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CANTRELL * ANbRRWS.
K .i T K.
1 know her by her angry hair,
Her in : eat o aca eyes, er br-gl,t blifck hair
llcr rapid laughters, wild and shrill,
As laughters of the woodpecker
From the bosom of a hill.
'Tis Kate - she sayeth what site will.'
For Kate hath an unbridled tongue,
Clear as til ■ Itv.ing ng of a harp,
Her hetrt is like a throbbing star.
Kate hath a spirit even strung
L k- anew bow. and bright and sharp,
As edges of (he scy nitir -
Whence shall si o lake a fitting mate?
For Kate no common love will feel ;
My noman-so dier, gallant Kate,
As pure and true as blades of steel.
Kate Rnith “ tbe w irld is void of might.”
Kate raith, ■* tb< tu arc g I led flic .”
Kate sn tps her 'invars at my vows i
Kate will not hear ot lovers’ sighs.
I would I were an armed knight,
Far-famed for well-won enterprise.
And wearing on my sw t thy brows
Tbeguluud of new wreathed emprise t
For in a moment I would pierce
The blackest files of clanging fight.
And stiongly strike to left and right,
In dreannng or m lady’s eyes.
Oh ! Kate lores w-U the bold and fierce ;
But none are bold enough lor Kate,
She cannot fled a fitting mate.
A Newspaper Adventure.
[From the Macon Daily Enterprise.]
My Dear : mith: Upon feuding the
short history (if the now gone Nupole
oil of the Press, James Gordon Ben
nett, and how lie started the Herald in
u cellar, worked Itis way up, etc., my
mind is cat riel back to a time that
will be forever a green spot in my
memory. Many years ago I lead with
no little degree of interest how Poor
Richard commenced Ins career as a
journalist, and also how poor Robert
Bonner wheeled his paper in a whet *
banow, and all that sort ol tiling.—
The more I read, the more I wanted to
try my band and build up a fortune';
and the more I studied ver it im-
mure I was determined So one bright
frosty morning, 1 bid fan well t . the
old folks o my home which iuid in a
small town in Georgia, and with one
"hundred well-e trued dt liars in my p t k
it, 1 set nut for that Mecca of every
boy New York. When 1 reached
thut gn at city of cities, 1 I ad only fi!
ty dollars left, yet i was resolute, and
I accordingly vent to work,
me ti second hand pii'r-s, a font of type,
and fitted tip an office in a dark cellar
on Beckman street. ill* a board
laid ftom window to window us a
counter, 1 began my career as a j urn
alist. Well do I recollect that morn
ing when 1 began the first “take’’ on
the New York Slat jack! I had pre
viously written leudeis upon every
known topic, and -it was upon this pile
of manusuript that I commenced
stuck in two ponderous leaders, then
wandered ■ m in search ol local items,
fully impressed with the idea that
everybody kn w u.e as the editor of
the Slapjack. T.ny were obtained;
for in a city like New York items an
always plentiful. VV en they wen
set up, 1 borrowed a wheelbarrow o
( Ululate B- inter, yon know, and bought
my paper I went all around tlu-priii
cipal streets in ord r to show the peo
ple how I didn’t mind to vvoik, bin
strange to say, no one seemed to care
whether 1 minded work or not. i
fact,a policeman said if 1 didn’t trundle
my borrow in the the street it stead of
the sidewalk, he’d ; ut me in the T< mbs
And when I iollowed his kind advice,
I was run over about fourteen times
by drays, omnibusses, etc-, and I fully
determined to hire my paper carried on
a dray from that day out.
Reaching my office nearly killed tip,
I wrote a stunning article comment
ing upon the condition of the streets
and hurling thunder and lightning up
on the head of the mayor and council
men.
My heart jumped into my throat
when I ‘j ulled’’ the first number of the
Slapjack! My fortune was made—l
really owned and ediled a paper in
New Yoi k! I was my own proprietor,
editor, printer, devil, pressman and
newsboy, and when 1 wandered with
two hundred copies of the great Slap
jack under my am I was happy.
