Newspaper Page Text
FOURTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT.
A Call for the Democratic Ex
ecutive Committee.
Grantville, Ga., May 27,1882—
A meeting of.^he democratic execu¬
tive committee «f the fourth Congres¬
sional district is hereto Called to as
semble at the Chattahoochee House,
in West Point, On Wednesday, the
21 st day Of June next, at 10 o’clock
a. m. A full meeting is desired.
The foliowing-named gentlemen com¬
pose the Committee :
W A Post, Coweta county.
George Latham, Campbell county,
J L Cobb, Carroll county. !
George McLester, Chattahoochee j
county.
J S James, Douglass county, in the
place of R A Massey, resigned.
Flynn Hargett, Harris county.
W H Daniel, Heard county.
W A Singleton, Marion county.
B F McLaughlin,Meriwether county
John King, Muscogee county.
R M Willis, Talbot county.
E D Pittman, Troup county.
W. A. Post, Chairman.
Local Briefs.
A splendid rain fell Wednesday
night.
Drs. Mitchell and Cope’and are
both very ill.
“Do it leak ?” is now the question
of the city’s pa’s.
The blackberry crop is fully insu¬
red by the last rains.
The railroad schedule now suits
everybody, or ought to.
Mrs. J. W. Gamble, Jr., who has
been quite ill, is convalescent.
Our county house boarder sings
“Oh, Lord, trouble in the land,” as if
he had a feeling experience.
The handsome new dress of the
Journal makes it the subject of
many compliments.
Hines Holt says the new passenger
train schedule is so fast that it takes
two to see the train under full speed.
Our New Yorkrietter will be found
brimful of interest, and we announce
with pleasure that we have arranged
far a regular weekly letter.
Curtis Beall has given us the first
ripe peach of the reason. It was of
the Alexander variety, good size and
a decidedly \ eachy flavor. He has
our thanks.
Cajit. J. W. Gamble, one of tire
most substantial farmers of Talbot
Valley, the garden spot of the state,
visited onr c'ty last week, accompa
r.ied by his daughter, Miss Jennie.
The Atlanta Evening Herald, as
bright and newsy a sheet as Atlanta,
e ver saw, has rea< lied us. Messrs
Howard Williams and S. W. Small
are its sponsors.- We wish . it much
success.
it was hardly necessary for the
superintendent of the Sunday School
which picnicked Saturday, to founder
himself on Sunday to prove that the
community was not bankrupted of
provisions.
A large grain crop always insures a
wet spell at harvest time. This illus¬
trates one of the beauties, of diversi¬
fied cropping, for while it is not so
good on the grain, it just hits cotton
and corn.
The young ladies of the “Recrea
tion society” will give an eritertain
meat Friday evening, beginning at
8£ o’clock, at the residence of Dr.
Franklin Barnes. An invitation is ex
tended to all of their friends to be
P resen '
'1 he editors table has rcen grace
this week with beans am squas.e ,
from the garden of Ju, ge \\ i uams^
beets and cabbage from that of Capt.
H. W. Pitts, and a npe peach from
the orchard of Curtis Beall. For all
of o which we trive g thanks and offer
"
Only one answer has been handed
in to the cistern problem. Ihe an
nual rainfall being 48 inches, how
long will it be before .he water falling
on two sides of a hip-roofed build ng
50 feet square, will fill a cistern four
teen feet square and twelve feet deep 1
a.low.ng one half for waste and leak
age?
A correspondent nforms us that
Mr. John Burton, of Whitaker’s dis¬
trict, while moving a pile of corn in
Oiis crib last week, killed over six hun
dred rats, that weighefl ninety
pounds. Tlris is a “rat” big story,
but we could find no difficulty in be¬
lieving the rat part, if willing to ac¬
knowledge the corn there in quantity
sufficient to hide them.
Onlv two newspapers have been
heard from, to date, who are disposed
to throw Mr. Stephens overboard
just because “them other fellers hoi
ered for him first and dared us to
nominate anv bodv else.”
The Atlanta Herald .-DDur une'e
Aleck totes his skillet because he is
after Bacon.
Sewing Machine Xeedles
We keep Sewing Machine needles
for ail tbe machines.
