Newspaper Page Text
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flowers that never wither.
There ore flower* that never wft her,
There are ekie* that never fade,
There are tree* that cast forever
Cooling bower* of leafy abode.
There nr* silver wavelet* flowing ,
With a hilling sound of feat.
Where the weat wind, aoftlv blowing,
Fane the fair land* of the bleat.
Thitherward our step* are tending,
Oft through dim. oppressive tears,
More of grief than pleamrp blending
In the darkening woof of venr*.
Often wonld onr footstep* weary
Sink upon the winding wav,
Bnt (hat when all look* most dreary,
O’er us beam* a cheering ray.
Thus the Father who hath made ns
Tenant* of this world of cure,
Knoweth how to kindly aid ns
With the burdens we must bear;
Knoweth how tci ennae the aplrit
nopefnllv to raise its pyea
Toward the home it doth inherit
Far beyond the azure skies.
There i« a vo'ce that whisper* slowly
Down within this heart of mine,
Where emotions the most holv
Kver make their sacred shrine.
And it tells a thrilling story
Qf the great Redeemer's love,
And the all-bewildering glory
Of the better land above.
0, this life, with *ll its sorrow#,
llsstcth onward to a close 1
In ■ few more brief to-morrow*
Will have ended all onr woes p
TtiPU o'er death the past immortal
Shall "üblimoly rise and so#r,
O’rr the «lar- resplendent portal,
There to dwell fhrevermore.
Forced Into Perjury.
The other day it was necessary for Mr.
Finder to go info conrt ns n witness. Mr
Finder knows fhe nature of an oath and he
isn’t a man who wonld perjure himself for
the biggest and best farm in Michigan. Mr.
Finder was ordered to stand np, raise his
right hand, and swpnr. that he wonld tell the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
troth. Then he sat down and a lawyer be
gan:
‘•Mr. Plnder, you saw this offuir, did
you ?"
*T did.”
"Well, state to the jnry what took place.”
"Well, I was sitting in the boose, and my
wife suddenly called ”
"Never mind your wife, Mr. Pinder,” in
terrupted the lawyer.
“Why, sir. my wife colled to ”
"Never mind your wife, I soy I I want
to know what you know.'’ M
Mr. Finder had been sworn lo tell fhe
truth, and the whole truth, but right at Jhe
outset the lawyer wouldn’t let him do either
ene Then he began :
"I was sitting in my house, when—"
"I don’t want to know what happened in
your house. A fight took place in the Btreet,
and if you were on the spot I want to know
it ?”
“Well, I heard loud talking, ond—"
"I wont to know if you saw the defendant
strike the plaintiff ” interrupted the lawyer.
Mr. Pinder had sworn to tell all ohout it
in • truthful manner, but he was now or
dered to leave out more than half of the
whole truth, and begin where it suited the
lawyer.
"When I crossed the street, a woman
said—”
"I don't care what a woman said, sir 1"
ebon ted the lawyer.
Wbat that woman said should have been
laid, according to the oath taken, but Ibe
lawyer wouldn’t have it.
“Well ] saw two men fighting—the
plaintiff and defendant here,’’ observed Mr.
Pinder.
“Do you swear that these were the men
Mr. Pinder had sworn to tell “the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,"
r.nd the lawyer turned right about and hinted
that he might not have seen the men he had
■worn he saw,
“These were the two men," he answered.
“And vou saw blows stiuck?"
"I did.”
“Now we claim that not a single blow
passed 1" shouted the lawyer.
He was defending a man with a black
eye and a busted nose, who had been arrested
while fighting, an<L Mr. Pinder had seen the
fight, and-yet be eraimed that Finder didn’t
see a blow struck.
“I heard ”
“No matter what you heard."
Mr. Pinder had heard plaintiff dare de
fendant to'strike him ; and he had sworn to
tgll tiie truth, and yet the lawyer forced him
into perjury. He wouldn't let him tell the
whole truth—nor even half of it.
“Did you see blows passed ?” resumed the
lawyer.
“I did."
“And yon saw the plaintiff strike the de
fendant first T”
“No. sir; the defendant struck first.”
“What! Do yon know what you are
swearing to T Didn’t you just take an oath
to tell the truth in the case?”