They sold Ike fury Everybody
bought one. When I counted ovei
my cash that mottling, I found myself
self the possessor of just four dollars
in one and wo cent coj-p s. Neti
morning I issued double tbe number
and started out full of hope. To my
dismay, 1 sold only three! Just I ere,
permit me to tenia!k, my star began
its descending Course, but not foi a
moment did I let my h 'pe of success
wane. I thought perhaps the 1 ind and
generous people vv. re not cognizant ol
the fact that I was a hardworking
youth, doing all of my own work, and
trying to build up fame and name, so
I began e new line. I explained my
position to the public, winding up with
C| t Jrorhnt Waif*
VOL. I.}
jen earnest appeal to "help me Cassius
are I sink.” Tncn I distributed my
papers free, hoping ihat everybody
would read and then patronize me.—
Far from it. 1 only sold one, and that
was to a blind organ grinder, who
said lit; would buy it to help me along
1 shall never forget that organ grind
er.
Then I set me down to think. I
wondera and Imw Bonner succeeded. To
be suie I bad followed everything he
had done; but nothing, especially that
wheel-barrow scrape, that I did do at
, racted the alien ion of a siug|e soil I.
I owed washing and board bills
Notwithstanding the fact that 1 had
landed them to the skies, one for her
incomparable skill, and the other for
her knowledge of the wants of tire in
nt'r man and man’s comforts, they in
sisted upon being paid. 11l luck at
tended tile whither I went. I was con
siderably discouraged, but 1 was still
bent upon continuing the public tion
of the Slapjack. My circulation was
over a dozen and rapidly decreasing.
My advertising patronage: was Unit and
to my prospectus and 1 had plenty of
room for that. I made it convenient to
pass Aslor, Vanderbilt and other rich
men, an 1 whenever I did so I w-s
head over heels iti work, but they nev
er any attention to me. They
passed by seemingly i.neoucions that I
was even iiving Fin illy 1 went t >
B inner and told him o! my r übi.-s,
h w I had struggled and all lhat sort
of thing, and wound up by asking foi
help He smiled a sweet smile aiid
said: “Young man you number about
the thousandth that has tome t-> m In
tlie same way, and now let me give
you a bit of advice: never undertok
a business that von an* not cut oat for.’’
With that 1 left, issued tny valedictory
and leit for home. ] have never tried
to Start as Bonner did. nor to start a
newspaper. Jaqdes Strop.
Dangers of the Labor move
ment.
There is danger that fa but mg men,
in combining for mutual protection,
will organize around the core of self
ness. This will be to imitate the very
evil w liicli makes corporate wealth dan
gerous It will have the inlieient and
essenti I mischief of the class spirit.—
Selfishness is the Ik- tie of life. It will
be no less destructive and dishonoring
among laboring men, tbati among cap
it-.lists. If the workingmen care not fi
ing for the whole commnnity, but only
orcliii fly for themselves, they will de
serve no sympathy. Each trade may
have a special benevolence for its own
members, but the whole is more impiir
taut than any fraction, and the com
mon wealth sliou and bo included in the
intents a. and purposes of workingmen’s
pliins If labor is to fight capital by
a rivalry in selfishness, then society
wi.l be nut as a caica.-s lying between
t he % ull tires. * * *
Workingmen are in danger of spend
ing their force in following glittering
social theories Certainly, they have
a- much light to speculate as any nth
ers But, no degree of intelligence
will ever enable any class or individual
to forecast she shape of society in the
future. The world lias its own law ol
develop! nnut, and society will make
its own paths, refusing all speculative
lines that may be drawn to coax it.
Men are in danger of regarding
Wo.ik as an evil, and Leisure as an
end, in itself, Lab >r is a saleable com
modity. To raise the puce of it by
legitimate means is fa r and wise.—
But it will be a supreme folly for poor
men to decrease the quality of labor in
the community. White here and there
a fo.v men aro overworked, the great
mass of men do not work enough.
What we want is freedom of men to
work, to work as long as they will,
and to sell their labor in the best mar
ket Odious as the despotism of Capi
tal, it is not a whit more odious than
Labor-despotism Freedom is the uni
versal need of men; —freedom of con
science, freedom in thought, civil free
dura; liberty of speech, of vote, of
work; restiaint upon tbe animvl, blit
liberty to the divine, that is in man!
For special reasons, and as a tempo
laiv expedient to gain some eminent
good, men can curtail labor and res
train their own liberties. But this
must be the occasional, and not the
permanent medicine, not food.
There is danger, too, that the work •
men will be godless and 'irreligious,
and therefore shadow aud narrow.—
it is not neoessaiy that the co-opera-
FAIRBURN, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1872.
live labor of the world shall be Pro
testant, or Catholic; it is not necessary
that, it shall join itself to this or that
sect; but Labor is absolutely incom
plete without a deep moral sense. II
labor becomes atheistic, unchristian,
antagonistic to the great truths of the
gospel, it will commit suicide,
* * *
*
There is a danger, too, that these
co-operative aHsb.-.iatioiis will set aside
the gicat law of subordination. You
Cannot by legislation bring all men up
to an equalitv. There are certain
great laws which are inevitable ar fate.
