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SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1874.
mat FAt e.
fc-’V Uir }w I), il’i.r <lrti ti lijiii*.
Yet wIU'H
lln rlppW hr, .ik Jut*# On, white
of t.io a.**j l>rt/w..ly,'lKpiiini? the bright
V>!> ft, gray <D’H, 1 nwMr
lJv gi'uek'US I">< mute Im*M
. Tlrtt nil Ilf dibit mid i;.,!.!
in tiHiru.
Ii lulle., 1 kin fan to xi ok,
Heboid
~ .lilt i uuud <d chin, tit. tint <,f , h' k
■ The 1(1' hwl fbt, t' JiUi rln l„ weak,
Tiki kn'iiiK-khid In ftiilhl,
Wlnit iii -ini in'll ii 1 v rnri,
D. ,u nui this owl tsir
Bofeidl
*ut nouielhiriii ft X Wiii'ii tu*ni{im,
H mm n' w>
Tfnir hinted only, when *>im
.HAlf-oli ri-qil tempt* mo with It*. Idt ■ ,
I filmy litrivo to time
One dtnnfle Ihere, to brook
Ttih parwot i'nro would pm feet pud,,
llorfioo.
HIE PHENOMENA OF SLEEP
Dr. EflbettOiwt’imay, in tlio June notn-
Inlid (In' Medical Un-i.ni , thus discourse*
of (deep, from a physiciani*’ point of view
“How i" (jtoi*j) ill,]tied, rind what in thf
condition if’tlia brain cUtripg thin period
of frit vtbii'fi oeeiqiiwt nearly one-third of
onr livos V” urn questions not merely of
jnifipj!# ipi: lit real practical lino. Either
the nemnm mossas a whole in quiescent,
undisturbed by onricntn of norvoun energy
or currents u: • still kept up,lint at mi oven,
nnnltoruitf pace. Tim latter conclusion
n, ipji the must plausabie, ’.oral i more
distinctly Iwnio out by foots. The licr-;
i f'cjdom allowed to full into
entire ."omiiolemu), Imt however profound
the clumber, the mind still seems to retain
wiihmf: IfflpiO'isions, and to a certain ex
tent under the itillin nco even in sleep. A
perron even very much fatigued, who has !
previously accustomed himself io that self
discipline, will full into deep and sound
4liljtr, i'fd yet wake up promptly at
time specified in Ins waking moments,
not,vitl(bl,milling lie might have slumbered
h* lionrabmt it not been for this net of
the will. A gentleman, who in the prosi i
ee^sonvit'> |ik; bid,iu ess is obliged to triivol
eonstiuitly, taking the train at (ill hours,
and iiia sleep when he con get it,
informs mo lie never has any trouble,
however milch fatigued ho may be, in
w'dtiiig rit' any specified time. Even with
out tins strung exercise of tlifl will power,
win brain, however profoundly quiescent,
in keenly alive to certain fttnmds, howevoi
nfffivi,tits it limy lie lo others. The jihy
sioimi hoars t|io first tap of the night bell,
tinned! Ip, anight sleep on tnuliutnrbcd
white a bnnil of music was playing in front
kipjfisf Jim I own, or the roar of thunder
or the crash of artillery was making the
windows rattle and the bed tremble bo-,
nerith bun. -The mother stArta from her
lie 'll shmihor nt the first ery or her child,
her ear quickly catching, however pro j
found may Ist her sleep, almost its altered ,
breathing, it is said of a young man, a
njulMttiprtnm, wishing to commend hlmsell
to t,liA commander, spent eighteen holin'
out of the twenty-four in watching and re
cording tlie signals, only retiring to rest
jt axhAimted. Thou' bin Jnm
ber was so profound that the hanient nio.se
would produce no impression, but simply
whisper in his ear the word ‘signal’ nml in
an instant he was on his feet, wide awake
end ifjidy hi* duty. Wo nve nil familiar I
with a kind of walking sleep, in which a
perfect stillness or some monotonous sound
fulls us into a kind of senii-miconseiouH
ness. Any disturbing element, may rouse
up the current of nerve force into full ne
tivityy Jim}. without them eiaiuicusneKs
gradually disappears,miebrding as the nerve
currents me unvaried in their degree,
until sleep, more or lots profound, is pro
dueed,
“Fudta' Stid) kb wi< have seated are in fa
vor of a-certain low degreo o l nerve notion
p.b existing under (wry variety of state,
from tlio light sleep to tho most profound.
