Newspaper Page Text
f he Home bourne.
K8TABLISHBD IN 1843.
latlon In Cherokoe Georgia, nnd Is the best nil-
vertlslng medium In tills section.
M. DWJNEI.L, Proprietor.
Tuesday Morning,
Nov. 18,1879
A good many Bul’ock’tes will follow
Felton.
PArsucKEits and office seekers will fol
low Felton.
My au.eoiancb to a party i8 contin
gent. on its success, is Dr. Felton’s
creed.
Tun Democratic party is whipped,
says Dr. Felton, therefore I will have
nothing to do with it.
Nearly at.l of the bone and sinew
of the country who havo voted for Fel
ton while he professed to be a Demo
crat will leave him, now that he de
nounces the whole patty.
Northern Conservative journals
treat Toombs’ “death to the Union”
dispatch as though it emanated from a
ward of tne hopeless at the Lunatic
Asylum. In this they show their own
sanity. _
Query to Rev. Mr. Felton: Is it
right, morally right, for anybody but a
preacher to profess to Democrats to be
a Democrat and tell the Radicals he
makes such professions just to getDern
ocratic votes?
We have said time and again that
Felton and Akerman would not both
run for Congress from this District.
We thoughtthat Felton would turn Rad
ical rather than have Akerman fake the
Radicals from him.
HOKE: A rout railroads.
b
Dr. Felton’s emphatic avowal of
hostility to the Democracy of the Union
is his first political act for six years
that we can commend him for. In this
he speaks honestly, and we love hon
esty in a man, even if we differ with
him.
When Dr. Felton voted with the
Radicals at the extra session to pass the
army bill just as they wanted it, and
Stephens made him change his vote and
vote with the Democrats, we thought
Mr. Stephens was intermeddling where
he had no business. I
Since Dr. Fei.ton has cut adrift from
the Democracy of the whole Union the
publication of his correspondence with
Ferry and other prominent Radicals
would be unnecessary. We therefore
withdraw our request for its publication.
The Cartersville Free Press need not re
ply-
“Has he deserted to the enemy ?”
begins a very sensible editorial in the
Augusta Chronicle and Constitutionalist
upon the question of Felton’s renun
ciation of all claims of belonging to
the Democratic parly. No, he has not
deserted. He has simply made a clean
breast of it, and gone whero he properly
belongs.
The advice of the Darien Timber
Gazette, of the 14th, to the Democrats
of the Seventh District to “rally to the
support of Dr. Win. H, Felton and re
elect him,” comes very inopportunely
right along with Felton’s renunciation
of all affiliation with the party. We
could never understand why the Ga
zette was so zealous in its support of
Felton unless it was, os we have been
told, on account of the kinship of the
editor and the doctor. But if any k’n-
ship evor existed between them it may
have ceased, for Felton is “such a har
um-scarum sort of a fellow,” (to nse
Judge Wright’s words iu reference to
another mau,) that one cannot be cer
tain of his maintaining the same rela
tions to any party very long at a time,
The Columbus Enquirer-Sun, notic
ing the report of Dr. Felton’s letter
“cutting loose” from the Democratic
party, says:
If the above be true Mr. Felton must
be left at home hereafter, and every true
Georgian will help keop him there. At
this writing we don’t believe the dis
patch.
We know it will be hard to convince
our esteemed cotsmporary of Dr. Fel
ton’s true position, but it will be con
vinced, without doubt. The Enquirer-
Suu owes the Democracy of the whole
State, and especially of the Seventh
District, some honest, hard work as a
compensation for the harm st has done
by advocating Felton ; and wo believe
it will come up to the full measure of
its duty.
Atlanta, Ga., November 14.—Jordan
Sheats (colored) was hung to-day at Dan-
ielsville for the murder of Mr. John Led
better (white). Sheats was cursing
his employer, Mr. John Williams, when
Ledbetter attempted to interfere, and
Sheats killed him with a shotgun.
There was an immense crowd at the
hanging, but no excitement. Sheats
said he was ready to die. The drop
fell at thirty minutes past one, and in
twelve minutes Sheats was dead. He
struggled violently.
