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VOL. IX. NO. 9.
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I OF * 4 PAST *^ k -*■* S S
'
BY ADRIANA BPADONL g
She e», toils , ., sot , neither ... does she , spin. .
_ Bu.-the , rest does . apply re ^
i ot to Donna
Maria Joaeta. Pent and wrinkled, bar
thin lips, stained at the comer with
tobacco, worked nervously over hsr
toothless gums. The thin hands that
hold the black shawl round her should-
ors are knotted with rheumatism.
the shawl slips back the skin beneath
shows dry and withered like yellow
papei Still Donna Joseta claims to be
only n ’- a " i ( J '‘
claims she makes, who can contradict?
As she herself would say—no have di:-
«rer la.
For thfrty-seven years out of the
flfty-hve Dozuta Josefa has lived in Saa
Frant i.a», and in ai st on a ot at
that For close on two score years her
different homes have been within a lew
blot of each.other, and never one be-
yonc 3c limbs ol the Spanish quarter.
For Oonna Josefa speaks no Hngiish.
Not one word can she say. aot one can
she understand. When she first meets
.
U
^ ;'. U0W liU
V|”. ! . , .VV,
; .
* God ' has ; ’ “^“r'the e m™ beautiful
tongue in i ,? £ rr ' J 'j.V" °
learn anothe. •c&ides, Que ,
cla have?’’
Ro Donna Joso. jntiuv.es to live al¬
most la the shadow of the Spanish
, church, in a house as old and dilapi¬
dated &a herself. Thirty years ago it
was built, one of the few places scat-
herod on the lower slopes of Russian
Hill. Now artistic, shingled homes lock
down on it from abofe, and cheap,
modern flats crowd it <W Still
stands .weather-stained and lop-m re- 1 ,
S £ tt iSe? C K °' °
Outside Donna Jot*fas , . door , yon will „,
stand and gasp, boi i, \ real readme.
Partl> from me m;K o a'-r, mo-, y
rrem surprise. For long since Donna
Jo- * fa ;.(.-covered t.iat ,ne proper p. -ye
for every tiling « the flo*,. , and acct-i
togly everything Is In its p.ace. Dirty
clothes, rag*>, empty lan ps,
on: with tobacco, orange peel,
tomatoes and oil stove, dishes, sauce-
rn^^S^f^b^s stone mortar, nail run oi corn, bo.vis
w-ift, villainous mixtures into which
one is afraid to pry too close y, orum a,
dirt, and in the midst of it all, on a
cot propped up with a cobble from the
street, sits Donna Josefa, old and
week and helpless, guarding her one
sarrhiy possession—the memory of a
P»Ft.
How she lives Is an economic mys-
tery. , „ Some times, , evrei yet, . she , sea a
But betw<*cn times. There e a wayB
soma tobacco In .he P°- - ‘"<1 c ^“ a ‘ lUv
shell she usee as a box. r. few chi is oa
the floor and an orange, or a ,anana
E-rwtr.rtaswliiw drop, • . Wh -tar f ob
from heaven she dm not exp tan, and I
Aid not question.
AS. uea she gets . ired of sitting ...... on the
oot she walks out in th« sun, along t ie
stretts where sh- iiv for
avven years, and v-.ere to ay kbe b
turn, be, p.tue ntaJa™ and ^ Jse grsv gray momow stone m r-
tar upside c.wr o keep the rats from
running over them. But be corn she
leaves in aa o; ■ u i.-ag, ond tbe* rats
make the best of the situation.
Fifty-five yeart ago Donna Josefa
was born in Guadalajara. Mexc^the
! l
being born 1 . 1 . Her parents were not
rich, but they bed enough. Josefa went
to the convent «nd learned to bow and
pray like any other w«?U»bre<l senorita.
Then, when she was fifteen, she left
and went home to sit In id.eness till a
husband'D,ouId appear, eager to let her
continue that occupation in a home of
her own.
