The Wrightsville recorder. (Wrightsville, Ga.) 1880-18??, March 10, 1887, Image 1

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Yolums VII.—Number 41. Street), where advertising contracts may be Bade for it in New York. Fidelity mutual LifeAsso. I represent the Fidelity Mutal Life As¬ sociation of Philadelphia, economical, Penn., and the Strongest, safest, most of Life Insurance in most equitable system ° ° & you A. CGI DE NT P OI . ICIE S ino no of the best Companies in this country. I will sell you Travelers’ Insurance Tickets At 86 Cents a day. Don’t start on a jour aey without one. At the same time , will take subscrip lions in the for United' any newspaper and or magazine States save you postage. j HICKS Hrightsvillc, Dec 80 3m. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. A. F. Daley, Attorney at Law, Frights rille. Ga. Will practice in this and adjoin lag count ies, and lsewhere [January by special 188(5-ly. eu gsgement. 7, - Walter It. Daley, Attorney and Coun selorat Law, Wrightsville, On. - Vrightsvitlejigii School 9 The Spring Term of this Institution » opens on the u 3d Monday in Janury/87 And continues Five Mouths. ZReubes of T ctitiion.; primary Class,' : : : : 8 8.00 Intermediate Class, : : 12.00 Advanced Class, : : : 15,00 Music, : : : : : : 15.00 Tuition will be charged from th,c time of the entrance of the pupil until the close of the term. No deduction for loss of time, ex¬ cept in cases of protracted illness. HT I>il» W-l^od lor college or active business life. Pataons will have benefit of the j Public Fund. ' r For further , particulars _ address the Principal H. T, Smitn, A. B. Dec 2, 86 tf lij 1 1 > \ il!e, Ga Wrightsville & Tennille cand D fc lin & Wrightsville R. R. Co) uml Geu’l W. B. THOMAS, Pres, Snpt. To take effect Nov. 13, 1886. GOING NORTH. NO. 2 NO. 4 Lv Dublin... .10:30 AM 4:50 P.M. Ar Condor... .10:55 •• 5:15 “ Ar Bruton Cr, .11:15 t‘ 5:30 “ Ar Lovett.... .11:35 “ 5:50 “ Ar Wrightsville..-12:05 PM 6:15. “ Lv Wrightsville... 12:10 “ 0:16 “ Ar Donovan.. ..12:30 “ 6:35 Ar Harrison.. ..12:50 6:50 Ar Tennille.. .. 1:30 “ 7:20 I -S. GOING SOUTH _NO. 1 —NO.3 A. M. p. M. Lv Tennille.......... 2:20 : Ar Harrison......... J - 2:50 : Ar Donovan......... CO 8:10 : Ar Wriglitsvslle...... GO 3:30 : Ar Lv Lovett........... Wrightsville...... 50003 3:55 3:31 I : Ar Bruton Cr........ 4:15 : Ar Condor... ....... 0 4:30 : Ar Dublin........... •..10:15 4:45.. MACHINERY! ENGINES, BOILERS SAW MILLS Grist Mills Cotton SHAFTING PULLEYS HANGERS Cotton Gins GEARING A Full stock ot Supplies Cheap and Good. Belting, Packing & Oil. At BOTTOM PRICES AM DOF IK STOCKR PROMPT DELIVERY. Repairs promptly done „^g ; Geo. Lombard & Co., Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works, AUGUSTA, GA. ABOVE PASSENGER DEPOT, guu 26-tm’ph 25, ’87. m m ■ m o Al & Watci Pipe & Fitting Brass Valves S-A/WS 3 TXT iTBS INJECTORS P-am-ps Water Wheels CASTINGS Brass and Iron Wrightsville, Ga., Thursday, March 10, 1887. mssmm anteel Broadway, N. Y. Dit, scott,S41 L ---------------- —~ IffiA BARKER’S HASR BALSAM the popular favorite for dressing the hair, Restoring color when gray, and preventing Dandruff. $jM It lioir cleanses falling, the and scalp, is sure stops to please. the ^L£l 50 c. and $1.00 at Druggists._ HINDEROORNS. K ■ *° cur8 - 15 ccnt3 •» ,ilscoi * co - N -*• DEAFNESS ™iTS aud successful CURE at your own home, l>y Treated one who by was nw#t deaf of the twenty-eight noted IpeclaUsle yearn without benefit. Cured himself in tine. months, and since then hundreds of others. Fl j'* P |Wt 1 C a 1 ', s ^t ut ‘‘PPljcation. * PAGE, I > w. 1 No. 41 estJlstbt,, Nbw y BOOKS FREE. Thrilling Doctor Detective Book, Stories, Slake Home Cook and Howto Poultry Pay, free, and Robilison Crusoe, these 4 books sent on receipt of 4 cents each tor pos tage, with agency terms, also our paper Home, Farm and Factory, 3 months on trial. For 20 cents we will place your ad dress in our new Agents’ Directory, which will bring circularssamgles, you over 500 books, papers, let¬ ters, &c. IIULBKRT PUB. CO., 46 Emilio