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THE NORTH
GEORGIA CITIZEN: DALTON, GA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 8,
1891. *
Highest of aU in Leavening Power.—U. S. Gov’t Report, Aug. 17, 1889.
Baking?
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
The Citizen.
Dalton, Ga.
j. T. WHITMAN & SON, PUBLISHERS.
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Address THE CITIZEN,
Dalton, Ga.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1891.
The silver question has done one good
thing already—broken the ranks of the
Republican sectionalists. The Western
people need the South’s help.
Jay Gould has bought a salt works.
Probably he has done this with a view
of salting down the innumerable dollars
of which he is the possessor.
The Fifth Avenue Theatre was de
stroyed by fire in New York on the 2d
in fifteen minutes after Fannie Davenport
had finished the play Cleopatra and the
vast audience had dispersed.
Gboveb Cleveland’s speech at the
dinner given by the Reform Club in New
York last week was a fine effort and well
received. Mr. Cleveland responded to
the toast, “The Campaign of Education.”
Hon. John Temple Gbaves spoke be
fore the New England Club at Philadel
phia recently. His eloquence was stirr
ing; but the Tribune-of-Rome does not
hesitate to comment very freely upon
the tenor of the speech.
Repobts of awful destitution and fam
ine come from eastern Colorado. Many
settlers in that portion of the State are
starving and hundreds of deaths will fol
low unless aid is at once extended. The
cause of the destitution is a lack of rain.
How a man likes to hold on to an office
when he gets one—especially if it is a fat
one. It is said that Senator Vance is
willing to do anything the Farmers’ Al
liance may require of him if it becomes
necessary to do so to secure his re-elec
tion.
Senatob Kenna, of West Virginia,
says that “the political madness and bru
tality of one mau have dominated the
present House ofJRepresentatives.” The
senator and the Hon. Thomas B. Reed
did not extend New Year’s greetings
this year.
Southern Industrial Developments.
The New York Star says it is a re
markable fact that the recent financial
and business disturbances seem to have
had permanent effect on the south than
on any other section of the country. It
is true that the trade and industries of
the south felt the influence of the panic
severely. Several large failures occurred
at southern centers within the past two
months. This general financial strin
gency, coming at a time when the largest
cotton crop the south ever, produced was
being moved and marketed, created no
little difficulty. But, at the same time,
it would seem that hanking interests
south of Mason and Dixon’s line are in a
good condition, and that the general
business interests there are above the
average of mercantile health.
This is all the more surprising, because
for the past four or five years the mate
rial and manufacturing development of
the south has progressed, at so rapid a
pace. Coal, iron and other industries
there have grown from infants to full-
sized giants. Northern and European
capital has been going steadily into such
investments, and the southern “boom”
has displayed few signs of decline. Un
der the circumstances, it might be ex
pected that a financial disturbance would
exercise a decidedly injurious influence
on southern industries.
Such results, however, seem to be
mainly confined to enterprises in con
nection with the material development
of the south which are in an incomplete
state. At the same time, northern' and
foreign capitalists interested in such con
cerns have been in some instances
cramped by the prevalent financial pres
sure, and have consequently been forced
to suspend the accomplishment of their
plans in that direction. That factors of
this nature will for a time check indus
trial progress at the south is not unlikely.
But it would seem, from the compara
tive absence of severe business distur
bance in that section, that any cessation
of manufacturing development in the
south will at most be temporary.
The West Virginia Senator, Kenna, is
not a Hill man. He is firmly ’’convinced
that the Democrats should nominate Mr.
Cleveland for President in 1892. The
Virginia Senator’s head is level on this
question. Cleveland is the man for the
nomination in 1892.
Dubing the latter part of 1890 there
were such financial disturbances as to en
title that year to take rank as a panic
year. It is generally believed in financial
circles, however, that 1891 will be an ex
ceedingly prosperous year, and that the
losses of 1890 will be made up in 1891.