Btc’.CtHoy £: K^brocgh.
Hamilton Journal.
VOL. X .-NO. 22,
Primary Elections.
Elsewhere we publish a call for a
meeting of the democratic executive
committee of this congressional dis
p-ict, to determine upon the time and
manner of selecting a congressional
candidate. If the committee would
j nsure the party against the possible
success of an independent, they will
provide for the selection of a nomi
nee by a primary election, polling
the entire strength of the party and
thereby insuring its support for the
nominee. These primaries can be
held Under the directions of the exec
utive committees of the several coua
ties, the vote consolidated by them
for their counties, and the returns of
the entire district consolidated in any
manner that may be agreed upon.
The last district convention was a
farce, and while it nominated a good
man, it did so in a manner that tried
to the utmost the party fealty of many
good democrats. The one which
preceded it two years, failed to agree
upon a candidate too late to reman a*
the question back to the party, an c
the district has never recovered from
the effects of that family fuss. While
any system that may be devised
be open to some objections, this lias
certainly fewer objectionable features
than any that has been suggested.
Only a few j ears ago all
lions in this county were made, either!
meetings of the whole party, 1
by mass 1
or by conventions composed of dele
gates from the several militia dist
nets. Recently they have been made
by primary elections, with so much
satisfaction that any cand ; date who
dared'propose a return to
methods would be at once suspected
of treachery and denounced as a
party traitor.
In this connection we call atten
tion to the report of the speech of
Hon. Henry Persons, which we pub
lish else where.
Matrimonial Insurance.
An esteemed young friend writes
us that he has the general agency for
several matrimonial insurance compa
ivies and a: ks us to recommend an
active young man to take a sub agen
cy. IVe regret that we cannot do so.
The e matrimonial insurance associ
ations, that offer to provide a nuptu
al endowment of $1,000, $2,000 or
$5,000, upon the marriage of its
niembers, for a paltry consideration
of a few dollars, are a delusion arid a
snare. The young person who in
vests in bogus lottery tickets will re
ceive better returns. They origina
ted with the yankee, and having ex
hausted the gullibility of the mar
riageable youths of the north, they
have gradually worked the.r way into
the west and south. The number of
the concerns indicates great credulity
youths. :
upon.the part of southern
Knowing as we do that they will all
speedily fail, as the.r northern pre:le
cessors have already done, we advise
our unmarried friends to have noth
j n g to do with matrimonial endow
men t insurance assoc ations. They
canno t do what they propose.
------ 1 001 * mantio 1 ", mg. ’. ’
1 he report of the St=tte J rea .“ __ e
shows $857,842.00 >n the state tie -,
ury or the state depositories, after,
the payment of the semi-annual in
teres ° n u a ;
cln a,) ° 1 ’- ’ credit! 1
o
0 * e P u j
1S m ^ j n t ]ie' i
'
treasury or v • • . f
'
ranci epo ° rUi * there' "
”| ont _ oes
’
, , 1 v
s roun « a e n ‘ n j
that will increase this surplus.
That nearly a million of dollars '
should be in ihe treasury idle, shows
. . if criminal • • 1 1
financiering, - not , „„„ neg
poor f
lect. upon the , part _ of r some ot .- ,1 the
, officials. _ . , \\ hose - ,, the fault. r
state s is
whether of the legislative or execu
rive, we do net know. But that it is
a grievous wrong, none will 11 dispute.
it ' ' for
cn.s s a rem - '
j
.
Poor crazy Guiteau will hang on
the 30th for doing an act that no |
^ m an could ever have done. \V e
shall expect to hear men prate of the 1
potent arm of the law, that saved him
f rom mob violence, but assigned him
to a not less relentless foe. AU
England joined to show the would-be
assasin of the Queen a madman,
while all Americans seem equally
anx : ous to prove the sanity of the
man who removed the President. In
after years Americans will blush at
the unreasonable fanaticism that
hanged a madman.
INDEPENDENT DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER.
HAMILTON, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1882.
