Newspaper Page Text
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Jf
ESTABLISHED IN iS43,
THE COURIER bas a large and steady circula
tion in Cberokcc Georgia, and is the best adver
tising medium in this section.
U. D WINEIX, - Proprietor.
Tuesday Morning, : : June 15,1880
FOR STATE TREASURER.
The friends of D. N. SPEER, of Troup county,'
announce him as a candidate for the office of
State Treasurer, subject to the action of the Dem
ocratic Convention. apl2twtd
Ex-Senator Lyman Trumbull lias
been nominated for Governor of Illi
nois by the Democratic Convention of
that State.
.1. B. Weaver, of Iowa, is the
Greenback candidate for President . He
was nominated by the Chicago Con
vention last week, and is thus con
signedto obscurity.
The Convention to nominate a can
didate for Circuit Judge, which met at
Gadsden, Alabama, last week, after
balloting one hundred and nineteen
times, nominated a “ dark horse ” in
the Hon. Leroy F. Box, of St. Clair,
the present State Superintendent of
Instruction.
The river and harbor bill, as passed
by Congress appropriates 816,000 to
the Savannah river above Augusta
820,000 to the Chattahoochee; 875,000
to the Coosa; 820,000 to the Flint
87,000 to the ©cmulgee; 81,500 to the
Oconee, and 82,000 to the Oostanaula
and Coosawattee, all rivers in Georgia.
In Alabama the Alabama river gets
$25,000 and the Warrior 820,000.
democratic countv convention.
We publish the call of the Executive
Committee of Floyd County for a Con
vention of the party in Rome on the
24th of July.
The prospects of a lively campaign
generally this summer will no doubt
arouse the Democrats of Floyd to
full turn out on the day for primary
meetings in the several militia districts,
We hope it will be so, and that every
district will be fully represented in the
Convention.
HON. a. W. H. UNDERWOOD FOR AT-
TORNEY-GENERAI..
The office of Attorney-General of
the State of Georgia is one that lends
honor to the- man worthily filling it.
It is an office requiring the abilities of
a man thoroughly versed in comnion
and statute law, and who is also con-
gerfiantuiath. the political history of the
country, flWnerc often arise questions
—nice questions—growing out of the
duties of the States each to the other
under the common constitution, and
also under the rules and precedents
that have become binding though un
written law,.which have their origin in
what may be termed the comity of
the States. That the State requires
the ability and service of its best minds
to prosecute its claims and defend its
interests is shown by the fact that some
of the ablest lawyers of the Common
wealth are seen in suit after suit, as
paid attorneys to assist the law-officer
of the State. This is no doubt the
part of prudence, and might be well
although one of our foremost lawyers
was Attorney-General; but with all
the people of the State feeling that
their interests were cared for by a man
well equipped in the reason and forms
of law, prepared at all points in the
history of affairs of State, and ready
as the readiest in the conduct of a case
before a jury, carrying with him at the
same time an impressiveness that
causes men to believe in truths spoken,
they would be satisfied—with such -a
man, we say, as Attorney-General the
people would feel that the public inter
ests would be properly cared for, and
we think we have in our fellow-towns
man, Hon. J. W. H. Underwood, the
man to worthily fill the office, and hope
to see him nominated by the Democrat
ic Convention in August.
THE CINCINNATI CONVENTION.
■ The Democratic Convention meets
next week at Cincinnati for the purpose
of naming candidates for the office of
President and Vice-President.
The task of finding* Democrats wor
thy of getting the nominations is not
difficult where there are so many really
worthy men capacitated by nature
and educated by long public service
within the ranks of the party, but in
malting the selection it will be neces
sary to look to the personal popularity
of the nominees in the Northern States
particularly, for it is generally conceded
that the Democrats will carry all the
Southern States, and the nomination of
Garfield by the Republicans was a tac
it admission on their part that they
had no hope of making any inroad
upon the one hundred and thirty-eight
votes of fhe Southern States.
In the North there are four States
that may be certainly set down as
Democratic unless the Cincinnati con
vention shall make a serious mistake.
There are New York with 35 votes, In
diana with 15, New Jersey with 9 and
Connecticut with 6. making 65 votes in
hit, tvhlcn added to the vote; of
the Solith trbuld give the Democratic
iibininee 203 votcSv or 18 mqre than a
majority of the electoral college. New
York and Indiana aloiie would give a
sufficient number of votes 188, or New
York. New Jersey and Connecticut
would do the same, the aggregate of tbc
three being tbc same as that of New
York and Indiana.