We endeavored in a recent article to
show that the Cincinnati Southern Rail
road, after its completion to Chattanoo
ga, would be forced by circumstances
beyond its control to seek a Southern
and Southeastern connection with roads
further South and Ef>9t by the construc
tion of a new road through Rome in
the direction of Columbus.
Recent moves on the railroad chess
board have placed Mr. Wadley, Pres
ident of the Georgia Central Road, ac-
cording to the Atlanta Constitution, in
such position es really to make the
Central nn ally of the Cincinnati road
in this matter. The Constitution says:
'Mr. Wadley is at present complete
master of the seaboard and its connec
tions, but he h»9 no Western outlet.
With just the same vigor that Col. Cole
is pushing for the sea, Mr. Wadley is
pushing for the West. At present he
has an unusually good connection
through the Western & Atlantic road
and the Nashville and Chattanooga. But
if Col. Cole and Governor Brown, who
control these lines, can secure a line to
the coast in direct competition with Mr.
Wadley, he will feel uneasy at having
to depend on them for the future for his
Western outlet. His first step towards
preventing this consummation has been
to block the lease of the Macon <fc
Brunswick road, or at least get it into
hands of persons friendly to the Central.
His first step in this programme has
been successful la scouring delay at
least. It may be that ho will succeed
again in putting off the sale, or in pre
venting its falling into the hands of its
enemies.
“But it appears that he is not wait
ing idly on this contingency, but is
preparing to make himself seoure
against any contingency, And this he
is doing by a bold stroke that will cer
tainly strike the unthinking with sur
prise. Mr. Wadley already has a line
of road running out from Griffin to Car
rollton. It is a poorly built road, but
still it is a road. From Carrollton to
Chattanooga is only about 82 miles, and
it is said that Mr. Wadley is even now
preparing to build a line across from
Carrollton to Chattanooga, through
Rome and cursing the mountains at
about McLemore’s cove. The comple
tion of this 82 miles of road will carry
him to Chattanooga where he will have
an independent and sympathetic West
ern connection in the Cincinnati South
ern, which is already alarmed at the
movements of Col. Cole. This line will
give him a straight and continuous con
nection w : th the great West, from Sa
vannah to Cincinnati, flanking Atlanta
by the right, independent of the Nash
ville and Chattanooga or the Western
and Atlantic, and in direct competition
with the latter. He can make his own
rates, with a car of freight loaded at
Cincinnati and placed on board his
ships at Savannah, and will thus con
trol one of tho grandest lines in Amer
ica.
“He will of course flank Atlanta and
the State road, and will, by using the
Cincinnati Southern as his Western
connection, divert an enormous amount
of freight from the Nashville and Chat-
laoooga railroad. The Southwestern
trade will thjis have two finely
equipped, powerful competing lines run
ning from the granaries of the West to
the ships in Savannah and Brunswick.”
that these promises were never fulfilled,
and the South to-day is suffering from
the consequences; that the same prom
ises were lavishly made by leaders from
the North and the West in the extra
session, leading the South again to be
lieve that they would be sustained in
the North in any revolutionary move
ment which they might inaugurate
against the Radical party.
He says that Independent movements
are going on all over Georgia, and that
the issue now before the people of Geor
gia is how to rid themselves of Bour-
bonism, and that he would not be as
tonished if the next congressional dele
gation was controlled by the independ
ent element. He says, further, that
there is not a man, in hie knowledge,
in the State of Georgia, who has watched
the course of politioal events since the
extra session, and particularly since the
elections, who does not ridicule the idea
of the Democratic party electing the
next President; that divisions already
at work in the South are so strong and
outspoken as to render it impossible to
hold it solid for any Democratic candi
date.
The Star contains this evening the
announcement that Dr. Felton has
written this letter. It has created quite
a sensation in politioal circles. The
Star adds that as Dr. Felton and Mr.
Stephens always accord in politics, that
Mr. Stephens may be assumed to Coin
cide with the expressions contained in
the Felton letter.
The Lease or Sale of the Bruns
wick Railroad and its
Complications.
