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THE VEEKLY Ww& AND ADVERTISER
Th. ALBANY NEWS.cMXIisInd 1SU, lto,s-_liiUVed»vlil.», ISMS, b) »
Too ALUANY ADVEKTISEIt, ntaMtohed 1ST7, | HelNToon A Kvass. 1
A Family and Political Jourxal Devoted to the Interests of Southwest Georgia.
1 —— ——— :
$2 a Year.
Volume I.
ALBANY, GA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1880.
Number 12.
gtofcsslonaX Cards.
James Callaway.
Attorney at Law
CAMILLA. g a.
Jas. H. Spence,
Attorney at Law,
CAMILLA. OA.
Will practice in *11 me conntire of Al
bany I ‘irc’.at, ud in Um V. S. Circuit and
Dm riel OonrU for Um Soulh.ni District
of Q*.
jWOfflra Up-stairs. otct Twitty * Col;
USD AND COLLECTION AGENCY.
S. 0. SHEFFIELD.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ARLINGTON. GA.
*#-Wild Tamila looked after and Col
lection* ueh in the eoouvtleeof Early.
Miller. Oalbnau an I Baker. frlcW-ly
Trowbridge & Hnllinshcd
DENTISTS,
WATCR0S3, - - - - GEORGIA.
Tort* «bkM wi.hoat ptliu An war*
warranted. Term* teoderete. Wilt »» »■.-
where on B.A A. awl Bailroeiis.
JOSEPH A. CROXK.
ATTOESSyatLAW
• m BAT ST.IEET,
SAVANNAH, GA.
#T. T. JONES, JESSE W. WALTER*.
JONES ft WALTERS,
Attorneys at Law.
ALBANY. OA.
vV. A. STROTHER, U.D.
ALBANY. GEORGIA.
013 o?3F Gilbari’s Due Store
TUB LORD'S PKAYER.
PATMRpbed Into an acrutic by Stu Grant, Jr.a
Midler In the > tl» nyinrnl of United St«t«e
laf»atry,aad wrwo—t mi war In the province
or Upper Canada.
One Lord and King, who rrtgna't enthroned
ftibr of light myaterlona I>eit I
Whs ar.t e great I AM, the last, the flrat.
Art righteoue, holy, merciful and juat;
Jn realms of glory, aceneo where angels sing
IMmrm U the dwelling pi ire of God, our King.
JjWfcvwf thy name, which doth all name*
taasceml;
Hr thou adored, our Great Almighty Friend;
Tkm glory nhleea boron ! creation’* »pa<v,
Jhnr In the booh eCJ«*u« »»•! of grace.
Up kingdom towers betond the starry *kie*;
JTwglwi Satanic tell*, but thine a Wall ri*e,
fkow let thine empire, oh. tboa H<»lv one,
fie greet and everta*tlng will be done;
IVW I'rtxl make known his will, his power
.display,
ft it the work of mortal* to obey.
Dsn* la the great and wondemu* work of
lore.
Om Calvary’* crow he died, bnt reign* above;
Han* bear* the record in the hob word,
as heaven a-lore* thy lore, let earth,oh Lord;
It shines transcendent in th* eternal skies.
Is praised in heaven—for man the Saviour
die*.
M songs immortal angels land hi* name.
IAmen shout* with joy, and saint* his love
proclaim.
Gist us, oh Lord, oar food, nor cease to give
Vs of that food on which our soul- may live;
71m be our boon to-day, and days t-» come.
Dap without end in o r eternal home;
Omr Lctdv souls supply from day to-day,
HmOm assist and aids us when we nrav.
Aral though we ask, yet Lord, thy blessing
send.
Ami make ns grateful when thy gifts tle-
/try** at our sins, which in dedrucUm
race.
oil on the stage no voice liatl
been raised tip in protest. Dr.
Sims closed by appealing to the
great newspaper* of the city, “*o
potent in the formation of public
opinion,** to denounce the play uml
its projectors.
Our souls u> save, e’en A am’* guilty
ftlUn to thee lu gratitude and love.
Ami in that duty paid by saints above.
Lfoi ns from sin, and in thy mercy raise
Vs from the tempter and his hellish ways,
JVot tn oar n«me. but in His name who bled,
M* thine ear we poor our every need.
ft #OWn faul charms help ns to shun.
As* may «e conquer through tne conquering
For we »re mortal worm* and cleve to clay;
Ufa* ’*J* to rule ami mortal-* to oiiey.
Is not thv mercy. Lord, forever free ?
Dr fc. W AlFRIEfrD
reoJtr* kl. »nfca, IB b.
»* #*rm*.i* *rsache» ot lb i>rof«iion. to tl*
SUa-v b»n* andinrroMnJina r«M»otry
i it-.
i UineBtreet-
HOTEL-
THE JOHNSON HOUSE
- SMITIIVILLE. GA.
I* the pliwln stop and get a GOOD
SQUARE MEAL
MARKET SQUARE,
1AVAHKAB, OA
Bates (1.50 to (2.00 per day. according
to location of rooms. -*
JOSEPH HEBSGHBAGH,
April JO, 1880—ly. PROPRIETOR
THE ALBANY HOUSE!