It is expected, taking the past as a
basis of supposition that Connecticut
New Jersey and New York will
all be controlled by the same
influences, and that as one goes all will
go. As these combined votes will,with
the Southern vote, elect, it might ap
pear at first blosh the part ofprudence
to nominate a ticket acceptable to these
three States, but that proposition is
met by a certainty of defeat if either
one of the three fails to vote for our
nominees, unless Indiana should come
to the rescue. Here the importance of
Indiana’s vote asserts itself, and as it
is as certainly Democratic as any of
the others named, policy as well as pa
triotism requires that Indiana’s will
should be consulted,and thather wishes
should not be ignored.
If then, the Cincinnati Convention
shall present candidates acceptable to
the Democracy of Indiana, and these
three Eastern States named, Demo
cratic suecess is assured, and to the
solving of this problem the abilities
and energies of broad-thoughted Dem
ocrats should be addressed.
I making the foregoing comments
and estimates, we make no mention of
Ohio and several other Northern States
which wise and prudent nominations
at Cincinnati may give us, for that Mr.
Garfield is unpopular in his own State
is shown by his having fallen over
twenty-five hundred votes behind
Hayes in' his own district in 1876. As
Hayes carried the State overTilden by
a majority a little over seven thousand,
if Mr. Garfield is as unpopular in all
the districts as this vote showed him
to be in.his own, an honest and popu
lar Democrat may hope to heat him
40,000 votes.
[Concluded Coin First Page.]
mis Herring, potential aid given in the
last campaigns to myseif and to the
standaM-bearars of the party ill these
hotly-contested mountain * districts.
[Applause.]. lii thus speaking at some
length ugon the purposes of Governor
Colquitt in making this - appointment,
I have dene him but Simple justice.
If I know myself I speak in the cause
ie of truth, of harmony, of Democratic
unity. [Applause.] . One thing is cer
tain, that while others high in position
were apologising for or defending
Grant, while he drove the cold iron
into the breast of Louisiana, Gov.
Brown was denouncing this act of tyr
anny. [Applause and cries of “that’s
so.”]
Aid now, my countrymen, yon have
this whole question before you. What
are you to do about it? Am I who know
the facte, and you who have now heard
the facte, to stand coldly by and
see Colquitt stricken for this act? Are
you to sit still? Am I to be silent
while this upright man, this brave sol
dier, this able executive, and sinless
Christian is hounded by detraction,
blackened by defamation and robbed
of the chaplet of untarnished honor
with which his grateful countrymen
have crowned him, and which the God
of humanity has stamped upon his
brow. [Loud and prolonged cheers,
interrupting the speaker for some time,
and cries of “no, never.”]
I come now, my fellow-citizens, to
the last act in the drama by which the
Pretorian guards have sold out Geor
gia. Gordon takes the position of
counsel for a railroad company. Yes,
that is true. But suppose it turns out
that this position was tendered by the
president of the Louisville and Nash
ville railroad company. Suppose it
turns out also that I sent my resigna-
Political Squibs.
For the Codkikh.
The Republican party always rewards
its men. Another evidence is the nom-
nation of Garfield, and true to time-
honored precedent the greater the fraud
committed, the greater the reward.
They have chosen him of the 7 to 8
electoral commission!, as their presi
dential standard bearer. Will the peo
ple endoree their action? —
Garfield helped to count out a man
elected by the people. Gen. Arthur
made the Custom House of ^w»York
so corrupt that even Hayes himself,
and that’s saying a great deal, removed
him out of mere shame. The two
make a beautiful team for the presi
dential race.
The hopes of the Republican part} 7
now lie in a disunited Democracy.
Will the Cincinnati convention grat
ify them?
Twenty years of fanatical, bitter,
partisan sectional ruinous rule, has
ended the usefulness of the Republi
can party. A new era of peace, fra
ternal feeling and prosperity is dawn
ing. Lovers of our country and her
constitution can you see it?
The “silver lining to the dark clouds”
is visible! The people will soon he
emancipated! Twenty years of fraud,
corruption and centralization of power
by a sectional party, have been enough
for the free people of America! We
shall soon see the end of it in the elec
tion of a Democratic President.
