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Thomasville Times Saturday, March 22, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, March 29, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, April 05, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, April 12, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, April 19, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Wednesday, March 26, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Thursday, April 03, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, May 10, 1873,
Georgia

Thomasville Times Saturday, May 17, 1873,
Georgia

Other Editions from Saturday, February 02, 1878

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Daily Nevada State Journal Saturday, February 02, 1878 ,
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Decatur Daily Republican Saturday, February 02, 1878 ,
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Denton Journal Saturday, February 02, 1878 ,
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Fort Wayne Daily Sentinel Saturday, February 02, 1878 ,
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Thomasville Times
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Thomasville Times

   Thomasville Times (Newspaper) - February 2, 1878, Thomasville, Georgia                                j b every Saturday 1.00  Subscriptions must be paid invariably in No in of paper will be in all instances at lie expiration of tiie time faid uniese i h are previously rene The following rates have been upon between the publishers of Thk and Southern and will be adhered 1 4 m. m 6 m 12 12 00T500'$2000 i; 8 00'l2 00 1500 18 00j2000 25 00 18 00 20 00 22 00 25 30 00 4 12 00 10 00:20 00 2200:2500:3000! 35 00 5: 00 18 00:20 00 25 00 30 00 35 001 40 00 00 20 00 25 00 30 00 35 00'40 00: 45 00 8' 18 00 25 00 30 00 35 00 45 00 50 00 25 00 30 00,35 00 40 00,45 00 50 50 00 00 cjI 00,40 00 45 00 50 oc 55 00 100 00  i 1.00^2.00 4.00' 5.00 10.00 15.00 2.U' 5.(K) 0.00 8.00 12.00 20.00 3 3.00 5.00 6.00 10.00 00 15.00 20.00 25.00  47.  Extract from may be and the deep root Of life and make its firm abode In bare and mute The camel labours with the heaviest And the wolf dies in in vain should such example if Things of ignoble or of savage Endure and shrink c ol nobler clay May temper it to is but for a suffering doth or is Even by the in each event with hope to whence they like eb and gray and ere their perish with the reed on w hit h they seek wargood a- their souls were to sick or ever auon of grief subdued There comes a token like scorpion Scarce but w ith fresh 1; And slight withal may be the things w hich to the weight which it would for it may be a A tone of summer's A w the hich shall chain w we know can to its cloud tlie feel the thock nor can efface The blight and blackening it leaves out of things deem of up no exorcism can The the the the many yet how SQUARE IS ONE Notices in local column will be measured space counte l less than a square 50 per cent on regular Notices ot Professional cCc one of a pol tical of in advocacy or defence of the to cents jier of Candidates contracts will be made with ior a certain space in our advertising subject to a charge oi style and mutter at their be the best and c pai ties who advertise largely and BILLS ABE advertisements in after the first of the and Kvill collected at the pleasure of the unless arranged by RULES EOH LEGAL 's per 00  Fi Fa sales per lor letters of Dismission from lor Dismission from for leave to ales of Iter of Perishable per to and of per fur 00  00  00  00  00 5 00 5 00 5 00 4 00  Old l a or aw ol by are bv law to beheld the Tuesday in the ni between the hours o'clock ill tlie U three in the at tbe which t situated ices of sales in gazette forty days to the ol Property cl the 1 1' must be least pre vious to the day of Debtors taid to auTi Creditors must be forty of Leave to that to tlie Court of for leave to Hell be oiu for and Guardi inship Letters of ion must be published for Dismission frc in three from (i 40 of for Fore losure must monthly or four supplied with and Most Improved are now prepared to execute in AT can Ijo had iu the up the sanctum steps yesterday and turning tb waste basket upside down sat down upon it a sigh that might have been cut up into tornadoes and whirlwinds enough to go around half a dozen agricultural He had a weary look about him as though he had been trying to die and couldn't find a His coat was ragged and patched here and there with a prosperous and clannish community cockle His water proof were so arranged that if you stuck them in the river the water would run out faster than it would run in. AVe asked he he glanced savagely at a Kansas paper among our before he answered pretty thank Ye times come iu pretty and it was pretty