Speech of Hou. Hfeury Persons,
Hon. Henry Persons daiivere 1 a
speech at Columbus Saturday night,
the following report of which we get
from the Enquirer-Sun.
hlr. Persons began his speech by
M*iag that he was a countryman who
had given considerable thought to
politics, and had come to Columbus,
the metropolis of the fourth district,
to present his views to the people. He
did not come feeling that he knew
more than any oue else, but he wish
ed to give his ideas, and the people
could take them for what they were
worth. In order that he shoffid not
be misapprehended, he desire to say
that he was an organized democrat,
an d he came to talk as a democrat
with democrats-in a plain and can¬
did way. Josephus was not a better
Jew than the speaker a democrat,
nor was Ruth more faithful to Naomi
than was he to his party,
After having placed himself fairly
and squarely upon the platform of an
organized democrat, he proceeded to
say that he proposed to be fair and
he hoped the people would be fair
with him. There were errors in the
democratic party which had caused
him to suffer, and had also cuised
liis fellow citizens to suffer. These
errors should be corrected. He
would undertake to show: 1st, that
the democratic party ought to be or
ganized ; 2d, that it was not organ! -
zed ; 3d, that it was disorganized ;
4th, the remedy for the evil, and he
would not make simple assertions,
but prove the statements he would
make.
He then proceeded to show that the
party should be organized in order to
insure its success. No institution
couid accomplish anything without
organization. He made several veiy
apt illustrations in demonstrating this
fact, and said that the church, which
was a great deal better than poLta s*
could not exist without organization.
He brought up the history of those
distl .; cts in Georgia where independ j
e pLs;in had sprung up to show how
important a factor 'organization is to j
tIlc part y. All who heard his argu- J
ment must have been convinced of ;
ti)e neccss j t y f or a thorough organi-,
?a( ; on
Taking the position that tl e 'party
; s no j thoroughly organized, he sa d
jf p W as, every man that belong
- e j to R 'would vote-for its nom’nee
fie presented statistics show'ng con
clusively that they hail not done this
j n faci, he went on to say, it is d“
organized. In the fourth district the
nominee of the party liked more than
f lve thousand votes of receiving as
many as he ought to have received
'j’here was some cause for this and
] le wanted to see that cause removed,
jq e wantyd to see every man in the
democratic parly come up lo the
po i[ s an <l j Lnk down h : s vote for the
democratic nominee. He wanted to
i-, ave a f ree and fair discuss’on among |
democrats in the party and se: if
some conclusion could not be reach
ed which would accomplish this er.d.
He alluded to the fact that re, re
sentatives are elected to nominating
conventions on a basis of the popu
lation of their respective counties, re
b 7 ?nd aU political inch
showed . of ,
™ li0ns ' He tne fa acy
this by stating that one county with
I > zo ° democratic votes and over
2.000 republcan votes had six repre
sentatives in the state convention,
while another with 1.800 democratic
voters had only four delegates. Mr. 1
Garrard had offered a plan which at |
first glance looked plausible, and he j
thought 0 it was much better than the
P^' _ Tt that , basts
P resent was tne
o{ representation be on the demo
cratic vote of the last election, ’ and
one delegate 0 to each 300 votes and
for each traction . above He
one 150. J
thought this too large as «t wou'd cut
down representation >n the fourth
d:stnct to trirty 1 four. He wou.d
rather see it smaller and proposed |
that his each man in represent the ballot himself box at and j I
put vote a
pnmary election. This he thought
wouId do away with independentism, i
aud solidify the party as nothing t-ise
w ould. He thought that cone but
true democrats and those who pledged
themselves to stand by the nominee |
should be a No flowed a could vote then m such j
elections. man say
he would appeal to the party, as it
would be the party that spoke.
, , : r . .
p W < kept him from joining the un
godly coalition and Saved the state.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
By our Reg uter Correspondent.
WassmoroN, D. 0., M»y 27, 1882.
