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TOIVN DIRECTORY.
Mayor —Thomas O. Barnett.
Commissioners —W. W. Turnipseed, D. B.
Bivins, E G. Hnrrig, E. R. James.
Clerk —K. G Harris.
Treasurer —W. 8. Shell.
Marshals —8. A. Belding, Marshal.
L. H. Moore, Deputy.
JUDICIARY.
A. M. Speer, - Judge.
F. D. Dismukr, - - Solicitor General.
Butts —Second Mondays in March and
September.
Henry—Third Mondays in January and
July.
Monroe—Fourth Mondays in February,
and August.
Newton —Third Mondays in March and
September.
I’ike—First Mondays in April and Octo
ber.
Rockdale—Third Mondays in February end
And Aug usi.
Spalding—First Mondays in February
and A^gnat.
Upson—Wrst Mondays in May and No
vember.
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
Methodist Episcopal Church, (South,)
Rev. Wesley F. Smith, Pastor Fourth
Sabbath in each month. Sunday-school 3
p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening
MKTHonisT Protestant Chobch. First
Sabbath in .each month. Sunday-school 9
A- X.
Christian Church, W.S. Fears, Pastor.
Seaond Sabbath iu each month.
Baptist Church, Rev. J. P. Lyon, Pas
tor. Third Sabbath in each month.
DOCTORS
DR. J. C. TURNIPSKKI) will attend to
all calls day or night. Office a resi
dence, Hampton. Ga.
I\R. W. I!. PEEBLES treats all dis
■l* eases, and will attend to all calls day
and night. Office at the Drug Store,
ltroad Street, Hampton, Ua.
BR. r>. F. KNOTT having permanently
located in Hampton, oflers his profes
sional services to the citizens of Hampton
mud vicinity. All orders left at Mclntosh’s
store will receive prompt attention. sp26
■JAR. N. T. BARNETT tenders his profes-
JJ sional services to the citizens of Henry
and adjoining counties, and will answer calls
day or night. Treats all diseases, of what
ever nature. Office at Nipper’s Drug Store,
Hampton, Ga. Night calls can be made at
my residence, opposite Berea church, apr26
JF PONDER, Dentist, has located in
• Hampton, Ga., and invites the public to
call at his room, upstairs in the Bivins
House, where he will be found at all hours.
Warrants all work for twelve months.
LAWYERS.
CW. HODNETT. Attorney ard Cooo
• sellor at Law, Jonesboro, Ga. Prompt
attention given to all business.
JNO.'G. COLD WELL, Attorney at Law,
Brookß Station, Ga. Will practice in
the counties composing the Coweta aDd Flint
River Circuits. Prompt attention given to
commercial and other collections.
TC. NOLAN, Attorney at Law. Mc
• Donough, Georgia: Will practice in
the counties composing the Flint Circuit;
the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the
TJuited States District Court.
WM. T. DICKEN, Attorney at Law, Me
Donough, Ga. Will practice in the
counties composing the Flint Judicial Cir
cuit, the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the
United States District Court. (Office up
stairs over W. C. Sloan’s.) apr27-ly
GEO. M. NOLAN, Attorney at Law.
McDonough,Ga. (Officein Court house)
Will practice in Henry and adjoining coun
ties, and in the Supreme and District Courts
of Georgia. Prompt attention given to col
lections. mcb23-6m
JF. WALL, Attorney at Law, Hamp
ton, Ga Will practice in the counties
composing the Flict Judicial Circuit, and
the Supreme and District Courts of Georgia.
Prompt attention given to collections. ocs
EDWARD J. REAGAN, Attorney at
law. Office up stairs in the Mclntnsh
building, Hampton, Ga. Special attention
given to commercial and other collections.
BF. McCOLLUM, Attorney and Coun
• sellor at L»w, Hampton, Ga Will
practice in Henry, Clayton, Fayette, Coweta,
Pike, Meriwether, Spalding and Bolts Sape
riot Courts, and in the Supreme and United
DISCORD.
