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1 HE CARROLL WtW FY TIWES.
'■ W ■ * *
VOL. XIV.
A MEXICAN MOUNTAIN TOWN.j
Picturesgue Scenes Out of the Us*
ual Line Rf Travel.
City ot .Mexico Special.
For a wild mountain ride, with
commanding kaleidoscopic views
of*distant, lofty peaks and broad,
fertile valleys and near-by glimpses
of picturesque.back -country scenes,
the Mexican National railway af
fords a grand opportunity. There
is no clearer or prettier cify in
Mexico than Toluca, and you will
wander far to find a better place to
gfudy simple Mexican folk than in
the quaint old mountain hamlet of
El Oro. ;
1 t 6 o’clock of a clear, crisp,
bi ight J uno morning I improvised
a scat on the rear platform of an
outgoing train fora ten day’s trip
into the country. We sped for a
few minutes across the level val
ley, running a neck and neck race
with a shadowy train which the
sun, but lately risen, projected on
the smooth, green carpet at our
side, then plunged into the foot
hills, up the canon of a mountain
stream, and began a twenty-five
mile climb to summit of the
mountain hairier which here, as
everywhere, hen sin the valley of
Mexico.
In whatever direction one leaves
the capitol he cannot miss a fine
scenic picture, for in any case he
must ascend high up above the
plain to surmount the valley’s rim.
But looking from the west and
northwest one gets the best view,
and the one most frequently chosen
by artists who have painted the
valley. Chapultepec, always an
object of interest to strangers, is
then brought into the foregrounds
with the Pasco and nark like su
burbs, while the lou’er and less at
tractive portion of the city, with
Lake Texcoco beyond, is releg ited
to the background, the distance
lending an enchantment to the lat
ter it does not possess on close ac
quaintance, and the whole has
then, setting back of all, the
lofty, mountain ranges, termina
ting in the snow capped peaks of
‘ 'Popocatepetl and Iztabcihuatl.
On the divide we are 10,800 feet
above the sea. Now look back on
the vast valley. Every detail is
lost. There is only a gr.cak
of green, thinly veiled here and
there by streaks of mist, shading
into purple and blue. How wide
the outlook is! It seems endless,
because the farther limit is undis
tingui.sbable from the sky, and a
long way it is, seventy-five miles
as the crow flies, to the famous
volcanoes, only visible now as their
tsnowy tops catch the sun, and with
•difficulty distinguishable from the
cloud crests bhind.
But this is not all. From our
xofty vantage ground we command
two valleys. This to the westward
is the valley of the Lerma, one of
the longest of the Mexi.au rivers,
dominated by its own lofty peak,
the extinct volcano of Nevada de
Toluci A.s we wind in and out
among the pine covered hills, catch
ing glimpses first of one and then
of the other valley, one needs to
keep his bearings well to know
which for the moment lies beneath
him.
The descent into the vallay of
the Jk’rma is even more delightful
than the ascent from Mexico. The
prospect is ißjt, perhaps, so compre
hensive, but one drops down more
abruptly and sec-4 things
more distinctly. zlt of
our long spins around mule-shoe
curves cut in the face of the moun
•t:iin, in the course of which we al
most completely encircled two 010
towns so close that we could fairly
:sec down into the court yards of
the houses, the eye took in an
immense stretch of valley, cultiva
ted to its full capacity, marked off
with rows of maguey or century
plants, and alternating m plants of
■a d soil, freshly tilled, and in
and yellow blocks of grain. Thu
whole city of which we now get,
with each opening of the hills, a
■distincter rkmq is L’oluca. lhe
ride over the mountains in the in
tervals where the broader prospects,
as described, are cut off, is wild and
picturesque in the extreme. You
spin aro<iiud curves up and down
grades which would be utterly im
practicable with any bpt a narrow
gauge, with any engine but ong ah
•driving wheels and the best air
brake equipment. You plunge
into a tunnel only to eboot out
over a spidery iron bridge ifa U'ay
■so like a leap into the air a*
startle yon.