On tills hypothesis, When nil Ibo ourrenta
of tho hruin are equally balanced anil eon
tiiiuo ut the tmmc pitch, when no one in
comiuoiioing, increasing, or abating, con
eimisneaa or feeling in null nml mind if
quiescent. A disturbance of this state of
thingn wakens np the couciousi ess for n
timoj tho variety or stiumleu in tho waking
Hi ate foil adding this perfect equilibrium
from being attained. * * *
"Sleep in a positive necessity. It. ja n ]
period of recuperation, during which their-1
ii a restoration of what lots suffered eol
l-ipse, waste or dislnrhanee during the pc- !
*od ot waking activity. Tho tired brain !
naj Jin* HaitiSg MUncles regain, by strength 1
and tho power to obey tho inundates oi i
tho will. The demands of tho material 1
form for rest aro so groat as often defy the
action of" tho mind. During the choh.ru j
summer of 181'J, wlnio practising in .the j
country, so constant nisi fatiguing wore i
niv professional labors that 1 have often |
lidden for miles on horseback Hound
asleep. Almost every phy. iciau in aotivo
lyricticu during periods of ephlomies, wlien ]
his strength is taxed to the utmost, has
dropped into u sleep, i.s 1 Imvi done many ;
tinius, while walking tho streets. 1 hiring
tho buttle of tho Nile, many of tho boy:
engaged in hand hug ainnrunitioii fellj
■ asleep oven wllilb the roar of tin- liable was
going on ig-uund them. It is sidle the'
retreat to Corunna whole battalions of in !
faatry slept while in rapid, march. Kveii ,
the most acute bodily nut-'rings are not , and
ways Silflilicnt to prevent sleep.
Wotu-out frumoof the victim oi ih In
♦P’.isitiott has yielded to its iutlnom; i in
tho pause of his tortures upon the rack.
and for a nionieut lie Ims forgotten his
suJerriugs. Tho Indian burned at the
stsko, in the interval between the perlimi
noi y tortnre and the lighting of the lire,
Las sweetly slumbered, and bc< u only
aroused by Urn tlaino which w. to eon
sumo bun curling around him.”
As editor, who speaks with tin ii ,l ,>
man who has discovered i mw fact by ex
perience, says that tlic new way to prevent
bleedingßt the noae is to keep -vmr ore,,
oQf pf oiOcr pettViV* inf "i
' A.V OLD SUPERSTITION.
Among./lie horrible superstition., whiel,
| stnl exist inaomo parts of the world, that
iof tho vampire is ouo of the worst. £
| recent lawsuit in Germany has shown that
j this weird belief still exists, notwithstand
ing the boosted enlightenment of the l!lth
!century.
On the 6th of February, 1870, there
i died and Kautzyjio, a village in Western
Prussia, of eonaumption, a respectable
gentleman, named Francis Von I'oblocki,
il years of age. A few days after his
funeral,kin ehleat son, Anton, was taken
sick and died on the, 18th of the month.
According to physicians his disease was
what is known as "galloping consuinp
' lion."
Almost at the same time this rnau’s wife-,
j and a younger daughter was taken sick; n
socoud son and a brother-in-law felt very,
j unwell and all these pernomi complained
j of feeling imlescribuble anxiety and op
i pressiot).
The supi rititloim notion was now adop
! ted by the family, that the dead fatlu-r
! was a so-called vampire, and that they
must all die if help was not at once ob
taim and.
