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i RIS R b S Pk X %
" HERE AND THERE.
B e
r J}B},l}hfi 6,@00 Ainhabi
- Smallpog s aging i Mobile,
%‘*‘a‘m lanta hud o big Gro last Sun
i
A common mulo sells far S2OO in
-~ Laudordale coupty, Ala.
R o o
- 15 hoys were arpsted in Boston,
. Mags,, o 4 gno timo last woek, for
Mooy,
. The Commercial bank of Augus
* ta,Ga., was robbed last Saturday,
~ of 2,500 dollazs.
- Jahn Crgwford, a negro of Crock
.et county, Tenn., is in jail for hav
~ing five Tiving wives,
- R.E. Cathen stabbed F. M.
Mackey cight times at Lancaster,
- 8.0, last week. Mackey died.
. "@fiiég‘yébrunr)’ the 21st, $6,000.-
E; spaion : ebt
*-'«,‘lifi_in gold have heen draywn from
the banks of New York and ship
ped to Europe.
; James Bowers shot and instant
* 1y killed Miss Roark, his intended,
in Tenn., last week , by handling
a pistol carclessly.
& A bill has been introduced in the
Wyoming legislature for taxing
bachelors, lawyers and other crim,
- fnals—prabably wiqows.
. Twa negroes robbed another ne
groin Atlanta last week, and after
they had rohbed him, they quarell
ed about the money and had a se
*{re fight. Both were badly cut.
A negro preachr, in Boston,
- Mags,, weighs 410 pounds, wears
~ ghoes 214 inches long, 194 around
- the ingtep, 74 across the foot, and
T 4 nerogs the heel. ' s
- gThree negrocs boarded sevepal
. jrgins near ;St. Touis, last week
- with drawn pistols, overawed the
- epnductors and brakesmen and
vobbed the cars. A posse of men
. prrested them the next day and
w put them in [ail. |
*‘There was congiderablg excite
~ gientin the N, J. legislaturc one
- day last week. Tt was caused by
gver.ope half the memkbers being
& R 2
,Ean Qne of the absentees re
* marked that fthey had one of the
biggeat games of poker hie cver
24,
- A youpg man of this county last
fall sold his farm and went to Cal
ifornia to lncate, believing that he
could do much better there than
_pn the paor soil of Georgia. The
next thing heard ot him le was in
Atlanta, then pp in Carrall county:
and yesterday we were informed
that ho has now bought a blind
mulo and gone to plowing on the
yery land that he left, and is de
termined to wark out salvation on
his native heath.—Griflin News.
The limited express train from
Chicago for New York, was thrown
off the track near Salem, Ohio,last
Thureday. It was runing at the
rate of 40 uiles an hour dewn
grade, when it struck some obstruc
tion and jumped the track and
went over san embankment. The
entire train left the track, and the
boiler exploded, blowing the engin
eor and fireman several hundred
vards, kiliing them instantly, Eight
ather partieg were seriously in
jured,
LEARN A TRADE.
Hardly a day passes by, but we
goe evidenco of the folly of our
~young men scattered here and
there. They inquest of something
~_to do. They are willing to work for
about half the pay they are receiv
~ing. If you ask them what iz their
. trade, they will reply they have
none, and 1n these days, when skill
ed labor is in demand | it is o shamo
and outrage for so many promis
ing woung men to be loitering their
time, either looking for work, or, if
they have it, in a position where
their pay is nothing. We have seen
100 many such men who expect to
climb up the ladder of fame and
forttie without working for it,
‘They ate looking around for pins to
pick up, and then to be folded in
the embrace of some wealthy bank
president or philanthvopic mer
chant, made a partner,and finally
marry in the family, Sush cases
. are not to be found every . day in
- the present time.™ Wo read Mun
chauscn tales in the years gone by,
that had ay ending like this ~ But
to-day the merchant who wants «
young man, wants ong of chyrac.
ter ungl “ability. “Iparn a frade,
young man ; first hecome profleient
in some industry, so whep you go
torth to pastures new, yqu'll know
within yoursalf thaj you have gome
thing to fall back on for a living
If the young men of tgday would
usk some of our old and succoss.
ful merchants ror the seerot of their
suecess in life, they would well be
agtonished at the stories of early
hardships, trials and privations
they endnred.—Ex. ;
HOPE FOR ALF DOYAL, ...