In a year be came, wlt.h _ youth, good
looks, money and a heart for Joecfa
and Josefa only. But he wse a foreign-
or, aa Italian. He mtgnt ae well have
been a Hottentot. Joeefas mother, a
.conservative of eocfiervatlvee, swore
that no girl in her senses would marry
other than a Mexican. Josefa swore
that rhe would marry lior Italian or no
c»e. Her mother promptly shut her Cp
aad began a novena to Ma,ry of
loupe for a change in bor daughter's
heart. But Mary of Guadaloupe was
evidently tniay elsewhere, for Josefa re-
mairv«d true to her Italian. In six
months the mother grew weary of the
struggle and gave her ooosent. A few
weeks before she was seventeen Joerna
was married and txwne to San Fran-
ctoeo. straight to quartern where Bhe
now lives.
For the first few years everything
vrvnt well. Josefa had money and ecrv-
ants. She «*i noth tog heavier them em-
broidery or ths finest of Mnxkmn
drawnwork Even now, after more
thaa fifty years, she speaks of the
wealth at those days with bated breath
—"twenty-*ix.thou3and pesos. seno*«ta
twenty-fils thousand l"
r t- ' r f- \ "J
iSBC1| ^WC ! 'Si -: <£\ . •'*';, '*' .; " ref re*/ #
THE OFFICIAL ORGAN OF CLINCH COUNTY.
Bat where is it now? Gone! How
did it go? Donna Josefa herself could
not tell you. All she Knows is this: It
was; it is not. Whether it went in
j j stocks whether or they mines simply or used real it estate, she has or
up,
| | no absolute knowledge. lifts She shrugs her
bent old shoulders, and her knott-
hands ’ for the saints to witness that
while it ,, lasted , . . she , made , Antonio’s
home a happy one> aad remembered the
j, oor> jjor did she know till the lest
p^os had disappeared that the whole
oi the miraculous twenty-a*.- thousand
was a thing of the past. "Ah, mother
of Qod, what a day!" cries Donna do¬
s ®*" a a centui y after,
m Ttlftn •** £»?“ M * Jo6 ® t0 fa W for |f , th ? U>T f ' rst ” tir y ’ e
bbe did the cue thing that she know
how . to do. . ace .. sowed. , She , was young.
oj. worked well. There were no big ;
garment factories then, rhere were no
unions. Those who could do line hand-
work were liberally paid.
And Antonio, who w::s not of the
ci. ,ren race of Meaicnn? The same old
si* -y. With hard work J >.’« brown !
, I-' i eheeks. grew dull. T' re,;'; hid* i from j
: Aa.-ibio woman c:..u»\ |
J<- nger and pr i..*r chWlwa|
Tmio went l- 1 .. :; to !a», it v,as j
Ji rher stayed •.•remaa’s tare. money With ihat to- going k him. of j j
■■ a 1 ..
Antonio went the last reason for iiv-1
1 D< I Jes*^ p-a T) Ua ,ireu
■-
- re. . ,
■ ’• R‘s factor*.- s up . .vy-
8t ■' lna Joerfa « stin ....... " ***».
w c: fore.-d u.iti... f i a wi-i;... s»<e took
"k houu'from the fnctc lies, but at
j 0 ,. ty g y, e was bioken and old and alow,
Then the factories stopped giving it,
and Donna Josefa was a thine of the
past. Treble to speak K :*?Urh, she
si .-yed close to her owu >ple, and j
v- .it down, down to where she Is now. j
Tire : it she helped w n she had i
a. i all gone, or they ir. .a poor
‘ D ■■’"■■y were then. H- ;'.•• m otv •
! rera Josefa says ibis ia an aa-
, rcuntrj . Uatk tn ber briC7 ^
( ;.,;..., ua . . „ a .*J bn,.re a |
' " l ' ?l ' • 1 - hlt
have not. Tim woman who cannot do!
, pr ov ,, , xrk ,. a:J u f( . r h „ r by j i
,,.... ; , rx .... her8 st dl money,
D , nlie y an( ^ the Mexicans are aa bad aa
^ Amerleans . Donnft j osefa makes a
F , ve4 , p j n g gesture over the filthy room.
** (n Ouadalaja,” she says, "it would not
^ Hert ^ Some one would do it for ms,)
I cannot pay, so no one does It
, ()m 0)( , and alck# and j bave Mvcr
th(lt klnd ot work /* j WO nder ! i
wMf ' h !s tl! ‘' ™' ?