A vampire is supposed to be a body
which continues to live in the grave, rising
therefrom by night to suck tho precious
life-blood from living persons, especially
its own relatives, and thus to nourish
itself and prevent the usual decay.
Tho persons attacked it is said some
times feel themselves in a dream caught
by tho neck and almost strangled; or
uuutilo to keep off the fearful visitant who
lies on their breast they decline very
rapidly, and after their death .become
themselves vampires, and so on, without
end, Until’ by some forcible measures, the
i fearful terror is dispelled.
According to this superstition which
| prevails in Poland and Western Prussia,
tho ability to become a vampire is given
I with the so-called Fortunatus' cap, which
ill nil apes mid among all people has been
regarded as an emblem of prosperity.
Hueli vampire candidates arc said to be
I somewhat dictatorial and avaricious. The
j principal sign, it is believed, is lo be
| found in the Corpse. The face retains it’s
] color, the blood (lows freely; tho stiffness
and ofiensivenoos of dead bodies are
entirely absent os though the person wire
in a trance.
There uro various methods adopted by
these superstitions people for destroying
the vftmpiro, some mild, others more se
vere. One is to turn the dead body iu
the collin with tho face downward. An
other is to drive a wooden stake through
the "breast, and further, to c it off the head
and lay it, face downwards, between the
lggs. While tho body is thus horribly
treated the people declare tlmt groans are
heard mid wild laughter from the mouth
of tho vmnpiro. In sonic cases tho body
is burned to ashed.
After Anton Von PobJocki’fi death and
Ida mother and sister were taken sick, the
family determined to resort lo the never- :
oat methods of relief, the execution of
which now devolved oil tho second son,
Joseph who was now the head of the
family, Tho same operation was to bo
performed on tho father on the night be
fore the son’s funeral.
•Joseph Von I’oblocki, with this view,
went the day before to the grave digger
of the place and offered him a round sum
of money if lie would dig the grave for his
brother bo near to iiis father’s that they
could without lunch trouble, break
through the separating earth, and open
the coffin of the supposed vampire.
The grave digger consented to do this
Imt first consulted the paster of the village
church. The worthy clergyman forbade
his taking any part in such a desecration
amt ordered him to dig the grave ns usual.
Ife also set a watch on the night before I
the funeral. The watchman, was, however 1
em-otess, and the men were not disturbed
until they had accomplished their pur-1
pose.
Joseph nml his assistants were, tried for
the not of desecration, and were found
guilty by tho District Court .f Appeals
but the verdict was sot aside by Superior
Court uml the eitso was sent back to he
tried again by the tribunal of the district.
The trial was protracted through two
years, but all tho parties wore dually ac
quitted on the iiißuftieieut ground that
they meant no wrong.
if now wo nsk for the origin of this
strange and her idle super:.tith n, we shall
probably find it in the ancient duel tine
that tho souls of the dead pass i-.to tin
bodies of other animals • a doctrine
still liehl by the Hindoos. There is a bat
in South America which sometimes suck
tho blood of animals, and if this species l
oueo existed in Km ope, it may have given :
rise to tho belief that the dead sometime
rise from the grave and nourish them- ;
selves oir tho blood of the living. Tim j
wonder is that the superstition should slill '
maint; infls ground in this age of almost
universal education and of seientiilc in
quirv.
A Voi.cmk in Tun Hinbw We have;
read many colums of philosophical! discus :
sion concerning the relations of the races
at tho South as ail'eeted by Radicals lapis j
Ititiou since the war, but nothing that j
compares in torsenes ; and point with fol
lowing from a negro philosopher who, ac
cording to the, St. bonis Dr'inot-rt l, (Rad
ical) set forth his views an follows;
"You know do turkey, roost on de fence,
and de goose lie roost, on do ground. You
pull do turkey off de fence nnd lrr will git
up again. Yoa crap his wings, hut some
how or middor he gwine to get hack on do
fence. Now put de goose on de fence an'
ho will fall oil'; lie don't belong dnr. De
turkey am de white man. lie’s down
now, but is gwine to get up again. De nig
gor in ile goose. 11,, better stay wlinr he
I b’longs. ”
•
A gentleman I ■ two canaries which he
calls "Wheeler” raid AYi! • n ' Hi
I ra"W f- v •'■"se r-'.lattor N; ■( n-i
: M- w ~f •„ v ., •
THE BAD BOY.
ll y Oiin who Know*.