O that some poet, with awed lips on fire
Of far, incffnble altars, would nrise,
And with his consecrated songs baptise
Our songs in harmony, that we might acquire
Insight into the essential heart of life,
Beating with rhythmic pulses! There is lost,
In the gross echoes of our brawling strife,
Music more tare than that which did accost
Shakespeare’s imagination when it swept
Nearest the infinite Our spirits are
All out of tune ; our discords intercept
The. strains which, like the singing of a star,
St ream downward from the Holies, to attest.
Beyond our jarring restlessness, rest.
—Richard Realf.
Accidentally Innocent.
No lawyer like going in'o court with a
thoroughly bad case—yet how cao he help
it sometimes?
1 should have more patience with the
question, “Do you think it right to defend
a man whom yon believe to be guilty ?’’ were
it lees frequently ask'd by the people who
spend six days of the week seeking to get the
upper band of their neighbors, and the sev
enth to circomvent their Maker. To the
honest inquirer 1 commend the answer Dr
Johnson once gave to Boswell: “Sir, the
lawyer is not the judge.”
Was it my place when George Gilbert’s
little sorrow-worn wife, with tears glistening
in her eyes, besought me to do wbat I could
for her imprisoned husband, virtuously to
lorn my back and leave her tired, struggling
heart to break or not, as it might ? I was
oeither a priest or a Levite to find a ready
excuse for passing on the other side! Yet
what could I do? George Gilbert had been
sent on a collecting tour, and had gambled
away money for his employers. It was a
plain case of embezzlement, and the penalty
was a term 0? years in the State prison.
••I’m rare he never meaut to be dishonest,”
pleaded the loyal little woman ; ‘‘be was
tempted by a crafty and designing man, but
instead of running away, as others would
have dons, be came back and confessed his
fault, offering to let his whole salary go to
ward making up the loat money till every
cent is paid. Mr. Me<k, the junior partner,
was inclined to be merciful, but Mr Mangle,
the head af the house, who returned just
then after a year’s absence, insisted that the
law should take its coorse.”
I gave what poor consolation I could, for
lawyers, like doctors, must keep their pa
tients’ courage op at times.
‘•ln the first place I’ll see Mangle & Meek,”
I said. “Mr. Mangle may be bronght to
bear reason, after all, if he can only be made
to see his interest in it.”
The pale and despondent face cheered np
a little. My words seemed to have inspired
a sort of undefined hope which I was far
from feeling myself.
Mr. MaDgle received me with a stony po
liteness.
“Young man,” bis manner said, “Don't
waste time in appeal to sentiment; you
won’t it you’ll just look at me.”
I took the hint and came at once to bus
iness ; repeated Gilbert’s off-r. and put it as
strongly as possible that mere was to be
gained by leniency than harshness —all of
which Mr. Mingle listened to with a con
scientious scowl.
“I cannot be a party to compounding a
felony,” be answered witlf a solemn intona
tion.
“Nor have I asked you ” I replied, not a
little nettled “I have merely mentioned a
plan of paying back your own, leaving it to
your own generosity and good judgment to
press or not to prosecution.”
“Oh. it's all the same,” was the contempt
uous rejoinder ; “anybody bnt a lawyer, with
his bead full of qnips and quibbles could see
that. Besides, there’s something rather cool
in the proposal to retain your friend in our
employ, nnder pretence of working out the
money he has stolen, with the opportunity of
filching twice as much money in the mean
time."
I felt my temper rising, and not caring ta
imperil my client’s interest by an outright
quarrel, I took a hasty leave.
Had I been in the prisoner’s place od the
morning fixed for the trial I could not have
ascended the court-house steps with more
reluctance than I did ; and when 1 entered
the coort-houae and found Gilbert and bis
wife already there, and noted the hopeful
look with which the latter greeted my com
ing, my heart sickened at the thought of the
bitter disappointment comjng.
“The People versus Gilbert 1” called out
the judge, after disposing of some formal
matters.
A jnry was immediately impanneled, aDd
the esse opened by the district attorney.
Mr. Meek was the first witness. The
vc -* **• -
HAMPTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1880.
effect, had it not evidently arisen from n dis
position to do the prisoner as little hort as
possible. But no softening could break the
terrible force of the facts he was compelled
to relate.
