Newspaper Page Text
@he Marietta Journal,
Eatered at the Post Office, Marictta, Ga., as Second
Class Matter,
W. S. N. NEAL, | e
3. A. MASSEY, ; Editors.
MARIETTA, GA.
THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1885.
“Epitomized hell,” is what Dr. Fel
ton calls the present chain gang.
B e —
General Grant says he has found
that Republics are not ungrateful,
e A — .
The collector of New York has
3,288 men on his pay roll.
England is not so much in love of
Liberty as she is of Libertinism.
The local option bill was up for
discussion in the Legislature on Mon
day and Tuesday.
— e I — e
Miss Lulu Hurst has retired from
the stage, rich.
e
The Worlds exposition plant, ma
chinery and buildings, New Orleans,
have been sold for $175,000.
e
The feud in Rowan county, Ken
tucky, has cost the lives of thirty
men.
e e
If President Cleveland is to be
held responsible for a democratic ad
ministration, he should place only
democrats in office.
Last week nineteen cases of sui
cide occurred in New York and as
many in Chicago. The heated term
always increase the number of sui
cides.
o —— s O——
The Mobile and Ohio Railroad
Company changed the gauge of its
road from five feet to the standard or
four feet and eight and a half
inches on the Bth inst., in twelve
hours time.
———— ®— e
President Cleveland is said to be
working hard. But almost anybody
would be willing to work hard if fur
nished a fine house to live in free and
paid $136.98 for every day ot the
year, including Sunday.
Dr. Felton delivered an able speech
in the House on the 10th inst.,in be
half of establishing houses of correc
tion and reformatory for young crimi
nals. He denounced the chain gang
as an outrageous and infamous sys
tem, a disgrace to hummenity and
unauthorized by law.
e
The best thing to do with the ne
gro is to let him alone and he will
reach the plane of his ability and
possibility much sooner than he
will by the aid of everlasting legisla
tion on the subject. With citizen
ship as a lever, and all other legal
rights conferred upon him, he isin a
position to stand or fall as he sees fit.
The average white man has nothing
more than this, and wants no more.
Mr. Samuel B. Wood, of New York,
left, in his will, $2,000,000 for a col
lege of music. Only $2,000 remain. |
The lawyers gobbled up $1,998,800.
Had Mr. Samuel B. Wood, toward
the close of his life, become his own
executor, the college would have
been built, and he would have known
that his desire was consummated.
But men hate to let go their money
while alive.
————
On the Bth a terrible storm or cy
clone swept through Wisconsin, Min
nesota, Michigan and Illinois doing
great damage to property, crops, &c.
At OshKosh, Wis,, the e¢yclone and
a waterspout come in collision, de
molishing hundreds of houses, among
the large buildings destroyed are the
Exposition building and St. Paul and
St. Peters churches. Two persons
reported killed and many wounded.
Poverty is no disgrace, unless lazia
ness caused it; hard work is an hon
or, provided you are not working
hard to do somebody aninjury. Wear
ing common clothes is no sin, but it
is a sin to wear fine clothes and let
your family suffer, or owe your mer
chant for them. 'To eat plain vic
tuals bothers no one, if you pay for
them. Above all things, don’t lay
your sins at some neighbor’'s door,
for that is both disgraceful and dis
honest.
e
The pay car of the Richmond and
Danville road, containing #30,000,
was coupled toa switch engine by
three men and run out of Atlanta
Tuesday morning. Mr. Groser, the
paymaster, sleeping on the car, awoke
in time to defeat the purpose of the
robbers. lle was shot at five times,
but managed to get off the train and
secure help. The robbers fled. James
Noland was captured.
We opine that the party who shall
put their capital into a canning facto
ry in this vicinage will reap a fortune.
It is undoubtedly the truth that the
south exports northward the very
best of its fruit and vegetable crops
in their serson, and out of season
buys back in sealed packages the re
fuse of northern markets. Let us
compete with the northerner just for
once ina commodity which we can
serve in better quality and at lower
prices, and which need not seek for
customers and consumers.
A BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION.
There never was as much work
done in the departments in Washing
ton as is being accomplished now.