** When , had {t » she continues, “I
^ t0 al! who Mked . No one ^
In va , n p*j VC! building hundred dollars I gave |
toward the of the.church of
Guadaloupe, and four of my gold rings
wi;h stones, senorita, with stones, are
buried under the foundation. Now X i
have nothing, only God and the saints,” j
Then Donna Joseta will lead the way j
back to another room, and if you know
j u ,- t |, ow to manage, you can have the
. hiosn bound chest lu the oorner opened.'
It i. full to the lid with remnants of
^ pMt Bu| chu>f trasLHure 0 f all. a
p,i.,,re t -repe scarf, with a heavy border
C ' i ft bud-- I ana Josefs unroll* It
renfully and holds it up. "From the
. , . ;. when he loved me," she says, bUb. put!
pl No persuasion can make her
. - t **>;e,-er again. Never, never."
on
^ rf’>■■ is. Like the aid lhy im —ht
1( .. . loves me not, Donna Jo-
whole life is divided into two
" h ” be }oved ‘ ae ~ and uow -
■y,.- •• £ j. e f.dmits, "I lovs him y*-L"
;;>j . ,, . ; ^ ^ tl)lrty yearB hM
c j, ;liig , k . "He wu* my heart, my
.. ay f, ii,” alio cries, while tsars
trickle over the dry, yellow sklo. "Did ;
f _ ot IIms good o>d gtVe him to me for
JiUelMt . idj and would you have me for-
’•
For thirty years I have cried night • ad
„ Now K1 , tear; Ere dry. 1 bave
criw] my eyes ^ ay ..
ever r€ j y \owe Douna
j oge « a w*
,. At yea; at firgt p,ved
me jj l|t other—she was younger
ttnd p r( ^t; ( , r than L” .Vgtvtaet L*er
IXmnu Josefa has no anger. Antovilo
loved j t T;ag cot tu tp.e nature of
things for her to remain oold. ftuflika,
w j )k (> { thirty y«a.rs, Donna
Jo 8 e j a kas t> u nt a philosophy. It is
^jg “AU men are bad—ell, all. Worn-
pr . is ( . vcr the victim. Don’t marry,
8eaorlta *• Bhe warcs , elenebing bor
j k j n> iwistwi hands, while fer once her
(Aa.r-tired ej’es IWl. with righteous i'i-
dlgBaUf>u . “ Not if he Is king of France,
Qf Spajn> of the wor j (J , • But the next
raoine , lt s j, e takes a picture out of its
j jrty vet ftn( 3 H with a lock
and vfc j tY of a i lttle c hjld: "Bu: ts he
nU ^ c , ;nej my Antonio?”
An i ^ si)e tiiri yet.
----------
I Japanese Chess.
I Japanese chess Ib complicated. Th®
board is nine squares Instead of eight
squares, and each player bss twen.y
pieces, of eight kinde. pliK-ed in three
rows. Bach kind of jrteee has Its own
pcouliar move, and if you take your op-
j pobcnt’s man you add It- to your forces.
The pieces are fiat, like ohereiors, vrnb
designs on both sides, anil wnyn they
j reach the '•king row" they are turned
] over and take higher ranks and powers,
which are not the same for all piece*,
HOMERVILLE, GA„ FRIDAY. DEC 29. 1905.
________- r.„-
1
THE DKEAM y
*•» «
$ jTHE 4v AKIMr. Si
® 5?
And .... a»erc, in ... the midst of chatter-
a
tag, gesticulating, fashionably clad
throng stood Mary, ptuk-uieeked, smll-
tag and talking animatedly about art;
Mary, In strange, esthetic array, with
the train of her clinging gown coiled
sorpentwise about her feet, her 1
pretty
hair dragged forward in a pale brown i
.
