihfi benefit nr of a personal character will he chalg e l for the ••siuicur advertisements. Ic*gal advertisements, the rates of which urn regulated by law, are payable in advance. AnniUlhCerarnli of for nftivc, live dollar*, ill advance. Iu accwrdance withanart of the I.ejli.datuve. legal advertisements will he inserted in the Monitor at the fallow in* rates . K„r «a.»ti UK) wards. i.< rents far Men in sertion for the- first r-fifi- insertions: Mr weh tmhrauent insertion, ;F> rents fia- eneh inn words. No a vertiseinent eanslth red less tint a lest words. Kneli and every Ward anil initial, including caption, ilati; and signature will lie counted- Every figure connteil as a Word. LOCAL ITEMS. —Front again this morning. —Mr. M. N. Mcßae of Jesnp Is here. Hr Morrison report* a citsc ol men ingitis near town. Mr. M. A. Curry tv as dotVtl from Dublin last FSutnrduy. Mr. *E R M.-Phall has returned from hia visit to CochtAn, —Mis* Tinker, of Dublin, is visiting j | ITrnfiit* of thin coniity. —Mr. ff* H. SnM»n*lt of S^v Wah drumming aruriti'd here last Friday —Mr. T. K. Hagers hits gone to .Ma- j «on to attcn<l the commercial or,liege. Mr. Aaron Ferst, of tin* Grocery fin.is* of M. Ferst A Co.. rtnVannah Ga., Ava* iu town on Tuesday. AVe are anderobligations to 3emitor Joseph E. Urown for reeent favors, and which are greatly appreciated. Mr. Bailey Chance, a former resi dent of tht« county, but bow ufCamden, is visiting old friends here. Mr. .Tnlins 1). Ilirseh, representing Reiser nnd Stern. Tobacconists, Savau nab, wan in town last Friday. Mr. Duncan I». Mcßae. represent ing the lions* nf Tinslev A Smith, was Id town the hitter part of last week. Wc noticed the genial face of Mr Duncan -T. Mcßae, Lnthair's tinteruria jug uii-reliant, at church here Sunday. —Look out fur the advertisement of Messers. A. Peterson & Co. next week. And when it does come take cate for low pricc-s. Mi»s Urnuie Mcßae and Miss Baker Fl,cd the light of tticir conntenmices upon this othee for a few minutes on Tnnuilay. , yf r . Philip Mcßae went to Dublin | r>n Sunday, for the purpose of uccompu- i trying hi* wil« borne. They arrived on Mondrty eveuing Representative Cri«|i, of Georgia, W been elected speaker pro tern of the ■ H.rnse of lU'prMetatives during the ah xeuoe of speaker Carlisle. —Mr. J. W. Barnet, traveling sales-' tuta ot Onstave Eckstein k Co., Dry Unods aud Notions, was iu onr place on Friday, plying hia avocation. —Dr. Jack returned to town on Mon- j 1 d»v. after an absence of several days on professional business. He left ftgiut) on Yesterday on the boat, for a more geuial ilime- He got liia tail frostbit up here. Mr*. Polly Sharpe, nu aged lady abort* seven ty-flve years of age, died on Monday night Inst at the residence of; her aon-iu-lasr. Mr. Daniel Hughes, four ruileH south-east of this place. —We were iudabted to the kinduess rt f Col. Loud for a seat in hi* buggy on | * « trip to Long Pond last Sutcrduy where ’ we formed Home valued new acquaint- J «nec». and materially add#d to oar cir eolation.. [■•Can February March?” asked a pun ster. with a sickly smile. "Perphape r r*ot,’’ replied the quiet man; “but April " The punster bad not mother - . ■ Married.—On Wednesday evening March 24th 1886, at the residence of the bride’s father, Mr. C. B. MeLemore, ' by John J. McArthur J. I’., Miss Lizzie i MeLemore to Mr. A. A. Peterson, all of 1 ; Montgomery county. 1 —John J. McArthur Esq. of Long j j Pond, this couuty, killed, last week,four ! rattlesnakes, averaging about five feet | in length—making twenty feet of snake for the week; and it wasn’t suuke wetk either, in that district. ( —Mr. B. F. Herring left this place x yesterday for Atlanta, whither he goes to ~ represent the M. E. Church, South, of j ( Mt. Vernon, in the Young Men’s Chris tian Assoacation at its annual celebratiou I, commencing to-day. I v —Mrs. Fields Clifton nnd Sirs, Jesse ! < •I. Fountain honored this office with j 1 their presence on Thursday last while we : 1 wc were engaged at the press. Mrs. C. , i manipulates tho press like she had 1 "served a tour” at the business. 