In the valley of the L-raia.
are great haciendav, with arch get
aways and red ti’ed roof*, d pro
jecting riffe towers at the cormn<
—veritable fortresses. Yon may
! sure the wealthy don who owns
T it, lev- ;i vassabige like a feudal
lord and vast flocks, ami that when
he visits tlie market at Toluca, he
wears a sombrero-ewe red with gold
•wr silver lace, and a full pint ul
ont er >ea*u
" Atting breeches, ai d
y i'. v Cased revolver at
».-lliß heavily mid rich-
Kmcd horse with bear-skin
flanks and silver- mounted
trapp¥ff£-f ls not | ess gorgeous than
Himself.
My destination on this trip was
a lirtle old town in the
’•aciK fiom the railroad, a hundred
males from Mexico. There has
been mines in and about E! Oro
since before the conquest, so that
it is a settled comiSmi.ty, with ins
herited notions of Ss own. Obe
secs panier-laden ' donkeys in
lhe streets, women coming and g> :
ing with jars on their heads to the '
old fountain in the plaza, and the
pigs enjoy the freedom of the town.
1 here is neither hotel nor inn.—
Why should there be? The na
tives never go anywhere, why
should anybody come to them?
Os flic 3,000 estimated population
not above a sucn e, I dare say, have
ever been fifty miles from home.—
1 iie plaza is shaded by tall gum
or eucalyptus trees, such as you
see everywhere in Mexico. For
years the people have labored in
the shafts and tunnels, and for
years, on Sundays, the Indians on
the hills and haciendas about have
brought their supplies and held
market in the plaza.
One of these markets is a quaint
spectacle. Nothing in Mexico has
Seemed to be more picturesque and
more suggestive of the conditions
of the Mexican social problem.—
I he Indians begin to pour in from
all directicns with flic first light;
some indeed, to secure favorable
locations, have camped on the spots
where you find them. When 1 ar
rived, at 9 o’clock, the day 1 at
tended, three of the four hundred
persons were already assembled,
seated about in rows on the hard '
flagging,with their wares spread out
before them. It was a pleasing
picture, with its setting low, tile
roofed whitewashed adobes, the
general the pleni
tude of color, gay, rebosas and
zerapes, Swarthy skins, glossy black
hair and bright eyes. The Indian,
with his.?opanish admixture, is not
ill loi/king, and Juan, in his white
cottons, sandals and' broad-brimmed
straw’ b.at and zerape carried jaun
tily on hi* arm { and Chucha in her
single short gown girdled at the
waist, with bust and shoulders dif
ferently covered, both possess points
of beauty for the artist whose eye
is not exacting, A low h.RRI of
conversation fills the air, From
half a dozen fires smoke and fumes
ascend from caldrons in which lard
is being fried out, and a cloud of
chaff surrounds the peddlers of
maize, busy winnowing their grain
by tossing it into the air in the in
tervals of tra.de. I’mbrcllas are
extemporized of mats, gnd the’deal
ers of infusible sweets protect their
wa-ies from the sun by utilizing
their wraps for awnings.
Fruits there arc of and
greens in endless variety. Hud
pottery oddly ornamented in black
designs ; huge water jugsand pitch
ers that would make decorators of
drain tile sick with envy, thoir
earthenware tortillas griddles, two
feet in diameter, that resound to
blows like gongs; plales, three for
” ventavo ; pitchers two and grid
dle* onp;, respectively, for a tlaco—
one might fill h,is pantry shelves
for a shilling. For pnofLp; shil
ling he could buy a hava s'one me
-1 and thus be the possessor of
his o\Mt and still another
shilling would command mats to
sit and sleep on. Here are toys -
and baskets, the latter really fine;
ebickens in coops, and turkeys j
tethered by strings tied to a log I
and held in the owners’ hands.—-
There arc meats, and hi les and
leather, and no end of articles of
! which I did not know the names
and could not conjecture the use.
I Onfi marvels at the possible demand
for these olj koyfj old pictures, odd
nondescript articles of al|. sprt§ sur
vivals from old Spain, heirlooms,
may be, about to be sacrificed to
the o vnefts’ needs.
Little of the trade is of propor
tions demanding aught biff coppers
and to change a ton octavo piece—
the national dime—would break al
most any denier, formore things
will be carried away than sold, on- .
to appear again on successive
I market‘day*. strong fellow,
i I observed, sat all day behfnd six
; unv banana-, which at night re-j
mained un-old. and five small
pieces Ime constituted anothers’
I contribution to the;j}a*ket s opp >r
tunitics for traffic. Tweu r y-n*c
dollars, like enough, would have
' L-»ip> ht out every dealer at his own '
price m nb.C whole market; hut it;
' would not be so I'.'conjecture
how many mile- of weary I'a' k j
j riage over hot dusty roads, coming
' and going, ami how many hours of
p iiient industry were represented'
bv these humble wares.