: .«t that threatened to drop ovos her 1
. t! '. > tin :;.oat, and a ivre tucked
’■■•Mud her dainty ear. [
Could she be that demure, shrinking
country girl whom Robert had escorted
to rural dances four short years ago? :
Evidently the painting under coasid- •
eration was the work of Mary’s hands,
It v.’as a portrait ot an 'amasingly tall,
reed-like woman whose scanty dra- :
perl os seemed in eminent danger of
slipping off altogether. Robert looked j
Dom Mary to the picture and back sev- j
er*l times before his bewildered con- I
spiousrecs grasped the significant fact
of her artistic achievement. Then, quite j
suddenly. Mary turned and saw him. i
with "Why, unfeigned Robert delight, Nearing!" gblng she forward-! cried j
with outsretched hands. “Robert. In-j
ii was not at all what he had hoped
she would say. or, rather, not the way j
«?«»»•»« r^erv^oi manner was gone; |
lior ready smile transferred Itself from i
the company to him with unprejudiced i
sincerity that made it drearily imper-
sonal.
“Of course, you’ll stay for a little ,
chat about borne folks!" she Insisted,
"I live here w!.’! Miss Gilbert, my rl- j
val get in art, and, being gored togethef." Bohemians, |
we on swimmingly ’
Robert stayed after the silken throng i
had draped fluttered lamp off. Mary stand lit the pink-j
on the little with its
ba li-emptied wineglasses, drew up an,
easy chair, and seated hoi red where !
the light fell rosily on her pre ty, suiil-
log face. She asked all manner of
q um Ions about the old friend.-and h-.r
brother, who had fostered tar orphaned
childhood with paternal tenderness,
“Dick hasn't been in to see me often |
—or.ly twice. In fact," she told Robert.
"U t I really don’t mips him half as ,
much ai 1 feared I might, tad so
many other Interests have com* Into
uiy , , *• :
n . is one of the Tritorc ;t; ’ I :ip-
■ Hohcit. v.. d 1
po a
4 -i-nc on her deck; the photogi*.;:U of i
a . ., lih a kandsome, 1, re rec I
and * e of singular, womani re I re’y.
Mary’s f«ce took a delicate roitectlon
of it < re.;es on her bosom and a sudden
radiance flashed across her line
Uke a gleam of sunlight on still waters. ,
"Ha is the dearest fellow in the
world," she answered, blithely. “A jolly
good fellow straight through."
Rci*ert did not trust himself to an- |
ew .i He picked up the picture and
looked closely, but unseelngly at the ;
handsome, debonair face of his rival,
'while he fought down the pain of de-
Pit. for the look In her eyes when they
strayoi toward the picture of "the dear-
c,,t fellow In the world” destroyed the
last vestige of bis hopes.
He woe a man of fine character,
sternly upright and eweet-uatured, but j
slow of speech and singularly reserved.
He had loved Mary in patient silence
for Blx DJars, during •which his secret
hopes had helped him through much
t re, ,. ;;d disappointment Now thaui
realisation of hie ambition had ,gi i
him the rigl.t to speak there v.^s
auo* 1-r man In his light—a man
against whom he bad not the shadow
of a chance.
. tagaged to marry himr he
asked presently, In a hard, conetralned
vote that quite startled Mary.
- 0h . d<;ar , no," she laughed. "We’re
eburas—good follows. He Is a writer,
ai)( p llke moat of the tribe, poor and
charming. He writes siories alxiut me
and poeoa for my sketches. Neither of
nr think of marriege. We talked Uiat
question all over and came to a nensi-
tie understanding.”
' And you’ve given up the Idea of
marrying?" Robert asked,
Mary nodded and bit oil the tip ot
the bu l she toyed with.
"Will a career satisfy you?"
"Perfectly,” Mary answered, glibly.
"We live as you see, ia a happy-go-
lucky, unconventional way. We sell
our work when we can, v.-ben we can’t
—why, then, we don’t,” she laughed
with an Irresponsible sliiog.
"Strikes me you’ve changed a good
deal,” said Robert, soberly, after a
thoughtful pause.
“I don’t like the idea of you living
(j.ft way, Mary,” avid the young fellow,
involuntarily glancing at the wine
j ’ j aa6e6 .,'
j Th!B jg t^g^ae 0 f your absurdly
oa e-eid«fl view of ttiings," she laughed.
gckJ( i-ndtui’edly. "U is great fun, re-
aJly u rj1ie (ol tbe humdrum
, Wg ^ the oia-fo^hioned woman,
; <xhat Is Juat why I object to it. I’d
ra ;y cr you happily inari ied and set-
down in what you call 'humdrum
w<? , than Ilving aa you do here
j Ccl ,i dn - t you paint as well even if you
.carried?” _
uo: said -,ury, very positive¬
ly. y-ilh a laugh at rue absurdity of
sn ' L a thought. ‘ Marriage spoils art.
