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The ALBANY NEWS,established 1945, l„ a „.. . - . -
Tlw ALBAN Y ADVEUTL1EB, Mttblisned 18?;, |Consolidated Sept.», 1880.
.A Family asd Political. Journal Devoted to the Interests of Southwest Georgia.
|>3 a Year,
Volume 2.
S,
&
'This Space is reserved foi
S. Mayer & Glauber,
who, in a few days will
have an important an
nouncement to make to
the Public.
S. MAYER i
ALBANY. GA., SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1882.
Number 39
EDITORIAL NOTES.
Thebe’s blood on the moon that
shines between the Macon Telegraph
and the Atlanta Constitution.
m It is - now understood that negotia
tions with Frank James have pro
gress so far that he has agreed, in case
of pardon, not to ran for Governor of
Missouri.
T HE LOUISIANA DU£L.
HEAT STILL GOING UP.
Itut<-l>er» Predictin'; a Lons Con-
tiuiinuce of tbe Present Famine
Prices.
We have seen nothing in the papers
of late from Horatio Seymour, and
hence are led to presume that he is
engaged in writing his regular letter
declining the Presidency for 1882.
According to the Washington lie-
publicany it is understood that Mr.
Vennorhas consented to be placed on
the retired list when he shall have
achieved a vigorous snow-storm in
J uly. That is his ultimatum.
At this season of the year some
hundreds of obscure provincial schools
that call themselves universities are
accustomed to inflict “honorary de
grees” on unoffending statesmen. This
is why so many men in this country
have been assaulted with an L. L. D.
The Meeting ot Tiro Bcllgerent Lou
isiana Editors Upon the Field of.
Honor—Editors as Gamcy as You
Make’Em. Xr.tr Yubk, June 5.— : *Are there
any >igns of a fall in the price of
meat ? ? * said a Washington Market
,. * „ . - . biitcier, yestefday, repeating tbe
®?. rk *_® r ”. coar - j q tics, ion in-kcd him. ‘-Well, I
i-honl.l say not; but there's every
GEORGIA GRAPHICS.
Tbe Work of Shear., P.ate-Pot an.
Pencil Among Oar Stale
eban-es.
Associated Press Dispatch.
* * * It is charged that either
The Washington Republican stren
uously objects to its being called the
iate “War between tbe States,” and
delights to characterize it as the “Re
bellion.” The Republican is oneof
that class of stalwart organs that yell
tweedle-dum every time a Democratic
paper says tweedle-dee.
Southern boys carried off the hon
ors this year both at West Point and
Annapois. At the military academy,
of the first four graduates two were
from Missouri and one from Mississip
pi, and at the naval academy the cadet
midshipman who graduated at the
head of his class was Mr. Lewis
Nixon, of Virginia.
‘•Instead of the Northern Demo
crats being able to help build up tbe
South,” says the Vicksburg Herald,
“it is all they can do to retain their
scats with all the boosting the South
ern Democrats can give them. They
are a sort of couldn’t-if-they-would
and wouldn’t-if-they-could sat that is
not advancing the material interests of
the South to any observable extent.’’
Louisiana is owned by a gambler,
the proprietor of tbe Louisiana lottery.
The concern was chartered in 1879, and
it pays $40,000 to the city of New Or
leans for charity, and is rich enough,
after hiring Generals Beauregard and
Early to give it tone as superinten
dents, to pay persons in power and
defeat every attempt in the Legislature
and courts to kill it, and nets its owner
about $75,000 per year.
At the first election held in the
.West after the recent Chinese discus
sion, the Republicans were successful.
Notwithstanding all the blow and
bluster indulged in by Western Sena
tors and Congressmen about this being
a white man's government, the people
of Oregon are not ready to espouse
any snch doctrine. At any rate, no
matter how much they may favor it
for Oregon, they still evidently think
it is a bad thing for the South.
