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THE EASTMAN TIMES.
M. L. BQftOH, Editor & Proprietor
THURSDAY, MARCH f, 1873.
GEOKUIA POLITICS
Is agitated by an .©pen letter from
Mrs. I>r. Felton condemnatory of Gen.
Gordon, Her attack on the General
sb quite severe, ebargmg him with bri¬
bery, jingling the money of Jay Gould
and others in his pockets, .and that th a
startling accusation was the common
street talk of Washington city.
We regret to see this letter in print;
we regret, also, to realize the sad fact
that the bitterness and partisan rancor
ciwgendered by the last campaign in the
Seventh District has not died out ; in*
stead of that we see it permeating the
State of Georgia, ar.d involving men
high in station and high in the esteem
of their c luqtrymcn. The saddest
spectacle of all is to see a Georgia lady
leading the revolt and threatening the
destruction of the only party that
saved Georgia and uaajfe he/ the Em¬
pire ytaie of the Sou h.
CONGRESS AI>JOURNEl>:
1 At 12 o’clock M. on Tuesday la-t,
both Houses of Congress adjourned
without a day. A« Is usual at the .close
the bilgin' as of the session was rushed
with the greatest dispatch possible —
Several bills were left undisposed ot^
notwithstanding the sessions were con¬
tinued, occupying the most ofthe night
.as well as the day.
AN EXTRA SESSION.
The Pr sideut lias issued his procla¬
mation calling for an extra session of
the Forty,fifth Cungres to assemble on
X he 18th lust.
The Speaker made a parting address
which was most enthusiastically ap¬
plauded. He spoke as follows :
In a moment this Congress will ex¬
pire, It* acts whether for weal or
woe, are indeellibly inscribed upon the
pages of history. In this hall party has
been arrayed against party, and inter¬
est against interest, in a fiercc aud bit¬
ter struggle ; but it is due to truth to
j*ay that on every side there has been
an honest ambition to win popularity
by seeking, eacn -jp his own way and
according to his best judgment, the
general welfare Whether or not the
<Se«ired end of the public good lias
been successfully attained, we must
wait for time to prove. But that such
has been the aim of both parties, can¬
not be justly disputed.
With two great parties dividing the
people—each holding an important
share iu the government—with strict
accountability on the part of public
servants and vigilant eyes watching
&1!—with reviving busiuess and restor*
ed confidence, ‘m ay we not look hope¬
fully to the esujy dawn of a new era
of increased prospeijty and of greater
happiness for the country. .Snob is
my fervent prayer
To each and ever}* representative
here I tender my heartfelt acknowl¬
edgment tor the kindly forbearance
extenvlcd to me as piesiding officer of
this House, and to say that I shall ev¬
er gratefully cherish the honor of which
I have been the recipient.
With the expression of the wish that
yon all may return safely and in health
to your homes^ it onjy remains for me
io declare that, in accordance with the
constitution ofthe Unitid jStutvs, this
House stands adjourned without day
Minnie £pears is the romantic daugh¬
ter of a Kansas farmer. She lately re¬
turned from a boarding school, where,
it is suspected, she added to ti e pre¬
scribed st udies the perusal of sentimen¬
tal stories in yellow covers. A wan.
defing Italian fiddler made his appear¬
ance in ihe neighborhood. Ht slept
in Darns and wasn‘t a handsome tramp;
but Minnie's lively imagination trans¬
formed h m into a heroic minstrel, and
she eloped with him. When overtaken
by lic.r lather, she was djvssed f.»nci
fully like a gypsy, and was playing a
tahibarine accompanimonX to the fid
.dling of the Italian. Her idea origin
jnally was to become a dancing girl,
and lead a delightfully free and roving
life, but the experience of a lew days
dampened jhor ardo.r, and she was glad
to returu.
There is yellow fever in HaytL The
distance between that island and Lou¬
isiana is but short. Contagion is liable
to be brought over at any time From
this CongrehS must see the necessity of
enacting national quarantine Jaws.—
The South is in danger of a repetition
of tip horrors of last year,. Measures
should be taken for protection.
A meeting of the Southeastern gen
•ei aJ passenger and ticket agents’' asso
ciaHqn was held in Atlauta last week.
The question of the maximum weight
of person il baggage was discussed,
and one hundred and fifty pounds to
a person holding a first*class ticket
was adopted.
