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if C«ll}®iro Cflwitg V 0tJO ■6* <* *
Vol. 2.
The Courier.
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COOK & HALL,
Editor aud Publisher.
Railroad Schedule.
BLAKfit.T EXTBNSiOV.
Leaves Blakely dally at 7:30 a. m.; ar¬
rives at Arlington at 8:30 a. m.; arrives at
I,eury at 9:39 a. m.; arrives ut Albany at
11:30 a. m. at 4:20 m.; arrives at
Leaves Albany arrives p. at Arlington
Aeary at 5:58 p. m.; Blakely at 8:12
at 6:57 p.m.; arrives at
p. m.
Cetiotjf Directory.
SUPER WE COURT.
sccojvi ?££ Monday
Spring term convene? on second Monday
in June, Fall term on
to Docepihei'.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Ordinary, A. I. Monroe; Sheriff. \V. \V.
Gladden; fax Collector, E. S. Jones; Tax C.
Receiver, Thor. F. Cordrav; Treasurer,
H. Gee; County School Commissioner, J.J.
Beck; County Surveyor, C. P. Norton; Cor-
oner , A. G. Gadson.
COUNTY COURT.
L. G. Cartlcdge, Judge. Quarterly May. ses¬ Au-
sions 4th .1/onday In February,
guet aorl November. Monthly sessions,
every 4th Monday.
COMMISSIONERS R. R.
John Colley, J. G. Collier and .T. T. B.
Fain, Courts held 1st Tuesday in each
mouth.
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE 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 each
month. J. P.
1123d District—J. L. Wilkerson, second
John Hasty, N. P. Courts held
Thursday in each month.
626th District—J. O. Price, J. P.; N. W.
F’ace, N. P. Courts held third Saturday
in each month.
1283d District— J. N.| Price, J. P
Courts held 3rd Saturday in each mouth?
R. R. Davis, S. P. C. L.
1316—Tlios. W. Holloway; J. P.
Smith 1 X:P. Courts held 2nd Saturday
In each month. J. P. John A.
1301—Thus. H. ffrlffln, Saturday
Cordray, N. P. Courts held 1st
In each mouth.
Bakep County Directory
SUPERIOR COURT. ' ;
B. B. Bower, Judge; J. IF. IP:ilt«rB, So-
, F. Hudspeth, Clerk,
Sieitor General; B-
Spring term convenes on first Monday iu
May. Fall term on first Monday in No¬
vember.
COUNTY COURT.
John O. Perry. Judge. Monthly ses¬
sions held first Mondays—Quarterly ses¬
sions first Mondays in January, April,
July and Obtober.
COMMISSIONERS R. R.
W. IV. Williams, T. H. Caskie, J. W.
Thayer, W. L. Sperlin. Courts held on
first Tuesdays iu each month.
CO UXTY OFBICERS.
Ordinary, VV. T. Livingston; Sheriff, G.
T, Galloway Tax Collector. R. B. Odom
Tax Receiver, J. M. Odom; Treasurer, L.
G."Cowell; Surveyor, C. D. Brown; Coro-
bar B. I). Hall.
Justices OF THE PEACE AND NO
TARIES PUBLIC.
•« $ 1st District—S. P.; J. Courts Livingston, held 1st J. Sat- P.;
XV <7, Odotn. N.
urday in each month.
900th District—G. T. Galloway J.
T. H. 'Taskie, N. P-; Courts held 2nd
Satmrday ih each month.
957th BisHict-J. H. EverPt -T. P., E.
C. Brown, N.,P. Courts held 3d Satur-
d ty in each mouth.
IJ23 District—L- J.Mathjs, J. P.;R. E.
McO'ulIun, X. P Courts held 4th SMUT-
ay ir month
* , 2
Concord! E.orfgct, F. & A, R.
Meets ■a eaeh
„ No. 42, 2-d Saturday]
month. 2Eo’ciodc p. to.
