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flu it mas #0tum.
ESTABLISHED IN' 1Q4.3.
THE COUHIEH nu a large and htoady circu
lation In Cherokee Georgia, and Is the nest ad
vertising medium in this section.
M. DWL\EtL, Proprietor.
Thursday Morning,: : : Nov. 6,1879
Mr. Hayes on Repudiation.
vor of Georgia.
. Mie80Uri Reeu^Hcan : Mr. Hayes has ^ thj 0 , ntllllltlo —
virtually avowed and endorsed the ex- The g uplem0 Court of TenneB8 ee last
traordinary rule laid down by Commb-1 wegk deoided two casea in favor of tbe
State of Georgia. Goth had been begun
The Republican or Radical party of
to-day is but a successor to the Federal
or monarchial party of the early days
of the Republic.
Thomas Jefferson, writing under
date of October 1,1812, said: “General
Washington did not harbor one princi
ple of Federalism.”
Alexander Hamilton was really in
favor of a monarchy instead of a feder
al republic, and his theory was that the
States were indissolubly bound together
as a "nation.”
Mr. Hayf.s, in imitation of the great
men who have been elected to and held
the office of President of the United
States, has designated and set apart
Thursday, the 27th day of November,
as a day of thanksgiving and prayer.
Pn. Felton, when in Rome tlio day
the circus was here, said that Grant
would be the candidate of the Republi
cans next year, and that ho would be
elected. We respectfully ask the doctor
if the wish was not the father to the
thought.
Latest advices from New York point
to the election of Cornell as Governor,
with the success of all the Democratic
candidates for office below that of Gov
ernor by about 30,000 majority. The
defeat of Robinson is due to John Kel
ley’s personal dislike to him. New
York is a straighout Democratic State.
Dr. H. V. M. Miller, according to
H. W. G.. speaks of the Constitution of
the United States being over a hundred
years old. We thought the Convention
that framed the original Constitution
met in 1787, ninety-two years ago, and
that some of the most important articles
and sections of that instrument were of
very recent creation.
It sriows a mnn’s superior wisdom in
polities for him to know exactly the
reason ot the defeat of a party after the
defeat has come. If one will watch
these men so wondrous wise it will be
discovered that they are always able to
point out past errors but are very poor
in the art of directing to success. In
fact they do not attempt such a thing
they never tenr out their eyes in suen a
bramble-bush.
The timeservers and trimmers who
got on the fence when Ohio wont as
usual for the Radicals and have been
sitting on a rail ever since, hoping that
New York would go the same way, are
left in a bad fix since New York sticks
to her Democracy. Go on to tbe Radi
cals if you cannot stay with the Demo-
crats without eternally growling. The
Democracy wants none of the croaking,
whining, weak-kneed sort in its camps.
Although Robinson may lie defeated
for Governor in Now York by Kellog’:
foolish opposition, the success of Potter
(for Lieut.-Governor) and the other
Democratic nominees for State offices
shows that New York is solidly Demo
cratic. We opine that this is not a
pleasant reflection to some "Indepen
dent," anti convention office-seekers nnd
office-holders here and hereabouts. Did
not some of them hopefully predict the
utter rout of tiie Democratic forces in
New York ?
L. Q. Washington telegraphs special
ly to the Picayune that the story to the
effect that some of the supremo court
judges had taken exception to the tone
of Judge Field’s dissenting opinion on
tbe Thurman bill to provide for a sink
iug fund for the Union Pacific and
Central Pacific railroads, is wholly un
founded. The language of the dissent
ing opinion is in the usual stylo and
perfectly respectful to other judges
There has been no complaint by any of
the judges; no unpleasant debates, no
bad feeling among the judges, and the
talk of a new rule to control the lan
guage of a dissenting opinion is a pure
invention.
Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser: The
business of the South nnd North Ala
bama railroad for the paBt two months
has been the largest ever done by that
line. During the month of September
2,400 car loads of freight passed over
the road, making an average of eighty-
five car loads per day. Three-fourths
of this immense amount of freight paid
the road from 8300 to 8500 per car.