1 1 —Daniel Manning. Secretary of the ' Treasury, was stricken w ith paralysis a week ago, and has lain in a very critical r t i condition ever since. There is little hope that he will lie able to resume the the duties of his office again soon if over, ( —Wo would call the reader’s attention t to the prospectus of the Savannah Daily , Times, to be found iu our paper to-day. , It is a good paper, and we shall he glad , to get it (n exchange, so that we can , miderstandiugly give a more extended | notiee of it —George WihlW, one of iho alleged 1 Montgomery couuty moonshiners who 1 shot, at some United State officials some months iigo, mid itho was indicted for i illicit distilling, was arrested by Deputy t Marshal Hall near Fernandina laStTliurs- I day. —Mrs. Sarah Peterson, living some j five nr stk miles east of this place; was going home from theinfair of Mr. A. A. Peterson on Thursday night, last, when her horse allien suddenly at some ob ject near the roadside, throwing her out of the buggy and breaking otfe of her arms and dislocatiug tho other at the j wrist, | —Mrs. James Higgs, of Higgston in , this county, did Us the honor to call on , ns at our office on Batnrdav evening and ( settle her husband’s subscription. And t not content witbthut, she subscribed for | her daughter, Miss Aliee, at Savannah, , and paid thut. The Indies are always , welcome at this office, but doubly so 1 when they bring their pocketbooks and I divide. Ntrs. Higgs is mi oat iltl able lad}, and we know Miss Alice ts pretty. • Head the advertisement of the At lanta Constitution in another column of the Monitor to-day. It the “old relia ble” in Southern newspuperdrltU. We did not fully fully realize how necessary to human enjoyment tho daily Constitu tion is, until we were deprived of it for a short time recently. We do not np preeeate the sunshine until bight de rives us of it. The Constitution has no rival in the Sonlli, ami we would not give it for any two northern journals we have ever seen. —Mr. G. W. Dunham, who lives a few miles from town, had a child, about four years old. to get a shirt button up j its nose a few days ago. He had read in a newspaper, that to apply his month to the child's mouth in such a case that the 1 object could be blown out. As Mr. D. | is a gentleman who reads to profit nnd profits by wbat be reads, be at once de - termiued to test the merits of this reme dy. Applying his month to the child’s, j ! and •! finger upon the other nostril, lie 1 blew suddenly and vigorously, when the j button was promptly expelled, nnd the ' j child relieved. Thus a good newspaper | in good bauds, saved a great deal of suf -1 j sering and probably a surgical operation, s j A Sad Death. We very much regret to learn that j Mrs. Dr. ,T. 13. Reynolds, of Lumber, City, whose serious illness we announced | two weeks ago, died ou Saturday night. | the 27tii ultimo. Mrs. Reynolds was' a most accomplished lady, in the bloom of young womanhood, find was married to Dr. Reynolds just three weeks and two days before her death. She was n step daughter of Mr. T. B. Adams of this county, find had many warm friends in this community, besides relatives, to whom her dentil Is ft sore bereavement. We teDder io the relatives and friends, of the deceased, and especially to the be reaved husband, whose honey moon has thus beeu cut short, and whose bridal chamber lias been converted into a char nel house, our heartfelt sympathy uud udoleiico. “Come to the bridal chamber Death. Come ' Whin life is sweet and hope is bright. * * ! And thou art terrible.’’ —— “Captain, what was the matter with your son when be died?” “Nothing the matter with him when lie died exept that be was dead.” | “Pretty sick, though, before he died, wasn’t be?” “Well, he wasn't as peart as he had been." “Died a na.ural death, I suppose?” “Yes.” ‘'Whiskey?” “Whiskey Arlunsaw Traveler. Chinese Courtship. New York Journal. "A Chinese love letter! Have I any old-fashioued Chinese love letter iu my trunk? Have I a gilt-edge Chinese bill, et-donx with a monogram like a crow’s track? There was never a love lottor written in Chin* se. No Chinese maiden ever penned a billet-doux or sent a valen tine.” Father sadly was this said by a roman tic young Chinaman, Mr, Hong Wing, who lives in Mott street and !i» noted among the Chinese for tho skill with 1 which he plays on the mandolin. "In Chinn," continued lit-, “a man never sees his w ife until bo has beeu 1 wedded to her for life, and sometimes ho does not see her then, for slio may re-* j fuse to remove her veil until three days i have elapsed after the wedding. If he doesn’t like her lie cannot get a divorce, ; but he may marry another wife, nnd j then another, and another, until ho has | gone through the blindfold lottery often enough to hit upon oue that suits him. j In China every one may lmVe ns many wives as ho pleases, and I have known men of somewhat moderate means to : have six and eight wives. Some of the : Chinese Croesuses have buudereds of i them. There was an old Chinese bach- j elor who took it into his head to get ! married one winter, and he married 200 ; wives before lie got through. The lost j wife is the favorite, but the first Wife is the boss,” "If a man never sees his wife before • their wedding, how does he make love to her.” "He doesn’t make love to her. If is mother arranges the match and his fu ture mother-in-law makes love to him. It is a sour courtship. Children are formally engaged to other children that they have never seen at the tender age of 0 and 10, nnd after engagement of 10 1 or 12 years they get married.” "Doesn .voting Chinaman ever marry j his cousin?” “No; a marringeof cousins was never heard of in the whole Chinese Empire, j A man may no rnofe marry hia cousin in j China than in England, lie may marry i his deceased wife’s sister. You talk about your old families here, nnd your I oldest familes are only three generations | old. In Bostoti there are a few families j four or five generations old. In China j families are seventy-five and eighty gen- i (•rations ild ami (Very member has a, complete record ofh is ancestors for all D ose generations. Now the remotest j kinship prevents marriage in China, and j if two iamilieshave the faintest, imagine- , ble kitftftip seventy --five generations back 1 their children cannot marry. Not only is this t’no, but pf*opio of the some j uame, between whom tiic longest gen-j eulogy cannot show a trace of kinship, < cannot tlngry." "What are the most cominou families , in your Cotin try?" “The Chens, tile Wongs, atid the | Lees, The Chens are the Smiths of j China, the Wongs are f lic Joneses and j the Loos are tho Browns. A Mr. Chen j would marry n Miss Wong, but he j wouldn’t marry a Miss Chen. Perhaps ; that is the reason tho old folks make the ; mutches. It prevents the Chons from fulling in love with on another.” j “Are the Chinese ladies cultivated?” I “Oh, yes. They can read and write | and draw and paint and emborider. i They never go out on the street with: j their husbands. If a Chinese man and 1 I woman were to walk arm-in-arm ou the I street in their country as American men and women do here they would be mob- I bed. The women stay Indoors. If they !go to visit their mother they take con- I veyances. Sometimes