The Rev. Mr. Watkins, an Ameri
can missionary recently sent to the
Western frontier, has been heard
from. Near Jalisco, Mexico, one
morning last week, our missionary was
attacked by % mob, and a Western dis
patch says that bo made a “vigorous
resistance,” killing five Mexicans and
wounding many others. It is not
stated whether the Rev. Watkins used
the jaw-bone of an ass, a carbine or a
Gatlin gun, bnt that he stood his
gronnd like a man whose “calling and
election” bad been (‘made sure” he has
not left us in doubt.-
The Ceusns Bureau has issued a bul
letin showing that the live stock of
the United States on farms on Jnue I,
1880, was aa follows: Horses, 10,357,-
981; mules andasses, 1,812,932; work
ing oxen, 993,970; milch cows, 12,443,-
693; other cattle, 22,488,600; sheep,
35,191,656; swine, 47,683,851. The
rate of increase from 1870 to 1880 was,
in horses, 45 per cent; mules and
asBes, 61 per cent; working oxen, a
decrease of25 per cent; milch cows,
increase of 39 per cent; other cattle,
66 per cent; sheep 24 per cent., and
swine, 90 per cent.
Lucas Hibst was a Philadelphia
lawyer and started his legal career as
an office boy in Attorney-General
Brewster’s office. He was of more
than saving disposition, for out of his
earnings, which consisted mostly of
small fees, he managed to amass a
fortune of nearly $200,000. Even in
his most prosperous days his expenses
rarely exceeded $8 per week. Not
long ago he went to the Law Library
to look np a certain law, and pointing
to a volume asked if be -might borrow
it for a few minutes. He was informed
that by paying $40 annually he would
have free range of the entire library,
and that only in that way could
he have access to the books.
Greatly disgusted he left, and made
known his intention to several friends
that at his-death he wonld found a free
law library, which, he asserted, every
city in the Union onght to have. Last
yveek he died, and it was (onnd that_
he bad kept his word, for, excepting
annuities for his three sisters who live
in poor circumstances, his entire es
tate will go to the establishment of the
Hirst Free Law Library.
age, and both were
hand at the hour named this morn
ing. The dueling ground was a
most appropriate spot. I", was the
Slaughter House, in Si. Bernard par
ish. Shortly before six o’clock a
carriage drove up, containing Maj.
Burke and his seconds. They liad
not long to wait. In a few minutes
Parker and his frieuds joined them
and preparations were at once made
for the duel. The seconds tossed for
posilions and Burke’s friends won.
The distance was paced oil 1 and the
two men pointed their pistols. There
was a second of breathless silence,
and then came the word, “Fire!”
It was given by George Hall, rep
resenting Mr. Parker. Two reports
rang out ill the still morning air.
They were almost simultaneous.
When the smoke was cleared away
it was seen that neither man had
fallen. Then there was a parley.
The seconds stood around and talked
it all over. Parker's representatives
were willing to go so far as to admit
that Burke was a man of courage.
But this wouldn’t do. “Mr. Parker,”
said Mr. Houston, “has wronged
Major Burke.”
“In what way?” demanded Mr.
Hall.
“His criticisms in the Picayune
have been beyoud the limits of legit
imate journalism.”
“We contend,” was the response
of Parker’s friends, “that Maj.
Burke, as a public official, is open to
criticism. We must reserve that
right.”
“Then the duel must go on,” said
Mr. Houston ; and it did.
Parker and Burke again took up
their positions. Again the word
was given and again two bullets
whizzed harmlessly by their human
targets. Then there was another
parley. Parker’s friends would go
no further in the way of a com
promise and Burke’s friends were
just as stubborn. Nothing was left
but'another round, and for the third
time the behgerents faced each oth
er, with the same result. One more
parley ensued, and this was the last
one. It went over the ground very
thoroughly.
“What do you demand?”’ was the
question finally put by the seconds
of Parker.
“We demand,” was the response,
“that Mr. Parker shall not only ac
knowledge the courage of Major
Burke, bnt his personal and official
integrity as well.”
This was the stumbling block.
Parker was willing to acknowledge
that Burke was courageous enough,
but lie refused to go back on his
statements in tbe Picayune. It was
agreed to fight it out, and for tbe
fourth time Burke and Parker lev
eled their pistols at each other.
“Fire I” shouted Mr. Hall, and whiz
went the bullets, as they had done
three times before. Neither man was
touched and the pistols were quick
ly reloaded.
The fifth round was the final one.
After the two men had keen firing
as each other all the morning, their
seconds must have thought that
neither was aii expert in pistol prac
tice. The fifth shot, however,
brought matters to a crisis. The
two dueling pistols were leveled,
and the two belligerents glanced
along the barrels. The reports were
simultaneous. Parker was unharm
ed. As the thin drift of smoke
curled upward from Burke’s barrel,
Burke was seen to reel. His second
sprang forward just in time to catch
him as he was sinking to the
ground. They lowered him care
fully, and auxiously examined him.