CUAPTKB I.
hitnxtucUyry. —His name waa John Hen
derson Tompk ins, and he was going on
thirteen years old. lie hod freckles all
over Ida nose, chewed p'ug tobacco, and
loafed around select schools, and put tin
ears on boys smaller than himself. His
father was killed by a Canada saw-log, bin
only Meier slept in tho silent tomb, und
Ids mother divided her time between gos
siping and canvassing for money for the
hSatiu ns iu Africa.
chajtbb it.
Thudy. Thus it will be scon that there
was noon, to give John Henderson Tomp
kins any dome .tic attention beyond an
occasional whook witli a slippor, which
made him the worse. Ho wasn’t sent to
school, never had to tuko a doso of castor
oil, waa allowed lo go around with a letter
iu the poatoflico and his pants supported
by a magnificent belt of sheep twine, and
if lie wasn't home by ten-o'clock at night,
his mother felt perfectly auto that he
would dump down somewhere and be
home in time for codfish and potatoes in
tho morning.
CHAPTEB TTI.
Hhninrfnl NwjtfitU. John Henderson
Tompkin’s mother never took him on her
knee and asked him if ho knew wlrnt was
beyond the bright stars, and if ho know
where he’d go to if he grow up nn awful
liar und horse thief. Hlio never told him
about tho Children of Egypt, Moses in the
bulrushes, or Daniel in tho lion’s den,
and it is no wdUdor tlmt he grew up to Is;
a bad boy. She didn’t noverhave stick
ing plasters ready when lie got n cut, and
Sunday mornings there was no one to rub
him behind his ears, fill his eyes with soap
and water, and comb his hair tho wrong
way.
CHAPTER IV.
Ilia Peculiarities. - Everything which
luqiponod in the village was laid nt John
Henderson Tompkins’ door. “It's some
of tlmt boy’s work,” they said, whenever
a bushel of plums, a watermelon, or a peek
of peaches mysteriously disappeared. He
was probably guilty of ovorythingahargod,
ns when he died they found whore ho had
hid seventeen stolen cow bells, forty axes,
ever no many s.aw-bffbJcs, fifteen or twenty
front gates, and I can't remember bow
many snow uhovels.
cnAPr.nriv.
Dtrwn on Him. —ln time, as the reader
wan informed in a previous chapter, the
adult male population of tho village got
down on John Hondoraon Tompkins.
Old maid ; jobbed at him with umbrellas,
merchants flung pound weights nt him,
shoemakers dosed him with strap oil, and
grocers always looked around for John
Henderson Tompkins when they wanted
to heave out bad eggs and spoiled fruits.
OH.U’TEIi VI.
His Atntiilii.il, You might think tlmt
(hoy would have eventually succeeded in
breaking the boy’s spirit and dashing his
hopes, but they couldn’t do it. lie lmd
an ambition which nothing could check. |
lie wanted to be a bold pirate and sail She |
raging main, and he was patiently waiting j
for Hie time to come when ho could wear
No. 10 boots and swear in a voice like tho
echoes of a lmss viol. Ho would bo con
tent to crawl into hen roosts and lo creep
around horse barns for a few year.’,, imt
then but then
ni.UTHI VI(.
Effiir/a at E'fvrm. Some of the more
philanthropic citizens made strenuous ef
forts to reform tho boy. They locked
him up iu a smoke house for a week; they ;
clubbed him until ho couldn’t yell, and :
they held him under npump until ho wan [
as limp as a rag, but ns soon as (hoy lot j
him go he went right back to his old linb
its again.
l-HAI'TEU Vltt.