Much has been said about the cor
ruption of the Democratic party after
three quarters of a century of power,"
hut will all the sins ever committed by
that party during all that time, not
Chiddgo Cdhventioii knocks all fhe i:oal
enthusiasm out of the sectional*.Radi
cal disunion patty and they ;; voYut to
their Hit’s end for.soriiethihg tystir up
the lagging fervor. Gaps and capes
with gilt letters “wide awake”, not
do it. They must get up the
liimdation, persecution of ll
ku-klux and demand bavonei
polls.
Letter from a Roman injlew
York.
New York, June 9,1880.
Editor Courier—Never has ^.any
thing fallen so still bom upon the
country as has the work of the Cnica
go Convention. Garfield’s nomination
was a great disappointment, but 4rhen
Arthur’s name came in it was a regular
wet blanket all around among Repub
licans, and the word most expressive
of popular feeling is disgust. T
Arthur is knpwn to be Conkfing’s
henchman, a local New York ma&ine
politician of the lowest order, andjNew
York Republicans do not hesitaj? to
say that Bayard will be the next Pres
ident, or that the only hope of tLtRe-
publican party is in the possihihMbo
the Democrats making a foolish nomi
nation. One Republican, alreacfy'dis-
gusted, last night when Arthur’s nalhe
came in as second on the tickefipro-
marked: “All h—1 can’t save us, gnd
Bayard or Hancock will be next Presi
dent of the United States.” Republi
cans who axe solid men say that {hey
know Bayard to be a statesmarrof
sound principles, incorruptible, whose I tion in order to accdpt another business
devotion to constitutional limits ingpv-1 position entirely disconnected with the
eminent, and sound financial stah^g,^ LomSVllle and Nashvdle radroad com -
stand as virtues when compared with Ce ^j ie
commend him to the public, and that
they prefer him to mere machine poli
ticians of their own party.
It is now clearly evident thatethe
Democratic party has only to nomi
nate a good man, in a sensible way^to
insure success. Bayard is a s
man of unblemished character,
noble ancestry, and one of the fewper-
sons of high birth and opportunities
who have not degenerated, and whose
tendency, amid the demoralizing infRv
ences of these corrupt times, whfth
sweep down so many, bas been upward
and onward, at all times towering
above the low level o.f the common pol
itician.
Can any one imagine Senator Bay
ard conductif^ a Presidential-nominat
ing Convention like that headed by
Ro$coe Conkling at Chicago, heading,
as it was, an immense' mob in the In
terest of U. S. Grant, No. he is far re
moved from: the possibility of%u$PW
cion*in relation :to ; :6ucli ; -conduct. In
short be is thoroughbred, using a coud
mon phrase among stockmen—cleate
as a Sunday shirt just from the lauti-
dry; clear as a bell on all vital qne&
tions, and the soul of honor. If the
National Democratic Conventfia|i
should nominate Senator .Bayard, ,1
predict his successful election, and that
he will be the next President of tlje
United States.
Business te quiet in New York,
though all parties seem quite hopefil
of a good business next season, and in
view of this the market is gradually
strengthening, with strong confidence
in the future of prices. *
Yours, truly, Roman, i
»^> m r
The De Golyer Matter.
Extract from a letter written to his
principals by one Crittenden, agent for
the Chicago firm of De Golyer & Mc
Clellan, contractors for wooden pave
ments under the infamous Shepherd
ring at Washington in 1872:
“ To-day’s and to-night’s work has
secured the assistance of Gen. Garfield.
You cannot overrate the importance of
this accession. He is chairman of the
committee on appropriations and holds
the purse strings of the National
Treasury. Through him must come
every dollar of appropriations..Imeed
not say that I now feel certain of sut-
i. seat.
t, Faf.k BOWIE.
jrNinj-GEofcGF,
j. J* SEAY CO.,
MANUFACTURE a full line of
COOKING AND HEAHNd STOVES. COUNTRY HOLLOW-WARE, TEA-KETTLES,GRATES,
tiloughtun Mills, Ii*on Bailings etc.
Agents for
Blymer Manufacturing Co.’s
PORTABLE AND STATIONARY
STEAM ENGINES,
Cincinnati, O.
MACHIKTE
I N ADDITION to oar former line of maniiaclure. we are now prepare*! to huild and repair Ki,
Sines, Boilers, Shafting Pulleys, Mill Gearing, Saw Mills, Threshers, Gins, ami all kinds 01 Ma-
Mr! Junius George, for several years in charge of the Rome Water-Works, will give all work his
personal attention, which is a guarantee that it will be thoroughly done.
