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/.V 7 HE SPRING.
In Be Spring Ihf young man's fancy lightly
turns to thought? of lovp,
And all animated creatures to the same
emotion move.
In the Spring the birds of passage woo their
mates npnn the wing.
Ard the kite deserts the small boy weeping
o’er the broken string.
In the Soring the mother beckons—calls the
darling to her knee—
Waves her silken slipper, saying, “PoD’t yon
play no tricks on »,ie !”
In the Spring thp mild esnary carols from
his happy heart.
At d the mild mule kicks his owner over the
potato cart.
In the Spring the turkey stupid roosts with
Cup d on a limb ;
E’en 'ha bzzard in his gizzard feels the wiz-
Kurd poking him.
In the Spring the life throbs quicker in the
puke o? innocence,
And the bootj*ek seeks the cats conversing
on the moonlit fence.
In the Spring the hnnsew'fe tries to make
the turkey gobbler set,
And sows cabbage seed on flower-beds,
thinking it is mignonette.
In the Spring the youth and maiden linger
in the evening air,
And fbp sighs, in broken necents, ‘ Joseph !
don’t yon muss my hair !"
In the Spring thev saunter homewards, never
dreaming it is late.
And eaeh keepeth each from falling ns they
swing upon the gate. —Puck.
A Letter on Ministerial Ability,
Taken from the writings of Wm. Hnnf
ington, a minister of ihc gospel, who never
Imlnnged to any sect church, nor was bap
tised in anyway by wafer. This letter was
republished by William Mosely, M G O. S.
B.:
7o Mine/inter Rnw:
Dkar RnoTnEn in Christ — l wish thee
abundant success in thy labors, and nppirove
Wt.neh of thy proceedings. It was the holy
resolution of the apostle Paul no* to build on
another man’s foundation, or rejoice (as
some do in our day.) in another man’s line of
things, made ready to their hands. Paul’s
helv ambition led him to strive to preach,
where Christ Jesus had not been named, and
that he might see the spirit communicated
and truth established by his own instrumen
tality. He was for ploughing as well as
sowing, jnd as a wise master builder lie was
fond of lnying the foundation ; and others
were ns fond of building bay, strnw and
stubb’e thereon but the work was done at
their peril. Aim more at being a father
than h nurse. Paul says, ‘‘Though ye have
ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet have
ye not many fathers ; I have begotten you.”
I. Cor ,iv : ]5. I bare observed some who
are very fond of breaking through ail bonds
into another mnn’s labors, and with a party
spirit and fiery zeal will draw a wonderful
train after them, both bad and pood, and if
they eon tra n them up in a bigoted spirit
and pet them to hate the poor pastor that
first begot them, then they my. Wo have c#»-
tabliihed a church. This Paul calls “zeal
ously affecting them,’’ but not well. (Jo!,
iv: 17. And il the father of this runaway
Hook exclaims against those thieving meas
ures, as Paul did. (when he called them de
ceitful workers,) then these seaitering gen
tlemen call it being “persecuted for right
eousness sake ’’ However, Peter is of another
way of thinking ; lie calls it being buffeted
tor their faults, and tells them to take it pa
tiently, hinting thereby that they justly de
serve it. I have olten thought that if such
ministers were to go into a barren soil ami
cultivate their own land they would cut a
very poor figure in the ministry. However,
they rather choose to go amongst a simple
flock with warm hearts, as they think such
are easily decern d by a false zeal; and he
Hint is so fot d ol warming his hands at an
other man’s fire gives on* room to suspect
that lie is one of Solomon’s “sluggards, who
will not plough up a barren soil, by reason
of the co/d, therefore he shall beg in harvest
aid have nothing”—nothing tint other men’s
labors. I hare watched some of these poor
simple souls who have been thus led away,
and all their work appeared to he condemn
ing those as disorderly who were more right-
eous than themselves—boasting of their or
der, prejudiced against others, bitter against
those who stood fast in the liberty, (where
with Christ had made them free and refused
to put on the yoke of bondage, viz.: “Juda
>»m,”) and ei joyed the love of Christ. Tea,
some wl om God has called by me, who were
as dear to me as my own life, have 1 beheld
with many tears, being grieved to s e the
•Saviour’s image so defaced on them ; indeed,
they seem to have no more features than an
oyster. This taught me to understand Paul’s
meaning by the following passage: “But 1
fear least by any means” [mark,any means,]
“as the seipent beguiled Eve through his
subtlety, so your uuuds should be co-ruptcd
from the simplicity there is in Christ.” H.