During the present month the businces
will be even larger. An empty car
seldom drawn over this line either way,
and tho increase of the lumber business
has necessitated a constant addition to
the number of cars required for freight
A great deal of the lumber shipped over
this road is sent to the Northwest.
sioner Raum in the case of tbe tobacco
inspector at Petersburg, Va., that no
man who supports a proposition to re
adjust a State debt can be allowed to
hold a Federal office. Commissioner
Raimi applied the rule to subordinate
officials of the internul revenue bureau;
Mr. Hayes amplifies its scope so as to
nclude all Federal officers—district at
torneys, collectors of customs, collectors
of internal revenue, postmasters, United
States marshals, and in short all the
officials who make up the Federal reti
nue in a State. Nor does the rule, as
explained and avowed, apply to Vir
ginia alone; it is made for all the States
—for we will not impute to Mr. Hayes
tho inconsistency of laying down a rule
of civil service that shall embrace Vir
ginia and exclude Minnesota and Kan
sas.
It is impossible not to admire the
maxims of fair dealing and the sound
moralities of debt-paying with which
Mr. Hayes attempts to justify his ex
traordinary decision. "Forcible read
justment, in principle, is nothing less
than repudiation,” he says, and this is
indisputable. Rut if Mr. Hayes were
more a practical statesman, and less a
theorist, he would know that there is
not a government on the earth, not ex
cepting the one over which he happens
to preside, that has not resorted to re
pudiation. Tho general mor-1 obliga
tion to pay one’s debts cannot be dis
puted; nor can it be denied that, in the
long run, it is more advantageous to
pay a debt than to repudiate it, or part
of it. Gut, unfortunately, individuals
sometimes cannot do this; hundreds of
thousands of persons live half their days
and go to their graves at last under ob
ligations which they have not the power
to discharge; and the bankrupt and in
solvent laws which are enacted from
time to time in all civilized States are a
recognition of and provision for this
universal human misfortune. The
railroad corporations alone in theUoited
States owe, or did once owe, five hun
dred million dollars which has not
beon paid and never will be. The
United States Government owes to sol
diers of 1812 pensions which it sol
emnly promised to pay and nfterwards
withheld, and now refuses to pay. The
same Government promised to pay loyal
citizens for the slaves which it eman
eipated wilhout their consent; but it
subsequently recalled the promise, and
has never paid one dollar of the pro
posed compensation. These acts of the
Government were acts of repudiation,
and they boar out the historical truth
that public policy and necessity some
times required obligations to lie wholly
or partially repudiated.
When, therefore, Mr. Hayes makes
the support of tho -Virginia readjust
ment proposition cause for instant and
peremptory dismissal from a Federal
office, lie goes out of tbe beaten path o:
executive precedent and propriety to
commit on act of folly for which he lias
no warrant either in conscience or poli
cy. Ho may say what he can in defence
of it, but after all is said it looks, more
than any thing else, like nnother meas
ure on the sido of that creditor interest
which the Ilaycs administration lias
served at the expense of the mass of his
countrymen.
A Decision in Tennessee in Fa- The Chicago Times publishes an ac-
j count of one James Hale of a balloon
ascension which he made a good many
years ago with Prof H. J. Kane at Ca
nandaigua, N. Y., and which he thinks
closely resembles tbe recent ascent of
Wise and Durr, except that the relator
escaped alive, while Gurr was drowned.
They floated over Lake Ontario, night
came on, and the balloon began to siiik.
All tho ballast was thrown out to no pur
pose. They nearly struck the mast of a
passing steamer, and it npp ared every
moment as though they would drop into
tho waves. Finally Kane said, "one of
us can get to Canada, the other must
feed fish. I’ve got a family and I’m
going to Canada.” Whipping out a
knife, he leaped into the rigging and
cut the basket loose. Hale dropped into
tbe middle of the lake. He waB a good
swimmer, and got upon the basket, and
next day was picked up by the steamer
Corinthian, bound for Rochester. Kane
never was heard from. Hale calls at
tention to the similarity in the Donald
son case. The body of Griuiwood was
found oi the shore. In the case of
Wise, the body of Durr waB found on
shore. In the case of Kane, the passen
ger who became merely a matter of
ballast when the question was whether
New Advertisements.
at Chattanooga, by levy of attachments
on the Western and Atlantic railroad
property there. The State intervened
and obtained decisions in her favor at
Chattanooga and those decisions arc af
firmed.