they may lie seen walking iu the parks with their chil dren." “Yon are married?” “Yes.” I i “To a Chinese lady?” “N'o. To an American. I came to j this Country when I was a boy 11 years old. Though I was 9,000 miles from j China my mother bethrotbed mo to a little Chinese girl whom I had never; seen. My mother used to write rue how 1 I small the Chinese girl’s feet were, and! how pretty she was, and what a beautiful cat-like nose she had. When 1 was 20 years old my mother sent me n letter.say ing that I was old etjongh to get mar ried, and must come back to China and marry the girl.” "What did you think about it? ’ “I thought I was old enough tp get ! married, aud so I fell heels over queue I in love with an American girl in Nevada 1 and married her. We bad our picture j taken, aud I sent it to my mother with 1 1 an account of the wedding, which I hail i translated from an Amcricau newspaper i into Chinese.” “What happened?” ! “The next thing I knew my ancle and and four of ray cousins csnin on from 1 ! China to the United State aud had me arrested for bigamy. I was taken before ' 2 a court and tried. My udclc my four j 1 cousins and thirty-five other Chinese wit i nesses, wont on the stand aud swore that I had a wife in China.” 1 “What did yon think then?” •'I thought I was in a box, as you Americans say. The Judge asked the I witnesses bow old I was when I left China. They said I was 11 years pld. He naked them if I Imd married the girl iu I Chiua. They replied Mint my mother bad ! picked her out for me. and that in Chin ese law that was tho same as marrage. ’ ; The Judge said that, they didn’t lave ' attv Chinese statutes in this country, and j *■ *■ •| my uncle innocently replied that he 1 ; would send to China tor some, livery hody in the court laughed, nnd ns 1 had lived in the town ever since I came to America, nil knew that l had left China a little boy, nnd so the jury acquitted me of the charge of bignrny. My uncle told the Judge Mint he would be beheaded when he went back to China, which was fa monstrous fib with which niy nhcle in intended to scare tho Judge. I have never been hack to China, nnd T suppose 1 the little girl whom T never saw is ’ k a grass widow. Poor child!” i • ♦> What our Neighbors Say About Us. • (>. wiul some pow Y the giftie gic ns. I To si r'mil sols as ithers see us; It wait frai nioiiy n blunder tier us. And foolish notion." Burn*. We have received n copy of tho Mont goery Monitor, a new, four-pace, ti col umn paper, published at Mount Vernon, ; On., by IE <’. Sutton, Esq. It presents a handsome appearance, and its columns were well filled with entertaining matter. | Success to yon, neighbor.— lteidsviilc | Enterprise. We are i;i receipt of the first num ber of fbe Montgomery Monitor, a ! twenty-four column folio, neatly prin- I ted and published at Alt. Vernon. It is : a bright.,newsy sheet, and under the j able management for its editor We pro prediot for it success in the journalistic arena.—Dodge Cfounty Journal. We are in receipt of tho Monitor, n neat six column folio, published at Mt. Vernon. (In., by D. O. Sutton. We wish the Monitor n longer mid more prospering life than the enjoyed by the ; Emn : re State. —Dublin Gazette. fTbanks. brother, but wo are no reJn j tion to the - Empire State—neither by blood or marriage. — Ed. Monitor, j The Montgomery Monitor, a newspa l per recently started at Mt. \ onion by | l). ('. Sutton I’-sq., has made two visits |to this office. Wo wish Mr. Sutton much success iu his new field. Dublin Post. | The Montgomery Monitor, a paper j edited by D. C. Sutton, is on our table | anil is full of local news, and it starts on | with the evident determination ofbubd ingnpa live newspaper and advancing its section. It is deserving of hearty .sup port by the people of Montgomery, and ! we take pleasure in recording it, among lour exchanges. EI I i jay Oounier. ,-- - - R;>v. Ci. R. W. Autbonya brother of |lev. J. !