Cor., XI.: 3. Indeed, poor souls, thus led
into prejudices, stripped of simplicity, taught
the art ot scorning and prohibited hearing*
and communing with warm-hearted, sound
ministers ol Christ, are as much priest
ridden as a bloodthirsty papist on Ins pil
grimage, or walking barefooted, doing peu
ance. ( hrist's yoke is easy, and his burden
light; but all other yokes are made ol iron ;
however, the yoke of priestcraft, (which all
sects wear) as well as others, will be destroy
ed by such as enjoy God's anointing, (which
is the Holy Ghost.) Il God's grace reign
and rule in the htart, there will be goed
order in the affections, and such cannot walk
disorderly before men; but if the heart be
not changed by grace, let them appear in as
much order as they will, or talk ever so
much about it, they are but refined Pharisees
at most,—and such are said to dwell nearer
the gates ot bell thau either publicans or
ballots. As to the ; r doubting ol year being
sent of God, it is nothing. If God has sent
tbee, he will bless thee; and let his hand 1*
known toward thee, and his ioc’ignutiou to
ward them that bate you for his sake. Dis
senting churches (counterfeits) have sent out
many into God’s vineyard whom God never
owned, but batb discovered them and sent
them I'flelc ini/'-lt' - ’ whency*'
„ • r "ivk
east lots to rhnose a minister in the plaoc of
Judas, and the lot fell on Malhins, and he
was numbered with Hip eleven Apostles.
Thus the lot of men fell on Mathias, (as it
often does in our times,) but the Saviours
lot fell on Saul of Tarsus; and he, into
whose lap the Lord’s lot fell, must be one
of the chiefest Apostles. This was the
Lord’s doing ; it was marvelous in (he eves
of many. If tied giveth vou to see clearly
your inteiest in his everlasting covenant,
and also a door of utterance to speak
soundly and boldly, and peps before you in
providence to open a door for you to com
municate the word of life io others, sends
many sinners to hear you and opens their
hearts to receive the glad tidings, and you
CBn see silmera renewed in mind and re
formed in life, these are full proofs of your
being sent of God ; and you may say as
4’aul did : ‘‘l am a preachpr, not of man,
nor bv mnn." ‘‘l have chosen you, and or
dained you,” says the Saviour, and that is
sufficient. As u free ngpnt, he often shows
his übsolnte prerogative nowadays in the
some way ; hot such as God sends are. by
stiff gentlemen, (or Jinlaiz-rs) stigmatized
with the name of ‘‘irregulars,” ns if the
God of nil good order dealt in nothing but
irregularities.
However, we believe a mnn commissioned
from hpaven to bo in divine orders though
lie stands aloof from priestcraft, (Judaism.)
Do nothing without consulting Christ.— wear
no yoke but bis; have no master but him ;
covet earnestly his approbation ; rejoice in
no testimony but his ; watch his hand all the
day long, and if God appears on thy side
tlinn hast no cause to fear what flesh and
blood can do unto thee. Stand fast in Christ
Jesus, and you will be as an iron pillar, and
a brazen wall ; but if you are looking for
man’s testimony only, you will be nothing
but u reed shaken with the wind. I can
traly sympath.ze with you, for I have had
enough of ibis false fire cast in among my
sheafs, which I have sowed in tears and
reaped in joy. But this he Fine of, that all
those persons who communicate a narrow
contracted spirit to a flock, or fix prejudice
in the minds of simple souls—who divide the
affections of a society, or community, and
.scatter discord among them, are seedsmen ot
Satan ; for God hates that man, and holds
him in abomination who soweth discord
among brethren, or in a community. II you
will watch those dividers und seatterers, yon
will see their joy counterfeited, their love
feigned, their ni liter borrowed, and their
way into God’s fold to be by hypocrisy,
craftiness and the cunning nrt of the devil.
