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DEVOTED TO NEWS, POLITICS, LITER ATE RE, AGRICULTURE ANi GENERAI PPnrvvvv ~' ' '
_ 1 PROGRESS—INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS,
# VOL. XIII.
JVIr. ISilltkiiis lakes a Jlcan Ad
vantage.
[Breakfast Table,]
The other night Billikins had an in
curable attack of the popular mania,
and going into a barbor-shop had the
lawn-mower driven over bis head as
long as it could find anything to catch
h o]§i of. He crawled out of the chair
with the look of an escaped convict,and
felt so ashamed of his appearance as he
surveyed his p te in the glass
that he couldn't nr.IN rup courage to
go home and receive blessing he
seeUfo’y confident his wife would have
ready for him, and so he wandered
around among the poolrooms posting
up in base-ball news, and storing away
lager until quite late. He walked up
the steps softly, so as not to disturb his
wife, who had been snoring two or
three hours, he thought, and began
fumbling through his pockets for his
nightskey. He searched every pocket,
and then turned down his socks and
felt Jgound in his shoes, but the key
couldn’t bo found 1
‘A nice go, this is,’ he muttered to
himself, as he took off his hat and felt
around on the inside of the lining.—
‘Dad sink the luck, anyhow. I’ve lost
that key, sure, and Mtfrtha Ann will
have to be wakened up, and then look
out for music! She's a warbler when
she’ij raised up out of a sound nap, and
the way she’ll keep the melody going
till daylight won’t bo slow. But there's
no help for it—l’ve got to rouse her
—wouldn't do to bunk out here on the
stoop, or I’d get it all with compound
interest in the mnrnina v ..
"irg to stave off what is bound to come
•—so here goes—the matinee will now
commence.’ And he gave a timid
held his breath, as he await
ed developments.
‘Who’s there?’ came from the inside
in a troir-p rnva t.i_
‘lt’s me, my dear. I’ve lost my 'key.
Open the door, please,’ said Billikins,
with a quivering voico and chattering
teeth.
‘o*h, it’s you, is it ? Well, I’ll you
you 1 Walk right in, and give an ae-;
count of yourself, and tell me what you
mean by loafing around till this time of
night? Oh, you monster 1 Just wait
till I get my hands on you 1’ and the
twin of his soul threw open the door
and gave him a pull into the house. —
‘Oh, you wretch ! Don’t stop to patch
up a mess of lies—you needn't tell me
anything about it. You’ve been drink
ing pgain.—l know it—you needn’t say
a word—enn’t I smell it? Oh, you
beast! You smell like a grog-shop.—
What do you mean, Josiah? Where
is this to end ? Are you bound and
determined to keep on till you fetch
up in the gutter and kill me with trou>-
ble and shame ? D you hear me, Jo
siah? I say you’ ;>1 profligate,
Shameless, horrid w and for_two
oeDts I’d tear 'every ban out of your
head ! Oh, you —you —’
And the frenzied woman set her
teeth, stamped her foot and made a
spring for his hair—the flowing ring
lets that had so often given her tempest
mossed fingers a haven of rest in mo
ments of storm. For the merest frac
tion of a fleeting instant the snowy fin
gers clawed his polished scalp, and then
came a shriek that tore the mosquito
bar—
‘Thieves 1 Murder ! Robbers! Help!
Help! Save me! Save me!’ And down
jr.she tumbled all in a heap, in the mid
dle of the floor, leaving Billikins more
scared than before.
‘Thump me, if I don’t believe the
woman has gone dead square crazy,’
said Billikins, as he groped about in
the dark for a match to strike a light.
‘What could a’ come over her all so
sudden, I wonder ?’
After a little difficulty and a thor
ough ducking, the woman was restored
’to consciousness, but as she opened her
eyes timidly and saw her husband's
barren poll glistening in the gas-light
just above her face, she shuddered
with fright, clasped her hands over her
face, and moaned —
‘Put him out, Josiah; put him out!’
‘Who, my darling ? Look up—your
mind wanders. Wake up and look
around —you'll be all right presently.’