In his partner’s absence he had emp'oyed
George Gilbert as clerk J bad found him
competent and trustworthy ; had Bent him
on a trip to make collections ; on his retorn
he had acknowledged that after receiving a
considerable sam he was induced by a re
spectable-looking gentleman with whom be
had casually fallen in, to join a social gam?
of cards ; at first they played for amnsement
—then for money ; and alter losing all his
own in the hope of retrieving his loss, with
the fatal infatuation which atteods the first
infection of that dreadful vice, whose end is
nvift destruction, lie bad hazirded and lost
the last dollar be held in trust for his em
ployers.
Mr. Meek’s voice faltered as he closed his
narrative. He was going to volunteer some
thing about the prisoner's previous good
character when n disapproving glance from
Mr, Mangle brought him to a halt.
Just then the prisoner chanced to turn h ; s
head, and. catching sight of the senior part
ner, who had just entered and was standing
among the crowd, he started quickly ; then
he whispered in ray ear.
“Turn aside your face,” I whispered back.
And the case for the prosecution being
closed—
“ Have you any witnesses for the defence?”
inquired the judge.
“I will call Ilezchiah Mangle,” I replied.
A buzz of surprise greeted the announce
ment, in the midst of which Mr. Mangle
stepped forward and was sworn.
“You have been absent for the last year,
Mr. Mangle?” I began.
‘ I have ”
“Traveling in different part!?”
‘ Yes, sir.”
"The prisoner was employed by your part
ner in yonr absence, and was arrested about
the time of your return ?”
“Socb was the case."
“Have yon ever seen him ?”
“Not to my knowledge."
“Or met him in your travels?”
“If be will torn bis face this way I can
tell better ”
At my bidding Gilbert tamed and faced
the witness.
The rfleet was electric*l. Mr. Mangle
turned pale aDd red by turns
“One other question, Mr. Mangle. Do
you recognize iu the defendant a young rann
from whom you won a thousand dollars at
poker while on your travels t” and I named
the time and place at which the prisoner
had met bin misfortune.
The man of iron virtue hesitated worse
than his amiable partner had done. He was
baiting between a point-blank lie, which
might entail the penalties of perjury, and the
truth, which would cost him money.
Cowardice performed the office of con
science, and tue truth came out. The firings
money, which George Gilbert had lost, had
been won by the senior partner ; and the
court instructed the jury that inasmuch as
the sum in question had actually been de
livered to one of the joint owners, who was
bound to make account to bis associate, the
prisoner could not be convicted.
"God bless yon, Mr Parker," faltered tbe
happy little wife ; “I knew you would bring
us out all right.”
A Hand Organ. — A living persecutor,
in the shape of a full toned, double bass,
high C hand organ, yesterday shattered the
atmosphere in the city and claimed the un
divided attention of the juveniles of all ranks
and stations, without reference to race, color
or previous condition of ancestral servitude.
The organ seemed to rely on several tunes
for its repu'atioo, but on none as it did on
the “Sweet Bye and Bye." This it clung
to with leecb-like tenacity, and the notes
were drawn out in a manner which seemed
to indicate they would reach the sweet bye
and bye before they ended. Several brass
mounted pistols were yesterday taken down
from tbe shelves, and tbe owners were seen
indosirionsly polishing them up and renew
ing the cartridges. W hether their move
ments bad any reference to the band orgaD,
we cannot say; but the proceedings were,
to say the least, significant. It was rumored
last evening that a trade was in progress be
tween tbe owner of the band organ, (who,
by the way, is a disguised Italian nobleman,
and in no way dependent on tbe “Sweet Bye
and Bye" for his sopport.) and the pooling
office boys for tbe purchase of the organ, to
be uaed on serenades and pic-nica. We
hope the rumor is a canard, as all of tbe
young gentlemen connected with the office
high In thg community. JinJ "
Selling a Horse.
A tall, lank, old gmngrr riding a wretched
horse stopped in front of the Fifth street
horse market yesterday and asked what the
prospects were for selling a good, quiet,
family nag.
“\Vhere’s the nag?” called ont soveral
men in the crowd.