Itis prohable tnat the supreme
court will grant Alf, Doyal a new
trial. Such is the belief of the attor
neys on hoth sides of the the casc.
It is expected that the decision
will be rendered Tuesday, and that
Doyal will have anotber chance in
the courts. hefore a jury. . Doyal
will get this new trial on the
ground that one of the jury, ¢, H.
Wiggers, before the trial that if he
could get on the jury he would
hang Doyal. Wiggers has since
been indicated on a charge of for
gery, and although he has been
cleared, on one charge there ave -2
othors gzainst Lim Since the trial it
has come ont that Wiggers made
the threat referred to aund that fact
appearing to supreme court by afli
davits, it Ts presumed there will be
a new ‘trial granted on that
ground
The erivie for which Doyal was
sentanced was extrememely brutal.
Doyal had heen drunk in Griffin
and wag arrested by a policeman,
Mark A. Hancock and lodged ina
guard house. Boval threatened to
kill Hancock and during the next
week he repeated his thregts. On
the evening of the succeeding Sat
urday after Hancock had gone off
Doyal saw him standing on tbe
street and approached him in a
threatening way, after having first
secured a pistol. ou reaching Han
cock he sgid -
© “You deeked meup, apnd Twill
pay you for it.” -
Hancock replied that it was all
over, and was turning away when
Doyal drew his pistol and shot
him squarely in the bowels, Han
cock threw his hands to his wound
and turned away, whereupon Doy
al shot™at him again but did not
strike hiza, Hancock fell dead al
most ingtantly, (
Doyal has had ove trialin the su
perior conrt and his case has been
to the supreme court twice inelu
ding the present time. Dogal is now
confined in Fujton jail. He is a
stoutly built fellow with a scowl
ing face and a rathor sullen dispo
sition. It is said that feeling is ver
y strong against him in griffin.
; DEAR OLD MOTHER.
- Homnor dear old mother. Time
has scattersd the snowflakes on
lhor brow, pillowed deep furrows
on her cheeka, byt is she not sweet
and beautiful now.?— Thelips are
thin and sunken, but those are the
lips that have kissed many a hot
tear from childish cheeks, and they
are the sweetest lips in all the
worfd.—The eye is dim, yet it ever
glows with the soft radiance of ho
ly love which can never fade. Ah
| ves, she is a dear old mother. The
sandsgof life are running out, but
feeble as she is she will go further
and reach down lower for you
thanany other upon earth. You
cannot walk into a midnight where
."11(5 cannot see )"UU; you ¢annon
enter o prison whose bars will keep
her out; you cannot maount a scaf
fold too high for her to reach, that
she may kiss and bless you in evi
dence of ber hreathless love. When
the world shall despise and for
sake, when it leaves you by the
wayside to die unnoticed, the old
mother will gather you in her fee
ble arms and carry you home and
tell you all your virtues until you
almost forget your soul is disfig
ured by vice.— Love her tenderly
and cheer her declining years with
tender devotion.—Ex
“Aunt Jane,” said an exaspera:
ted wife, “Iwish it was as commor
for women to trade hushands as i
is for men to trade horsces; 1%
cheat some ts'p%na’n dreadfully be
Tore subllown T ol Lo i
- MIGEDGEVILER, Ga
T ”I'.”ffifi}‘z L it e
“e.&lm, {s \‘ Lhe v 78 aay
had some ogs flflq@ufile;, citement
over a matter thyt has fiot entirely
ended ygt. A negro named Clark,
wlo hails fromabout Augusta, so
seid, has heen making ipcendiary
specches to nggro meetings in vari
ous parts of the county. He spoke
acrogs the Ocopee river, at a
church noar Captain T. H, Lati
mer’s plantation, to a crowdof ne
groes several nighty ago, and said,
amang other things of 4 viclent na
ture, that he had heen sent to his
work hy Genperal Grant and other
republicans—that congress — had
passed a law giving land to negroes.