Address, - ■
JT. ,T. SEAY & CO.,
ap29tww3m
Rome, GJ-a.
the Indian agency, Navy contractings,
whiskey ring, Credit Mobilier ring,
Syndicate frauds committed in five
years by the party in power?
The Democratic party owes a duty
to the country which is plain and
comprehensive. That duty is unity.
In this center the hopes of our country
and future. Any other course will be
suicidal to both; with that course suc
cess is sure.
Can the world show a parallel case { , Gen. Grant, no doubt felt, quite con-
of assurance on the part of an indirid-1 fident that he could have been elected
- . Y _ _ fUa. X Iff 1 - ■*' - r ■
ual so eminently unfitted for the-pre-
ferment to which he aspires, as that
displayed by U. S. Grant? If there ex
ists in hisfory another similar case, I
would like to hear of it. . '
It was conceived in iniquity, bom in
sin and subsisted on corruption and
fraud until it was rotten at twenty years
of age—the Republicanty party.
Show me a Radical in the South and
I will show you a man who either ex
pects or holds an office.
The bloody shirt and bloody chasm
phantom has been the capital in trade
of Northern fanatics. The people are
sickened by it and will give it its final
quietus next November. 1 Says one “ Kendall’s Spavin Cure js
Now for artificial enthusiasm! Never ^?j > ! st j i “^ ient % h V man fle f h J
man who held “the purse
strings of the National Treasury ” did
not disappoint the expectations based
on Crittenden’s belief in his venality.
According to his own testimony before
the investigating committee he receiv
ed 85,000 for his influence and ser
vices in putting this job through. And
this is the man whom the Chicago
Convention has nominated for Presi
dent of the United States.
Presidential Campaign.
for the third term if he had only : ac
cepted the position, but we know of
thousands of men who say that Ken
dall’s Spavin Cure is the very best rem-
iy that has ever been discovered for
spavins, splints, curb, callous, ringbone
or any lameness on beast or mail,
Everybody should investigate these
subjects and read the advertisement
for Kendall’s Spavin Cure. i
Celebrated Dr. Wm. Stokes,:
Baltimore, writes:,“I confidently rec
ommend to the medical profession
Colden’s Liebig’s .Liquid Extract bf
Jleef for consumption, depression,
weakness and depression.” Sold by all
druggists. J
pany or with any other railroad com
pany east of the Rocky Mountains.
What, then, will these men say who
are so disturbed lest somebody should
do something wrong ? What will they
then do for some pretext for harrow
ing up their righteous souls ? [Great
laughter.] Well, this is precisely the
truth, as will appear by the documents
which I shall hand to the reporter. I
had long since decided to retire from
public life and had only waited for
time and opportunity to do so consist
ent with my own honor and your in
terests.
That time had come. Your rights
were secured, your liberties safe, and
the opportunity for congenial and prof
itable employment for myself present
ed itself. Some months ago I met a
Confederate friend formerly of Louis
iana, who had aoqulred a large fortune
on the Pacific coast,and was engaged
in important enterprises in Oregon.
He; made me such offer as induced me
tq consent to join him. It was my
purpose, however, to continue in pub
lic life until the Legislature should
uieet. but the letter which-Lhand th
reportbr-rrill-wlibTT—rrlij—rtBiecame
essaty for me to decide at once.
To accept this offer and one which I
jnras arranging for my sons, I sent my
resignation to the Governor. While in
New York, conferring after my "resigna-
with Colonel Hogg, I received intelli
gence that Mr. Newcomb wished to
obtain my services, as shown by his
letter, which I also hand the reporter
col. hogg’s letter.
New York, May 1.1880.—My dear
General Gordon: I trust you will par
don me for pressing for an early decis
ion as to your puiyose in respect to re
signing your seat in the United States
Senate and accepting the position ten
dered you in Oregon. I am compelled
by my own negotiations to know as
early as possible .what I can say as to
your action. May I again remind you
that in a pecuniary sense the certain
compensation is more than double that
which attaches to yonr present position.
The business opportunities you will
enjoy in Oregon will enable you to ac
cumulate a fortune in a comparatively
brief space. I beg, in making your de
cision, you will keep these considera
tions in remembrance as well as the
minor collateral ones.