Mr. Editor: The Atlanta Constitu
tion in two labored articles has called
public attention to the great moves on
tho railroad chessboard ignoring entire
ly the true line, either because, perhaps,
did not occur to him, or did not suit
his views.
I propose in the briefest possible!
space to call attention to the true line.
From Toledo, Ohio, at tho west end
oi Lake Erie to deep water on the Gulf
of Mexico at or near St. Marks, by Cin
cinnati, Chattanooga, Rome and Colum
bus, Ga., to “Spanish Hole” near St.
Marks on the Gulf is a direct “Air
line” and 80 miles shorter than any line
that can be constructed. The whole
line is running now to Chattanooga, or
will be when the Cincinnati Southern,
now approaching completion, is finished.
On the line from Rome to St. Marks
twenty-five miles from “Pine Mountain”
to Columbus is now running, and eighty
miles more graded.
The building of the road from Chat
tanooga via Rome and Columbus has
always been desirable; it is now an ab
solute necessity.
If Col. Cole secures by lease or pur-
The Position of Rev. Hr.
ton, D> D.
Fel-
Rov- Dr. Felton’s Letter.
Re Openly Arrnys Himself Agirnst tiie
Democracy.
It Is Thought that Mr. Stephens Agrees
With Him.
Special Telegram to the Savannah News.
Washington, November 14.—It is
learned concerning the letter of Dr.
Felton, announced in these dispatches
last night, that arrangements have been
made to have it published in Chicago,
Cincinnati and New York in a few
dayB. It will, of course, appear in
Republican papers. I have been unable
to secure a copy of it, both for the
reason that one is not now in the city,
and because Dr. Felton’s friends have
endeavored to keep all knowledge
of it from Democratic coi respondents.
That they have not succeeded is appa
rent. Some other points as to what Dr.
Felton says in his letter have been de
veloped to-day. He says that he is in
favor of David Davis as candidate for
the independents. As to Bayard, he
says that he bases his aspirations prin
cipally upon his financial record, but
that all prestige in that direction be
longs to John Sherman. He asserts
that the Democratic party received its
death blow on tho fourth day of No
vember ; that tho verdict of the North
and West against it was too decisive
and emphatic to be misunderstood, and
that the sensible men of Georgia, at
least, have now made up their minds to
sever themselves from it. He says that
the Northern elections is the old story
repeated, viz: That Northern Demo
crats would sustain the South in aDy
mad career they might embark in; that
they told them this before the war, and
led them to believe that all that w
necessary was for the South to strike
blow and the Northern Democracy
would respond with armed assistance;
Savannah Newa.
The information contained in the
special telegram from Washington
which appeared in the News yesterday,
announcing that Rev. Dr. Felton, Rep
resentative in Congress from the Sev
enth Georgia district, had decided to
openly renounce his heretofore pretend
ed allegiance to the Democratic party
and ally himself with the Radicals, is
corroborated by the special which we
publish to-day. This move may not
excite the slightest surprise.. Dr. Fel
ton has always boasted that he was out
side the pale of the Democratic organ!
zation; that he rose superior to “oliques,
rings and irresponsible tricksters”—as
Mr. Stephens called the Democracy of
this district—and that he was in every
respect an Independent. This simply
means that he was willing to call him'
self a Democrat because he knew the
name “Republican” was justly odious
to his fellow-citizens, yet that he relied
mainly upon the Radical votes of his
district to defeat the Democratic party,
and seaure his eleotion to congress.
One occupying such a position is already
a Radical in all but in name, and it is
not at all to be wondered at that now,
when the reverend gentleman feels him
self sufficiently strong to do so, and
imagines that the country is to be re
stored to Radical rule, he should throw
off his flimsy disguise and reveal him'
self in his true colors. For ourselves
we are very glad he has decided to
take this stand. An open foe is always
preferable to a pretended friend. Hence'
forth we will know exactly where to
place the Rev. Mr. Felton, D. D., Geor
gia'a champion political divine, and will
have demonstrated to us through him
the true status of a model Independent
—a term which usually designates one
whose whole desire is to be on the
strong side, and who stands ready to
sacrifice party and principle to gratify
personal ambition and secure his own
political preferment.