Between the election contest in
the lower house of Congress and the
attention attracted by the revolt
against the Cameron rule in Penn¬
sylvania. politics have been unusually
lively and interesting during the last
few days. Senator Mitchell is a
good deal of a Hon just now, and the
indications are that both Don Came¬
ron and President Arthur will event
ua u y regret having treated him so
umx)n ,p roul i s , 1H -i v , Governor Cur
tj n sa i<i hi conversation a few days
^ {he Int j epem j ent movement
is assuming proportions Cameron
never dreamed of. The moral influ¬
ence of such men as Mitchell and
Marshall is not to be lightly estima
ted. This is no local fight, but a
contest for the dominition of the
Stalwart faction, which controls the
machinery of the party in Pennsylva¬
nia as it just now happens to control
the National organization through
Federal patronage, and Cameron’s
course is likely to provide a surprise
for the Arthur administration as un¬
looked for as it will be disastrous to
Stalwartism. If the Democrats act
wisely and nominate a straight, dean
ticket, Stalwart power will take a
tumble from which it cau never re¬
cover, Arthur and Cameron will go
down together, and the 306 will put
away their little medals.
It is gratifying to know that the
Democrats in the House have found
their backbone and that a stand
has been made against the outrage
contemplated by the Republicans in
carrying out their programme for
unseating Southern members, In
the Mackey case especially, where
forgery and all sorts of skuldugery
has been resorted to in carrying on
the contest, there is ample justifica¬
tion for resorting to every means
know « t0 parliamentary law to defeat
'■ •- c w i. .ed part: an scheme. At this
writing ti e Democrats express a
determination to stand firm, rifen.
Rosecrans, of California, the chair
,nan tha Democratic Congression
al campaign committee, in speaking
of the contest, ;a:d: “If the Repub¬
licans intend to seat Mackey, with
all the forgerie; and wrongdoing,
they must do it over our stubborn
resistance.” Randall is master of all
the tact is that can be brought to
be iron the Democratic side, but
Spiaker Kieferis very hot-headed and
has an exaggerated idea of the power
and prerogatives of the chair, and the
struggle, if continued, may be mark
ed by some exciting and lively
scene;. Whether the Republicans
will regard it as good policy to make
the appropriation bills and meas¬
ures of necessity wait for any protracted
period in the attempt to seat a man
who has no legal Claim is somewhat
doubted, although such are the threats
which are current.
There has been talk in some quar
ters about the necessity of creating a
tribunal to take the settlement of
contested cases out of the hands
of Congress, Certain non -partisain
journals J have advocated such a plan
and . there . . much . sohd truth the
ts in
reasons assigned for it. “Congress
men simply vote the party ticket in
deciding a contest without regard to
right or wrong. This is done in so
cynical a manner that it seepis as if
members of Congress had lost all
feeling of the moral obliquity of it,
and as if the strongest appeals to
higher b motives of action were and
' vould ,, remam availing. It » very
evident that under such circumstan
ces Congress is not the proper author
. decide , .. contested election -
lty to cases,
and that . order
in to seenre justice
and to arrest the infect,on of f such , de¬ ,
moralizing practices, it will be neces¬
sary lo look for some judical tribunal
outside to which such cases can be
submitted with the assurance that
evidence will receive its due weight,
and that the man justly entitled to
the seat will have it, no matter
whether ms party is in a majority in
Congress or not. I his is all very
well, but the question is where are
we to find tne tribunal lifted above
and beyond the political influences
that control Congress. It has been
pretty clearly demonstrated that the
Federal j udiciary does not come up
that standard, and one of the
*r Democtai,
against Judge Davis Supreme Court
bill r. the fact that President Ar-
thur, an intense partisan, would like¬
ly, appoint all those new judges from
men of his own ilk. We had a les
son the people will not be stow to
forget in the tribunal created to set
tie the contested election between
Hayes and Tilden, when the judges
taken growns and all from the Su¬
preme bench, twisted the same point
both ways—one way in Florida and
another way in Oregon—to suit party
ends. Phono.
Georgia News.
New Switzerland, on the Air Line
Railroad, is settled by Swiss colonists.
Each family brought with them to
Georgia from $2,000 to $5,00.
The steam grain separator of Col.
Edward Martin was destroyed by fire
on Friday afternoon, at the plantation
of Mr. S. L. Norwood, near Perry.
The straw caught from sparks from
the engine while the hands were at
dinner. Mr. Norwood lost one-half
of his crop of wheat.