‘No—no ! Drive out the horrid,
ugly, bald-headed man. I can’t bear
the sight of him —he looks so much
like an ape. Put him out, please, Jo
sy, do? He must have slipped ia be*>
hind yon in the dark.’
Mr. BillikiDS ha-hahed till he felt
sore in the ribs, and pulled down his
wife’s hands.
‘lt’s only me, Martha Ann. Ha ha*
ha ! Just take a good look at me. I’ve
been getting tr.y hair cut —don’t you
see ? Don’t it look cool and nice ?’
Mrs. Billikins jumped up and gave
hitn a look that would have been death
to house plants.
Oh, you old fool!’ she said. ‘Well,
now, you are a beauty,' ain’t you?—
Nice and cool! Fudge! Don’t tell
me, Jostah Billikins! You didn't "et
it shaved r or that at all. I ,v you.
You wanted to spite me—that ! ji -
what you did ! But I’ll get even with
you somo way. Just wait till that hair
gets grown out again, jand see if I don l
make up for lost time ! Oh, Josiah!
How could you ? 800-hoo-hoo !’
As poor Billikins tried in vain to
soothe the sobbing woman, he actually
did fee! as though he had taken a mean
advantage.—Ex.
A Story of a Trailt
She was a ta'l, stout individual, and
spraug out of the wagon as lightly as a
spring chicken after a grasshopper.—
He was a little, withered, dried-up
weasel, and followed slowly, bringing a
basket of eggs with him. They enter
ed one of our and she asked :
‘What are you givin’ for eggs ?’
‘Eight cents,’was the reply of the
counter-jumper.
‘Well, here are three dozen,’ said
the fat party, ‘and I’ll take it out in
calico.’
‘But I want some jar n to ivend my
socks.’ tho old man,
‘The weather is warm/ replied the
fat party, ‘and you can go without
socks.’
‘But my boots hurt my feet,’ insist
ed the old man.
‘Go barefooted/ said she, rather
s.iarp'y. Then [nmi-.. , ■
sne cnsfTgetrner tone, and remarked:
‘Young man, please count out the
eggs and give me four yards of calico*
match this ’ere dress.’
‘But ,’ the old man wrf to
coutinue when she raised her huge in
dex: finger and said : ‘Henry Winter
Davis Spriggins, them ’ere eggs are
mine; the hens what laid ’em are
mine; the corn what fed ’em was mine,
and I’se going to have a trail to this
ere dress as long as Betsy Gowen’s if
every too on your feet turn into gum
biles. Now, shut! and you, youngster
yank off four yards of that ’ere calico,
or you will hear a bumble bee a-buz
z'mg.’
The old man shut, and the clerk
yanked off the calico.—Ex
4re the Jews going Stack ?
Some ingenious person has been
searching the Scriptures with a view to
finding in terms of the treaty of Berlin
a step toward the fulfillment of the pro
phecies concerning the fin. > in •.*“ r-|
ing of Israel. The language r Lai;’
is certainly very striking at this {if-|
sent time. lie says: “Ho to the land |
shadowing with wings, which is beyond j
the rivers of Ethopia, that scndeth am
bassadors by the sea, even in vessels of
bulrushes upon the waters, sayiug—go
ye, swift messengers, to a nation scat'
tered and peeled, to a pociplo terrible
from their beginning hitherto a nation
meted out aDd trodded down, whose
land the rivers have spoiled.” The
conclusion, in the eighteenth chapter,
is that this nation (the Jews) are to be
brought back “to the place of the name
of the Lord of Hosts, the Mount cf
Zion.”
In the sixtieth chapter we find the
following : “Who are these that fly as
a cloud, and as the doves to their win-,
dows? Surely the isles shall wait for
me, and the ships of Tarshish first, to
bring thy sons from afar, that silver is
their gold for them. *
and the sons of strangers shall build up
thy walls, and their kings shall minis
ter unto thee, for in my wrath I smote
thee but in my favor have I had mercy
on thee. * * * * * *
The sons of them that afflicted thee
shall come bending unto thee, and all
those that deipised thee shall bow them
selves down at the soles of thy feet,and
they shall call thee the City of the
Lord.”