J. J. Heck, W. M,
T. H. Griffin. S. W,
E. C. Helms. J. W.
Harper Daniel, Se^t’y.
P. S. Barbre. Tyler.
Geo. H. Dozier,
Attorney at Law,
kmmmi, ba.
J J 'BECK ,
•/ ■ ATTORNEY AT LAW. t i
MQJiijtAN,, - - - . - -GEORGIA.
Proa pt att.'ehtirt'n Will he giveh-to Collec¬ all
business entrusted to his care.
tions made a specially. Money loaned on
ozod security. leb 9 82.
I. H. Hand, M.D. J. H Hand, M. D.
Drs. I. H. Hand & Son,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
Office at the residence of Dr. I. II. II and
.Bakercounty. Post Office address Mil¬
ford, Ga. apr 24 8 m
Dr. 1- S. Graves,
Fracilclixg Ph|deJa®
Will answer calls day or night. My
charges are reasonable,. Graves, ,
L. S.
feb8tf. L'cai'y, Ga.
AiW. Turner
WKOIiESA’tEIDEAXER IN
TcIhgco, Ciprs ail Snuff,
gg StiUlROrry StOBri, 85^ \
Macon, I Ga. i
Send him or.l e rs, hi. get the
your th e lease
bcst\' 0 "ds for m v
jni 13 83. tf.
T. W. Hammond,
i
’’■IT**
ki ui M Mh 0
a
Good stock an.d Comfortable V'h'oles.
Terms moderate. leb 8 ff.
-H. LDEWj-
Wachmaker and Jeweler
o
Corner Rroad and Washing2on street, at
S. Mayer & Glauber.)
ALBANY, GA.
All work sent to me will beVpromntly
clone and warranted. Satisfac¬
tion guaranteed where others
fail. 1 9|A nice selection of
■TEW ELR "5T
always ou baud. jul. 6. ly.
THE BEST OF ALL.
--O--
PUIS ui W ■
By Dr. IIaygood, Prof, McIntosh,
Contains the Cream ‘ot all the Other
Hymniand Tune Books.
Round and Shaped Note and
Houd Editions, A specimen copjrjof
Note edition will l»s s**ut ou rtcoiptof
(JUcent', and <>f the Word Edition on
29 cents. If not satisfactory may be
returned at our expense, lor sale by
all booksellers. For special terms,
dress .
-L W, BUKKE & CO., Publishers, ■■
MAcon, GN .
FRIDAY, 20
In the Darkness. I
We .marched by the left flank nlpng ,
^ bM road in the weeds until the 1
frees ho longer hindered our
ments, "nd then the brigade cine to a |
“Iropt” and advanced m line. Here
and t;l,iere we came upon our dead or
wounded skirmishers, and before we
opened the lines to let a dozen or
twentv men pa s ^o the rear, driven
foot by toot hy au advancing
Tliere was spoke Ipnging Ipw over
woods aud fields, but now and then 1
caught .sight of flags and men aud
horses in oar front. Cannon wore
booming, muskets popping and officers
shouting orders^ and amidst this terri-
ble rackct we suddenly quickened out
pup© and drove straight forward at the
battery. The distance was perhaps a
hundred Vods. It was lifea daoliing
into a fog I stepped over two wound-
ed aud three dead men, stumbled
agaiust a horse lying on his side, and
looked up to notice that our line was
out of dress. What had become of
my comrade on the right—where was
one on the left? We had touolied el¬
bows as we moved forward. Now the
nearest man was ten feet away.
Now we halt—-now we close up—-now
1 hear men cheering, and we breast
forward into a fog which is cut and
streaked with long, rod tongues of
flames, Id a minute more I can see the
cannon wheels and tlie leg of the gun¬
ners under the smoks. Fear? No!
It is a xkild exultation—a feeling that
may truly be called devilish. I want
kill ' corfie !U
to shoot qnd stab and one.
I yell at the top of my voice. I grip
the aim of the mil n ou my left to hur-
ry him forward, and I chuckle as 'ill- I
noticed how fierce his look—lioW
hungry tiger cau be read in his eyes.
