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IN THE SPRING.
Io lbs spring the merry robin Jam pi about
tbe l» »o;
Id tbe spring Adolphus Bilej pot« bii ml*
ikio cap io pawn.
Tn the spring fair Musldwra wear* a rosebud
In her loaks;
Id the spring the painter paintetb, “Use
Jane*’ Salve,” open the rock*.
Id the spring the oilip blossoms io the lea*
•nd on the hill* ;
To the spring the blnshing maiden take* her
■hare of bilious pills.
In the spring- the weary husband beat* the
carpet in »be grove ;
Id the spring the weary hatband wreitle*
with the parlor stare.
In the sprirg onto the poet (?) aaith the
editor ‘-Get hence !"
Id the spring the circo* poster decorates the
coai-yard fence.
In the spring within the forest blow* the
eiolet, the fern;
la the spring the email boy ahirera aa be
f*zes on the churn.
In the spring the happy poet think* forever
he would lire;
Id the spring the can’* c< nnecttd with the
canine’* naratire.
la tha spring the downy cloud-ship mils
serenely o’er the flats;
Id the spring the maiden's fancy lightly
torna to thought* of hat*.
In the spring thrangh rosy bowers doth the
brooklet wend Its way ;
Id the rprirg—hot wherefore should I thus
fire “Geotle Spring” away T
Wrmn for Tin watict.T.]
My Neighbor’s Baby.
ST MRS. VIOLA JACKSON.
••Yes. I sm tired just a little hit, bnt not
too tired for a talk with you. So come to
me right now, you brown-eyed, laughing
Rttie one See, here ore ever so msnv flow
ers. I picked 'kPUJ on the rond side, just
down the lane a little war. Yioleta and
daisies and wild verbena, and one wee hit of
a wild rose; they are yooia, every one of
them. Certainly they are I can get plenty
more—a whole hnndfol of wild flowers.
••Why. I feel to-day that all the flower*
bloom for me, and that the birds sing lor me
too as well as for other people There 1
you’re paoght the rose in yonr little fat
dimp’ed hand
“What do you know ahont roses, yon wee
angel? Whv yon haven’t been in this great
big beautiful world one short year yet. 1
remember it well. They told me that yon
had come, and were a tiny little ugly thing
that bod to be curried about on a pillow
lest yonr soft little bones might be broken.
Po yon know what I snid ? Now, don’t
look so saner at me out of those great
brown eyes I ssid, ‘I don’t want to *ee the
little ngly thing,' and I didn’t. I waited
eyer so long, and when I came over one
bright, cool October day, yon were a very
respectable looking baby, and hud been
named Mary, (the sweetest name on earth,
and then 1 protested against any one ever
being permitted to call you Mollie.)
“Aid all this was hmdly a year ago. and
now just look at you 1 O, my I You’ve
left off your long robes—r.o longer a baby,
eh? Bless those little round arms and pretty
dimpled feet I Short dress, indeed ! Who
would have thought it ? Now don’t you
laugh po. Yon know every word I say—of
course yon do. At any rote, you know
woman-like, that I love you, and am saying
sweet things to von. (How quick the wo
man-nature shows itself I)
“Making step* too 1 Little paltering feet
—I did not expect to bear their music so
*oon.
“Now you've caught the whole bunch of
wild lower* and ran away, looking back
so cunningly. You want to romp, do yon?
There! I’ve esnght you. and mpsn to run
right into thep rlor with yon. That’s what
yon like. Don’t gaze so wendronsly at that
picture of Beatrice on the wall. She’s beau
tifol, but so sad 1 don’t want your pretty,
lsugbing brown eyes to see anything sad.
No, no! tears will come eoon enough, my
little one, and you will be colled on to shed
yoar share in this great and ofter tearful
world—o. my collar! I’ll just kiss that
little hand until it lets loose.
“0. this little bl«ck Ik ad! I wouldn't
take a hundred dollars for this black, silky
btir of years. And it’s trying to curl, tool
"And ‘mamma’ want* to go to the pic
nic, down on the lake, where the green grass
grows, aud the long gray moss bang* in
beautiful and giaceful festoons from the
trees. How do you kDow that I'm goiDg to
keep you and play nursery-maid ?
