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Vol. I.
The Courier.
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Railroad Schedule
llLAKELT EXTENSION.
Leaves Blakely daily at 7:30 a. m.; ar-
rives at Arlington at 8:30 a. m.: arrives at
Leary at 9:39 a. m.; arrives at Albany at
11:30 a. m. at.
Leaves Albany at 4:20 p. m.; arrives
Leary at 5:58 p. m.; arrives at Arlington
at 6:57 p.m.; arrives -at Blakely at S:1‘2
p. m.
County Directory.
B.'fi. srrElUOR COURT.
non. Bower. Judge; J. W. Walters,
Solicitor Genual; J. U. Coram,
<SM in September. en W V tena on
0 OUNTY OYNICERS.
Ordinary, A. I. Monroe; Sheriff, IV. W.
Gladden; tax Collector, E. S. Jones; Tax
Receiver, Tho.s. F. Cord ray; Treasurer, C.
JI. Gee; Countv School Commissioner, J.J.
.Beck; County Surveyor, C. P. Norton; Cor¬
oner, A. G. Hudson.
COUNTY COURT.
• L. G. Cartledge, Judge. Quarterly Au¬ ses¬
sions 4th Jfonday in February, May.
gust and November. Monthly sessions,
every 4th Monday.
COMMISSIONERS R. R.
John Colley, J. G. Collier and J. T. B.
Fain. Courts held 1st Tuesday in each
month.
JUSTICES OF THE PEASE AND
notaries public.
574th District—R. J. Thigpen, J.P.;~ C.
F. Blocker, N. P. and Ex-officio J. P.
Courts held third Wednesday in midi
month.
1123d District—J. L. IViikerson, J. P.
John Hasty, N. P. Courts held second
Thursday in each month.
636th District—J. C. Price, J. P.; N. IV.
Pace, N.P. Courts held third Saturday
in each month.
1283d District—C.J. McDaniel, J. P.
Courts held first Saturday in each month.
1316—Thos. IV. Holloway; •/. P. C. L.
Smith* N:P. Courts held 2nd Saturday
iii each month. John A.
1301— 7T»Os. II. (7riffln, J. P.
Cordray, N. P. Courts held 1st Saturday
jn each mouth.
Bakor County Dire&Ury,
SUPERIOR COURT.
B. B. Bower, Judge; J. TV. IFaiters, So¬
licitor General; B- F. Hudspeth, Clerk,
Spring term convenes on first Monday in
May. Fall term on first Monday in No¬
vember.
COUNTY COURT.
John O. Perry. Judge. Monthly ses¬
sions held first Mondays—Quarterly ses¬
sions.
COMMISSIONERS R.R.
B<Siiford7H h T m! each Pullen. ' Cburt“idd on
first Tuesdays in month.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Ordinary, W. T. Livingston; Sheriff, J.
B. George; Tax Collector, R. B. Odom
G* BoweH; Surveyor, C. D. Brown; Coro-
nar, B. D. Hall.
JUSTICES OF TIIE PEACE AND NO-
TARIES PUBLIC.
971st District, —8. J. Livingston, J. P„-
W. C. Odom. N. P.: Courts held 1st Sat-
nrday in each month.
T.OWth^'District^ p ; ' Courts ^ held 2nd
Saturday in each month.
957th District— G. D. Lamar, J. P., IT
8. Johnson, N. P. Courts held 3d Satur-
day in eacli month.
1123 District—L. J. Mathis, J. P.;R. E.
McFullun, N. P. Courts held fftli 8’atur-
say in mouth.
OUR OWN.
If I had known in the morning
IIow wearily nil the day,
The woids unkiud
Would troulde my mind,
I said when you wi nt away,
: I had been more cairful^larling,
Nor given you m-edhss pain.
But we vex “our own”
With look and tone
We may never take back again.
; F< r thougli in tho quiet evening
You may give me the ki-s of peace,
Yet it might be
That ni-Vi r for me
The pain of the heart should cease,
How milt y go foitli in the morning
That never come home at night;
And hearts have broken
For luusli words spoken
That sorrow can ne’er s-1 right.