Thebe are intimations that the appor
tionment bill as passed by the House will
be much chauged in the Senate, with the
purpose of giving the Republicans greater
advantages under it. The Senate has
several times shown itself even more par
tisan than the House, and it would not
be surprising if this scheme he carried
out.
Notwithstanding the present tight
ness of the. money market, times with
the Southern merchants and trades peo
ple ought to improve greatly when the
spring trade opens, provided the hundreds
of tnousands of cotton bales now locked
up are put upon the market. This would
turn loose over $5,000,000, which would
insure flush times and a splendid spring
business.
A Wonderful New Metal.
The great thing of the future will he
aluminium. The farmer hardly can be
made to believe that in every six tons of
the clayey material of his farm there is
a ton of metal, worth $350, which can be
used for all the purposes to which silver,
brass, tin or nickel is now applied. This
is aluminium, which scientists have for
years been trying to extract from the clay
at a cost that would make it cheap enough
for general use.
A Chicago narty announce that they
have discovered a process of production
that secures tbje requisite cheapness of
the Dew metal, ; and claim that they will
revolutionize the arts by their discovery.
They say that it will surpass any other
material for plating purposes and en
tirely change that industry, relegating
galvanized iron to the shades of oblivion.
One of the largest Chicago dealers in
pipe and galvanized iron examined speci
mens of this new plating and was so well
pleased with it that he ordered a million
feet of aluminium-plated piping. For
pipes, burnished furnishings, kitchen
utensils, stove and furniture mountings
—in fact, for every kind of article that is
now silvermounted, nickle plated, tinned
or guilt—it is claimed that at the reduced
cost of that material, aluminium plating
will be substituted.
As for tin, the new metal will speed
ily settle the tariff, on that article and
turn the tables on the monopolists who
have conspired to raise the price of the
workingman’s dinner bucket and the
housewife’s water pail. At least we
should be led to believe so if what the
Chicago party say about their aluminium
discovery be true. But Chicago has the
reputation of being a windy city and it is
to be feared that her citizens partaking
of her nature, are given to blowing,
But if the new metal is really what it is
representated to be, we hope that its dis
coverers won’t have it placed on the list
of infant industries and get the republi
cans to protect it with a high tariff.
The country papers are at "last having
their eyes opened as to the way they are
being fleeced in the starvation rates paid
by advertising agents, and are kicking
vigorously. Let them kick and continue
to kick until they kick living prices out
of these fellows for advertising, who have
grown rich off of the prices they have
been paying the country press for the
patent medical ads sent them.
From our Regular Correspondent.]
* Washington, D. C., Jan. 2,1891.
The senatorial situation was never in a
worse- muddle than it is to-day. Nobody
can say with any certainty what the re
sult will be, there is so much pulling at
cross’purposes on all sides. First, be
cause most numerous, comes the repub
licans who-want the election hill passed
and who believe the cloture rule to be
necessary in order to get a vote on that
measure; then come the republicans who
want free silver coinage and who don’t
care a continental about either the elec
tion bill or the cloture rule; then there
are the republicans who neither support
nor oppose the election bill with any
spirit, but who gladly assist in keeping
that measure before the senate, because
it prevents the consideration" of financial
legislation, to which they are unalterably
opposed; the democrats are solidly uni
ted in opposition to the election bill, and
it is generally believed that they agree to
sacrifice any or all legislation if thereby
thby can bring about the defeat of that
measure.
Everybody is taking a long breath, so
to speak, for the decisive contest which
will begin Monday and end with the
triumph of some one of the forces above
mentioned. Some idea of the feeling of
the free coinage republicans may he
gained by the following remarks made
by Senator Teller: “I wish to say that I
think there are other subjects which
ought to be brought before the senate
of infinitely more importance than the
election bill. We stand in the very face
of a great financial convulsion; and no
matter what gentlemen may say, the best
minds in this country assert today that
we are on the very verge of a financial
panic. I know that certain bankers in
the city of New York are saying that ev
erything is lovely. Why? They dare not
say otherwise. If the great mass of peo
ple of this country were fully aware of
our financial condition they would see
that there is danger of financial ruin to
thousands and tens of thousands of men
who are absolutely solvent today. I be
lieve it is the duty of the senate to meet
those questions; not that 1 put dollars
and cents above human rights or above
liberty, hut there can be no liberty in any
country where there is not prosperity of
the people, and the people to-day in ev
ery portion of this country are mutter
ing their discontent against existing facts
and existing conditions. They are de
manding legislation at our hands, and
rightfully demanding it.” A member of
the house, who is decidedly favorable to
the Farmers’ Alliance, remarked’to me as
Mr. Teller finished his speech: “If Tel
ler wasn’t a lawyer that speech would
make him eligible for membership in
the Farmers’ Alliance.”