Covington correspondent Atlanta
Constitution; “On Friday night last
two yoturg men. John McCurdy
and a Mr. Parker, were together and
supposed to be drinking. They lived
at the Fork, near Covington. That
night they stayed in town, and, it is
said threw rocks at a negro woman’s
house near a wagon yard. In the
wagon yard some men were spending
the n’ght. One of them named Par¬
sons, was awakened in his wagon by
a negro woman. He pummelled her
well, when McCurdy and Parker
threatened him. He warned them
off and was answered by the roots.
He then fired, with the resit t of the
ball takiirg effect in the hip of Mc¬
Curdy. It was supposed that the
ball ranged downward in the leg.
He was carrried to the Cox House
>
anti died in forty eight hours, 'l ire
doctors have examined him, and pro¬
nounced the death resultant from
natural causes and not from the
wound. The body was re examined
in Jasper county, wlrcre it was car¬
ried, and the ball found in the bow
els. Parsons was released. The
Covington physicians are censured
for their failure to locate the boll,”
IViiitcvivillr Notes.
—Miss Blanche Truett is visiting
the family of Mr. Sim Reese of Bar
her county, Ala.
—Dick Hadley, a clever darkey
killed a coach whip 8^ feet in length,
last week and hung it up to make it
rain.
—Rev. H. Carmichael, pastor of
Baptist church, and who lives at
Hickory Flat Ala., will spend this
week with his friends of Whitesville
district. He will return home after"
preaching at Buggs chapel, colored
on Sunday 3ft], instant.
—A debating society was organiz¬
ed at a school house near Mr. Ship¬
pers on Saturday last. Tbe subject
for the next debate is, whether man
is tied harder to a woman than he is
to money. We think the subject
well balanced for they are both hard
knots. The club meets weekly and
we will give a better account in our
next.
—Sweet potatoes of last year’s crop
are rather scarce but a few of our
farmers have them yet, notably
Messrs Reuben Robinson, Rink Hop¬
kins, and J no. Thornton.
—A Whitesvillian has ventured
upon the task of eating two eggs a
day for a month just to show the
people what he can do with his stom¬
ach
-Mr. Callaway Davis has invested
in a new buggy and harness and the
young men deserve to have their
memories jogged in this respect lest
,b„ sleep over ,heir i*«
•—There seems to be a deal Of
dissatisfaction among the laboring
class, they aie continually breaking
their contracts, deserting their em
jiloyers and abandoning their already
pitched cro|«s after having become in
volved as much as ,«*s.ble. Some
demoralizing influence is executing
upon them just now.
—The school of our popular school¬
master, Mr. Hill,has decreased some¬
what on this account. The patrons
substituting their boys for the perfid
io.is hirelings.
The Dayton (O.) Democrat men
tions the telephone amnection of that
city with Springfield as follow.,: The
voice can be heard as distinctly over
twenty-five miles of wire between this
city Ar.d Springfield as in the case of
a subscriber but a square from the
Te’ephcr.i Exchange.
SI A YEAR.
News In General.
Dr. Mary Walker pronounces
Guiteau insane,
A gentleman in Sonoma county.
Cal, has this year sold $700 worth of
carp from a pond covering less than
an acre. He has had the fish but
two years.
An enterprising Monogolian in
New York without the fear, or per¬
haps the knowledge of the Chinese
bill before his eyes, has opened an
intelligence office for the purpose
of furnishing such as desire it with
the “Chinese cheap labor.”
It is one of the discoveries of mod¬
em archeology that in anc ; ent times
ships were drawn across the Isthmus
of Corinth ov er a “diodos" , or “polish¬
ed way,” an account of which is pub¬
lished in classical history, and some
remains of which have recently been
brought to light.
The Marlin (Texas) Index reports
a newly discovered food for horses in
Falls county, that State. In the
Brazos bottoms grows a weed, in
height fifteen or twenty feet, that is
said to be almost as nutritious as
com. It is called the “blood weed,’’
from the fact that when broken there
escapes a juice that is almost as red
as blood. Many farmers feed their
work stock but once a day with corn.
The other two meals arc made by
“staking” on blood weed. There are
many instances where crops are rais¬
ed by feeding the work stock exclu
sively on this weed.
