Upson enterprise. (Thomaston, Ga.) 1878-1879, November 15, 1879, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOLUME I
THOMASTON, GA., SATURDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 15, 1379
NUMBER 37
THE UPSON ENTERPRISE
ADVERTISING RATES
QUAEKSTIT. 11 M.13M. €M. I 1% M
Saunro. $1 00 |$2 50 $700 1000 $15 00
teuarer. 208 5,001000 1500 25 00
25 00
ran. The bullets fell all around us.
and one struck me on the thigh.
. • ACCOUNT OF the OUT- ploughing through the flesh just un-
NEAR AT WHITE RIVER AGENCY-der the skin. It stung me like a wah)
wish MEEKER’S STATEMENT OF HER and I thought it timeto arop. I fell
EXPERIENCES AS A CAPTIVE AMoxG to the ground. --- 1
MRS. MEEKER’S
THE INDIANS.
Squares,
(Squares,
Colvins
2000
4 00
5 00 I12 00 ‘ 30 00 | 2900
1000 | 20 00 | 35 00 1 65 00
15 00 | 25 00 40 001 7000 I
30 00
000 1 4000
50 00
80 00
7000 180 00
DR. J. M. BLALOCK,
Thomaston, Georgia.
L. C. SUGGS
ATTORNEY A T
THOMASTON, GEORGIA.
Will practice in the several Courts •
„he State.
oct23,-tr
WESLEYAN FEMALE INSTITUTE.
STAUNTON, VIRGINIA.
Auv one who desires to educate his
daughter thoroughly, on the lowest terms
and least expense, in one of the first
schools for young ladies in the United
Staten. which opens September 18th, 1879,
write for a Catalogue to
Rev. Dr. WM. A. HARRIS. President.
juIr12.-tf Staunton. Va
P. L. PEACOCK,
J. W. HUNT.
W. N. HOLT.
C. S. ELLIS.
PEACOCK, HUNT & Co.,
Cotton Factors
General Commission Merchants,
No, 2 Kelly’s Block, 188 Bayst.,
ANNAN, .. GEORGIA
IDE RAL advances made on consign,
wents of Cotton.
Being agents for no particular brards
of Bagging. Ties, etc., we till orders for
any brand desired at the lowest market
prices.
The New York Herald printsan in-
teresting statement by Mrs. N. C.
Meeker concerning the recent massa-
cre at the White River Agency. She
"Trouble began when the agent in-
dicuted an intention ot ploughing
eighty acres of land lying between
Douglass avenue and the river. * The
Indians had not used the land except
for their ponies to run on. It was
open and unoccupied. As soon as he
heard of any dissatisfaction about the
matter the agent called the Indians
together, and settled it by obtaining
the consent of the majority of the In-
dians to plough. Chief Johnson failed
to attend the council, and when the
Utes gave their permission he grew
angry, and it was his son who shot at
the plough-man. Afterward John-
son said he was ‘No angry ;‘ but back
of all this there were signs of wick-
edness and secret plotting, suspicious
movements, increasing rumors, large
sales of ammunition and false charg-
es that the agent had cut down the
rations. This last was false. The
government had reduced or changed
the issue of rations for all the Indians.
My husband gave the White River
Indians regular and full government
rations, but he had orders from Wash-
ington not to issue rations to the Un-
compahgre, Uintah, Arapahoe or oth-
er outside visiting Indians.
"O the morning of the massacre
Douglass came to the agency and
spoke of soldiers coming. My hus-
band said :
"‘Let them come. They will not
hurt any one. But we will send for
We offer to our correspondents the Inf-
est information of the markets by daily |l 61, : 1,
mail, and. when desired, by teleg raph: all the chiefs and head captains to
and will give prompt personal attention | hear their complaints and talk the
wall business entrusted to us. sep19 tf
LT. LEE, E.B.LED, W.J. LAWRENCE.