.Surely we may get into the fold of Christ
without lulling council of devils. If God
gave thee a discerning rye, you will see
a fallen countenance, which is a certain in
dication of a guilty conscience through all
tlwi mask of their feigned love; but if you
stand fust in Christ .Jesus, your lace will
shine, ai d God will appear the health of
your countenance ; and that, with the power
which attends the word, will establish you
us a minister of* Christ in the conscience of
those discerning Christians who beur yon :
II Cor., iv : 2
The light troop that followeth him shows
of w but spit it the leader is. It has been a
grief to my very soul when 1 have seen a
person, whom I had great reason to believe
was u hypocrite, fond of me. Alas, said I,
surely 1 am of the wo. Id, for this worldling
loves me; but soon God liu9 turned his heart
to hate me and deal subtly with my soul. 1
bless God lor the world’s hatred, and 1 bless
God for the Saints’love. Be not astonished
at his gifts. A musician can play at any
lime if he has the use of his hands, and a
minister, with a gift only, is compared to an
instrument, without life, giving sound—he
can play when he pleases if be lias but the
use of his tongue. However, F’uiil knew
what it was to want a door ol utterance, yea,
and what it was to go bound in the spirit.
Ezckial knew what it was to be dumb belore
a whole audience, und what it was to have
his mouth opened to him that.escaped. And
il this man is never burdened with the cross
—if never bound in spirit—if never on the
mount —if always alike—he Iris no changes,
therefore he lears not God. He only stands
in the testimony of men. feeds on human ap
plause, and is furnished for the pulpit by
Mr. Brown’s Comments, and Mr. Keatb’s
Metaphors. I have nothing to say against
the divinity of those good men, but you
must get your divinity Irom Christ as those
good nien did. or else you must eon ess at
last, as the prophet’s son did, “Alas, master,
it was borrowed!” I have heard some
preach sound discourses, which I admired,
and when I have been in conversation with
them they appeared never to have experi
enced anything they said. Such are subjects
of blame and objects ol pity. Grace be with
thee. VV. H.
I have requested the republication of the
above letter for the due consideration of the
people and benefit of the present ministry.
11. T. PICKKN.
Something Saved fk> m mi Wreck.—
The scene waR hereabouts ; the characters, a
rising young merchant and a pretty woman.
He had an affection for her; she n liking for
him, so they became betrothed. After n
time she found out that she didn’t love him
well enough to marry him, and the match
was broken off. It was a severe blow, and
he staggered under it ; hut he fought well
for himself, protested that lih life was ruiued,
asked if she could not learn to love him. and
in all ways did the proper thing. She was
immovable, however, and he sadly and re
luctuntly took his leave. While" his eyes
were foil of gathering tears he bade his (alt
ering faiewtlls. then closed the door upon
his hopes. A moment later he opened it,
stepped back into the room, and, with tears
in i'is voice, brokenly murmured, “I hope
this will make no difference about your
coming to the store, Miss ; and that
your mother will continue to trade with n j .
I shall be happy to give the usual discount-
Our stock is large and varied ; our aim to
please.’’ And the door shut finally, leaving
him alone with bis grief. —Poitlund (Me.)
Press.
“Excuse me, Miss,” said a polite old gen
tleman to an otherwise well-dressed young
lady on Washington street, “but are you
aware that somebody has jammed your hat
quite bi.diy T” “It’s all right, sir; it’s a
Nu Turk, and the fashion,” replied she, with
a toss of the bend. as she swept away, leav
ing the o. g. looking alter with a "stare of
astonishment.
If a man really wants to know of how
NEW FIRM!
Copartnership Notice.
IH AYR this dnv sold h half interest in mv
business to G F. Turner, and the come
and style of the firm will be known in future
as Harper ■% Turner. R. 'l'. HARPER.
January 9th, 1879.