Then—!
* * ;* # *
The sun had gone down. There
was a spiteful roaring o? artillery—a
veugful sputtering of musketry—a
trembling of the earth which hurt me.
All thjs came to uv “ s I opened in {r v
eyes,? but it cmie 1 slctvl>'. Idea 31
wondered fora moment whether I was
or was not. No! I had been hit—
wounded. Where? There was no
pain—not the slightest twinge. Ah!
co no to remember, I had stumbled
against a corpse just as the picture of
the battle field faded before my eyes.
Curious that I should have lost con¬
sciousness in the fall. I would get up
and hurry ou and rejoin my company,
I rose to a silting position, and then
— Well, my tight leg stuck fast to the
grass. The blood had poured out and
dried to a paste, and all of a sudden a
twinge of pain racked my very soul.
All around me I saw the bodies of
my comrades. I Called aloud, but not
a soul answered. Not a ui-in of us
reached the battery. Grape and can¬
ister had saved the gone. To move
was to feel the stabs of a dozen kuivo*
tfflt I drew myself along, inch by inch,
to a stnrnfi. Th-n I had » prop at my
back and could wait. The roar of the
bat tie was lining aWay and grim night
was mercifully hiding tlio horrible
sights of abaitle-fijdd.
•‘Help!”
A shadow passed me, never heeding
tfie call, and knelt beside a dead body.
It was that of a young lieutenant in
the Twelfth New York. I remembered
his crying, “Forward.”’ just as I fell
i locked again, and the shadow cov¬
ered its face with it-ihand. and rocked
to anil fro over the dead and moaned:
“My bn-band—my darling! They
have rubbed hie of my- treasure -they
have turned my joy into deepest sor¬
row f”
A shadow otf my fight. It moved
slowly, with bards it. tightly pressed
over the heait. was that of «n aged
woman. The hair was snow white,
the limbs were weak and trembling,
and the voieC was choked and brokeu
as it called: "’iVgere is my boy—where
is belying dead?"’ I 2 'oiateu to the
body of a youth, scarce 18, which was
and
k heeide it and sobi.ed:
‘‘A'ud this is the glory cf war! They
roll a poor old mother of her last-born
and then ring the bells for victory! Oh!
Gud! I am heart-broken! Let me die
her(>betide liim! -
Shadows on my left. There are
four of them. The first was that of
a wife and mother—the others her
children, They locked at me jo mhfce
appeal, and I beckoned to them, At
uij? feet, with his broad bVeast aliat-
± '
ter( , d nlld t tn< wa c tt st ul«u, t ser-
8<mut uf tl)u g fcCOud Massachusetts,
i t was lie who had j ils hed into the
(ront nuik and encouraged us when we
waVe , ed uqder the storm of grape,
They wink down beside him, and
w | u | e tlie children moaned nnd sfibbed
mother raised her hands to heav-
eQ and C4 j ld;
-Widowed — desolated — broken -
j iear ted/ What is victory to me when
heresies the corpse of husband and
f rt n, er ?”
And yet another shadow came. It
wus tbat of a fair young girl. Her
beautiful face was deadly pale, her
brown eyes were filled with horror,
] ler White teeth were shut tightly, as
d 6 be feared she would scream out and
HWa jjen the dead. Ah! I knew for
w ] J0m s be searched. When onr right
flank was doubled back on the centre
and the regiment confused and min¬
gled, I found him utmy side. He be¬
longed to the Sixth iihode Island. I
pointed to the spot where he lay, half
his handsome face shot away by the
terrible grape, and with a shriek she
knelt beside him. 1 saw her white
fingers toying with his brown curls
I saw her hold liis hand aud kiss it
again and again. By and by she rose
upland with hand outstretched toward
the ragged clouds of night she cried
alound :
•‘And you call this victory! You
cripple and kill and break hearts and
make widows and o.tphans, and you
wave your iu Detroit flags Free in rejoicing!”—M. Press.