All commentators agree that Pales
tine and the Jews are the land and the
people meant. “The land shadowing
the wingss” is identified with the Tar
shish alluded to in the sixtieth chapter
of Isaiah—“ Surely the isles shall wait
for me, aud the ships of Tarshish first.’’
GREENESBORO’, GA., THURMAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1878.
Esekiel, in the thirty-eighth chapter
speaks of Tarshish as in alliance with
Dedan and Shebar, or India; and hav
ing to oppose an eruption from the
north the land of Gog and Magog, Rosli
and Tubal. Tarshish is apparently
England, and commentators agree that
the land of Gog and Magog means Rus
sia.- Tarshish, with the young lions
thereof, is described as an island with
a great commerce, innumerable fleets, a
place for manufacturing, with textile
fabrics and exquisite dyes, gold and
tin and iron. The lion, as we
i w, is the symbol of England, as
cue e cie is that of Rome, the bee of
Assyria, Beciocodile ofEgypt. The
Scriptures commonly mention these
other countries by their respective
symbols, and why shall not the “young
lions’’ refer to England ?
Anyway, England is now thrust into
the position foretold of Tarshish, and
already -‘the swift messenger” are on
their way. It seems incredible that
the British protectorate of Asia Minor
should be the forerunner of the return
of the Jews to the Holy Land—Tor, in
the first place, they have no desire to
go there, and secondly, Palestine could
hardly contain them now that thev
have become so numerous, but it is not
more incredible than a prophecy would
havo been two hundred years ago that
a Jew could be premier of England and
sit as her representative at the greatest
peace conference ever held in Europe.
—Ex.
The Pnfou Creed ofßeadi.
1 oere is nothing new nnder the
sun, Ihe philosophy of the pre
sent day rationalist and skeptics
was entirely anticipated by the old
Roman, Lucretius; and Froud">
in reproducing it, decW“ a t^at it
was also the creed ' ,jcero . Jttlitiai
j.i’Toncal curiosity, to show
a, with all their ingenuity, mod
ern materialists have not succeded
in giving us anything better or
radically different. Death is noth
ing, for where death is we are not.
Before we were begotton, empires
were convulsed ; provinces were
wasted with fire and sword ; nations
were sunk in wretchedness. We
knew nothing of these calamities.
They touched not us. We could
suffor nothing, for wo were not.—
As it was before we began to live
so it will be again when we have
ceased to live. Storms may roll
over the earth, land may be mixed
with sea, and sea with sky. We
shall know nothing of it. The
substance of our bodies will be in
other forms, with other souls at
tached to them. New beings will
lavo come into existence, to live
u t ss away as we did. But
| tut", beings will not be us. The
continuity one broken is broken!
forever. We shudder when wej
look upon a corpse. We imagine
that when eur bodies are corrup
ting wo shall be in some way pre
sent and conscious of our own de
cay. It is not so. Our bodies
will decay, but we shall not bo
present. Wo shall not bo any
more. ‘Ah I’some one says, “must
I leave my wife and children, and
my pleasant home ? Must all be
taken from me?” They will bo
taken from you, for you will have
no being. You will not miss
them. You will have no regrets
or vain longings for what is gone.
Your friends will lament for you.
Y r ou will not lament for them.—
You will be in peace. “Why,
then, unhappy mortals,” says
Lucretius to the vain complaincrs,
“why do you grieve? Why cry
out on death ? Has your life been
happy, the banquet is over; you
have taken your fill; depart and be
thankful. Have you been unfor
tunate, ha.s life brought you sorrow
and pain, why wish for mora of it?
Life and sorrow end together.—
Would you live forever ? The
terms of human existence do not
alter Had you a thousand lives
they could bring you nothing new.
You would but treated again the same
circle. AB.it has been with you, so
it would he though you could re-
peat the process to eternity This
is naturo’s santence, and vo shall
gainsay her ? Dry your tars.—
Peace with your idle whins Use
your time wisely while it
A little space, and it will gene.