A. T. Lee & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCILINTS,
HAND-
COTTON FACTORS,
Consignments Solicited.
Highest market price guaranteed.
Charges for selling cotton very moderate.
Furnish Barging and Ties and Fertili-
more at lowest market quotations. Make
promt returns and liberaladvaueemente
• Bille of Lading,
Nil the Savannah Weekly News to
"E lar shippers gratis. ° sep20 tT.
(IFGRGIA—UrsoN € OUNTY.—Where-
Uas L. W. Elling on. Administrator
onthe estate of S. A. Ch ppell, deceased,
applies to the undersigned for letters dis-
missory from his Admini.tratership.
The efors all persons concerned are re-
tired to show cause (ifanv they have)
NOY said a ministrator. on the rst Mon-
day of December next, should not Le dis-
thurged.
Given under my hand and seal of office,
Sept 1st, 1870. A. WORRILL, Ordinary,
MORTGAGE SHERIFF’S SALE
TILL be sold before the Court-hose
co" deor is Thomaston, Upson county,
the first Tuesday in November,
it between the legal hours of sale, the
Lowing descried property, to-wit:
matter over.’
"Douglass did not say much and
went away. We did not Tar any
particular danger, though ou Sator-
day, three days before the massacre,
they had moved their tentsand wom-
en and children to the wilderness.—
The Indian Pauvitz asked me on Sat-
urday, Sunday and Monday if I was
afraid. I said,‘No.’ Pauvitz wasthe
husband of Jane.
|"I was in the kitchen with my
daughter, washing dishes, about half-
|past one o’clock. We had just finish-
ed dinner. Some of the Indians had
eaten with us, and Chief Douglass
had been picking around the table
and joking with my daughter Jose-
phine while we were washing the
dishes. There came a volley of fire-
arms—a succession of sharp explo-
sions. It was startling and I knew
what was coming. My daughter and
I looked into each other’s faces. Mrs.
Price, who was washing clothes at the
door, rushed in, exclaiming:
"What shall we do ?"
"Josephine said, ‘Keep all together,’
and the girl was as cool as if she were
receiving callers in a parlor.
"The windows were shot in. Our
The Indians captured
Josephine and Mrs. Price first, as they
were behind me, with Mrs. Price’s
bies.
all turn round and smoke and laugh
and talk. Sometimes the ceremony
is repeated all night. I assisted at
two of these medicine festivals. Mrs.
Price’s boys became expert it sing.
: somnambulic state, and in a pose
closely resembling that assumed by
the late Charlotte Cushman lu the
celebrated sleep-walking scene of
"Lady Macbeth," stood Ilia wife, while
|ing Ute songs, and they sang to each in either hand and ominously fishing
other on their journey home. The in the gaslight she grasped the man-
A political party needs a machine
in the sense that it needs a work-
ing organization. .
The machine in this sense exists for
the good of the party.
The machine in this sense is an in-
strument of the party —an essential
instrument, perhaps, but still an in-
strument.
The arrival of General Adamsiegener, he kept quiet while the lady There is no vitality in political ma- -N EW-
• hel A ms is soliloquized : "[Toll the carer in an chine, al
The strength of a political machine: DiaCKSillILa Shor
sick-bed ceremonies were very moth carving knife and fork. Curi-
r strange and weird, and more interest- ods to know just what was going to
.‘ I saw the body of my husband ing than anything I saw in all my be the denotement of this kTENk
stretched out ou the ground in front captivity of twenty-three days."
of the warehouse; all the clothing
was gone but the shirt.
was not mutilated.
The arms
The bods described, and the councils that fol- easy p ion in the right hand, thus."
ims were lowed in relation to the surrender of All
.. - -|ushe dipped the point of the huge
as looked as penceful and! ndtural as follows:r 18 narra ive concludes kuifa as gracefully a • teneing-mas-
|ter 12 the broad-sword exercise.—
extended at the sides of the head. Th
is the strength of the party behind it.