We respectfully solicit a share of the pub
lic patronage, believing we can show a= fine
and well assorted stock of goods as will be
found anywhere. Our stock of
DRY GOODS
Is complete in every particular, and includes
a fine assortment of Ladies’ Dress Goods
Linens, Blanchings, Domeslics, and Fanev
Notions of all kinds.
ClotHing S
A new and eleynnt lot oT Clothing, of even
style and quality. Gents’ Underwear a spe
cialty.
I
HATS AND CAPS
l o suit the tastes of the masses, and at prices
that will meet the requirements of the trade
BOOTS AND SHOES!
Our stock of Boots and Shoes, having been
bought at a bargain in the Northern m r
kets, we can afford to sell cheap, ami are pre
pared to offer extra iudaeements to the trad.-.
Furniture!
We have also a large lot ol Furniture—Bed
steads. Bureaux, Wasbstands, Wardrobes,
Tables, Chairs.,’ etc —which we will sell at
extremely low figures. Bed room setts e
specialty.
GROCERIES.
Special attention is called to our stock ot
Groceries, which is quite large, 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 lor cash
from first hands, thereby enabling ns to eetl to
advantage—both to ourselves and customers.
With ail these facilities we are prepared to ex
bibit at all times a complete general stock,
and parties wishing to buy can always fiud
same specialties ot very low prices at our
store. Give us a call.
This important organ weighs but about three
pounds, and ail the blood in a living person (about
three gallons; passes through it at least once every
half hour, to the bile and other impurities
strained or filtered from it. Bile is the natural
purgative of the bowels, and if-the Liver becomes
j torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car
| ried through the veins to all parts of the sj'sitm,
j and in trying to escape through the pores ©f the
I skin, causes it to turn yellow ©r a dirty brown
| color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys
ipepsia, Indigestion, Constipation Headache, ftiii
lousncss, Jaundice, Chills, Xlalarial Fevers. Piles,
| Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility (cl
low. Mbrkkll's H El* ATI nr, the great vegetable
discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver %o throw
(off from one to two ounces of bile each time the
. blood passes through it, as long as there i* an ex-
Icess oi bile; and the effect ef evee a few doses
upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking
skin, 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 Hepattnr in accordance with directions.
Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist
if a feir trial is riven.
SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Pries 25 Cents and SI.OO
The fatality of Consumption or Throat and
Lung Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
one-third of all death's victims, arises from the
Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu
pefies as the work of death goes on. SIO,OOO will
be paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
in th# Globe Flower Cough Syrup, which has
cured people who are living to-day with but one
remaining lung. No greater wrong can be di ;ie
than to say that Consumption is incurable. The
Globs Flowrr Cough Syrup will cure it when
i all other means have foiled. Also, Colds, Cough,
Asthma, Bronchitis, aud al! diseases u 4 the throat
ard lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hop..
Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. Smith aud Lx-Cov.
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 il
you wish to be cured you can be by taking the
Glow! Flower Cough Syrup.
Take no Troches or Lozenges lor Sore Throat,
when you can get Globe Flower Syrup at same
price. For sale by all Druggists
Price 25 Cents andsWo
Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of all
diseases that arise from poison in the blood. Not
one case ©f 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.® Dr. Pemberton's Stillin
gia or Queen’s Delight is the only medicine
upon which a hope oi 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.
Price by all Druggists fi.oo.
Globe Flowrr Cough Syrup and Merrf.i.l's
Hkpatinb for the Liver for sai« by all Drug
gists in 25 cent and SI.OO bottles.
A. F. MURRELL & CO., Prcprieiorr,.
- PHILADELPHIA, PA.
HEPATINE.
GLOBE FLOWER SYRUP.
STILLINGIA.
