The weekly star. (Douglasville, Ga.) 18??-18??, January 20, 1885, Image 1

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» THE WE VoL VL-NQ. 51. Donglasville, Georgia, Tuesday, Janury 20, 1885. Subscription: 8I..10 §1.00 Cush Per Annuir. 'Dr. T. R. WHITLEY, Physician and Surgeon, TQc»i3isX*».*»‘x7'Ai3.®* " Ore*, S . PEOIAL attention given to Surgery an Otifonic Female troubles. Office tip stair DRUKKEIE1 ««-' <*;*» its Various Stages Desire for stimulants entirely removed. Home treatment. Medicine can be adminis tered without knowledge of patient, by slm- 'pt>^i»elns it iu coffee, tea or any article of ood."t>a««trft»r»nteod: $100 Will be Paid For »n» esse of drunkenness that Golden Specific will not, cure. Circulars containing estiiuonHls and full particulars seat Tee. Address OOIJOEX SPECIFIC C*. For A Business Education Attend f.au canon Of Kentucky University, I-exing:tom, Kv. Students can begin any v.vck-day in the yenr. No t cation. Time to complete the Full Diplrma Business Coarse t -.out 10 weeks. Average Total Cost, including Tuition, Set of Be ks and Board in a family. $00. Telegraphy a specialty. Lihwary ourse free. Ladies received. 5,000 successful graduates. OV f 400 pupils last rear from 15 to 45 years of age, from 22 Statet In struction is practically and individually imparted by 10 ton. tiers. Special courses for Teachers and Business Men. TJniv,-- sity Diploma presented to its graduates. This beautiful city is noted for its hoalthfulncfis and society, and ’s on leading Railroads. Fall Session begins Sept. Hth. For cin la.rs and full particu: * rs, 'address Ur President, WILD UR R. WITH, Lexington, ity. LOR IL L ARB* MACOBOY SNUFF. CAUTION TO CONS IT ERS. As many inferior imitations h a anpeared opon the market in packages so.closely re sembling oars as to deceive the unwary, we would request the purchaser to see that the red lithographed tin cans in which it is packed Always bear (fur JVume and TrttdHe-Jllrtrli.. bin buying the imitation you pay as much ff»\an inferior Article as the genuine costs. BS SURE YOU OBTAIN TIIE GENUINE. LOR I LLARD’S C LI MAX RED TIN-TAG PLUG TOBACCO. The Finest Sweet Navy Chewing Tobacco with Navy site. Jm» Genuine always bears a Bed Tin-Tag our name thereon. SB'•tenure, ot tmmilalions. DOIT to call or send your Jug to 94 \vES ATLANTA, Who is gene *X* T.X SB ami kw»|i Y 1 f.^ 1 '.A & I AAAAWA PE TERs S T., GEORGIA BROW' ylark \o*^ erT WEEKLY STAR. DOUGI.ASVI1.I.E, GA. TUESDAY MORNING, JAN, 20, 1885 Contemporary Opinion of Noble Lives. Noble lives have often been spent to little purpose so far as their contempo raries were concerned. The fact is, “No man is a hero to his valet,” nor is any man a “prophet in his own country;” and as “distance lends enchantment to The Height of Waves, BEST TQKESL ? This medicine, combining Iron with pur* Vegetable tonics, quickly and completely Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Weakness, Impure Blood, Malaria,Chills and Fevers, and Neuralgia. It Is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the Kidneys and layer. It is inyaluable for Diseases peculiar to Women, and all who lead sedentary lives. It does not iniure the teeth, cause headache.or produce constipation—other Iron medicines do. It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, re lieves Heartburn and Belching, and strength ens the muscles and nerves. For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of Energy, Ac., it has no equal. gsg- The genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Hk.Ii- ! - BTU>W« CHKHICAl CO., BALTIMORE, JI1>, CELEBRATES •a i i v d lo q> ClienT>'\S» W hi.~ V Brandies, lev* *v»!#.