The object of a political machine is
Near the Livery Stables,
as in lifebut blood was running from "Next morning we left for Un sThen » continues, ... . .
the mouth. Istooped to kiss him, compalgree in charge of Captain dent, "bend Blight
but just as my lips were near him 1! Cline and Mr. Shermr- PL / :. !.
Saw an Indian standing stone still,
looking at me, so I turned and walk-
ed away. Douglass afterward said
that my husband was shot through
the side of the head.”
Miss Josephine Meeker has written
out a statement of the experience of
the captives while among the Indians,
from which we cull some extracts.
An incident of the first halt after the
march southward had begun, is thus
related :
"Then the brave chief, Douglass,
who had eaten at our table that very
day, walked off a few feet, returned
and placed his loaded gun to my fore-
head three times, and asked me if:
to de the work required of it by the THOMASTON,
party.
GEORGIA
The ... . - y the left wrist and When a political machine tries to
served as scout iu the army of the a insert the fork in the breast of the tur- control a party the order of nature is
key, one prong on either side of the reversed—the tail tries to wag the
Ireast : one." A id, suiting the ac- dog. This makes the dog laugh.
tomac, and Mr. Sherman as chief
clerk at Los Pinos Agency. To these
gentlemen we were indebted for a
safe and rapid journey to Chief Ou-
ray s house on the Uncompahgre riv-
er, near Los Pinos. We rode on po-
nies forty miles the first three days,
and reached Captain Cline’s wagon.
on a small tributary ot the Grand
tion to the word, she was about to
plunge the fork into my friend’s anat-
When the engineer of a political
machine—whether the engineer is a
omy, about where the ribs join the United States Senator or a Presiden-
sternum, when he caught and disarm-
ed her. She drew back and glared at
him for a moment, and then, pushing
back the sleeves of her robe de nuit.
We took the buckboard wagon and pointed her fager towards him and
traveled the next day to the Gunni-1 ‘
son river, and the next and last day
1 her :
"The only way to reach your hus
of fear we traveled forty-five miles, La., , .:....
1. band 4 heart is through his stomach!
and reached the house of good Chief 0
Ouray about sundown.
"Here Inspector Pollock and My
was going to run away. I told him I | brother Ralph met me, and I was hap
was not afraid of him nor of death.
and should not run away. When he
found that his repeated threats could
not frighten me, all the other Indians[
py enough. Chief Oa ay and hisu-
ble wife did everything possible to
make us c mfortable. We found ca:-
pets on the floor and curtains on the
windows, lamps on the tables and
turned on him and laughed at him,
and made so much fun of him that he stoves in the rooms, with fires burn-
sneaked off and went over to frighten ing. We were given a whole house,
my mother. I heard her cry ‘On! and after supper we went to bed and
and supposed that she thought some slept without much fear, though
terrible fate had befallen me. I shout-
ed to her that I was not hurt; that
she need not be afraid ; that they were
only trying to scare her. The night
was still, but I heard no response.—
mother was still haunted by the ter-
rors she had passed through. Next
morning we breakfasted with Mrs.
Ouray, who shed tears over us as she
Since that night this gentleman has
slept in another apartment with the
door bolted and a stack of trunks
piled up against it.
‘The History of Petrolium.
A correspondent of the Philadel-
phia Times, writing from Oil City,
Penn., thus universally used petrole-
um: "In 1841 petroleum was used
briefly sketches the history of the now
as a medicine. At that time and up
1853, it was known as ‘Seneca Oil,’
probably on account of its having
been found on the surface of Seneca
lake, and having first been used by
tial candidate— runs this instrument
of a party counter to the judgement
of the party, he lies a wke nights think-
ing what the party will do about it.
It is supposable that in certain cir-
cumstances a political machine may
be more intelligent than public opin-
ion, but in the United States public
opinion is the court of last resort, and
possesses the power to enforce its de-
crees.