41 ‘What do I know about babie*?' The
idea ! Why, I’ve been in a boose with a
baby all my life—l know that you think I
belong to you—you tell me so by your laugh
and co*.
“My ! yon coo like a dove—a real little
dove—only there isn’t a dove in all the wild
wood that can eoo so sweetly. ‘Mamma’
should call her home tbe ‘dove-cote.’
“I'm t* keep you. am I? Won’t you
have a nice time upsetting my work basket
and ink-bottle, ai d tearing my books and
pulling my flowers ; for, of course, you are
to do as you please on that day. 1 wonder
how we will like each other after spending a
whole long summer’s day together ? I won
der if I won’t ft el a little more sympathy for
poor, tired, care worn mothers, who seldom
get a peep at tbe green woods? I wonder,
too, if my heart wod'l expand a little , aDd if
I won’t think o tenei to keep the babies
while mammas’ go to church, and pic-nics,
and elsewhere to find a little recreation and
cheer? I wonder if I will ?
“ Most big enough to go to school,’ you
say with your eyes. Well, your papa and I
went to school just down that little path
that lends over the creek, but the old school
house is gone now ; yet tbe trees are there
atiU, aod tbe cieek runs on jest as it did
when we used to wade io and wash our
bare little feet. 1 can almost see it dow.
though tbe vioes are s* thick. This was
when I was a real baby child, with my First
Header. 0, It seems so long, so loßg, since
I k-ft it to go to a great eollege, with its
many stories aod massive walls, sed some*
times I wish that all my childhood had been
•pent in the little old log scbool-bouse.
• A tear I—cruel thing to come welling
dp at tbe thought of the hallowed put.
* . - to »
And yet I do not pine to he a child again,
although these reminiscences make me so
weak sometimes. But what do yoo know
ef all this ? Now don’t look so at me aod
then at tbe piano. There’s no mosic in my
fingers. Why, I would not give one of your
little cooing notes for all tb* piano* io Lou
isiana, jast now. Here, just yoo lay on the
carpet and grab nt the roses and lilies as
much as yon please, bnt don’t poll all the
pretty feathers oot of the peacock's tail on
the mg; hut just kick your little heels
against him while I run tell ‘mamma’ to go
to the pic-nic."
Etna —Bnt if we failrd to see Stromboll,
we had the fall benefit of Mt. Etna, and this
made up for ranch that might have bopn lost
in the night The snow-clad summit of this
magnificent mast was in plain view and
apparently close at hand long before we
came abreast of its mighty buttresses reach
ing down to the shores of the »ea. Spring
ing from tide level, with no intervening foot
hilia to break the effect of height, and tow
ering upward until an altitude of eleven
thousand feet is reached, this mountain pre
sent* one of the finest spectacles of the kind
to be found anywhere in tbe world. To
give an idea ol her vastness let me say that
her base covers an area of gome seventy
miles in circumference, yet so symmetrical is
her shape and so great the elevation that
the crater, which is said to be a mile in
diameter, seems but like the natural slmrp
point of a perfect cone Not only by her
size and height, however, does Etna impress
one, but equally also by her fine form and
tbe picturesque effect presented hy tbe
graceful wreath of smoke which floats away
like a feathery plume from her glittering
helmet of snow.
Altogether, tbe picture unfolded to view
that calm, beautiful Sunday morning was
one opon which memory may dwell with
emotion* of pleasure for a lifetime. Behind
us lay tbe narrow straits famous in fable and
poetry ; on our right rose this majestic pile;
on the left ran tbe low reaches of the
Culahrian coast, flanked by barren ruin
covered heights, with snow-clad mountains
beyond, and before ns stretched the dark
blue waters of the Mediterranean dotted
here and there with odd-looking and odd
colored sails, some close at hand and others
far away toward the horizon line.—Cor
respondence Washington Star.
A Storv or a Trail—She was u fall,
stoat individual, and sprang out of tbe
wagon as lightly aa a jaybird after a gra s
bopper. He was a little withered, dried-up
weasel, and followed slowly, bringing a
basket of eggs with him They entered one
of our stores and she asked :
“ W hat are ye givin’ for eggs ?’’
