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THE GAZETTE
SCMM KHVII.LE, UA.
J. CL LOOMIS,
Editor and Proprietor
RATKH OF SL’BSOKU’TIOJJ!
IX ADVANCE. ON TIM K
twoW# mouth* ... • • sl-76
HU month* "6
Thrto* mouths ,•.*. 40 *>o
Oorr*jM*nd*ne* wottclted; but to rceiv* at
tention, !ett ’r mum be accompanied by a re
•ponelblc immo not for but aa a
*u ran lee of good faith.
All article* candldatea for
offl. .<r intended for the peramial benefit of any
one. muat be paid for at the rate of i cwnta pro
!Jne. In advance.
C Hitri'iiiqo iH of ii**wh Hollclted from every
quart - r Rejected article* will not be returned
unloM accompanied by a atamp.
i pf* Advertiwlng rate* mid Mtiinata* given on
\ypiication.
AlMettara should be add re* and to
J. ('. LOOM IK.
Summerville, ( a.
WEME3DA? EVENING, MARCH 23111,1333,
rut KOAU TO V 11,1.1 V IIKAM.
The people ot Chattooga county foci
flint (li ■ builders of the bridge nor,inn tin;
Ousts haul i at Rome have received find,
the more}’ which the I,ridge coat them,
with interest, u fair iwoftt, ni„l never,il
hundred per cent on the sum ul the three.
Ar, opportunity in now presented to free
themselves, from thin expense, and ihey
propose to embrace it. Their couise in
this respect is rot dictated by ill will lo
Koine, hut by a comparison of advantages
nnd disadvantages. The distance to
Valley head is not I to he acven miles less,
than lo Rom. : the road thither cannot
well he worse than the road to Home is
during part ol the winter: and we are
told tlnitthcgradoup Lookout Mountain,
by the proponed route, is r,owl,ore us
steep as up the other side of Tuylor s
Kidge. In the winter lime a trip lo
Rome consumes three days: lo Valley
Ilcait, two. When to nil these ad
vantages h* added ihe freedom Irom
bridge toll, it cannot he a subject of
wonder that our people strongly favor the
new project. If Rome wishes to retain
the bade of Chattooga and Walker
counties, and of Cherokee county, Ala
batna, she will do well to bestir herself,
amt remove, us spocdily ns possible, such
of the disadvantages under which she
labors us can he removed. Now is the
time for action: soon it may I e 100 lute.
TitK ItOVVI ON-IUU.I.IH H I.KTTBUS.
Objection is in:i<U' to J. S. Itoynlon
because ho applied to Uov. Bullock
for a position as judge of the third
judicial circuit. The words purlieu
larly objectiofiuhle lire, “I congratulate
you upon the rest.or.if on of (icorgia
to the union, and your inauguration as
governor of the proud old common
wealth," and “II appointed, I shall
not. certainly pursue a course politically
obnoxious to those of niy friends who
place me in position.” Congratulating
Bullock on his election does not look
consistent in one who worked for
Gordon at the polls every day during
the election, as Boynton says lie did.
If lie had been appointed, and eases
resembling tl'e Columbus trials had
come before him, it would have been
impossible lor him to avoid becoming
obnoxious either to “those who placed
him in position,or to the Democrats
of Georgia. We think the publication
ol the letters cannot fail to lessen his
chances for the nomination.
EXTRACTS FROM Ill'll EXCII AN (i ES.
It is the opinion of the Public, after
a careful analysis ol too tariff bill, that it
will i licet a reduction in duties ol
$37*000,000a year, and cut off more than
$40,000,000 of internal revenue. Other
authorities, equally entitled to respect,
think there will lie very little, if any,
.reduction of duties. -Savannah Arus.
It can’t he denied ti nt the girls are
sweeter than the dowers, and would he
prettier, but for one thing— the Hewers
dou't wear bungs. Telegraph and Met
sen flier.
Mott farmers are now, as usual, on
gaged in straining ev< ry nerve in pre
paring to tuuke 3 cent cotton to pay lor
20-cent bacon and $1 25 corn. Rain
brillge. Democrat.
The man who cannot vote intelligently
should not vote at all. The truth is not
more applicable to a uan with a black
skin than to a man with a white cue. Tl;i
manhood suffrage business is a fraud.—
Telegraph ami Messenger.
There is plenty i t matrimonial timber
in this burg, and some ol it is pretty well
seasoned. Sglvanta Telephone.
It is said ibat SIOO,OOO of Northern
cupitul ha- lee i sunk in mining lor gold
in Oglethorpe county, and not one ecu:
yeahaod.
_ . —*• *w- -
“The essential characteristics ol a
gentleman,” says Mr. Matthews, “u’e
not an outward varnish or veneer, hill
inward qualities developed in the heart."
The drover was u gentleman at heart and
in speech also, of whom this anecdote is
told. He was d.iving cattle to market
otic day when the snow was deep, save on
the highway. The drove compelled a
lady to turn out id the r ’ad and (read in
the deep snow. “Mad. me." said the
drover, “if the cattle knew as well as 1
what they should do, you would not walk
in the snow.”