The first was in favor of the Elliott
national bank of Goston and John De-
mont, founded upon about (820,000)
twenty thousand dollars principal of
the Tennessee car company notes made
by Foster Dlodgett, superintendent of
the Western and Atlantic raiiroad, in
1870. In that the complainants wore
represented by Col. T Fort, of Chatta
nooga, and Judge Morgan, of Memphis.
The other began like tbe first, on like
notes, in favor of J. Nelson Tappan,
trustee of H. Clews & Co. When the
State intervened complainant’s counsel
amended by suing on about one million
principal of the bonds of tbe State of
Georgia, which Clews & C.>. held, but
which Georgia did not recognize as a
valid debt in their bands. This amend
ment was dismissed on demurrer on the
ground that the State could not be sued ! tho balloon mU8t , 8Wam P or r | 8 ?> 7“
on her bonds. In this cause the com- ver y fortunate ln bein 6 dro PI’ ed ln fre '
Road Citation.
W HEREAS. D T BRISCOE, Ht. At,, HAVE
p -tltioned “for a pablto road commencing
about I milo east of tho rcaldonnc of eaid D. T.
Briscoe, folio, ing a private way around Thus. II.
B loao’a Holds on tho east stds until it rsaches C.
K. Barnett's tins thennealoi-g said Barnstt's line
until it reaches J. T Dowell's line, thence along
eaid Dowell’s lino until it reaches W. H Jones’
brink mill, there conneot with the rosd lrom
said Jones' mill to Rome,’’ this is to cits all per
sons to » ho obj i-itlons, If any they have, to the
granting of sa d pitition oa or before the drat
Monday in Docotnbor, 1879, at which timo tho
•amo will bo passed upon This Novembers
1879.
Tae Biibd or CoHMisstosana Roads
ash Revbsuk, Fnurn Ouowtt.
novSwtd
Road Citation.
W IIEREA8. W. J. THRASH, Er. At,., HAVE
applied for a “change of the Alabama rood
(982nd District, G. M.) oommencing at Charley
Lloyd's gate in front of bis house and thenee
running a llttlo nort i of west between M-asra.
Bishop and Purkins’, and thonoe intersect the
Alabama road at the foot of tho hill,” this Is to
nito all persona to make objections, if any tboy
have, to the granting an order for said change on
or before the first Monday in Dec mbor, at whiab
time the petition will be pnssod upon. This No
remberB, 1878.
BOARD OP COMMISSIONERS
OI Roads and Revenue, Floyd Couuty.
novSwtd
plainant was represented by Messrs.
Key, Carton & Key, of Chattanooga.
In both the State of Georgia was repre
sented by Messrs. Van Dyke, Cooke &
Van Dyke, of Chattanooga, and Colonel
N. J. Hammond, of Atlanta.
We expect a copy of the decisions in
these important and interesting causes
in a few days, and may then call further
attention to them.
Zach Chandler Dead.
St. Louis Post-Dispetch.
For twenty years a senator of the
United States and a member of that
body when Jeff Davis sat in it; the ex-
tremest of the extreme leadeis of tbe re
publicans, and the most outspoken
champion of the eternal punishment of
rebels; the mau who raised himself
from a dry goods clerk to the Benaie
chamber and the wealth of a million
aire ; the man who, as chairman of the
republican national committee and sec
retary of the interior, did more to steal
the presidency in 1876 than any other
man except John Sherman ; tho stron
gest champion of Grant’s third term and
centralization, and probably the best
abused republican leader in the country
—Zieh Chanler - was undobutedly a
man of great force and much more natu
ral ability than he was generally credi
ted with.
As he lived he died—unusually.