“1 did.”
“And now you are trying to mislead the
jory by suppressing part of the tru’b—by
telling what yon wish to and suppressing
what you don’t T"
“No, sir. Just as I beard—”
“You heard T W e don’t want to know
wbat yon heard.” \
• Mr. Pinder didn’t want to suppress any
thing, but be was forced to ; be wanted to
tell all about it, but they wouldn’t let him ;
he wanted to tell the whole truth, but they
would not have it. They made him perjore
himself while swearing to tell the truth, the
whole truth, and nothing bot tbe truth.—
Cincinnati Star.
It doesn’t dc any good to veto a butcher’s
bill.. Bloggsby tried it, and tbe butcher, in
deiaDce of alMaw and constitutional prece
dent, absolutely refused to vote any more
supplies uptil the bill passed Bloggsby say 6
fbe eouatry is on tbe verge of a new revolu
tion, and io fact tbe new revolution has
come, for he bow waJks clear arouDd the
block to avoid that butcher's shop.
A tclso doctor in Norfolk spends h«
leisure hours in practicing on the comet, and
pcssers-by, thinking amputation is going on
inside, are deluded at to the number of tbe
tniD'l patiedjs
Lot»* as an Investment.
I/»ve is thp only thing that will pay ten
ppr cent, of interest on the outlay Love i*
the only thing in which the height of ex
travagance is the last degree of economy
ft i# the only thing, I tell you. Joy is
wealth. Love is the Ipgal tender of thp soul
—and yon need not be rich to be happy
We have all been raised on sneeess in thi«
eonntrv—always hepn talked with about be
ing sneeesofnl. and have never thought onr
aetve* very rich unless we were nn«se«sors of
some mngniffeenf mansion and unless our
names have been hetween the putrid lip* of’
rumor we eonld not he happy. Every litt'p
boy is striving to bo thi# and be that. I tell
vnu the happy man i* the sncee«s?nl man
The man that has beep pmperor of one%iod
heart, and that heart embrace all his. has
been a sneeess. If another hn« been the
emperor of thp round world and ha* never
lov’d and been loved, his life i* a failure
It won't do. Let ur teach onr children
the other way—that the happy man is the
one who always trie* to make iomp one else
happy. The man who marrie* a woman to
make her hnppv ; thnt marrie* her as much
for her own *akp a* for hi* own ; not the
ipan that think* his wife is hi* property, who
think* that the title, to her belongs to him ;
wretches who get mad at their wives and
then shoot them down in thp street* because
they think the woman is Wheir property. I
tell you it is not. necp*snrv to be rich and
great and powerful to be happy. A little
while ago I stood by the grave of the old
Napoleon—a magnificent tomb of gilt and
gold, fit olmost for a dead deity—and gazed
npon the sarcophagus of black Egyptian
marble, where rest at Inst thp ashes of the
restless man. 1 leaned over the balustrade
and thought about the career of the grentrst
so'dier of the modern world. I saw him
walking upon the banks of the beine. con
templating suicide I snw him nl Toulon-*-
I saw him pntting down the mob in the
streets of Faris—l saw him at the head of
fhe army of Italy—l snw him crossing the
bridge of T ,di with the tricolor in his hand
I snw h m in Egypt, in the shadow of ihe
pyruinids—l snw him conquer the Alps and
minglp the eagles of Frnnee with the eagles
of' the erne*—l snw him nt Marengo, at Ulm
and Austerliiz I saw himfin Russia, where
the infantry of the snow and the cavalry of
the wild blast seotteml his legions like win
ter's withered leaves. I saw him at I,eipsic
in defeat and disaster—driven by a million
bayonets hack upon Paris—clutched like a
wild beast—banished to Elba, I saw him
escape and retake «n gmpire by force of his
gen us. 1 paw hjrn upon Ihe frightful field
of Waterloo, where clmneo and fate com
bined to wreck the fortunes of their former
king. And I saw him at St. Helena, with
his hand* crossed behind, gazing out upon
the sad and solemn sea.