Yuti can make all men equal to each
other politically; you can make all
men equal before the law; you can
make all men equal i lights and du
lies; hut you cannot make all men
equal in their earning-power. It is a
species of rank injustice to undertake
to strike an equality between one class
and another. If you make the wages
of a weak and ignorant man the same
as the Wiipes of a strong and wise
man, yon do that which is fundament
ally unjust. It is not a kindness bill
an injury. It is demoralizing. It dis
regards a distinction which God made,
and which will always continue to ex
ist- It takes away the stimulus tode
velopement and industry. II men find
that tbe indolent ittiri the industrious
are treated .M;r, that tie fines-' and
the highest workers and tile slovenli
est and lowest workers are award* and
alike—are graded t>i the same pi ice—
there is taken away from them the
fundamental move by which manhood
is mtn ;; ri up, ned ingenuity is quicken
ed, and industry is developed.
*****
YVe ti'e in the midst of this expert
incut, and we ought to i e patient with
it. \Ve ought not to think that it is
going to enirnp society, and destroy
us. There is much in tie- movements
of laboring men to be ei incised. They
are - men who me feeling their way to—
wind a larger life, toward a nobler
innob -ml • .. ml u.vjj ‘‘dfljAxl apuuul fluaa
At the same time I make criticism up
on them; but I make them for their
good health, and not for their harm
and hindrance. Christian Union.
Defter from China*
A friend of oms lias kindly furnish
ed us with the following letter for pub
lication:
Pekin, China, )
July 17th, 1872 )
Mr. Henry W Dear Sir: —1 feel it
my duty as wel as pleasure, to write
ymt a letter, knowing that you are atix
ions to hear from me I arrived in
this city yesterday, and I am confident
that yon have traveled enough to know
that there is no fun in it.
I anticipated much pleasure before
I started, but when 1 had gotten about
a thousand miles fr m land I became
sea-sick, my friends gave me some
consolation by telling me that I would
get use to it, and soon get well; but
there came on a powerful storm, and
tlie waves rolled so high that they look
ed like huge mountains of ice, rolling
down in large avalanches It appe m
to me like I was in the middle of them
I rem ined sick until we landed in
Asia Minor, close by the place where
Troy used to stati i. It was such a
lonesome seene-y that I wished I was
at home. There was the ruins of Troy
which presented a melancholy appear
ance to me; but I did not tarry long at
that place. I then commenced my
journey towards Palestine, and saw
some beautiful landscapes, ruins of cit
es, edifices, towns and temples, which
I suppose to be of tbe Phoenicians!
Scythians and others, but I cannot tell
yon in this little manuscript, which I
am writing, half I have seen. Iso n
came to Palestine which struck me
with admiration. Sometimes I saw
beautiful little towns, and at others
the signs of ancient buildings. Jeru
salem, the capital, is one among the
first cities of antiquity. It is not like
it was in ancient days, but it is the
must important place in Asia.
Here is the spot where our Savior
was crucified and where many' other
important things of record took place
which 1 have not time to mention.—
I have seen many cuiiosities since
left home, which if my whole trip f-nnil
Georgia to this place was written,
giving a description of all I have seen,
it would make a large book.
I am now in a curious part of the
world. We don’t, have anything to
eat that you ever saw, the principal
diet being fried leaves and roasted ri o' B .
Your trend,
A. W. M.
Boy-Devils.
A sad incident occurred in Steuben
ville County, N. Y. Infinimiy, a few
days ago.resulting in a horrible death,
the burying of a small lad named Mur
phy, aged five years, a reel footed
child, who was deserted by the mother
to cloak her shame. It appears that
two other pauper children, named Phil
lip Sheridan and Andy Stewart, dug a
huge whole in tiie orchard adjoining
the ii.-fiiniary.
Altei eff cling this part of the dia
bolical act, the two little fiends, whose
ages n,e respetively five and ten years,
repaired to the iufimiury grounds and
caught the reel-footed boy and carried
him to his living grave. Shrieking,
yet without power of being heard, the
little victim was caught by the young
execiitiouers and forced into tile hole
Holding him down, they shoveled in
the earth and stones upon his writhing
body, stifling his cries as best they
Could until the poor def ruled body
censed to Struggle, and the spirit took
its flight to Him who gave it.