This is said to be a “business admin
istration ;" certainly its employes are
a busy people if you judge them by
their present activity. Never was
there a prompter or more active
and apparently anxious set of em
ployes. Men and women, too, who
used to think nothing of laying off
whenever they found an imaginary
ache or pain, are now on hand before
the hour for beginning work, no mat
ter what ails them. Those who were
in the habit of straggling in 10 or 15
minutes or a half hour late each
morning are now promptly on hand
before the hour of 9 arrives. For
merly the rule was to knock off work
about half past 3, wash and brush
and dust and kill the time of the last
half hour in whatever way was most]
convenient. Now the work goes
steadily on until 4, and in many cases
til 5, or even later. The result isap
parent everywhere. It has been a
long time since the close of the fiscal
year has found a year’s work in as
good shape as now. The record of
of the past two or three months in
the department shows a greater
amount of work accomplished than is
usual in that length of time.
ENGLANI’S SHAME,
England is all stirted up over the
recent exposures made by the Pall
Mall Gazette in London, of the scan
dalous importation of young girls for
immoral purposes, patronized by the
Prince of Wales and the wealthiest
and most aristocratic men of London.
The Gazette has shown a rotten state
of society that is scandalous and
shameful, and is doing a good work of
reform. Rev. Mr. Spurgeon and cth
ers endorse the course of the paper
and say “while it is a loathsome bus
iness, even the sewers must be cleans
ed. Spare not the villians, though
wearing the stars and garters.”
INSURANCE LESISLATION.
The insurance laws of this State
need overhauling. There are evils
growing out of constitutional and
statutory provisions that exist at
present, that can be easily cured by
proper legislation. We refer, of
course, to the constitutional provision
requiring a deposit from every com
pany doing business in the State, and
the statute that prohibits adjustors
from companies not making the de
posit from coming into the State, to
adjust losses in case of fire. Under
these provisions, the companies who
have complied with the deposit law
have combined, and have advanced
insurance rates in many instances
from 200 to 300 per cent.
The deposit at present required is
$25,000. As a matter of tact, this
amount furnishes little or no protec
tion to insurers. They look at last to
the character of companies making
the deposit. If the Legislature will
pass a law making the deposit $25 in
stead of $25,000, there would be lit
tle or no difference in the security
offered insurers. This change in the
deposit law, and a repeal of the stat
ute prohibiting adjustors of compa
nies not making deposits from com
ing into the State to adjust losses,
would result in inereasing the number
of companies doing husiness in Geor
gia from 40 to 100. The competition
naturally arising would result in
bringing rates back to reasonable
standard such as was in force for
many years previous to the provis
ions in our law, above referred to.
If the Legislature really desires to
protect insurers, this is the line upon
which they should operate.— Macon
Telegraph.
The above is on the line we have
been urging some time, and we are
glad to see so able a paper as the
Telegraph in harmony with our
opinion on this important subject.
oP W e
The following remarkable story of
a water spout in Texas is published
in the Galveston News, under date
of July 5: *'Phis morning near Wal
dron, 150 miles west of here, an east
bound freight train was struck by a
water spout. The engineer saw the
water spout approaching, bounding
along like a rubber ball, tearing up
themarth and unrooting all in its
way, and slowed his train to avoid it.
Just before the waterspout reached
the line of the road it changed its
course and hounded along, parallel
to the track, with frightful velocity.
When opposite the train, the water
spout burst, deluging the engineer,
fireman and breakman, who abandon
ed the train and climbed some trees to
avoid a wave of water fully cight feet
high and about one hundred feet
wide. The locomotive and fourteen
cars were raised bodily and carried
nearly two hundred teet from the
track, while the road bed was almost
obliterated. No one was hurt.”
A New York gentleman who knows
Mr. Geo. I. Seney well, said a few
days ago that Mr. Seney had made a
fine start toward the recovery of his
fortune. This will be welcome news
in Georgia, three of whose colleges
received over £300,000 of My, Seney’s
former fortune. Mr. Seney is only
about 54 years old. He has robust
health, a big brain and abigger heart.
Such a man is always rich, ‘
GEORGIA GLEANINGS.
Editor J. D. Alexander has been
appointed Postmaster at Thomaston.
John B. Campbell’s barn near Au
gusta has been burned with 1,000
bushels of oats and 600 bushels of
wheat.