Bet what of yourself, Robert? Why
don you take your owu advice and
seii down?"
‘,-cause," said Robert, gravely,
'' " ‘ &' :r ‘ la the world to
me and she doesn’t want me."
v>t> .. miu . dlcd out ot Mar >g
mo.".ontarlly.
■d .U St: sorry, Hubert,” she said shn-
ply. Her eyes strayed Inadvertently
to •'o picture in his hand, and she won-
deti i vaguely if she was "the only
worn an la the world" to Ted Hartley
* **»•**
' j 'hat night Hartley called with
the
P r0i ' s of a story which he wanted Mary
to isad. It was a bnlliauOy written
Bke'cJh of a decadent type, in which a
man ot the world had wooed and won
a l«l worldly woman,
’ 'don’t like it," Mary told him
frankly; “it leaves a bitter taste In the
tnouth.”
"Taya well," said Ted, complacently.
“And, by the way, the story la a true
one."
“Are you the hero, Ted?**
“I am," he admitted, uublushlngly.
“And the girl—surely she is a mythr*
"Your quondam model, Eleaor
Frost.”
"Elenorl And she loves you?"
"Does that surprise you?" Ted asked,
lighting a cigarette and leaning im h
she docs.” ’
"Ted, you deliberately made her bo-
“I succeeded perfectly, as you will
see by the story.”
Mary’s eyes hardened, and a curl-
ous pallor supplanted the rose of her
cheek.
“Are you telling mo tho truth?” she
asked, In a low voice,
“This time—^es.”
-----------
GEORGIA, /ujaiwh » ClllH'li , COR Illy:
Notice ia hereby given that
*
^ H _. <f j j j. ^
til* 1 dinarv of Said count V- for
‘
k . a to sell lots., lot in Du
_ P 0,l! , ' (,:i ,, ” bdmiging , , - to . H.ccs
rate “of Lida B. Mobley for the
purpose of education and
mainlainance of the children
Said application J will be beard
V fh ............ u ' , vm nf
Court ol ,, Ordinary for . said . .
county to be held on the iirst
Monday *’ in Jan. 1900.
HilS . Dec. 4. , 1909. .
J. A. Mobley,
Guardian of
Minor children of Lula 15,
Mobley,
GEORGIA, Clinch county:
S. A. Pierce administrator of
Gi f< egtatft of Li Her J. Pierce
having filed bis application for
leave to sell the following
property ! ’tnwif belonging of to ids in-
tMt "I' , , ' • Lot lunil No
'
$ -^ ri 1 > ^4 ^ 1 J . of ° r lot , 1 ]( t t £ No. K °’ B80, rw tl 175 i*«
• -
,
acres in _ the S. 1-2 of lot No.
582, bounded North lands of
Frank Touch toil and E. S. and
W . by original ? land lines. 800
'
“V°* r « 4 488( <.o (> o f () a i'J* 8 V 1 « i. t
'’
plftCe ,,n< OI J lift', known lain li. as B. Johnson, Ih* homo
all lying the 12th district of
Clinch COIIllty Georgia,
fia< All j that persons are application hereby noti-
said will
hu * ......i I* 1 1 Y °1* ,i 1M
il^st Monday W . in ' .January . Dfinie, 1900.
J. T.
Ordinary,
SPECIALS.
o are spcciallj" fitted to .soli
you a Thornhill Light Running
cross tie. wagon for one to four
mules.
Don’t wait till the prices go up
to buy your wire fencing for the
season.
Men’s and boys’ clothing.
Ladies Jackets and capes. Specialty
reduced prices during December.
Now opening the handsomest
line of china, glass-ware and holi¬
day goods ever before shown at
right prices.
New lot cook stoves, furniture
mattresses, etc., just arriving. See
us before you buy.
One of our Reversible Disc
Harrows will make farming
easier and life longer.