AYe have careful thoughts for the
strangers,
And smiles for the sometime guest,
Bat oft for “our own”
The bitter tone,
Though we love “our own” the best
Alt, lips with the curve impatient!
Ah, brow with that look of scorn!
’Twere a cruel fate,
YVete the night too late
To undo the work of morn.
The Lame Hand.
m. The ranche i of r beuior u • tv Diaz was „ on a
chaining slope overlooking the smooth
waters of one of the tributaries to tlu
Parana, on whose opposite shore the
rank gra-s grew ten and twelve feet
high. The lion-e itself had a tropical
chaiacter; it w»s Bpanifli-American,
with a cool, shady veranda, a long,
low front, painted walL, and latticed
wiudows, a spacius comt, and a flit
roof provided with a parapel, which
R«ve tlm J-truc’ure the iippearanee of a
fort Many acres of cultivated land
showed b-nj lines of eng >r cane and
fives laden witli bananas, in sur-
prismg-co-tmM to the & rtc,
i trable mass of wild bum which sur-
rounded the settlement in tlm furthe
distance.
Seitora Diaz was one of the tropical
beauties of whom Murillo dreamed.
“I am going toteffyour gallantry,”
she said, coining out on the veranda
where I sat, “by uskjngyon to help me
water mv flowers, for with my tame
hand, it is not easy for me to lift the
heavy watering pot,”
“£ am at your service, but allow me
—am I wrong?—to remind you that
you promised me the story of how
your baud was lamed.”
“Certainly. As soon as tho flowers
are wiiti-.red.we will have coffca on the
veranda, and you shall hear all about
it.”
Accordingly I was soon sipping
coffee with the little Lolita, my host’s
only daughter, aud my pet, beside me,
while her mother rolled a cigarette,
light-d it and began as follows:
“When we first came here, years
ago, it was a very different looking
place. The wild bush laud reached to
the edg'e of the water, and was such a
dark wilderness of thorns, brambles,
palms, wild fig trees and other tropi¬
cal vegetation that I dare not venture
into its depths. But my husband and
his workmen went manful'y to work
felled trees,' uprooted stumps, made
hedges and ditches all dny long, ex-
cepi iu the severest heat, and I often
saw them come home so wearied that
they would fail asleep wherethr^y stood
and first think of food three or four
hours later when they awoke.
After a while they get a portion of
the ground under subjection, but
after the acres were chared and we
began to plant, we lifid a throng of
foes to combat. The worst were the
matched for on account
of their depredations on plantations,
have a way of making underground
passnges until they undermine the
whole surface of a field, aad it falls ill
like a crust of a cake. Just noith of
us is a great gap in the ground, full of
basli**s , and , wnd grasses, with .,, , here
and there some rotten timber, where a
whole settlement sank from the ants
rmdermining the foundations. From
this comes the saying we have here in
Paraguay that onr wor.-t enemies ‘are
q ie j n< jj an b.aves and the Indian
allta.
Luckily, the only Indians were
friendly ones, who exchanges ai kinds
LEARY, GA., FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1883.
of provision. 0 , especially dried meats,
for kiiiv<s and brandy. We poisoned
the ants, dng up their npsts. flooded
their passage ways with boiling water
and so, in a great measure, were free
from them, although they now some¬
times come in from the woods to at¬
tack the plantation.
But after them came another plague
—snakes. For a long time I thought
it was hopeless. My husband used to
call them tax collectors, and they did.
come juff as regularly. No day passed
without our finding one or more in the
bouse. And once-Oli, heaven !-wbat
a fright I had. When L'dit a was a
baby, my hits I and and hiti men had
gene off one morning as usual, and tue
child was asleep on a mat at the end
of the room. Suddenly I mw on the
floor the skin of a mouse from which
the whole belly had been sucked as
from an orange. I knew at once that
a snake must be near, f.-r they feed on
mice and eat them in this fashion; but
much as I looked around I could s> e
no snake, till it occurred to me, pre-
Imps it is under the baby’s mat. I
snatchy the child up and placed her
in safety. Then I softly lifted ft pait
of ihe mat, and there it was, the long,
slimy, green and gold reptile, coiled
up and fast asleep. All! how I jumped!