Quad,
Our Atlanta. Letter
-:0:-
. A TJ hA>>’TA Ga, ] I
Jtibe, 18th, 1884.
I \ tired • ».* of, walking
eKpect vou are
matches, bbt the last one, the inter¬
city match, between Atlanta aud Ma¬
con. in which Atlanta was so unmer-
cifolly beatm, has created a great
deal of street talk, and the principal
Atlanta walker, who was depended on
heat too race, hud actual k- sold
for the hiinfijkome sum of 87000
iet the race go by default. This is
common talk and a great deal of icy
fetling has been engendered in the
city between those who beliove this
rumor and the friends of the walker
wlio indignantly deny the report. Bev-
eyal knock downs and bloody noses
have boon the result so far, tyut noth-
iug more scilo’tis. . .. t
Young Arcli Orine is iniptoving and
it is how thought lie will recov.-r. We
see stated that suits hare been entered
against him for rather over #19,000,
which it is charged lie is short in his
accounts. Tills is probably the rtfiisou
why the attempt to get away from the
* trouble was made. He was, wo under-
stand, paid a salary of #400 per
month.
Tile Chicago Convention caused
very little eicitement here. The
Bulletin board of the Constitution had
all the news tip to the nomination of
Black Jack Logan for Vice-President,
Everybody pielicted When the Logan
force went to Blaine that Lo was
promhed his present position or
some good place .in case of
f fee #ve~
Blaine’s election. I did not
a dozen people aronnd the board at
any time that I was there.
The nominations are received very
indifferently, A crowd of noisy col-
ored people called a meeting one eve-
ning before the court house to ratify
them. There was more c-mfusioti
khan order ih theif proceedings. /orward .
A great many are looking |
to the meeting of the Democratic I
State Convention on Hie Iffth, next
week; we keo wit will be fur Tild^en. !
The Chicago Conveutiou wi/f nomi-
nate the old ticket by acolWfnation and
it will be elated. The Northern In-
j dependents will not support ..Buiue.
! The New York Heiald and Times both
\ Came • 1 ,, I
{ not support the ticket noif ask any o tie
el.-e to do so. touring ,local
There is very little in
politics, all the be resting conpres-iqoal th*-ii can oars ii- | ■
dates seem to
^No'uews ot^u^impor^aXe and stirring
at present; will tty keep yon
posted. We aro having plenty <»f rain,
Several car loads of watermelons and
cantelopes have beeu sold here and
for good prices, Tlie weather lias
been ion cool lor them to se 1 very
fast-. More anon. Atlafta".
[Tlie above was received loo late
for o ir last issue, Eds.]
THE OLD HUI^TEH.
[K. J.. Burdette, In llawiteye.]
‘ Slug Nine” loarne^ his letters
right from the boxes, and gryyv up,and
^earned to set type in one of those mus-
,tang offices where they keep the type
iu a coffee saelt and chalk out the cu-
ses on the floor. He wapn’t even a
very fast printer; he didu’t often rush, !
and he never‘‘soldiered” for the fat
on the hook,,’ but took whatever came
along with equal Jpatiencejand good !
nature, whether if wai ‘‘pick-up’, or a
great take or blind c<>pv, eotibbled^iu
pencil on Line foolscap on Jmth sides
of the paper and marked solid, with A
never a break or paragraph from to
Z. But he would stand at that old
case and pick np type all night, plug¬
ging along on straight brevier as traii-
qual ns though he struck a di-qday
head on every take*. He s'Ways made
lair bills, and-Mfier a while, as the six¬
ties began creeping on him, the hoys
had a way of “soldioring” for him,
and may he you don’t know how hard
it is for a printer not to drop a good
many typio. and fumble for the boxes,
and let his thumb get most awfully
sore, and have to hunt for the bellows
and blowout his case, and study the
copy verv closely and find it dread¬
fully liaru to read, aud that sort ot
thing, when by rushing a little lie can
get a “pick-up.” as long a3 your arm
an d a leaded fake wib}i a paragraph to
every saritenee. But they did that for
the old roan, and he knew it by and
by.undloved the boys as though tjiey
were his own, every last sing or them.