The presence of Hon. Robt. T. Lincoln,
United States minister to Great Britian,
has revived the talk about a crisis hav
ing been reached in onr negotiations with
the Britian government in relation to the
Behrings Sea dispute, and"the air is again
full of rumors, some of them of the most
sensational and improbable character.
The correspondence between the two
governments will be submitted to con
gress in a few days, and then it can be
seen whether the situation is as grave as
some gruesome gossips would have us
believe.
New Year’s is always a gala day in
Washington, and yesterday was no ex
ception. The Official reception At the
White house was a great success and was
attended by all the people of prominence
now in Washington, including all of the
official representatives of foreign coun
tries, and the stream of big guns went
direct from there to the large residence
of Vice President Morton to attend a re
reception held by him and Mrs. Mor
ton. - Later, all masculine Washing
ton called upon its feminine acquain
tances.
Justice Brown, of the Supreme Court,
having had his nomination confirmed by
the senate aud his commission signed by
the President, is now ready to take his
seat, and will do so when the court meets
next wfcek.
Senator Wolcott shocked the republi
cans and shamed the democrats in a
speech announcing his opposition to the
election bill. He said in effect that he
opposed the bill because it was an attempt
to put ignorance on top of intelligence in
certain southern states.
Prof. Koch’s lymph, the new consump
tion remedy, is being thoroughly tested
by the physicians in charge of Garfield
Hospital in this city. The experiments
have not yet lasted long enough for the
formation of intelligent opinion as to the
result.
The postoffice department is, at the re
quest of Mr. Harrison, investigating the
recent killing of the postmaster at Car
rol ton, Mississippi.
If the senate does not change its tactics
an extra session of congress just after
the fourth of March is inevitable; it has
been in session a month and has done
practically nothing.
The senate census committee, which is
considering the Apportionment bill, is
said to be farorably inclined to a propo
sition to amend the hill by making the
membership of the house 350, giving
New York and Minnesota each an addi
tional member.
reqt Literature
; and size for this year,
NOTES,
has changed its
..Co,
shapi
A recent Youth’s Companion has a
charming bit of verse from the pen of
Kobert Loveman. .
We have received a copy of the At
lanta Monthly, a new magazine that has
made its appearance. It is neatly got
ten up.
A new magazine lately started in New
York has the name of “The South Old
and New.’ ’ Wade Hampton DeFontaine is
its editor.
A writer from Switzerland in the At
lanta Journal describes the Alps as
pretty! The sublime peaks should crum
ble in horror at the mere adjective.
Southern publications of a literary
character should he encouraged and pat
ronized. It is a bad commentary on our
people that all the successful magazines
must have their home at the north.
To Nervous Debilitated Men.
If YOU will send us your address, we will mail
you our illustrated pamphlet explaimng all
about Dr. Dye’s Celebrated Electro.- Voltaic Belt
aud Appliances, aud their charming effects up
on the nervous debilitated system, and how
they will quickly restore you to vigor, manhood
and health. Pamphlet free. If you are thus
afflicted, we will send you a Belt aud Applian
ces on yqltAIC BELT CO., Marshall, Mich.