Xnu i’ty /tin End. John Henderson ■
j Tompkins bad kept this thing for eight or \
nine years when our story opens, and lie j
was injuring bis end. Justice overtakes i
i the guilty Sooner or later, nnd justice was j
laying low for this bad boy. Ho had the I
check to believe that ho would livo to boa |
hundred years old, but bo was to be taken !
i down a peg or two and bis mother left an f
I orphan.
i
Clt.Yl-TI.U IX.
TU a Eml. (>ne day, while in the hey- I
iley of his wickedness, John Henderson I
Tompkins came upon something new in i
j the line of plunder. It. wasa pile of little !
jeans labelled nitroglycerine -hands off—
dangerous poison, Ac., but ho couldn’t i
road and lie didn’t care a corner, linear - j
lied a cun behind the mcotiug-lionse and!
sat down on a rock to open it. There •
w.i n't any g'luirdiaii angel around to tell i
him that he'd got busted if he fook-d with j
that cm, and so lie spit, on his hands nnd
so he spit on bis hands and gave it a
whack on the alone.
cuu-’mi x.
OhUniri/. The folks all ran out, nnd
after a good deal of trouble they found and
separated the pieces of mcctiug-honse
from the pieces of boy, and they got to- j
gel her enough of J ohn Henderson Tomp
kins to fill a soger box ami answer as the j
basis of a funeral. They buried the ro-1
mains in a quiet nook, and the gravestone I
maker (nit a little lamb on the headstone,
!to show that John Henderson Tompkins
was meek and lovely.
l hi all grades of human intelligence aud
j eulluro there are three cycles of devclop
j mout the physical, tho intellectual, the
-; iritnnl. That which is rationnl in mail
is higher than the animal, and that which
is spiritual higher than the rational. To
: develop the nnininl is to develop the lowest
nature to develop tho intellectual is to
I develop tho intermediate nature—to de
velop the spiritual is to develop tho highest
nature of man -that which makes him
! God like- that which roaches forth to
! eternity, with no limit to its growing ca
pacity.
An ice house laborer being killed by a
! lamp i-t ice falling on his head the ver
v ‘ " "i 1 : -I b 1 hard drink.
I). W. PRICE,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
QUITMAN, GA.,
Would Inform tho citizen,'! of Qaitmau end car
ruundi n country, tlmt holms Jmri opened s'
Knt#n* oi>ABB
MERCHANT ANO TAI MIRING
ESTABLISHMENT
IN QUITMAN, AND IIAH ON HAND A FINE
LOT OF
CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES,
BUITAHLE FOB MAKING
DR SS AND BUSINESS SUITS.
He ha* also on Hand a Scleet Stock of
BEADY MADE CLOTHING,
CUTTING, CLEANING
- \?nv~
If 13 1* A I HI N < j
PONE OK 6IIORT NOTICE.
*S-naORS MODERATE, -©a
| WORLD KESratTFULLY CALL THE AT- •
1 TENTION of Itiu i-itiiK UH of ItriHiUs mid I
tin Adjoining comities, to my largo nod neb-ct I
stock of
DRY GOODS,
BOOTS AND SHOES,
IIA II O W A It E
GROCERIES, Etc., Etc.,
Allot’ which will bo sold upon REASONABLE
TERMS and nt LOWEST PRICES.
o
and would call tho attention of Plantorn to my
LARGE STOCK OF
FARM IMPLEMENTS,
Such as
PLOWS,
OLE VICES,
HEEL BOLTS,
GRAIN FANS, etc., etc i
Those goods will be sold at
j
MANUFACTURER’S PRICES,
-
Willi FreisiUt Added.
*r GIVE ME A CAUL *K
JOHN TII.LMAN.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
LEHADDGfcK.