<•/«cM« n. The Largest and Only Complete B y e W o j? k s IN GEORGIA. &ITTERS Hostetter’a Stomach Hitters is the article for you. It stimulates the failing energies, invigorates the body and cheers the mind. It enables the system to threw off the de bilitating effects of undue fatigue, gives renewed -"Igor to the organs ot digestion, arouses the liver when inactive, renews the jaded apetite, and encourages healthful repose. Its ingredients are. safe and its credentials, which consist in the. lu-arty endorsement of persons of every class oi society, are most convicning. For sale by ull Druggists and Dealers generally. W9- JAMES LOCHRE pbemiiim cloth Pressing Silk, Woolen and Cotton D YE ING ESTABLISHMENT, 45 E. Hunter st., Atlanta, Ga. {Opposite Christian Church, between Pryor and Loyd Streets,) Bend your Goats, Vests, Pacts. D-esses. Ribbons or anything; that, needs dyeing or cleauiug up to us by express, cr bring it in person, and we will guarantee 10 28 8m eatisfHcrion. W. H. MALLORY, _ Wathmaker and Jewelr JUOUtiJLJLS VILtoE, «.J. Keeps on hand a full and complete line of •CLOCKS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, ETC. he stls at. Rock Bottom 1EPMKM Wfttche*, Clocks, Jewelry, Etc., Made a Specialty. ■ and satisfaction guaranteed in every - insance. [10 4 3m.] M A N’SO R G A N IS M Is this ionfct complex work, of the Creator aid when ibis oonpiic-ited stiiJcmre, to ex qm.'dtely wrought, is disturbed by disease, toe i i<vt efficient aid shoald be sought roni the most, skilled physician—for the human b- dy is too precious to be negledUd It be comes the question, then; “What physician shall 1.-' tm -bn eri?” Dr Oscar, Jobannesen, of the University of Bunin, Genminv, has made a life bag s udy of ailmen s of tfieN'ervous and Getiiso- U inarv Sy«'»-m. rliis SfS.osTK'i.eciLof® Cnty© A ny Debill, y or Derang merit of the Nerv ous 8 stem, inducin'* Speraiatthorea. Gonorrhea, Syphilis Stricture, Impotence, etc., etc; Because vop may • ave been cheated and fooled by Q lacks, who claim to cure this class of disorders, do not hesitate to give Dr. Johannesen’s method a fair trial before your case becomes chronic ard incurable. ssrTS t sr&&"®& A valuable treatise, explanatory of Dr. Johannesen’s system, will be sent by mail, posi paid and securely sealed from observa tion, to any sufferer addressing his sole au thorized agent for the United Stales and can- ad a. H E N R Y VO G E UK R 49 South Street, N-w Yrrk, jtS3~Complicated symptoms treated Uom Dr J.ihaqnesen’s Special Prescription, un der advice of r duly qualified consulting pbys eian, Alton respondent held as strictly coufi: deutial, and advice by mail free of charge, THOMAS W attorney f auu: it Will practice 1 AT HAM, at law. fiKBORN, GEORGIA. in all the Courts both State and Federal. . ; Special attention given to suits; a ainst Railroads and other Corpo ra lions, ill attend regularly the I Superior and other courts of Douglas county. FREE! RELIABLE SELF-CURE. KWSW.S&S A favorite prescription of one of the 1008* noted and successful specialists in the U. a. (now retired) for the cure of Wervous JDeoility, Xiost jjK*xWetthness and D>eeay. Sent in plain sealed en velope jV«®. Dinggistacan nil it. Ad dr ©as DR.WARD &CO., Louisiana, Mo. A GRAND COMBINATION The bent Politic al and Yamily newspaper :n the United States with the bout Agricultural journal, nnd a prood reliable Watch fox* but fifty cents more than the price of Watch alone. The Weekly Gourler-Journal and the N SeH«i-I>lojithiy Home and Farr,, for the pur pose of adding 100,000 New Snoserioers to their lists in the next Jour months, inaJce tho following UNFARADHEliFD OFFER: the two papers one year and the YYnterlmry Watch, for only ?54* See the reduction made*. REGUIiAB PRICES. I COMfiT.NATJON OFFER. Courirr-JovmaL.... $1 50 | JT^r'The TWO Home and Farm.... f-0 ! p s a7lfl fp m Wour^r, W«*.. 3 60|jPAl V rt $•>.#0! for only *a The Courier-journal (Henry Watferson Edi tor in Chief) is an uncompromising* enemy of mo nopolies and the spirit ol subsidy as embodied in TML THIEVING TARIFF!' It is too well k* own to render it necessary to s] >eak of its character as a public news and family journal The Dome and Farm has tho largest and most attractive list of contributors of any c^ricu.U tural paper in the country. Its columns are de voted exclusively to Agricultural and Homo Topics. Every phase of Farm life de picted and commented on. It. made by farmers for farmery. It treats Household matters exlensively, and is in dispensable to every housekeeper. The WATEF-BUIIY WATCH sells at the manufactory for $3.50, and is widely known as the best ci.cap Waitcls ever placed before tlio public. Fur only $d- this Watch, and two papers, one year, xvjit