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MRI BN TJ MU GAZETTE.
UI( lFl). W. feKUBB, -"Editor.
ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION, - - $2.50.
DARIEN, GA., OCTOBER 81, ISPS).
y 11 . ■js-. * i ll i-naau i .mil' ins lt Tzrmtmmm
EDITORIAL KRIS TITLES.
Texas talk is to ike effect that things are
ibxmwji
Wade Hampton fawofß Bayard and Bo
lton aid.
There te considerable emigration ft on
Txne to New Msxioo.
The Greenback element in the. South is
gradually booming out of existence.
The Greenback vote in Ohio last week
was leas than 10,000, against 88,000 last
year.
It is mliably reported that tho indepen
dent ticket will aarry Yazoo county in Mis
sisnippi.
Hon. Oharlea Foster declares positively
that he will not be a candidate for United
States Senator from Ohio.
General Piatt, National Greenback can
didate tor Governor, g0t159 votes in Ham
ilton eonnty—Cincinnati—in a total vote
of 56,485.
It is said that seven out of every ten im
migrants arriving in this country of the
male adults, fall into line with the demo
oratio party.
The Texas papers say that the death of
Hans, Holt, murderer, would be worth a
million dollars to North Texsa, and he isn’t
from Ohio either.
A Bayard boom is plainly in the air.
The Democrat# in Philadelphia are ar
ranging to give him a reoeption on his re
turn from Europe.
“onion party” is thus described,
One young lady takes an onion into the
room, bites a pi<co oat, then a young gen
tleman is admitted, and if, after kissing all
of them, ho fails to tell which bit tho on
ton, they are all compelled to kiss him.
The Rev. William McKay, after reading
Several notices from his pulpit in the
Methodist church at Genova Ind., said
there was another matter as to which he
desired to inform his oongTegation. His
wife had eloped with Mr. Hatton, a neigh
bor.
The Detroit Free Press has oomo to the
Otracludfon that the great need of reform
lie* in the serenading business, and it al
leges *lhat Senator Thnrman, during the
late oampaign la Ohio, was greeted on
one ©ooaaioa with “Seo that my grave’s
kept green."
There Is a great deal of scandal about
the Grand Opera at Paris, arising from the
£aat that the subaorfbers, numbering 600,
are permitted to go behind the scenes.
Many men avail themselves of this oppor
tunity to mix with the dancers and ohorus
singers in thoir green room.
Alfred Bentley of Hardinsville, Ky,, re
fused to pay tho rent of the farm on whioh
be lived, and deolared that he would sub
mit to no remonstrance about it. James
Bight, the landlord rode to thtf place to con
fer on the subjeot, and the tenant shot
him on sight with a ride, killing him.
A workman on a railroad at Florence,
Italy, Wan run aver and killed. His sweet
heart laid hersolf on the track to dio
same manner, but the train only injured
an arm, whioh ww: subsequently amputa
ted. Still determined on suioide, she tore
off the bandage and bled to death.
The Boston Globe says “the Grant bootn
fa ns Strong in Massachusetts as in Cali
fornia, and should the ‘groat living Amer
ican' come to the Boy State, the demon
stration of his Republican admirers would
at once boas numerous and imposing as
they have been on the Path tie coast."
Statistics show that the inhabitants of
Now Jersey who are in the State prison
have better health and longer life than
ftroso who are out of prison. Whether this
ia due to the strong constitution of the con
victs, or to their forced observation of the
laws of health Is not shown by the figures.
But, from either standpoint, the facts are
significant.
The Norfolk Virginian strongly favors
the nomination of Senator Bayard for the
Presidency by the Democrats. It says:
“His name is a tower of strength, around
which tho true patriots of the land will
gather as to a refuge agairud despotism
and oppression on the one hand and an
archy xd Communism on the other."
"One of the first fruits of the Ohio elec
tion," say* a Washington special, "will
probably be the ousting of Benator Kel
logg. of Louisiana.” To which the New
Orleans Democrat rejoins: "The Ohio
election will hare nothing to do with it.
Kellogg will be ousted because he was
never eleoted and has no right, moral or
legal, to the seat he oocupiea. He will go
simply because he never had any title to a
gat in the ijenate other than that pro
ved through unblushing rascality and
Open tUt braten fraud.