hard to get I either just had to sell the six or cut down the expenses in some other so I stopped the I miss it powerful bad the first few then I kind o' got used to it. Borrowed it once a while here and but folks didn't appear to want to lend their and so I finally lost sight trouble begun ALL erery other description of Job Stock and Material is I New and Complete and every effort will be made to give to all who favor us I their The first thing I I was arrested and fined twenty dollars for violating the game You see the thing has been changed a and I didn't know nothing about but the judge said as how ignorance wasn't no excuse in these days when the State was so full of papers that you couldn't fire a stone out of the winder without an Then in a week I was arrested and fined dollars for fishery and when I begged and said I didn't know about the judge asked me where I was and remitted me two dollars of the fine for me to take the paper But I kinder thought I get in any more and I sorter liung on to the two In about three days I was took up again and fined four dollars and costs for on and I hope I may die if I was I bad to sell the gun to get out of the Then a fellow came along and bought every grain of corn I had iu the for six cents less than I found next day it was worth in the market then I lost two of the best cows you ever and they was took and and all the time I ail over the whole country for when I found 'em at the costs was the cows was The taxes come due I didn't know the farm was I had big costs to pay before I a word about and every week since I stopped the I've paid ont more money to out of trouble than would keep me in newspapers all my Put my name on the Quaker friends there are three things which I much wonder at The first that children should be so as to throw clubs and brickbats up into fruit trees to knock down they let it alone it would fall The second that men should be so fool ish go to war and kiU each if let alone they would die And third and last thing I wonder at that young men should be so unwise as to go after the vonng if fhey womd stay at home the yoang women womd come after tbe of the Danbury young men who has occasionally escorted a young lady home Sunday and went in for after performing both services last Sunday suddenly said to you talk in your she answered in you walk in your he next moved his chair an inch closer and with increasing interest you she hastily looking uneasily at this reply his eyes fairly His lips eagerly parted and he briskly you throw the combings from your hair in the wash she with a blank repeated the although with increased I she answered in his chair went forward while bis agitation grew so great that he could scarcely maintain hLs place upon it. as he further you clean out the comb you are course I at him with all her an instant he was on his knees before his eyes ablaze with flame and his hands my dear I love he passionately 'T give my heart up to Love me and I will be your Love me as j love and I will do everything on earth for will you take me to be 3'ourlover, your your your was a critical moment fur a voung woman of her she was equal to the as a woman generally and she him iu a railroad journeying to On tae seat was a man of commanding and ful a line I wish I knew his he's a he's not a The Lord writes a plain and there is too much benevolence in tlint mav be a banker a bit 01 it. A mail witli such a expression couldn't content himself with aim in life is than vou think he's an with such a face An editor saying hard things about everybody ridiculing long dresses and abusing his mother-in-law V An cutting and slashing his skinning public men and mercilessly slaughtering his best friend for the sake of a three line he's He's a Christian minister or a learned his life for the good of His face plainly indicates that he is all that is puro and guess vour word and his face foi Xi the next station an farmer took a seat beside the man with noble and asked him about his Amelia held her breath and listened to the keep a and Mv wife sells beer and I do mv own on Editorial of the greatest trials of the newspaper profession is that its members are compelled to see more of the shams of the world than any other every day after go all the weakness of the all the that want to be aU the revenges that want to be all the mistakes that want to be corrected all the duU speakers who want to be thought eloquent ail the meanness that wants to get its noticed gratis in the editorial in order to save the tax in the advertising ah the men who want to be set light who were never ali the philosophers with stories as long as and as gloomy as finger nails in mourning bereft of soap all the bores who come to stay five but talk five Through the editorial and rooms all the foUies and shams of the