Trusting for an early response and
that it may he a favorable one, I am
my dear General, faithfully yours,
T. Egenton Hogg.
Gen. J. B. Gordon.
' mr. newcomb’s letter.
Louisville and Nashville R. R. Co.,
New York Office, No, 52 Wall street!
Nos. 9 and 10,' May 19, 1880.—My
Dear General Gordon: I am informed
you are about resigning or have already
resigned your seat as Senator from
Georgia to accept some position in Or
egon. If this , be true, let me see you
before you make up your mind to leave
Georgia. I am sure I can make it to'
your interest to remain' in the South
and do not doubt on reflection, you
will find it more agreeable to yourself
and family to remain among your own
people. At any rate, I would like to
see you before youllecide upon taking
this step, and see if we cannot reach a
conclusson mutually agreeable. I re
main, yours most truly,
H. Victor Newcomb.
Gen. J. B. Gordon.
was there greater occasion for it.' The
lameness of the nomination by the
used and thousands have • extolled it
in similar terms. See their adverti&-
ment.
I at once saw Mr. Newcomb and
changed my plans and so notified my
friend, Colonel Hogg, whereupon he
wrote me this letter, which I ask the
reporter to incorporate in my remarks
at this point-
New York, May 19,1880—My Dear
General Gordon: While feeling deeply
disappointed at your decision not to
acceptthe propositions made to you in
respect to Oregon? I can fully appre
ciate and understand the feelings
prompting you to accept a proposition
to wmch a less remuneration is attach
ed than the Oregon one. Yes, I do
recognize that there is a .vast difference
between your proposition as a married
man with a family and the ties ft) the
people of your State and section and
that of mine—a bachelor—who for
years has been residing on the Pacific
coast. I am glad that I have had the
opportunity of submitting the business
propositions to you to testify my wil
lingness to farther your interests. Be
lieve me to remain'faithfully yourg,
T. Egenton Hogg.
To Gen. Gordon.
How these vile insinuations against
Governor Colquitt now vanish! How
puerile these efforts to defeat him must
now become! How intense must be
come the abhorrence of the people at
such unwarranted assaults upon pri
vate character!
I have stooped to bring before the
public even my private letters, because
justice-to Governor Colquitt seemed to " hich foster ana maintain
require it, hut no language can ade
quately describe the contempt I have
for such efforts to secure public office.
It is a sad commentary upon the ten
dency of the times. Is character so
cheap and office so dear as to
justify the effort to destroy the
one in order to attain' the
other? [Applause.] If nothing were
due Alfred Colquitt as a vindication at
the hands of his people—if nothing
were due the executive who has done
as much as any executive within the
past half century to give your State a
proud position among the sister States
of the union—if nothing were due the
man, who has served you in wars, and
whose whole life has been devoted to
the highest interests of society, the
loftiest aims of the church and to the
most exalted ends of government, still before fusSYthe cfaiom*.
it is due yourselves that you will .rally
to his support and crown him with your
approval. [Great applause, and cries
“we will.”] It is due to these young
men who are soon to beoame the guar- and
dians of our politics—it is due these
old men now tottering to the grave, it
is due these women so deeply interest
ed in purity in all departments bf life,
it is due to society, to the church, to
the state to liberty, that you rise in
your majesty, and by the omnipotent
flat of enlightened and inexorable pub
lic opinion rebuke and banish ..forever
from our politics these unholy methods.
[Loud and prolonged cheering.] Ah,
pnntryrQAn^I am not mist
verdict' If these faote can reach
the people in time they will bear ' Col
quitt’s banner to a great victory as a
lesson to traducers. [Cheers.] Justice
and truth have not forsaken the breasts
of this people, Jehovah still reigns
and the grandest of facte is that for
which His throne is pledged and truth
shall triumph and justice shall live.
[Immense cheering from the entire au
dience.
(yticura
HUMORS or THE BLOOD, SKIN
AND SCALP.
Cuticuka Resoi.vkxt Is tlie most powerful
Blood Purifier and Hvor Stimulant ever com
pounded. In forty minutes after taking the first,
dose it may be detected in thesalivu, blood, sweat
and urine, showing that it has entered the blood
and been distributed throughout the entire sys
tem. In its passage through thecirculatingfluids
it meets with the corrupt particles of matter
which foster and maintain disease, with which it
chemically unites, destroying and gmdually
climinating them from the system.