Arid so, year after year, be , wrought
among the boys on a moring paper.
H$) wqnt to bed about the time the
rest (;>f the World got up, arid h 3 rose
about the time the test t of * the world
- . <
sat dcHfu to ,dinnpr. He worked by
every kin-1 ofligjht ^xee’pt t'te office punlight.
There wire .-andles in when
be came in. then !uifl, lard-oil lamps,
that smoked and spluttered aud smnll-
cdjthen ha saw two or three printers
bliuded f by explosions of" eamphont
and spirit gass; Hum kerosene name i n
aml heated up the news-ioom ou sum¬
mer nights like a furnace ; then the
office put in gnss; and now tlie rjeet'h!
light hung trom the coihng and daz
Zled his old eyes aud glared into them
from the copy. If lie sang on his way
home, a polisemuQ bade him ‘‘Csccse
that/’ and reminded him that he was
dtstwbing the peace, and people want I
ed to sleep. And ?7lieu he wanted, to
sleep, the rest <>f tiie world, for whom
he had sat up all night to make the
morning paper, roared and rraslied by
dnvjn tlip uoisy. strvet under his win-
l5o ' v with curt, and truck, and oui-
>
ntbus; hlarnl with brass bands, bowled
whit hand organs, talked and shouted
asd even the shrieking newsboys, with
“ gba-tly sarcasm, murdered the sleep
of the tiie.l old printer by yelling the
name cf of his own paper. Year alter
year the loreinan roared at him to re-
member that this was not an afternoon
paper-editors shrie tel down.the tube
Uo have a blind man put on that dead
man’s eftse; 0mart young proof-read-
ers scribbled s-rcast.c comments on
hie work, on the margin of h.s proof-
slips; long-winded correspondents,
learning to wrte, and long hatred po-
etn who could nevp learn to .spell,
wrathfully cast all their ioiperfect.ons
u|ion hfs head. Bat through it all lie
tvrongh, patientlv, an^ .found more
sunsl.ine than shadow in the world;
he had more frteuds than ^oemies.
Printers and foremen aud pressmen
and reporters and editors came and
wont, but he staid, run} he saw news-
room and sanctum filled and emptied.
HU< 1 filled and emptied again with new j
and He atran^e working face-. , . night, , and \ |
was one
hours that short in tlie '
when tue aro so
ball-room and ko long iu the !
room drew weH HlT on. he was tired; he
£ ?dn ‘ ‘J r< J* D Iu | l fnlI cane, he said ..
0ne of ,he ho ™ t,red himself-but _ a j
printer is nyrei- too tired to be good
natured—offi-refl to change places with
|,j,xi. but the old man (wild there ' was
enough,in bis case to.last him through
his take, and be wouldn’t work any
more to-night. The type clicked on
j„ j|, a giient room, and by aud bye th«
old man said:
( v I’m out of sorts ”
Ife sat down on tlie low window-sill
by his case, with his stick in his hand
his kinds iolde I wearily in his lip. J !
No.
Th-type* clicked Co. A galley of t#l»
g amt wait* 1. , (
‘ Will any one kindly tell me what
gentleman is lingering with D 13cell*
ed the f,femail; wnc Whs always de«r
feronily polity and .polish^ (| when hf
Was on tin point cf exploding with
impatience and wrath, l )f .
Slug Nine, panning by tlifl, alley,
stopped t<> speak to tlie old man sill
tiug there s > quietly.
Tim telegAph boy came running l®
with last manifold sheet shouting:
‘Thirty!”
They carried the old mRn,to the
or-man’s long table. ,Hnd Iwia him
down revi-ientiy. and covered his face.
