Newspaper Page Text
” A A
“
—
and ^tertian:.
pan, Ga., Friday, August 19Ui, 1887.
'iA-'t 'A :
“About two hour*—it wasn’t quite 3
o’clock when she went in.”
AMONG THE ROSES.
Sons tl»<* rose*. in morn's rosy glow,
lie w«nld not look at me, l.iu tunn-d asW'.o.
tanning the queenly blossom* in ihoir
J pride;
|tl hall she smiled and half she b ushed to
| know
arself more fair than all their glorious show;
gkVn'-mly I wooed to pain a peerless bride,
t. though my tendercsf. e!oqii'’nw I t ried,
e laughed her silvery laugh and answered
“Xo.”
tit when pale moonlight, In the garden close,
lalf hid an<l half revealed iheir loveliness,
£ stood iitrioijg the roses, and I chose
Phut shadowy hour my suit once more to
press.
c.arkness gave her courage; like a rose
IlShe chopped her head and soitly whispered
“Yes.”
monstrous crime, he is allowed to with
hold it by merely pleading that he has
a client in the case, who has paid him
a retainer, and whose secrets he
bound to keej
sional honor; and learned judges reso
lutely and solemnly uphold it as such.
Possibly it Is necessary to grant to a
special class so much in the way of priv
ilege to pervert the principles and
methods of justice, morality and pro
priety, which are rigidly applied to all
other classes; but if so, it has yet to Ik 1 j
satisfactorily demonstrated—and the ,
average observer may therefore be par-| ,
cloned for entertaining some doubt epitaph she desired for her husband s
A school inspector, finding a class
This is called profes- | hesitating in answering the question,
“With what weapon did Samson slay
the Philistines ? ” and wishing to
prompt them significantly tapped hi*
own cheek, and asked: ‘AN hat Ls this ?
The whole class instantly answered:
“The jawbone of an ass !”
“I don’t want no rubbish, no fine
sentiment, if you please,” said the
widow who was asked what kind of an
The Privileges of Lawyers.
f !Sf Louie Globe-Democrat.
The observer of current events in our
[courts and our legislative bodies ean-
inot have failed to wonder from time to
■time how • \ comes that, so many privi-
| leges are oven to lawyers which are de-
! nied to uA other classes of citizens. By
uine curious process of favoritism all
ordinary rules of responsibility and
■propriety seem to have been suspended
■for the benefit of this particular frater
nity; and to be a lawyer nowaday* ‘ y
LMijoy immunities that amount to prfic-
tical exemption from restraints which
y^n the case of the great ma jority of peo
ple are supposed to be indispensable to
the safety and welfare of society.
Thirdly a day passes that this fact is not
glaringly illustrated. Under the plea
-professional privilege, the most Ha-
raCivt breaches of personal right and
V^f.esy are constantly being cominit-
c', and the victims of these outrages
[e expected and required to submit,
the singular theory that a man who
fntrives to gain admission to the bar
i y that happy chance invested with
authority to violate the very laws
obligations which he undertakes to
|§fine and enforce.
_hcre are insults lieaped upon wit
nesses in common legal proceedings,-by
attorneys pretending to be anxious only
, to discover the truth, which serve to
make a mockery of the dignity and de
cency that should prevail in the’halls
pf just ice. The'lawyer would not think
for a moment of taunting and provok
ing a man upon the street in any such
fashion; nor would a man thus insulted
n any other place be obliged to forego
fjhe right of self-defense. Individuals
'|»iro promptly and properly punished
i-i'very day for offenses which lawyers
ipersistently indulge in for the mere
jmvpose of confusing honest witnesses
nd making the worst appear the better
•ause; and if the witness asks for pro-
ection, the Judge sagely informs him
hat the lawyer is a much-privileged
lerson, who must be allowed to choose
iis own methods of examination. 1 here
ire eases, no doubt, where the bulldoz-
,f men on the witness stand is jus
tifiable, but they are certainly not so
numerous that the attorneys should be
L permitted to assume as a general rule
hat witnesses are always ready to per-
ire themselves, and can only be pre-
i.mted from doing so by systematic
del less on the part of the. questioner.