Hence its power to forever expel Scrofulous.
Cancerous and Canker Humors, which unchecked
fill the body with fonl corruptions and rokout the
delicate machinery of life.
Cuticuka, the great external remedy for all
humors of the Scalp and Skin, Ulcers, Sores and
Discharging Wounds, is the. most soothing and
healing of outward applications. It speedily
destroys fungus and, parasitic growths, restores
the oil glands and tubes to a healthy condition,
and cures, when assisted by the Cuticuka Soap, ■
Diseases of the Skin and Scalp which htlvc bePh
the torture oi a life time.
SKIN DISEASES.
Great Suffering fqr Sixteen Years. A
Wonderful Cure by the Cuticura
Remedies.
Mexsl-x. Weeks «£ Potter: Gentlemen—Cuticv-
ra Remedies have done me a power of good. I
have beenafliicted with skin disease- for sixteen
years. Some days it troubled me more than
others, but at night the itching nearly drove me
wild.
I would scratch until the blood would run dpwn
my limbs. , ..
I have had several physicians. Some said they
but others said no'
. that before I used
Remedies 1 was in a fearful state, and had given
up ail hope of ever having any relief.
But, Uke a drowning man grasping at a straw, I
thought I would try the Cuticuka Remedies,
about which I had read so much.
They have performed a wonderful cure for me,
nd of my own free will and accord I recommend
them. Yours, truly,
S. A. STEELE.
ffl IV. Van Buren St,, Chicago, Ill„Mar.7,1S79.
MORE HOOD TUAN DOCTORS
In Three Tears of Treatment.
Gentlemen—Please find aOccnts to pay for small
box of Cuticuka and direct it to me. The dollar
box you sent me lias done me iiioro good than
all the doctors In three years. The doctors have
done me no good. My feet and legs are healing
last. It is indeed Cuticuka.! .
Yours, truly,
EVAN MORGAN, P. M.
Moscow, Minn. June 25. ixso
The revenue cutter Thomas Corwin,
which has been reported by telegraph
as starting from San Francisco Arctic
expedition, goes especially to rescue
the crews of two missing whalers, the
Mount Wollaston and Vigilant. She
is provided with an iron ice breaker for
her bow, is fully provisioned for a
polar winter, and has instructions to
go as far north as possible, after rescu
ing the whalers or ascertaining their
fete. Captain Smith has a theory
about the north pole which he hopes
to substantiate, “that Wrangle’s Land
Public School Notice.
N otice is pereby given that the
Public Schools of Floyd county will be
opened for three months, as usual, the present
, . -i . . . year—namely, any time after July 1st and before
extends elear around, to and forms a September 1st, to suit convenience of neighbor
hoods. Ail schools must be opened before Sep-
part of. Greenland, and that when the
north pole is discovered it will be
found on the land, firmly planted in
the ground, as it were. To my mind
this has been clearly proven by the set
of the current and the motion of the
moving ice.”
diseases. No preparation ever offered
to the public recommended as is Sim
mons’ Liver Regulator. Its virtues
have received every form of endorse
ment that incredulity could demand.
Be sure you obtain the genuine in the
white wrapper, with the red Z and sig
nature of J. H. Zeilin & Co.
At Cardiff (England) lately, a hotel
porter was sent to get change for £25,
and went off to London with the money.
Arrested, he was discharged, because,
said the magistrate there was a contract
between the parties, the prisoner hav
ing undertaken to bring back some
thing different to what he received, and
this took the matter out of the range of
crimnal proceedings.
Charles Dennix, Druggist,
First Place, oor; Court street,
T , , „ Brooklyn, March 4,1879.
I can cheerfully speak of the healing qualities
of your Cuticuka Soap, aiul its perfume is supe
rior to any of the standard soaps now in use.
CHALKS DEJ7NIN.