Charles Egbert Craddock is a writer
whose stories are read and sought for
by the whole of America. The "Decem
ber Harper contains the opening chap
ters of a serial of hers entitled, “In the
Stranger People’s Country.” This is one
of the few dialect stories that hold the
attention of the reader, for it is so filled
with the exquisite language and realistic
descriptions of the picturesque Tennes
see mountains that it- charms the sense
like a strain of music or the rare per
fume of a flower.
For Over Fifty Fears
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has
been used by millions of mothers for
their children while teething. If dis
turbed at night and broken of your rest
by a sick child suffering and crying with
pain of Cutting Teeth send at once and
§ et a bottle of “Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing
yrup” for Children Teething. It will
relieve the poor little sufferer imme
diately. Depend upon it, mothers, there
is no mistake about it. It cures Diar
rhoea, regulates the Stomach and Bowels,
cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums, re
duces Inflammation, and gives tone and
energy to the whole system. “Mrs. Win
slow’s Soothing Syrup” for children
teething is pleasant to the taste and is a
prescription of one of the oldest and best
female physicians and nurses in the
United States. Price twenty-five cents a
bottle. Sold by all druggists throughout
the world. Be sure and ask for .“Mrs.
Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.”
RAILROAD MATTERS.
Some of the W. & A. shops it is thought
willjbe removed to Nashville.
For the first three weeks in December
the total earnings of the Louisville and
Nashville system were $1,162,130, a de
crease over the corresponding period of
last year of $17,074.
The East Tennessee management is re
trenching on expenses, it is said, and to
do so they are discharging all employees
whose services can safely be disposed
of. The order is made specially appli
cable to men at work around the shops
and to section hands.
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it iB pleasant
and refreshing to the .taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleating to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach; prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on band "vtill pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y.
For sale by S. J. McKnight, Dalton, Ga.
THE GREAT TONIC.
Purifies the Stood. Aida Digestion*
Purely Vegetable.
TT70RKS ^j^OSTDEEFUL QTTBES!
Last fall I was suffering’from General Debil
ity, from "some blood affection, and my whole
The new Bishop to succeed the late la
mented Bishop Beckwith will not be elec
ted until the next regular convention of
the Diocese of Georgia, which is in May,
1891. Rev. Robert Foute, of San Fran
cisco, California, is spoken of as his
probable successor. Mr. Foute was rec
tor of St. Mark’s Church in Dalton for
short while just after the war, and is
quite a prominent Episcopal divine.
The postoffice department has displac
ed Mrs. J. B. Johnson as postmistress at
Calhoun, and given the place to a strap
ping, able-bodied young man. Mrs. John
son is a widow-lady, with two children
and was dependent upon the office for a
support This is but one of the many
devilish deeds the present administration
has been guilty of. What won’t a Re
publican do, especially those of the Har-
rison-W annamaker ilk.
In the “Editor’s Drawer” in Harper’s
Magazine for January Charles Dudley
Warner has an article about the popular
tendency to make good resolutions at the
beginning of the year. The first of Jan
uary is the time, he says, for reforming
the world; and yet reform at any time
would be easy enough if we knew, or
could agree, where to begin. But one of
the perplexing questions is whether we
should begin with the men or with the
women.
Will lieJReach. It?
The disappearance of Mr. Clements
from his seat in congress may or may not
be a serious disadvantage not alone to the
seventh Congressional district of Georgia,
but also to the whole South. That will
depend somewhat on the manner of man
his successor shall prove himself. In any
event, the new man will not be of much
use to his district, his section and coun
try in the first two years, for it will require
that long for him to get familiar with the
ways of the house and learn its business
routine. He will start where Clements
was ten years ago, and if he have equal
ability, industry and concientiousness he
may come to as much as his predecessor—
.unless his loving constituents turn him
out after a much shorter trial than they
gave the present member.
TOPICS OF THE WEEK.
has been favored. The score of members
whose bills for towns four or five times the
size of Rome have been vetoed,are anxious
to know what is the secret of Mr. Clem
ents’ success. They say Rome owes hi™
a statue on the building and a brass-hand
reception when he gets home.
The Great American Chorus.
Sneezing, sniffling and coughing. This
is the music all over the land just now.