The Georgia match factory shipped
another full carload of their matches
Wednesday on an order from Balti-i
more. |
The Georgia railroad rents for $5O,- ‘
000 a month ; the Western and Atlan
tic is seems should bring at least $40,-
000. ’
One hundred and eighty-two stu
‘dents were in attendance upon the
university at Athens this session,
twelve of them being law students.
Troup factory, at LaGrange, has
“shut down” for an indefinite period
and the operatives have generally
sought employment at other mills.
Romans are organizing a home in
surance company. Theredas already
heen 8100,000 subsecribed, and $500,-
‘OOO will be the limit of the capatal
stock.
Near High Shoals, in Morgan coun
ty, Thursday, Calvin Gordan was
shot and instantly killed by a saloon
keeper named Henry Crawford. An
old grudge led to the shooting.
Dr. Felton’s bill to establish a
house of refcrmatory for conviets,
has been referred to a committee of
nine.
Miss Nellie Butner, a social belle,
and Mr. A. F. Brimberry, of Macon,
came to Atlanta and were married,
thus defeating the opposition of pa
rents.
At Dalton two negro prisoners
overpowered aldeputy sherift when he
entered the jail to feed them. After
a hot chase one of them was recaptur
ed but the other escaped.
At Chauncy, Ga., R. M. Peacock
and Charles Thompson, both of North
Carolina, renewed an old quarrel,
drew pistols and commenced firing.
Both were instantly kilied, and a
stray bullet killed a negro.
The heirs of the late John T. New
ton of LaGrange, have brought suit
against the Atlanta and West Point
railroad for $15,000. Mr. Newton
‘was killed by a passenger locomotive
‘atthe steam mill crossingin LaGrange
May 29.
A colored woman living in Appling
county, near Graham, locked her four
children in the house and left them.
When she returned she found the
house with all its contents and the
children burned up.
Cartersville American: [ heard
Colonel Trammell, of Dalton, say not
long ago that his political platform
now consisted of only three planks,
to-wit: “No whisky, no fence, and a
dog tax.” He wanted to quit mak
ing drunkards, quit cutting trees for
rails, and quit raising sheep to feed
to “‘yaller” dogs.
Lydia Cox, a small girl 4 years old,
entered the school of Miss Lula Mor
gan at Rhode’s school house, in Doo
ly county, and learned the alphabet
and advanced so fast that in the short
space of five weeks, she was enabled to
spell 130 words out of 140, which
were given out to her by her teach-
Recently a man was removing some
poles on Henry Johnson’s place at
Americus, and uncovered two nests
of the large-stripped lizzard, common
ly called “scorpions,” one containing
14 and the other 16 eggs. Return
ing to the place soon afterwards he
detected one mother lizzard in the
act of removing her eggs to less ex
posed locality. She had removed all
but two, and was carrying off one
of those in her mouth when discover
ed.
Henry Grady, in the Constitution,
says: “In the Southern Base Ball
League there are 125 players, mana
gers and umpires, engaged at aggre
gate salaries of perhaps $£15,000 a
month or‘S’lOO'c.uuh. Of the clubs it
is believed that Atlanta, Nashville,
Macon and Augusta are playing pro
fitable scasons in the order named,
and the other clubs losing. In Bir
mingham last Saturday $1,700 was
raised in three hours to replenish the
club treasury. The Atlanta directors
have passed a resolution donating to
their manager and players 75 per
cent. of the profits of the season. It
is estimated that the profits will net
above §2,000.
There is a curious ease now before
the governor for consideratiou. On
Christmas night two negroes had a
quarrel and a scufilein a eabin, which
was the home of one of them. Later,
the quarrel, which was about as much
a Christmas frolicas a guarrel, was
renewed in the yard, The visiting
negro struck at the other with a stick.
The lick miscarried in the dark and
struck a baby which the other negro
had in his arms. The child died
from the effect of the lick. The evi
dence was clear that the assailiant
did not see the child and did not know
that there wus any child near. But
the law being that whoever kills an
other in the performance of an u n
lawful act is guilty of murder, the
negro was convieted of murder and is
now in the penitentiary for life. If
he had hit the negro he aimed at, the
most punishment would have been a
few days sentence. e hit the child
he did not see, and he is a murderer.