I ran out in the court to call help,
T Luckily . Jose T ,, there, and ,
our man was
he . kill'd it. But ,, as we el-met ir-oi,-
acres uie , smiio-s , leit . ns t > hide m • Ui" ,i
s<>r- st. , .... 1 began to . hope our cues
, were ended, hut they were only just
begun. Wild basts now first ap-
peared upon the seme.
One morning, juff as we were at
brcak r ast, < tie of ear herdsmen b 1 ought
the news that onr cattle, which grazed
in the tail grass on the other side of
the rim\ had been attacked by a
jaguar, that kibe 1 one of the bail-.
The re in who told i s c-map d with
his lif •, yet he would scrcel.y have
done so had lie not misled the be>i H
or had there not been a fat o^therc. akuyu,
A week p.uscd without an w
and we had coin ‘tothink Ws about it,
xvlten suddenly three or four Indians
rusln-d to tell ub how a great jaguar
lmd broken into Them camp and killed-
a yoman and one ej their dogs, When
my Imsbaud heard (he story he con-
eluded that it was I lie same animal
that had attacked our bull, tor the
Indians described the cn-ature as of a
singular color, far lighter than any
they had seen about tin i(>, so they
named it‘The White D. ath We all
thought it now* time to do something,
and my linsbatnl called his people to¬
gether to go out and hunt it.
I remember that morning distinctly.
They went away cheerfully enough,
each man with his gun and hunting
knife, and More, the blood-houml was
with them. My husband turned round
just as be entered the woed and kissed
pig j ian q to me. Tii- n they vanished
in tiie forest.
When I found mvs.tlf with Loliti
'
alone , in . the ,, house . and , thought of
what might happen if they mec that
terrible wild animal, such anxiety
seized me (although I never thought |
I could be in danger) that I could not i
bo contented till I liad locked every j
tloor in the house; and then I seated
myself in tho great sitting room, took
j, 0 ]jm on my lap, and tried to tdi her
a s t 0 ry.
Suddenly I heard ascratching along
the roof, and (lieu a dull thud, as if
something heavy hud fallen. Anxious
andnervousIhad.no presentment of
w bat it was. The next moment I
heard just over me a sound which I ,
could r.ot mistake—a loug, passionate :
10ill . that 1 often heard from the woods I
night, and never without feeling as j
jf m y heart stood still. Tlie thought
rushed through my mind, ‘oh, Heaven '
t i, e jagma !’
i shall never forget that mom nt.
One minute I was q nto rigid and
ll0 l p less, as if life had d-pai b-d, and
then a thought flashed upon me— the
j.'guar was not lobe kept off it he pen-
e tr-dod here from the roof, for the
m ost of the iuntr doorwsys had only
draperies. In my dining room was a
g lva t wooden meal chest nearly empty
and large enougli to hold six or seven
p erfi ons at once. If Lolita and I can
get ^ere, I thought, we £ re saved.
I seized the child, ran with her into
the dining-room and crept into the
chest. Unfortunately it had a spring
so that I was fore ed to hold the
lid open with one hand to guard
against its locking, «nd immeliite'v
stifiiiug id ; but it liml more Ilian an
inch of miter liui, which completely
hid my titigers.
It was not a moment t >o s on. We
Wi re scaicely liiddeu when I heard the
great claws Scratching nlong the floor
and the hungry snilling of the jaguar
showed me lie was in search of food
He came stiaight to the eh stand High
paused a moment as though lie fear, d
a trap. Then he put- his head close to
the small Opening so that I could feel
his hot breath. He sniffed awhile,
and then tried to laise the cover with
liis paw.
Howl tremble 1! But, thank God,
the great paw won! 1 rot go in the
narrow civvioe, and I held the cover
fast, by clinging to the inner part of
the lock with all the strength of des-
peration. All he could do was to
stritell out his tongue and lick ray fin-
gers until they bled as if they had
been scratched by a saw. And then,
as he bad tasted blood, and heard
Dolila cry —for my poor darling was
just as frightened as I was—-his eager-
uess increased and he began to make
piercing yells which sent icy chills
over me.