«/
cARROLLT( )X, GEO RGIA
As the day wears on and barter
the market assumes its
lo.iday aspect, and every gum tree
on the plaza shades one or - more
family picnics. After all, it i s
more holiday than market day
boon good and lad fortune in the
morning trade arealike forgotten
m the intoxication of the yeasty
pulque. Here and there a rude
giiimr—I bought one for a shilling
—is more or less musically picked
and social. chat succeeds baiter.
| Imt as the day wears on. one by
| one the peons who, from choice or
I jrok of coppers, have remained so
uq arrange the:r goods into cor.-
I place Uieitrapgijßver the fore
, and turn their lootsteps home
warp until at last only here and
therj a q|an or woman .sleeping oft
the (|fcct: of the pulque on the
hard pa violent remain to tell that
martfet day is over. With to-reor
row bjsun Juan will begin work
agairlpn his hacieqda art
2 real a day, and if his head-aches
from indulgence, it will
not be? In the visitor’s heart to
blamcpim.
TifeStephens Highschool.
Crawfordville, Ga., August
11.—[Special.]—As is well known
an association was organized here
soon after the death of Mr, Steph
ens, under the name of the
“Stehpeiis monumental associa
tion,” having for its object the
purchase of Liberty hall—Mr.
Stephens’ old home—the removal
of his remains, the erection of a
monument to his memory and the
establishment of a high school
bearing his name. The property
was purchased, his body was re
moved and interred in Liberty hall
yard, and the association, with the
i aid and co operation of the trustees
| of the Crawfordville academy, elec
' ted a few weeks ago, the disting
uished educator, Piofessor V. T.
Sanford to the principalship of the
“Stephens High school,”to be open
ed here next year. Professor
Sanford, after spending several
days here bust week in surveying
the field, * accepted, and will open
a school herfe the ensuing year, to
be known aa the Stephens High
school. Ouij peopleare^thoroughly 4
enlisted in this noble cause,and the
prospects of .it first-class high
school, as contemplated by the
charter of the Stephens Monumen
tal association, are exceedingly fa
voiable. There is no town in
middle Geo’-gia where facilities for
g large ai)d flourshing high school
aro better than thosp of Cpawfopd
villo,
Ths Telephone.
“Is that my precious pet?” sim
pered a young man to his girl, on
Peachtree.
“Yes, you old sweetness,” was
the reply.
“What would you do if I should i
comp out tp take tea with you to
nigl't?”
Lip rose, fairly overcoißC wjth
rear, whpn tlipopgh tfie telephone
he heard:
“I’ll send yoii back to town for
some grub, you old fool, you.”
And not far away, Fitzgoober
was equally paralyzed with aston
ishment on hearing his wife reply
in answer to his message that he
was going to bring Plunimett home
to supper with hioj.
“I’ll fill your mouth too full of
kisses for you to cat.”
Verily the telephone girl has a
stack of fun.—Capitcl.
Sherrell’s Ne ve ard Bone Linimqnt.
Is she best Iqcal application uqw
in use. It cures PRts, bruises, old
I sores, rheumatism, swellings, sore
throat, sweeny in horses swollen or
stiff joints. Prepared by
N. B. Drewry,
Griffin, Ga.
For sale by VV. W. Fitts.
Griffin, Ga. June 1. 1884.
Dr. N. B. I)rewry—Dear Sir:—l
have kept constantly on hand for
jpy sfopk and family, the
Nerve and Bone Linimpnt’ 2 for ten
years, and believe it to be the best
local application I ever used.
Respt. J. H. Keith.
Griffin, Ga., June 30, 1884.
Dr. N. Drewryi—-Dear fair—=-In
my Livery business 1 have used
successfully the “Sherrell Nerve
and Bone Liniment" and find it to
be the best local remedy I can
find. Yours, etc., W. B. Hudson.
Enipn District. Spaulding Co,,
Ga., dmie 30, 188 q.