AN EARNEST APPEAL
To the People of Cobb County and Marietla,
We have Leen appointed & committee to
call your attention to the fact, that the State
Agricultuial Convention will eonvene in
Marietta on the 13th of August, and that
suitable arrangements will have to be made
for the entertainment of the delegates, and
that we furthermore propose to give the del
egates & basket dinner on the grounds of
the Pheenix club, and make such display of
our farm and garden pfiflcm, and our
stock of horses, cows, sheep and hogs, as
the limited time and means at ourcommand
will permit. Now, we come to you as fellow
countrymen, interested alike with us in the
main industry of onr common heritage, and
appeal to your generosity to assist us with
such contributions as your means will allow.
We feel assured when you understand that
we need funds and materialto erect some
sheds for the protection of the exhibits made
by the ladies, and stalls and shelters for
stock, you will come to our aid and encour
age our efforts to stimulate and foster a spir
it of pride and emulation among the farm
ers in order to make their calling, not only
successful, but their farms and homes
sources of pride, and objects ot attraction to
all of our citizens. You realize fully, that
upon the successful conduet of the farmers
of Georgia depend her future prosperity and
the happiness and intelligence of her people.
Encourage us, therefore, in stimulating and
arousing this spirit to improve and make
every department of the farm a grand suc
cess. France points with pride to her self
supporting farms, and vine covered cottages,
dotting every hill, and in her hour of peril
she rests her hopes on this conservative
class of her citizens, whose love of State and
home is such that they consider no sacrifice
too great to be made to maintain her glory
and honor.
Cannot Georgia foster and advance this
interest, and shall we not reach out and
‘grasp the opportunity now presented to us
of promoting our material prosperity? Our
county has a splendid reputation abroad, let
us not sufter her banner to trail in the dust
by indifference and lethargy. We beg that
you will open your homes to the delegates,
aud that you will contribute some money to
help us in our work. All contributions left
with the merchants of Marietta or with eith
er of the undersigned, will receive that di
rection which its donor intends, and will be
properly accounted for by the Executive
Committee,
Our time is so limited, we are compelled
to urge immediate action on your part, so
that we can decide at the (s:n'fiest day prac
ticable, what plan will be most feasible with
the means at our disposal. We are anx
ious that the exhibitat the Pheenix grounds
shall be from the farmers of the whole coun
ty, whether they helong to clubs or not, and
anything in the way of farm products, field
crops of all kinds, fruits, vegetables, &c.,
will be gladly received, and ml(l;ed to the gen
eral display. We will have accommodations
for stock, poultry, &c, and hope any citizen
of this county having anything extra in this
line, will bring it and show it.
To the ladies, particularly, we appeal to
help us with their handiwork, canned fruits,
vegetables, pickles, preserves, dried fruits,
cakes, l;rvuti, &e., also needle work. em
broidery, any of the various beautiful things
which they know so well how to make, and
which will add so much to the general dis
play. A list of premiums will be published
next week, R. T. Nespirr,
J. G. HuGues,
W. J. ManylNG,
Committee,
——————tlly AP e i
STOLEN BY GYPSIES.
Mr. Carson of Columbus, Ohio,
in February, 1884, had his two chil
dren, a son 9 and a daughter 13
years old, stolen by gypsies. He fol
lowed the gypsies South and took a
detective along. After a time he
sent the deteetive home and contin
ued pursuit alone. While at Nash
ville, a little more than three weeks
ago, he heard of gypsies at Coving
ton, Tenn. On July Ist he entered
their camp and found his son. The
little fellow, overjoyed, ran to his
father’s arms. The gypsies told him
he would find his daughter at La-
Grange, Tenn. lere he found the
girl with her neck branded and her
skin dyed. e was driven from the
camp, but with help from LaGrange
he got his daughter. 'This was on
July 4. He went at once to Mem
phis and took passage for Cincinnati,
Or all the cool things in thisage of
cheek, the passage cited from the sen
tence of death passed by a Judge in
Wyoming, upon a condemned mur
derer, is certainly the coolest. After
reviewing the trial, his Honor said to
the prisoner: “I am by no means sat
‘ isfied with the evidence lin the case,
and am not sure whether you killed
‘John Forbes or whether he died by
&a visitation of God, but my sentence
is that you be hanged on the third
Friday of June: and should you know
of your own innocence you will have
‘the comforting thought that it is.