It is reported that such leading business
and Republicans of New York city as
Vm. R Dodge. H. B. Claflin and David
supporting Governor Robinson
ft* re-eleotion. The Germans are also
said to be strongly in favor of the Demo
ctMc ticket am account of the Democratic
ptficif of economy and low taxes which
tee been so au :cessfully carried out by the
gtjvernoi*
Han, O. B Singleton was prevented from
a speech at Holly Springs, Miss , a
tw days %go by the enforcement of an ou
ter Of the Board of Health of the town
•gainst attawing public gathering* for any
purpose. The Vicksburg Herald claim*
fhat this is "the fitst seuauple on record
H'tore a-quaftatine has been vabfisbd
.zy'm tk * inrtwt* v.'i.r?
Tuo Guards Return to Hartford,
j Under the above beat! the Atlanta Con
' stitutieu publishes a “Hartford letter to
the Springfield Republican,” from which
it appears that “the Gate City Guards of
Atlanta" had a good timo in Hartford by
their returning there when they set their
faces homeward, “as well as by their join
ing the Hartford boys in singing 'we’ll
bang Jeff Davis on a sour-apple treo.' ”
Our esteemed contemporary says that the
Atlanta boys aro “representative Southern
ers,” and knowing that he is usually right
iu what he says wo do not doubt its truth.
Now if tho boys generally, Hartford and
Atlanta, sung that song in a Pickwickian
sense, or under the influence of chain
paigne, as intimated in the letter, only to
mark an era of good feeling, whatever may
be said about the good taste of the selec
tion, it is all right, we suppose. But if
they were in earnest about it we submit
that they ought to have borrowed an idea
from Pinafore and added a chorus in
which their fathers and mothers and aunts
and uncles could have appeared along in
the respectable company of Mr. Davis.
Why if J. Davis is to bo hung on any kind
of a tree for what ho did in the war, what
should not be done with Evan P. Howell,
and for what we know, the ballance of the
Constitution staff for the>r evil deeds du
ring tho same epoch ? We aro certain
that Captain Howell, in slinging that old
battery of his around tho hills between
Dalton and Atlanta, killed a heap more
Yankees than ever the President of the
Confederates was directly responsible for.
And yet here he is now working up the
erea of good feeling and slinging hot-shot
into Yahoos and Yazoos of tho country at
large. We don’t blame him or the Con
stitution either. Wo wore just pointing
out the general “cussedness” of things;
and now console ourselves with the reflec
tion that the times change and with them
men, and that somebody said “he did not
care about being consistent ho only want
ed to be true.”
Wo are not at all -satisfied with Major
Orme’s reply to our inquiry of last week.
We think that the Major should come out
over his own signature and state whether
or not ho is now, or will bo, a candidate
for Congress on the Independent lino next
year. We have hoard it intimated several
times of late, that the Major had Congres
sional aspirations, and if thoso persons
who have been getting up this “boom” for
Major Orme, are misrepresenting him, why
we would like to know it. As we have
said before the “Independents ff tho first
could go farther and do worse,” and we
now reiterate what wc then said. We oan
not, at this time, promise Major Orme our
support, but there is no telling what may
happen between now and next fall. The
Gazstte nor its editor, at this time, has a
candidate for Congress next year. We
are pledged to no one and don’t intend
to be.
There is some talk of getting up a gen
uine “Lester boom" for Governor of Geor
gia next year, and it would not surprise
us to see Rufus E. Lester go into tho next
Democratic Convention with the whole of
Southern and a largo portion of middlo
Georgia at his back. Wo believe that the
next Democratic candidate will either be
Alfred 11. Colquitt or Rufus E. Lester.
Gen. A. 11. Lawton would make a good
showing bnt we learn that he is not aspir
ing much in that direction. No man can
be Governor of Georgia without ask
ing for the office.
We see that General James R. Chalmers
is a candidate for tho United States Senate
in Mississippi. Wo hope he will bo de
feated, for Chalmers has done more harm
in the House of Representatives than he
liaH done good. If he should bo elected to
the Senate, why he would have more scope
and that would never do. He would make
“blood and thunder" speeches and would
fight the war over two or three times more.
We must send conservative men to Con
gress in the future.