A manufactory of cedar buckets,
4ut'P, Ae, has been started at Sarasc^
t*, Fla.
more about the wild
LMD TROUBLE.
Hom. Nelson TiU, ot A'brny, Ga.,
has written the Atlanta Constitution a
lengthy article, in which he condemns
the coarse purs tied by Comptroller
Goldsmith in tranffeiring the tax fi
las. \mong other things Mr. Tdt
says:
4. That the -comptroller general has
violated the plain letter and spiiit of
the law is too plain for further a gu*
menu He was acting under the au¬
thority of a special law which pre
serbed his dut ies; the fi fas which he
issued were state property, though
they were is t issued at the time nor
in the form prescribed by the act; he
could not sell and transfer the staters
title without special authority, Ho
not only had no authority, but his du¬
ties prescribed by the law absolutely
prohibited such s.ile and transfer.
Thpre is but one reasonable solution
of this whole matter, and that is that
the personal interests of Mr. Gold*miih
as well us the speculators in wild laud
tax fi fas, have been cared for by the
comptroller-general at the expense of
the State, as will appear from the f. l*
lowing :
1. In his several communications on
this subject he has persistently mis¬
represented the law and I he opinion of
the attorney general, representing both
as making it compulsory on him to
transfer the state tax fi tas whilst he
was opposed to such trnsfer.
2. He accompanied the transfer of
the tax fi fas with instructions to sh er
ifts which enabled the transferees to
purchase the lands without paying /or
them, leaving the surplus of sales, over
taxes and .costs, in their pockets, in
stead of sending it to him to go to the
treasury of the state as required by
law.
2 He has received from the trans
fereoft of the tax fi fas several thou¬
sand dollars in fees. The house wild
land committee say they could not as¬
certain what amount of costs lie had
charged, nor what had been clone with
such costs. Evidently they have not
been paid into the treasury as required
by law, but are retained by him.
4. He wrote letters in his official ca¬
pacity to sheriffs in the interest of
transferees and against the right ol
puolLhers, instructing them to make
special contracts with the publishers
ofthe sales under transferred wild land
tax fi fas which reduced tne price to a
fraction of the usual legal rates, thus
prostituting his office for private pur¬
poses.
5. He sold and transferred to his
own favher twenty-seven wild land tax
(i fas ; and it is not probable that this
was done by compulsion or against his
own will. There are badges of a per¬
sonal interest in the great fraud which
cannot be overlooked.
The article reierred to above, pub¬
lished in the Atlanta Sunday Gazette,
concludes with the first half of £he re¬
port of the wild land committee as ff
if it wi-s the entire report; it should
haye published the other half, or have
given some sign of omission. Toe full
report .is a curiosity. It consists of
two distinct parts, each written by
different men with very different views.
The first part was written by a white¬
washing friend, and the second part
by one who traces the whole difficulty
to a transfer of the fi faebv the comp
trolle-general., and the report shows
that the committee could obtain no
satisfactory information from him or
his office concerning the subjects they
were appointed to investigate. It is
fortunate that the legislature did not
comply with the request of the corn
rnitteeand give them auihority to sit
during vacation for the purpo-e of a
full investigation. There is only one
parallel in our history to this wild land
fraud, and that is the Yazoo fraud.—
In both cases the authors were backed
by large and influential land lings. In
both cases ihe fraud was committed
by the pretended authority of the
State. Trie Yazoo fraud by a corrupt
majority of the legislature. The wild
land fauud through the instrumentality
of a trusted officer of the executive
department. In the Yazoo case the
act was summarily made void even
?
the-record* ol the crime were burned,
and the land res toted to its original
ownership.