Manor Trading Co.
Manor, Ga.
A A
50 CTS PER YT.AJR
*• '■*
,£.* i> **»*».*-(-• , fiiSi ; :f, . ;. c '■&
* H. J. PEAULER, President. 1J. L. LANKFORD, JR. I
;A \V. T. DICKERSON, Vic -esident
•J, iti y i
IV 'C' M t BANK OF HOMERV’LLF
v HOMF:RViLLE
S’ 9 .! GEORG 5 A
h %
■ i
’•V
CAPITAL STOCK, $2 r moo.
is
$
*
& i
jj t H. J. Peftgloi’,- W. T. Dickerson, ID (! Dickerson,
.*• E. II. Ij, Lankford, A. Sweat, Jr., G. M. Da trio, i
. F. B. Sirmans W. K. Pca-I er. I
V
li¬ *!<
re. | itlinnlp, Tliis bank farmers solicit? and others, the accounts ami will of indivnjnv-li?. extend iiipi'- re :
V.- f every an. ♦
’ft t commodation consistent with sound banl:i.>: V. o S
m .
* want your business and will make it to your ini ".re
'* J i to deal with
»t me, : ; t :
* *1
:■ ?. i fi i i s re ? .. Six.,* J
~ rttarw-.a
j: nwrwirws-recrae—*ijftts»K
KTTlIllifli— _ IHWIIMIl|Ml)i MMii'ium | | ,|j| |W|i|ii|||i|i mi B Si
T H •* H M IT I #4 A Q 1/ ® fi L» I F IL
■ v
1 1 13 LJfelNEfefe COLLt i E
® mrimi/i- X Jrei_ JVL Ab A ovctt o X±_i - _j£5, DA•
The Keystone of Success is a Good BUSIN ESS EDUCA¬
TION. If you are interested, write for particulars
ANSON W. BALL, President.
V smSTBimm 1
THE CITIZEIS BAKK
Of Valdosta
CAPITAL Ail SURPLUS $300,000,00
ti
J. F. LEWIS, President, W. H. BRIGGS, Vice-President,
W. GOLEV, Cashier.
DIRECTORS J. F. Lewis, V. fl Briggs, B. P. Jours. T. ij
B. Converse, -J. G. Stevens. W. 11. Griffin, T. S. McKt-y, T. I
G. Cranford, J. L. Staten. |
Stsckbolders’ Liability fo depositors 3128,000.OQ , Additions I to our larga Capital
and Surplus of SGiiO 000,00.
-Vl
.A We have (he largest Dapital ami Surplus of any
^ Bank designated between depository Macon an*l forthe .1 icksov State vilie. of (teorgia. We are W*i the s
«n
J pay interest on denosits in nur SA VING DBPART-
nliONT, the intorest compounded quarterly liberal,
■v The policy of this Bank, to bn strong, to bo '.. >
^ e* to We serve solicit ds depositors business safely of and Merchants, well, farmers, IN
the
+ <v* Banks. Mauufactuters and'prompt and others, promising all. eour-
tcous treatment service to * lb ■
"■BB T repg & f. W ««K* i+i OgttE v JtetvCrS-ett-SSf 0**’
ar*
Stasilev’s Business ColSeje
MACON, GEORGIA.
Success is yours if you attend a good business college. We will ,
qualify you and Becuie you a fosit ion. \\ rit'* for catalogue.
G. W. H. STANLEY, Presidn t.
ppp rarjaware re-AgaEagsasgaEa^A'i.. HS5SIKTimQ*SBBffiMZBB§
■fl €. IB. ipeeples. £
■
VALDOSTA, GEORGIA.
o- • «•»
Building and Fire Proof Brick, Lime,
Cement, Plaster and Hair,
:
f£
} Paints, Oils, Leads, Varnish Crushes, Mantles
B
1
Tiles and Grates
McCORMSCK MOWERS A^D PARTS EOR SAME.
HORSE R A K^S. IRON AND WIRE. FFNCIuQ *
‘+m ./
/gviva gK anB n—wua ’gyauwrrt-T-'.'Sfe;^!' S5Y» S.'?'SX£ r ZtUMJL 3Ef JS2SJ«52SaBW*i