Next Tuesday five states —Maryland,
Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York and
Wisconsin—will elect state officers and
members of their state legislatures. On
the same day, Mieissippi and New Jersey
will elect members of their state legisla
tures, and Pennsylvania will elect a state
tresurer. The next election day, in Louis
iana, will be December 2d, when the new
constitutfon will be adopted or rejected.
Congressman Hooker, of Mississippi, in
a speech at Vicksburg, demanded recogni
tion of rights of citizens regardless of col
or; gold and silver equally capable of pay
ing government debts, and a liberal in
terpretation of the law in regrrd to federal
and states rights. Hanged if the Southern
Congresmen aint coming to their senses,
after all. Let the good work go on.
The New York election comes off on
Tuesday next, and wo sincerely hope that
Governor Bobinson will be re-elected over
both Kelley and Cornell, by a handsome
majority'. If he is elected ex-Governor
Samuel J. Tilden will be th* next Presi
dent of the United States. Mark the pre
diction.
Sarah Bernhardt has bought a piece of
land nenr Sante Addressee, France, upon
which she intends to erect a cottage to be
called “La Solitude.” There’ll be no more
children there ! Perhaps.
The Radicals are doing all their crowing
this year: the Democrats will do aIK their
crowing next year when they elect their
President. Turn about is fair play.
The official count lor the vote for Gov
ernor in the recent Ohio State election
givaa Foster a majority over Ewing of
of 17-129 in a total vofo of 000
Mark Twain, (Mr. S. L. Clemens,) in a
letter regretting bis inability to attend the
banquet to the Gate City Guards, of At
lanta, Ga., at Hartford, Colin., wrote:
“Meantime, you will kindly see that the
portion of your banquet which I should
ho glad to consume if I were present is
equitably distributed among the public
charities of our several States and Territo
ries. I would not that any partiality be
shown on tho part of political creed or
geographical position, but would beg that
all the crates be of the same heft. lam
glad to add my voice to yours in welcom
ing tho Georgians to Hartford. Personal
contact and communion of Northerners
and Southerners over the friendly board
will do raoro toward obliterating sectional
lines and restoring mutual respeot and es
teem than any other thing that can he de
vised. We cannot meet thus too often; for
whereas we meet as Northerners and South
erners, we grow in breadth and stature
meantime, and part as Americans. There
is not any name among the world’s nation
alities that can oversize that one.”
Tho superintendent of the census, Gen
eral Walker, will in a few days conclude
the work of laying gut the districts in the
different States to be under the charge of
the supervisors of the census. There are
only 150 supervisors in all allowed by law,
and New York will lead offwitk 11; Penn
sylvania 10, and Illinois and Ohio with 8
each. Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee and
Virginia will have 5 each. North Carolina
4, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi and
South Carolina 3 each; West Virginia 2,
and the District of Columbia and the ter
ritories 1 each. No city will have more
than one supervisor. There aro a vast
number of applicants for these positions,
but no appointments will be made until
after the meeting of Congress.
Springfield Republican: Mr. Bayard
was bom in a slave-holding State, if we
mistake not, he held slaves, he Vastravel
ling in the South in the Winter of 1860-61
and with sympathies strongly favoring
peaoe; but as matters stand with Bayard
these things would not now injure him,
even in Massachusetts. The South will
not find many Democratic politicians at
the North advising his nomination, but
neither the South nor the Democratic par
ty need nominate a candidate to suit these
politicians. Their votes are secure for any
candidates. The need of the party is a
man who will raise the standard of Demo
cratic candidates, who will have the confi
dence of the whole country, and whose
nomination will give assurance that in the
event of his election tho country will havo
a safe and pure administration, so far as its
oheif oan govern, and ono which will not
imperil the results of the war or listen to
Bourbon reactionists.
This week, says tho Franklin (Ky.) Pa
triot, several darkies who loft this section
some two years ago for Kansas returned.
They say that they are thOrougly satisfied
with the above State in every particular,
and never again we want to gazo on its
soil.' The are heartily sick of this great
negro emigrating State. They footed it
through from that State, and say that
death and destruction are making their
march through the entire State. They ad
vise all colored people who are getting
half rations to stay where they are, for
they give it as a fact that over one-half of
the colored people who have lately emi
grated to Kansas are dying, starving and
walking hack to their old homes.