The age3 before you wc born
are a mirror in which you p read
the ages to como. The ft has j
no terrors in it. The fut| has
none, unless you create to for >
yourself. Real, indeed, t> are
to you as long as you aiiipate i
them. Tityus and Sisyphi Cer-1,
bes and the furies! thelmght 1
of these will cause you agus as
long as you believe in themXnow
these spectres for what thi are,
tho offspring of your owraears,
and be at rest. Who an what
are you that you dream oflmor
tality ? Wiser and nob) men
than you will ever be. hav ived,
and aro gono. Accept yo< fate.
There is no remedy.—Ex.
Hayes as a War NI4.
A White Sulphur Springs iter to
the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, ys :
■ It is hinted that President Hayes
is ardently in favor of a war wi: Mex
ico, and it is even asserted that® less
than three months hostilities wijie ac
tually beguu. General Henrjfleth,
an ex-confederate general of me, and
likewise a West Pointer, is ow in
i exas, watching the tide of aff.rs in
this country,' and he, like (metal
iuiy and others, is willing to p into
the war. The people of Tcz'i are
burning w.th a desire to finish their
little (differences with Mexico. jt War
with -Mexico would be a nopqlarmeas
uro ’ 80 its advocates represent, tarticu
i:lr‘y cum in nr is in
a measure win unite trio whole country,
will do away with the threatened labor
troubles, will give employment to many
unemployed, and will settle the Mexi
can question finally. This intelligence,
startling as it is, certainly must have
some weight when it obtains credence
among such o)J soldiers as General
Maury and Hetlv/’i
A young girl discovered her young
brother out behind the shed the other
day pulling away at a cigar. ‘There,
young man !’ she exclaimed, as the ci
gar hastily disappeared behind the
boy’s baok, ‘l’ll tell your father on
you —see if I don’t.’ ‘Yes, tell him,'
retorted the brother, suddenly recover
ing himself; ‘you tell 'irn, an’see how
quick that fellow ’o yourn 'll ship. I’ll
tell father how you an’ 'im was sittin’
on the parlor sofa, an’ him a huggin’
you. You just go an’tell, that’s all I
ask," The sister very discreetly with
drew, while the young statesman finish
ed his smoke in tranquility.
—a •
Asa conceited young man was sing
ing n company, an old lady burst into
tears. The singer, greatly flattered
by the old lady’s emotion, took an ear
ly oppoitunity to get an introduction
to her, when she cordially thanked
him for his song, and said: ‘I had a
donkey I thought a groat deal of that
died lately, and your voice was so ex
actly like his, that I could not help
thinking of the poor beast as you sang.’
She clasped her handkerchief to her
face again, and the young man silently
stole away.
The Bon Ton Corset, SI 25.
Cinderella Corset, SI 00.
The Crescent Corset, 75cts.
The Hip Gore Corset, 50cts.
The Standard Corset, 25cts.
An entirely new line of them just re
ceived by C. A. DAVIS & SON.
BQr"One gallon Pickles for Half Dol
lar at JACKS & DAVIS’.
fiSF'llead the announcement of a
Conflagration in another column.
Corsets at 2.lets.
C. A. DAVIS & SON.
auction Goods have arrived,
and are placed on the Bargain Tables of
C. A. DAVIS & SON. Many people arc
buying them; they are far under the mar
ket.
bargains every day upon our
Bargain Tables. The goods are selling out
and new ones are being put on.
C. A. DAVIS & SON.
CfitwTho “Caskade” feed Cutter in store;
the “Sanford” feed Cutter to arrive.
C. A. DAVIS & SON.
£~-J-Tool Chests, Wax Dolls, China
Dolls and liubber Dolls for Half Dol
lar, worth double t lie price, at
JACKS & DAVIS’.
the Ho rn Bit
Often innocently gives her nursing little
ne the severest Colic or Cholera Infantum
by indulging herself in fruits and vegeta
hvn,„ I>ar ! £ , Cr ’ S Gi, ’ Kftr Tonic, taken freely
by tho mother, will not only counteract
Uns dangerous effect on her babe, but will
lengthen her own nervous and physical
system, and impart to her little one quiet
cheerfulness, freedom from pain; and a !&
.position to refreshing sleep. Ir is a most
( cheering relief from the miseries of Dvs
Pepsia, lied,idle. Nervousness, Palpitation. I
Heartburn, Liver disorders, Constipation
how Spirits and Wakefulness, ami the
dangero" 8 Cholera Infantum, Cramps, Col
c, Cholera Morbus, Diarrhoea and Dysou
ery are rendered harmless and speedily
*ure by this matchless and invigorating
corrective. Buy from your druggist, John
xriffin, a $1 bottle or a sample Lot tic <
at 15 merits.