be p*>ent. Watch to one address, and papers to another when so desired. The Watch, under this offer, will cost $1 less than it can be boutrht for at the manufactory. CJonrier- Journal and Home and Far m, without watch, will be pent one year for 81.50. Sample copies sent free of charge. Subscriptions can be sent to either W. N. HALDEMAN, Pres. Courier-Jour- nal Co., Lomsville. Ky., or B. F. AVERY tfe N S, Publishers Home and Farm.Louisville, Kyv Hints About Millinery. The imported bonnets are either very simple awl plain, and should therefore be inexpensive, or else they are ex tremely rich, being made of embroid ered stuffs, stiff with the threads of gold and beads with which they are wrought. For simple bonnets smooth with felt is chosen for general use, and plain velvet for nicer wear. The new felt bonnets have the crown cut out in a curve or point on the lower edge to make room for high dressed hair, or to form a pretty finish above that part of the hair which is combed upward from the nape of the neck. It is a very easy matter to trim such a bonnet by placing a very large cluster of stiff loops of velvet ribbon near the front, directly bn top,,making each loop stand out-in wing shape, just as small wings are now arranged. On the edge of the brim a binding of gal loon, or some velvet folds, or a puff, are all that is needed. A bird's head or some straight feathers may be thrust in among the velvet loops, or the whole cluster there may be of feathers grouped by the more practiced milliner’s hand before being sold. These montures simplify the trimming, and only need a little care in sewing them on, as they have a good background for holding tl o stitches. The strings may t-e the small velvet bow now so popular, or else they may be two yards of velvet ribbon from two to three inches' wide; this ribbon crosses the lower edge of tlie crown, or may be attached on each side by a fan ciful pin. The richest fabrics, some of which cost one hundred and forty dollars a yard and are so narrow that a yard vvill only- serve for two crowns, are. tho gold-em broidered camel’s-hair made as stiff as metal with threads of gold. Fat simpler than these are the lembrqjiderefl velvets with small figures All ovehthefn, as for instance, a lozenge shape wfought, in self-colored silk weth a zigzag outline of silver or gilt threads. This design i# handsome in black and silver velvo* placed smoothly on the .small crown, while the close capote brim is eovoreO with diagonal rows oi silver braid, edged with a thick cord covered with black velvet. On top of the bonnet is a rosette cluster of black lace threaded with silver and this holds some brilliant feathers of the bird-of-paradtsc which are cut only a few inches in length, and are far more graceful than the long slender plumes of that bird when used in their natural length. The strings are of striped- velvet and watered silk. Green is the prevailing color in im ported bonnets for the autumn and winter, and is seen in the usual dark myrtle and bottle greens, but is most distinguishable in the new and lighter cresson shades. There are hand some frise figured velvet without figures for the brim and the strings. Dark brown with green tinges giving olive hues combines handsomely wi'th the brighter greens, and is worn near the face when cresson is used for the crown. A dark myrtle velvet hat has its brim arched, not sharply pointed, and partly- covered inside near the face with a cluster of fine piping folds of brilliant eoquelicot red velvet. A novelty in velvet round hats is to have the top of the crown quite soft, as if to indent it at pleasure, and to cover the sides of the crown with gathered velvet, forming two puff's all around it. The brim is then covered plainly, and edged with galloon that has gold threads in it, or else gold beads, but, the prefer ence is for wrought gold rather than for beads. Velvet ribbon loops and a bunch of feathers directly- in front are almost the only trimmings seen on round hats. The high square of Slightly tapering crowns arc most, used, and the brim is narrow and stiff being quite even all around, or else getting still narrower in the back. The crown is high and large enough to take in the high coil of hair, if the hat is set slightly back on the head, and in this way the front hair is also shown. Felt round hats to match woolen suits have cording all over the crown in ver micelli patterns, or else, they are slightly- embroidered in silks of the same shade. Galloon, velvet bands, and wings thrust in velvet loops are the trimmings for felt hats.