We are inclined, however, to believe
that the Reverend Dr. Felton very
greatly mistakes the spirit of the peo 1
pie of Georgia if he imagines they can
be induced by him to abandon, and
thus to contribute to the defeat of, the
only national party in this country—
the party which, though in a hopeless
minority, remained steadfastly and un
waveringly true to them and the South
in the dark days of reconstruction,
when Southern men were disfranchised
and held under Radical rule at the
point oi the bayonet. Under the spe
cious name of “Independent Demo
crat” he might bo able to deceive
enough Democratic citizens of bis dis
trict to accomplish, with Radical assist
ance, his election to Congress. When
however, he openly repudiates the Dem-
ocratic party and comes before them aB
a Radical, we imagine he will find that
many of his quondam constituents will
become alarmed and will desert his
standard. Certainly, we hope for the
credit and good name of Georgia, that
no considerable proportion [oi her peo
ple will permit Rev. Dr. Felton, or any
one else, to pursuade them to consent
to band this fair State ever again over
to the tender mercies of Radical rule.
Grant Not Wanted at the South.
Charleaton News and Courier.
What the Chronicle & Constitutional
ist says of Mr. Stephens is confirmed by
a Washington correspondent. To him
Mr. Stephons said that, as regards Gen,
Grant, the South “might go a great deal
further and fare a great deal worse."
There cannot, in our opinion, be a
worse e r ror than thiB. Mr. Stephens is
all brain and Gen. Grant is all muscle,
i. e., he has as much brains as Mr.
Stephens has muscle. The extremes
meet. It is nothing new in history to
find a Stephens in love with a Grant.
Whenever he gives serious considera
tion to the subject he will find, we hope,
that the surest way of cutting the
throat of Republican institutions is by
putting a "strong man” in the White
House. It is as likely os not that Mr.
Stephens will hold to bis present opin
ion, but he will no more carry the peo
ple with him on the Grant line than he
will in his vagaries concerning finance.
The Southern people do not want
Gen. Grant. They will not call on this
Saxon to protect them against the in
cursions of any political barbarians of
the North. In fact, they would fare
better after a political Appomattox, hav
ing fought to the death, than if they
surrendered en mnsso without striking
a blow in defense of their convictions.
New Advertise™^
explaining everything 'a^J’ 111 -
Ranker., 7 Will s.f v
ik eent troo ex
BAXTER A CO.
“ HILL’S MANUAL,” Soel.TTr-r"^
ygis&ttff wanM -
gl,g sra-arot
“Darn a fool!” said Wilkins to his
wife.
“Certainly,” replied Mrs. Wilkins,
chase tho Brunswick Railroad his line j flourishing a needle. "Whereabouts are
will hold a monopoly to the sea at deep 0 * ? " ^ flmart to j iTe
water at Brunswick, and Mr. Wadley will
be checkmated and will no longer hold
in his hands the sceptre.
If Mr. Wadley secures it he will still
be railroad king.
If Mr. Cole succeeds Mr. Wadley will
be compelled to extend his line from
Carrollton to Chattanooga.
If Mr. Wadley succeeds Mr. Cole
will he compelled to seek an outlet to
deep water not by the Ga. Western and
Ga. R. R. to Port Royal, but by the line
from Chattanooga to St. Marks, Fla.
The idea that Atlanta is the centre of
space and the huh of the universe is
very predominant in Atlanta, but is not
as universal as some people desire.
To go round by Birmingham, Atlan
ta and Augusta to Port Royal will add
two hundred and fifty miles to the
length of the line. Is it supposed that
Col. Cole has no railroad sense ?
Now as to the importance of the line:
From Chattanooga to St. Marks, Fla.,
is the finest and most productive region
of the United States East of the Ala
bama River. Cotton can be profitably
produced along the entire line. In fact
Northwestern Georgia and the valley of
the Chattahoochee River is the finest
cotton producing region east of the
Mississippi River—abounding in forests
of yellow pine, all kinds of oaks,
hickory, poplar, beach, cherry, ash and
walnnt, suited to every use of man.