The ball had passed through both
legs, about eight inches above the
knee. It was a painful, but not nec
essarily dangerous, wound. This,
of course, ended the duel. Neither
party had given in, and there was
no settlement
sign of prices booming higher.”
“flow long is it going to keep
lip?”
“Four or five mouths at least;
may be a good while longer.
Tlieie’s one thing certain—it won’t
go down to the prices we had
awhile ago for some time to
come.”
“To what cause do you assign the
rise in beef?”
“To the scarcety of cattle, and
that’s due to general causes. One
of them is the heavy export of beef
■o England. Another is the drouth
last summer. Then there's the price
of grain—leastways, that’s what
they tell me when I try to find out
about it.”
“And bow about the speculators
have they anything to do with
it ?”
“Very likely they have; but
don't think they could have sent’
prices up so much if they hadn’t
been a scarcity to start with. Then
they jumped in, I suppose, and sent
things a-kiting, and you can gamble
on it they’ll not let up till thev
have to.”
“Some people say that the
choicest beef is sent to Eng
land.”
“That’s true enough, for that’s
the only kind would stand the voy
age, and the oniy kind they could
sell there.”
A DUEL BETWEEN WOMEN.
Fighting to Heath on Aceonnt or a
Young Han’t Love.
Lumbebton, N. C., June 9.—Fuller
details haye been received of the
fatal fight between two women of
St Paul’s township. Tliey met by
appointment to settle their differ
ences, and the struggle between
them must have been a terrible one.
Jane McKellar and Frances McNair
were both yonng and were both
rivals for the love of a young mau
of the neighborhood. Tho man in
the case seems to have courted them
both. At all events both of the
girls were dead in love with him
aud had set their hearts npon win
ning him. For a long time there
had been a bad feeling between
them. They avoided each other as
much as possible, but at last their
hatred - overcame them and they
quarreled openly. During the past
tew days hostile messages bad
passed between the two women, the
exact tenor of which has not leaked
out, although important and sensa
tional developments are looked for
before the officers gets through with
the affair. At any rate they agreed
to fight it ont, and met on Friday
evening in a secluded dell, not far
from the main road, and began to set
tle the trouble between themselves.
Jane McKellar was tbe larger and
more mnscnlar, though her antago
nist, while spare, was lithe and quick
of motion. They fonght each other
like tigers, and finally Jane McKel
lar succeeded in throwing her small
bnt plncky opponent and with her
heavy knee pressed in the stomach
of the prostrate woman, grasped her
by the throat with tbe fury of a ti
gress and well nigh choked her life
from her. Finally, by a last terri
ble effort, Frances McNair, who had
been wriggling npon the gronnd
like a serpent in agony, gave a sad-,
den twist of the bodfy, forcing her"
antagonist to lose her seat and fall
sideways to tbe gronnd. Before she
could recover herself Frances got
on her feet, drew a bowio knife,
plunged it into the heart of Jane
McKellar, who died with one gasp.
Then, on sight of the gaping wound,
the victor in the fight fell in a swoon
across the dead bod}’, where she
was found. A party had followed
them, but too late to prevent the
terrible tragedy.
IMPORTANT CA E.
A Sail to Recover tbe Slate Rond
From the Leave on.
Atlanta Herald.
The readers of the h. erald will
recollect that the committee appoint
ed by the last Legislature recoin
mended to tbe Governor to require
the lessees to make a new bond, and
in the event of their failure tobrinj'
suit to recover the State Railroac
and set aside the lease.' Gov. Col
quitt notified Gov. Brown -that he
must make a new bond. No steps
were taken to comply with the order,
so the Governor has taken legal steps
to set aside the lease. Attornev-
General Anderson has filed the pa
pers. The Governor has employed
Capt. Harry Jackson to assist the
Altorney-Gcneral. This will be the
most important suit commenced in
Georgia in many a rear, and no
doubt will be stubbornly resisted.
A Mistaken Description Leads
Trouble and a Law Salt.
New Yoke, June 5 .lames E.