Florida, Our BLarnl til l lov! m. 1
A throng of sufferers with coughs and
colds, annuall go South to enjoy the ether
eal mildness of (lie land of flowers. To
them we would say the necessity of that
expensive trip is obviated by Coussens’
Compound Honey ofTar, which speedily
cures the coughs and colds incident to this
rigorous clime. For public speakers it
surpasses the Demosthenic regimen of
“pebbles and sea shore;” clearing the
throat until the voice -iags with the silvery
cadence of a bell. Use Coussens’ Com
pound Honey of Tar. Price 50 cents a
bottle. For sale by Dr. E. V. Culver,
Greenesboro’ Ga.
Botlinl IJgitimng 2
When used for Rheumatism, Sore Throat
Lame Back, Neuralgia, Sprains Bruises,
Contracted Muscles, Stiff Joints, Corns and
Bunions,on human beings; and Spavin,
Ring hone, Galls, Scratches, etc., on ani
mals, Coussens’ Lightning Liniment is un
equaled, and its effect simply electrical.—
As its name suggests, it is quick to relieve,
and thousands bear witness to its astound
ing virtues. Priee 50 cents. For Sale by
Dr. E. V. Culver, Greenesboro’, Ga.
IF
The Woman who rejoices in salad
and ice cream, hot cakes and warm
The Student who eats hastily nua sits
down at active mental labor;
IF
The Business Man who bolts Lis food
in eager haste and hurries to his coun
ting-room;
IF -
The Hard Drinker could look at the
delicate glands, swollen and festered
with disease, that cause tho throbbing
brain;
IF
The Lawyer, tho Minister, the Mer.
chant, and all who lead sedentary lives
and are subject to dispepsia or Indi
gestion, Constipation and Headache;
IF
These only knew what Merrelt/s
Hjspatink for the Liver will do
for their relief, and how quickly it
cures —there would be much less suf
fering than at present.
The great Liver Medicines for sale
by Hr. John A Griffin, Greenesboro
Ga.
Smith's Worm Oil.
Athens, Ga., December 8,1877.
A few nights since, I gave my son one
dose of the Worm Oil, and the next dayjie
passed sixteen large worms. At the same
time I gave one dose to my little girl, four
years old,and the passed 80 worms, from 4
to 15 inches long. W. K. PHILLIPS.
Prepared by Dr- E. S. Lyndon, Athens,
Ga. ji‘-°
A SSJ.-ssiiis; to llolliers;
There will be no necessity for moth'
ers leaving the comforts of home, with
their sick babies, this summer, if they
will give Dr. Moffett’s Teeeiiina
I (Teething Powders). Teethina will
regulate the bowels and make teething
easy. It cures Cholera Infantum and
the summer complaints ol Children,
heals Eruptions and Sores, removes
and prevents the formation of Worms.
John A. Griffin and all Druggists keep
it.
\ Sure Cure tor 4 oiisiimptioii.
Those suffering from this fearful disease
are assured that Thrash's Consumptive
Cure and Lung Restorer will positively
cure. Ask the recovered consumptive how
lie was cured, and he will tell you Thrash's
remedy is the only one that is a sure cure
for the disease. Pleurisy, Pneumonia,
Coughs, Colds readily give way where the
remedy is employed. Croup and Whooping
Cough lose their horror where the Con
sumptive Cure has been introduced, and no
family who have once used or witnessed its
happy effects will ever consent to he w...i
--out it again. It is so simple in its compo
sition, containing no opium or other injuri
ous drugs, that the most delicate and feelde
can use it without the least injury.
! John 11. Mead of Atlanta, Ga., writes:—
“It is the only remedy now extant for
Consumption and diseased lungs.”
Rev. I)r. Lovic Pierce says—
‘l have been speechless about two months
-—have been taking Thrash’s Remedy. This
is the ninth day, aud l can talk now with
some ease.”