Dr. N. B. Drewry—Dear’Sii"—
After trying all other remedies
with my stock or family when they
are ijqqred. pud fail. I always find
relief from the use of yqur ‘iSher
: roll Nerve and Bone Liniment. ’’
Very Bespt. David Aikin.
Prepared by N. B. Drewry.
i Giiffiin, Ga
Congressman Morrison ha 9» >e
covered from his recent severe ill
ness.
■ ■-I . *
A m e rij Locomotive.
Thc in America
was | )V q ie |t
Canal C<>m
pmiv. track' agd
MBWBonesdale. the
>K '’ w^^M® r!icn a lann>l
an<! brokcn onl y!
for lhe half a dozen
humble
The locomdtfaiOhich was called
the “Stourbridge W)n,” was built
in England in t hew tie city whose
name it bore, undewho supervision
j of Horatio Allen, «n
( and a ciVil cngineerl|who'had been
| engaged upon the moun
tain railroad. It intended for
use upon the “levels” of
the road between tliVplanes, whose •.
I stationary Mmgincsl supplied the ,
power necosary up or low
er coal-ear trains. V®lien icturned 1
to America in the
i became a voritablewion of New -
j 1 ork in the sticqeodßg autumn, be- 3
ing given a, there (the ,
wheels
the strange jnßCnanim was sup- i
ported upon“royiis)ircatly to the '
admiration of tljp£g|ropolitans of j
the time. W,
Taken to Honesdale by canal in (
the simmer mHB29, it was duly 1
placed upon tbpAracland duly giv- .
en its Mig. 8, before
a great croWdfof pcolle who had j
come from the ' surrwmding conn- j
try, some of thpin miles, to ,
witness the novcLspAtaclc. It was }
thought to Wivy for the t
trestle work\'dtxHri(S the railroad j
largely consisted, many pre
dicted a disaster, but*| Allen who
was to act engineer,
was » willmg |o assume
the risk" and bravelyXstarted out
alone. The trestle (Waked rather
ominously, bpt as it wps seen that
it did not crash, t.he wople lifted
up their voltes in che%s, i.nd thc
clumsy lit^ipianCelO locomotives
sped along UieWap'Xil trap.k with
considerable yswiftrlMs and 4 as
smoothly as «>uld bc-ikpected/ It
was run two or wiree -ffiiles,
but the experiment
the practicability of tl® use of lo
comotives, and con zinßd the' most
far seeing at last that Aey tverp to
form tile transportatiw of the ‘*fn
lure. TB? StourhriJßb Lion in
proporgwi J;o poweiMßs Drg<* and
cumbrons coiiip:i fi■’< 1 i rh l i!h
the present day, and not of striking
ly handsomely appearance. It had
no cab, but was provided with a
small tender. Thc wheels of the
flic letter, and of the locomotive
itself, were four in number, The
spokes and fellows wore wood; the
tires and hubs of iron. The cyl
inders were upright, and the power
was conveyed to the the wheels by
a walking-I.earn on each side. Thc
smokestack was straight, and there
was nothing about its construction,
or that of thc entire machine,
which was ornamental. This loco
motive was little used upon the
railroad, horse and gravity power
bping employed, aqd the laftcr ft
nully taking the place of thc former
entirely. Borne portions of the
locomotive aro stjll preserved at
Carbondale. Horatio Allen enjoys
the distinction of having b Ce n the
engineer of the first locomotive in
America, is still living, a hale old
man of 84 years or thereabouts,
and has a comfortable home in
South Orange, N. J. When he
made the trial trip of lhe “Lion”
at Honesdale there were but 23
miles of railroad constructed in
the United States, and now there
are about miles in opera
tion. He left the sceqe of his now
distinguished labors and assisted at
West Point, New York, in the
planning of the first lo
comotive built in the
United Slates and the second one
placed upon a track. This- was
“The Best Friend of Charleston,”
placed upon the South Carolina
Bialroad connecting Charleston
and Augusta, Ga., on Nov. 2. 18-
30. [
fho.mus county and citizens of
Decatur county, living on the eas
tern side of Tired creek, next to
Thomas, are seeking to have that
part of the county cut off aud
made a part of Thomas ooimty.
Yes, Too Much. so.