What shall be done in the present
case of .the wild land fraud ? There
is but one way out of the difficulties,
and that is that the legislature shall
declare the truth, and that all wild land
fi fas issued and transferred by the
comptroller-general, and all proceed¬
ings under or by virtue of such fi fas
are illegal and void ; the title and pos¬
session of the lands against which they
were issued remaining as if such fi fa
had never been issued ; the state to
refund the money paid into the treas¬
ury arising from such fi fas, and the
comptroller-general and his bondsmen,
and the purchasers of such ti fas and
all other parties interested, be left to
settlements among themstdves,through
the courts or otherwise,. There is a
precedent for ibis in the.aet approved
March 17, 1869, besides the one men¬
tioned :
‘‘An act to declare void the unau
thprized sale of wild lands by the tax
** *
• .i
collector, where the land *o.s located,
and to direct the refunding of the mon¬
ey received there tor/
This act declare* »n substance that
the safes of wild lands were in viola¬
tion o i the law . that it would be uit«
just to such pat tic* to impose upon
thi no expensive and tiomdi Sitae liti¬
gation to assen t tiu?'r rights against tl*
illegal act of tax collectors^ and it pro*
coeds to declare the sales null and
voi«.i # authorises t l »»* purchase money
to bo refunded, and declares “That all
p Tseng iu possession of land* so pur¬
chased, as aforesaid, shall acquire no
right undi-r atiy col a - of title or pos*
session of the same, hut owners there¬
of are hereby authorized to enter upon
such lauds and take possession theie
of/
The principles of this act applied to
the present ‘illegal’ sales of wild lands
are what is now needed.
CARRYING PISTOLS.
A Georgia Judge’s Way of En¬
forcing the Law.
The Nashville American has the fol
lowing ;
Our reform legislature, among the
many good th ngs that it proposes to
do for the people, is trying I believe to
amend the law in reference to canying*
pistols.
A prominent Georgian told me an
incident the other day that may he of
interest, and which he assure s me ac*
tually ocenrred :
Georgia has a stringent pistol law.—
The penalty is forfeiture of the pistol,
a fine of fifty dollars, ajnd at the .dis¬
cretion of the court, imprisonment for
thirty days. A short time alter th s
law went into effect, Judge Lester was
holding court in one of the mountain
counties of North Georgia, and right
in the midst of a cause, he asked tne
attorneys to suspend a few moments,
and told the sheriff to lock the court,
house d or, and let no man pass c ut
without permission from him. Then
tho Judge in his firm^ decided way,—
‘Gentlemen, I saw a pistol on a man in
tiiis room a f< w moments ago, aud I
cannot reconcile it to my sense of duty
as a peace officer to jet such a violation
of the law pass unnoticed. It may be
that it is my duty to go before the
grand jury and indict him, but if that
man will walk up to this stand aud lay
Ids pistol and a fine of one dollar down
here, I will let him off this lime ; ©th*
erwise I will go before the grand jury
and testify against him.
The judge p uts d, and an attorney
who was sitting down just before the
stand, got up, slipped his hand in his
hip-pocket, drew out a neat ivory
handled Smith & Wesson six-shooter;
and laid it and a dollar down before
the judge.
‘Tnis is all right/ remarked the
judge, ‘but you are not the man that
I sw with the pistol/
At this another attorney sitting im¬
mediately in front of the jndge, got up
and drawing out a small Colt's revol¬
ver, laid it and a dollar Ml upon the
stand.
'This Is right again/ said the
judge, but you are not the man I speaK
of.
Thereupon a large man just outsid
of tbe oar walked an-and, rau his hand
in lus bosom, and drawing out a huge
ol<I army pistol, laid it aud a dollar on
the stand.
'I declare/ said the judge, if this
don't beat all ; you have done right,
my friend, but you are not the man 1
saw with the pistol.
This process went on until nineteen
pistols and nineteen dollars were lying
on the judge's stand, t hen there was
a pause,ana it appeared as if the crowd
was pretty well disarmed ; at least if
there were any more pistols in the
house their owners did not seem dis¬
posed to give them up.
G. ntl m n/r.sumed the judge, here
are ninetem persons who have acted
like men in this business, but the man
that I saw with the pistol has not come
up yet, and now/ continued he, pulling
out his watch and looking toward the
fur side of the house, ‘I will give him
one minute to accept my proposition,
and if he does not do it in that time, I
will point him out to the sheriff and
order him to take him into custody.
Immediately two men lronj ,th.± back
pait of the house began to tnoye ,to¬
wards the judge’s stand. Once they
stopped and looked at each other, ami
then coming slowly fo/ward, lajddown
their pistols and their dollars. As
tin y turned to leave the judge said,—
‘This man with the black whiskers is
the one that I saw with ihe pistol.
Then Judge Lester gave a short
lecture upon the cowardly, foolish and
wicked practice of carrying concealed
weapons, and assured his audience that
in the future the law would bo strictly
enforced.
The court proceeded with its regu
lar business, and it-is needless to add
that in the county the habit of carrying
pistols was broken up. Jan.
Baron Albert Grant, who failed in
London for nearly $3,000,000 has a
family of ten daughters ajpd only two
sons.