tand that the white meu tore up
the law and would not allow the
the negro to bear of it. He fold the
negroes to all arm themselves and
appear in the neighborhood of
Z . ; S
Sandersville on the. 31st of this
month, where they would meet U~i
nited States troops to help 'thcmfi
He urgel the negrces in reck
less worde, to make the war on the
whites, the nextnight he apjpeared
to the negroes at a ehurch near D,
B. Hill's residence and repeated to
them about the same l):‘..r.‘lngxk"."if(-‘
appointed a meeting for the fol
lowing night, when Captain [ W,
Ennig, sheriff of our county, with a
posse went out to arvest him. | Bui,
on approaching, the negroes! took
alarm and began to vun oft. when
the sheriff fired at the leaderof the
crowd and hit another negro, woun
ding himjin the arm. The leader.
escaped. This man has appdired
among the negroes at 4 time vhen
evervining is as quiet and jepcen
ble as could be wished, and by sig
hellish words, is trving to arpusc
thein to contact with the whites
Since his speeches, many of ttncm
have bought ammunition in tdwr,
here. :
Somie of these negroes on Cap
tain Datimersfplace, went to him,
iu their trouble, and told him all a
bout it. They said that Clark teld
them they would be wmurdercd if
they refused to obey him. They
asked Captain Latimer whether if
was so. They said that thc-.\"dé’g;l
nel want to have my’t])ing I‘(‘s“%‘-’ss'
with Clark, g
| This whole business-leoks like
getting material for the coming
presidential campaign. And but for
its being discovered soon, and han
dled o voughly as Captain Ennis
did, might have given Baldwin
county a great deal of uneasi
nes, ;
In 1882 Georgia made 11,5000,
000 bushels of ‘oatg, last year 6,000,
000. The estimate for this year is
3,000,00). Last vear's corn crop was
10,000,000 bushels short and the
cotton crop 200,000 bales short,
‘SUNGS FOR ALY
is now being received b v the public with
a great degl of enthusinsm wherever it
has been used at all, Tte firstisane came
from press just a year ago, and thous
ands of copieshave sinee been sold by
we. It reecives the endorsement of all
first class teachers for the- excellence®
pithies and appropriateness of the less
ons and diagrams, and the endorsement
of all lovors of song * for the variety and
perfect harmony of the musia it contains.
it has been adopted at every Musical con
vention as a
Standard Text Book,
in which it has heen exhibited. The
sSouthern Musical Convention, the Cobir
County Conyention, the Union Mugical
| Convention, the North Georgia Mngical
Convention, the Concord Musical Con
vention and the Suuth Union Musicial
convention, Besides those, it has been a
dopted fu several choirsin prominent
cities inthe United Mtates, aud nuinbers
of teachers use it and are more thay
pleased with it Fvery onespeaks in
praise of it
It Condains
352 pages--partly in round and part.v in
shaped notations—32 Rudimental Josu
ons, and _as jts ‘name ndizates for all
‘“n-rszxm# and all plaecs, congtsting of |
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Chants, |
Antherss, : |
l mentences, ‘
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Music,
Temperance
Songd,
Sabbath-school Music
and a choice selection of Music for sing
ing schools and their practices,
Send For It.