Herrick Barnes,Proprietor
Albany, Georgia.
mbis Hoose is well furnished and in ev-
JL try way prepared for the accommo
dation of the traveling public. Entire sat
isfaction guaranteed. The table is -tip-
plied with the beat the country affords,
and the i-eTvant* are unsurpassed ir po
liteness and attention to the wants of
gt&eaU. Omnibnaee convey passenger* to
And from tl»e different railmndn prompt
ly, f.*ee of charge. Chsrgeu to snit tli«*
timca. tl
300,000
M-CtaM
pu sale. *rrir k>
VLA.SIMMO/V3
CURES
UHorAPPcmk
jimmy. L
Th* wh I# ere • tion know. BO Goil but Thou
Kingdom anil Kmcire in thy pmnic fall;
ncKing ,-t.rnsl reign* the King of *11
ftnT i, with rhee; to Thee he glory rive
And be th. name adored by earth and hearen
The i»sai-« of taint* ami anre la thine own;
Glory to Thee, the eterlaating one.
Furmr be thy gloriou. name adotml:
Amen ! Hovaooa, hleaacil he the Lonl I
AGAINST THE PASSION PLAT.
A Preacher Point, lb. Objection.
M a Proposed Theatrical Hepre-
•cntatloi
Sew York .-si
The proposed production of the
Passion Piny at Booth’. Theatre
lias attracted the aiteniioii of llie
pulpit. Last etching I he Hev. Ur.
C. N. Siuia, of the Siiinnierlield
Methodist church, Brooklyn
preached a sermon denouncing ill.
play and the participants, the actors
and the management. The play, lie
-aid, was “an insult to the best
Christian sentiment of the laud.'
(lift text was tlie 28lh and fSltli
verses of the 27th chapter of ,81.
Mathew ;
"And they stripped him and put
on him a scarlet robe.’’
-And when they had platted a
crown of thorns they put it upon hi*
head, and a reed in his right hand ;
and they bowed the knee before
him and mocked him, saying;
Uail King of the Jews!’’
The reverend speaker thought it
lamentable that there should be any
attempt to personate ’‘the Holy
Christ, in whose name we offer our
prayers day and night,’' and this,
too, “«n the boards of the same the
atre where the echoes of the foot
-teps of the profligate Bernhairit
•will have scarcely died away." It
was sad to contemplate tiie spectacli
of a professional player who, per
sonating Jesus Christ, would pugs
the cup to twelve other players, rep-
re-cutiiig the apostles and say
“This is my blood which is shed lor
you" A simulated John woul-
lean on the breast of a simulated
Savior, and the inquiry ol simula
ted treachery would be whispered
around the table: “Is it I ?”
I ?" This scene so sacred to nl
Christians, was to l>e introduced ut.
the boards of a theatre as an amuse
tnent. The trial before Pilate .aid
‘-that great triumph of the world’*
hope and faith, Hie a-cousion of the
risen Lord in ilcatcu,” were to In
represen led.
The litatia, ers confessed that the;
cxpcclcd opposition at.d iiidigim
tion. When it was pr< seated i
8an Francisco, eigh’eeu mouth
jigo, the force of public opinion
compelled its withdrawal trout the
stage, and the city authorities pass
ed hii ordinance making it. pc
forinance a criminal offcu»e, am.
James O’Neill, win* personated
i Christ, was arrested and lined (50
A new Board of hnp> rvi-or* at
tempted to rescind H c ordinance.
\ but nimh-c to. iind to-day the per-
! forinance of this play would be an
unlawful act in 8uu Francisco. Tin
| managers Imd prepared the pub ir
; here for its reception by carefully
prepared newspaper art cle-, which
dwelt upon its elevated character,
j and declared its influence would not
! In- immoral or irreligious. The
public was asstf cd tha, only mor-
ltd people Would be" perm.tied to
i t>ke part in Hie play Two hundred
FHTNIOGNOIIIV.
FAST MAIL SERVICE.
THIS SOUTH to BMOV IT AtI t * , « or Character Reading Ex.
LAST.
A Fast Train to b. Han Dally Be
tween Boston, New York and Sa
vannah.
A Thoughtless Child.
The erratic Dr. Taltnnge may lie
guilty of inauy indiscretions, but
lie following is not one of llietn :
Thera arc many parents who arc
i.icriflcing their children with
wrong systems of discipline—loo
great vigor, or too great leniency.
I'liere*are children in families who
rule Hie household. They cotno lo
be the authority. The high chair
in which infant, sit is Hu 1 throne,
and the rattle is the sceptre, and the
other children make up Hie parlia
ment, where father and mother
have no vote. Such children come
up to the miscreants. There is no
chance in this world for a child that
has never learned to mind. Such
people become the botheration ot
the church of God and the (test ot
the world. Children that do not
learn to obey human authority arc
unwilling to learn to obey di-
iue authority. Children will not
re-pect parenat whose authorin'
they do not respect. Wltoare these
ou’ng men that swagger through
he streets with their thumbs in
their vests, talking about their
lathers as “the old man,” “the gov-
ri>or,’’“the -quire,” “the old chap,”
or their mother as “iho old wo
man ?” they are those who in cltild-
nood never learned to reaped an
Hinrity. Eli, having learned that
his sons were wicked,. fell over
hark ward and broke lira nock and
lied. Weil he might. What is lire
to a father whose sons were de-
iiiuelied? The dust of the valley is
dea-anl to Itjs taste,and the driving
rains that drips through Hie roof ot
< he sepulchre are sweeter than tlie
wines of llclbon. There uniat be
harmony between the father's gov-
rnincut and the mother's govern
ment. The mother will lie tempted
lo too leniency. Her tenderness
will overcome her. Her voice is a
ittle suiter, her hand seems butter
Jt lo pull out a thorne and soothe a
pang. Children wanting anything
from Hie tnoHier cry for it. They
tope to dissolve her witli tears,
(tut the mother must not interfere,
utist not coax oil. must not beg lor
ilie child when Hie hour eoutes for
lie ns-crHon of parental siiprcnmry
ntd tiie subjugation of the child’-
'em per. There cornea in the liisto-
y of every child an hour when it is
eslud, whether the parents shall
ule or Hie child shall rule. That i-
ilie critical hour. If Hie child Iri-
mph in Hint hour, then lie will
some day make you crouch. It i- a
terrible scene. I have witnessed it,
A mother conic to old age, shivering
with terror in Hie presence of
sou who cursed her grev hairs, ami
mocked her wrinkled face, and be
grudged her the crust she munched
witli her toothless gums!