BILL ARP’S CHAT.
Bill and the Old \huuu Discuss
the Chicken Mala.
From the AtlautaCoMti tu tied.
Your remarks abet it fighting chick* S
ens were tit and proper in the main,
and I would h »ve writ em myaeif ifyti
hadent. Its all wrong and altogether
unprofitable fo tire state at luge them
sports had better beplowin or rolling
loga. The trouble is that folks will
run things to extreme aud work harm
out of harmless things. My parents
wouldent let ur boys play cards be¬
cause people gambled with ein, w<>ulcl
ent let us learn to play the fiddle be.
cause there was always a feller in the
t<»wn grocery playiu “Biily in the low
ground.’* But I have thought that a
little chi. ken fun at Irene in a quiet
way might be tolerated once or twice
in a while. No gaffs, no crowd, n >
ou>sin, no money put up—just a sort
of accident fight witlout malice afore¬
thought. You see a game chicken wag
born to fight. Tin y go at it as SnOli
as they break the shell, and Freeman
says if its a double egg and two roast¬
ers in it, they tight before they git out
Old man Smith says hes seen em tight
like the dickens at three years old.—
They love to fight and its no great
harm to humor their instinct when
you’ve nothin else to do. V\ hen a felleri
is lookin on he cant help taking sides
to savs His life, aud if somebody t »k<*s
the other side it gi ts up a little excite¬
ment that wisnt premeditated.
An itinerant preaclu r or a woman of
broken sperits will get their spunk upi
on such occasions, and e ou’d bet a
little on their judgment if they had
anything to bet. Human nature will
take sides iu all games of pluck, wheth¬
er its between nations or men or chick¬
ens or dugs.
Well, the other night we was talkin
about the New Orleans concern, and
my wife Mrs. Arp said it was a sin and
a shame ought 1 ml to be allowed in a
Christian country.
‘Kentucky against Georgia/ said
Freeman, ‘and ten to ten and the elev¬
enth figiit a draw /
Mrs. Arp stopped knitting fo r a rno
ment and said :
‘Is that the way of it ? Well, well,
if they had io hare the fight I wi-*h the
Georgy chickens had have whipped the
last, one/
Freeman winked at me, and says he
to my boy :
‘Victory (his name is Vick but he
calls him Victory for short) ha rent
you got a game looster ?‘
‘No, he hasent/ says Mrs. Aip/bnt
I have, the finest one you ever 1 ©lend
at. He was a present from Major
Cooper.
‘I have never seen him/ said Free¬
man, ‘but I have got the finest one in
the state, I think Hes built up right,
and has got the best use of himself of
any bird I ever^saw. 1 have never pit¬
ted him, but if I was a betting man I
would put up m >ney on his whipping
any ch ckcn in the state, and he is not
a Slmwlneck either.
Mrs. Arp 6’op pod knitting sgam.
‘Well, he cant 'be any better than
mine, said sin*. ‘Vick got four roosters
and lie whipped them all so badly I
was sorry for them— poor things ; he
liked to have killed one of them. But
they all kerp eut of his way now.
‘Well 1 would like te*see him tackle
mine/ said Fieeman. ‘He would sur¬
render in h-ss than ten seconds.
‘That he would ut/ snid Mrs. Arp in
a lively tone, ‘you bring him down
and I will show you.
‘Well, I will bet you a dollar, said
Freeman, ‘and I’ll bring him down in
the morning.
‘No, I wont bet money,* said Mrs.A.
‘but if my chicken whips yours you aro
to give me a pair of your Hong Kong
geese.
‘All right/ said Freeman
She knit on silently for about five
minutes and then renigd, for she said
it was a s : n, aud was setting a bad ex¬
ample
‘Thats just the way I *ot overtook
in Atlanta. 1 was sta iding by the
ace track when the hors-s came out,
and after lookin at em all carefully, I
say* to the boys :
‘Thats the horse that wid win the
race.
‘Well he wont, said one of them.
‘He will, said l.
‘I will bet you five dollars he dont»
said he,
‘Done/ said I, and the m mey was up
before I had time to think about it 5
and the Worst of it was I lost it
too.
‘Whats the matter with you to
night V continued Freeman, ‘you look
sorter down.’