world are day after day and the temptation is to in neither nor It is no surprise to me that in this profession there are isome men I only wonder that believe Usef f|l had been out to the ard to bury 3its, and we were riding in the carriage with the While he sopped his eves with his he told us about one I never saw her She was a I've knowed that that's lying out there in the tomb to take an old pair of my and make a splendid suit of for both of them out of them old and a cap for and have some left over for a besides making out of the and a bustie for herself out of the other Give her any old garment and it as good as a gold she'd take a worn out and a good over coat out of I She had a turn for that kind oi f There's one of my shirts i hat I bought in 1847 still going about making itself useful as window curtains and of other Only last July our gridiron gave and she it and in two Lours it was rigged on the side of the house as a lightnin all except what she had into a poKer and an Why she Kept our family in buttons and whittles out of the she an she made princely coops from her old hoop and a pig pen out of her up corset She never wasted a solitary Let a cat die around our and the first thing you Knew have a and a set of and I'd begin to find mince pies on the dinner She'd stuff a feather bed with feathers that she'd got jne little bit of a and she'd even utilize the roaches in the Kitchen so's they'd run the ch a machine she invented the I've seen her potato parings so's you'd were and she had a way of gs that the eat em and grow I believe that woman ci uld build a if you'd her a single pine or a steamboat out of a wash and the very last thing she said to iue to her in the garden so's she'd be useful down below to shove up the never see her to Kill a a comes to and looking about for a and a business si eer at the idea of his locating Tell him our business is all schools are a our churches to there is no taxes are em real estate is going and in short the a dead ycu prevent a man from coming in to help make t o help pay taxes and support local you have a vac ant hold it for a Chicago or New and let it with you have to fcr send away to the city to but always tell the local to his ears rith the grand things you can do it his line and tell the f at his counter t les of this common gen whatever takes the orm of public If a school is talked oppose it Such things cost and of ( Durse the money put into them and anv with any proposed ' in of to the tomb cf a id was lind that are regularly brought to adorn the graves of the 1, Mrs. Lee and a student's guard of honor Keeps watch and ward at the Gy aerai Lee's office is still preserved ist as be left it on the day of his and that mementoes of great chieftain are cherished increasing as the years go The mausoleum which is to contain beautiful is soon to be and wLU be to an The Memcr .ai has been progress of but it is hopi I that the day is not distant a suitable mou shall also mi rk the of a true that liave come bacK lise the dove to the after the first tr iias been frightened c recall the angry and savage chari 3; of an THE is a how little in general people know about the It is the part of in which nature has done moro for tbe sake of pleasing for the sole and evident purpose of talking to him and teaching than in any other of her and it is just the part in which we least attend to There are not many of her other works iu which we to arc not of her other works in which some more material or essential purpose than the mere pleasing of man is not answered in every part of but purpose of the sky as far es we be if once in three days or a ugly rain cloud broken up over the and every thing well and so left again until next with perhaps c film of morning and evening for instead of there is not a moment of anv dav of our lives when nature does not produce scene after picture after glory after working still upon such exquisite and constant principles of the most perfect that it is certain it is all done for intended for our perpetual pleasure by the Great Being who made all Hitchcock was a whose character under Deacon Sol Rising was inquired of about said the you think Mr. is a dishonest man no. not bv anv do you think ho is a man with regard to said the a little more mav sav that I don't he's a mean I've sometimes thought that he was what you might call a man a prudent so to tlo you mean I mean that he had an for old widow back and he went up to her and levied ir on a of and them ducks one at round and round the much all and tinni a duck he'd set right and wring its and of on Friday sentence Robinson from stealing law or attempting to steal from He reported as using the following you have pleaded guilty to grand Yoa were caught iu the act of stealing law books from the office of Mr. Samuel