How sharper than a serpeata tooth it la
To hare a thankless child.
gaiVEa STABLE Ifcoc
UYER MEDICINE
It tbu oViskt, tnA r genuine ftitt*
gou’Mrimnc ikiv on !bc rnuniri. Prepared _ .
">• n of the most exemplary c(i'arac
>,M.D. PuanpIn■.■.w-siitamdtixwhottl** . ter were advertised to represent the
Wives.
Journal of Commerce.
Three men of wealth meeting, not
long since, in New York, the con
versation turned upon their wives.
Instead of finding fault with women
in general and their wives in par
ticular, each one obeyed the wise
mau’s advice, and “gave ‘honor’
unto his wife.”
“I tell you what it is,” said one of
the men, “they m iy s ty what they
please about the uselessness of mod
ern women,, but my wife has done
tier share in securing our success in
life.
•‘Everybody knows that her fami
ly was aristocratic and exclusive,
uml all, that, anil when I married
Iter siie had never done a day’s
work in her lile; hut when \\. St
Co. failed, I had to commence at the
foot of the hill again, and she di—
• barged the servants and chose but
a neat little collage,and did her
■wn housekeeping until I w us bel
ter otr.
•‘And my wife,” said a second,
••tvas an only daughter, caressed and
pelted to death; and everyImdi
aid, ‘Well, if he «ill marry a doll
ike I list, lie’ll make Hie grente-i
oistake of hia life.’ But when I
•■ame home the first year of uiarri-
.ge, sick with the fever, she nursed
oe hack lo lieiillli, and I never knew
»• r to niiirtiiiir because I thought
ve couldn’t aflord any better style
•r more luxuries.’’
“Well, gentlemen,” ehimed in a
bird, “I married a smart, healthy,
pretty girl, hut -he wa- a regular
rlue—lurking. .She adored Te: ny-
oti, dot> don By on. rend Emerson,
iml named Hie first hiliy Hnlpli
Waldo Emerson and tips append
Maud; hu| I tell you wliat ’tis,’’iiii(l
llie speak r'« eyes grew -u-pieiou-ly
moist, “when we laid little Maud in
her last bed ut Auburn my poor
wife had no reiuetiihr.ii.ee of neg
lect nr stinted m Jbnly caret and
'lie little dre-ses th .t still lie in the
locked drawer woto all tputlp In
her own huiiils "
Special Tdraram la tbs MurntiiK Nsw*.
Washington, November 21.—As
the general dispatches Inform you.
the South is at last to have the ben
efit of a fast mail service. Tito dif
ferent railroads linvc come to rea
sonable terms for carrying the cars,
and Superintendent Thompson gave
me the following as directly inter
esting Savannah:
“The fast mail trnin will leave
Boston at 7 P. M., New York at 4:35
A. M.„ Washington at 11 A. M.,
Richmond at 3 P. M , and arrive at
Charleston at 6:15 A. M. and Sa
vannah nl 11 A. M. For the next
two, possibly three weeks tin: train
will arrive at Savannah us ut pres
ent. at 12:40 p. M. After that time
at 11 A. M. Trains will bu daily
from New York, and daily, except
Sundays from Bj-lon. Arrange-
mentH have not yet been made fot
Jacksonville and point- west of Sa
vannah. and for the present the fast
mail will practically stop at Savan
nah.”
Colonel Thompson wi'l go to
Chartcstoi, Savuinali and Jackson
ville in lately after tiie inatign
ration of tld- fa’-t service, on No
vetuber 28lli, to perfect all lie
details and lo make any change
necessary. The appropriation nit
tier which llie service is established
wiil expire June 30th, next. Nec
essary eflorts should he made !<•
continue it, ns it will doubtlcs-
prove of great beifefit to the South
Washington, November 20.—
During the lu-t session ot Congress
Superintendent Thompson, ot the
Railway Mail Service, wrote a let
ter to the Postmaster-tieneral, ad
vocating an additional appropria
tion forth* Southern fast mail aer-
ice, which letter was transmitted
to Congress and an appropriation
made. Up to ti c present time it
iia- been impo—ible to make ar-
rangetne ds witli Hie Soutle rn line-
lo pul it into operation. There was
a meeting to-day of Southern lunu-
agers* in litis city, at which an ar
rangement was completed, a d it
was agreed to put it into effect on
ihc28ih insi. By Hie terms ot thi-
tirinngeineiit a fast mail will leave
Boston nt 0 P. M., and New York
at 6:35 A. M., arriving at Washing
ton at 10:50 A. M.. and leaving
Washington at 11 A. M-. it will ar
rive in Richmond at 1:40 P. M., At
lanta at 9:30 A. M., and in New Oi
lcans the following morning, which
will he eqmvelaut to a saving <>•
one business day. By this arrange
ment not only New Orleans, bin all
intermediate point* bet ween Wa-li-
itiuton and New Orleans will In
heiiefitted. A- this line will pet-
form local service, the mail which
arrives at Atlnnta lay the present ar
rangement at 11 P. M-, will arrive
at9:3-J A. M., and all other cities
and villages will receive eurro
ponding benefits in the saving ol
time. Not only the towns on tin-
line of tliis route receive such bene
fits. but by its connections with lat
ernl lines the entire service ill Hi?