>. Anthony oT Spring Hill, this ■ county, who was formerly on this circuit j committed suicide, at his home in Jeffer- j ; son County Ala., on the‘2/th ol lebunry-. J ! His father, who lived a few miles gwav. } died on the same day about tho same j ; hour, and was buried in the sulne grave yard at the Same time. *-♦ j Out of seten thousand bills Introduced | ! in the preseut Congress, threw have be ! come laws. T TI K TROY SPRING WAGON AND WHEEL WORKS, TROY, OHIO. '.GAD WAG'G '■ Manufacture for the Trade, SPKIKB tfJRGKS, jrn? SEATS, r" SOLID and STICK suaniES, &c. .?/,/, c trouK wjutajurTiin. Drrp us a postal card unrt wo will direct, you to our agent nearest von, or furnish you Catalogue and Prices. Troy and Wheel Works, TrAy, OHIO. FIRST GLASS—Grocers Keep It. JllSlit i. i . Mgr »iii ? a \y a --1: f. ■ /\ e = s 2 ill r L' A fa * 3 e— i 3 * fa* = 11 Co TT? III! -lifer ■'C' "•«<' Were witsbed wit!) ELECTRIC LIOITTSOAP WffhoTit RiihMnir. Flrut < gxtrn naif* It. ImL Ueikliinf; In tho tmnAl iißiiiivr Ih «lf<>|«|f»di v !mr<l work ; it * <-ftrM jou out and tin* clotiif* too. 2d. Try r. plan and inmf flvf isi i% Irtr E V4ECTKIC I, ;h H T SO VC*. S.»v« H Tlm<-, hnlxir, tun*’.*', and 1 lo(h«k. I n» <ll - tbt- %v .***|» jx r of «ftcl* bar. oi!Dcr.b NOfjcnxD. ATKINS SOAP CO. INDIANAPOLIS. 7NT). » ■ ■ . ) ( JAS. McNATT & CO.. a l 1)E I .Elis IX G-IEIsriELKvYLIIL IYELLELCLK.A-InTIDISE, >1 AND ; LEADER IN LOW PRICES, ; MOUNT VERNON GA, . j Keep constantly on bond, n full line of PRY-GOODB, GROCERIES, HARDWARE, ' CLOTH INO, HATS * CAPS. BOOTS Sc SHOES, (ROOKERY, GLASSWARE, GUANO. , DRUGS, & MEDICINES. GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. An<l nny and every other thing Von mny wish to buy. We sell Flour, (Extra Family) nt .■?<! 0(1 Y’ barrel. Bacon (bulk,) side*, nt :'7 00 )' hundred. “ “ shoulders nt 85 7". ');* hundred. I’rinta 5 |«' 7 cents yard. Fluids 7] oenty 'jtt yard. GotVee 8 (it 10 Hi to (tie dollar. Corn ‘.lO eents 7' bushel, and everything else in proporlioti. | Fresh Garden seeds kept always on hand. New Goods arriving) every week. \v o would say to the purchasing public that it will pay them to enll-nnd examine onr Htook before purchasing elsewhere. nich 18 80 Gui. i Wra. M. McLEMGEE, MT. VERNON. GEORGIA, 11 lu AIXJI AIITI IIS FOR ZDIKYY GOODS, iistotiolys, <»<‘iieriii\l t'l’flmiuliso , BOOTS, SlloES, CLOTHING am. HATS; CHC.IGE FAMILY GIiOCERIES, iNcnnoiNn a an: BEST COFFEE IN THE STATE; CROCKERY, AA < >< >l)r.N \V A 1113. GARDEN SEEDS, SEED POTATOES, ST AT IONAIIY l’A( ‘K A( I ES, JEW ELK V, ETC., ETC. PI.FASF, ASli FOR WIIAT YolT \V \ X r V . I GIBE TO SHOW MV GOODS. ’ I AGE LEADING EAMIGVyrKDfCINES L>'d E\ STtKIK, INCLUDING'^ i>r. Cl.tr'k s Blood owl i.iver Fills, Itrt inoti’a Belief and Bunion’s N’ervo j and Bono Oil. r SEET. CIIEAEEB THAN THE CHEAPEST. Give lneo trial before purchasing else where, [3 iB-'B(j.-ltn, , „ . - , ■ nim^i****** U*..« MU «» 4 « -rs PROFESSIONAL CAKDM. D. C. SUTTON, Ai » At. I .aw, MT. V EAR NON, GA, j WLf.f. I'KACTM'K ill Hit: HIJVtTH.J JII>• *i« * HeoIIITs l t,r M< i’y coiintv, tin Hii)m rior *-oiirtH ui t rht* Oc«»»n*c < 'iicuit, tlic Hiuh fir.*-. *mii t nf thu > Htiitfj ofin, iinti fiic 1 iiiUtl Din trid Court at siivriiiir]i. (’oll*< tioiin 11 »:*• 1• • »*n i tii* iiHiial t riiis, j »tuiiptio hh olmm ; i tl in paying tlic Kiimt; over when collect! «J. 11. VV. CARSWELL, ATTORNEY AND COU,*' ELLOB _A_T LAW, MOUNT V ERNON, GEORGIA. Praetie. sin Montijonu ry, latureris, ian.ui* net. Tatnall, Telfair, Dodge and Appling counties. (:s~ll—’t>li~ly. i i i " ; CHAS. JD. JLiOTJJD, ATTORNEY AT LAW BIT. VERNON, GA. Will practice in the. eouitu of tlic Oconee Circtiif and in Emanuel and Tatnttll eniintieK i,t tlie Middle Circuit and in tic; State and Cniteel State, courts. HPjJViAL. ATTENTION OIVKU CASE.? 11l VOIVIifG I.AHD Til FES. [ 1 11 Mi ly. > I i tut. mmzm, m. d„ * ' PRAC ITT/OM.U <-r MEDICINE am. St Bt lERY. Gill pron.p 1 y attended to nt nil hour.