“Right here he is,” replied the lank old
man, clasping bis long lpgs afl •ctionateh
afoond the body of the animal upon which
be was seated.
The auctioneers in the stables were nna
ble to bold their audiences, and all hands
gathered aroood the man and his horse. The
rider was evidently about sixty-five years of
age and the horse about the same. Both
were gray. Yarion* comments were made
on the “team," and the crowd plied the old
man with questions with reference to the
animal, something as follows :
“Does ho remember Grn. Washington ?”
“Can he walk without crotches?”
“Does he carry an ear trumpet ?”
“Do you have to chew hii food for him ?”
etc.
One man looked in the horse's mouth and
announced that he was “too old last spring.”
The lank old farmer appeared to be mncli
pleased with the attention he was receiving,
and, taking off a battered ping, bowed his
acknowledgements to the crowd.
“Fetch in the wi iged Pegasus,” yelled an
auctioneer, “and we’ll see what he’ll bring.”
An avenue wns quickly made through the
crowd, as many men as could took hold ol
the horse's bridle, one or two twisted his
tail, eight or ten touched him np with their
whips, and thus was the grand entry made
into the stable, the old man bowing to the
right and left, and plugging the sad eyed
animal in the flanks with his boot heels.
A bid of twenty-five cents was made
“Shake op Bucephalus,” said the ane
tioneer, “and let the gentlemen look at bis
paces.”
The old man belabored the beast to the
rear eDd of the stable and return, while a
dozio watches were polled on hint, and a
dispate followed as to whether the time was
217 or 17.02.
“This horse doesn’t osnally take the whole
end of the barn to turn in," explained the
auctioneer, ‘ bnt he has a touch of the rheu
matism at present. He’ll be all right in the
spring. lam bid twenty-five cents. .Now
that you have seen him move, does the gen
tleman wish to withdraw bis bid f”
Tbe old man said he didn’t like the auc
tionecr’s style, and, as he osed to be in the
business himself, he would, if lie wasn't so
tired and thirsty, get into tbe box and sell
the horse himself.
At this suggestion, he wa9 dragged ftom
the saddle, carried to the auctioneer’s stand,
and that functionary requested to make
room for his uncle.
‘ I must have a drink of—water,” said the
lank old party, as he spat a sixpence and
Coughed feebly.
“Water be blowed 1” cried one of the
crowd ; “we’ll get you the reirnlar old juice
of the juniperberry that will make your
breath smell like n night-blooming cereus,”
and he disappeared in a saloon adj ining.
The old party said water was plenty good
enough for him, but the other article was
produced and be drank it, with a here’s to
you, courtesy to the crowd.
‘•How much do I hear for thin magnifi
cent specimen of hoss fle°h which we bare
before os?” began the old man with a floor
i*h. ‘ Examine him closely for blood or
bone, *pao, poll evil, scratches, quarter
crack, splint, beavea, thompa, mumps, bumpa
damps, and when you find one I’ll eat it."
“Fetch grandfather a cocktail," aaid a
voice, and a cocktail was brought and
drained to the dreg®, the old man murmuring
softly, “here’* looking at you I”
“Now, gents, be good enough to bid np
lively. My hoas may DOt.be a perfect
quadruped described in the poem by Byron,
Barns and George Francis Train, but he
comes of the same family, and I have his
pedigree at home, and it runs back to the
time of Henry V.”
“Fetch him a sour-ma«h I"
“I really ought not to drink any more,
but as yon say, it isn’t often I come to town,
therefore —my regards!”
“Oblige me by bidding up sharp.”
“Thirty cents !’’ yelled a voice.
"Thank you. Thirty cents I am bid
Qentleuien, you needn’t be afraid of him.
This is an animal I can recommend. He
won’t run down at the heel, cut in the eye
or shrink in the wasb’n. He is gentle as
the suckin' dove, and pulls like a five cent
cigar.”
“A gin-sling for the ancient mariner 1”
“Gentlemen, your liberality is only exceed
ed by your if my 81$^,'™°".