The Cuticuka Remedies are prepared by
„ WEEKS & POTTER,
Chemists and Druggists, 300 Washington Street,
and for sale by aU Druggists. Price of Cuticuka,
small boxes 50 cents: large boxes, containin'-two
and one half times the quantity of small, 31? Re
solvent, 31 per bottle, Cuticura Soap, 25 cents
per cake; by mail 30 cents; 3 cakes 75 cents.
fiftLLlAIOi . By instantly affecting the
ymainy Nervous System, their influ-
VflLTAH! Mn rPTnn cncc is at once felt at the
TO.IWJ m^EUCTBIOf ar the.st extremities: Hence
Pi iereftS Pain, which arises from a
I «.»* disturbance of the Nerve
Forces, is cured in every instance as if by magic;
also, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflamation ofthc
Lungs, Liver and Kidneys, Irritation of the Stom
ach and Bowels, Indigestion, Dyspepsia and Kil-
ious Colic.jnn7 tw-wlm
, opened before Sep
tember 1st. The Commissioner will examine and
license teachers ever “ '
his office in Rome
Commissioner to t
he or she first obtains a recommendation from
the Trustees of the District in which the school is
to be taught. This is required in every instance.
Every teacher mustbign a contract in person, this
year, with the Commissioner, and also must ob
tain blanks, which pre new and different from
last yerr. No teacher will draw one cent from
the public fond until these requirements are corn-
pay particular attention to this notice.
M. A. NEVIN,
County School Commissioners
Rome, Ga., May 30,1880. tw wlm
Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, John
W. Beckwith, Bishop of Georgia ; Gen.
John B. Gordon, U, S. Senator; Hon,
John Gill Shorter, Rt. Rev. Bishop
Pierce, J. Edgar Thompson, Hon. B. H.
Hill, Hon. John C. Breekenridge,
Prof. David Wills, D.D.; Hiram War
ner, Chief Justice of Georgia; Lewis
Wimder, Asst. P. M.J Philadelphia, and
many others—names of eminent and
well known individuals who certify
from actual experience to the great
imccessoffee Regulator in subduing M^SSdK
law. Stipulations, specifications and require
ments can be procured on application ai the office
of Secretary of State in Atlanta.
X. C. BARNETT,
Secretary of Slate*
W. A. WRIGHT,
< "omiitroller-Goneral.
J. W. UENFUOE,
• Treasurer,
Commissioners of Public Printing.
Atlanta, June 1,1880. 4w
Proposals to Jo Die File Printii.
XTNDER THE AUTHORITY OF AN ACT OF
U the General Assembly, in compliance with
Art. 7, section 17, paragraph 1st of the Const it ution,
apptoved 23d August, 187!), proposals will be re
ceived to do the Public Printing for two years
from the expiration of the term of office or the
“resentIncumbent. SEALED PUOPOSAI.S will
e received for thirty days from the 1st of June,
1880, at the office of the Secretary of State in At
lanta. On the first Tuesday in August next the
—cii * j. . _ At _ ■ *
S. A. McArthur, DENTIST,
TNSERTS A FULL Upper or Low-
I ek set of Teeth for 310 on best base
in use. Gold Fillings from SI to 32
each. Other work at lowest prices.
Satisthctlon guaranteed. Give me a trial.
Office at Bnena Vista, Broad St., Rome, Ga.
April 20,1880. twtf
SEED PEAS!
A LL VARIETIES—SELECTED ESPECIALLY
forseed.
Also, stock peas at 75 cents per bushel, sound
and clean, bnt mixed.
DeJOURNETTE & SON.
junlowlt
HOME STEAM DYE-HOUSE!
"CURST-CLASS WORK ON ALL GOODS.
. ? Prices moderate. Blankets scoured without
shrinkage, Carpets cleaned at yonr own houses,
White Curtains bleached and recalendered.
Gentlemen, save money by looking up yonr
last year’s spring garments and having them
cleaned or colored at the
ROME STEAM DYE-HOUSE
Office just over Etowah Bridge. ap22twtf
Dr. John H. Samuel,
F )RMERLY of the Good Samaritan Hospital
and lately First Assistant Superintendent of
the Longview Asylum for the Insane, in the city
of Cincinnati, has procured rooms in the Noble
Block, and offers his services in all branches of
the profession and will give special attention to
the various forms of nervons disorders. i
- ap24twtf
FOB SALE.
A FORTY-EIGHT INCH TYLER; COTTON
Press, with boilers complete, for compress
ing cotton. Apply to
HENRY CARD,
President C. W. & C. P. Co.,
une 4,1880. tw9t]Charleston, S. C,
E. N. FRESHMAN & BROS.,
Advertising Agents,
190 W. Fourth St., CINCINNATI, 0.
Are authorthorized to contract for advertising
in this paper.
Estimates furnished free.
Send for circular.