A party which is worse than its
machine is an untrustworthy party.
A party which is better than its
machine cannot be controlled by its
machine.
When a political machine ceases to
be responsible to public opinion it is
time to change the engineers, for if it
is better than public opinion it will
—*0) —.
I would respectfully inform my friends
and the public generally, that I have open-
ed a Blacksmith Shop at the old stutid of
John Bland, opposite the Steam Shop,
where, for connection with W. 0. Smith
and John Bland, I am prepared to over-
haul old Buggies and make them look
like new. Repairing Brigetes and Horse-
Shoeing a Specialty, I will guarantee all
my work to be firstelass in every particu-
far and at hard pan prices. All those who
are indebted to me for work done in the
past are earnestly request to settle up
promptly this Fall. in order that I may
carry on my business.
Respectfully.
oct 1-1n
J OI1 N D. CA RA WAY
MASE FACTURER & REPAIRER of
Buggies, Wagers, &c., &o
Tenders the public his thanks for past
patronage and solicits their future fav-
ors
sept20,-1m
MAKER AND DEALER IN
iThe Indians looked at each other. All
|hands took a drink around my bed;
then they saddled their horses, and
Pursune led my horse to me, and
knelt down on his hands and knees
for me to mount my horse from his
back. He always did this, and when
he was absent his wife did it. I saw
|Pursune-do the same gallant act once
Ifor his squaw, but it was only once,
|and none of the other Indians did it
|at all.”
A touch of feminine nature is thus
described :
"On Wednesday and other days,
one of Supauzisquait’s three squaws
put her hand on my shoulder and
said:‘Poor little girl! I feel so sorry;
you have no father ! and you are a way
off with the Utes so far from home!
She cried all the time, and said her
own little child had just died, and her
heart was sore. When Mrs. Price:
came into camp another squaw took|
her baby (Johnny) into her arms and|
wept over him, and said in Ute that
she felt very sorry for the captives.”
Miss Meeker witnessed a genuine
war dance, which she describes as
follows: -
"One of the favorite amusements
was to put on a negro soldier’s cap, a
The North half of lot of land number 64 first move was to get under the bed
uinleg (ch umngLount con- in Josephine’s room to avoid the bui- short coat and blue pantaloons, and|
more on less, improved. Leviedon under lets, which were whizzing over our
a superior coita ed from heads. Josephine had the key of the
ENRt.L Curtin ,
Natzhews vs. James H. Beall, as the
inert of said James H. Beall, to Batis-
ied. 2 fa. Tenant in possession noti-
81236 C. T. FOX, Sheriff.
40850,-108
We have on hand
Orders for BRY
tram, at PRICK can be left with J. T.
is Geo. w chard & Bro’s. store, or
rich will receivoft, at the yard, all of
average lots vie prompt attention.
FALE EADBUICK CE
wno nobsand. The Brick we offer
superior
7They arancome and see for your-
WOOUTTY CORD of HARD
E will be paid. W bich the HIGH EST
bade us good-bye. Then we took the Seneca Indians as a medicine.
mail wagons and stages for hom
The mode of obtaining this oil, at
Three days and one night constant | that period of its history, was by
travel over two ranges of snowy throwing blankets on the surface of
mountains, where the road was 11,000 still water where the oil was wont to
teet above the sea, brought us to the accumulate, and after they had be-
beautiful park of San Lins.
cone saturated to remove them and
"We crossed to Rio Grande at day- extract the oil by wringing the blan-
light for the last time, and a moment kets. From this primitive beginning
later the stage and its four horses has grown one of the leading indue-
dashed up a street, and we stopped
before a hotel with green blinds,
while the driver shouted ‘Alamosa.