Lowell (Mass.) Journal: And now
it has reached the point that the ne¬
gro cannot work in the Pennsylvania
mines because of his Senagainbian
Complexion and proclivities. This
seems to be a harder fate than to be
denied access to the comfortable lar¬
der of the Revere House, and what
the black mail must plainly do is to
remain in Southern latitudes, where
honors thick and fast are yet in store
for him. And if he has not yet learn
ed that his lot will be the pleasantest
where he is numerically the strong
est, some of his best “political” friends
should kindly fell him so, and pay his
homeward.
Mrs Burrows, of Kaufman, Texas,
was at her tea table last Tuesday
evening. A sharp cry from his wife
caused Mr. Burrows to look up. She
held her teacup in her hand, which
was half way up to her lijis. Mr.
Burrows asked what was the matter,
and she replied, “I’m shot through
the hea l.” As she spoke a second
electric current enveloped her head.
The cup was knocked from her hand,
•She tried to get up, but was knocked
insensible by a quickly following cur¬
rent. Mr. Burrows was not touched.
The poor woman was rational on the
following day, but could not open her
eyes. Last year two men and three
animals were killed within a few yards
of the house.
The twenty-eight executions at St.
Marc and Gonaives form a bloody
climax for the rebellion lately under¬
taken against President Salomon;
and at latest accounts fourteen more
victims have been condemned *to
death. The marksmanship of the
Hiytiean troops made some of the
shooting at St. Marc almost as bung
ling and brutal as an ordinary Ameri¬
can hanging. The severity toward
the insurgent may cause other out
breaks; for as Gen. Salomon Was
himself long an exile, biding his time
until he should he recalled and made
president, so other exiles will perhaps
improve any reaction of horror at :
r J ;
hlS f^ugblm to fomenting their own
B ro J e< ts 0 n,s ’ irrf ’‘ tl0n -
According to the Massachusetts
farmer, it is a fact that the fences of
Unitel Sloe, h.,e e,« ,„e,e
land, and they are to-day
the most valuable class of property in
L nite i States, except buildings,
railroads and real estate m*fcttie*. To ;
keep up the fences requires annually
an enormous consumption of timber, j
The ,25,000 farm, in Kentucky re
quire 1 0.50,000,000 pane s of fence
to enclose them. The manlier of
rails required is set down at 2,006,- i
000,000, costing $7 5,000,000. To
repair <uid keep m good order the
fences in this one State aione costs ;
annually $10,000,00o. Illinois, a
comparatively State, has $200.- '
new
000,000 mvested in fences, but it
costs her only $130,000 annually for
repairs, many of her fences being
constructed of wire. '1 he whole val- ,
ue of the fences rn the United States
and -w.b.~ i‘ do-o $
costs 100 , 000,000 annually
o keep them in re par.
Suffer
. no longer from Dyspep¬
sia, Indigestion, want of
Appetite ,lossor Strength
lack of Energy, Malaria,
Intermittent Fevers, Ac.
BROWN’S IRON BIT¬
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all these diseases.
Broun Boston, Kovtmbrr 26,
Chemical Co.
(.teutletnct*:— Yu r year* I h-aivo
been a f!«at»uflcrcr from Dyspepsia,
and could get uq relief ^having uted
everything which Wus m'oinmeml
<td> until, acting cm the advice of a
friend, who had Ken benefit leu by
iiHOlVN's li«»N lilTTKKS, 1 Inctl «
bottle, with tno»t auroiisinn remits,
Previous everything to taking P-hdWn’s Iron
\UTTaas, 1 ftttflercd 1 grefltly me Oistreascd
tnc, and fr 01 a a
burning which sensation unbearable in the Hitee .jomach,
wm tak¬
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ti are at an eat any
time without any disagreeable re¬
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jo Mnvcrick St., E, Boston*
BROWN'S IRON BIT¬
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removing oil dyspeptic
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He^tt in the Stomach’,
Heartburn, etc. Tho
only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the
tooth or give headache.
Sold by i'll Drujjfji^ta.
Brown Chemical Co,
13Hlt,inr»orr, Md.