TRIAL BOTTLE 50cte.
sale by ,IO(IN A.
l-'IA. Greeneshoro’, Ga.
Maroli Id, 1k7(1—1 1'
\ XT E are Agents for Jewell's Mills.—
\ V Kersey, Jeans, J, and 4-1 Domestic
prices same as at Factory
J. F. HART & Cos.
1 week in your own town.
0* J* |■Outfit free. No risk. Reader,
haV'f V Oll want a business at which
of either ex can make
1/ Vf Vgreat pay all iho time they work
* write for particulars to P.
Hali.utt & Cos., Portland, Maine.
Feb. 28th, 1878—ly.
i
- College.
ATLANTA, GA.
rjvHE Twenty-First Annual Course o:
I Lectures will commence October loth
1878, aVI close March 4th, 1-711.
FACULTY—I G. Westmoreland, \V. F.
Westmoreland, W. A. Love, V. H. Talia
ferro. John Thad. Johnson, A. W. Calhoun.
J, 11. Logan, J. T. Banks; Demonstrator,
C. W. Nutting.
Send for Announcement, giving full in
formation.
JNO. THAI). JOHNSON, M D ,
Aug; 15, 1878 —1m Dean,
Wesleysui female
3E!_b m~ C3r IHL
MACON, GA.
The Forty-first Annual Session begins Sep
tember 18, 1878.
UNSURPASSED advantages in Liter*
ture, Science, Ancient and Modern
an cf Vcienffs ! I•'gui\lVftg ' w TT%T wrrnsm
course of lectures during the Fall term, by
Dr. Lipscomb, of Vanderbilt University.
Address, Rev. W. 0. BASS, 1*.1).,
July 25, 1878-2 ms President.
C'i EOltGlA—GreenC County.
H Benjamin F. Bickers, Administra
tor ‘do bonis non,” of the Estate of Wil
liam Bickers, dec ear e i, applies for leave to
sell all the lieal Estate of said deceased,
and an order to that clfect will bo grunted
on the first Monday in September nexl,
Uni "is good objections are tiled.
JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y.
August sth, 1878.
('IEORGIA —Greene County.
James K. Daniel. Administrator de
bonis non of the Estate of Samuel J( Dan
iel, deceased, applies for letters of Dismis
sion, and such Letters will he granted on
the first Monday in October next, unless
good objections are tiled.,
JOEL F. THORNTON Ord’y.
July 10th, 1878.
(N EORGlA—Greene County.
_JT Henry Moore, Administrator of tlie
Estate of Mrs. Sarah G. McHenry, applies
for Letters of Dismission, and such Letters
will be granted on tho first Monday in
November next, unless good objections are
filed,
JOEL F. THORNTON, Ord’y.
August Ist, 1878— *
{ N KOBO I \—Greene County.
7 Charles O. Norton, Administrator
“De bonis non.” of the Estate of Thomas
P. Wr.gnon, deceased, applies for leave to
-ell nil the Real Estate of said deceased
and an Order to that effect will bo granted
on the first Monday in September next un
less good objections are filed.
JOEL F. THORNTON. Ord’y.
August Ist, 1878
( N EORGIA— Greene County.
I John O’Neal, Administrator of the
liatnte of Win. A. Oorry, deceased, applies
for leave to sell all the Real Estate of said
deceased and an order to hat effect will be
granted on the first Monday in September
next, unless good objections are filed.
'JOEL. F. THORNTON, Ord’y.
August 1 -t, 1878.
Executor’s Sale.
I}y virtue of an order from the Ordinary
J of Gfei ne Genuity, will he sold before
the Court House in Oreenesboro', Georgia,
on the first Tuesday in September next.
One Share Of Georgia Kail Kmd Stock ami
two Shares of the Stock of the bank of Au
gusta, as the properly of the Kstate'of Janies
W. Jackson dc<seaesd, for the purpose of
Distribution. T3rrns Cash.
Win. U. JACKSON. Executor.
August Ist, IS7B.
FOR SALE.