^ . till wider and harsher license of
^.dt is practiced towards litigants in
«o speeches of the lawyers to judges
juries. The most pronounced slan-
15 .ire frequently uttered; men’s mo-
are impugned aiul their acts mis
represented quite as a matter of course,
{ft happens far oftener that the parties
a suit are treated with violent injus-
[•Vve than that they are dealt with in a
iji-itof even tolerable fairness. The
l-ver must make a vigorous and sting-
(r'address, and if the material is lack-
|he proceeds to invent it, regardless
he rights of feelings of the persons
accrued. In short, it is held that
at a private citizen may not do with-
being knocked down or compelled
^ >ny damages a lawyer may do with
approval of the Court, and be ac-
T nted a model of prhiessional force
Jnd skill. It is difficult for the average
Observer to understand why blackguard-
Pu> should be tolerated as an agency in
the enforcement of the laws under any
circumstances; but there can be no
'doubt about the fact that it is so recog
nized, and that all protests against it
lire met with the assurance simply that
[t is a privilege vested by custom and
ireeedentyji the legd profession.
N AV e are®!so taught that a lawyer
mav with perfect propriety accept a fee
for acting as a lobbyist and helping to
* or defeat givet schemes of legi Jji-
” a jf an editor, a minister, a y uysi-
/ or a merchaiV takes money in that
rtf: we sav he is iribed, ai 1 the com-
mmitv distrusts and den} fmces hun
.accordingly. Bu a man lui ring license
to practice law pay go a
? ure or a City tfuned and, upon the
‘retext of being Inployed as an artor-
f/v do everythin in his power to eni-
inn-iss the prof r course of business
ami to thwart rfVil! of the pe^e
an dweareestot|d from saying that
his behavior is earnest and uusclnev
ous. The Courf^ ill not even require
im to
fttt lie knows!
upon the subject, to Say the least.
Crops After Peas.
TJ. N. R. in .Southern Cultivator.
In addition to the good things already
mentioned about peas it may be said
that after taking off the vines—which
make excellent hay, capable of keeping
stock fat with the addition of a very
small quantity of corn—the land is left
in good condition. The roots have
broken and mulched the soil to a great
depth, while the growing has shaded
the ground, which with attendant con
dition 1 : is the best part of the results of
pea-culture. Three pecks to one bushel
of Life Preserver peas is best for hay
making, because the crab grass will
then race with the vines and make a
good mixture, which shortens the time
of good curing. Mown in the morning
after the dew is off, raked into wind
rows the same evening, and put
into cocks the second evening, it
will be ready for housing on the
third day. To insure perfect safety,
posts might be arranged for inserting
bars as the hay is stored, which will
give air-passages through the hay. Dry
fodder on straw may be interlaid in
stead of the bars (which may benefit all
round.) Fine crops of oats or rye may
be grown after peas without addition
of fertilizers. I know of a patch of
rye following peas that was grazed in
winter and till April, and then made
the best crop of rye I ever saw. Any
crop following peas has the advantage
of a considerable application of fertil
izer.
My first observation of pea culture as
a benefit to land occurred the second
year of my experience. Not haring
enough peas—about two acres of corn
were without a pea crop—that fall I
sowed oats, using about seventy-five
pounds of guano per acre. Where the
peas, had grown the year before I
gathered twenty to forty bushels of
oats, while the oats after corn alone
were hardly stout enough to be cradled.
In a certain field, which was partly
in corn and peas and partly in oats last
year, and which is now in cotton with
out fertilizer, the difference in appear
ance of the plant is the difference of a
moderate application of fertilizer in fa
vor of the peas. About 250 pounds oi
ash element is excellent for peas sown
after small grain in June.
tombstone. “Let it be short and sim
ple, something like thl*: “NN illiam
Johnson, aged seventy-five years. The
good die young.’ ”
Pat bought a sheep’s head, and was
writing down the receipt for cooking it,
when a dog made off with it. Pat gave
chase, shouting, “Come back wid me
shape’s head, ye robber, ye!” But, al
ter a stiff run, he had to cave in, but
consoled himself with the remark:
“Never moind; he hasn’t got the re
sate, be dad.”
A negro who was resuscitated from
drowning, was telling whom he saw in
the other world. “See any white folks in
hell, Tom?” asked his master, “Lord
save us, der ain’t no to end ’em, but,
begosh, massa, ebery white man done
got a nigger boldin’ between him and
de fire !”
If you can get away for a summer va
cation it is best to go. If you cannot,
you will find great comfort in the re
flection that there is no place like
home.
Buy a Clock from me
With a guarantee
That insures your Clock
Against a stop.
I live in your town,
Where I may be found
’Most every day,
Doing what I say.
(This is not spring poetry.1
1
FROFRIZirCFv
EMPIRE STORE
WILL
T
A
VE
n
PROTECT YOUR EYES!