. w ...
coat ; but here’s hopin’ we may all live to
see politics and religion purified and the red
ribbon of temperance enenmnaos the round
earth from Quadalquiver to Kansas City—’'
“Fall back for a Tom and Jerry 1”
“Really, gentlemen, 1 can’t permit this
expense to be al 1 one side, like the handle of
a coff e pot, and the moment I sell this horse
Pll reciprocate, if I have to walk home, nod
I live in the badk end of the next county ;
however—many, happy thanks 1” and the
Tom and Jerry disappeared from the
them.
“Now, gents whit do 1 hear for this—”
“Take this life-everlastin’,” exclaimed a
Kentuckian, and he passed up a glass pf
Robertson county.
The lank old mnn raised the glass to a
level with biR lips, and said :
“I don’t care, «eein' it’s you. I will put
myself ontside of this elixir, and then I'll
show you what this boss can do nnder the
saddle when he knows something is expected
of him. In the meantime —here’s my opin
ion 1”
The farmer was helped to mount his nag,
the crowd fell apart to allow the pageant to
pass in the street, where it could have elbow
rtknn, and as it ambled along the old man
was heard to observe:
‘‘A whiskey straight, a cocktail, a gin
sling, a sonr mash, a Thomas and Jeremiah,
life everlastin’ from Robertson county—and
the King of the Cannibal island himself
couldn’t tell wbat else—ain’t so bad, by
jingo 1” and the gray-baired old sinner
turned half around in the saddle, kissed hie
hand to the crowd, and shouted :
“I’ll call around egain about half pant
two o’clock next spring, e.nd while you’re
waiting you might lay in a new stock of gin
slings end cordials, for them’s the thing*
that strike your grandfather right where be
lives I" —Cincinnati Enquirer.
John Randolph in the Senate.
An old-time politician, writing in the
Atlantic of noted characters whom he net in
Washington in the last century, thus serve*
np John Randolph of Roanoke: John
Randolph attracted tbe most attention on
the part of strangers. He was at least six
feet in height, with long limbs and an ill
proportioned body aud a small, round bead.
Claiming descent from Pocahontas, he wore
his coarse, black hair long, parted in the
middle, r.nd combed down on either side of
his sallow faee. His small, black eyes were
expressive io their rapid glances, especially
when be was engaged in debate, and his
high-toned and thin voice would ring
through the Senate chamber like tbe shrill
scream of an angry vixen. He wore a full
suit of heavy, drab-colored English broad
cloth, the high, rolling collar of his aurtout
coat almost concealing bis bead, while bis
skirts hung in vo'uminous folds about his
knee-breeches and the white leather tops of
bis boots. He used to enter tbe senate
chamber wearing a pair of ailver spurs, car
rying a heavy riding-whip and followed by
a favorite hound, which crouched beneath
his desk. Be wrote, and occasionally spoke,
in riding-gloves, and it was his favorite ges •
lure to pofnt the loDg, index finger of bis
right hand at his opponent, at be bnrled
forth tropes and figures of speech at him.
Every ten or fifteen rainutea while he occu
pied tbe floor, he would exclaim, “Tims,
more porter I” and ihe assistant door-keeper
woo’d hand him a foaming tumbler of
WhitebreHd’s potent malt liquor which be
would hurriedly drink, and then proceed
with his remarks, often thus drinking three
or four quarts id an afternoon. He was not
choice in his selection ol epithets, and as
Mr. Calhoun took tbe ground that he did
not have the power to wall a senator to
order, the irate Virginian pronounced Presi
dent Adams “o traitor," Daniel Webater“a
vile slanderer," John Holmes “a dangerous
fool” and Edward Livingston “tbe most
contemptible and degraded of beings, whom
no man ought to touch, unless with a pair
of toogs.”
Did you ever notice a poor chap that
stands io the first picture of tbe almanac
with the fish and sheep and scorpions, and
twins, etc., around biro? Did you ever
notice that he was naked and had nothing
io bis stomach T Well, that poor fellow
used to edit a paper.