I thought of the orphans and widows he
had made—of the tears that had lieen shed
for his glory, and of the only woman who
ever loved him, pushed from his heart by the
cold hand of ambition. And I said I would
rather have been a French peasant, and worn
wooden shoes—l would rather have lived in
a hu*, with a vine growing over the door,
and Ibe grapes growing purple in the kissel
of the autumn sun—l would rattier have
been that poor peasant, with my loving wile
by mv side, with my children upon my knees
and their arms about me—l wonld rather
have been that man, and gone down to the
tongutloss dust, than to huve been that Im
perial impersonation of force Hnd* murder,
known as Napoleon the Great.— Bob lnger-
Little Women.
Little women are ptone to fascinate big
men, and perhaps they have a considerable
amount of power over men in general. But
they ure endowed with no such power for
witchery so far as their sisters are concerned.
Indeed, there is a certain amount of chronic
antagonism between little women and other
women, and prevents them from fraternizing
together with that cordiality with which
women who nre in no way physically re
markable can. The ordinary woman will
piobably tell yon, if you appeal to her for
od opinion, that the iittkj woman “is a con
ceited little thing, and gives herself all man
ner of airs and graces.” The statement may
not be quite correct, but those who generally
make it hsve goal pauses of belief in its ac
curacy. The little woman is in the habit of
treating them with a degree of scorn, not to
say contempt, which is calculated to hsve n
most miserable irritating effect upon their
nerves. The constant contemplation of her
own insignificance has ruffled her temper,
though her very smallness, in some cases, is a
point in her favor rather than against it.
But consiant fighting; even if it is Only
shadows, has a decidedly exasperating ten
dency, Now, sbg ia continually doing battle
with what she and some others niay be dis
posed to consider her weak point. It is easy
to see bow keenly she feels the sting of being
small. She not only assumes an aggressive at
titud*toward a great portion of humanity on
that account; she allows the fact to influ
ence her in the matter of taste and her every
day life If she has a house she will have
everything in it on as big a scale as possible;
she will love big horses and big dogs ; she
will, us we have already said, probably marry
a b ; g man, and she will in a variety of other
ways indicate her eflection for the magnifi
cent as compared with the insignificant All
this may be regarded as a sort of protest on
her part against her own littleness. It is
another proof that people would like to be
jus*, what they are not, and to get just wbat
they lack. Though her foibles and eccen
tricities are many, she can be forgiven them,
in view of their causes. At the Fame time
she may be recommended to mnke herself a
little more agreeable. She. would be more
agreeable if she were less egotistical and ag
gressive. Perhaps we should say that we
have spoken o! typical little women, not of
all little women. —Liberal Review.
“Bit you know, pa,” said the farmer’s
daughter when be spoke to her about the
addresses of his neighbor's son, “you know,
pa, that ma wan's me to marry a man of
culture.” “So do I, my dear, so do I ; and
there’s no better culture in the country than
agricuitare.”
A country doctor, in writing a letter of
condolence to the widow of a late member of I
tbe Legislature, says; "I cannot tell how ,
pained I wng to bear that your husband had |
gone to hcaveu. We were bosom friends, j
be 1 now we shall neya meet agmu."
T|iree Generals.
Last evening the skies were sultry and
gloomy, the atmosphere was laden with
heavy vapors, and now and then splattering
drops of sad rain discolored the clean gray
of the flags on C trial street. The impersonal
journalist of this paper, under the influence
of the overhanging clouds and the murky
atmosphere, felt disinclined to work, and
avoiding the reportorial rooms of thp Demo
crat. where the lean and hungry looks of
hum drum work awaited him, sought refuge
from monotony in a walk down Canal street
, to the Irvee.
P reliance he thought that a beautiful
sunset nvereoming the weight of a leaden
skv would afford him bv fhe riverside mate
rial whereon to display the skill of his des
criptive pen Peradventure he imagined
that strong-wheeled steamers, snowy-sated
boats or graceful gigs stemming the tide
with feathered oar «rtnld furnish him where
with to feed his appetite for scribbling. It
may be that he had no aim in his wander
mgs. BDd that he went forward, as many do
in this world, full of problems, not knowing
or caring whither be tended, what his goul.
and thinking nothing either of what would
come of the mysteries whose skein was being
unraveled about him.