Attorney A*t J#n\v
QUITMA N, GEORGIA.
Will practice In all 4he Courts of the Boutliem
Circuit, will nl*o jiraftirt- in tho adjoining ooun
tioa in tho State of Flornla.
g*' Ofiico over Finch’s Store. may9-ly
JAS.II.IIUXTKR
ATTO RN E Y AT I. AIV ,
QUITMAN,
IIROOKS COUNTV. OEOROIA.
o-
Willpmctico tu tho Counties nt the Houthen,
Circuit, Echols Sail Cttnnh of tho ISruimw irk. and
Mitchell of tho Albany. **-onico at tho Court
llouho."** jancZH-tf
W. B. I.KNSKTT. H. t. KIKOOIUUII:V
BENNETT & KINGSBERRY,
Attorneys at I#n\v
QUI TM A N,
fil-ooks Comity, - - - Georgia.
JuueZß-tf
EDWARD R. HARDEN.
Attorney tit Law,
QUITMAN,
BROOKS COUNTY, - - GEORGIA.
Late an Associate Justice Buprome Court U.
8. for Utah and Nebraska Territories; now Judge
County Court, Crooks County, Ga.
niA\24-12nio
.1. S. N. S N O W,
DENTIST,
Quitman, ----- Georgia,
Office Up Stairs, Finch's Corner.
| _*ng23-4m
00. E. A. JELKS,
| I’BA(TISI.\G PHYSICIAN,
Qnitmmi, (n.
OFFICE - Brfrk build Ini' adjoining thf* ptoro of
J Jelks 5t Cos., Hercvt n street,
may *otf
RE DELL CO‘.r
Llq uor Dealers;
AND
TohAC’GO AGENTS,*
140 BROAD STREET.
COLUMBUS, GA.
nov29-tf
CURRIER, SHERWOOD & GO.,
WHOLEHALE DF-ALEKH IN
BOOTS ANDSHOES)
This is ono of the Oldoot and Largest
Boot ami Shoe .lobbing House*
IN THE CITY.
All thair Supplies are obtained from
THE VEUV BEST MANUFACTORIES,
And Sold to Customers on tho
1/057’ ACCOMMODATING TERMS.,
476 & 478 Broome Street, New York, i
A. M. WATKINS, Traveling Agent. |
CREECH & NEWSOM,
DEAI.ERS IN
DRYGO O D S,
GROCERIES,
Liquors, Flour, Bacon, etc.
QUITMAN, GA.
uuaylO-tf
SA rANNA H AD VERTISEMENTS.
Dc W ITT, M ORGAN & CO.
DEALERS IN DRY GOODS,
13f) Congress Street,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
CHAMPION & FREEMAN.
OUOC KLS AND COMMISSION MEnCHA NTS
Corner Bay and Drayton Streets,
SAVANNAH, - - - - GEORGIA.
CLAGHORN & CUNNINGHAM.
ll'// 0 L ESA L E 011 OCER S,
Corner Bay and Drayton Streets,
SAVANNAH GEORGIA
DIARKET SQUARE HOUSE
VALENTINE BASLER,
(Sueecawr to hU brother Antony Bailor)
THE WELL KNOWN
TEN PIN ALLEY,
At the Old Stand, 174 Bryan St.,
OPPOSITE THE MARKET,
Continues to keep on hand the best of
Brandies, Whiskies, Wines, Ales,
AND ALL OTHER LIQUORS,
My Foreign Liquors are all of my own Impor
tation.
ngit-tf
ft. §
! | pi i
FOR M YEARS THE
Standard of Excellence
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.
Over 900,000 iu Use.
100, non MOKE THAN ANY OF ANY OXHKIi KIND
TUBS NEW WiIKKLKa A WILSON.
Kkgkived in 1873:
The Award;; at the Vienna Kaposl
tlon.
Tlxo <*oU I. ..Ini of tho Mtujlmttl Intrtl
tnli: Fair.