I wonder why the fright did not
kill me; but the touch of L-lit a’s little
arm around tny ne..k see mad to ke p
up inv c mrag ).
fetid ..j \ the , w.n-t w.s yet . In , ciine.
1 ,. niiuid. lw cuv-d ,, a-ff
Vv .. bon ilic ,
: i g iar
i reach . ,, f.o.n b . lmv he spiangoi'lm ,
j iiv
J client. Hh huge the Weight puts Crush- of d the tny
j fingers betwe -n t-vo
lock. Then I thought all was over
and si.riek- 1 s > t’uu it rung through
tin? whole b utse.
But my cji ies were answered by
sound uiihh made my heart thl'ob
with joy uStvogpi:by the barking bf
o.,r bloodii md. The jaguar heard it
too, for be spring down, and stood
f r a morni t listeuing, aad- then ran
to the door ! ;s
: Again cai s.mn 1 of, the dog’s
| -r-o „ -, w , .... i at fh-~
j « a me time voices.of men C illing to
oath other. C-mtiary to expectation
j they w -rij already coming back,
j Meanwhile til* jagnnr seemed to be
hew ilded, and ran wildly to and fro.
Suddenly a loud cry came from o:io of
the windows, and then two flints and
a foarlul howl; tlien my husband’s
voiceanzioudy called:
‘Cachita, w here ate you?’
I could just get out of the chest,
( ] r „g myself to the door, and let my
husband in. Th-n I swooned away.
They told me afterward that our
bloodhound found the jaguar’s trail
leading straight back to the house,
and tin y all I.lin k'd home like mad
fearing that barm would come to me.
My husband and Jose came ahead,
mid shot tho jaguar through the win-
dow;bnt my husband told mo that
when he saw the jaguar iu the house
he felt as if stifled.
I could not move a joint J of the
hand for many weeks aft- rward. The
riutians gave me medicine to heal it.
“ ud ,ho .v s*y that aftor awhile I can
i™* . to “S’ make 11 "- me 1 dl lemomber 1 tl0t that ^ day
If I were to live a thou^nnu yen r.s I
could not forget the terrible moments
I spent in that chest.”— Anjonavt.
The Diamond Queen-
The most conspicuous feature in the
evening scene (at Saratoga) was a lady
from Philadelphia, fair, and young,
end petite, a Mrs. More, whose slceve-
le ss dixss of rare point-lace is said to
have cost #20,000; and in whose hair
»bd ears, and on whoso shoulders,
bosom, nock, wnsts and bauds wme
displayed^ diamonds that mint ¥w
run up mm n-.mn.us ot iimusa.ias n.
v.du • in ^italics, crescent?,
z°t><' tli.it rmas «nd ,uk grained " , r ““ wbci.m.r ^
there was the shadow of nn excuse for
fhem.* Her husband, a g. ntiema'ily
middle aged man in appcarniire,
her on Hi, «n„; »ud a litt W
in then lent, solemnvmaged and a '‘-
sorbed in intense watclifulues of her,
a private defective in citizen’s dross,
wound his way iu and cut amid the
'
brilliant scene. I •» *
spectacle People held their breath and
‘ idled* Imr “the Diamond Queen,
— Albany Evening Journal.
A Day Dream Interrupted.
The cry of “Road! road!” caused a
business man to jump aside ju«t in
time to avoid being run down by
sled in one of the city suburb?, Tib
boys w«re making the most of the
s*o\v. Astheweaiy man picked his
way carefully up the slipp< ry a cent
iv col Vet ions licgan to crowd upon his
mil d of the time wln-n ho wan ownei
j of a sled which could pass anything
on the hill. The lines of care in his
face began to relax as the symmetry of
the proportions of that sled and the
inline cut fin t' e bottom hoard with an
old jacknife loomed up through the in-
tei veiling y< ors. Then there came
into his mind another picture of a
giil, whose blue scurf matched (he
[ color of her eyes, and the ruse of whose
complexion deepened a lit tie as she
J picked up her skirts and sat timidly
down upou t he sled. lie remembered
what he said:
“Yon needn’t be afraid, Nell; she’ll
hold a ton 1”
The weight, of that little hand upon
liis shoulder still has power to stir Ilfs
pulses. As the iron-shod runners shot
svi'tly over the snoAV the gia*p tight-
enod and an arm was thrown around
his m ck with a little civ of alarm.