Inexhaustible beds of limestone, marble,
and iron contiguous to fine coal fields.
Unfailing streams with shoals and
terfalls of power sufficient to run all
the mills, and factories in America.
Besides from Knoxville and Nashville
to Carrollton and Huntsville a wheat is
grown that will make flour dry enough
to bear transportation across the “mid
die passage” to South A merica, which
trade is now monopolized by the mills
of Haxhall & Crenshaw at Richmond,
Va,
A direct line from Toledo, Ohio, by
St. Marks will pass by the west end of
Cuba into the Cairibean Sea to the
mouth of the Amazon and to Rio Ja'
neiro, and Bhips and railroads carrying
the freights to South America would re
turn laden with coffee, BUgar, syrup and
all the tropical fruits.
We have only desired to call the at
tention of capitalists and magnates to
the true line. When built it will break
down and destroy monopolies—so
much desired and so much in the inter
est of the people—nnd will be the great
motive power in the advancement of
oiviliz ition and commerce.
Citizen of Rome.
P. S.—I omitted to state that the wa-
of “Spanish hole” near St. Marks is for
ty feet deep, and is the place wnere the
winds of Heaven and the Gulf Stream
landed the fleet of DeSoto when he
touched the coast of North America.
C. of R.
long,” retorted he.
“My dear,” said she smiling sweetly,
“let me congratulate you upon your
fair prospect of lorg life.”
The Queen of England’s full bap
tismaland family name is Victoria Alex
andrina Guelph. She iB the daughter
of the Duke of Kent, granddaughter
of George III, the niece of William IV,
and cousin of the present Duke of Cum
berland, pretender to the throne of
Hanover.
Says Comptroller Olcott, of New
York:
If I am defeated or counted out I
shall esteem it an honor to have made
so good a showing considering the forces
that were arrayed against me. All the
rings and corrupt elements in both par
ties made a special endeavor to defeat
me, and if they succeed it is sot a vic
tory that I can personally regret.
Atlanta, Ga., November 14,—Tljja
morning Wm. Seagravo, a rough farmer
near Grffin, committed suicide by shoot
ing himself through the head with a
pistol. The cause of the deed is not
known.
You may talk about equality aud all
that sort of thing, but until a woman
can go a week’s journey with no other
baggage than a clean handkerchief and
a tooth brush, she can never hope to oc
cupy a position upon the same exalted
plane with us who are nature’s lords of
the universe.
Nowepapor advertising ti now reeogni.ned by
buxintii men, having faith in their own ware,,
at the moil eSeotlve meant of tenuring for their
goodie wide recognition of their meriti.
New Advertisements.
$777 Out Y fl t^ee?^&?Y^'
BRY, Auguttq, Me. °° 8,1 P ’ VICE.
Newspaper Advertising BurtiiUFs^sir^
COMMON SENSE VIEW'S
-OF-
FOREIGN LANDS.
BY M. DWINELL.
rpms volume, of four hundred
-L Paget, now ready for toll, i. well printed
on good paper end neatly bound in mu.ll,.
It embraoei a terlet of !«»,„ wpitt , ’ .
the men tnt.re.ting oitle. of Southern Bum’"
f.om Alexandria, Cairo and the Py,» Bld 7 ’
Egypt i from Jaffa, Jerutalem. Bethlehem, folk
any, Mount of Olivet, Jericho, Rive, j 0 7 d “'
Dead Sea, Ac, in Palo,tine; Smyrno and An’
0i.ntEph..u,, in Syria; from tonttanilnopi,
Vienna, Swita.rland, Ao„ in Europe. Alio .
terlet frotn the We.terr part of America, from
Omabn to San Franoltoo and including a rlilt i.
the famous Yotemite Fallt. * 1 "
Thit Volume will be tent by mill, f r „ ,i
pottage, on receipt of $1.60. Addree, Cot.,,,
Office, Romo, Go., or it nan be bought at the
Book Btoroi.
L. W. BARRETT,
Late of Shelby ville, Tenn., hat opened at
No, 97 Broad. Street,
A FULL LINE OF
GROCERIES PROVISIONS,
And Some Hardware.