Block, St. Douis, Mb. nt If 9 fej PI AND FORES. UNEQUALKD FOE Tone, Totielt, Durability Workmhnship And William Knahu & Co., Nos. 204 west Baltimore Sf, Baltimore. No. 112 Fifth Avenue, Now York. ffgBP a t A urn Winter Exposure Causes Coughs, and other ailments, for which Bens n’s Capcinc Plasters are odmitted to be the iNja best remedy few known. They relieve and cure ‘lsMf tbeTt’TTO Jjuirs^Uen iffrait,- no Endorsed other application by 5*060 Physicians find Druggists. Beware of im itations .under similar sounding names, such sicine.” as ‘‘Capsicum,” Ask for Unison’s “Capsicln” and taka or “Cap olh no ers. Examine carefully when you buy. All BEABURY* JOHNSON, Proprietors, New York. % & V P fi : -flBjSBKiff ~~JsESm yT ' Jig — k mm AU 1 if. yI i! Most of tho diseased which afflict mankind aro origin* ally caused by*, disordered condition of the LIV E R • For all complaints of this kind, such a b Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousness, Nervous Dyspepsia, Indiges¬ tion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatu¬ lency, Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimos called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria, Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diar¬ rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, I'oul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down 2M&ST feDIGER’S flUBftNTII for diseases, is Invaluable. It is not a panacea all W g. ail diseases r ‘he LIVER, will y m STOMACH* JOWELS. . It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes low, gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL* TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADICEft’S AURANTII Far sale by all Draggizta. Price 8 1=00 per bottle. C. F.STADIGER, Proprietor, *40 SO. FRONT ST., Philadelphia, PM w can live :it home, and make more money at work for us, than at any¬ thing else in this world.’ Capital not needed; you are started free. Both sex¬ es; all ages. Anyone can do the work. Large earnings sure from fir/t start. Cost ly outfit and terms free. > Better not delay. Costs you nothing to send us your address a.d find out; if you are wise you will do so at once. II. 1 Ialijstt& Co., Portland, Maine. §2 1 3 "W EEES: The POLICE GAZETTE will be mail¬ ed, secitrciy wrapped, to any address in the United States for three months on receipt of ONE DOLLAR Liberal discount allowed to postmasters, agents Address and clubs. Sample copbs mailed free. all orders to RICHARD K. FOX, Fit akklik Square, N. Y. fMraia \mmuw Secure Health) B H S H Paction Band to the t,iv« relieve all bi J jwraj —nui ^ nT1 *» trouble* r#Tel7 Vc^ttatis; E-Crisis*. Into 253. AU Srwal* HER HOSPITALITY. A BIT OF EXPERIENCE IN A MOUNTAIN CABIN; “These mountaineers are the hospitable people on earth. It is rude but genuine hospitality. would share their last loaf with stranger within their gates. latch string hangs out of all.” We were riding down a Rocky Mountain trail, my Clate and I, when when Clate the remarks quoted. He was an thusiast over the noble traits of honest miner and mountaineer. tain experiences of my own had me skeptical on the subject. At tke base of the mountain a little log cabin. “Now,” said Olate, “I’ll prove theory. It’s past dinner time we’re both hungry as wolves. wager anything you like that get a good square meal at that free of charge.” Five minutes later we stood the closed door of the cabin. “Hello!” roared Clate. There was no reply. “Hello, I say!” This time Clate rapped loudly on the door. There being no ho lifted the latch, when the door swung open showing no one within, although the cabin was evidently bei ing occupied. “All right!” cried Clate, cheerily. “Come on, Ned, and we’ll ’round and see what we can find in the commissary. The folks care. They’ve left the door open on purpose for wayfarers like us step in and help themselves. just like them. It’s your who knows what true hospitality Clate “forage around” for some time, but all he could find was piece of dry salt pork and a fow tatoes. A SUDDEN SURPRISE. “We’ll, help yourselves to there is,” said