S.c that all Iron Romm-, ;m* made by
Brown Chemical Co . Haifamore, and
have croMrd red lines find trade¬
mark on wrapj ei.
BEWAflE OF IMITATlOrtS.
WHENCE COMES TEE UN¬
BOUNDED POPULARITY OF
Allcock's Porous Plasters?
Because they have proved them¬
selves the Best External Remedy
ver invented. They will cure
asthma, colds, coughs, rhumatisme
neuralgia, and any local pains.
Applied to the small of the back
they are infallible in Back-Ache,
nervous Debility, and all Kidney
toubles; to the pit of the stomach
they are a sure cure for Dyspepsia
and Liver Complaint.
ALLCOCK ’ 8 POROUS
PLASTERS are painless, fra¬
grant, and quick to cure. Beware
of imitations that blister and burn.
Get ALLCOCK’S, the only Genuine
l’orous Plaster.
Notice to Debtors Creditors.
All ppruonf ind fot i! to tlio untiit* o l
JtfliTMon Dai'iel, Are tlfoett ei, Kte ©/ Hunh
county, Oonrtcia. tuneby r«-«|mv«d M
make Imnioiimte putymen* Tho»e hiv¬
ing claim** ttgtottflt the o*t*te will preie; it
them, duly an then tic itucl, withiu tint
time prcKCribcd l*y
11 A. Mybxxd Exb utor.
Georgia, llurriw County.
Hiram A. Uoodmau m »k<*« application
for letter* of iidiniulKtration tie boni* non
upon the estate of Aaron Goodman late of
nai‘* county (Icccaneil
All fierHon* are hereby notified to nfro’v
caUMo if any they have, by the lintt Mon¬
day In Juno, next, why letter* of admin -
ihiratiou nhould not be grunted said appli¬
cant.
Given under my hand aud oflHaJ *ig -
Mtv 1^82. #
nature. let,
J. K C Wilma mb Or# tin ry.
Georgia, Harris County.
Administrator’s Sale.
Ap;roe*t>ly to no order fiom trie .loiirt of
Ordinary of mid county, J wilt Hell bef -re
the court house door in tte town of Itftip
it ton on Ihe first Tucwdny In June n> xt,
the following do-'Tlbed properly Iwloottiu*
to tl e eetate of Klinria .tot, 11.ton late of
Hiid (ounty doceased to wit, 'Ihe lot tip
on which she ratified at the time of her
dt-ntli, contnintu^' ttvo ucrea mole or leno
0,1 *?>« ro»A leading fiom Hamilton to Vat
Icy I’lniuif.
1 H MliriiKi.L A‘liiiu*'r.
* A 4^ T-v « Blond A. A. Jt Trioma*. Aiding,Wv*h- 8t.
h(tote lho
stat** G«nrr» Land Offlje. • 'out. eted
hefuto th-; <lu wrtm^nt of the In e i*w on l
S'“th-^.rtvu "0^"!TJZ
ci*l att*ntion given tii towit Bit#* car#K.
iV^of ‘ 1!
-
P3TKGF S GINGER
TONIC.
0(nKe , ^ ¥ ,^ ake ^ raany *
t||, : i^t uteaiicines known nrc li«i« cnni
btne«l Into k modfidne of incli cartel pow¬
er* as to mike it the create.! ItiooJ rori
fier *nd tbe ia-st
Health aud Strength Restorer Usod
Cudh wn.p'RiDU 01 Wimien »n>i
of, h c H'ohkuIi, Lnnn, Ki-m.-v*.
an t i« cultre Jiff, ivnt trom Iht'HiH, Linger
Kk cnee* anil ntlwr LniKw, a tt never in
luTtcal*'. »VV ami h I iixe, t,tl^ K»v
iuz fiuyin* St -i***. lltwi-x k tN. V.
» we** in jonr uwo u.wn. $5
Onifit tree. Nj riaii. Every
W* thing new. Capilsl not r quir
will toiuish j u .vwjttiiDu.
Many »r* mak'Dg :orton< » I. Hi*« m k*
“ « nth a* w u. «ud boy* *t d ,iti. io.la
-
tnue too woik, writ* (or j t > u rs li*
Rallt-t A Co., RortUca, -u.'ut