PRICE for Country Produce, etpeelolly
DRY and GREEN HIDES, and earneitly lolielti
the patronage of the pnblic.
fSSf'Como and try me.
T.j. W. Barrett.
Rome, Ga., Nov 12, 1877. tw-wlm
872- WEEK. $12 adayat home easily made.
Oo.tly Outfit free.
Angn.ta Main.
Addrett Tans A Co.,
novl3tw-wly
B. F. Avery & Son’s
Flows ail Aimltaral Implements
FOR SALE BY
WRIGHT & O'BRYAN
Borne, Ga.
T he undersigned are the author-
Izcd Agents of B. F. Avery k Sons for the
sale of their various styles o! Flows, Blades of
all kinds, Stocks, WagonB.eto.
WRIGHT k O’BRYAN.
nov7fw-wrtw
<jj>00a week in your own town^Termsand_$5
outfit free
Portland,Maine.
Address H. Hallrtt k Go
noyl3tw-wly
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES
-AND-
WAGONSI
I FEEL JUSTLY PROUD OF THE REPD-
tatlon swarded me by an appreciative peo
ple. For over twenty-five year, I have been
engaged manufacturing In Oartenrille Wegoni,
Bagglet, Carriage!, Ae. I have a fine atook on
hand. Am making all the time.
ALL WORK MADE IS FULLY WAIt.
RANTED, NOT FOR A YEAR
ONLY, BUT FOR ANY REA-
SONABLE TIME.
I do a ti{uare, honeit business .a near ei I
know how, and endeavor lo give every one the
worth of hit money.
No palm or ooat le tpared to buy beet materiel
and employ belt of moehanlee. I oty it, end
defy contradiction, there It
NO BETTER WORK MADE IN AMERICA
THAN I AM BUILDING.
I have a Bopoeitory in Rome, in ohergeoi
Mr. W. L. Whitely, In old Odd Fellowe’ building,
corner above new Maaonie Tomple.
Wegono, Buggiee, Ae., kept by him are Jut
wbat they a-e represented ta be. All said under
warrantee.
Call on him or write ta me tor pa-ticul.ri,
I alea have a Shop In Rome, at the old itaud
of D, Lindeey A Co., where No* Work and ell
kind, of Repairing will be done at prlcee to lull
the timet.
Give ut your trade.
R. H. JONES,
janlfi tw wly Cartertvllle, Gt.
Homestead.
U ICHABD DEAN HAS FILED HIS APPLI-
cation for exemption of peraoualty and Bet-
ting apart and valuation oi horaettead, and I
will pau upon the name at my office at 10 o'olook
a. m., on tbs 9th day of December, 1879 Thie
Nov. 14th, 1870 II. J. JOHNSON,
pd Ordinary.
Mill Machinery for Sale.
T he mill mabhinery now in the
DeSoto Mill li for Bale. It coneleU of three
pair of 3} ft. Frenoh Burr Millstones, dressed,
faced and furrowed oomplete; one No. 2 Eureii
Smuttor, 5 reels, bolts complete. Will be sold
low. Enauire of J. J. COHEN'8 B0N8.
mar29 tw wtf
PATENTS
Obtained for new invention!,or for improvement!
inoldonos. Caveate, Trade-Markt and all pat
ent butlnetB promptly attended to.
INVENTIONS THAT HAVE HEEN
REJECTED may .till, In most casei, be pat
ented by ue Being opposite the U. 8. Patent
Ofifice, and engaged in PATENT BUSINESS
EXCLUSIVELY, we can tecure patents in
leea time than those who are remote from Wash
ington and who must depend upon the malls In
all transection, with the Patent Office.
Whan Inventor! send model or sketch,wo make
soarchdn the Patent Offine and advite at to ita
pa,a«iW$<lity free of c'turae Corretpondenoe
bonfidtn ral.pricetlow.and NO CHARGE UN-
18SI PATENT IS OBTAINED
jaWeJtofer to Hon. Poatmastor-General D. M.
m'T/.Rev. F. D. Pownn, to officials in the U. 8.