List night he spoke to an immense au
dieuce at Chicago. This morning he
was found dead in his bed.
His death is a loss to the republican
party, but a gain to the country and to
the great cause of peace.
The Cherokee Advocate, edited and
published by Indians, very truly sug
gests, in some comments upon the letter
written by Miss Rose Meeker, in which
she speaks of the Utes oe “red devils,”
that "if you feel toward an Indian that
he is a red devil, that you will treat him
as such, and if you treat him as such
he will ‘come at you’ in the same way.”
The Advocate is "driven to the oonclu
reluctantly, that Agent Meeker
quented waters, and the regular track
of a steamer. In the case of Donald
son, Wise and Kane, another similar
feature is found. Neither the aerunnut
nor his balloon was ever afterward
heard from, and probably never will
be.
The year 1881 will be a mathemat
ical curiosity. From left to right and
right to left it reads the same; 18 di
vided by 2 gives 9 as a quotient; 81 ui-
vided .by 9 and 9 is tho quotient If
1881 is divided 200, 9 is the quotiont; if
divided by 9, the quotient contains a 9;
if multiplied by 9 tho product contains
two 9j. One and 8 are 9; 8 and 1 are
9. If the 18 be placed under the 81 and
added, the sum* 99. If tho figures be
added thus, 1, S, 8, 1, it will give 18.
Reading from left to right is 18, nud 18
is two-ninths of 81. Gy adding, di
viding and multiplying nineteen 9s are
produced, being one 9 for each year re
quired tocomplete tho cer.tury.
All the charges preferred ngaiust Mr.
George F. Seward, tho American Minis
ter to China, have been translated and
printed in tho newspapers at Pekiu t
much to bis own as well as the disgust
of the foreign digniataries with whom
he is brought in contact. Yet in the
face of the prolonged discredit that at
taches to tbe official and the still great
er humiliation of being publicly pro
claimed abroad as a peculator, the ad
ministration persistently refuses to even
suspend him from duty while his in
vestigation is in progress, A more high
ly privileged pet has nc7er disgraced
the diplomatic service.
The Washington Post says there is
no effect of the Grant "boom” more
prominent or significant than its re
viving influence on the members of the
various rings that fattened on the spoils
of public robbery during tho era of good
stealing. Spring sunshine affects rep
tiles very muoh as these men aro af
fected by the return of "tho greatest
dving American.”
was in collusion with the Governor of
Colorado in a deep laid scheme finally
to drive tho Utes from that fine country
occupied by them and granted to them
by the government," and that the nlow
ing of the fine pasture upon which the
Utes had set their hearts for grazing
purposes was deliberately attempted
with a view of provoking an outbreak
It has frequently been said that no
horse could equal the best record of a
man in a six-day race. The fallacy of
this notion was demonstrated, in the
recent Francisco contest between men
and horses. A common looking beast
from a livery stable, culled Pinafore
travelled 559 mileB, beating the best hu
man performance, that of Weston, by
nine miles. Pinafore is a gelding, eight
years old, without a pedigree. He was
not lamed by tho race. Two other
horses made 543 and 514 miles, while
the foremost man scored only 375.
N. Y. tVorld: Mr. Chittenden, is a
merchant, and as a merchant ho ought
to know how grave an offense it is to
misrepresent the financial standing of
individuals or communities. Yet he
last night implied a charge of repudia
tion against the State of Georgia. Does
not Mr. Chittenden know that according
to so good a Northern authority as the
Gankers’ Magazine for October the
credit of the State of Georgia is just
now rather better than the credit of (he
United States?
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA, Floyd County.
O N THE FIRST TUESDAY IN DECEMBER
next,will be sold,bnforo tbe court hnuio dour
to Rome, in said county, within tho lawful hours
of sale, lots ot land Nos. 278 and 2S7 and fraotioo
of 6 aorss spring lot off of lot No. 2S0; lust the
right of-w- y or the Selma, Rome A Dalton Kail
road, about 10 sores, more or less oil of lot 275
and spring I it of some 5 acres off of lot No. 287
Sold as tho property of Eugene LoHardy, C.E.,
deceased.