doubted by some of the wisest think
ers of the age whether life is, under
any circumstances, worth living.” ‘
N el 4 W
A clerk of one of Boston's courts
tells a very good story of a somewhnt.{
flighty lawyer who was once trying a
case in which there was a great scar
city ot witnesses, and the evidence
was about all eircumstantial. Final
ly the lawyer got excited and ex
claimed: “Why, judge, the :mgeli
Gabriel come to me last night :m_d‘
said this man is innocent.”” The
judge, who happened to be writing,
did not even look up, but saidin a
most matter-ot-fact way, “Let Lim be
subpanad.” :
A runaway marriage is the latest
sensation in Webster, Jackson, coun
ty, N. . Oscar B. Coward eloped
with Miss Emma Long, one of the pret
tiest girls in the county. The mar
riage license was issued by the young
lady herself. Her father, who is
county register of deeds, had left sev
eral blank Jicenses at his hguse with
his name already signed to them, so
that if any one should come fora
license while he was out of town some
member of the family could fill out
the blanks over his signature. His
daughter secured one of these blanks
and filled it out herself, She is not
yet 14 yeaws ot age.— Richmond Bis
pateh,
REMARKABLE.
Samuel Crowell, an aged darkey on
the farm of John P. Collins, twenty
miles from Orangeburg, 8. C., was
taken sick, and kept grasping at his ‘
sides as if something was gnawing at
his vitals. Dr. Sally gave him an
emetic, and he vomited from his
stomach six full grown lizards. The
physician was completely thunder
struck. The old darkey soon began
to improve, and in a couple of hours
was able to get out of bed. Investi
gation proves that four years ago,
while drinking from a spring during
the gotton picking season, the old
man swallowed what at that time he
said was a lizard, but as it gave no
trouble he soon forgot about it. The
one he swallowed was doubtless a fe
male and the others were born in his
stomach. Dr. Sally has preserved
‘the lizard in alcohol.
A novel dodge to defraud the gov-*
ernment has just been discovered by
the internal Revenue Bureau—a bar
rel so constructed that the stave im
mediately above the bung and the
corresponding stave on the opposite
side of the barrel were of unusual
thickness, thus giving a smaller diam
eter when the gauges measures the
vessel. Thanks to this device, about
two gallons of each barrel escape the
tax.
It is chayged by certain parties in
New York that Col. Nicholas Smith,
of Kentucky, who married Miss Ida
Greeley, has, since her death, spent
most of the money left by Horace
Greeley. Gossips have it that he is
shortly to marry a Calitornia heiress,
‘when he intends to pay back the
‘ money spent to the estate.
The latest artesian sensation is that
of a young man lately moved to
Brunswick, who avows that bathing
his head every morning in artesian
water is curing him of baldness.
——e,
MARIETTA MARKET.
[Corrected Weekly by our Merchants.]
COTTON—9 to 10 cents per pound,
CORN--85 ets per bushel.
MEA L—~sets per bushel,
HAY--$1 35.
BRAN —sl 10.
OATS--65 cts
WHEAT—SI 00 per bushel,
FLOUR—S 4 50 to 7 00.
BULKMEAT—7¢ts to Scts per pound.
LARD —llets to 124cts per pound.
SUGARS—Crushed and Powdered, 10cts.
Granulated Yets. Extra C 83, Brown 7} to.s.
SALT-—Liverpool $1 00 per sack. Vir
ginia $1 00 per sack. ‘
COFFEE—Java 30 cts per pound, Ric
Coffee 12} to 16ets.
SYRUP-—New Orleans to 50 to 75 cts per
gallon. Drips 60 to Tets. Georgia Cane
60 to 75. Molasses 40 to Socts per gallon.
PEAS—#£l 75 per bushel.
RICE—B] to 9 cts per pound.
COUNTRY PRODUCE—Buying prices
from Wagons—Eggs, Sto 10 cts. Chickens
12} to 20cts. Butter 15 to 20 ects.
FACTORY GOODS—§ Shirting 6ets;
4-4 Sheeting 7 cts: Factory Yarn 90 cts per
bunch; Prints 5 to 6; Bleach SLirtings 6 to
14; Jeans 15 to 50.
LIME--3 bushels barrel $l.OO.