‘I'm used up. Pm tired as a a galley
slave/ said I. I never was ae tired in
my life. My wife is the smartest wo
man in the world, I reckon. Ever and
anon sites been talking about that old
rolliD, one-sided Tout yard, and about
terraces and blue grass and flowers and
vines and rookeries, and I never could
find time to do anything, so yesterday
morning she knew the giound was too
wet to work in the field, and I was
prowlin a round thinking what a good
rest I would h *ve, when sndden'y she
Plft P n P 110 b dr pleasantest coonte-
nancrB and invited rue t>* the front.—
There was a pick, and a shovel at.d a
wheelbarrow, and she showed m**just
a ilitle jol» She wanted do^e hcf.ro the
steps—jtfst a little job—and she told
me hviw to level it up Hml where to get
t c dirt I dident have aby excuse at
a1 ^ a,vi we “' »t « * "dl to get it
doar. By dinner time I had nearly
and sh»* rt nm down to an
uncomnwm good dinner wi b u br< ad
pudding to wind «;> on^ and then su
gated me over again and laid out
enough moie diggiu and bardin to erw*'
sum** the evening—and this morning
she found out ad of a sudden that tbi
whole thing would look worse than ev,
cr unless the terrace was extended,
and I've been at it all day and done
more diggiu and rollin than two Irish
inen, and it looks like we was a build*
in a railroad in front of the house, a id
1 uint done yet. When Im up 1 can
hardly sot down, and when I'm down
1 cant get up. My fingers feel ju-t
I ke they were gripped around the han¬
dle of something, but Im in for the war
aud going to finish up to-morrow I
thiuK. Freeman, do you reckon ali
men me imposed upon like 1 am ?
‘Shorely e.ot,’ says Freeman.
‘Well, if I was your wife,’ says Mrs.
Atp, ‘Id manage some way t o^mako
you build that gar len fenoe.
‘1 egun it this morning/ he said.
Yours, Bill Arp.
Perry vs, McLendon. Habeas corpus,
from Laurens,
Blecklky, J.
1. Judgment on habeas corpus be¬
ing in this State subject to review, es
pecial’y where the imprisonment is on
civil process, is final until reversed;and
where tiip legality ofthe same cause of
imprisonment is twice drawn in ques¬
tion between the same parties by 8UC
cessive writs of habeas corpus before
the same court, or befoie different
courts of competent original jurisdic¬
tion, the judgment on the firmer writ
may be answered in a bar of a dis¬
charge under the latter. The matter
will be deemed res adjudicata as to all
points which were necessarily involved
in the general question of the legality
or illegality ofthe arrest and detention,
whether all of them were actually pre*
sented or not. It is sufficient if they
might h ive b**en and ought to have
been presented in the exercise of due
diliigcnce.
2. The defendant in “bail trover”
cannot, since the adoption of the Code
of 1863, procure their discharge on
habeas corpus sued oat by them or at
their instance on the ground that the
plain!iff has not n.et his legal obliga¬
tions in respect to fees due or to be¬
come due the jailor.
Judgment affirmed.
VY. H. YVylly ; Jno. M. Stubbs ;
Jus. J. Conner, lor plaintiff in erro.
Rollin A. Stauley ; J. E. Hightower
for defendant.
The number of those who in 1877*78
died of starvation in Brazil is estimated
at over 120,000, exclusive of deaths
indirectly resulting from it. Frightful
havoc was also made by small pox,
which carried of 21,000 persons. There
have been few periods in history more
fertile in famine that the last lustrum
President Hayes has vetoed the
Chinese Bill upon the ground, among
others, that the evils complained of
can be remedied without the aid of
Congressional legislation, and inti
mates that the evils will be remedied
by the proper authorities.
“THE MEllCKHIAN.”
Mercer l^nteernity, Martin,is to have
a monthly paper. The following from
a voun * fi lend, a student of Mercer,
fully explains llactt. \\ *• wish the eu
terpi ise abundant enccess.
The Ciceronian and Phi Delta Soci
eties of Mer er University hare made
arrangements tofftun a monthly paper,
to he edited by the societies, and to he
devoted to the interest ot the same.—
Each sm iety bis one editor, two sub**
editors, and a committee of three to
manage the paper,
The foil owing are the editors a ad
committee elected ;
Ciceronian Society—- Editor, Philip
A. Jessup, of Puli ski county. Sub
editors, J. K, Buttle and W, L. Rich
aids. Committee, Gregory, Thurman
and Greaves.