—Harper's Razor. Many experiments have been made to measure the height of waves in all con ditions of weather. One authority goes as high as sixty-four feet and another as low as five feet, giving it as his reason ,, , that the penetrating power of wind ean- theview,” it is only when the worlds j not reach below that depth. Of this best men have been hid from sight in j pb ;i OSO pher it may be presumed that he the greedy grave that their influence has been felt in all its power. Wears apt to hold even the eldest and best of our contemporaries in light esteem; but we reverence the ancients. Nay-, many- of earth’s noblest sons have been bitterly blamed; and held up to scorn and derision in their lifetime; an4 not till death stepped in and took them away did the world discover its mis take. A poor shoemaker rises while others sleep, and searches among the wayside leaves of his native lanes, his only inspiration being his thirst for knowledge, and the joy of adding a few plants to the known flora of his native land. His neighbors deride, him, are doubtful of his sanity, and think his life a sad warning to the peas ant lads around who may show signs of leaving the beaten path of the monot onous life their fathers trod. Unmind ful of scorn, in defiance of , faith, he goes forwai d in the thorny path he has chosen for himself, gaining knowledge that is quite new, making discoveries that were reserved for such as he, and at last becomes possessed of an herbari um famous for containing specimens to be found in no other. All the while he is unheard of, or heard of unfavorably; but when he grows old. and, tottering on the brink of the grave, bands over his precious scraps to the nearest uni versity, he becomes famous. A coterie of appreciative men in far-away Lon don collect something to. relieve his pressing necessities, and—the matter ends. But he dies, and then the world gains-—not the blood and toil-stained herbarium, but the stimulating example of. a hero’s life, which, though it re pelled the youth of his own time and district, becomes a burning and a shin ing light to lighten the path and fii-e the noble ambition of every youth who reads the story of the heroic struggles which bore him above the swamping waves of prejudice, of poverty, and oi scorn. — Chambers' Joumal. Pumpkins and Potatoes for Cattle. A readm■ aska “WSoTTs the value of potatoes, either cooked or raw, as com pared with corn, and does it pay to raise pumpkins for cattle?” The circumstances of each feeder will determine, to a great extent, the question as to whether or not it will pay to grow pumpkins, or other kinds of food for cattle. But inasmuch as the cost of raising pumpkins is generally confined to the planting of the seeds in the field with corn, and to the labor of gathering and cutting the crop for the stock, it is not likely that much loss will result from raising plenty of them and feeding freely’ to cattle. That they may- form an excellent addition to the diet of milch cows is too well known to require stating. That great benefit to fattening stock will follow feeding with pump kins, as from feeding roots, can not be doubted. And as it seems to be a settled fact that the farmers of the Middle and Western States will not “fuss” with raising roots for farm stock, as long as maize remains the great staple fteding crop, it may be well for them to grow pumpkins as a good substitute, costing little or nothing. But it will scarcely pay to do as thousands have done, pro duce a large crop of pumpkins and leave them, to freeze arid rot in the field, while the stock gnaws a half starved existence from the straw-stack and from storm-bleached cornstalks. In feeding pumpkins it is better to remove the seeds, as in considerable quantities they act as a diuretic. was a martyr to