The Macon Telegraph, of last
Sunday, sounds a note of warning
which may well be heeded, not
on’y in Macon society circles but 1
in many cgmmuiiities elsewhere.—
That society in thc South, and
especially in cities and summer
resorts,has taken on much of license
and abandon, characteristic, in a
measure, of densely populated [
towqs of the is mattei of .
painful obseryalioh to any one fa- i
miliar with the easy but restrained '
me’.lpds which marked a “foyrnyr ■
genei alien.”
The ariirno under c.oiisuler»tiGn
refers, and justly, too, to familiari
ties allowed by holies, which re- ’
moves firn barriers that fend off any
AY MORNING, AUGUST 28, 1885.
••
and all approaches of a
hie and nneecmly character.—
| Modesty has an irresistible charm,
i It is ia , conipanied by the easy grace
and courteous demeanor which
] invests the fair one with some-
I thing which makes her just a “lit
tle lower than the angels.”
Are not parents responsible for
much of thc evil which the
Telegraph s editorial seeks to
remove? A young lady should
make her entry mto society sur
rounded, so to speak, by a cordon
of maternal care.
The Family.
It is in the family life that a
'man’s piety gets tested. Lot the
husband be cross and surly, given a
snap here and a cuff there, and see
bow out of sorts' everything gets!
The wife grows cold and unamiable,
top. Both are tuned on one key.
They K’ibrate in unison, giving tone
fu< touej'Sasing in harmony or dis
cord together. The children grow
up saucy and savage; as young
pefrs. The father becomes callous,
fjctivislf, hard, a kind of t two-legged
brite with clothes on. The wife
bristles in • self-defence. They
dey>elo|p an unnatural growth and
the] is haunted by ugliness
ai)4 domestic brawls.
i 'ls that what God meant the fam
ily* ito —he who made it a place
for to build her nest in, and
whore kindness and sweet courtesy
might come to their finest manifes
tations? The divine idea can be
realized. There is sunshine enouirh
iii the to warm all. Why
will not men come out of their
caves to enjoy it? Sometimes a
man makes it a point to treat every
man’s wife well but his own—have
smiles for all but his kindred.—
Strange, pitiable picture of human
weakness, when those we love best
arc treated worse; when courtesy
is shown to all but our fiicnds! if
one must «be rude *o any. let it be
to some one lie dots not love—not
to wife, sister, brother, or parent.
Let one of the Idved ones be ta
ken away, and memory recalls a
thousand sayings to regret. Death
quickens recollection..painfully
The grave caiinot hide the white
faces of those who sleep. The
coffin and thc green mound are
cruel magpets.. They draw us far
us to remember. A man never sees
so far into human life as when lie
looks over a wife’s or mother’sgrave.
His eyes get wondrous clear then,
and he sees as never before what
it is to injure the feeling -of the
loved. —Christian Journal.
THE COLUMBUS AND ROME.
The Survey from Greenville to
Fsirburn to Begin at once.
Coiumbus Enquirer-Sun.
An Enquirer-Sun reporter heard
yesterday that a civil engineer had
gone to Greenville for the purpose
of making a survey for the route
from that place to Fairburn, for
the Columbus and Home railroad.
During the day the reporter ( called
on Mr, W. L. Clark, general man
ager of the road to ascertain if the
report was true.
“Yes,” said Mr. Clark, in answer
to a question, ‘Mr. E. N. Brown,
our civil engineer, begins to-day
what we call the he rseback survey.
He will first ride over the country
from Greenville to Fairburn via :
Senoia, and will then return via
Turin. On Monday fte will go into 1
the field with a full corns and sur-
VI . .A VVIIAC <M4M. aux ’
vey the rente to Fairburn. The
route vja Oakland to Senoia and
from theie to Flat Creek, thence
to Fairburn, is the most favored
one and 1 think it will be adop
ted.”
“How about the route to New*
nan?” asked the reporter.
“That will probab[y survey
ed, but I don’t think it will be
adopted. You see it runs too near
to the "Wr’S-t point and Atlanta
and by the adoption of the
Fail burn route we will about even
iy split the unoccupied territory
between the two roads already
running into Atlanta from the
south.’
What is the distance from Green
ville to Fairburn?”
“It is about forty one miles and
runs through a very fertile and
prosperous section of
This route will give Qolumbns an
almost db’Vct line to .Atlanta.”