‘Tve such an awfdi pain in my head.
Cure it with Ely’s Cream Balm or it may
end in the toughest form of catarrh.
May he you have catarrh now. Nothing
is more nauseous and dreadful. This
remedy masters it as no other ever did.
Not a snuff nor a liquid. Pleasant, cer
tain, radical.
Representative Lanham, who has been
re-elected from the Eleventh congress
ional district of Texas—probably the
largest in the country—represents ninety-
seven counties that are said to exceed in
area ten states.
English Good Templars are fitting out
temperance wagons and sending them
off on tours through Great Britain.
Good speakers and singers go with the
wagons, who hold meetings and distrib
ute literature wherever possible. The
idea is au excellent one.
- Rome’s Public Building.
The President signefi the Rome public
building bill last week. It appropriates
$50,000 for a postoffice building in Rome.
Rome is, perhaps, the least populous
town in America to get a public building,
and it was only due to Mr. Clements per month are mined, and the output
persistency and popularity that Rome * ast year—was nearly 2.000.000 bushels.
The future great man is he who will
devise a plan for keeping the streets of
great cities clean without bankrupting
the taxpayers. If the complaints of citi
zens count for anything, the streets of
New York, Chicago and Boston are in a
filthy condition aU the year around.
Attached to the Kansas penitentiary
are 396 acres of coal land, and the” state
leases 636 acres additional. The men
who work in the mines get 3 3-4 cents per
day and an occasional opportunity to
speak to each other. - About two acres
Hereafter all passenger trains on the
Western & Atlantic will be provided with
two first-class coaches, and a car which
will be given up entirely to smokers.
President Thomas has decided to give up
the middle coach to the negro passengers,
and no persou, while smoking, will he al
lowed in it, nor in any car but the proper
one. This middle coach ‘will be exactly
the same as all o£her .first-class coaches,
and nfegro passengers will get the same
return for their money as the whites.
Regarding the proposed new railroad
from Dalton to Gainesville the Atlanta
Constitution says:Colonel H. C. Hamilton
of Dalton, formerly clerk of United States
district court in Atlanta; Hon. Paul Tram
mel, representative from Whitfield county
aud Mr. C. C. Davis, of Tunnel Hill Ga.,
were- granted a charter at the last session
of the legislature to build a line of rail
road from Dalton to Gainesville,by Spring
Place, Ga. The promoters of the enter
prise say they are ready to begin work
in the spring. Colonel Hamilton says a
preliminary survey has already been run
as far as Tate’s marble quarries, and the
engineers report that the line will traverse
one of the finest sections of this part of
the south.
“The money is already up,” said Colo
nel Hamilton, “and we are backed by a
strong syndicate composed of northern
and southern capitalists.”
“There is no doubt about the success
of the scheme, and if Athens will make
an entertainable offer we will continue
the road from Gainesville to that city.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chillblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required. It
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,
or money refunded. Price 25 cents a box.
For sale by S. J. McKnight. ^
If the experiments of physicians in
various parts of the world result suc
cessfully, Prof. Koch’s lymph will prove
to.be a veritable cure-all. Several cases
of” cancer are being treated with the
lymph in New York hospitals aud the re
sults are said to be most encouraging.
It is claimed that cancer has its bacilli
and that the lymph.acts upon it in much
the same manner as upon the bacilli of
consumption or lupus. In a Madrid hos
pital two persons suffering from leprosy
have been inoculated and are reported to
be rapidly improving.
Confirmed.
The favorable impression produced on
the first appearance of the agreeable liq
uid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years
ago has been more than confirmed by the
pleasant experience of all who have used
it, and the success of the proprietors and
manufacturers, the California Fig iSyrup
Company.
In the winter of 1884-85 I was suffering
with rheumatism, at times could hardly
walk about—used Dr. Baker’s Blood and
Liver Cure—am now entirely rid of the
disease. John Townley,
Firm of Townley & Hamilton, Dalton.
Sold by F. O. Trevitt, Druggist.
year jvas nearly 2,000,000 bushels.