Terms, $5 000 oash; balanae in ooe end two
years, This November 5,1870.
J. O. Lr.I1ARDY, Administrator.
nofiwtd
* U ‘ horlitBd b >’ «» Common^Tin!
Popular Monthly UrnwiuTui
COMMONmrH^BlBOK
at #1 ACAULEY’S THEATRE
In tho City ot Loui-vili 0> on
NOVEMBER seta, , 81s
A CT 1 OF III D B* L E V J fa Li TURB nIM Z * b BY
SUSTAINED BY ALL THB ^“5
KENTUCKY (all fr.uduffiv^l™ «F
Other lottory companies Who clklm*?^^
ownership.! “all the grants in K.V h 1 '
n °twitha>anding? O|.?r? ok i" *o
ULARLY ON TUB UM Iiav “K-
MONTH SUNDAY EXOEPTEDI°L £ o V£ «Y
-UPERVlMED BY PUjMINfnI' 4KS
OF THE SlaTE. CITIZENS
features! u W«“ d «h>d .uses,. ol , hl
Every ticket-holder esn be his own
Wheel, hto " Umber * nd >»» « Kffffg
The Management call attention to it,,
onpormmtj presented of obtaining',
THE FOLLOWING PRlggo
1 Prize
1 Prize. *
1 Prize ****** — •
10 Prizes, $1,000 each .**’.’.
20 Prizes, 6('0 eaoh
100 Prizss, 100 oacb,\\\\[*‘,j*
each .,.'**"“
20 each ( "
10 etch ,*,**,**'”’
3)0 each, ApprosiniVtoi
200 on.h, Approximation
, Pritei
100 eaoh, Approximation
Prizes
Concerning the question of the earn
ing power of locomotives, a correspon
dent gives the prize to the Gurlington
and Missouri river in Nebraska for
showing average earnings in 1878, by
by 29 engines, of 860,000 per engine
This is certainly extraordinary. The
case of the Southern Pacific, showing
an average by 43 engines in eleven
months, of upwards of 8100,000 peren
gine, is still more remarkable, but we
are inclined to suspect thatthe operating
expenses are as high proportionately
as tbe freight and passenger rates, so
that the net earrnings were not so muoh
larger than on other roads as would ap
pear. Anyway the tariff of charges on
the Southern Pacific is not a fair basis
upon which to compare its earnings
with those of ordinary roads.
Goston Herald Norfolk letter: Nor
folk is the first peanut port in the world.
The peanut individualized is a small
potato, and irresistibly suggests tho
ragged and wistful small boy, but where
it originates it is a gigantic industry.
Norfolk receives the entire crop of Vir
ginia, which is larger and euperior to
the growths of Tennessee and North
Carolina. The crop begins in Septem
ber and lasts through the year. The
crop this year reached 900,000 bushels.
Two large factories for sorting and clean
ing peanuts supply employment to hun
dreds of hands. The average price per
bushel is about 81, and the total income
to Norfolk for the amount she handled
last year was 8600,000.
The New York Sun says the foremost
Republican candidate for President at
present is General Grant; and his name
is already generally and openly asso
ciated with the proposition to essential
ly change and strengthen the Executive
Department of the government. It is
even unhesitatingly advised that tbe
office ot President shall be conferred on
General Grant for life, and that his son,
now Colonel Grant, shall succeed him.
Halifax, Nov. 4.—The cable steam
er Faraday arrived to-day. She has
laid tho telegraph cable for the new
French company, between Great and St.
Pierre, and is now engaged in laying
the cable between the latter place and
Cape Cod. Tho Faraday was in tho
heavy gale of last week but kopt steady
at work. The cable was buoyed 200
miles from Cape Cod on Sunday night.
New Orleans Times: The steamship
City of Gristol yesterday crossed the
bar (or the place where the bar used to
be) drawing twenty-five feet of water.
She had as cargo 5,000 bales of ootton
and 22,000 bushels of grain. And yet
some people have tho audacity to say
that the jetties are a failure.