The Nashville American, in speaking of
Senator Bayard’s candidacy for the Presi
dency, says: "He both inherits and has
learned, and has been surrounded by all
that can make a man learn, statesmanship
independence, purity and nobility of char
acter. Many men prefer other candidates,
and many, for reasons of various kinds
oppose Mr. Bayard, but it can fairly be
said of him that he has the profound re
spect which virtue wins of all men, and
the deep gratitude of the South and of the
friends of free government for his great
services.”
Congressman Garfield seems to have a
sure thing of the Ohio Senatorship. A
partial canvass of the members-elect to the
Legislature has been made with reference
to the ekoice for United States Senator to
succeed Mr. Thurman. Of sixty Republi
can Senators and Representatives inter
viewed thirty-four are for Garfield. This
is two-thirds of the entire number and
twelve less than a majority of the Repub
lican caucus. The others are devided be
tween Sherman, Taft, Dennison, Mat
thews, Eggleston and others.
Governor Robinson, of New York, in an
interview on Tuesday, said he had no
doubt as to the result of next week’s elec
tion. The entire ticket which had his
name at its head would be the successful
one. The bottom was fast falling out of
the Kelley movement, he added, and all
efforts to get up side issue would fail. The
real issue was whether to go on in an hon
est and economical government, or return
to the dishonest systems that prevail un
der Republican rule.
The registration of voters in New York
city was closed on Saturday night last,
with 168,043 names on the books, or 15,-
021 less that the registry of 1876. The
present registry indicates a vote in the
city of 15fi,000,and the country ticket that
can command 60,000 votes will probably
leave the two other tickets out in the cold.
. M P -'LL-JJ-J .ML
The Northern Radical sheets doesn’t
like the way Senator Benjamin H. Hill
talks. “Our Ben” strikes directly from
the shoulder and his blows hurt, and that
is why the Stalwart sheets don't like him.
The Radical sheets don't admire anything
t-bat Is BiMily.
Hon. Evan V. Howdl.
The gentleman whose name heads this
article is the managing editor of the At
lanta Constitution, and it is for that rea
son we desire to call the attention of our
readers to a few things which we happen
to know about this gentleman. He is one
of the most intelligent, high-toned, hon
orable men in Georgia. Though young
he has filled many offices of trust and hon
or in the State, and has filled them well
and honestly. His acts have needed no
investigating committee to look into them
and expose the fraud, but they have been
satisfatory to his constituency and the
public generally. He is fine of the rising
young men in Georgia, and we confident
ly expect to see him on the top round of
the ladder if he lives many more years.
We expect to see him cJmb there step by
Btep, by his straight forward, honest man
ly course. He is a man of unswerving in
tegrity, can neither bo bought with mon
ey nor influenced by public opinion when
he takes a position. He examines things
carefully for himself, goes to the bottom
of matters, and then makes up his honest
opinion from the facts. When he has
done this, neither the persuasion of friends
nor the threats of his enemies can change
him. We noticed his course carefully in
the last Senate as he was one of the lead
ing members of that body, and we found
it to be wise and conservative. He done
his duty, regardless of public opinion,
which is more than can be said of some of
that body. He believes it was right to
vote against impeaching Treasurer lien
froe, and he did it like an honest man that
he is. Ho would have been false to every
principle of honesty had he failed to have
voted nay, when he honestly believed that
to be the proper vote. Not only in this
particular case did we notice his course in
the Senate, but in several other important
matters. One among the number being
the interest hill, which is one of the dam
aging acts to the whole people, passed by
the last Legislature. While the dema
gogues who believed the act would be
popular with the masses who have to bor
row money, was working hard to get the
bill purchased in order to make political
capital for themselves in the future, he,
like a patriarch, having the good of his
people in view, did what he could to de
feat the hill, and was willing in the lan
guage of the deinagoguo, to trust ths
“dear people” to pass upon his acts. He
is strictly a man of principle and not of
motives. We have noticed since he has
been the managing editor of the Constitu
tion that the paper has taken a very bold
and determined stand in all the import
ant matters that have come before the
country and by this course it has become
a power in Georgia.—Griffin News.
Why tlie South Will be Solid lor Tilden.