I HAVE A CARRIAGE FOR SALE.
niade i-y 11. C. Sitton, of tfti.-i place for
which 1 paid him S3OO, and will take $l5O
for the same in cash. Parties wishing to
Imy a bargain can seo I lie Carriage at my
Carriage house in Greeneshoro’.
T. \. 101 S.S,A*V
July 18, 1878—tf.
jj t iiORG lA—(lreeue Coi (y
\ T Ellington applies for I.ef
levs of Administration •>:i the Estate of*
Dennis Ellington .colored,) decea-cd, su-l j
such Letters will he granted on the first!
Monday in July next, unless good 'ejec
tions are filed ‘ J. F. THORNTON.
June 3, 1818 Ordinary. ,
f- -Fly Traps at 7-’>- ts. which will j
catch quantities of flics in a short time, i
(’.A DAVIS & SON. |
11 $ &SJNEBS CA R DS.
M - '' k ' v - s - y
J'SIOS & SON’S,
c f ttmmj'; nt %;„v.
GHKKNKSBORO’, ga.
W ' LL practice in nil tim Courts
" it'' and i’edernl. n0v.29,’77
li. 11. LEWIS,
\I7ILfj give faithful anil prompt attention
’ ' to allbusincas intrusted to his care.
•1.-.,.. 1878—dm 8
McW hortcr UroM
Attorneys & Counselors at Lav*.
GtIEENESBOIIO’, - - GA.
,T®~CollccGon of Claims a 'tjK't'itiHt,
f John A. iMVliortcr. )
i Ilainilton McAViioftci. 1
Sept. 27, 18771 f
Philip B. Roliiiiscii,
Attorney at Law,
<iREENESBORO‘. . . . GA
\X7ILF, give prompt altonti in to business
' ' entrusted to hi3 professional enve.
Feb. 20, 1873—(Iras
JAMES B. PARK.
Attorney at Law,
(jREENESBQIi 0\ - - - GA.
PtOM n T personal attention given to all
business intrusted to bis rare, in ti c
Counties of Greene, Morgan, llaucurk,
Oglethorpe,(Hark, McDuffie and liii bmond,
Jau. 1, 1878—ly
Attorney & Counselor at Law ;
GREENES BORO’, - - - GA
OFFICE in the North East Room of the
Jas. L. Blown Ruildiug. Up sum s
March, 21, 1878 —ly.
~W7W. LUMPKIN'
attorney at la if,
UNION POINT, • Oil
OFFERS his professional services to the
people of Greene and adjoining coun
ties. and hopes, by elosc attention to bnsi
sincss to merit and receive a liberal share ol
patronage. ja2B ’7l ly-
Picticrifk Si. ileai-y,
Aitcrney at Law,
SPARTA, GA
wxtilL give prompt personal altentoin
♦ t to all business cmpiocted with hi
profession, in the Northern and Ocnuilgoo
Circuits..
attention given to the, col
lection of claims. jf- n - 1 “ 1878
lh\ Win. Mortal!,
RESIDENT
3 DENTIST
GREENE SB 0 R O', G A
feb. 1, 1574.
T. Markwalter,
lItBRIJI Ft OKI'S,;
Near Lower Market, Broad Street.
Augusta, - - - - Ga.
\ LARGE SELECTION always on hand
ready for lettering and shipping
Augusta, Ga., Sept. 0. 187i—hns
J. F.&J. C.HART*
Steal Esfulc
AGENTS,
iLYiorii s’Oivr, ua.,
VltF. Correspondents of Real hst.'itq
Agents, North and Sniuh. h'i this
section. Business solicited. 'm-!”7
The National BanK of Augusta-
M T a-’iS liRPIWIT
riDD-S BANK i pre-par. I o te-r-e tn:d.
! SAFI'S inside its fief. fruot vm’i.t
:it mud crate rate 0 , fun* tin* rerefi-Gi m
Bonds, Securities, Deeds, I -* -*I Dneu
ments, Plate, Coin. Jewelry, and mln-.hle-.
of everv description. ti. M. Till.’’.
Feb. 17. 187t>— tf Cashier
j,-. -'Every bodv acts suited who bo?
Goods of *C- 4. DAVIS SON.
NO. 37