The young murderers went back to
the house witYout informing any one
el i )* deed, ;u and the hurried hoy's ab
sence was first noticed by Mr Pm ter,
th< u eiintenderit, about one o’clock
U m making iiiqo ries a little black
boy iuh'i med nim that Andy Stewart
ami Pnii. Sheridan had “tunried 'Limy’
down tu the holler” On going t„ tl u .
spot Mr. Porter found the newL made
grave, and below the 1 ifi less body ol
‘ LimAy. ’ The little murderers have
been sent to tin refoinmtory. t'his is
one of the saddest incidents we have
evet li ; 1 1 to record.
“Strategy mi B y.”
An exchange tells a novel love story:
\ young couple planned an elopement;
tiie girt descended Item her room on
tee traditional ladder, but at the gate
they were met by the father of the
girl and the ministe", by whom they
were eseorted o the parlor where
'• u,- I,- tr.ijn-tjc itti-y round ail tneir
ti lat ves collected for the marriage
ceremonies, which took p ace at once
It was a neat paternal freak. Not
near as neat as that of a fund parent
that we know. [l,i heard his daugh
ter and her fellow plan an elopomenr.
The next day the old man waited on
the young one and addressed him thus:
‘Yotu’rc a fine brave youth, and 1 do
not object t‘ you for a son-in law.—
Here’s a hundred dollars t- aid in the
elopement. May yon live happily in
tin'same house, and may no accident
occur to throw the least shadow on the
sunshine of your life. All I request is
that yon elope with my daughter—she
is a mighty nice girl,but somehow 1 and
her mother could never travel smooth
lv with jter, we don’t know her good
points—elope with her'to such a dis
tance that she won’t return to her lov
ing father and mother any more.—
Good bye, sonny and may you be hap
py.” Tlieie was an elopement that
evening us one The young man went
unaccompanied He thought every
thing couldn’t be light when tee atlier
was so anxious to get rid of the girl
T e father looks on this as a neat bit
of strategy, for one who bud never
been on McClellan's staff.
A YTonclei.
A litlleigii'l named II ■ ltie Paine,
aged fourieen years, of Sardinia, N. Y .
is afflicted with a dreadful an ’ must
uri account! tdu disease. Hattie, when
a child of fix years of age. was on a
visit to he# friends in the East, nnd ot
her ret unit home iulonned her parents
that she hdd seen a mad dog killed
The subject.soon faded front therecol
lection ol the parents, only to present
itself ag.iinjnn the appearance of the
fearful syiutinis of hydrophobia. On
the 14 1 1 1 oflAngust, she went to the
fields in search of berries; on her re
turn she complained of great heat and
exhaustion; oil the day following she
suffered with severe pains in the spine,
side, head, and stiffness of the muscles
of the neck. On the 16th,she had sin
gular nervous paroxysms, interrupted
w-.th frequent sighs, or a peculiar kind
ol moaning, Wailing, sobbing sound;
shuddering tremors ran through her
frame; a fearful expression of anxiety,
terror and ck-spair was depicted on
her countenance. On the 17th, this
dreadful malady assumed a more se
rious fnrm-tkfc convulsions were fear
ful, excited l>y various external inflii
euces, especially by tin* sound of liquid
j changing ft or* one vessel to aimtliei ;
the - yes rolling unremittingly; o incr.
diuatc quantity of Baltva issuing from*
{NO. 7.
her mouth, and forming a foam ou her
self and others. After temporary ease
us the convulsions tiie teeth remain
firmly set, relaxing in about twenty
minutes; tin* mind is reasonably calm,
and collected, and consciousness is re
tained The most remarkable feature
of this case, that which divides tin
opinions of the attending | hysiefans,
is during the remission of the si mp- I
loins, the ease with w. ich she takes
loud and the little or no inconvenii nee
with which she invariably drinks a
common drinking glass half full of wa !
ler. There is no reasons to believe
ihat she has ever been bitten by a
mail dog.
Going a Fishing.
The following is an ‘ order for sup
plies” recently sent to au Ameiicus
(G.i ,) grocer, by a fishing excursion
party:
Dear Sir- Myself and a couple of
friends leave this morning on a fishing
excursion, und you will please send us
by bearer, tie following articles, which
if you prefer it, you can charge to ei- j
liter Jack Brown or Jim Smith. Ei-j
tlier is the safest.
Fur pounds of salt and a small
c isk us W hiskey.
0 -e piiiiil of ground black pepper
and ad; mijohn of whiskey.