South will be greatly improved.
This train will nl-o, by connections
from Richmond, continue South
via the Atlantic Coast Line via
V. iliiiington, Charleston and Savan
nah to Jacksonville, dccrcasipg tin
time to the extent of one business
day, to :lie cities named, logethc
with their intermediate points, also
on the lateral lines.
In addition to the above train
■here is also a special fast train
the Virginia Midland It-iiinnid. be-
ween Wa-hington ami Duuvilh
which leaves Danville at 10:40 1
M.. on arrival of Hie train whirlt
leaves New York nt 4 P. M. Tills
Virgi.tiu Midland sperial train nr
ri“csat Danville, Va., at 7:45 A. M.
in time to connect wi.h the Pied
mont Air-Line train for the South,
whirl, '-taken In connection with Hn-
ntlicr fast truing, gives (lie South a
double (jaity fast mail service that
is unsurpassed elsewhere. The
Southern railway managers very
kindly plnied Hie trains at Hie dis
posal of llie department, which it
promptly accepted, knowing and
appreciating the value nl such set-
vice to Hie patrons ol the Post Of
fice Department.
plained by Frol. lVIllls.
There wa* a good alleitdanco at
Ilawilioritu Hull, Park street, last
evening, iho occasion being a lec
ture on “Physiognomy^ or llie Ail
of Reading Character,” hv Prof. A.
E. Willis, ot Chicago. The speaker
said ilint the heud was one ot tin-
best indicators uml chart of a iiiiiii'h
character that it was possible lo
obtain, ns it never lied If Hie soul
is pme, the face will show it, and
It is impo-sihlc fora man to liven
licentious nml immoral life with
out titu indications ol hia manner
of living being plninly diseernnble
on It's face and in Ida eyes, the eye.
in particular, being one of-lie mo-1
•uddt-iily affected and piouipl to
indicate any wuywnrd traits in a
man's career in lile. The human
body iscmiKiriicted mnthenintica ly.
there being only one straight line,
the bridge of Hie nose, uml one cir
cle, the hull of the eye, and its con
struction is composed of curves pro
portionately and symmetrically ar
ranged. Some children have iarge
heads, and Hteir amount ot brain is
out of proportion to their bodilt
strength. Such children are pre
cocious, aim' the mistaken parents,
proud of the apparent ability of Hie
child, insist upon showing it oil’ to
visitors, and, by forcing the too
large bruin, cause sickness, prema
ture decline and. in insnv cases,
leatli. Tiie speaker said that the
result of his studies had been that
the first seven years of a child’s life
-liould he devoted to training the
-tomncli; the next seven years to de
veloping the honesnnd muscles,and
the third term of tiie same number
of years to education ; not by tld
advice meaning that tiie child should
not go to school until it was 14 tear-
old, hut during tin- first two period-
iiiciitioiicd.thu training o. the stom
ach and Hie detelopnieui of the
muscles and hones should have
preference. The hiiinan system
livided into three leading anti dis-
t.nct tempera in, nts, viz: nervou-,
motive and vital, apd could Hies
it ree bu, with tne lesser tempera
nentu nud a proper shape head
-teulv combined, then wo shoulo
ee wliui tiie world never yet h.-n
hi held, a perfect man. In regan
to the hones, he said that, upon gen
rnl principles, the large honed
man might he Recounted hottest.
a bile the small boned human be
ing tvas generally the contrary
Broad heads indicate push, cuergt
■ ltd a di-position to succeed. Tin-
short, thick neck is a sign ot saga
city. and Hie long neck ol iimhitiun
Ever.' Ilian lias ill Ids make iipsotii
cliaracteri-tic of fi-h. hml. anim -
•eptile, and it is when drunk Ilia
i ittaii will most thoroughly act on
the animal peculiarities thtit In
possesses. Ip regard to food tl
speaker said th t ill order to fee
he brain, li-li, Urahattl bread an
•racked wheat should he used,
inii'cuiar devlopnient is de.-ired
use lean meat, ami if fat is wanted
•at fatly rin-ats nnd greasy food. Bt
Hie nid of charts nud enlarged
photographs Hie speaker illustrated
amt coinpar d vramus facial ex
pressions. Tiie lower part of Hu
face was taken as an indication
tiie affections of the heart; the nose
of force and energy, nnd the fore
head of the intellectual ability, the
mouth being the indication of cul
ture. The eves, which indicate ant
cinporury emotion, represent them
selves the spirit of the person,
Various other sigus tet d t-> assist
in reading the character of a pet-
son, the hair, the laugh, the voice
the gait, all being auxiliaries in
summing up a person’s general
character. After the lecture, Hie
Professor examined stvertl of the
younger memb rsoftae audience,
and explained their characteristic
straits.
nxvs.M.i). r
and cartages.
Vsm.M
i !.> alldruext-u. ; Jewish rabble ami Roman soldiers.
who will not laugh or he noisy he
! bind the scenes, and who will ert
‘•Cruelly hint! crucify him!” at 25
or 50 cents a night.