As in a dreamy mood he reached the cor
ner of the Custom House building, he met
the historical laces of Generals Juhal A
Early, G. T. Beauregard aad J. B. Hood,
who in company appeared to be taking an
evening walk. Three great figures brightly
shining in the panorama of days gone by ;
thtee statues belonging to the Southern
Pantheon. Three volumes in tho history of
the Confederacy, walking arm in arm,
through the mist ond gloaming of the even
ing, wiih the weird gleaming light of the
past around and about them, and the ghosts
of heroic memories fluttering across them,
telling of battles won, of ensanguined fields
gloriously contested, of bright pages sten
ciled on the everlas!ing* stone of history and
ol dark defeat surrounded and made radiant
with the beaming rays of Devotion, Honor
and Chivalry.
I'here was G. T. Beauregard, the pride of
our creole population, the hero of Munassas,
the scientific defender of Charleston, wi h
his sturdy, athletic form defying the heavy
hand of time as in Mexico, as in Virginia,
as in South Carolina and Tennessee he had
braved the advunce of foes and issued v cto
rious Irom all encounters No, this jour
nalist is no more impersonal; he regains b s
identity when he remembers bow hearis
leaped and bats waved when Beauregard,
sitting centaur-like on his war s'eed, rode
along the lines, inspiriting “the army” by
his presence and bearing, even when disaster
appeared rife and the shadow of the wings
of death darkened the atmosphere. And
flood, the “subreur,” the gallant charging
commander in Virginia and Tennessee, who
walks on crutches now because steel, shell
amt shot choose the bravest to maim or kill.
And last, old Juba I Early, once tbe most
active man In the Confederate army, now
leaning forward as he walks, resting on bis
stout hickory stick, his long while heard
flowing in the wind, and his bright blue, in
telligent eyes, bright with the reflee'ion of
past heroic deeds and beaming with specu
lation, looking toward tbe future prospects
ol l»is country. 1 Old Jubal,”as he wascalled,
was a freut fighter, and we recall u charac
teristic anecdote of him. W hen the troops
were charging at Manassas, he espied a cer
tain preacher riding down as fast as his horse
could carry him. “Where are you riding to
so fast T” said the General. "To the icar,”
answered the preacher, scarcely reining in
his steed. “Well," responded Early, ‘you
have been showing us all the time the way
to heaven, and now that we are all going
there, you tuke Ibe opposite direction.” But
by this time the preacher bad vutiisbed out
of sight— N. O. Democrat .
Doings of the Telephone.
At V'ansfield, Ohio, on Snndav last, a
telephone was run from 'he nulpit of a
church to a residence where there were sick
people, and they could h<ar the seynon, the
singing, snd the jingling of the gun wads in
the collection plate IT this telephone busi
ness proves to tie all that i« claimed for it,
the cbuiches ean all be sold to be used for
breweries and livery stables, the minister
can preach fron his bed at home, or from a
pier out in the lake, while holding a fi-h pole
to catch his dinner out of the water, and the
members of the church can lay all around at
home, with dirty shirts on ; that is. the men—
and with tbeir hair tied tip in curl papers—
that is the women —and they can hear ail
tbe sermon, even if their pantaloons are out
at the heel and their new bonnet not yet
urrived Irom the milliner. Then, religion
will be so cheap that even the poor can have
it. There will be no expense for chnrches,
no pew rent, no fuel, no gas, no frescoed
ceiling, 4»o nothing. All that will tie nec
essary will be to hire a minister, give him a
house to live in on some fish pond give him
land enongh ho raise vegetables, and let him
catch fish between meals. If he catches
more fish than he needs he can peddle them
around the town, and send the money to for-,
eign missions, and no collection need betaken
op for that purpose. And then everything
will be lovely. A sermon through telephone,
with tbe congregation lying down at the
homes of the members, on lounges, or
stretched not on carpets on bot Sundays,
will soak in them better than the old way.
You won’t have to be looking around the
church wondering wbat some eoufoanded
hand-iorae woman is laughing about, and
there will be no bald-beaded hotel keeper
sitting in front of you so you can't Fee the
girls in the choir. But, come to think of it.
going to church is the best. It seems more
soeiat'ie. Never mind, you needn't sell tbe
churches yet. We will take that telephone
on probation a spell.— Milwaukee Sun.