The Nashville Banner says: “It may
be set down that the South will go for
Democracy “solid.” It requires 185 votes
to elect. Then given the Democrats the
Southern 135, it will still require fifty
votes to assure suocess. Give New York
to the Republicans,* and where can those
fifty be obtained? The Northern States
voting for Tilden in 1876 were New York,
Indiana, Connecticut, Delaware and New
Jersey. These states exclusive of New
York, give thirty-three votes, or a defi
ciency of seventeen votes. Where can
they be got? Aro there any Northern
States that can at all be relied on to give
these seventeen rotes, even taken it for
granted we will carry the same States we
carried at the last election ? Then, if we
do not get New York, we will have to con
vert seventeen votes some where else.
Will any one please tell us where they are
to come from ? But suppose we nomi
nate some man acceptable to New York,
then we have only fifteen votes to raise,
and Indiana can give them, or New Jersey
and Connecticut. The question is plain,
then, if we can carry New York we can
elect a Democrat, and if we do not we
cannot. With this understanding, then
that New York is absolutely essential to
Democratic success, the question again
recurs, have we a man in the whole range
of the Union that can carry New York
more certainly than Samuel J. Tilden ?
When this question is satisfactaroily an
swered, then we will be roady to place
that man’s name at our masthead.”
Missouri Republican: "A Macon (Ga.)
correspondent of tho New York Times says
notwithstanding the prejudices of Aleck
Stephens against the statesman of Gra
mercy park, notwithstanding the heavy
profanity of Bob Toombs in regard to
New York's ex-Govemor, notwithstand
ing the well-known friendship of Gov.
Colquitt for Senator Bayard, it requires no
prophet to foretell that the Georgia dele
getionjwill carry its strength for Tilden.”
The shredest politicians of the State, in
cluding Hill and Gordon, aro all known
to favor a personal as well as national re
buke of the fraud of 1876.
A New York letter, alluding to the pres
ence of the Gate City Guards of Atlanta in
that city, says: “The feeling everywhere,
outside of the narrow circle of the sour and
souring politicians, is that the more re
unions we have of this kind the better.
As an offset to the visit of these Georgia
troops to the North, a member of the Sev
enth Regiment informs your correspon
dent that the latter has already received
and accepted an invitation to go down to
Savannah, in the course of the winter,and
from up to Atlanta, at both of
which they are promised a reception, hot
only by the miltary but by the citizens
at laage.”
The Sunday Capital hoists the names of
Samuel J. Tilden, of New York, for Presi
dent, and Frank H. Hurd of Ohio, fbr
Vice-President, in 1880.
The New York World considers Mr, Tib
kens nomination in 1880 “fatal and fu
tile." _________
Chairman Arthur, of the Republican
State Committee, fignresout 20,000 majori
ty Cornell'.
Afihirs in Georgia.
Hawkinsville had a$ 1 10,000 fire on Sat*
urday last.
The Macon Fair was a grand success we
arc glad to state.
Oan’t someone take that Pinafore busi
ness out and shoot it.
Ed. Worshum commuted suicide in At
lanta on Saturday night
There were three hundred girls Rescued
from tho recent Centennial fire.
The editor of the Thomasville Times
does not want any Grant in his’n.
A colored man was killed by a white
man in Atlanta, a few days sinoa.
John H. Ruwe’s steam bakery,in Savan
nah, was destroyed by fire on Sunday last.
Proffessor B. Mallon, former superin
tendent of public schools in Atlanta, is
dead.
We heartily endorse what the Griffin
News says of Hon. Evan P. Howell, of
Atlanta.
Messrs. Henry H. Cabiness and Cary A.
King will hereafter run the Monroe Ad
vertiser.
The Atlanta Dispatch continues to “go
for" Colquitt. And oh ! how it hurts(?)th©
Governor.
Clinch county has made a capital rlfee
crop this year, for which good prices are
being paid.
The Macon Telegraph has been enlarg
ed to meet the demands of advertisers
during the Stato Fair.
The Atlanta Dispatch is mistaken when
it says that Tom Blodgett has been ap
pointed Collector of Customs at Darien.
Jordan Sheats, the negro murderer who
was to have been hung on Friday lft6t has
been reprieved by the Governor for three
weeks.
The Augusta Chronicle says "it is an
nounced that Major R. M. Orme, of Sa
vannah, will stand independently for
Congress next fall. ”
Tho Savannah Recorder endorses what
we skid about our friend, Jack Abrams be
ing the next Representative in the Leg
islature from Chatham county.
There is man in Clinch county who ho*
not taken a dose of medicine in fifty years,
and his name is Stalsvoy.- He is seventy
years old, and as hearty as a young buck.