DR. RICE,
37 Court Pte, LOUISVILLE, KY,
A regularly educated and legally qualified physician and the
most successful, aa his practice will prove. Cures allfonns
o * private, ohronio nnd sexual disease®, Sp firri
rhea and Impotenoy. as *tfie result ot seif
at use in youth, sexual *exoesKet* in maturer vears. or other
tausea, aod producing some of the following effects: Net voua
ne.Ns. Seminal K middens, Dimness of Sight. Defective Mem
ory Physical Decay, Pimple* on Fare, Aversion to Society of
Females, Coalit ion of Ideas, Loss of Scxua 1 Power, Ac.,
re dering marriage Improper or unhappy, are thoroughly
and permanently cured. SYPHILIS positively
•ured and entirely eradicated aho system;
A» Gleet, Stricture, Piles and outer pri
yate tltaeasas quickly cured. Patients treated by mall ore**
pr.*n. Uonsultation tree and invited, charges reaaouaUfc
aud correspondence strictly confidential.
A PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of 200 pages, sent to any address, securely sealed, for thirty
(30) cents. Should be rend by all. Address as ahqrSb
Office Lourt from 9 A. id. to 7 P. Id. Sundays, % to AP. Ms
RQrMDR. BUTTS
ifWefSlfe No - 12 N - Eighth St.
St. Louis, Nlo.
W ho hM hart router CTperimpe In tile treatment of the
sexual troubles of bolli male and female than any physician
in the West, pivoa the faults of his lon# and surcessful
practice in his two new wirtu, jurft published, entitled
The PHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE
The PRIVATE MEDICAL ADVISER
Books that are really Guides aud KelMnstructors in all mat
ters pet tani.ng to Manhood and Houmahood, aud supply
«ant long felt, t hey at e beautifully Illustrated, and iu^plain
language, easily understood. The two books embraced
pages, and coutuin valuable Information for both married and
single with all the recent improvement* iu medical treatment
Head what our home papers say : “The know lodge imparted
In Dr. Butt# new work* is in no way of questionable char
acter, but is something that everyone should know Tbs
Ysnlh. the victim of early indiscretion; lb* Man, otherwise
h^ alt,, y maybe, but with \vanin £ vigor in theorinw
of life, and the Woman, in
from many ills her mlx is heiraqJ 2I J ajj ■ nfl
rOri LAli ritl('KS U -Qg <*, each f* J j V, I 1 n
both in one volume. #1; in cloth
gilt, lib eta extra, item under seal, ojJßfc Dfw *,v33
receipt of price in money or stamps. Iw *" , iy
$
:i ANTED BEST AKD CHEAPEST.
’'R :V \ Fi-io** k enlucetL Pamphlet free.
SUPPLIES.
Works: Christiana, Lancaster county, Pa.
Office :23 S. Beaver st., York, Pa. n 29 Iv
CMOKV
w 1 BLACKWELL'S fl J
M DURHAM mm
TOBACCO
PRESCRIPTION FREE!
For the spool v Care or Seminal Weakness. Lost
Manhood and"all disorders brought on by Indis
cretion or excess. Anv Druggist has the Ingre
dients. Or. W. *t ««».. Xo. 130
West Mis tit Street, (iueiuuati, O.
BM ■ 1 ■ M MS and Morphine habit cured
B B O I I E ■■ »TlieOriginal an lealv a’ ..lot)
&fa gP S* CURE. Seulmnn fur book oa
P V >J 5 E ZLB VVI Opium Kiting, to WB. Squir*
H K) 9v ■ Wortbingun, Growno Co., lad.
r?W a trills sßtos7. RfrolvfruwflrtC
12.50. Over 100 latest Novelties m
Ag u «»ttesi. So.SuppljrCo.>>»*bvlU«.Teim. V
Ucan make money faster at work for us
than at anythiug else. Capital not re
quired ; we will start you. sl2 per day at
home made by tbe industrious. Men ,wo
men, boys and girls wanted everywhere to
work for us. Now is tbe time. Costly out- I
fit and terms free. Address True & Co., '
Augusta, Maine.
DrfifT business you can engage iD. $5
D-LiO X to S2O per day made by any
worker ol either sex. right in their own lo- J
calities. Particulars and samples worth $5
free. Improve your 9pare time at this busi- i
nMa Address Stihuom & Co., Portland,'
Gullett’s Improved Cotton (Jin.