Tln-y took the stick out of his nerve¬
less ??And and read his !iwt take:
DohtoX, Nov. 23.— The American bar¬
que, Pilgrim, went to ptscea.QiS 1 Marble.
head to a Ught gal«, about updpight.
was old and unseaworthV, aiud this was to
haTC been her last *rtp
THE CASH SYSTEM.
, >
The faihres that Imre taken place
among farmers and merchants during
the past year woqld^ot h;iye ( been so
general had it not bvon for the loose
and utibuRiuewi like method* which
are su brevaleiit. »A {Ify 4 Ever aiace the war
• v
there ha? bean a mania for eimugiag
in large tninaactioue, and the idea cf
acquiring sudden wealth has become
so firm y fixed in the minds of the peo¬
ple that its eradication is a matter cf
extreme ! “; in.'ty . The pl.enot’iunit
success of a comparatively small, nupj.
her seems to have set the re»t on flr,e r
|pid prises they and ru-h speculation into ull hinds without of enter¬
a propi
er knowledge of tlie unyielding laws
of trade, and without being able to
see far enough into tlie future to avert
the,disasters that even the ordinary
vicissitudes of, the time* render iuovF
able. Thu man who goes in defct
without having a reasonable certainty
of being able to meet bis payment-
when duejf-d**™ a wrong i -*' )v 3uly to
hi« creditors, but himself, hfs family^
and to tlie community. There is a d,e
gren of unc> rtaint.y iu al^human tTSD
suctions »ud it Is altogether too com¬
mon for m n to become oversaugnine
and involve themselves in debt In the
hope of making lucky hits and jn an--
ticipation of fortunate coptingemtieiM
which are of rare occurrence,, Qredit
is almost, always deai ly /-’.uglit even.
where the sewurity is ampfvlf, Interest
is a cojnsnroing fire that l^uins day and
night, and ,tJ>o' r -—r-'entn^e is always-
increased in jiroportion^ tlie risks
the creditor takes, v and i,p this those
who w ill pay are expected to cover the
losses occasion® 1 by thope who do not.
A farmer milare s hie operations lie- •*
yon t hie means. Land,stock and sup¬
plies are bought on a credit; uiouejr i»
i
borrowed to pay current expense, an<J
perhaps Tflis he may ( do well f$r a >ear o^-
two. tempts him tp greater-
risks. Iti such Cases it is puly will a ques- bb -
tion of tiiqe when the seasons
nnlavorahl-, crops short., nnd every¬
thing he lias will |>e forced on the
malket when there is little or same® no 4e-
and h # is r oJ.«l, The
true in regard to the merchant. He
buys largely ' on n credit or with bor-
row#J « 0 ney . H c is anxious to selL -
„nd tk tempted to take great risks by.
tlje j ,, pnc08 , lbuiim ^. C ro P A<
ar< 8 | JOltj his. collections fail, and
bridging or* r, his iroubU* ftotn vesr-
yo^ Q fily postpone, and intensiAes his
distress.
Misfortune, like a creditor severe,,,
,i^ s in demstul for her delay—notli-
ilJg can ^ t , u „. -Borrowing
(lu]1 ^ ^ ge of |, ust , a „dry.’* sad
] )U yj n gou a orrdit is the most extruv-
agant aind of borrowing. There is
Mt 0|j ; * bwlut4 . Ir ' Insur- .
euccea8 ;w iil „ vcry oue p dy . "sure he goeSi live'-
linrJ he u be not only to
wj ^ in ; J1S , uCO me, but it sill not be .
)oI ^ l>e f or eH basis for permanent pros- .
perity wi „ ,, 6 m tlwt wj „ prove 4
l( , 8BsinK all through life,—Savannah
' durijlu r- News
If you suffer with Sick Headache,.
Constipation, Dizziness. S<mr Atom-
ache, or Bilious attack-. Emory’s Lit
tue Cathartic Pills wiil releivo yon .»
ns a regulator of the bowels tfisy have,
no equal; very small, one to three ai
dose.—15 cents,