'‘Will the extension be made for
a broad guagef"’
“Yes. The survey and estimates
will all be mada upon the bt\sU of
a broad guage. Ri; intended to
widely the gwagc of that portion of
thp roa fd already in operation. Or
dinarily the ex pense is a Bout one
third more for a broad than for a
nai row guggvb ie change can
b,e toy immediate use at an <
’additional expense of 20 per eent. j
It ii a settled fact that the road
will be extended and the actual
> work will probably be in no distant
day.
at
S ! NAILING A FALSEHOOD. ?
Mr Hendricks denies that he Disa
grees with Cleveland.-
( j Waukesha, Wis., August 16.
Last evening a cori-espomd’rtt
j called upon Vice-President ißfr
dricks, who is spending a few
. at the Fountain Springslhotel, fori
b the purpose ol obtaining his Mjews
> relative to the conduct of naKial ,
( affairs, but more especially lar
ding a recent Washington'diqMvh ;
t ! to the Philadelphia Times, which
imputed to him sentiments jflat
threatened the unity of the d&no- ■
( cratic party, and would precijTtate 1
j a conflict between the president and
■ '-a considerable portion of his party i
! I in congress. Thc dispatch, in
1 : brief, alleged that there is a scheme
! on foot to widen the breach that is
presumed to exist between the I
• president and vice-president rein-1
tive to the disposition of the fede i
ral offices; that Mr. Hendricks was
openly, as well as in private, at |
war with the president; that Mr. I
Hendricks takes no stock in civil
service reform as repreaesented by
Mr. and docs not con
eonceal his contempt for the gene
ral policy of the administration;
that there is already on foot an
organized movement among the
democratic senators and members
of the house of representative* with
the purpose, ol antagonizing Presi
dent C/levelaud,' and that -these
malcontents find in Vice-president
Hendricks a powerful and earnest
ally. Mr. Hendricks listened to
the reading of the article, and re
plied to its charges substantially as
follow’s:
“The charge that lam not on
terms of \ personal friendship
with the , -president is
pure fiction—the idle gossip of
irresponsible correspondents. As
to our political relations, there may
be, defference, such as
exist between equally sincere nien
striving for the same e»d. As to
the charge that I am openly or
secretly eoncerped^in a movement
having for its purpose thc antago
nizing of thc president's policy,
nothing could bc V more ffctitibils.
I know of no such organizatsffi,
have heard of noje, and do pot
believe a.uy such exists.” jA
“But you do not agree entiroly 1
with the president in regard to (
his eonstiwti-jßmfs.thcqqki.l eqmcdj
law as toTlie distributlwof p
That fjvfet is generally accepted ?
throughout the country.”
“Well,” replied Mr. Hendricks, «
there are points of difference bes ■
tween us, but not such difference
as would warrant thc statements
you have read. I have not been
in Washington for several months,
and have only seen the president
once of late, at Gen. Grant’s fu
neral, from which I have just re
turned, nor have I had any com
munications with senators or reps
resentatives that would afford
opportunity for such a combina
tion as that to which reference is
made.”
“May 1 ask what you regard as
thc proper policy for the adminis
tration to pursue?”
“I am a democrat,” said Mr.
Hendricks with emphasis. “I
belive that the democratic party is
right, and, believing this, I want
to do what I may to promote its
progress and subserve its ends. I
believe thc welfare of the people
will be promoted by tlfc continu
ance of the party in power.”
“But in the event of a serious
-out in uie event oi a serious
disagreement between yourself and
the president, where would you be
found?”
“That is not the question we are
discussing. It shall be my aim to
preserve the unity and harmony of
the democratic party. That is the
first consideration, it is essential
to success and to the maintenance
of democratic institutions. That is
the first duty of every citiaen, and
I shall do my part.”
“But might not circumstances
arise which would precipitate a rad
ical disagreement between the
president and yourself?”
“1 have rothing to say about
that. I can only reassert that I
shall strive to secure harmony
and unity in the democratic party.”
In response to a series of inqui
riefij Mr. Hendricks said: “You
may place at rest the silly and
irresponsible rumors of a conspiracy
against the administration in which
I have a part. I know nothing
about them,” Further he said that
sum? differences of opinion exist
: between men of independent views,
but not such as must result in a
disturbance of th© harmony of the
paity to which thay may belong.