J. it was despicably mean for you to steal from the gentleman from whom the presidency of the United has recently been I sentence you to two years and six in the State Louisville of the first duties of is to aid as as he can in supporting his county for that paper can do more to promote the intellectual and material interests of his than any or all other Show us a county which liberally supports a good and we show you a county whose are enterprising and A good newspaper only where the people of the are known abroad for their their in all pursuits of About the best to move from is one which does not support or supports but indifferently its About the best county to move into is one which doest and supports its among A short man reading a burglar picking at a jeweler an an omnibus driver for one a nice young man going to the a laborer at his a young woman with her Tom studying Dick's a learning a servant looking for the a miller deep in a hour with in a Dutchman interested in a domestic man with a bookseller to save his a woman in a lazy man's a determined a a a minstrel reading a a creditor pleased with a fellow laughing woman frequently resists the love she but cannot resist the love she men may not he good but they are very on a even the most herself to Ihj wag suggests that a suitable opening for many should have mercy on Iowa recently announced that a certain patron of his w as He he wrote it W. K. Clerk and T 11. B. of -A P I il B woi ih athl J i J n. A P M B H B E o n Ktl and L A Chm Chin A n and I. A CLm B. S J and t W Washington woman has j pealed to be appointed a despairing of catching a man in other a newspaper I speaking of a lady who has j had all her teeth closed | for little child thinks that bi- glad I hears lots of ' r iloM 01>*.l.. 1 H. r S. I. - S y. O- Adam could have a had a 110m., which to hang up he might better Norwich man which will broom handles in i be patented under ihe to I L. m m ir V i s A. r. N-h r. i ly 1,1;.: lirm recently sent a lot West for The back with being ' Three months after the I got into a new and with the marked S. WC a tip n al i ' I t I h i I 1( his the it as 1 know of. but I thought after that cock was II prudent don't a girl for lu At a singing school the other night a young man was 1 ragging about the strength of his and invited a girl iu company to hit him in the said she was left In 1 been washing that dav and was didn't feel very at his great urgent shu go at When his friends to him up he said he he would die easier lying had lost all recollection of -ing any but the consoled him ijy admitting that she didn't hit him as hard she might have done because she ' rather 1  - 7'hcre no day sacred but that the laugh of a will make it holier of said a Chicago tell the rn steak and a ' I'll broil you a u-r morning for m of Jai of it is taat w ' the Vou for goutiness do old 1 ' H J. 1 li r W U - r 1 i - - 1 - i I ' - i. i i I 1'  ' ' 1; 1 f tiiK I h l: liand of wierd iyre strung the j sweet uid the until silver i and kiss the moonlit the but sweetest strains are with the laugh that fills Willi Oh art between the beast Uid every doth some fretful of should oi -ov enough in 0'fiht;w lo y. lost o if nhd tho worst i 1 o ' AV 1 i I i i ' ' Xi a h 1 sa M. i i a M i. ' a ai S a ' a i Ina lo a aa a ' ' i ' ' ' - a r sa -a a- a ' i ' i. j ' f i a i rr M the generations passing over the earth j ji one wave of them after another on the shores of ' a But it is not the wild w af the sea that leave no iLan a little loam or a few on barren the leaves of the treey strewn by the autumnal but as they perish they leave behind them on the soil a p which other trees t iu the of other to With the winds ia a i; negro out up kke 1 told y 1 1 kke ter know de kit dem chickens all at you I de an - M ' v. a v jau their ' af o I A M a - 1 tl j r i a - J M i M H ' H t. a O r - J f A Philadelphia woman 1- -a horse railroad for damages She was throat n down i car bv a company luces that she not the or she Would not swears thai her coi wits vj that sbe not reach up to ti. editor throw - sponge with the that doesn't pay to nm a aa i town where the read pick their teeth ith hening tails and advertise on the hoase Tie -i common oar are the art of the a - r I .Ii put them a a hammered a and lA H. j. a a J there % my a or % ar take k/r Waat I ' -i a Iii e a Harry 11 am going to graduate next eaid a boarding house school girl in said in whUe do yon you the in the ii saucy fellow to a think nor trith a of pride at the most if yon hadn t it ha re worn oat long For the tin t in ber life a A k il V 10 an IM oLe r bot to tan have it ior one ' ht catting it laid to hin never him bat he takes me lor mum big Kow to hare a who H 4 tifa - i A lai KS i 9*m  } im Uny A im 4fier t  

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