“Eight cents,” was the reply of the
counter-jumper.
“Well, here are three dozen.” said the fat
party, “and I’ll take it in calico.”
‘ But I want some yarn to mend my
socks,” said the old man.
“The weather is warm," replied the fat
purty, “and you can go without socks.”
“But my boots hurt my feet," aaid the old
man.
‘ G* barefooted," said she, rather sharply.
Then turning to the clerk, she changed her
tone and remarked : “Young man, please
count out the eggs and give ine four yards
ol calico to match this ’ere dress ’’
“But ” the old man was going to con
tinue, when she raised her huge index finger
and said; “Henry W. D. Spriggin*, them
’ere eggs are mine ; the hens what laid ’em
was mine ; the corn wbat fed ’em was mine,
and I’se going to have a trail on this ’ere
dress as long os Betsy Gowen’s if every toe
on your lett turn to gum-biles. Now.
shut up. And you. young man, yank ofl
four yards of (bat 'ere calico, or I’ll go for
you like a streak av lightnin’.”
The old man shut up and the clerk yanked
off the calico.
Thu Chinks* (^ukstion. —II the people
of California adopt tbe new constitution,
wuich is to be submitted t* them for ap
proval er rejection in May next, no further
legislation will be needed to secure them
against the incursions of Chinese immigrants.
It provides that no corporation now existing
or hereafter formed under the laws of Cali
fornia shall employ, directly or indirectly in
any capacity, any Chinese or Mongolian;
that no Chinese shall be employed on any
State, county, municipal or other pnblic
work, except in punishment for crime. It
declares that the presence of foreigners
ineligible to become citizens of the United
States is dangerous to the well-being of the
State, and that tbe Legislature shall dis
courage their immigratiou by all means
withio its power. Asiatic coolieism is for
ever prohibited in the State, and all con
tracts f*r coolie labor are declared null and
void. The Legislature is directed to provide
the necessary legislation to prohibit tbe io
troduetion of Chinese into. Californit after
the adoption of the constitution. It may
possibly be determined that the clauses in
reference to the employment of the Chinese
by corporations will stand sgainst a contest
in tbe courts of tbe United States, but it is
at least doubtful But, right or wrong, the
poor Chinamen cannot stand up against the
tide of popular disfavor, which ruus so
strong against them.
Wowkn KrasiNO—Did you oversee two
women kiss each other? It’s very fnnny,
They sidle up toward each other and smile a
dty sort of a smile, then they both job for
ward and their lips come together with an
unctuous dryness that has no suction, or
warmth, or life about it. How different
when there is a young man with a mustache
in tbe business! Then they draw down to
each other gently, but firmly, get a good
solid bold with tbeir feet aod bands, the eyes
fondly, tenderly, meltiogly gaze into each
other, the lip* meet first with a gentle pres
sure, and more, until you think tbeir teeth
will give way, and all tbe time the snetion
would discount a force-pump. Oh. there’s
a wouderlul difference!
Whrn the flower of tbe family is out on
an evening racket it’s a bad case of the night
blooming serious.
Tbx man who sighed for tbe wings *f a
dove probably did not know that the leg*
were much better eating.
One of the problem* which puzz'es a magi
cian is how to strike a bee flat without get
ting stung by its demisemiquaver.
Tbx daintiest and most spirituelle lady at
a tea party will sit 00 th* bind leg of her
cbair and eat pickle* when at borne.
19 It* V*i**s •
NEW REM!
Copartnership Notice.
I HAVE this day sold a half interest in my
business to G. f. Turner, and th« *sme
and style of the firm will be known in fotare
as Harper A Turner- R. T. HARPER.
January 9th, 1879.
We respectfully solicit a share of the pab
lic patronage, believing *£ can show as fine
and well assorted stock ®f goods as wifi be
found anywhere. Our stock of
DRY GOODS
Is complete in every particular, and iscMe
a fine asfortment of Ladies’ Dress Goods.
Linens, Rienchings, Domestics, and Fancy
Notions of *ll kinds.
ClotHing S
A new and elegant lot of (Mnthing, of < vi r\
style and quality. Gents’ Underwear a spe
cialty.
%
HATS AND CAPS
To suit tbe tastes of the masses, and at prices
that will meet the requirements *f the trade.