Patent Offiee. and etpoaially to our olientt in
every Statu of the Union and Canada. Fur spe
cial references, terms, advice, etc., Addrett
C. A. SNOW & CO.,
OprosiTx Pa-text Office, Wasdi*(itox, D. C.
novlO twtf
CP Qt*OflP 6r day at home. Samples worth
qpeJc-i tree. Address 6risso. A Co.,
Porland, Maine. novlStw wly
Summary of Floyd Sheriff’s
Sales.
GEORGIA, Floyd County,
W ILL BE SOLD BEFORE THE COURT
House door in tho city of Rome, in Floyu
county, botween the legal hours of salo, on the
First Tuesday in December, 1879,
the following property, to-wit:
Loti of land Nos. 183 aud 184,except almt six
teen acres, known as Morrison's cutup ground,
and west half of lot No. 218, exoept about two
acres on which is Blue Pond church. J. J. Skin
ner.
Also, lota Nos. 89 and 74, in Oostanaula Divis-
lon city of Borne. J O Coleman, executor.
Also, lot No. 17 in the Coosa Division city of
Rome. D E Hof.
Also, city lot in DeSoto, No. —, on Mill street,
Mrs. O. A. Doyle.
Also, lots Noi. 232 and 239 in 23d district and
3d section said county. C W Sproull, endorser#
Alio, lota Nos. 114 and 164; also farm known
aa Jim MoCullough's place, consisting of lots 84
and 86, except about 266 acres; also 100 actes of
lot 120,known aa the Fleetwood place; all in 24th
dutriot and 3d section said county.
Alio, let No. 179 in 22d dlitrict and 3d section;
subject to widow's dower. T W Alexander ana
J I Wright. novfiwtd
E. N. FRESHMAN & BEOS.,
Advertising Agents,
190 W. Fourth St., CINCINNATI, 0.
Are authored to contract for advertising
in this paper
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA
(AUGUSTA.)
Medical Department of the Uni
versity of Georgia.
T he forty-eighth session will
begin the FIRST MONDAY in NOVEM
BER, 1879, and end tho FIRST of MARCH
f °Faoulty-Lewi. D. Ford, Joseph A. Eve,LA
Dugae, Geo. W. Rain., H. F. Campbell, De.tui.
Ford, Edward Goddinge, Robt. 0. Eve.
Apply for circular to
D»SAUS8UBE FORD,
oolll twlm Dean. Augnita.Ba,
LATEST STYLES
FALL AND WINTER
-by-
MISS SALLEE WILKERS0N.
M Y NEW SUPPLIES INCLUDE 60 D.n»
Hats and Bonnet., price front ,toek
to Ten Dollars; a large ana very beau.ui ^
of Flowere, Feathers and Birds; » #lc ,
assortment of Ornament*, Ribbon«, Com^,
Will be pleased to ehow^mv
OQtlB tw2m w2t
SALLIE
ELLIS DAVIS & C0„
Slate Manufacturers
and. Hoofers,
H ave always on hand an
lent .took of SLATE, and e«i prep« (
do Roofing ot abort notice In any F*,l,|,ilei.
South. Price about a third * b “ T ‘ ,t-
Satisfaction guaranteed. Ordor. pro P
tended to. _ . 0»-
Offices; Rockmart, Go., and A #m
Box 8«T. (l<lp
WHITELEV’S
OLD RELIABLE
LIVERY STABLE*
W. L. WHITBLEY, Proprietor-
keeps constantly OjJ
hand to hire. Good Bert* Jtf
— Excellent V»hlot«'- B| g or M»,
accommodation, for Drover, and ^Jhond ft*
Oariiaj * " -
•ale.
patronla.n..
riago., and Bngglat »>«
Entire e.tl,faction guaranteed
Notice to Debtor* andCre^rj;
At’a.T&s
county, decaaaod, are notified to p
in term! of the law. . le reqa** 1 '
All parti.. Indebted to ••«••»»»•
ed to meke t““®dlate lettlemenfc (r |,
MARY S. MILLER A d ®‘“ ' d "„,,rd-
on eitate of n. H. u
octlwJm