“Bomkbodv’s coming when tbe dew drops
fall,” she was softly humming, when tbe old
roan remarked : “An you bet yer sweet
life, Maria, that he’ll think a thunder
storm’s let loose wbeo he gets here,”
A OIRL soflering from lockjaw was left
alone with a mouse by tbe shrewd pbysican,
and she opened her month wide enough to
give a yell that made tbe crockery in the
Care of tbe Eye*.
A writer in Haiper ’« Bazar has an arti
cle on the care of the eyes, but as be fails to
cxhau‘t his subject, we add a few additional
rules, and if they succeed in exhausting tha
reader, we shall feel amply repaid for our
time and trouble in compiling them:
Never rend, write or sow by gas’ight It
is exceedingly hurtful to the eye. Always,
when possiolo, use a kero-one hinp, one low
enough K. 'nable yon to sit with it under
your nose. Not only is this practically rec
ommended by tho worst Dentists, hot there
is also the delicious perfume so grateful to
a cultivated taste.
When outdoors, always protect your visual
organs with colored glasses. Besides being
a graceful ornament to the nose, they pre
vent the daylight reaching the eye. Noth
ing is so bad as daylight for the eye. Of
coarse you will remove yonr gia*ses when
yon enter nn artificially lighted room. It is
ouiy natural light that hurts.
One of the very worst things yon can da
for the eyesight is to tell a man bigger than
yourself that his veracity is doubted. One
instance of this kind has often destroyed a
person's sight for months.
It is also a dangerou* practice to use the
keyhole as an avenue of vision. The party
on tbe other side may own a brad-awl or
squirt gun.
To toughen the eye, it is reconrra n le l by
good authorities that one sit in the steam
c>r beside an open window This, to be,sure,
is heroic treatment, but if persisted in tbe
eye will become so tough that nothing can
penetrate it, not even light.
Reading at twilight is excellent practice.
It accustoms the eye to the changeful gra
dations of receding light until complete
darkness ensues. When blindness inter
venes, this darkness is perinaoeut and exceed
ingly restful. v
Io reading, always place your book on the
table before you, and bend your face down
over it. This will serve to concentrate your
attention upon tha volume. If you become
shortsighted, as you probably will,so much
the better. Tour thoughts will not likely
be d tract'd by distant objeta.
It is a rule followed by all careful gunners
to close both eyes when pulling the trigger.
The danger of any detached pieces of per
cossion cap striking tbe eyes is (bus ob
viated.
When an infinitesimal atom of dust strikes
your cornea, immediately mop your eye
with a coarse pocket handkerchief It will
cause you to forget tbe paio made by tbe
first-named foreign substaoce.
Bpaee forbids giving the correct rules for
removing the cinder from the eye. There
are lour bandred and seventy-three of these
rules, any of them perfectly efficacious ex
cept in tbe case under treatment. As signs
of rain fail in dry time, so do rules lor ex
tracting cinders from tbe eye when there is
one there.
Eyes are like good children nnd should
never be crossed.
Gentlemert should never look at a bril
liantly beautiful woman. It engenders ener
vation of tbe eyelids, causing them to nicti
ate in an unseemly manner.
The eye is the most precious organ of the
body.
President Johnson was notabiy food of It.
He spelled it thus: I.
But eye am getting egeyetistical.
Shall eye stop.
Aye I
Aitkr you’ve tried it a few times you'll
find out that it isn’t judicious to give the
man across the table the point of an ex
cruciatingly fuuny story just as he bas
filled his mouth with coflee.
Mr. O Hull is the name of a deacon in
a Chicago church. When the choir finishes
a poorly rendered song the minister im
patiently calls out; “O, Hell, pass the
contribution box.”
Thb man who fell ofl the fence into the
brambles wss much nettled by the occur
rence. “We hope thistle be appreciated,"
says a punster. W eed have said the same
thing.
As the western clouds are tinged with
gold even after the sun is lost to vie v, so
does the ’memory of a kind act bring a
smile to the face wheo its author is forgot
ten.
All flesh is grass. That is why the'
young man’s arm assumes a grasehook curve
when be thoughtlessly encircles the waist of
—at this point let the gas be turned low.
The baidest thing in the world for a
young woman to do is to look unconcerned
the first time she comes out in a handsome
engagement ring.
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NO. 26