A Westrrh paper tells of a man who
claims to have swapped borers 37 times and
cheated the other man every time, aud yet
when his wife died the other day he prom
ised to meet her io heaven.
Two men started out on a wager to* see
which could tell the biggest lie No. 1
commenced: “A wealthy country editor
whereupon No 2 stopped him right
there and paid the forfeit.
A sporting man said, alter bearing Bob
lugersolPs lecture: “It was a spicy thing
to laugh at for an hour, but not a very cheer
ful doctrine to have around when there is a
funeral iu the house."
NEW FUtM!
■ ft 'wi' .** V » '
'-JpA 4 4k 4 ■ •* - *4-9*
Copartnership Notice.
I HAVE this dav sold * half interest in my
buxines# to G F. Turner, ami the name
and *tvk* of the firm will be known in future
as Harper t Turner. R. T. HARPER.
January 9th, 1879.
We respectfully solicit a share of tbe pub
lic patronage, believing we can show as fine
and well assorted stock of goods as will be
found anywhere. Our stock of
DRY GOODS
Is complete in every particular, and inelnde«
a fine assortment of Ladies’ Dress Goods.
Linens, Bleaehings, Domestics, and Fancy
Notions of all kiuds.
Clotning s
A new and elegant lot of Clothing, of every
style and quality. Gents’ Underwear a spe
cialty.
HATS AND CAPS
lo suit tbe tustes ol the masses, and at prices
that will'meet tbe lequitemeuts of tbe trade.
BOOTS AND SHOES!
Onr stock of Roots and Shoes, having been
bought at a hargain in the Northern mar
kefs' we ean afford to sell cheap, and are pre
pared to offer extra inducements to the trade.
Furniture 2
W’e have also a large lot ol Furniture—Bed
steads, Bureaux. Wash stands, Wardroties,
Tables. Chairs,,’ etc —which we will sell at
extremely low figures. Bed-room Betts a
specialty.
GROCERIES.
Special attention is called to our stock ol
Groceries, which is quite large, and com
prises every article kept in that line.
Oar stock is being constantly replenished
with Goods that are carefully selected by ex
perienced buyers, and are bought lor casu
from first hands, thereby enabling us to sed to
advantage—both to ourselves and customers.
Witb all these facilities we are prepared to ex
hibit at all times a complete general stock,
aud parties wishing to buy can always find
some specialties at very low prices at our
store. Give us a call
Harper & Turner.
hiYEki
Thb important organ weighs tut about three
pounds, and all the mood in a living person (about
three gallons; passes through it at least once every
half hour, to have the bile and other impurities
strained or filtered from it. Bile is the natural
purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver becomes
torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car
ried through the veins to all parts of the system,
and intrying to escape through the pores of th*
skin, Ciuses it to turn yellow or a dirty brown
color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys-_
pepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Ii earache
ousness. Jaundice, Chiils, Malarial Fevers, Piles ;
Sick and Sour Stomach, and general dehiiitg fol
low., Mbrrbll's Hepatinb, the great vegetable
discovery for.torpidity, causes the Liver to throw
off from one to two ounces of bile each time the
blood passes through it,,as long as there is an ex
cess of bile; and the effect of even a few doecs
upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking
skin, will astonish all who try it—they being die
first symptoms to disappear. The cure ot iifbUi
oua diseases and Liver complaint is made certain’
by taking Hrpatimh in accordance with directions.
Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist
if a fair trial is given.
SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
LUNGS
The fatality of Consumption or Throat and
Lung Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
one-third of ail death’s victims, arises from the
Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu
pefies as the work of death goes on. SIO,OOO will
oe paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
in die Glob* Flower Cough Syrup, which has
cured people who are living to-day with but one
remaining lung, No greater wrong can be done
than to say that Consumption is incurable. The
Globs Flower Cough Syrup will cure it when
all other means have failed. Also, Colds, Cough,
i Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the throat
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
I to all at the drug stores—and be convinced that if
! you w ish to be cured you can be by taking the
Globe Flower Cough Syrup.
I Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Threat,
when you can get Globe Flower Syrup at same
price. For sale by all Druggists
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
BLOOB
Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of all
diseases 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,
j 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 Sttlltn
gia or Queen's Delight is the only medicine
upon which a hope of recovery from Sc ofula, Sy
philis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can De
reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer.
SIO,OOO will be paid by the proprietors if Mercury,
I or any ingredient not purely vegetable and harm
less can be found in it.
Price by all Druggists si.oo.
■ Globe Flower Cough Syrup and Merrell's
I Hepatink for the Liver for sale by all Drug
| gists in *s cent and£x.oo bottles.
A. F. liEEEELL Ss CO., Proprietors,
" PHILADELPHIA, PA.
HEPATINE.
GLOBE FLOWER SYRUP. I
STILLING IA.
Gullett’s Improved Cotton Gin.
Pj,aht*pb fire respectfully invited to r
limine this (Jin before buying I will keep
sample Gin, with Feeder, Condenser and
Gullett’s Double Revolving Cotton Press
(dispensing with n lint room.) always on hand
lor exhibition. We guarantee the moat per
feet satisfaction to purchasers, in every par
ticular. The price will be reduced next sea
son from $4 to $3 sft per sow on the Gins,
and from $1 25 to SI on the Feeders. I
refer all to the accompanying certificates of
our cotton buyers and planters of last year,
and to the eernfi' , aies of well known planters
who are using Gullett’s Gins, as to the extra
prices obtained tor cotton pinned on them.
J. A. REEKS, Agent.
Griffin, Ga., March 10, 1879.
Griffin. Ga , March 1,1879.
We, the undersigned, are using theGullett
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 lias no equal;
but the most important feature is the attach
ment for opening and improving the sample.
The brst 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 , May 17.1878.
To J A Beek<, Agent for the Gullett Gtn
Man'f'g Co, Griffin, Ga: —At your re
quest, we, planters and dealers in cotton, give
to tlie public our opinion of your Gflo. We
take pleasure in saying to ail in need of new
Gins that it is now a well established fact
that cotton ginned on these Gins a
higher price is our market than any Other,
and the Gins are growing in pnblic favor.
Cotton ginned on them sold last season at
from to 1 Xent per pound above the mar
ket price. Mr. Gullctt’s attaenment for im
proving the sample of cotton, we ate satisfied,
is what he claims for it. The Gin appears
to have reached perfection in gin machinery.
(Signed) A C Sorrel, 1’ J Brooks, R, P
McWilliams, S B McWilliams, D W Pat
terson, R H Sims T J Bloodworth.
1 am also agent for the celebrated Eclipse
Portable Engine, manufactured by Frick &
Co, for the counties of Butts, Spalding,
Fayette and Clayton. J. A- BEEKS.
mar2B;3m •
[ , JjS/j *%v4 a >
kwi
f .* * v
OFFICE N? 17 7 W 4 T r ST
* CINCINNATI. O.A-
L-C. Manager
•>ar For sale Dv O. fc. \> ise, iraouioi),
Oa. «pl3*ly.
* - - - '
Job Work solicited and executed with
neatness.
Sc*u;ribk for The Weekly.
■ •
Reduced to $110!
, .J,/ A k
TUB
HENRY
. -j| r£ | sqggj
COUNTY
W EEKLY.
FUBI.ISHUD kvbrt r BID At
AT
Hampton, Henry County, Ga.
A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, SOUND
IN PRINCIPLE AND UN
SWERVING FROM
PARTY LINE/
Confident that Democratic supremacy can
only be maintained in the State by strict
adherence to the cardinal principles of Dem
ocracy. and unfailing courage in their sup-
P or *> IHE WEEKLY will never be found
remiss in its duty, either hy departing in the
slightest degree from Democratic doctrine*,
or failing to maintain them te their full ex
tent at all times.
Believing it also to be a fair assumption
that a large proportion of the readers of
weekly newspapers see no other, special
pains will be taken to present each week,
though necessarily iu a condensed form.
IP
ALL IHE NEWS OF EVERY KIND,
AND FROM EVERY QUARTERt
.
*
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One 'year...'.... .T. T.’ . \VT. \s{ &0
bix uioullis.
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