The moon was shining brightly, and
Mount Blancho, the highest peak in
Colorado, stood out grandly from the
four great ranges which surround the
park. Mother could hardly stand —
She had to be lifted from the coach,
but when she caught sight of the cars
of the RioGrande Railroad, and when
she saw the telegraph poles her eyes
! tries In this State. It was not, how-
ever, until the years of 1853-4 that pe-
:troleum began to be valued as an il-
laminator, and this only in a limited
way.
crude state
for it was then burned in its
in old lard-oil lamps.
brightened and she exclaimed
I feel sate.’ In closing this
want to thank Chief Ouray,
and Gen. Adams. To them
our escape."
,‘Now
letter I
which were liable to explode at any
time.
"Between 1854 and 1857 it became
known that the explosive qualities of
this product could be removed by sub-
jecting it to a process of distillation,
and from that time its value began to
be recognized. Here a difficulty arose.
This wife : The oil could not be gathered in suffi-
We oW6
A River Turning Into a High
|Cent quantities to supply the demand
|and something must bo done or the
new industry would fll through —
Accordingly in the year 1858 a joint
stock company was organized for the
The Ohio River is now lower, it is:...... .1 = .2 21 ,.
1,‘. purpose ot boring into the rock in
said, than it has been for twenty five . 4 1_
quest of the now valuable oil, and
milk house and proposed to go there
The bullets were flying like hailstones
and we locked ourselves into the milk
house, which had double walls filled
in with adobe clay, and there was on-
imitate the negroes in speech and
walk. I could not help laughing, be-
cause they were so accurate in their
personations. On Sunday they made
a pile of sage brush as large as a wash-
stand and put soldiers’ clothes and a
hat on the pile; then they danced a
years, and it has a deal of capacity to
get very low on slender provocation.
At any number 01 points it can be
easily forded. Navigation is wel
nigh suspended, and between Pitts-|
burgh and Louisville freight is piled
up in many places on the banks, wait-
ing for the rise which, it has been
predicted by the weather-wise, will
as they waltzed
ly one little window. We stayed | war dance and sang
there all the afternoon and heard 110 around it. They were in their best
sounds but the crash of guns, we clothes, with plumes and fur dancing
knew all the men were being killed, caps, made of skunk skins and griz-
:and expected that the Indians would zle bear skins, with ornaments of ca-
finish the day with the butchery of gle feathers. Two or three began the
the women. Frank Dresser came in dance, others joined, until a ring as
the women.
Frank Dresser came in
shot through the leg. He killed an
Indian just as we let him into the
milk house.
About 5 o’clock in the afternoon the
firing ceased and all was still. Sud-
denly we heard the low crackle of
flames and smelt smoke. Then we
large as a house was formed. There
were some squaws, and all had knives.
They charged on the pile of coats
with their knives and pretended that
be inefficient, while if it is worse pub-|
lie opinion will not tolerate it.—Now|
York Evening Post.
HARNESS, SADDLES, BOOTS, Etc.
/ T will seff my goods cheaper than any
body in Thomaston
82011
A queer fish of a man arrived
at
|the Brush at Feet depot from the South|
yesterday, in company with a sheep’s
gray ulster and a bulky satchel, and:
when the hack-drivers went for him|
he called one of them aside and said:|
"I am a singular man. I’m worth
over a million of dollars, and when
I take a notion to a person I can afford
to buy them a house and lot.”
"Take you right up, sir," replied
the hackman.
‘Perhaps you will—perhaps so. Let
me tell you something. I landed in
Toledo ten years ago, get into a hack
C. H. CORBIN,
Merchant Tailo
Thomaston, corgia
2
4
OULD respectful inform the public
and drove up town, and the hackman TITOULD resp
never said a word about fare. He win Thheh
seemed to take a liking to me. In
four weeks I presented him with a
team and hack worth $1,200. Yes,
I’m a singular man."
"Get right into my carriage, sir,”
said the hackman as he opened the
door, and the stranger complied and
was driven to a hotel. As he got out
lie said:
"I guess I’ll take your name. I may
... .. as made arrangements
wit hN.Y. importers by which he can fur-
nish fine imported woolens of German,
French and English manufacture, at N.