BOOTS AND SHOES!
Oar slock of Boots and Shots, having been
bought at a bargain in the Northern mar
kets, we can afford to sell cheap, and are pre
pared to offer extra inducements to the trade.
Furniture!
We have also a large lot of Furniture—Bed
steads, Bureaux, Wasbstands, Wardrobes,
Tables, Cbair*,,’etc —which we will sell at
extremely low figures. Bed room setts •
specialty.
GROCERIES.
Special attention is called to our stock ol
Groceries, which is quite lurge, and com
prises every article kept in that line.
Our stock is being constantly replenished
with Goods that are carefully selected by ex
perienced buyers, and are bought for cast)
front first hunds, thereby enabling us to setl to
advantage—both to ourselves and customers.
Withal! these facilities we are prepared toes
Libit at all times a complete general stock,
and par'ies wishing to buy can always find
some specialties at very low price* at oar
store. Give ns a call.
Harper <fe Turner.
11l w
Thi* important organ weighs but about three
pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about
three gallons; passes through it at least once every
(half hour, to nave the bile and other impurities
I strained or filtered from it. Bile is the natural
! purgative ©f the bowels, and if the Liver becomes
j torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car
ried through th© veins to all parts of the system,
and in trying to escape through the pores ©f the
skia, causes it to turn yellow ©r a dirty bn vn
color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys
pepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Headache, Bili
ousness, Jaundice, Chills, Malarial Fevers, Piles,
Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility fol
low. M brrbll's Hep a tin*, the great vegetable
discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver to throw
off from one to two ounces ©f bile each time the
blood passes through it, as long as there is r.n ex
cess ©I bile; and the effect ©f ©vea a few doses
upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking
skiu, will astonish all who try it—they being the
first symptoms to disappear. The cure of all bili
ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain
by taking HsrATnrs in accordance with directions.
Headache is .generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no diseas© that arises from th© Liver can exist
i/ a fair trial is riven.
SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
LUNGS
Th© fatality of Consumption or Throat and
Lang Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
one-third of all death's victims, ari es from the
Opium er Morphine treatment, which simply stu
pefies as the work of death goes on. SIO,OOO will
Le paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
of Opium, Morphia© or rrussic Acid, can be found
in tha Globs Flower Cough Syrup, which has
cured peool© who are living to-day witn but one
remaining lung. No greater wrong can be done
than to aay that Consumption is incurable. The
Globe Flower Cough Syrup will cure it when
all other means hav© failed. Also, Colds, Cough,
Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the threat
and lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hon.
Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. Smith and Ex-Gov.
Brown of Ga., Hon. Geo. Peabody, as well as
those of other remarkable cures in our book—free
to all at the drug stores —and be convinced that if
| you wish to be cured you can be by taking the
Glob* Flower Cough Syrup.
| Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat,
( when you can get Globe Flower Syrup at same
prie©. For sale by ail Druggists
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
BLOOD
Gray© mistakes ar© made in the treatment of all
diseaaee that arise from poison in the blood. Not
one case of Scrofula. Syphilis, White Swelling,
Ulcerous Sores and Skin Disease, in a thousand,
is treated without the use of Mercury in some form.
Mercury rots the bones, and the diseases it pro
duces are worse than any other kind of blood or
skin disease can be.faPß Pemberton's Stillin
gia or Queen's Delight is the only medicine
upon which a hope of recovery from Scrofula, Sy
philis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can be
reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer.
510,000 will be paid by the proprietors if Mercury,
or any ingredient not purely vegetable and harm
less can be found in it.
Pric© by all Druggists SI.OO.
Globe Flower Cough Syrup and Merrill’
Hkpatinb for the Liver for sal© by all I n
gists in 35 cent and SI.OO bottles.
A. 7. MSEEELL b CO., Proprietor:
PHILADELPHIA. P.*
STILLIgQIA. —— GLOBE IXOWER SYmUP. — — HEPATIFE.