Phi Delta Soo’ety—Editor, Eagewins
Nesbit Ileid, Eatont<>n, Ga. Sub-edi*
tors, W\ F. Gheney aud 0 C. Richard¬
son. Co nmittee—Burke, Freeman and
Nesbit,
The paper is to be called the Mercer
ian , and with such an able corps of
editors,And also with occasional contri¬
bution by the Faculty and board of
Trustees it will probably be one of
the best papers of its kind in theSout .
Junius.
S T A T E NEWS..
Rev. W. M, Clark of Monroe coun*
ty is dead.
Judge J mies T Bothwell, Ordinary
of Richmond county, i* dead.
The business men of Augusta seem
to be opposed to the reuomination of
Mr. Tilden.
Two Boston gentlemen have been
inspecting the sheep ranges of south¬
western Georgia.
It has been adjudged that the city
of Macon owes Mayor IIul! over nine
thousand dollar*.
Both Savannah and Augusta cele¬
brated Washington's birthday with
appropriate ceremonies.
Thenew census shows tha the city
of Augusta has a population of nearly
twenty-seven thousand.
It is authoritatively announced that
Judge E. IT. Pvittle has no idea
moving to Savannah or being a candi¬
date for the Judgship o; the Eastern
Circuit.
A little negro child about ten yeai8
old. killed log baby brother a few days
since, iu Warren countv, near Elim
Cburch. His mother made him nurse
the bahy against his will and when
she returned from washing clothes she
found the baby in convulsion, with
marks on his face, showing where he
had bruised and beaten.
Recently Mr. Daniel Lott, a well
known and enterprising citizen of
Ware county, and we think the found¬
er of Way cross, has closed a contract
with Reppard & Walter for 1/200,000
feet of lumber for binding purposes iu
that town. This is one ot the largest
oil.’s of lumber ever made by any one
person in the United States.— News.
The town of Way cross, Ware coun¬
ty, bids lair to be one of the most en¬
terprising in the State. It is the junc¬
tion ot the Brunswick and Albany
Railroad, and the centre of a
brisk and growing trade with the sur¬
rounding country, w'dch is being rap¬
idly opened up by a g> od class of im¬
migrants, some of whom are northern
and western men of means.
The avenge life of a locomotive is
from 35 to 40 years.
The number of Greeks in all Turkey
is about 2,500,000, while the number
in Greece is only 1,400,000.
Gambling is one the increase in Lon¬
don. Mr. Cavendish, at the “ Hanover
Square, recently, lost $40,000 at a sit¬
ting,
Tne Chinese in California pay annu¬
ally two hundred thousand dollars in
p<-ll taxes, besides property taxes and
licenses.
Lace gloves with fingers as w *11 as
with long wrists will be worn it* the
spring, as well as lace milts and half¬
fingered lace-gloves.
Dr. I. I. Hayes and Mr Henry M.
Stanley will accompany Mr. J. Gordon
Bennett to San Frauci-co, in May, to
assist him in the final preparation for
the Jeannette’s expedition, aud to see
her depart for the Arctic Seas.
In Jacksonville on Tuesday lust, one
negro drew a revolver and fired it point
blank at another. The Press sa}s the
ball struck him fairly in the centre of
the forehead, but instead of penetrat
ing, flattened and traversed the skull
beneath the scalp.
iki TIMES «
■
JOB FEINT® I
I
establishment. 1
We are now prepared to fin all order
fiw every description of
JOB PRINTING i
at short notice and exceedingly k>v
rates.
WJE PRINT
BOOKS,
MINUTES,
BY LAWS,
FAMPHlETS,
CATALOGUES,
HANDBILLS,
PROGRAMMES,
BALL TICKETS,
TAGS,
LABELS,
DODG ERS,
BUSINESS CAROS,
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VISITING CARDS,
CIRCULARS,
AN1) ENVELOPES
BALL,
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CLUB and 5
JTC-NIC
INVITATION/,
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NOTE HEADS,
BILL HEADS, r
STATEMENTS,
LAW BLANK?,
ETC., ETC., ETC. P
ESTIMATES
Promptly s?nt by Mai! on aay work io
our line.
THE
EASTMAN TIME*
will bo sent, post-paid, to any pai'to*
the United States, for one year,
on receipt of
Only Two Dollars.
/»■ y mw
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
Eastman, Dodge Gu
GEORGIA*