Clate cheerily. “You build a fire, Ned. We’re to what we’ve found, I’ll bet on that, for”— He stopped. A tall, lank, grim visaged woman, with a leathern ing face, suddenly appeared at a back door. She saw Clate, and yell¬ ed out: “Drop them taters?” “Why, madam, I—I”— “You drop them taters!” “We are strangers, you sec, mad¬ am, and”— “Drop ’em.” A short gun hung on the She snatched it down, brought it to her shoulder with a jerk and said: “Drop them taters too quick.” Clate dropped them. “Now you fellers git.” I had already got, but Clate, abashed and rebuked though he was, lingered until the shotgun was again pointed toward him and the woman said: “Clear yourself! I’ll learn how to walk into a body’s house help yourself to one’s vittles. bacon and them taters ain’t to bought for love nor money, let et up by you uns fer nothin’. you light out!” We “lit out,” hungry and fallen, and Clate has been dumb er since on the subject of western hospitality.—Zenas Dane in Free Press. A Schoolboy Who Knew Too One day recently the amusing incident occurred in one our district schools, unfortunately the teacher’s expense: A class in second reader unapt in was reading about the “golden ins” and their peculiar habits. they had finished reading the teach¬ er asked the class if anyone coula tell her the celorof the golden All were silent. Thinking to en them upon the subject she took handsome and apparently costly from her finger, and, holding it before the class said: “What does this look like?” Up jumped a cious youth of 7 years and shouted: “Brass!”—Erie Observer, The Farmer and the Tariff Boston Advertiser. The first protective tariff in the United States began with the found ing of the republic itself. The pro dominant interests of the nation were those ot an agricultural natu.e. A manufacturing estaplishment is no where more thoroughly appreciated than by the inhabitants of a village devoid of factories. Such a village is usually willing to bestow great benefits upon any manufacturer who will come f and locate in its midst. And the same is true of a nation which is without manufacturing in¬ dustries. The great men who form ed and secured the adoption of the Federal constitution knew that they had the farmers behind them in their efforts to foster home manufacturers by discriminating protective duties. Benjamin Franklin said: “Every manufacture encouraged in our coun try makes part of a market for pro¬ visions within ourselves, and saves so much money to the country as must otherwise be exported to pay for the manufactures lie supplies.” Alexander Hamilton rdfoinded his countrynacn “that there arc natural causes tending to render the external demand for the surplus of agricul¬ tural nations a precarious reliance.” The suggestion of Hamilton is as appropriate to-day as it ever was. John C. Calhoun added his testi mony as follows: “When our maim facturcs have grown to a certain proportion, as they will under the fostermg care of the government, the farmer will find ready market for his surplus produce, and, what is of equal consequence, a certain and cheap supply for all his wants.”_ Calhoun was a protectionist until he became a secessionist; and, now that the sectioii of which he was the lead er b&Alomiug reconciled to the spir¬ it and tendency of other American institutions, the protective tariff is again growing in favor with the Southern States. Thomas Jefferson was another of tho fathers who believed in develop¬ ing manufacturing industries, urg. ing that “we must now place our manufacturer by the side of the ag riculturist. Experience has taught me that manufacturers are now as necessary to our independence as to our comfort.” John Quincy Adams gave expres sion to a thought which is as oppor tune’now as it was then when he said: “The great inteiests ot an agricul tural, commercial and manufacturing nation are so linked in union togeth er that no permanent cause of pros perity to one of them can operate without extending its influence to the others.” Andrew Jackson declared that we had “too much labor employed in agriculture, and