4£53g.
&
Os
And selling the best and
cheapest Watches, Clocks,
Jewelry, Spectacles, Silver
ware, etc., to be found' in this
section. Call and see me for
anything in my line.
Respectfully,
W. E. AVERY.
OFT IN THE
Next week for New York, Fr.iirrx
goes to purchase his annaaMrocx. c
Boston, whither he
I
Un
people Demand Protection—Patent
Medicines.
Chicago Mai), 3d lust.
* What are they? As a general thin
they are prescriptions having been used
with great success by old and well-read
Physicians. Thousands of invalids have
been unexpectedly cured by tlieir me,
and they are the wonder and dread of
Physicians and Medical Colleges in the
U. S., so much so, that Physicians grad
uating at Medical Colleges are required
to discountenance Proprietary Medi
cines, as through them t-lie doctoi lost s
his most profitable practice. As a man
ufacturer of Proprietary Medicines,
Dr. G. G. Green, of Woodbury, N. J.,
advocates most cordially,— in order to
prevent the risk that the sick and ai-
flicted are liable to, almost ilailc, bi the
use of Patent Medicines put out by in
experienced persons for aggrandize
ment only, and the employing of inex
perienced and incompetent doctois by
which almost every village and town is
cursed; and men claiming to be doctors
who had better be undertakers, experi
menting with their patients and rol -
bing them of their money and liealtl,
for the good of the afflicted that our
government protect its people bj ni.n -
ing laws to regulate the practice of
medicine by better experienced and
more thoroughly educated Physician.-,
and thereby keep up the honor and
credit of the profession, also forms
laws for the recording of recipes of
Proprietary Medicines, under exami
nation and decision of experienced
Chemists and Physicians appointed for
that purpose by the Government, be
fore they are licensed for general use.
He would most freely place the recipe
of Boseliee’s German Sprup and Green's
August Flower under such laws, had
he the proper protection, and thereby
save the prejudice of the people, and
avoid the competition and imitation
of worthless medicines.
^GLASSES-
PAT! JULY III 1679.
MR. H. HIRSCHBERG
The well known Optician of l'w N. 4th
street, (under Planters House) 'St.
Louis, has appointed
DE. REESE, Of NEWNAN,
as Agent for his celebrated Diamond
Spectacles and Eyeglasses, and also for
his Diamond Non-Changeable Specta
cles and eye glasses. These glasses are
the greatest invention ever made in
Spectacles. By a proper construction of
the Lens a person purchasing a pair of
these Non-Clian geable Glasses never has
to change these Glasses from the eyes,
and every pair purchased are guaranteed
so that if they ever leave the eyes (no
matter how rusted or scratched the
Lenses are) they will furnish the party
with a new pair of c<lasses free oi
charge. ,
1>k. Kefse has a full assortment, and
invites all who wish to satisfy them
selves of the great superiority of these
Glasses over any and all others now in
use, to call ani examine the same at
DE. SEESE’S DEU3- STORE,
A guarantee with every pair. No ped
dlers supciird
FALL
a v n
Al\u
WINTER GOODS.
STILLY • NIGHT
WHEN YORK
CHILD IS TEETHING,
Are you awakened with the piteous cries of
the little one, who is gradually wasting away
by the drainage upon its system from the ef
fects of teething.
THE BUSINESS MAN.
Wearied from the labors of the day, on going
home finds that lie cannot have t-lie desired
and necessary rest, for the little darling is s; :1
suffering, and slowly and pitifully wasting
away by the drainage upon its system from
the effects of teething. If he would think to
use DR. P.IGGERRS’ HUCKLEBERRY
CORDIAL, the Great Southern Remedy, iosi
of sleep and bowel complaints wou'd l c un
known in that home. It will cure Diarrhoea.
Dysentery, and all Bowel Disorders. For sal.
i by all Druggists. 50c. a bottle.
| THE WALTER A. TAYLOR CO,
ATLANTA, GA.
Lie goes thus er.rh
making his selection
tember.
may not be hurried in
; until the ist of Sep-
HE PROMISES
To show’ tin
and Winter
lc r.
xsl
me t carcfuliy selected sleek cf Fail
O
TTY
Y
G
AST!
Mustang
Liniment
Sciatica,
Lumbago,
Rheumatism,
Burns,
Scalds,
Stings,
Bites,
Bruises,
Bunions,
Corns,
CURBS
Scratches,
Sprains,
Strains,
Stitches,
Stiff Joints,
Backache,
Galls,
Sores,
Spavin
Cracks.