| i The s’eil was now speeding like a grey-
| hound, , and snaring . from side , to sal■>
‘
-. Another was thrown mini 1 his
arm a
nti-k, , «• d . , In* h< , nrd , , h* r eiy J in nflnglit. ......
>
| 1 O -fi—*-h! sto—op li— < — John! ,
| Tile agt mz'd entreaty tailed to in-
flu-nee him, us he was sat sfi -d' with
the condition of affairs, mil
when the bottom' of the hill was
| reached was the willing pii-oner iv-
d. Then the walk up the hill in
the moonlight, with the eigor and
| nipping air echoing w t-h the merry
j ! uighmr and i boats if his com pan-
ions. P.-vbaps n< the moon slip, cl
! under a cloud.-
' The feet of; the d .y (brame:' wmv
’ m l’cnly kuo.-k. <1 from uti ler hi n nt
-m-t - • 'r-> e kilii-M a GL
!>'>-Juro be heard the derisive
s
( j n jf or ’ ^hy ’ don’t you keep out
of the road?”
-— .<>. —
The Office Boy.
r. s t-lie office boy idie?
H 0 , ho is not idle; he frantically in-
dustrious; he is killing ° himself with
hard work.
Will it take long?
Unfortunately, yes: ho is very, very
tough.
YVlint is be doing now?”
H ither ask, what is lie nut doing?
He has the faculty of doing so many
useful tilings at the same, tune, that it
is impos-ible to guess vvliat he may
not be at. Ho is probably at this
moment engaged in sweeping out,
dusting, tidying up the several rooms,
going on a few score of errands, and
quietly omitting to make himself use-
f„l.
U. es the office boy ever make any
unnecessary noise? .
Olt, dear no; he never whiffles and
plays the devil’s hornpipe on tlic desk
with lii3 lilly while finger.-; ho «as
never known to rai e his voice in un-
seemlv bellowing. No, uiy d'ar sh
you have certainly been misinformed,
Is the office boy ever rude or dis¬
courteous?
Not a bit of it. He is courtesy it- ,
solf. His bumps of veneration and
reverence cover his entire head. He |
lo >ks up to his employer as to a supe-
rior being. He would sooner go with-1
out his meals for a week than once |
omit “sir” after yes or no, or forget to j
return thanks for the smallest favor.
Then you think the office boy is not
'
° f° r f It wonlJ he like at-
te tj|)g ” t ; I;aiut the lily or g i!(1 re-
‘‘ ■ ^ tjj6 ()ffic( , l)0 ja
^ oij ^ mosfc po tljiu „ ja nalure<
jj„ yi)l , ]ove ,h c office boy?
isunsedlv< Without him life
were uuliverble. The thought of hav-
in fQ , t from j,i ni is tlle only thing
^ dai . keus onr way to t lie silent
w "
tl , at
nobody’ can answer, I only know he
not in tim office. He is so consden-
ti uq you know. He absents lnm-
«&[th-.,t he will diffurb some^
Ki2S s Johuf tlie
j [ say lnllo! Where in
thunder is tliat hoy now I v,ondcr.—
• Boston I r ante nipt.
No. 50,
The Rlstol and Its Victims.