The directors f the South Georgia Agri
cultural and Mechanical Association havo
decided to postpone their fair for twelve
months on account of the continued heavy
rains.
The Macon Tolegraph says: Wo are re
quested to state that during the unveiling
of the Confederate monument in this city
on the 29th, there will be a reunien of the
“rescuer of the Savannah lady."
‘The Covington Enterprise says that
Newton county has a negro man 92
years old that will make six bales of cot
ton, forty bushels of corn and forage
to feed his horse. The horso is about as
old as the darkey.
The Mystic Owls of Atlanta had their
procession Friday night, and the papers
of that city doolare that it was the biggest
thing of the kind that ever happened in
the South outside of New Orleans and
Memphis.
The Augusta Chroniele says: “Emory
Speer made a great speech the other day
in Franklin county. Speer is a man of
genius and eloquence, a plucky, indomi
table man, destined, if he lives and takes
care of himself, to rise in publio esteem
and honor.”
Every one armed and one legged Con
federate soldier in Georgia is entitled to
draw enough money from tho State Treas
ury to buy him the needful artificial limb.
The money, though appropriated for this
purpose, after being drawn, is the proper
ty of the soldier to do with it as he pleases.
Major Orme, of the Savannah Recorder,
says he is not a candidate for Congress on
the independent line, and in the next
paragraph he inserts a very large “if’ and
says: ,f We would say, however, that the
position of Congressman ‘is neither an of
fice to .be sought or refused;' and when
the people shall ask the 6orvice of any
favorite son, he should give it.”
The Atlanta correspondent of the Au
gusta Chronicle writes to that paper: “Mr,
Nelms very frankly says he has whipped
the fight, and it Seems that he has, for
there appears to be no probability of his
removal. It does not appear that his con
duct would justisy such a oourse, and
Governor Colquitt will not act merely on
the demand of a cfamor by certain parties
for his removal.” Right, Mr. Nelms in our
opinion, has done nothing to authorize
his removal.
The following is from the Atlanta Con
stitution: The Daiuen Gazette says that
J. J. Abrams, Esq., one of the most popu
lar lawyers in Savannah, will be one of
th* next representatives in the Georgia
Legislature, from old Chatham. This is a
good idea. Mr. Abrams is a youug man
of fine capacity and is a representative of
the young Georgia that is taking hold of
things. We shall have to get np an ex
cursion from Atlanta and go down and
vote for this young man.
An extensive fire broke out at
rilleon Saturday at one o’clock in Boze
man’s warehouse. Help was telegraphed
for from Macon and two steamer* and fire
men were sent on a special train. Boze
man's warehouse and the buildings of F.
C. Clegg & Cos., F. HAnd C. Bozeman, J.
F. Lewis & Cos., Lewis Leanasl & Cos., D.
Rhodes, J. W. Bowis, and fce Masonic
hall and the library were consumed.
Jenks Brothers lost $10,000; W. B. Steele
lost $5,000 on ootton—no insurance; 1,500
bales burned: lo*s sllo,ooo—insurance
fifiO.fQO:
Publications.
THE DARIEN
TIMBER fiAZETTE,
PUBLISHED BY
RICHARD W. GRUBB
-AT
DARIEN,
McINTOSH COUNTY, GEORGIA.
The Lire and Progressive Weekly
Newspaper of Southern Georgia.
TUB GAZETTE
IS ISSUED WEEKLY. FROM THE
PRINCIPAL
Timber and Lumber Mart
ON THE
ATLANTIC COAST,
AND CONTAINS ALL THS
Local Market Reports and Quotations
ON THAT IMPORTANT HrBJICT.
In addition to this trade report in the
leading article of commerce at this point,
the Latest News—Local and Foreign—
appears in its columns,
THE GAZETTE
Is acknowledged by many to be the best
LOCAL WEEKLY IK GEORGIA.
THE GAZETTE
Has attained a wider eircnlation than
any wndh-Y in this section of ths State
extending as it does not only throughout
the State of Georgia, but also to
NORTHERN AND EUROPEAN PORTS.
—AS AN
Advertising Medium
ITS MERITS AAS
Unquestionably Superior
TO THOSE or
ANY PATER IN THIS SECTION.
DR. BULLIE’S NOTES.
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