Y, cost cash prices I always keep the
lest N. Y. Fashions on hand and guaran-
tee a perfect fit in every instance.
P.S.- No pie ce goods kept, such as are
sold by merchants in this market.
USE THIS BRAND
take a freak to present you
house and lot.”
"The are is fifty cents, sir!
ed the driver.
with a
repli-
Col. E. L. Drake was put at the head singular man!
"What! Didn’t I tell you I was a E
of this company, with full power to
push the enterprise. The work prov-
ed to be full of difficulties. The fa-
cilities for probing the hard rock at
that time were exceedingly limited.
The derricks used were only thirty
feet high and the drilling tools only
weighed in the neighborhood of two
"You did, sir, and I’m another. I
want my fare."
"Look here!" whispered the man
as he put up his pencil, “you have
lost just exactly $40,000. On the way
up here I determined to put you in
my will for that amount. Now 11
BEST IN THE WORLD
not come this season. Scarcely a boat |L. , ...
, 1: 1:1 hundred and fifty pounds, and the
of any kind is to be seen on the upper 1
part of the stream, if it may be called old ‘horse-power’ was used for run-
such. The Ohio has not had water
enough since July for the transport-
ning the machinery. With all these
difficulties to contend with the work
progressed slowly, and it was not un-
tion of coal from Pittsburgh to Cin-
cinnati, and the latter city has beuti August 29, 1859, that the drill
suffering for fuel. The price of coal struck the shale rock at a depth of
has more than doubled, and there is seventy -one feetand the well immes-
so little on land that people will hare diately filled uD to within five inches
of the surface. A small pump was in-
to renew their supplies through the
railw ays, which will advance the rates
be hanged if I do!"
"I had rather have my fifty cents
now, and I can’t wait here all day for
it, either!”
"There it is,” growled the stranger
as he fished up a half dollar after a
great deal of trouble, "and now, sir—”
But the hackman didn’t wait. The
singular man watch him turn the corn
er and then entered the hotel, turned
the blotter wrong end up to register
his name, and his voice was heard
saying:
"If I can’t get a room looking out
on a circus procession I don’t want
any at all !”—Detroit Free Press.
BETTER THAN ANY SAL-
ERATUS.
One teaspoonful of this Soda used with
sour milk equals Four teaspoonfuls of the
best Baking Powder, saving Twenty
Times its cost. See pa kage for valuable
information. If the teaspoontul is too
large and does not produce good results at
first, use less afterwards, febl-tf
CULLODEN
sorted, and the production was found
to be about forty barrels per diem, at
which rate it kept up for several
they would burn the brush. They much more. Any quantity of coal is
became almost insane with frenzy and awaiting in flat bottomed vessels at
The dance lasted from Pittsburgh to float down as soon as
excitement.
2 o’clock until sundown.
months.
This well was located in
Tree township, Venango
Then they the river shall have risen. Some 25,- Cherry
1‘000,000 bushels are reported to be at county, about two miles from what
The system of medical treatment that point, more than has ever been is now the city of Titusville, on the
Portland Bar, at banks of Oil Creek. Other wells
"While in the building we barely lows by Miss Meeker, the Falls of the Ohio, is now an island soon followed, and people began to
whispered, and tried to keep Mrs. | "No whites are admitted to the tents of very considerable size, and the flock to this new field of excitement.
Price’s babies still. As the fire was while the Utes sing their medicine. Falls themselves look like an arch - ready to tap the veins from which the
increasing we left the milk house cau- songs over the sick, but I, being con- pelago. The Ohio would be, as has
saw it coming through the cracks in
the ceilings and knew that the de- took the coats and all went home.
struction of the agency buildings had
begur.| among the In dians is described as fol- accumulated there.
tiously, and Josephine reconnoitered sidered one of Pursune’s family, was been said of the Arno, quite a respect-
the enemy. ‘It’s a good time to es- allowed to remain. When their child able river, if some more water was
cape,’ she said. ‘The Indians are busy was sick his family asked me to sing pumped into it. It seems to get shal-
with them, which I did. The Medi- lower every year, and some persons
stealing agency goods.’