DR. RICE,
37 Court Race, LOUISVILLE, KV,
A regularly ednc&Ud and legally qualified pfevfftdan and tha
mo-t •uccesaful, aa hie practice will peeve. Cures all forma
9* private, ehronio and aaxuaidisaaaea, Spevmfktor—
rhea and Impotexicy, as* the result of self
at us* in youth, sexuaT exoessej in maturer year*, or other
causes, and producing some e f the folic wing effects: Net vous
ness. Seminal Kmissions, Dimness ©1 Sight. Defective Mem
ory. Physical Decay, Pimples ©u Face, Aversion to Society of
Females, Confusion of Ideas, Loss of Sexual Power, «0.,
re dcriag marriage lmprotter ©r nnbappv, are thoroughly
•nd permanently cured. B V IT-.FS
•tired and entirely «rartieeted^ro m (ho system; GON«
ORRHEA, Gle«*t, Stricter#, Piles and other pri
vate diseases quiiTiy eured. Patient* treated by mail orax
prevs. Consultation free and invited, charges
and corrcnpondeno# strictly confidential.
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of joe p.gM, Motto ».y »<ldro«,, teourely Moled, lor thlrtf
iso) cents. Should b. resd by til. Address so sboro,
)®»*h.ur»from» A. U. to IT. U. Buudsyt, 11. 4T. M.
DR. BUTTS
No. 12 K. Eighth St.
St. Louis, Mo.
MARRIED
LI FE ?
Who has had greater experience in the treatment of the
sexual troubles of both male and female than any physician
in the West, gives the seeuits of his long anu successful
practice in his two now wars*, lust published, entitled
The PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE
The PRIVATE M EDiCAL ADVISER
Books that are really Guid.-* an A Self-Instructors in all mat
ters pertaining to BaakaM! and X©manhood, and supply
waut long felt. They are Beautifully illustrated, and in plai*
language, easily understood. The two books embrace 545
pages v and contaia val ankle information for both married and
single, with all the recent improvements in medical treatment
R** 4l what our say; “The knowledge imparted
in Batts' new works ts in no way of questionable char
acter, but is something that every one should know The
*•©**-the victim of early indiscretion; the lan. otherwise
perfectly healthy mavhe, out with waning vigor in thepriroe
of life, and the Woman, in misery!
from the many ills her sex is hefrl
to."—St. Louis Journal.
POPLLAh PRICBm €o eta. each I
both io one volume. $1; in cloth and!
gilt, 26 ets extra. Sent under seal, oiJ
receipt of price is money or stamps. (
BUHTTHAM’S
| WARRANTED BEST AND CHEAPEST.
1-riccß reduced. Inmphlet free.
a ILLDIG SUPPLIES.
Works : Christiana, Lancaster county, Pa.
Office : 23 S. Beaver st., York, Pa. n 29 ly
CJMO K T?
BLACKWELL’S J
• M Durham mm 4
TOBACCO
PRESCRIPTION FREE!
For the spefdv ( lire orseiuia.l Weakness Lost
Manhood and’all disorders brought on by indis
cretion or excess. Any l>ruggist has the togre
dieuts. *»r. W. Jt((llA A CO., No. IS*
Wml Sixth Street. CineUuutU, O.
Ah BSIHS m an<l Morphine hshlt cored,
flPiliEyi
- ill IWI 10 w B Squaw
W B 890 111 w urtblngv.fi, Grs.ll. Co., lad.
rVWsifltM *8 to $7. Re'rolyer. BB _JBgL
fc!.so. Over 100 latest Novelties
t » A*'uw»a«l.So.SupiilyCo.NMhTUiaTMm.~ W 9
Ucan make money faster at work for us
than at anWhiog else. Capital not re
quired ; we will start you. 812 per day at
home made by the industrious. Men ,wo
men, boys and girls wanted everywhere to
work for us. Now is tbe time Costly out
fit and term* free. Address Tbcb & Co.,
Aujusta, Maine.
DrOll business you can engage in. 85
DPaO A(o $5lO d a y made by any
worker ol either sex. right in tbeir own lo
calities. Particulars and samples worth §5
free. Improve yonr spare time at this busi
ness. Address 6tik*om & Vo., Portland,
Maine.
Gullett’s Improved Cotton Gin.