Tate, of Thomson, Georgia, mention
ed in a dispatch made np from an arti
clc in the New York Times of tbe
29tli ulL, in which he was charged
with having imposed upon Thomas
Leeniing & Co., of this city has prov
ed himself, to the satisfaction of that
firm, to be not the party who swindl
ed them and other of our merchants.
On tho contrary Tate is a merchant of
means and is a member of one of the
oldest and most ‘respectable families
in the state. The mistake is repre
sented to have 1 occurred wholly
through a letter written by Messrs.
Jas. G. Bailie & Sons, of Augusta, Ga.,
to Messrs. Leeming & Co., stating
thatjtue description of the wetl-deress
ed swindler corresponed with that of
Tate who had lately started north.
Tate states that he will bring snit
against Jas. G. Bailie &"Sons. of Au
gusta, tor $10,000 damages, having re
tained Judge !Vm. Schley, of this
oityVaud Judge Hook, of Augusta as
tho attorneys.
Tbe Situation at Birmingham.
Age, 7th.
Notwithstanding I lie labor troubles
in the North and West among the
iron men, everything in and around
Birmingham is progressing satisfac
torily. The rolling mill 1 , two fur
naces and several machine shops and
foundries in the city are running
smoothly along. Tbe furnaces em
ploy several hundred hands and
turn ont about 150 tons raw materi
al per day. The rolling mill works
three hundred hands and tarns ont
1,200 tons finished materia] per
month. It is understood that the
rolling mill men will take no action
in regard to the strike until they
have received instructions from head
quarters. There is at present no pros
pect of a strike here; and the situa
tion remains unchanged. All the
coal mines arc being worked with
full force and other industries in this
section are progressing without dis
turbance.
—They pepper the watermelon
thief with bird shot in Quitman.
—The corn crop of Southwest
Georgia has been laid by, and it is
good one.
— Valdosta Times: Two young
men in the comity—brothers—have
already received $1,000 on the sale
of truck raised this season.
—Mr. L. E. Lastinger, of Berrien,
seems to enjoy the biggest boom of
any of the aspirants in bis county
for the Senate. This is Berrien’s
tarn.
—Tbe Quitman 1'rce Press records
the capture of Bill Wright, a notori
ous negro thief, who made his es
cape from the convict camp a few
weeks since.
—Coffee County Gazette-. The
Satilla river is in good order this
week for drifting timber, and the
timber meu seem to be making good
use of this long looked for oppor
tunity.
—Hear Col. James Freeman, of
the Coffee County Gazette: We are
editor, foreman, compositor, press
man, mailing-clerk and devil now,
and it there is any thing else, we are
that too.
—The editor of the Thomasville
Times, after a trip in the county, is
of the opinion, from observation and
reliable information, that no better
prospect for a general crop has been
seen in Thomas county for years.
—Thomasville Times-. Thomas-
vilie always bores with a big auger.
She is going to have a six inch arte
sian well. We thus see Albany’s
well, and go her several inches bet
ter. O, you can’t get away with
Thomasville.
—Our congratulations to brother
James Hanlon, of the Worth Star
upon the arrival of a daughter a few
days ago. The Star will now doubt
less shine with twice its accustomed
lustre, because there’s another
mouth to feed.
—Mr. Eddie Yonng, of Quitman,
shipped the first car load of melons
of the season to New York. They
were large and fine, and netted him,
we learn, a little over $500. Eddie
is not yet grown but has set an ex
ample worthy of emulation, to older
persons.
—Berrien County Hews: A Mr.
Meadows, who lives on Mr. Mayo’s
turpentine farm, we are informed,
while under the influence of whisky,
made an assault upon a negro with
a gun on Saturday last. The negro,
defending himself, cut Mr. Mead
ows across the back of tbe neck with
some sharp instrument, supposed to
be a razor, inflicting a wound sev
eral inches long. Dr. Pat Hall was
called to attend him, who dressed
his wound and left him doing well.
To give an idea of the length of the
wound, it' required fifteen stitches to
sew it np.
—In response to a scurrillous card
published by Mr. J. F. Nelson, in
the Brunswick Appeal, slanderous
of Mr. B. H. Richardson, staff cor
respondent of the Savannah News,
that gentleman writes a manly and
dignified communication to the Ap
peal. The controversy grew ont of
strictures made by Mr. Bichardson
on the lack of accommodation at the
Nelson House daring the late fair
at Brunswick, From all we have
heard it is hardly probable that Mr.