Tlu. FOUii liICIIEiTT PHEMIUMB* (including
| two me dub.) at th, GEORGIA B'fATE FAIR.
i;i:st or all:
I Tljd WTIKfXFIt A ha tho approval
i "f miliioiis of Ladies who have used this well
| iiied machine. Übvsioianß certify that it it the
i t>nly (mm whig Muctiinti filfor
F:u*iHy uhc. light and easy motion does
not fatigue invalids. Its rapid execution of work
recommend* it fc* * all who u w fur a living. It ii
(hi mo*i c4.m>mh id (Mi iUisf, tin mit iln*
rablr.
Onr ne\, and popular No. 6 Maehmc adapk and
for Leetlior work and general Manufacturing
purpos- H is now used L>v n.t; leading taUoring ua
taiuisluuenta and shoe l i , ric^.
Hi ml for our eireulnrw. Miw liirien gold ou easy
ten.is, or mouth'y paviu- nts takeu. Old machines
put in ordt r or received in t xehange.
WITEFLKIt A WIT,SON MFG CO.'S OFFICBB:
W. 11. Clsyks, Gen. Agi., Savannah, Ga.
‘JYniutf _
15 H ESN AN’S
EUROPEAN HOUSE,
Nos. 15C, 158, ICO and 162, Bryan St.,
SAVANNAH, GA.
null’, PROPRIETOR HAVING COMPLETED
_L the mei-saory additions and iniprovemcnte,
can uuw offer to his guests
ALL THE COMFORTS TO r>E Oil
TAI NED A T OTHER HOTELS
AT LESS THAN
HALF TIIE EXPENSE.
A Restaurant oil the EUROPEAN FLAN has
been addi-d, wiiero fpiests can,
A.t All Hom s,
Order liatevor can bo obtained in tho market.
Rooms, TVitli Baortl, SI 50 per day.
Determined to be
OUT DONE BY NONE
all I can ask is a TXIT.V.L, confident that complete
satisfaction will be given.
oe.U-tf JOHN BItEfINAN, Proprioto
J. M. KOHOHiRS. \ J. I>. WIKO.
BOROUGHS & WING,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
TOBACCO,
CIGARS, SNUFFS, PIPF.S and
SMOKER’S ARTICLES,
14 Decatur Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
|J. T. JORDAN, Traveling Agent.
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SAVANNAH AD4ERTISEMENTS.
N 13 W
SPRING STOCK!
DeWITT, MORGAN t CO.,
ARE OPENING
TIIEIR SPRING STOCK
WHICH THEY OFFER
L" olt CASH,
AT
Prices to Suit the Times.
DRESS GOODS,
SILKS,
CALICOES,
CASSIMERES,
SHAWLS,
PRINTED MUBLIKS,
GRENADINES,
TRIMMINGS,
COLLARS,
RUFFLING.
EVERYTHING FOR SALE
THAT IS KEPT IN K
FIRST-CLASS HOUSE.
FOR SALE BY
DeWITT, MORGAN & CO.
139 Congress Ht.
SAVANNAH, - - - GEORGIA.
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1)R. D. COX,
LIVE STOCK, SLAUGHTERED MEATS
AND-
I* K O 1> UCE,
COMMISSION MERCRANT
—AMD—
PURCHASING AGENT
VANN AH, GEORGIA.
Stock Lots,
WILLIAM AND WEST BROAD BTEETS
Produce Depot
IN BASEMENT OF CITY MARKET
CONSIGNMENTS ON
BEEF CATTLE,
MILCH COWS,
SHEEP, noos,
GAME
DRESSED MEATS, Ac., Ac.,
—AMO
POULTRY, EGGS,
VEGETABLES,
FRUITS,
. MELONS,
SUGAR,
SYRUP,
HONEY,
HIDES,
TALLOW, Ac.
RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.
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MARSHALL HOUSE,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
A. B. LUCE, Proprietor,
BOARD. S3 OO Per Day.
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