Plantkrs are respectfully invited to ex
ainine this Gin before bovine I will keep
sample Gip, with Feeder, Condenser and
Gullelt’s Dnnhle Revolving Cotton Pres*
(dispensing with a lint room.) always on hand
lor exhibition. We guarantee the most per
feet satisfaction to pnrchaseia. in every par
ticular. T'e price will be reduced next s>-a
son from $4 to 83 50 per sow on the Gins,
and train 81 25 to 81 on the Feeders. I
refer nil to the accompanying certificates of
our cotton buyers and planters of last year,
und to the certificates of well known planters
who are nsing Gullett’s Gins, as to the extra
prices obtained tor cotton tinned on them.
J A. BEKK.4, Ageut.
Griffin, Ga., March 10,1879.
Griffin. Ga., March 1.1879.
We, the under.-igned, are using theGulJett
Improved Light Draft Cotton Gin The
Gin is of superior workmanship For fast
ginning, safety in running and light draft ('o
do the same work.) we think it has no equal;
bat the most important feature is the attach
trier t for opening and improving the sample.
The best cotton is improved by it so as to
bring from to cent, and stained and
dirty cotton from % to 1 cent per lb. more
in the Griffin market than on other Gins
(Signed) W J Bridges, T W Manley, J T
Manley.
Griffin Ga,Miv 17 1878.
To J A Bede*, Agent for the Gulletl Gin
Man’f'g Co. Griffin. Ga :—At your re
quest, we, planters and dealers in cotton, give
t the public our opinion of your (Jin. We
take pleasure in saying to all in need of new
Gins tba* it is now a well e-tablisbed fact
that cotton ginned on these Gms brings a
higher price in our market than any other,
and the Gins are growing in public favor
Cotton ginned on them sold last seasixi at
from % to 1 cent per pound above the mar
ket ptice. Mr. Gullett’s attainment lor im
proving the sample of cotton, we ate satisfied,
is what fie claim* (or it. The Gin appears
to have reached perfection in gin machine v.
(Signed) A C Sorrel, T J Brooks, R P
McWilliams. S B McWilliams, D W Pat
terson. U 11 Sims T J Bloodworth.
1 am also agent lor the celebr-.led Eclipse
Portable Engine, manufactured by Frick &
(to, for tbe counties ol Butts. Spading.
Fuyene and CluytoD. J. A. BEEKS.
mai2B;3m
~THE NEW DAVIS
Sewing Machine
Is now generally conceded to be the best in
use. and thousands have been sold to delight
ed purchasers all over the country. It has
a vertical feed, runs at a high rate of speed,
which, combined with its peculiar feed,
enables the operator to turn the work at anv
angle while the machine is in lull motion,
without changing the tension or length of
stitch, consequently it can easily do in a
given time one-third more work than any
rotary or four motion feed. It excels in
hemming, felling, tucking, braiding, cording,
binding, quilting, ruffling, etc , aod lor all ol
which it has attachments especially adapted.
It uses a shuttle-which holds a large amount
of thread, and which gives an even tension
iu tbe most simple manr.tr. For sale by
G. W. Henderson.
Hampton, Ga , April 19— ly
* I % v
fflmsmt
OFFICE N? 17 7 W.4 T r’ ST
~ CINCINNATI , O.r
L.C. NEBINGER. Manager
mm
lefflbl
tesr For sale by lx. E. Vi i»e, li..unoou,
Ga. sep!3-ly.
Furnitur e.
S. S. Middleton,
HAMPTON, GA.,
Ha* on hand a large and assorted stock of
FURNITURE,
Bureaus. Bedsteads, Chairs, Secretaries,
Wardrobes, Cupboards,
And is prepared to manufacture to order
anything you need to furnish your house
Upholstering and Cabinet work done in
the latest style and with dispatch.
Coffins alw«vg on hand.
*
week in yoar own town. 85 oat
VvUSt free. No risk. Reader, if you
want a business at which persons of either
sex can make great pay all the time they
work, write for particulars to H. Uai.lktt &
Co. Portland, Maine.
Scbscribs for The \Vkkklt--81 50 per
aomm.
Reduced to $1.50 !
4
i
THE
HENRY
COUNTY
WEEKLY.
prH!I«nKI> KVPRT FRIDAY
AT
Hampton, Henry County, Ga.
A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, SOUND
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