Nelson would have to go a thous
and miles ont of Brunswick to find
out that Mr. Bichardson is abont
right in what.he said.
A Colored Fatalist.
Texas Siftings.
An Austin colored preacher being
called upon to make a few remarks
at tbe grave of a boy, said: “Deahly
belnbbed bredderin and 9isterin, do
day an’de hoar when each and ebery
one ob ns mus’ yield up onr sperits
am done sot, but cl a kind Provi
dence had not made de cowcnmber
late dis heah season, dis heah promis
in’ boy wonld have clomb de golden
stair seberal weeks ago. Praise be
to de Lord for his goodness and
mussy.”
A New Yobs dispatch states that
it has been determined by the firm
of A. T. Stewart & Co. to close up
their store on June 30th. Every of-
fort is being made to sell ont the
stock on hand, bnt it is confidently
expected that an immense amount
of goods remain unsold when the
shutters go down. Some arrange
ment will have to be made to dis
pose of these in balk. Since two
hundred men were discharged a
fortight ago, others have received
their dismsal in batches of from
twenty to fifty. Every branch of
the business whose continuance was
rendered unnecessary by tbe ap
proaching sospension has been sum
marily lopped off. In this way the
eredit department, with its clerks,
has been cut adrift. It is estimated
thdt about 460 men have rlready
been dispensed with, and 1,100 re
main to be thrown out of employ
ment at the eud of this month.
SOME FEARFUL FIGURES.
How Huch a Han Can Drink and
Smoke In Eight Ycnr».
Macon Telegraph.
“That is a finely colored pipe,” we
remarked to a well known gentle
man. of Macon yesterday, as he sat
on tbe curbstone at oneof our hotels,
puffing wreathes of smoke from a
well-browned meerschaum.
“Yes,” he replied, and it has cost
me abont five hundred dollars to
give it that color.”
“How so?”
“’Well, I kept a faithful account
for eight years of all my expendi
tures, and as I have not always been
what von might call an upright,
moral man, the account is a fearful
one.”
We know the methodical habits of
this bachelor, and hence wnsnotsur-
prised at his statement. In addition
to the itemizing of his expenses, he
had kept a full journal of his doings,
and could tell how many headaches,
how many days’ sickness, how many
times drnnk, and thus it was an easy
task to jot down at the end of the
day how much whisky he had
drunk, or how many ounces of to
bacco he had smoked. No old
maid is more precise or systematic
than he.
I stopped drinking two years ago,
but have continued to smoke. Aud
up to the time I let up on whisky I
had smoked up four hundred pounds
of tobouco in this pipe. I smoked
one pound a week, and at times,
when troubled with nenraigia, I
smoked four onnees a day, which
was a pound and a quarter a
week.”
“What did that tobacco cost
you ?”
“Ten years ago Durham was ship
ping bis tobacco in barrels instead’
of bags, as at present, and I paid one
dollar per pound for several years.
It filially got down to seventy-five
cents,' and then sixty cents; but
averaging the price at seventy-five
cents, the four hundred pounds cost
me $300 lor the eight years, or $38.-
50 per year.”
“How mnch whisky did yon
drink in the eight years ?”
“Sixteen barrels 11 drank a quart
per day. I was paying twelve dol
lars per week at a certain hotel in
Florida, and the barkeeper has
boasted on several occasions that
for mauy and many a week I paid
him $4 per day for whisky, ginger
brandy, etc., which makes, with the
the board, just $40 per week! Now
sixteen barrels at $100 per barrel,
is just $1,600, but that does not cov
er the cost to me, as I paid twenty-
five cents a drink for lots of it. I
calculated that my whisky for the
eight years cost me folly $2,000, if
not more.”
The nervous system of this
^entlcman docB not' seem to have
ieen impaired by this excessive use
of tobacco and liquor. He holds
lhat but few men could stand it, and
when his hands commence to trem
ble he will cease to smoke.
This is a remarkable case, and we
need not point ont the moral. It is
apparent to all.
guofcssioual CJards.
O. A. VASoy. A. H. ALFRIENU
vason <e alfbiend
Attorneys at Law,
ALBANY, GA.
Active and prompt attention given, to col
lections and ail general business, Practice
in all the courts.