Great pains will he taken to pro-
TEMPLE OP FLSIIION pfrs-ts^itus:
lujaiuu vi l iiuilltjit lowed; no return checks wiil he
given at the door, and therefore llie
•*•’“ri de’j auraetloDs i« audience cannot go out for driuk-
lietwceu the acts. It is even sug
gested that while the play comili
nes the H-stole of Shakespeare shall
he removed from the front of the
building and tiie cross erected in
it* place. Christians should object
strenuously to tld* schc’iqc of mak
ing merchandise in llie markets of
public entertainment of tiie agony
and atonement of Hie Lord Jesus
Christ. What would the public say
Lack*, Glove*. Rosiest, Ztrumn, No- °f *° attempt to represent the a«-a»-
tioxs. Etc. eination aud death of Abraham
. . „ L-ucoln for the amusement or an
STiSS&UioK ‘ , °» r •“/ coma
*sd iasa-et nr ( —as<.4 iriers shrink back in horror from a prop-
lanatnis^aifia-ikai'sitMrlTUia osition to dramat ie for public her at itud - lie
H/T— r* -E3 oo.re, amusement the d *Ut rru ghs .,i, ri eoiibddcrs as -
??**• Gr SSAW.J ityjGfimfMjhT IT Mdltcr! Yet wh idered a*, and si.
AJnwj’MC.UWa,ifn , . afmtfm* . Wlfh* Wu* (0 bit tasriustUr- . thus (Of gg h“V> •» •
Mrs. Shaw’s
Haf!a«J'iit ratufMd from th« Northern roar
ktrf*. mb' is I ipFoi (uom Urns In tslscf lit* all id'
Istoet *t\I *s of g-mpin in my lins, f mow have the
IMH* fW|l(U MKftUMtof
8ats,Bonnets, Feathers,
BIBB038, NECKWEAR,
•‘And Tbla Simula ba Hia Castonaa-
rv Attitude.*.
The fa-o ite standpoint of the
male at tliet : c i« the ■ liiinnev-piece
for this a titude: Lean the'cllmw-
on the chimney-piece. Turn back
Hie open hand that it ttiav comfor
tably support l ie side of the jaw
The head is liras thrown hack, and
the nose is jvci| til (lie riir. It i»
one of (he first lessons to he learned
l.y the novice in aistlieticlsm to wear
the no-e ihns. Tiie l.ack is slighilt
lient nnd one leg is graccfu Iv curv
ed eround Hie other. Tiie Hiitraei
the legs the better. The .esthetic
lady begins by getting her chair
close to the tyall, i,iul H|Uit sink-
into ‘t sidyway* HI Wiif-.li a way that
iter draperies leaves the outline
of her figure i.lniuly vi»il.lo. Then
she leans her head against the wall,
mashing the throat a» long and the
back of the neck as short as possible.
Next she stretches her arm* to their
utmost length and crosses her
hands so »hat the fingers droop in a
lank, dejec.ed out-stretched way
over h' r kn-cs. Having completed
i.nmVib'liiytnu-l
•oiueihing lo he
she ni »st ieui.iiu
What She Forgot.
t-RllaScIpbis Tiuca.
When a girl concludes to pul up
her Imir ami make herself look
sweet, llie best policy is to let her
have her own tvav. She <an’t be
drawn away from Iter mirror l>\
any of the ordinary things of till
lif". A tire 4vill someliius i|<; ii
bit it lilt- beep shown thui even a
tire may fall to excite some girls
The other night a New York lodg
ing i ons, took fire, >ra I at a most
iiucotiiforliibl hour, when most of
Hie giris probably have their l.ae|,;
hair down. One tr.u young
ladic* Ip-npi Htil tl|u place was
burning dptyn, l.qt site didn’t f.-el
like u.itki.ig Iter Hji|ie.irniteti Itefore
the crowd wIlMiiwd gaHiureil In
H.n street braking like a perteei
fright. Site shut the door leading
into Hie hall to keep out tiie flames
and went to her mirror to tlx her
hair. Anybody who bus waited
for a girl to fix her hair knows that
it lakes time, and a great deal of it.
This girl wasn’t any quicker (|ptn
.lie average, ami situ wasyery parti
cular allull( Inly ing lp:r l\cir dime
up exactly as it slp.uid he. Tiie
lire had cut oil her chances of es
cape by llie s'.iirs, and her lover,
after appealing to her for some
time, filially lo-t n|| | alienee »ml
got away without her. A llreiiuill
got up to Hie room mi a ladder sod
she made him -1| op the edge ol
the window anil wait until site had
arranged her hairpins anil ribbons
lor a right sort uf pilhllo appear
ance, then site threw herself Into
her nrms—it was *o romantic—and
slid down the ladder with him,
looking just sweet. The whole
tiling was a tremendous success,
but when the carefully young girl
was safely landed on the puveutppt
site found that she had forgotten
b,T a
There are In Georgia 88.522 col
ored-men-who own, be tax receiv
ers' returns C- r their ruspuctiie
wuv***., ffuyt Vl hknti.
Noses dawlfled.
From tha .iloba.