The New York corferp mdent of
tlic Uti•.! Herald writ".; The word
pistol is derived from l’istogu, a t >wn
in I'aly, where t-lie weapon was in¬
vented about tlnee centuries ago. As
a dueling weapon it superseded tho
sivoid about the time of the Amenenn
Revolution. N° sword duels nre on
lec.ovd in this continent, but this w»m
for a long time the approved method
in Ti.rope. 'The pistol fh-edby H[nh>r
Pitcairn, at Lexington, which was the
first shot in the levoluti >n, is now iu
the State Library at Alb my. Among
other historic pis’o’s shots is that by
wliich • (-Lionel Richard M. John-on
slew Teenmseh at the. battle ot tfio
Thames. The most fearful n u 1 It u--
rible of all pistol tragedies w.'S tlur
death of Lincoln, the most rtbtiiv-
guished man that ever died by such a
weapon. The next in point <-f dis¬
tinction was A1 xaudtT Ha mi Hon.
The derivation of tile m 'tod weapons
lias some interesting point-a Cannon
is from cuima, which in tlm Latin
nnans a tube; musket h from tliu
Spanish moscheto—evi bnlly r«f.-ring
to tile sound of the hail and its wound
Rifle is derived from r..pin (Latin) or
rip,” meaning n ripped or grooved
| s , tl f., c . Ai'tilloiy is derived from
■
art, it tlic ,, ... highest art of d
since is
i tucti , >n, and vot the whiskey Imttl.i
i Inis , proved , much . inoie des'-ruetfve ti
onr race. „„ The devil’s , ... artillery is a
-
j,,' ways doiim ”js its woi k of * ’el! *' \ '' Ill !!’j*
<it ut ■'mflivl'^ 0 ' 0 ' *'' ' °
Paying a Debt.
The Committee on Harmony of the
Lime-Kiln Glut’, re; o:ted that the
L : rne Kiln (Tub was at Peace and bar-
monv-with ( vorv gov rurnem on eiirth
except Greece, a id with every o 0r
/atioii aid association iu Amwit «x-
-pt the C-ncord .School , i Vhiloao
M j >y> j> v „j, w dm o mvt Ywentv-foer c -mmit
to had taflgn anti m iu J
jn . t . im . 8 w „ m> of t dul)
had differed i;i < pi,foil, and the oaiv
ca e 1 -ft was that o! Whalebone How-
l.er vs Cay Bank Tyler.
“Wliat am dat cm e?” softly inquired
the President.
It was explained that Brother How-
ker had won an • lection bet of Brother
Tyior but that tho latter refused to
square up- He was asked to stand tip,
aU( l "hen lie was on his feet Biotin v
Gardner Said;
“Brudder Tyler, did you bet a new
hat dat ile Republicans would carry
New York by a millyou majority?”
“Yes, sah.”
“Has you jvaid dat bet yit?”
“No, sir.’’
“Was you waitin’ fur anythin’ in
Pjfrtickler to happen befo’ you paid
dat bet?”
“No, sab.”
“ I)cn J ou had bettei ‘ sett,G c1e mnt ’
ter befo’ do upx’ meetin’ oecures. A
man who am fool miff to bet on lecli-
slitius should 'be idiot miff to pay
what h ■ loses .”—Detroit Free Press. {
• «£> •
Some time ago a rich old man who
was dying, sent in g eat haste for the
editor “ f i]li « P a l» r - The editor
knew that the old man had no family
or rotations inns ■<!, ;ts he went along,
o v ”' Ui” P'obabilify of a large inlieri-
“I’m glad you come,” said the
old man in a deathly whisper. “Como
closer.” The editor approached,
‘Von know I have woiked hard and
t!mt I have earned every cent I have
&>t. Sometime ago, you rem mber,
L subscribed for your pap -r for six
months. Th- re is ju-tone more umu-
bei due m", aud as I am dying aad
can’t wait till your u.-xt issue comes
out, just give me a nickle and we’li
call it squar o.~Arkansas Traveller.
Girl-, if there is ore thing more
than another that holds the young
men of our day back from mafrimoui-
«*1 ventn.es it iu the disheartening
spectacle so often presented them of
their dear papa and mama walking in-
to church glorified respectively by a
^ aml . S30 ^ That’s
w i, a t tC ares the boys .—Burdette
There are between Tod and 800 pio-
of 'fr" whom are Ameuc.ins, iney are
of every age. from children of six to
men and women of sixty.