Office over Southern Express office, oppo
site Court House. fanO-aU
*l\ T. JONES, JESSE W. WALTERS.
JONES & WATERS,
Attorneys at Law,
ALBANY, GA.
Office over Centra* Railroad Bank.
>anl5-ly
James Callaway,
Attorney at Law
CAMILLA, GA
fol)‘23.
Trowbridge & Hollinhead
DENTISTS,
WAYCROSS, - - - - GEORGIA.
Teeth extracted without pain. All work
arrahted. Terms moderate. Will go any-
here on B. ft A. and S. F. ft W. Railroads,
apl8-12m
r. E. W. ALFRIEND,
I3ESPECTFULLY tenders his services, in the
1-v various branches ol his profession, to the
itizans *i Albany and surrounding country. Of-
ice opposite 3ourt House, online street.
Z.-J. ODOM,
Attorney-at Law,
(Office in the Court House)
ALBANY, GA.
^yiLL^ represent client. In the Allan; clr*
Collections , specialty.
dec&dltwl;
IN GENERAL.
Murder is a “protected industry’
in Missouri.
General Lew Wallace is a great
chnm of the Sultan.
A good name for a September
novel—Hardy’s “Beturn of the Na
tive.”
Sallivan, the prize-fighter, ought
to be a leader in the “iron strike.”
Advice to Frelinghnysen as to the
Panama canal—First dig your hole.
The Egyptians are reported to be
“fortifying 1 ” but their particular
"wantity” is not mentioned.
Mary Anderson has just launch
ed her new steam yacht, the Galatea,
and soon will appear in a new roll.
The Agriculturalist advises its
readers to go without lnnch. But
that meal is not “free” in this coun
try.
Genuis is hereditary. Erart’s son
has a badger which can kill twenty-
seven rats in six minutes.
The Napoleon—the organ of Prince
Jerome, heir to all Bonapartist’s suc
cesses—has stopped publication be
cause there were no subscribers.
Robert Collier smoked his first
cigar to celebrate the evacuation of
Bichmond, aud was taknn for a
Southern sympathizer in consequ
ence.
The recently married . Duke of
Albany is very ill, and all the plans
that had been made for a yachting
cuirse and a foreign tonr have been
abandoned.
It is not perhaps commonly
known that a tendency to make
Two great evils—headache and _ _
constipation, afflicting nearly all hu- puns is regarded by many students
inanity, are relieved by Bailey’s I of mental physiology as a sign of
Saline Aperient. 1 cerebral disease. •
A Boston Experiment.
W. M. F. Bound in Christian Union.
The Oriental Palace coffee honse
is a Boston notion, and one to which
temperance reformers and capital
ists may well tnrn their attention.
In one of the busiest parts of Wash
ington street there is a very showy
bnilding, with plate gloss windows
and mnch new paint, where the at
tractions of the corner gin palace
are all set forth—minus the gin. En
tering from the street one finds a
long bar, at which nothing stronger
is sold than most perfectly prepared
maleberry Java coffee, and such edi
bles as usually tempt the patrons of
the more spiritnons lunch counter.
Coffee is sold at two, foor and six
cents a enp, according to the size of
the caps. In the same room with
this coffee bar are billiard and pool
tables, where the games are furnish
ed at about 33 per cent lower prices
than in the liquor shops. Smoking
is allowed and the daily papers are
furnished gratuitously to those who
wish to read. In another part of
the building is a concert hall, where
entertainments are given twice a
week to the patrons of the house.
There is a room for small games,
checkers, dominoes, chess, etc., which
can be used on payment of fifteen
cents an hour. I visited tbe coffee
honse at eleven in tbe morning, and
found it full of patrons. Full of
yonng men, many of whom wonld
have boen lounging in pool and bar
rooms if they had not been there.
That the institution is a success is
clearly shown from the fact that no
less than eighty gallons of coffee are
sold thei;e every day, and that the
place is not empty of patrons from
morning till night. This is a common
sense move in temperance reform.
It pays for itself as it goes, and its
benefits are already so manifest that
similar cafes are to be put up in dif
ferent quarters of the. city.
THE ALBANY HOUSE!
Merrick Barnes,Proprietor
Albany, Georgia.