Savannah, November 4.—The At
lantic and Gulf railroad was sold to-day
under a decree of the United States
court for three hundred thousand dol
lars over the first mortgaging and other
claims to H. D. Plant. The purchase
money has already been paid.
LAST CALL
For Purpose of Collecting State
and Count? Tax for 1879.
I WILL ATTEND AT FOLLOWING TIMES
AND PLACES:
Etowah, Wednesday, November 5th.
Chulio, Thursday, November Bth.
Barktr’s, Friday, November 7th.
Romo, Batnrday, Novembers h.
Waiters, Monday, November 10th,
Everett Springs.Tueeday,November 11th A.M
Floyd Borings, Toosday,November 11th, P. M
Texas Valley, Wednoeday, November 12th.
Rome, 13th 14th and 18tn November.
North Carolina. Monday, Novembor 17th.
Livingston, Tuesday, November 18<h.
Cave Spring Wednesday, November 19th.
Rome, from 20th November to 5th December.
Books will bo closed Decembor 5th and as list
ss fi fss can be issued after that time they wili
be put In Bailiffs’ hands tci prompt collection.
All of the pull tax is aopliod to County Sobool
purposes, and employers will tare laborers cost
and increase tbe amount by paying for them,
important elections occur next year, tho payment
hi all Taxes due area necessary qualification To
exercising tbe glorioas privilege ol voting. A
oompleto list ol tax payers will be I'uruitbed
managers of election at each precinct as required
bylaw. JOHN J BLACK,
nov4twiww2w Tax Collector
Chattanooga Times: The total yellow
fever cases reported in Memphis up to
and including last Sunday 2nd inst., was
1,521. total deaths -473. Per centago of
mortality 31 1. The disease was con
siderably more fatal thie year than last,
after all the talk the per centage of
mortality then being not quite 30.
Go to J. R. Gutt & Co.’s if you want
a bargain in stoves. They bought be
fore the reoent advance in prico of pig
* ron - tw wtf
How to get the Weekly Courier lor Sl.SO
a Year.
The price of our weekly is still 82 a
year except to such as pay in advance.
Any one of our preaout subscribers by
paying all past dues caa then take ad
vantage of the reduced price provided
h# pays in advance from the time of that
settlement.
flOSHPtlft
*ITTER s
Let your first attack ot indigestion be the last
Rouesi tbe dotinant energies ol tho stomach with
tbe Bittora. The tune thu. imparted will remain
This is a fact established by thousands of wit
nesses, whose testimony Is simply a statement ol
their own txperiences. Those tillioted with gen
oral debility uf every phase will find this tncdl
eino an unfailing agent in building up and re
newing their strength.
For sale by all Druggists nnd respectable
Dealers generally. fm>3twwlm
COMMON SENSE VIEWS
FOREIGN LANDS
BY M. DWiNELL.
T HIS VOLUME, OF FOUR HUNDRED
Pages, now ready for eale, is well printed
on good paper and neatly bound In muslin.
It embraces a eories of Lottcrs written frou
the most interesting eities of Southern Enropo
Lom Alexandria, Cairo and tbe Pyramids, in
Egypt; Irom Jafl’a, Jerusalem. Bothlebem, Beth,
any, Mount of Olives, Jericho, River Jordan
Dead Sen, Ao , in Palestine; Smyrna and An
cient Ephesus, in Syria; from Constantinoido,
Vienna, Swita.-rland, 4o., in Europe. Aleo, a
series from tho Western pan of America, from
Omuba to San Franoisco and including a vi.it tu
tho famous Yosomito Falls.
This Volume will be sent by mail, ireo of
postage, oa receipt of $1 60. Address Couitir.n
Office. Rome, Ga., or it tun be bought at the
Book Rtoroe.
200 Prises,
SOU Prises,
1000 Fr ees,
9 Price,
9 Prism,
9 Prlr.es,
901 Prises,
tut,lot
Half Tickets, yt,
•*5 tickets, litg).
thlh P o P maofflc n e' f °' °' Ub bem.de
Mill tw wl
tt hole Tickets,
27 l'icUets, SSO.