Ten pounds of lard und a large jug
"f whiskey.
One canvassed ham and six quint
bottles of whiskey.
Three good, stout fishing lines and
three pocket flasks of whiskey.
One paper of large Limerick hooks,
and a gallon of whiskey in any vessel
you don’t use about the store.
Also, send one pound of white sugar
and a small jug of whiskey.
Hmnedly yours,
0. and G.
P. S. —As we shall be gone several
days, and as snakes are bad oil the riv
er at this season, my physician has
inst. stemu'd in. ands lurtceu t ...t il,--i .....
better take along a little whiskey.—
Send it, and enter it on your books
with the other items above.
N. B.—Our cook who goes with us,
accompanies the bearer of this. Let
iiiru have a small ban el of wiii. key
lur his own use, and charge as above.
Lest something might happen, also, be
so good as to send by our cook one
bottle of good peach.
Idleness.
Idleness is the germ ol neatly all
vCi s. Thu i vil effects of idleness ate
lim common and glaring to be misun
derstiiiid or adti-.i: o cavil; they visit
tin- lie'll and Die poor, the high and tin
hnv, the good and tin? bad, tiie learned
and the unlearned, the wise and the
simple, the idined and the unrefined,
the male and the female, and the young
and tin- old, all everywhere.
Negh Ct and laziness are the first
fruits of idleness. Persons without
employment, very soon overlook impor
tant duties and negh-ct such as should
have careful attention and prompt ex
ecution. “General neglect ullow, and
there will lie so many tilings that in ed
attention, and there wil be no oppor
tunity for them. YVe time such a pci
sou saying: I have so much to do, I
nave so many things to look alter, 1
have no time for my family, I have no
time to attend church, or visit the lec
ture on temperance. His business de
clines, Ir.s Inline iias not even tin- nee
essary couihp ts, and lit; soon acquires
tiie title of being called a negligent
mail. His estate passes into the hands
of others, lie is left witlmt means and
without employm lit. He is found
loafeiiug iqioii the streets; and by idle
ness soon becomes lazy and i. doleiit.
riuoh indeed are the first fruits of idle-
ness.
Idleness leads to pennury and want
if we have a sufficiency of the corn
forts of life,idleness soon passes them
into the hands of others; if we an
possessed with ease and luxury, idle
m ss sweeps them away; if we shotiid
-'Wil the banker’s gold, the miser'seap
ttal arid the Lord’s realty, idlness
would soon waste them all and leave
us penny-less; and if we had the wealth
of Kings and Emperois, idleness
would soon convert them into the
frightful cries of want. Such are the
pecuniary effects of idleness.
Desipations of all kinds f.Jiow idle
n< 8s The young and tender minds o!
the youth who lias just passed from
under the parent il care of a kind and
pious mother, by idleness upon tin
streets, soon learns t.,e innocent, (si
called) amusements of the day. He
never thinks harm or evil, but for want
of business to engage the mind, In
goes step py step from t lie barmless,
tbe pure, the open, the free, and Han
d'd, to the vile, the vicious, the inirent
th Inn itnt. the aid and the ruined
Sn h a nda ly ex mp' sin . u midst
Our youth- an- to prou i to b.n, t
SC f-wili; (1 t 1 0111-V t.. .1 monitions .if
their parents. Tiny lea n to hIK
during business hoars, they handle in-
RATES OF ADVERT! MIC,
'ne Pquara, first inrerlion $1 00
-a each tiilmcqur at insertiiiß 5Q
hie Square, six mood's. ' .9 uo
One Equate, twelve ninntlis 12 00
£■& Lib- ru 1 di-itactiO" v. 11l be made tor cuu
ract advertisements.
" “ Enough In puv for enmpositiori will be
'■"geo K-1- (fringe at advertisement*.
AH arlicl-s I'iiMi-lnd t r the benefit of
- .rin-s or in.iividiinls at tlioir . wn sola-nation
a h elm rg. . I i«r ti. a.tvei liremeuta
ni'cent gnnes, they take the sofcta!
j glass, they visit the billiard room and
j they become interested in the gambler's
j neks Soon they her-nme thediunk
.l ands companion, the rowdies associate
.. and the gambler's escort. No tongue
(.' •n tell the moral degradation of idle-
MCISS.
Idleness is productive* of crime.—
obencss brings its votaiies to want,
I 1 nil in cessily drives them to theft; it
‘■iigcnileis eli nti g, swindling, lying
Old ini.-re) K-Keiilatiiib in all biisinesit
; 11I sue!lntis, idlrisquai el,fight, >.nd
k ' n , ' ilt ' ll ' Idlers me the eiimi
i.Mls before* our Court-; ihey fill our
Huge."llß, I ll 'sons and penitentiaries.