CULLODEN, GEORGIA,
The language of postage stamps in-
stead 01 flowers, has just been invent-
::
liquid wealth poured in such profus-
ion.
A Confederate cap-machine
been unearthed in Danville, Va.
has
In
"We went around in front of the | cine Man kneels close to the sufferer, ! in the West have seriously proposed May, 1861, W. H. Wash, a millwright
agent’s office and found the doors
|with his back to the spectators, while to fill it up, and convert it into a high- I invented a machine that would make
Open and things undisturbed, except
that some of my husband’s clothing
he sings in a series of high-keyed way.
lay on the front stoop. We
one, living or dead, and no
any one having been killed.
saw no
sign 01
We ran
30,000 caps in ten hours. He sold it
to the Government for $15,000, return-
ed to Lynchburg, made another which
ed.. Thus, when a postage stamp is
placed upside down on the left hand
corner of the envelope it means ‘I love
you;‘ in the same, crosswise, ‘My
heart is another’s;’ straight up and
down. ‘Good-bye, sweetheart, good-
bye: upside down in the right hand
The School embraces three courses of
study: The Preparatory Course, intended
10 prepare students for College; The
Commercial Course. to prepare young
men for Business: The English Course,
to lay the foundation of & common Eng-
lish Education.6
Terms reasonable. Board cheap.
FALL TERM BEGINS AUG, 11th, 1879
in a line with the buildings, toward
the sage brush, so as to keep the
buildings between us and the Indians,
who were at the warehouse pulling
out the goods; but we had not gone
far before we were discovered, and
the Indians made for us, tiring as they
grunts, gradually reaching a lower
and solemn tone. The family join,
and at intervals he howls so loud. v Miss Corson’s lectures on cooking had a capacity of 80,000 per day (ten
that one can hear him a mile : then |had a singular effect upon the wife of hours) and sold it for $3,000. He sub-
his voice dies away and only a gurg- |a gentleman re siding in Washington, sequently manufactured another with
corner, ‘Write no more;‘ in the cen-
tre at the top, ‘Yea ;‘ opposite at the
bottom, ‘No;’ on the right hand cor-
ner at a right angle, ‘Do you love me ?’
in the left hand corner, ‘I hate you;’
For further information, address
C L. FLOYD, A. B., Prin"l,
Culloden, Monroe Co., Ga.
REFERENCES. Rev. T. G. Scott, For-
1 " - * " E. Lambdin, Presi-
top corner on the right, 4 wish your syth, Ga.; Prof. C. E. Lan
friendship; bottom corner on the dent of Gordon Institute,
, , a \ . , • Ga.; the Fact lty of the Uni
ling sound is heard, as if his throat
was full of water. The child lay near-
left, ‘I seek your acquaintance ; on a
The gentleman was awakened from a a capacity of 12,000 caps per hour.—
sound sleep about 2 o’clock in the When Richmond was euacuated this
ly stripped. The doctor presses his morning by a flood of gas-light in last machine was put on a heavy wa-
lips against the breast of the sufferer.
the chamber coming from the jets in com and carried to Danville, where it
and repeats the gurgling sound. He | the chandelier burning at full head. has remained in a rubbish heap ever
sings a few minutes more, and then Standing over him, evidently in a since.
line with the surname, ‘Accept my
love;’ the same upside kown, ‘I am
engaged ; at right angle in the same
place, ‘I long to see you ; in the mid-
die at the right hand edge, ‘Write me
immediately.’
. . Barnesville,
, the Faetlty of the University of Ga.,
Athens, Ga.
|L BLACKWELL’S II a
IN DURHAM
TOBACCO