NAILS—Per keg, 10d $3; 81 $325;
6d, $3 50; 4d, $3 75.
IRON—Tire 13 by 3 inch 3} to 3} cts,
smaller sizes Je advance. Rods 9cts. Cast
steel l6ets. Sad iron Hets. Horse shoe
nails 18 to 22cts.
LEATHER-—Harness leather 30 to 32}
Sole leather, hemlock, 274 cts; oak 36 to 12
split 40¢; kips, country 60 to 70c per Ib.
Pegs 5¢ per pint,
What will Surel; Do It.
One's hair begins to fall ont from many
causes. The important question is: What
is sure to make it grow in again? Accord
ing to the testimony of thousands, Parker's
Hair Balsam will do it. It quickly covers
bald spots, restores the original color when
the hair is gray or faded, eradicates dan
druff, and causes the scalp to feel cool and
well. It is not a dye, not greasy, highly per
fumed, sate. Never disappoints those who
require a nice, relinble dressing.
——— — — .
A dispatch from Washington says:
Nearly 8,000 applications for offices
have been placed on file in the Inte
rior Department sinee March 4th,
and remain unexamined.
s
Au Enterprising. Reliable House.
R. H. Nartheutt can always be relied up
on, not only to carry instock the best ot
everything, but to secure the Ageney for
such articles as have well-known merit, and
are popular with the people, thereby sustain
ing the reputation of heing always enterpris
ing, and ever reliable. Having seenred the
.\:mu-'y for ‘.ht' eelehrated “l'. l\‘;li',:'rl New
Ditcovery for Conswmption, will sell it on a
positive gurantee. It will surely cure any
and every affection of Throat, Lungs, and
Chest, and to show our confidence, we invite
you to cali and get a Trial Bottle Free.
New Advertisemconts.
Bridge Contractors,
OFFICE OF ORDINARY CoBB COUNTY.
MARIETTA, GA., July 15, 1885, }
Will be let to the lowest bidder before the
court house door in Marietta on Satyrday,
the 15th day of August next, at 10 o'clock,
A, M., tiie vontraet for bullding a Bridge
across Sweetw ater creek and known us the
“Hays Bridge; ' Also a Bridge across ltot.
tonwood creek; said bridges to be about 100
feet long each, the plans and spec'fications
can be seen at this oflice Contractors wil)
be required to file theiy bonds oa srld day
tor the faithfui pertormance of the contract.
County warrants will be issued in payment
s 0 scon as the vork s ¢ mplcted and ac
cepted. The right to reject any or s}l bids
is reserved Ho M. HAMMETT,
Ordiuary.
RELIABLE SELF-CURE,
rese a o -t
oy EREENATEC RIS o o,
now rg red)mma cure of Nervous Debility,
oBt aah y Weakness snd Deeay. Hois
plainsealed envelope free. Druggistecantill e,
Address DR. WARD & CO., Louisiana, Mo,
“fl
EXECUTORS SALE.
GrORGIA—COonB CoUNTy:
By virtue of an order from the court of
Ordipgry of Copb ecoupty, will be sold, on
the first Huesday in August |B3, at the
Court House or in said county, hetw cen
the legal bours of sale, lots of lapd Nos,
8§96, 935, BRL, 070 in [th district and 2nd
seciion oi ( by county aud being what is
known us the Wm. Duke plice, conta ning
160 acres more or less. Said lands sold as
the property of Wm. Florence, late of swid
county, deceused, for the bendfit of heirs
and creditors. A credit until Juppary tat,
1886 will be given to parchagers.
. 8 FLORENCE, Surviving kx
of Win. Florence, deceas ~
Jupe 80th, 1885,
Are Determined to
Close Out their Entire Stock
Of Summer Dry Goods,
Many lines of which are being sold
REGARDLESS OF COST.
It will be to your interest to call if you need
anything in the line of Dry Goods, Shoes,
Hats, Shirts, Notions, &c. They must go, as
we keep no shelf goods.
- Jiily 14, 1885. AUSTIN & GRIST.
If Tou Want to Purchase a
COTTON SEED QIL MILL,
A Cotton Gin,
A Cotton Feeder,
A Cotton Condenser, ‘
A Cotton Press,
———OR A———_
SAW MILL,
Pulleys, Shafting, Hangers and Mill Work.