Francis Groce, in his appendix
to Hogarth’s “Elements of Beauty.”
delqn ntes eight typical noses. 'I here
is the angular; tin: aquiline or Ko-
tiian ; Hie parrot’s beak; llie straight
or Grecian ; the bulbous or bottled :
the tiirued-upor snub, aud the mix
ed ot broken. Of Hie latter, by th-
u-ay, the noses of at least two illus
trious men may he taken nxillustru-
ions—Tyeho Brahe and Miehuul
Angelo, the latter of whom owed
his ungraceful nppendix to a blow
from a companion witli whom lie
was at vnriunce, who thus disfigur
ed the great artist Tor life, aud then
fled. To these may be added tin-
orator Cicero, upon whom Nature
seems to have bestowed a nasal or
gan of a type decidedly ‘‘mixed.’’
f not broken. Plutarch, ill hi-
life of llie querulous Roman, say.-
Ilrat he had a flat excrescence ot.
he tup of his nose in the shape of a
vetch—ciccr in Latin—from which
lie took his surname. Pliny says,
witli more probabilty, that the niiiue
originated in ait extensive cultiva
tion of vetches, just as others had
previously been surname.! from
crops of other kinds. However
this may be the fuet of Cicero’s snub
nose may no doul.t he accepted, and
it accords with the traditional be
lief that this description of nose is
usually indicative of u fiery, quick,
impetuous temper, Cicero having
possessed this characteristic in a
marked degree. Horace seems In
regard the short nose, with a little
turn up at the end, as the mark of a
person given a good deal to jibing
and jeering. Martial calls it the
hinocerus nose, aud eats that it
vas highly fashionable in his da>,
•very tiody afi’eeting this kind of
proboscis as an indication of a
-atiric.il humor. The “angular”
nose, as Grose calls it. is the long,
leariy-cut, pointed organ, and was,
in doubt, the type to which Horace
illudcs when he says that it is radi
ative of satirical wit. The “parrot
oeak” is Hie nose with which Mi.
Punch usually adorns his carica-
ore of the Sultan or Khedive, uml
s akin to Hie typical Jewish nose
HI over tiie world. The eight types
'iren embrace every description of
llie feature, and students of carica
ture are strongly cecoiiillieiidcd in
he treatise alluded to to make
hcniaelvcs perfect I > familiar wiili
■ie simple lines by which these
-mioit-ly comprehensive sketches
ire oflected.
A very sigttlar fact has been ob
erved with regard not so much to
he shape ot the nose as to Hie rat
ing uf it in tiie face, so to speak
fo be strictly collect from the
■rli-l’s point of view, tlip uo-e
liould he accurately in tiie imddie
I the face and at right angels witli
t line from Hie pupil of one ere to
lrat of the other. As a matter oi
act, it is rarely or never found tliu-
plticed. It is almost invariably a
little out of “Hie square,” and the
fact of its being so is often that
.vhicli lends a peculiar expres-iou
-lid piquancy to the face. A niedi
■nl writer points nut that there are
.■untoiuieal reasons why a slight
leviatiiiu front the true central line
may be expected, and that the nose
•vliicli is Hu.8 accurately straight
tietiveen the two eyes may be ron-
sidcicd an abnormal one, an I that
ihe ouly absolutely correct organ is
that which tiius deviates n little I-
Hie right or left.
ni FIBKT CIGAR.
Toss Just hrtilnti ihe wood bed,
Unr glorious kuturner it,
F*roVr ihf HIIIn ihe *lahin sun
Pursued its tMvanl say.
And In toy lone*eclualon,
.Rarely n-moT.-d a ar
From all e*itl»*e confusion,
a tnoked my lint cigar.
Ah-briitHl the boy Uh fsuclHi
wrapped In iht* sresth *>f • lue;
My fjei er« dim. my h*-«d wa» tight.
The sootlahed ruuud me flew.
He Pnt Hie Arm Around Ifcr,
From the Little Rock Gazette.
The oilier day several men were
standing on a street car, talking,
wlien a handsomely dressed lady
passed.
“You may not believe me,” said a
Ilian trained Spriggms, “hut l have
Imd my arm around that lady.”
“You are a vile slanderer, sir, 1
exclaimed young Mr. Pnpcragu.nnd
drawing ofl, lie struck Mr. Sprig-
gum a icavy bl»w between the eyes,
Until patterns wero Instantly arrest
ed. and when Mr. Spriggms re
quested that the lady be summoned,
a policeman caught up with hoi
and requested her presence in court
which had just convened in after
noon -e ginn
“Judge,” said Pape rave, “wllil
several ac(|iiaipt'iqces and nr
were stgi ding on the stro •' talking
this Istly passed. Then tliis hlati'
pointing to 8priij“ins, “remarked
' ** H 1 * ie pH* h»H arm a round het,
i iic lailv i« no liin^ to Jud^c.
1ml my mother was u lady, and nit
sisters flrp indies, nml I h-ive made
it a point to ehastis- n limn who
spi .iks ill of a Indy,”
“Mr. 8|>rtgi'ltis," remarked tiie
Judge, “did vou say‘hat von had
lint your arm around Hie litdvi 1 ”
“Yes, sir.”
“Then lie gniitlcmim did right in
striking you. Ladies aie not safe in
Utile Rock so long ns such rufli ms
are allowed to insult them.’’
“Judge, allow the lady to speak,”
requested Spriggins
“Uertnittly. You will please m ike
your statement.”
“I didn’t hear Ihe man when he
said tlnil lie had put hisnrm around
me, ami ns 1 passed on 1 do not
know wlint occurred."
“Excuse me lor being blunt, but
—tun—”
“Do yon menu to ask if Hie man
put Ills arm around me?”
“Yes.”
“Then, I must sav lie lias.”
For a few titonients there wa*
deep silence, only di-turbed hv a
hoy wlm picked at the plastering
with a horse shoe trail.
"What right had he to put his
arm around you ?” stammered tiie
Judge.
“Because,” answered the woman
“he i» my husband.”
Th* men took beer, and the “court
adjourned.”
The ladies wear their hats very
Inrye H}i» year and,their bonnets
very small. As usual they wear
tin Ir tioimets on he street and their
Ueta bt Urn Ujuu.’w.
The modern Young Ladj at Two
Periods or Her Life.
New York (iraphlc.
Behold her at 11.