Plantrrs are respectfully invited to ox
amme this Gin before buying I will keep
sample Gin, with Feeder, Condenser and
Gnllett’s Donhle Revolving Cotton Press
(dispensing with a lint room.) always on hand
for exhibition. We guarantee the most per
feet satisfaction to purchasers, in every par
ticnlor. T e price will he redooed next s-a
son from $4 to S 3 50 per enw on the Gins,
and from SI 25 to SI on the Feedeis. I
refer all to the accompanying certificates of
our cotton buyers and planters of last year,
and to the ceriificnies of well known planters
who are using Gullett’s Gins, as to the extra
prices obtained lor cotton cinued on »hern
J‘ A. PEEKS, Agent.
Griffin, Ga., March 10, 1879.
Griffin, Ga ~ March 1, 1879.
We, Ihe undersigned, are using the Gutlett
Improved Light Draft Cotton Gin The
Gin is of superior workmanship For fast
ginning, safety in running and light draft, (to
do the same work.) we think it has no equal;
but ihe most importa.it feature is the attach
ment for opening and improving the sample.
The best cotton is improved hv it «o as to
bring from to % cent, and stained and
dirty cotton from % to 1 cent per ib. more
in the Griffin market than on other Gins
(Signed) W,T Bridges, TYV Manley, J T
Manley.
Griffin Ga , May 17. 1878.
To J A Beeki, Agent for the Gull ell Gin
Man’f'g Co. Griffin, Ga: —At your re
quest, wc, p'unters and dealers in cotton, give
to the public our opinion of your Gin. We
take pleasure in saying to all in need of new
Gins that it is now a well established fact
that cotton ginned on ibeFe Gins brings a
higher price in our market than any other,
and the Gins are growing in public favor.
Cotton ginned on them sold lust eeaaou at
from }/£ to 1 cent per pound above the mar
ket pttce. Mr. GulleU's attachment lor im
proving the sample of cotton, we are satisfied,
is what he claims lor it. The Gin appears
to have reached perlection in gin machine y.
(Signed) A C Sorrel, T J Brooks, R P
McWilliams, S B McWilliams, D VV Pat
terson, R 11 Sims T .1 Bloodworth.
I am also agent for the celebrated Eclipse
Portable Engine, manufactured by Frick &
t'o, for the counties of Butts Spalding.
Fayette and Clayton. JA. BKhJvS.
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 any
angle while the machine is in full motion,
without changing the tension or length ot
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, telling, tucking, braiding, cording,
binding, quilting, ruffling, etc., and for 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
in the most simple manner. For sale by
G. W. Ilendemu.
Hamilton, Ga , April 19-ly
\
OFFICE N? 177 W 4 T “ ST
-►CINCINNATI, O.r
L C NEBINGER. Manager
h’ur sale by (i. K. \\ i*e, Hampton,
Ca. sep!3-ly.
Furniture.
S. S. Middleton,
HAMPTON , GA.,
Has on hand a large and assorted stock of
FURNITURE,
Bareaus. Bedsteads, Chairs. Secretaries,
Wardrobes, Cupboards,
And is prepared to manufacture to order
anything you need to furnish your bouse
Upholstering and Cabinet work done in
the latest style and with dispatch.
Coffins alw“vs on hand.
week in your own town. So out
free. No risk. Reader, if you
'■■ant a business at which persons of either
sex can make great pay all the time they I
work, write for particulars to H Hai.lktt A
Co. Portland. Maine
Subscbibs for Ins Wbkklt—sl jy ptr
•"Mini j
iked In $1.50!
tub
HENRY
COUNTY
WEEKLY.
PUBI.ISHKD KVRRY MIDAV
AT
Hampton, Henry County, tin.
A DEMOCRATIC PAPER. SOUND
IN PRINCIPLE AND UN
SWERVING FROM
PARTY LINEi
Confident that Demoeratic supremacy can
only be maintained in the State by strict
adherence to the cardinal principles of Dera
ocaov and entailing courage in their sup
port. THE WEEKLY will never be fonnd
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ihr*e tnoatba.. 49