Scuh a construction of the differen
ces was wholly unwarranted by the
facts,
■” 1
Three cuts from a pocket-knife
. was the reward a black highwayman
obtained at Macon Thursday night
when he attacked U negro hack
man.
| figgl lsQ=| IsgM |
s i
npS -
lITWI
I l^ u BESTJDNIC. 3
This medicine, combin ir»a3rnn with pure
Vegetable tonics, quirklyWnd completely
< urcs Dvmpepidn, In<il«r<t>Wn. WrakeMt,
I inparr Rlood, Malwria.thUl.aad Fever*,
mid Nrurnlaia.
Ibis an UDfttUins remedy for Dimases of the
Kidney a und Liver.
It is Invaluable Ibr pisaaxw peculiar la
Women, and all who lead fedehtarv llvve
It does not injury the teat b. vatiac headache,«
produce conotipabon— MhT Jnm mcrfunarsde. 1
It enriches and purifies the blood, stlanulalee
the appetite, aids the assimilation of Ibod. re
lieves Heart burn and Reletting. and strvnath
ens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers. Laasßnde, lack of
Energy. At., it lias nn equal.
<d~ The genuine has above trade mark and
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other
‘ •»sxirM “"ows cuiiical to.. r a tTianaa. ■>
' - - i ’
IWKSSIMAL A«fi LAW CARBS.
- --~j- - —i rr;-r—x
VVi 0. ADAMSON, l
Atto’ney at Xbaxtv
A CARROLLTON. - ~ - GA.
Promptly transacts all business confided
him.
Holding the office of ,/udgy <rf the City Overt
does not interfere with his practice in other
A i
S? E. GROW?
ATTORNEY-AT- LAW.
AND REAL ESTATE AOSNT.
MOW' on Improved Inrrnr la
tjirroll, Heard, and Ilaralson counties, at
reasonable rates.
Titles to lands examined and abstracts fnr-
Dialled.
Otnice up-stalrs In th'-Jcolirt bonne,
;i;Jt 1 CarroMtoa, Ua.,,
j? w~JoNm
-A.ttom.oy- a,t Law
JOEL, - - GA.,
<*A.J.CAMP, .
Attorney rtt
VILLA RICA GA. *1
—u_
WM. C. IIODNETT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
riLLA RICA,} - - GinORGIA
Office over Dr. Slaughter’s
storq. Prompt attention giv
cq to all business intrusted to him.
—
a’ , tll, at all times, be found nt W. W, •Fitts’ drne
store, unless professionally absent. ' 38-ts *
W. F. BROWN,
Attorney At
C’X2?2?OXZ7’OJV, - - (IEORGJa.
I
C. P. GORDON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
CARROLLTCN, . GEORGIA.
w. W, & G, W. MERRELL.
Atto’ncys atLaw.
GARROLLTON, - - GA. ’
Records and land titles examined. Will
collect claims, large or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of manajjinr
estate by Executors, Administrators, Gar
dians &e and other business before the Or
dinary. Will practice in all the superior
courts ot the Coweta circuit, and always at
tend at Haralson court. practice anr
where and in any court where clients may
require their services:
hr. D. F. KNOTT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and tenders his
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES h ‘
to the citizens of Carrollton ami
vicinity.
Oilice, Johnson’s Drug Store.
Residence, Seminary street. I—ts.
BARGAIN
IN
AN ORGAN.
ns,',
knee swells, height. 5 feet 11 inche - width 4
2 Th?. hes ’ def,th ’ 2 sect i txcJS’ Ibl
, - organ is unexcelled for purity of tone ria
rabihty, and beauty, and is fully M
live years. Apply at once to ZB. BEALL
DR. D,W.D OTtSETT
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
TEMPLE, GT a.
Having permanently located at Temple I nffbr
my professional services to the citizens of Car
oii“l d adj ° in i n^? oantll:!? - attention [•
Obstetrics and diseases of women. Oilice at
Campbell & Bell’s store. All calls nromutlv
from B. J. McCam’e residence. 2 iy,
Wrights Indian Vegetable Pint
FOB THB
LIVER
And all Bilious Complaints
iWT FREE!
SELF-CURE
pMlJtanAoorf,
■n plain sealed ep velope/ree. DruggteuSn fiHS
_ Mdr... OR. WARD A CO., Agfc
NO 35.