Her limbs unfettered by the Ion,
skirts of conventionality, she runs
-he romps, she slides oh tiie ice
ponds, she rolls hoop, she climbs
fences, she leaps, s|p- kicks, she run-
races and is as fleet of foot as the
hoys. Her appetite is good, lici
cheeks rosy, and her movements un
consciously graceful.
Behold Iter again at 20. No more
does she run or jump or roll hoop,
■■mi races or slide on the ice. It ~
not ‘‘proper” now nor ladylike, and
sue couldn’t if she would, and shei-
fetlered by long skirls, tight shoe
and tighter stays. Her movement
has no longer tiie freedom and un
conscious grace of childhood, lor
now when site walks abroad she
walks to be looked at, which now
in In r estimation is the main object
of walking. She is already in deli
cate health aud has a doctor who
proscribes expensiveadviip and pro
scriptions for Iter, and ascribes Iter
complaint to niiything and
tiling hut Hie real ca-; n ’ . v
simpty.he f-. : , rilljr of'the hody
' v ".’. insliionnlile elotlies. Physical
ly she is a prisoner. At 11 she vvu-
free, Tlio doctor advises travel,
but he doe-n'l advise Iter to take off
and keep off her fashionable feticr-.
"die tv*... id n’t do suit’ he did, and
lie wouldn’t advise her if lie knew
ii would bring relief, for she would
no longer believe in a doctor who
would make her dress like it guy,
and being dressed like a “guy” i*
dressing different from the style
prescribed by -a Paris modiste.—
Diana never could limit in a trailing
skirt; narrow, light, high-heeled
gaiters, nud a pinched, corseted
waist; but Diana witli a belted tunic
and unfettered limbs would be
bounced off Broadway by the near
est policeman. Dressing' foi health
mid freedom of body and limb is
one tiling, nud dressing foe fashion
quite another. A man couldn’t en
dure jliu pinching and incumbrances
peculiar to feminine attire for an
hour, and a pretty spectacle he’d
make rii-hing about in such during
Imshiess hour. Yet the “weaker
sex” Wear double Hie iuriimhriiuccs
«f the so-called stronger. To “dress”
at all after the style ii-cs up half a
woman’s time and tvvo-lhirds of her
strength.
Ah,(islIUi was my not-la brow,
Thv wttnit g ii Uhl wa* late.
My wtartlrd mo her cm 4 in fesr.
“My child. What Uve you re r
I heird m> father’s * mothered laugh,
Ii seen ed *tatraiige and f*r,
I kn-w he koew I know he knew
Id smoked uay find cigsr.
Bill Arp on Newspapers
Your papers are agre.it 'Omforl
t• mo; in every number I find
someHiiiik to put away ill my itioivl
and memory: something that I din
not know before nnd that will he of
•ervice to in-‘ in time to come. If a
man can t^ad lie can get a good ed
ucation hy taking a good paper; he
can keep up with the world nod
make himself an entertaining mcni-
her in society; lie can talk upuu
most any subject. Book learning
is ft very good thing, hut I know a
man who ha* a power of that, hut
he never reads the newspapers and
he passe* for a fool in Ids neigh mu -
hood. Some papers are not much
in appearance, hut 1 never took one
that didn’t par me in some way
more than I paid for it. One time
a i old friend started a paper
away down in Southwest Georgia,
mid sent i< to tne, and 1 subscribed
ju-t to encourage him, soil after
awhile it published a notice Hint mi
administrator had an order to seli
several lots otJniid nt “iridic outer) ;
mid one of the lots was in my oil
county. So I inquired about the
lot, and wrote down to my friend
to attend llie sale, and run it up t
fifty dollar-. He did so. and hotigiu
helot for me at thirty dollar-, ntid
1 sold it to the mail it adjoined for
a hundred dollars, and *o i made
sixty eight dollars clear by inking
the paper. My father tolu me Hint
when he was a young man lie saw a
notice in a neiv-paper that a school
teacher 'vvwanted in a distant
county, and lie went down there and
got the situation and a little girl
was sent to him, and site grew up
mighty pretty anti sweet, and lie fi II
in love with her and married her.
Now, if lie had pot taken the paper,
wliat you reckon would have be
come of me? Wouldn’t 1 he some
oth'-r fi llow.or in n he not at all?
Old Basemtwe Hakes a Reputation,
Old Bazemhee Imd return ;u Irom
tliu club Hie other evening, when,an
he hung up his overcoat on the h.-ill
lint-rack aud prepared to go up
stairs, he heard sueli strangely *x-
eiled voices in Ihe front parlor that
lie paused to listen.
A voire that he recognized at once
as belonging to that fast-looking
young Snyder lie had warned Maria
to lie careful about, said contemp
tuously :
“Fence woman, and weary me no
longer hy your reproach s." I tell
you the day of wedding with Alice
Montrcssur is fixed, and hy heavens
nothing shall prevent our union.''
Gould these words lie nddre-srd
to his own daughter? Ye*, it was
indeed Maria's sob-cln-ked tones
I hat replied :
“This, then, is the reward for mi-
sacrifice, my devotion. Ruined and
forsaken, run ttiimi me witli your
latest conquest. Monster—coward ”
It only required a second for lla-
zemhee tit ru-li up stairs anti gel his
-holgiin out of theeiorat. Tiie next
inoiitenl lie hurst into tiie parlor
w'.lli b Hziug eyes, and, hurling the
black Hearted lietrnver In the floor,
he placed l|io itmxzlc of hi* breech
loader at his temple, hi*si -g:
“Villian, swear to me that you
will made an honest Wotn-in uf litis
poor duped angel or I will strew
the floor with your devilish brains!”