sea-sickness, and that he must have contented himself with making his calculations in his study-. On the cither hand, a height of sixty- four feet is almost as absurd, though if is more in correspondence than five feet can possibly be with our conception of the altitude of the majestic surges which roll under the impulse of storms of wind along the surface of the great oceans. It is true that the earthquake wave has been knowm to rise to sixty feet; yet surges of this kind are happily scarce, since when they occur they are not only in the habit of razing whole towns upon the coast line where they break, but of carrying some of the ves sels they may encounter at anchor in the. neighborhood to the distance of a day’s walk inland. Practical experi ence, however will look with suspicion upon most of the scientific theories touching the altitude and velocity of waves. Prof, Airy’s table couples speed -with 'dimensions, and, as a sam ple of his calculations, it may be shown that a wave one hundred thousand feet in breadth will travel at the rate of 538.80 feet per second in water that is ten thousand feet deep. This is possi ble, but it is difficult to accept such con clusions as exact. At all events, there is nothing more deceptive than the ; height of waves. The tallest seas in the I World run off Cape Horn, where, whether the wind blows east or west, they have a holiday ground within a belt of eight or ten degrees that coin- passes the globe without the interven tion of a break of land. Any man who has run, say, before a strong westerly gale round the Horn vvill know the mag nitude of the seas which follow his ship. Viewed from the stern when the vessel sinks in the trough, the oncoming sea that is about"to underrun the ship and lift her soaring to the living .heavens will seem to heave its rushing summit to the height of the mizzen-top; but when the summit is gained by the ob server, and the waves viewed from there, it will then be seen that those crests which from tlie deck looked a long way up, vvill now appear to be a long way down. It is a common shore going phrase that the seas run “moun tain high.” The idea implied is not very generally accepted by r sailors, though the term may be sometimes used by them for convenience. The truth is, if waves were as tall as they are popularly supposed to be, no ship could by any possibility live in them. They are lofty to the fancy, because at sea they are usually surveyed from low freeboards. To a spectator on a steamer, with a six-foot height of side, an Atlan tic or Pacific surge would necessarily appear as a mountain a.s compared to the aspect it would take from the deck of an old line-of-battle ship, with a thirty-foot “dip,” or from one of those lofty, glazed, and castellated structures which in former times took six months to jog soberly from the Thames to the Hooghly. —London Telegraph. — * —James Lyon, of "Panola, Ga., has thirty children,—Atlanta Constitution. A Great Kinccvery 1 Thutisdaily briuglu* joy to the homes of thousands by savin* many of their dear ones Iron an early grave. Truly is Dr. King’s new j Discovery lor Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Paver, Loss of Voice Tickling In the Throat.Pain in Side and 1 Chest, of any disaaso of the rhroat and Langs j ; Guaranteed, Trial bottle free at G. G. Hud- f on's Drugstore. Large sjxe $1.00, 1 Curtained Mantel. i ; plain vvhi out of fashion, a device for covering it, which will produce the popular effect, may be acceptable to many. The sup position is that the mantel shelf is sup plied with a lambrequin, and we desire to cover the bare whiteness of the man tel front. Of the lambrequin material make two curtains just reaching to the floor and meeting in the center directly over the fire front. The curtains are suspended by small rings on a slender brass rod placed under the mantel ghelf. They should be sparingly deco rated with embroidery or whal ever class of ornamentation is put upon the lam brequin. Another means of transforming a white mantel is by the use of paint. Where it is found necessary to do over the woodwork of a room, have it done in the fashionable cherry or mahogany color, painting the mantel in the same. Have the usual black fire front done to imitate copper and gold, and the ef fect is new, novel and pleasing.