that the channels for labor should be multiplied.” Daniel Mobster said “that is the truest American policy which shall most usefully employ American cap ital and American labor. Agricul ture, commerce and manufacturers will prosper together.” By protect ing maul tacturing industries the far mer is directly benefitted through the creation of a profitable home market for his products. --. i —i -- When a young man in the Alem tain Islands goes to see his girl in the evening, the parents of the girl thoughtfully retire to another com partment of the ice house, leaving a burning candle with the lovers. Do they let the candle burn! Not much; they promptly blow it out and eat it between them. -H »> «-— A Washington correspondent says that many young women in society the^e are learning to swear; and tells of a caller who sent ih his card, and heard in an adjoining room a young woman say: “D —n the man! Show him in.’-’ The Style is the Man Buffon, the great French natura list, before sitting down to his desk to compose, always arrayed hnnself as if going to an evening par'y. lie said: “The style is the man.” Terms—$1.00 per annum A CYCLONE AT EAT0NT0N. ONE NEGRO KILLED AND TWO BADLY INJURED. Savannah News Special, Eatonton, Ga., Feb. 26. One ot the ' n08t destructive cyclones that haa visited Eatonton in several years Rtru °k t ^ 10 edge of the place this ev en * u g about 4:30 o’clock. It came f in r01n to a t* southwesterly northeast. direction, It passed mov- di S 10 , 'e° t 'ly over ^ ie °ity, but high in the a " * ^ ar as can l earne d of the damage done in and around the city it is about as follows: Col. B. F. Adams’ residence was ve, T badl y damaged, and the family bare |y escaped with their lives. His ^ oss ’ 8 ver ^ beav y* Willis Marshall > an old a »d respect ed colored blacksmith, was killed in his sho P b y timbers faU ™S onhlm > crus hing his skull and killing him in sta, ‘tly. The male academy was lifted from 'f s foundation and is ruined, Fortun¬ ately there was no one in it. J. K. Johnson’s dwelling is badly ^ ama g e( L an< i ab the outhouses were b ^ own to pieces. A. O. Mosely’s res '^ encc was a l so badly damaged, and tbe outhouses were blown down. The greatest sufferer yet heard of ^ aschall. His dwelling and every cabin on his plantation are to tally destioyed, hut no lives were losL ^ he beautiful giove aiound Mis. ^ • Wingfields is completely ruined, noarl y every tree being felled to the ground. The dwelling was not dam a ged at all. The kitcbe u of IE M. Dennis was blown down. A little damage was done to the Methodist parsonage. Nearly every house in western and northern Eatonton suffered more or less. The cyclone passed in nearly the same path as the one of 1884. I*- impossible to estimate yet the amount of damage done, but it isve ry great. Col. Adams and several more of the sugarers, it is stated, have ey¬ clone policies sufficient to cover theii losses, Richard Trippe (colored), on John Wright’s plantation, had his arm dis located by falling timber, and Bev¬ erly Harris was severely injured. A large piece of timber from Col. Adams’ house was blown through Z. C. Allen’s residence, slightly damag ing it. In the northern part of town fencing aud shade trees are totally destroyed. Nearly all the property that was damaged in the storm of 1884 was again damaged to-day. It is impossible to hear from the coun¬ try at this hour. How Long Should a Nervous Pattent Be Treated. The question of how long treat ment should he continued in a neur otic case when no evident benefit is produced has recently been raisd in a Hamburg law court, A medical man, says tbe Lancet, having as a patient a merchant suffering from “nervousness,” treated him by gal vanism. Altogether he galvanized him 445 times, but the nervousness did not disappear. Then came the matter of fees. The sum claimed was $556. The merchant disputed this on the ground that the treatment ought not have been contined so long, as it was not producing any benefit. The court referred the mat¬ ter to the medical board, which gave as its opinion that the