“Iloory!” shunted young Snyder,
silting up and ulasp'ing his hand-.
“That’s way up, Mnguif. Sperieu-
diil!”
araefs
Kidneys Liver
CURK
$1.25 PER BOTTLE
A Positive Remedy lor ALL
Kulnev, Liver and Urinary
Troubles of both. Mai • atjd
Female.
Read tiio Record?
- M E. B. l-aki-ly, Svlnta .
“118* vet I uiy life.”
AU.
“It is the remedi* that will ere the mnay
lifleases peculiar to worn a.”—Mother** Maga
zine.
“It ha* paused sever** tentsau<l won entlor-**-
ments fn»m none of the hixln^tmetiicul talent
in the country.—Xew York World.
“No Uuuietly lierrtotorc tlia overed can be
heldferonv! moment in com <;ui*»n with it.”
—C. A. Ilarvey, I> D., Wa-lmijri<*n. i>. f.
his Great Natura 1 ln-iiv h fo
Sale by Druggists in nil parts'of the
World.
TRY IT aud TAKE N 0 OTHER
Jl. U. U AilXl.1! ,(>
ROCHESTER, N. V.
J. ■'. JOINER,
IA T riMAEtl 3»if JEWBEB
I.IH.-ATED AT
W. II. Gilbert, Ag’t, & Co.
I1KO 11) STIfKI ”.
J
AND JEWELRY!
■ Ikpairino a Specialty 1 !
I. J. BRINSON,
Cflitractflr& Builder
A.vrt DE.vt.mt t
a
ALU.I AY.
Lumber. Brick,
r,.i.
Shingles
Lathes, Lime and
' Cement
Constantly
ptly
An old darkey caught a two
pound sucker the other day aud
laid down for a nap with the fish
beside him. Another darkey came
along presently picked up tliu suck
er aud left a half pound oue in its
place. When the old darker woke
up ho looked at his fish and'it took
him soveral seconds to realize that
something had-.’ happened. Then
turning hi-tthh ov-r and exaiuin m . _
ing it all around, lie simply said : 1 csrritT. - — D c* your -uulUe.' kuovv
•Mudy how OntUsh Wtt xwuoiNd.” • your router
“Beautiful, papa, Etteure! Eu-
• ore! Bravo!” nddeil Marin, de
lightedly. “I never saw utivlliltiu
heiter at Baldw in’s,”
“Eli? What? I—or— ,. r ?“ stnu-
mered the bor.Vulera.1 parsni.
grouudtntr V.U arms.
■ c were so afraid that VO-.
would object lo my taking p-.n in
the private theatrienl*. M i aiil
you’d never listen to it. But you
net better Hum unv of its—doe-n’t lie
Bol.bv ?”
“You bet,”replied Bohhv. fervent
ly. “Gue-s you must have been an
amateur Ma.-readv once, sir.”
Then Mr. Bazcnibce e -uvhed and
wiped his foreliend, and mumbled
about Ii s having seen a good deal
of that sort of tiling when lie was
young and that Maria must be sure
to take in ihe tnnt when Iter young
friend Imd gone, and then went
up to lied and dreamed he was
playing an outraged community to
crowded Itou-es idl night.
A Leap Iroin Washington monu
ment.
Att adventurous nud patriotic ert
ascended the Washington Monu
ment Hie other night hy ilie siaiis
within the shaft, lu tiie morning,
when the melt went up to work,
she took a leap of one hundred ami
sixty feet. In tiie descent the cal
snreail herself out like a flying
squirrel and struck the ground on
all fours. Alter looking a littli
while she proceeded to leave the
place, and Imd almost gotten bey
ond the slinddovv of tiie tnontiiiient
when a dog that stays around the
base started for Iter, and Hie eat. not
being in her rest running trim, was
easily made a victim and killed.
Had she lived and not bcon so shy
the workmen say they would have
bought Iter a collar h'iuI given Iter
the fccdom ot the monument. As
it is the eat will lie stuffed and and
placed in the Smith-oiiiaii Institu
tion, with a largo card which will
bear the legend; “This cat jumped
on Septera-ier 23. 188& front Wash-
iligtOibMo iMuieut and lived.”
,o ■»* i> * J,» ■ •
A g >od qu--tion t-< asfa’WTPi
hand, u.tl tmlc
Ailed.
Q^^Estiinntos furni.-li,*.] f rbui’slinrsand
roiitr.Tfts taken at lon«*8t liv injrjaW&. ‘
Aliiany ami tmuthu'eat neetl an en
terprise of thi* k'ml, ami i am titte* mined to
supply the demand.
Patronage solicited and *>.<U its faction aruar-
tntcftl
• t# OFFICE: At S. Sterne** Store
on Wsi^hlngton Street.
Albany, Ga., Sept, 9,1SS0. tf
RUMNiiYy
FASHIONABLE TAILOR,
WASHINGTON STREET,
TIKr RECEtTED, A 1 -VIS IE LOT OF 8AM-
“ PLBS uf lhe .
Latest Styles!
■ Ol 1 '
fall m mm mm
SHIRT CUtTiNG
viaTY
'2ood Work ! Pet feet Fit and
Reasonable Prices
Guaranteed !
(umt hotrralntucium. Uiui'l’ Gt d.unaatl
•akra Teething easy. limi-iY'S aud prt reau
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Thousands of Chihtrm »»!<»•/ 6** saved
smarm p»wr by u*In<; >h- Ponderm.
For 8.M le hy
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iliLVEIlt liAULt!
h A COMMON O MPLAUST.
miBLMTUHOD
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