LATEST STYLES
FALL AND WINTBR MUM!
-by-
MISS SALLIE WILKERS0N.
n/IY NEW SUPPLIES INCLUDE 50 Do:,,
L m HnQ Binneta, piices from Fiftv Centi
o Ton Dollars; a large and very beautifnl iioek
of blowers, Foathers and Birds; a beautiful u.
Ribbons. Combs, it.
Will bj pleased to show my goods and prises
.... „ . SALLIE WILKER80N.
octl8 tw2m w2t
SASH, BUMS,
•pHE UNDERSIGNED HAVE ASS0CIATI
A themselves together lor tho purpose of sup.
plying the demand lor SASH, D0OK8, BLINDS,
GLAZEO WINDOWS, MOULDINGS, SIAM
MANTLK8, BALUSTERS, *c.
A fall line ol these goods will be kept ns hscJ
in white or yellow pine, or famished at sho
notice.
Wo aro folly prepared, and are willing tomcel
competition from any quarter, and respectful!)
ask an examination of our g-odi and prices, a
Robt. A. Johnson's machine shops sr si A. A
Jones’ store, No. 117 Broad street, Roae.Gt.
A. A. JONES,
ROBT. A. JOHNSON.
nug2Stw2m
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GE3RGU
(AUGUSTA.)
Medical Department of the Uoi{
versity of Georgia.
T HE FORTY-EIGHTH SESSION WILd
begin tho FIRST MliND'.Y in NOVEMl
Be;It, 1879, and end the FIRST of MABCf
following.
Faculty—Lewis D Ford, Joseph A. Ere, LJ
Dugaa, Geo. W. Rains, H. F. Campbell, De?"
Ford, Edward Claddings, Robt. 0. Eve.
Apply for circuUr to
DkSAIM9URE F0UD,
Ofltl l twl m Dean. August*, C*-J
J7t. CAHILL
MANUFACTURER OF
IR0.\ 1ND MUSS 0|
HOLLOWWARE, GRATES,
Mill Castings, Fencing, k
Architectural Work
- AND-
Building Castings]
A SPECIALITY,
Office
James G, Dailey,
UNDERTAKER’S WARE-BOOMS,
(On second story)
96 Broad Street,
A FINE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK
of Metallic, Walnut, Grained and Stained
ComnB, BUriel Robei and Coffin Trimmings, al-
wey* on hand. Neatest Heartei farmahod for
funerals. All orders filled with dispatch, day
or night. Rosidonco, cornor Court *nd King
atreoto.
AL80. DEALER IN
FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS.
jut 6 twtmarIC
•Railroad Avenue; betweej
7th and 8 th
Chattanooga, TV ,in '
jun28twflm _
ELLIS DAVIJ & CO..
Sla-te Ma.nufocUU' er |
and. Roofers, I
H ave always °N c ,H AN j D
lent stock ol SLATE, and are>P"P cf j
di R.iofiDg at shott-notice IB »“ T b h .J
sou.h Price ahiut a third » b °« ‘ i 1
ft .tlafriM.inn rruarantcod. OrdOTS P
end Atlan's.
(sopHtihj
8 itlafaotion guaranteed
tended to.
OfBoes: Rockmart, Ga.
Bis 307.
JOHN W.
attorney at law,
SUMMERVILLE, CEORCl*
SKATING RINK'
rutn 4 tu C o’clock, and
to 10 o’clock, commeno ng btwv
!4tb, until further notlo . n , f j,«mci
Tues-ay, Thured.y end Salu'D.? ^
10 o'clock the Hall will bo op
tu learn and practise- —
Mill Machinery for
civ HE MILL MANHINBRV ^ ’
1 DoSoto Mi l U f ° r “l® u ll stonoi. d
pair of SI ft. French on«S“ , C ( p|
faced and lurrowed complex I Vi jl
Smutter. 6 reole, bolls f‘”? p c oHi'b’’3 80 ‘ I
low. Enouiraof J - *•
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