T his House is well furnished and in ev
ery way prepared for tho accommo
dation of the traveling public. Entire sat*
isfaction guaranteed. The table is sup
plied with the best the country affords,
and the servants are unsurpassed in po
liteness and attention to the wants of
guests. Omnibuses convey passengers to
and from the different railroads prompt
ly, free of charge... Charges to suit the
times. sep29 tf
SEE WHAT
HHP
(MAUD WILL DO!
Waynesboro, November 1,1880*
r. x A. x oinill, Waynesboro
Dear Sir—I desire to express, through you. to
the proprietors, my thanks for the benefits I have
derived fron
Tbe New Schoolmaster.
The old man approached the new
schoolmaster with a bull-dog glare in
his his eye.
“You got after my boy yesterday
because he left a live hornet glued to
your chair?”
“I did.”
“Yon licked him so he thought
the world was coming to an end ?”
“That was the impression I intend
ed to convey to him.”
“I am his father, and I’ve come to
let you know what I think of yonr
proceedings.”
Then they clinched. Hair and
blood flew in the air, likewise the
dust and fragments of garments.
Then it quieted down a little, and the
old man implored him to let him up,
stop choking and take his teeth from
that ear.
“What do you think about my
warming yonr boy?” asked the
teacher.
“I think you did just right, and
when I go home I’ll give him a tan
ning that’ll teach him to come to me
«-ith his complaints, and stories that
the schoolmaster can’t fight”
They parted and tbe schoolmaster
mnrmnred, “I did right to tackle the
son of the -worst fighting man in the
district first. None of the others
will pester me.”
Tbe Cincinnati rolling mills were
fired ap yesterday morning, and the
men resumed work.
HEPATIC PANACEA
I have Buffered, as you know, for the past nine
yean, from Dyspepsia and Liver troubles, and to
■such an extent as to fear death wonld be the Im
mediate rAult. I have been using H. H. F. for
six weeks, and lrom the time I commenced taking
it I found myself relieved,'and I wonld not now
be without it for any consideration.
Very respecftully,
A. E. MOBLEY,
FOB SALE BY
GILBERT St OO.
flH Htf Hbusiness now before the public. You
I !lV B *|lcan make money faster at work for
K r. \ I us than at anything else. Capital
JJ If Li 1 not needed.* We will start you. SIS
W■ tf la day and upwards made at home by
the industrious. Men, women, boys
and girls wanted everywhere to work far us. Now
is the time. You can work in spare time only or
give yonr whole time to the business. You can
uve at home and do the work. No one can fail to
make enormous pay by engaging at once. Costly
outfit and terms free. Money made fiut, easily,
snd honorably. Address Txux .ft Co., Augnsta,
Maine. novtly
TUTT'S
PILLS
A DISORDERED LIVER
IS THE BANE
of the present generation. It to tor Bin
Cure of this disease mad tte attendant.;
8ICK-WEA71ACHE, EUIOPaHESS, DYS
PEPSIA, COKBTIPATIOir. PILES, etc., that
TPTTS PTT.TH have gained s world-wide
repntation. No Remedy hn ever been
discovered that acta ao gently on the
aimilate food. As a natural reanlt, tbs
Nervone System te Braced, the Mnaolee
ere Developed, end the Body Bobuet.
B. rival, e Planter at Brno Shi, Imzmmm:
My plantation la In a malarial district. For
several years I could not make half a crop os
arennnt nf hlHnnB «HB»aaaa anil ChlilS. X WEB
nearly discouraged when Z began the use ot
TUTT'S FILLS. The result was marvelous:
my laborers a
i became hearty and robust,
They relieve the engorged Liver,
the Blood from potaonons hams
niue the bt —
»at wblefa n
els to met naturally, with-
me can feel well.
• remedy thirty, and yow will gad*
y Digestion, Vigorous Body, Dwsw
trong Nerve*, and a Sound Id ver.
“ Dee, 35 91 array SC, N.Y.
TUTT’S HAIR DYE.
Gray Ha in or Whiskers changed to a Glossy
Black by a single application of this Dye. It
Imparts a natural color*and acts Instantaneously.
^ic^lgvDrusgtets, or sent by express on receipt
Office, 83 Murray Street, New York.
( Dr. TMJTTS 3IA.SUAh of Fofwoblo'V
JTnfomeaMon and Uooful Moootptm I
seta he matted VUE on ayfUeaW—./