Write to us for PRICES and DISCOUNTS. We can make it TO YOUR
INTEREST to buy direct from us.
E. VAN WINKLE & CO.,
MANUFACTURERS,
L TAIE DM i iciiiinsivhin e RIO IRI
njg),,,l\'()'.l'l(_fli TO THE TRADE—We give Discounts to the trade.
Sessions, Hamby & Co.
DEALERS IN
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
PRY GUOGLIS
GROCERIES, &ec,
MigiEris, - - (G EORGIA.
J. M. WILSON,
DEALER lIN
HARDWARE
gEes STOVES,
@ e Tin % Sheet Iron Work,
PG 7 Uity ad Howe Vurishing Goods,
Unions, Reducers, Eibows, Pipes and Fittings for Steam Engines and Wa.
ter Pipes Red Jacket Force Pump and Hose, the Best in the World.
AT THE OLD STAND, WEST SIDE OF PUBLI2 SQUARE, MARIETTA, GA.
. J. M. VWIr.SON.
.. M. DOBBS=
Westeside Public Square, Marietta, Ga,
Has in stock the most complete line of Hardware, Stoves, Tn and sheet
Iron Ware, to be found anywhere in Novth Lreorgia.
I am determined to keep my stock full and complete, and have large or
ders out that will he here in a few days. When you need anything in the]
——ET ARDW . ARE LI B i
e i g y .
g s mmastewm. - Lome and see nve. 1 have on
._:;& _/_;,,fiu——‘ hand STOV ES of all ]\'illi}h‘, and ]n'i(',es,
"s »:?‘.":::,’:,Wés from the best wrought iron RANGE to
e EoST BEL . e pematea Sgt s ihad b i TN W T .
“'Ei‘*-‘?i*"‘i’?’&fi(""i "‘;‘ tl.u «'lna];m[ .\['[«,l’ ‘\J"()\ [: “‘,“H.f}w_
BTR [l Ry ik nishing Goods, Clocks, &c. [he best line
N - ety ADSRITY A d 1 >
fi*:}’; of Pocket and Table Cutlery in town.—
Ti e s *rw* Builders Hardware of every deseription,
Bt B Rk ¥ e C‘ll'pcmvl‘s and Blacksmith To Is of all
PR RR ¢ o ee A, . ; ! : 18 01 a
\\m:\“,xf;:a;‘k kinds, Breech and Muzzle loading Shot
Tl **2 ;__“ Ny Guns, gun llnylulnwxlts. Nhiells, Primers,
o =T TRO Ammunition, Dynamite Caps and Fuse.
e N I manuticture everything in the tin and
- sheet ivon line, and employ none but first
class workmen, Rooftng, Guttering, Plumbing and Pump work done in the
best mguney aud on satistactory terins, Steam and water pipe fittings
always on hand, Tam also Agent for Oliver Chilled Plows and Repairs,
Gullett’s Magnolia Gins, Feeders and Condensers: Tanner and Delaney
Engines, &e. Don’t fail to call and see ny stock and get prices hefore buy
ing. Respeottully,
S M. DO,
ADMINISTRATOR'SSALE. |
Agzreeably to an order of the court of Ors
dinary of Cobb county, will be sold at auc
tion, at the Court House door in said coun
ty, on the first Tuesday in August next,
within the legal hours of sale, Ihe following -
property to wit: Lot of land No. 1203, lot
1239, 30 acres of lot 1240, 10 acres of 1204
1 acre lot 1241, all in the 19th distriet and
2nd section of said county, and lots Nos, 25,
26 and 27, all town lots in the town of
Powdgr Bprings. Sold as the property af
James J. Barues, late of suid connty deccas
ed. Money to be paid Ist of December
next. This July 6th, 1885 ‘
J. W. & J. T. BARNES, Admr's.
GEORGIA—COBB COUNTY :
Notice is herebv given 4o g 1 persons
having demands agains; Mrs. Demarius
Summerhill, late of syiq county, deceased,
to present them ti me, properly made out,
within the thme prescribed by law, 80 as to
shiow their character and amount. And all
persons indebted to said deceased are hereby
required 1o makeo imwediate payment to me.
A. A GRIGGS,
Adw’r of Demarius Summerhill,
e L
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