—Cin cinnati Times. Extended experiments .have been made with potatoes in feeding, but it "' v '’ ' l “ s ‘i "L to would be difficult to say how profitable j Lil^daugliter) ut 18 they would bo as food for cattle in '" J ~ ' different regions and under varying cir cumstances. Scientific analyses can do something to help decide the question; but it has been found, that the practical results do not agree with those, which, such analyses would Igad us to expect. The market value of potatoes and other foods, the cost of production, etc., must be considered in reaching a decision. It is . quite clear that with good corn selling at ten cents per bushel, and po tatoes worth twenty-five, cents, as has >een the case in the West, the latter mild not be a profitable feeding crop. Hit when potatoes sell slowly at ten ■ nts per bushel and corn at fifty cents, lie difference might be in favor of po- itoes.—Prairie Farmer. Oscar Coulter, a young man 11 vx. g In Dade county, about two miles from Sulphur Springs station, lias gotten himself into serious trouble which, from present indications,wbl doubtless land him behind the. pri son bars. Last summer a gentlen an named Lothro, from the North, moved into the locality where Con » ter was living. Lothro had a beiiuti- years cf age, and a warm lrie.ndship sprung up be tween young Coulter and Mis Lothro Th^ir * fri< ndship soon ripened into love, and in a short lime the two were engaged and the day was set for the marriage. At the appointed time, about the middle of novembtr. Coulter appeared, bringing with hi n a gentleman ‘shorn he introduc<d as a magistrate to perform the cere mony, saying the minister selected FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. —Pickles or vinegar will not keep*in *, ! ar that has ever had any kind of grease mit. —To scour knives easily, mix a small quantity of baking soda with your brick dust, and see if your knives do not; polish better, —It does not pay to put a strong horse beside a weak one. The teams should be well matched in strength, as neither, then, is so liable to be injured. —Albany Journal. —The most common mistake on small farms is overstocking. When mor« stock is kept than can be liberally fed, so as to keep regular thrifty growth, all the stock is kept at a loss.—Prairit Farmer. —A good way to arrange fruit in a dish for an ornamental piece, is to set a glass tumbler in the center of the dish, around and over it put a thick layer of moss; then not nearly so much fruit will be required, and it can be arranged veyy handsomely. -c-Hasty-eup pudding: Beat four spoonfuls of flour with a pint of milk and four eggs to a good batter, nutmeg and sugar to taste; butter teacups, fill them three parts full, and send them to the oven. Will bake in a quarter of an hour.—The Household. —For canker in the mouth take the inside bark of peach tree twigs of last year’s growth and make a pint of strong tea. then add a lump of burnt alum the size of a hickory nut, finely pulverized, Sweeten with honey and wash frequent ly.—San Francisco Chronicle. ■—Here is a piece of information for housekeepers from South Carolina. Every one knows how disagreeable the odor of cooking cabbage is. All your neighbors can tell when you are going to have cabbage for dinner. If you put a small piece of red pepper in with the cabbage there will be no smell. The pepper absorbs the odor of the cab bage. Don’t put in too large a piece of pepper, however, or the cabbage will be hot. —Many trees can be transplanted from the woods; this can be done in the fall or the spring. The little trees should be taken up carefully, with as much of the root as is possible, and planted in a well-prepared soil the same depth at which they stood before. The tree will respond to clean culture as readily as corn, or will show neglect bv a slow, stunted growth, if weeds and grass are left to grow about their roots, — Utica Herald. —For felons take the root of the plant known as dragon root, or Indian turnip, either green or dry; grate about one- half a teaspoonful into four