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you witl hods™
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Extavlishe? 1630--80,000 Readory,
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By recent purchsse it now comblngfi:
THiE Dixis FARMER, Atlanu, gs.; THE
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AT DQRRR LS P o
BT SovTHERN CULTIVATOR is devoted to
the Agricultural and Industrial interests of the
Bouth—and every number goes out freighted
wita Informetion vital to the success of thowe
whoss interests itsubserves. Itis oneof the
oldest and most En&ulsr Journals in the Union,
cod for BOUTHRERN AGRICULTURISTS, for
whom it hesjsbored for hella gentury, has
nosuperior, § e
The following are soma of the leading sea.
tures of this great journal;
THOUGHTS FOR THE MONTH
Valusble, Practioal Suggestions to the
Farmer for Each Month in the Yeau,
Fublle Boads; Ditching and Terracing;
The Orange Grove; Legal Department;
Lettors frora the Field, from evory State
in the South, giving resnlts of tests of our best
flmtm on waite:s of praoticel benefit to the
rmer. .
Ixquiry Department, in which sre pro
poundsd and u)_sv,areg' questions covering
simost everything of intorest on the farm.
The Putrons of Husbandry, wverything
ol value partaiuing to the order; :cc‘?xica of the
times ; lu\!l°-} department, atiractive to the
ladize; the apidry ; horse notes ; live etock dog
tor; hog cholers; Jersey hard: fruit culturs;
Soutbern slik t‘u}%m; scienca and art; the
family cirole; L enildren's department; houso
hold to{fics; THE CuiTIvaTOR GOOK book, ete.
Tha Intemclve Syster of Farming, by
M B oty e, M
1 of Southern sulturgs now beins
?mn‘m g TEE COLtlvAon, tn series of
welve monthly pumbers. Back numbers can
ba furxyshad.
45, P, HARRISON & 00.,
Stete Printers, Publishers, mgmveu. and
Eumk Boog Manulfactuzers, ®. O, Drawer 8,
TLANTA, GA.
THE SoUTRERN CULTIVATOR OnR Year, and
L PARKER'S €OLUMN,
:
3. W.PARKER'S
(~'.\"q 4, i\ AN K
HOT T,
BR FME. A .IS GROWING IX
TRITREFCH JA SO R
When in Bremen, go to
DR. PARKER
gr 1 ‘
HOTEL
Angd get a
GOOD DINEERR
i . 84 B B
QIII>T N LA Y 5
SPRING BEDS!H
Fer Sale at
DR. PAREKRERS
HOTES
: i ; '
BREMEN, (A, |
De. Parker has for vale the cele
brated Seven Barks, kidneys, liv
er, dyspepepsia, rhewmalism, uri
narvy organe. female complaints,
dizeases of the bowelg, fovers piles,
heart and nervous digseases. It iz a
cood medicine, I
He also has on hand ]”.r:ulfivld'si
Female Regulater Simmon’s H\'vr‘
Regulator, Waris Safe l(idn(‘_\'l
& Liver Cure, and many other Fom- |
edies that are good and pure. i
v ; |
S 8 88 AQ
Bad blood, and these ¢an’t agree.
Lots and lots of this medicine is |
g Jd, C: W, Parker, Agt.,
sSErat o Bremen, Ga
I have now an hand one of jthe best stocks of'
s y NPT Y TAT :
: s ever brought to Cedartown, My stock consists of .
MEN’S AND BOYY
ADY-MABE CLOTHING
READY-NMA BE CLOTH ne
BOOTS, SITOES, RUBBER 3,
¢ mo L e -
HATS, CAPS
AND ALL DRESS GOQDS,
1 My stock is complete, and I will sell to my customers ag
| Cheap as any Firm in Georgia—Atlanta not pxcepted.
=7~ 1 have also the Latest Style of Spring
TOTHG POR MEN AND BOYS
w “‘[/'J) {i (b 0§ {J ALy ) bo
[ ask everybody, wishing to buy anything in my line, to eall and ox
amine my stock befpre purclmsin-g elsewhorg, Come quiek to ;
MILLER A. WBIGHT,
Cecartown, Ga,
I amn now in the Huptinglon & Wright old stand,
% A
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: —DEALER J¥="
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