The vein is about 25 inches thick.
Peter the Great’s hut, at Zaa.nd*™
near Amsterdam, is being restored, hav
ing fallen of late years into a somewhat
dilapidated condition. When working
incognito as a shipwright in a neighbor
ing dockyard Peter inhabited this little
wooden two-roomed house for some
weeks in 1697, and the interior contains
many interesting portraits and relics.
Look After the Children.
Many a little darling has been taken
away because through neglect their sys
tem has been undermined and destroyed
57 ^ orins - Such neglect, is little better
than murder, when the trouble can be so
removed. Only a few doses of Dr.
5*1* 8 Cream would do the work,
and the little sufferers would soon show an( i
the unmistakable signs of returning
health.
• the first bottle.
j ever since with
Columbus, Ga., June 1
lave used it In my
results.
„„ L. G. BOWERS.
Dear Sms': Early In the year18891 had a fully
SSSSWw?
I took three bottle3 of your W. ,w.c. (Wool
dridge’s Wonderful Cure), and am to-dav as well
as ever I was. I took no other medicine but
•w w c. henry mcbride.
This’ Is to certify that the above facte are cor
rect, and that! administered the medicine."
Hamilton, Ga., Feb.26,1890. O. W. ELLIOTT.
FOR SALK BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
B Dr. BULL’S
ABYSYRUP
I Dr. BULL’S facilitates Teething and
) regulates the Bowels. At
all druggists. Price 25 cts.
Plgg I 7D Cures Coughs, Colds,
D W Bb ka w Bronchitis, Croup,
Asthma, I I U Whooping
Congh, W V*l Is Incipient
Consumption, and re- CV DI 5 Cl
lieves Consumptive V I IV.
Persons. Price 25 cts. At all druggists.
WE HAVE THF LARGEST" LINE
GUNS AND GUN GOODS EVER OFFERED,
SHELLS BY THE THOUSANDS.
Goods delivered at 100 per cent, less than Dalton prices. It will
B. B. fare twice over to come and look at our goods. 1 * - Voa r
(CHg^Send for Catalogue and prices.
EWING, CASH & C0,,
725 Market Str,, Sign of BIG AXE.
CHATTANOOCA, TENNESSEE
October 23,1890.—tf.
Oct 7 90-6m
0®ce and Factory 713 Cherry St*>
Fine Mattresses
Made a LEADER,
Chattanooga, Teim,
COAL! COAL!
I have on hand a large stock and
ready for immediate delivery the fol
lowing well known brands of Coal:
Pioneer, Jellico,
Coal Creek, Glen Mary and
Steam.
Entrust your orders with me. I
guarantee prompt attention and the
lowest prices. Coal delivered to any
part of the city.
Respectfully,
E. 0. HERNDON,
Oct,-ly.
DALTON, GA.
1891.
HARPER’S WEEKLY,
ILLUSTRATED.
ir’s Weekly has never failed to justify
“Journal of Civilization” and iUka
Harpe
title of a uj, T-ivuizanon- and
d °“f so w *S h a constant regard to enlarged
sibilities of usefulness and a higher staudLSrf
artistic and literary excellence, it leam
touched no important phase of the world’”™?'
gress, and presents a record, equally trust™
thy and interesting, of the notable events wr'
sons, and aehievments of our time. ’ .
Special Supplements will l>e continued in i»t
They will he literary, scientific, artistic, histori
cal, critical, topographical, or descriptive »
occasion may demand, and will continue to'ife-
serve the hearty commendation which has ben
bestowed on past issues by the press and tie
public. As a family journal. Harper’s WeetIt
will, as heretofore, he edited with a strict reori
for the qualities that make ita s afe and wdcone
visitor to every home.
HARPER’S PERIODICALS.
PER YEAR:
Harper’s Magazine -
Harper’s Weekly -
Harper’s Bazar
Harper’s Young People
id
- («
• Id
- 2d!
SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE
For the coming year will be noteworthy for a
number of special features which the Publishers
believe are of very unusual interest, and among
them the foUowing may be mentioned:
Sir Edwin Arnold
contributes to the December number the first of
a series of four Articles on.Japan, its people,-its
ways, and its-thonghts. Mr. Robert Blum, who
was commissioned to go to Japan for Scribner’s
Magazine, has prepared a very remarkable se
ries of drawings to iUustrate Sir Edwin’s pa
pers. Articles upon the recent Japanese Festi
val will follow, illustrated by Mr. Blum.
Henry M. Stanley
has prepared for the January number an impor
tant article upon “The Pigmies of the Great Af
rican Forest.” Another contribution in this
field wiU be Mr J Scott Keltie’s account of the
recent African Exhibition held in London.—
Both papers will be amply illustrated.
The Wrecker;
a serial novel by Robert Louis Stevenson and
Lloyd Osbourne, will run through a large part
of the year. Illustrated by Hole. A two-part
story by Frank R Stockton wiU also appear.
Prof. Janies Bryce; M. P.,
author of “The American Commonwealth,” wiU
write a series of four articles upon India, em
bodying the results of his recent journey and
studies on this land of never-ending interest.
Ocean Steamships
will be the subject of an important series some
what upon the lines of the successful Railroad
Articles. “Passenger Travel”,” “The Life of
Officers and Men,” Speed and Safety Devices,”
and “Management” are some of the subjects
touched upon and illustrated.
Great Streets of the World
is the title of a novel colleciion of articles on
which the author and artist wiU collaborate to
give the characteristics of famous thorough
fares. The first, on Broadway, will be written
by Richard Harding Davis, and Ulustrated by
Arthur B Frost. Others wiU follow on Picca
dilly, London; Boulevard, Pans; The Corso,
Rome.
The price of Scribners’s Magazine admits of
adding a subscription to one’s reading at very
small cost. Orders should be sent now.
$3 00 a Year; 25c a Number.
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS. Publishers,
743-745 Broadway, New York.
NOTICE of DISSOLUTION.
T HE-firm of Chester & HoweU is this day
dissolved, January 7th, 1891. f
TRUSTEE’S SALE.
Y virtue of the power of sale granted me in
'a deed of Trust executed to me by R. M.
cClatchv and his wife, Catharine J. McClatchy,
on the 13th day of March, 1877, and for the pur
pose of enforcing said trust, I wiU offer for sale
to the highest bidder, on Tuesday, the 16th day
of-February, 1891, before the premises, a city
lot in Dalton on the comer of Jones and Craw
ford streets and known as the home lot of R. M.
McClatchy. Terms, credit of six months with
good security. Jan. 6th, 1891.
Fee $4 JOHN L. SMITH,
Trustee.
3NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
B IDS will be received at the Court House
door in Dalton, Georgia, on the 11th day ox
January, 1891, between the hours of 12 and 2 pm,
for the erection of a court house for 'Whitfield
county. Plans and specifications can be seen in
the Ordinary’s office m Dalton; also, at office of
Chamberlin & Burford, Architects In Knox
ville, Tennessee. House to be located about
where the old one now stands. Contract will be
let at public outcry, and the right to reject anv
-h bids is reserved.
■vr J C NORTON, Ordinary.
November 20,1890—8t—$4 76 9
Three
times
a day
Take Roy's blood purifier three
times a day, before meals, if you
are troubled with any skin or blood
disease—full directions with each
bottle. Ask your
druggist for it.
Roy’s
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JUST RECEIVED AT THE
MILLINERY
BTOEE
- OF
J. & J. B. GRAVES.
85 HAMILTON ST.,
DALTON, GEORGIA.
An elegant assortment of
MILLINERY
—AND—
STRAW GOODS
In store and constantly receiving
consisting of
Straw Bonnets
—AND—
CHILDREN’S HATS,
Trimmed and untrimmed.
Neck and Sash Ribbons,
Velvet Ribbons,
Neck Ties, Bonnet Silks,
Satins. Velvets and Grapes,
Flowers, Feathers,
Ornaments, Etc.