tablespoon fuls of sweet milk; simmer gently a few minutes, then thicken with bread crumbs and apply as hot as possible, This can be. heated again two or three times, adding a little each time. If the felon is just starting this will drive ii back; if somewhat advanced it will draw it out quickly and gently. It ia well to put a little'tallow on the poul tice, especially after opening, to pre: vent, sticking. This same poultice is good for a carbuncle, or any other riS; ing, —Exchange, —To whiten flannel, made yellow by age, dissolve one and one-half pounds of white soap in fifty pounds of soft water, and also two-thij-ds of an ouncs of spirits of ammonia. Immerse the flannel, stir well around for a short time, and wash in pure water. When black or navy blue linens are washed, soap should not be used. Take instead two potatoes grated into tepid soft water (after having them washed and peeled), into which a teaspoonful of ammonia has been put, Wash tbs linen with this, and rinse them in cold blue water. They will need no starch, and should be dried and ironed on tbs wrong side.—Boston Budget. Subscribe for the Star ii you want the county news. A Staten Island man was frozen while drunk the other nigh 1 . After being put in a coffin for burial, he raised up and asked for a drink of liquor, and then fell back dead, a notable instance of “the ruling pas sion, strong in death.’ A New York City judge sentenc ed a man to two years in the peni tentiary for taking ten cents from a youth, with the promise of keeping it safe for him while the boy went on an errand. him. The marriage was d uly soleuan- a number of friends of the contracting parties, Mr. Coulter was questioned at the time as to the Magistrate who had per- j forme 1 the ceremony, but to ail in i quiries he explained that the Mag- : ist-rate was a friend from a neighbor | ing county. Rumors soon became | rife that Coulter had not p ocurtd j his license h gaily, hut he a. ways ! managed to evade inquiries. A tew ! days since the bride found the mar riage license, and to allay all sm- ! picion and fear of an illegal otsi- 1 riage, she took tlie license to the Ov- : dinary, whose name was signed to it 1 He at once pronounced the sig- 8HERIFF SALES. Will be sold before the court home door in Pouglsswille, Gr, within ts« legd hours of sale on ti e first Tuesday in Pebuu- rv i ext the following pronerty to-wir; ' L it. of land Nos. 721 in 18;h district and 2nd section Douglas county, containing ior tv acres, more or ]e* s as the property of c rdline Mathis und r a id bv virtue of a j uspoe court ti a in favor of W. P Ander son &s ms,as agents for Charles Elds ...gains': John E 1: S'oi nnd csrjfine Mai his. i ■ d the 1273rd district; fit. M > >ag w» U i b Q from lor the oea'casum bail disappointed i county. Property pointed out by pfa ' attorney. Levy made by D. W. jot, s . , . ,, ic and returned to me. lzed in the presence ot « Also at t he same time an d pAce lofcof It nd No 430 in the 18th district ai d 2nd sect. • \ of SJerokee now Douqlas county. Levlti • bv virtue of and to sa isfy tw > justice cour fifos issued from the 1273rd di- riot G M, lr. favor of M A Varner vs P M Mitchell Lev-, if d on and to be sold as the property • F Mitchell; Property pointed out ov d ant, lew made and returned by D w j . p 0; ' j. tv. BROAb 1 ■■ ? JfOT r r* We hav rre. Ordinary of Djsv.U-. erect two gates acre: residei i denes U l:l:> St! As a rule, man’s a fool; when it’s hot, he wants it cooi; when it’s cool he wants it hot; always wanting what is not; never liking what he’s got; I maintain, as a rule, man’s a fool. A man is called a confirmed when nothing that he says is firmed. liar con- i.ng from ti way of th- county. or\ ard Vij»s r. , , ^ Jo‘an VVr* natuie a forgery,and caused Uouiters arrest last Friday on the charge of j ppinim. &n forgery. It now transpires that the alleged Magistrate who married the couple was a fraud, and he will also be prosecuted. The young lady is now in a delicate condition and is almost heart broken. Yellow shade. hr.da of saic Slid pcti’ioi: be hci .. by Taira arc very stylish. is now the fashionable Twenty-dollar gold pieces j Subscribe for the St. i happy.