Contracted
Muscles,
Eruptions,
Hoof Ail,
Screw
Worms,
Swinney,
Saddle Galls,
Piles.
ELY’S
CREAM BALM
\Cleanses the Head.
'Allays Inflamma
tion. Heals the
-Sores, Restores the
[Senses of Taste,
\Srncll, Hearing.
| .4 Quick Relief.
HAY"FEVER.4 Positive Cure.
A particle is applied into each nostril and is
agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists; by
! mail, registered, 60 cents. ELY BROS., New
| York office, 235 Greenwich street.
HAY FEVER
\ is ail inflamed condition of the lining mem
brane of the nostrils, tear ducts and throat,
! affecting the lungs. An acrid mucus is secre
ted, the discharge is accompanied with a
burning sensation. There are severe spasms
! of sneezing, frequent attacks of headache, wa-
I tery and inflamed eyes. Ely’s Cream Balm :s
j a remedy that can be depended upon to relieve
i at once and cure.
:LO'
TING
'C
m.’mari V a witness and tell
F T ,r the corrupt ap-
THIS COOD OLD STAND-BY
accomplishes for everybody exactly what is claimed
for it. One of the reasons for the great popularity of
the Mustang Liniment is found In its universal
applicability. Everybody needs such a medicine.
The Lumberman needs It in case of accident.
The Housewife needs It for general family use.
The Cannier needs it for his teams and his men.
The Mechanic needs it always on his work
bench.
Tho Miner needs it In case of emergency.
The Pioneer needs it—can’t get along without it.
1,0 Farmer needs It in his house, his stable,
:BRADFIELD’S
liauces which)
|y himself-or otfj
particular result.
Rt he cannot i i
A tall girl named Short long loved a
big Mr. Little; while Little, little think
ing of Short, loved a little lass • allied j
Long. To make a long story short, Lit- j
tie proposed ro Long, and Short longed man or the Boatman needs
to be e\en with Little’s short-connngs. i it in liberal supply afloat and ashore.
threatened to j The Horse-fancier needs it—it is his best
friend and safest reliance.
The Stock-grower needs it—it will save him
An infallible specific for
all thedlseases peculiar to
women, such as painful or
suppressed Menstration
Faliingof the WorntgLen-
corrhcea or Whites, etc.
FEMALE
So Short, meeting Loi _
marry Little "before long, which caused
Little in a short time to marrt Long.
Querv: Did tall Short io\e big Little
less, because Little loved Long ?
(x luTise been used.
to blying about a
le has* only to say
spall testimony
khout
imeity as a lawCjand he is nt once
gS l The 'S!£ n “!
Ivifege convenient” prot ect ^
all contingencies ot , ^‘ a y | andshehfebeen under sueha'time that
“What is the matter, Alfred? M hat
do you find so interesting in the river
that you Stare at it so fixed 1\ . these eome the Mustang Liniment is wanted at once.
Mv mother-in-law IS 111 bathing, ana Recp a Bottle inthe House. ’Tis the beat of
thousands cf dollars and a world of trouble.
The Railroad man needs it and will need it so
leng as his life is a round of accidents and dangers.
The Backwoodsman needs it. There is noth
ing like It as an antidote for the dangers to life,
limb and comfort which surround the pioneer.
The Merchant needs it about his store among
his employees. Accidents will happen, and when
Xo mat-1 took a dive from that boat cut there,
ter how inifiOlfanl ,‘f the inibite inter-j I’m getting uneaxy.” .
of «tual and I “How long has she been un^er!
Iveep a Bottle in the House. ’Tis the best of
economy.
Keep u Bottle in the Factory. Its Immediate
use in case of accident saves pain and loss of wsgeA
Keep a Bottle Always iu the Stable for
use when wanted. ■ __ —
CHANGE OF LIFE.
If taken during this crit
ical period, great suffering
and danger can be entire
ly avoided.
REGULATOR!
Send for onr book containing valuable in
formation for women. It will be mailed free
to applicants.
Br.ADriEU} RsetrLATon Co., Atlanta, Q».
SiriOjH
NOTIOI
Jc^je
ro.:gkt to'NcVvuan, raid by his
T
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will de :i(-r;htiriLC tl
—ad v all tau es t :i a:
custo.TATS. Be ]>a
be 2T:at.'
A* a
I
■ j
f- >■ a ' • • -I "k * i- H :•: .
pu cYsiag.at first hands
\rxiiiy by the merchant and his
he returns and your reward shr.ll