Or goods were bought of the largest and best
my .'ting honses in Baltimore and New York,
and will be sold at very low prices for cash.
Postage Free to all subscribers in the Uniat
States, anada, or Mexico.
The volumes of the "Weekly begin -with fl*
number for January of each year "When u
time is specified, subscriptions will begin rifi
the number current at time of reeeipt of orda. j
Bound volumes of Harper’s Weeklv for time 1
years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sen
by mail, postage paid, or by express, free oft *
pense (provided, the freight'does not exceed o
dollar per volume), for §7 00 per volume.
Cloth Cases for each volume, suitableforb
ing, will he sent by mail, post paid, on receipt i
$1 00 each.
Remittances should be made by Post-Ofitt
■Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of log.
Newspapers are not to copy thisadTertisaiat
without the express order of Harper & Eros.
Combined’With Great Refract
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And for softness of endurance to the eye cannot
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JK5*Ask for catalogue.
TERRY M’F’G CO., Nashville, Te
ROME DYE 10
ROUE, GA.
Henry Weatherly, Agent,
Dalton, G-a.
T ADIES’Dresses, in Silk, Satin, Velvet art
1 j Wool, cleaned and dyed in the most*™**
colors; Mourning Black dyed, and CrawnM-
vated; Ladies’ Hats dyed, remedied and P«=-
ed to fashion. Special attention winabo*
given to cleaning and dyeing Gentlemenst*** I
ing. AH work guranteed to hold c0 ' 0 ’' I
rub off or stain. The proprietor of thagafr I
lishment is willing to give a written goara® 1
for first class work on first class
left with Mr. Henry Weatherly rilig
prompt attention, and who will also nmnJ.
formation regarding prices, andwhois ."
thorized to receive, deliver and collect tors®
C. W. CAFFRAY,
ROME DYE "WORKS,
Oct 7 90-4m
ROME, Ga.
CATARRH
Ely’s CreamBalni
mih Hearing.
A particle la applied into I
tB agreeable. Price 50c. at Drfg*““ Ta i
jgJ«xTirr:YTreryrTTflRS,5CWarrenStj^^^ j
For sale l>y S J McKnight. Dalton-
' Big«istheMto*jJsJs|
_ S&TdSfel
,>it65da?s?1
Guaranteed not to ^ 1 ^esS
cause Stricture. taunff
Euf Stricture. tauing ” .
rmJT to women. .. „_4feel*2
|S[ Mrdor.iT hr I u *
tilTHEEVMSCHEMjmC^ in,recog^
KOl £lUCE|h£
TJBF.Ti FOR DIVORCE-
EORGIA, WHITFIELD COUSTV. I
M 4jby E. Roberts ) LIBEL F ^ B £?r°
vs. {In "Whitfield Supr
Thomas Roberts, j October Term, ^ J
It appearing to the Court by
Sheriff in the above case that tn
does not reside in said county, apufi-i
Pearing' that he does not reside in tm-
|sordered by the court that 11
ed on the defendant by the
order in the North Georgia crr fjnW- ,
paper published in Dalton, Georgia, “ c c .a |
the law. THOMAS W. MHNEG- £. -
B, Z, Hekndox, Att’y for Plamtifi- (
I certify that the above is a t 10 .® 5rmrrt, ‘
the minutes of Whitfield Superior t ;C .
November 24,1890. I>Sbo^>-
LETTERS DIS3IISSlO> r -
P EORGIA, WHITFIELD COUW g.
vT To Whom it May Coxcer>' 0 f
ford, executor of Jesse Callowaj. J“‘ der .-ii
county deceased, represents to’ the ,
that he has fully discharged thed Oj
said trust, and prays to be dischargeo .
and I will pass upon the same on tn
day in Febraary, 1890. - J- c -
3m. $4 Go
.— v»»““- t ,
stead, and I will pass upon the sam®
at 2 o’clock, p m, December 9th,18p u > Y
J C NORTON
November 20,1890—S2,
■■■:' : :-Y ■-