doctor ought to have asked the patient, after some fifty sittings, whether he would like to continue them, as it was doubtful whether the treatment was doing any good. The court, however, de¬ clined to accept this view, holding that it, was for the patient to say when he had tried the treatment as long as he was disposed to pay for it, and as gave judgment for the full amount claimed. This judgment seems to accord - with the principle that applies to newspaper subscript tions. A man must pay for his pa per as long as he takes it from post office. AN INCIDENT OF BULL RUN. IIOW GEN. LEE BROKE BOTH IIIS HANDS THE MORNING AFTER THE SECOND BATTLE. A brief chapter of unwritten war history was related by Capt. Greene of Charlottesville, Ya., as he with a group of ex-Cdnfederates were stud¬ ying the panorama of the battle at Bull Ruu. Said he: It is a fact not generally known that a serieus acci¬ dent occurred to General Robert E. Lee the morning after the second battle of Bull Run. General Lee and 'sjjpnewall log, Sudley Jackson Springs, were seated on a near when some Confederate soldiers, who had cross¬ ed the ford imagined they had struck Pope’s whole army. They instantly became stampeded and rushed pelb mell by the two officers. Gen, Lee’s horse, old Traveler, broke away, and the General in his efforts to catch him was thrown violently to the ground, breaking both hands. Gen. Lee went to South mountain and An tietam in an ambulance and traveled in this manner through the cam¬ paigns that followed, carrying his hands in a sling. According to my best remembrance he never fully re¬ covered from the injury.” A Letter I-ifty-beven Years Old. In searching among his old letters the other day, Mr. Dan Adams, clerk of the Superior Court, came across a letter written to his father, Dan Ad anis, Esq., by his Drother George Ad ams, who lived at the time in New berry, South Carolina. The letter is dated April 10 1830, and is remarka bly well preserved. The paper is urn calendared, but of a good quality, and the ink used was as good as any made nowadays, The letter is written principally on family affairs and the news of the -ne^ji-boThwad.'Gne extract that horrible murders were committ¬ ed in those days and that extraordi¬ nary tliiugs occurred also. The writ¬ er says: “I forgot to inform you how David Sims was murdered. He was cut with an axe from the eyes across nose, through to the palate of the mouth, and that part of the face hung down, though he could not talk till it was sewed or held up IIo afterward talked and mide his will. Ilis arms was out nearly off and one of his fingers. He lived six ot eight days.” There were no envelopes or stamps need in those limes, and the mount of postage paid on it was eighteen and three-quarter cents. The Death of Poor “Snow,” We had a dog named “Snow.” He wasn’t much of a dog—never dotae anything in his time more remarka¬ ble than just laying around the firo in, pold weather and taking in the sunshine on the piazza when the weather was mild. He got to be very old, and after the wagon ran over him and broke his leg he got to be a regluar nuisance about the house, getting in everybody’s way and whining if you only looked at him. (j /Wd morning the landlord said uewoulfi take him-out in the woods and kill him. But when ho got there and aimed the gun at him, Snow looked at him so pitifully and so ret proachfull that he didn’t have the heart to shoot him, and came back home with poor Snow limping pain, fully beside him and looking grate¬ ful for tho life- which had been spar¬ ed him. But Albert, tho boy who drives the wagon for Mr. Batts, was less merciful, and when he took Snow out the net day he shot his head clean off and “left him alone in his glory.” New, Albert says that every night of his life Snow conies at him, hold ing his head in hir mouth, ahd haunts him till he can’t sleep.—Smithville News. Rev. Robert Hall, when asked how many sermons a preacher could pre¬ pare in a week replied. “If he is a man of pre-eminent ability, one; if he his a man of ordinary ability, t\yo if he is an ass, six.”