Ihe pious and devoted minister would
e soon di i\eii to the lowest walks of
vice by the evils of an idle life;
the saints "f Heaven would fall from
the glories of redemption to the Tempt
er,s miserable home, if left to the met
-1 lc 'S "f idleness; angels of mercy Woiod
"o driven from their holy missions,
were they to follow the foot-piiiits of
,ril " ,lt ' tia Palmetto.
Points to I 1 aruicrs.
A ci a respondent of the Germantown
Ti leg) agh " tiles how to make guano:
Fi'otn tune to time, as there are any
j bones to dispose of, I lake tnem to my
hen-house, lay them on a flat stone and
| with an old axe break them up fine and
let the liens cat them In the hen-house
under the roost there is a tight floor
and over this floor I spread dry, fine
•‘“'th or muck, and Oceanian ally i,s the
tnauuto accumulates more earth is
spread over it. VVl.en 1 wish to clean
out the manure the contents are shov
eled ov. r and mixed together,and it is
tium in a shape that it can be used at
•iny time or place. My practice is to
clean out spring and fall, and by hav
ing a supply of dirt to use when Want
ed, I manufacture sarc with ve.-y lit
tle labor or expense a very valuable
fertilizer—the quantity dependii gon
the number of hens kept; but tbe
amount of maiiute which cun be made
liom hens in this way is much larger
than one would suppose who has never
practiced it, and the value of it when
caietuily saved and applied to tbe cul
tivation of crops is probably more in
proportion to tin* cost if keeping than
that ut any other kind ot sti ck kept ou
the fat in.
lakk Care of the Envelopes. — The
postmaster of Boston recently found it
necessary to issue a circular to the
toxholdei sos that city, calling atten
tion to tiie lact that many persons re*
ctiving letters are in the habit of
opening them in the vestibule or on
the street, and throwing the envelopes
on the ground. This custom has been
largely turned to account by sharpers,
w ho are thus enabled to learn the box
numbers ol firms and to lay plans for
getting possession of their letters.
I his is accomplished in a variety of
ways, the most successful of which
im- been by means ol bogus box tickets
in tise iti liia> city, the hurry and con
fusion incident to the distiibution of
the mails generally enabling the per
sons practicing this fraud to escape
detection at the moment and carry off
a boxful of valuable liiiHinesK letters.
H'isconsiu on Giant.
[From the Evening Telegram
The inhabitants ol Beaver Dam, YY'is.
have been canvass and to ascertain their
political sentiments, and it was discov
ered tliat there were but three Giant
men in the place—one was the postmas*
ter, allot her was the revenue col>etor,
and the third was a d-d fool.
Nut Guilty’ lhe Siler case
which occupied the time for Fulton
Superior Court for eight days, term
inated Saturday in a verdict of not
guilty, by* a jury who were out only a
lew minutes.- Oriffiin Star.
A band of Gypsies is gathering in
the stamps from the colored populat ion
us Jacksonville. No vagrant law in
force there. —Savannah Advertiser.
DB. P. HI. TIDWELL,
RESPECTFULLY tenders his services to
tbe citizens, of Fairburn, and surrounding
Country, in the practice of medicine, in its va
rious branches. He is wil supplied with am
putating and nbstetricul instruments, and all in
siruments necessary for the successful treat
mi'ii- ol diseases peculiar to females, manvof
which cauuot be succeshully treated without
their use.
Having been engaged in ihe practice for tbe
last twenty ye irs. he hopes, by close attention,
to buOKs huJ patients, lo merit and receive a
liberal share ot patronage.
£»' Office in Ciiurt-Il use. m a 3-6?B
J . W AHLICK,
MANUFACTURER of
TIN WARE;
ST»ALB, 111 t* ATE, OU TIMERS’ FITDDGSv
Also, OIL & LAMPS.
Marietta Street, Oetween Whitehall & Broad,
Atlanta, Georgia.
We call the attention of Ike cßilen
.if Campbell, Fayette aud Douglass cuunpiest
ihe advertiscm-nr ol Mr. J. Wariick.* Wo
knew him to be oue ol the high toned, hmn-st
nd energetic business men of At'anta. Ge
iu hi- house and buy your wifeanewSteve
a..a you will find him all right. Success ta
such meit. ap2l»J*