* ill tty, J}. T V COUNTY DIRECTORY* Sfif'Eßioit Cotmr. Hon. C. Kibbee, .bulge; C. Smith, fto lieiu.r (ieneiid. Spring term convenes Hh Monday in April; tall term, till Monday m October. Cotifrrr On iriuts. Ordinary, Alexander McArthnr. Court J* Monday ill each ntontb. Slieritf, .1. I>. Mc- Gregor; Olorlc Superior Omirt, S. 15. Morris, Tax Huociver, James Higgs; Tax Collector; A. l’oterson; I 'oiintv Treasurer, T. It. < 'ullinmi, Surveyor, Win. It. Wilkos; Coroner, James It. llai'Hcy. County Commissioneks. John Meltae, Ohalrman, .lolm 1,. Mafl(cvi>, John A. I'etersou, John Wilke, Sr. and John K. (iindv; Clerk, John C. McAllister. Court Ist Monday in each month. Hoard Or Education. U. A. llolmcH, Chnirmiiii: J. T. Me Collongli, /.'l'. Mann, At. under Morrimm; J. I laylou Clcinluits, . oiintv School CninuihnioiuT. Justice Coup.tk. M«. Vernon I.H Irrt lli.lricl. Fi idiu lie fore the 2nd Saturday. M |i. llilglo I I’.; M. C. Adam.:, N. l'i Jaiiies Morris and W. K. Adams, coiiKtahlcs, l.nllknlr P22l't Pihl. Id Saturday. Ja Hits 1 inoo, J. i'.| W. J. Haley, N. V. J. V. Hill, ei instill do. IV in tier Ten .'d»t llistlict 2nd Saturdnv. A. J. Mclntyre,'.!. I'., A. W. C<dlins, N. I'.; \\ . It. Todd, oonaiiible. I.title York J'.ldrd lllstrict a 111 Hntnrdav. Alexander Morrison.). I’.; J. \V. Clements, I'. I. I'nsil ‘iVf.tli Ilistrivt ttli HSlmday, John.!. MeArlliiir, J. I'.; A. M. N. f’etetaon slid fduytoii Morris, con diilduH, ►’»ik JlMtli Hist. Illi Hsturdsv, J. Clny ti.il Clements, J. I’.; J. M. WnltN. f*. '/,M1i1.-e District 2nd Saturday. (1. I’. mount, J. I*.; id. A: Holmes, N. I’. MASONIC, OKIIAE LODGE, No. ‘J'VJ, F. A. M. Monthly communication fourth Sat urday in ouch month at 1(1 o’clock u. in, M. A. CURRY, \V. M, J. E. MATTHEWS, Hco’y. I. O. G. T. Htau or Hove Louoi', No. Hi. M* i trt e very I'ritluy iii^Ur. 11. W. Caiswt 11, W. T.; ?.f. M. I’flr r kgii, W. V. T.; Colin Ah Hm* , H.; /*. !•'. fluiing, I . K.; Al<\. I'd. i </ii, 'J’.: 'l'. A. Hfnith C.: M. IK Ilugln-H, M,; I'oiituiiiii Chi hwi 11, <l.; < Mcli-ntßl, S.; Mihh A fnun A'limis, A. H.; Mihk Mary ht:mh»r<l, l>. M.: Minn Kula J’Mtrhon, 11. H.; Miss .Mary A. Hmilli, h. M. Dan it I J'cf* rson, I*. W. C. i'.; A. H. Ha/» Jinirc, I>. (L W. ('. ’J'. SABOATHSCHOOLS. ■'ll. Vernon l iilon. Mlijali Mcllnt’ iij* t. Meets r.vory SuiKlay cvt at -i o’clorl . ( odiity Sfaiifluy Heliool Annofliilioii. / 'l, Mann, t'l'esiilunt, J. I!. Uniflv, heci » Urv. fiuartcrly M* ' Natimlav ht ft/in th< ‘jiml Miindays i; t cjii uary May A N’ovfihlb r; Ann uni WetlnrstJay hcloro tnc 2iui Htuulay iw AnguHt, each year. RELIGIOUS SER VICE S I’IIEBIIYTEIUAN. (Bev. W. A. JONES, fastor.) Mr. Vkhnon. First and feurth Sundays in each month, morning and evening. Methodist. slt. Veiinon Ciwcit. (Itr:v. A. 11. I’A/KMonr., I’. C.) Mr. Viaivi.v. Every fitli Sunday, and l.;t Sunday night. ISniina. Ist Sunday, and Hatindnyhffi.ru, t.o.sii 1 'onin- 2nd Sunday, and Saturday be fore. Adamkvii i.k. 2nd Sunday aftermam, at 4 o'clock. botbair.- 3rd Hundny and Saturday before, S.v.i'.xa. tth buiuiiiy, uiid Saturday before. Baitikt. (Hey. JOSEPH M. SMITH, Pastor.; I>inii I’oNo.-Ist Sunday, and Saturday be fore. Mt. ViaiNos. .ai d Sunday and Sunday nigl.i. iiciim.i; ( iir.ni. - 2nd Sunday and Saturday before. Wax Him. Hcutooi. lErxi;. 2n ,4 i Kuwktv eve ning. i . Ni.i iTov Scnixi ‘- itli Sunday and Satur day befero alternately-. Oi'i imi MAM . Uii Yjundny and .Saturday L«* fore liUotniutcl;. . i < • • ' hi; 11 i,T* A*4 «<•«<'». d-axa-.H -