Stephen Phillips, of Walker county,
has been n allied 49 years; has twelve
living children —tour sons and eiel t
daughters—all with him; has given them
.]| ~ fji r Kit dish education, without
S. ~iuc one lit Ir 111 to school a sing’e
, vet bought for any of
ti mil ng, except
hats, I ■■ oil thing ua h g been made
at home.
MAJOR It.WON’S POSITION.
While upon the prandround yesterday,
we dropped into Major Bacon's office
where we luund him busily engaged.
"I am glad you have come in," said
he, “as I have something to say. lam
in a position now where the public have
a right to In ar from me, and the time is
•oo short for six* eh making. It is due
to the public, nevertheless, as wed as t ,
my sell, that 1 should speak for myself."
We as ured him that we would
willingly la, t he medium of his communi
cation, and he continued:
"! learn through letters received from
friends in various sections of the ‘St-lo
that by some a very persistent anddil gcnl
effort is lieitir made to array i gainst me
the Iriehds of'Onv. Kief,hens, as well a
the tender sentiment n luridly exalted by
hi* death, with the charge, directly made
or insinuated, that in my present candi
dacy, I am seeking directly or indirectly
to reflect upon the memory of (lev.
Stephens. There nev ir was n charge
nin e utterly unfounded and unjust. No
far Irom i's being tine, it Ins been niv
most earnest w Ul,, expressed on nil proper
oecnainns, that no word should he spokun
concerning him that could possibly offend
or wound his most sensitive friend. No
such word has beer, uttered hv mo. My
desire wis and is to make the present
content without, any icforeneo to last
yar's contest, further than the present
one nrght he affected by the fa t that I
was one ,if the Opposing candidates in
such former contest, and then yielded to
tlij v-ill l the majority, and in goof
faith, Irom the very beginning, supported
the nominee to the best of my übility.”
“I suppose you have seen lint it is
chatg and 'that’ you did not give (iov.
Stephens a cordial upport?"
“Yes, *! “conrsej I have, nod I an,
coming to that. Tl ut| charge is as un
founded us (he f„rm,r one, us I an,
satisfied I can . show lo all fair-minded
and unprejudiced men. Upon the day ol
the nomination, last July, in the moment
of defeat, with all its disappointment, I
voluntarily and openly announced it,
Atlanta, to m, friends and to the Irieutls
ol Mr. Stephens, that I would eive to
him n,y unqualified suppt rt There are
inon of prou>iuei,ce|in t l,e State who then
support'd Mr. ,Stephens who will read
what I now say, and who will icon tuber
those doc’ll rut ions then openly undo by
me.
“But I did not sop ill to. A abort
time after the n,.inrn<ih>n of (i.c.ernor
Stephens, I went North. I inysc'l
needed rest and reetiperalinn, us I was
worn, in no small degree, by tin; fatigues
an 1 anxieties of a most arduous campaign.
,My principal object, however, was to I e
with my children, who were absent from
home —one of whom, after a protracted
illness nines: I v ball a year, was an invalid,
mil bad been recommended, ly my
lamily pliisieiao, to travel at the North
during the summer months. At the time
of my leaving, ulimit the lii.-i ol August,
he | arty in th•; Stale was to a large
extent inhurmoniuns; anil, knowing linn
fact, l took tteea-ioo, hehtre leaving ti e
>tate, to address to u public meeting in
my own county a leltei in which I again
in a mote tin mu! mantel, annou, ceil my
iiin|iriiilii and support ol Mr. Stephens,
i'biil letter was, by my direction,
published at that lime in the pros oft lie
State. I did n a intend that toy Iriends
should ho in doubt as to my position, or
that my enemies should have the shadow
ol an excuse to misrepresent it.
“Hilt the main charge which is pressed
against ini', in this connection, is that
when invited by thoixeeulive committee
to make speeches for Mr. Stephens, I
laih-d to do so; and 1 wi-li now to give
the history* of such invitation, and my
action in res muse to it Upon my return
to the State, l was uiixmUs to contribute
what 1 could to harmonize the entire
party in support of Mr. Stephens, and I
tell that, us the representative of the
portion of the (tatty which had opposed
It's nomination, there was a responsibility
mi me to make an effort io that direction.
I had not thou been invited to take any
part in tho canvass; and (lie inv tution
which 1 subsequent'y received, and which
was publi-hcd, was soliciting by myself
With the de-ire to do wliSt 1 could under
the circumstances, I expressed my wish
to a friend, and stated that, if requested
to assist, 1 would respond either by i,
speech or a public letter, and requested
him to suggest to the chairman of the
executive committee thul be should
extend the invitatr n to me. I said to
uty triend then that the time was short,
and I beliveti the public letter would do
the most good. The friend by whom
tliut request was conveyed is Senator
Hope Barrow. It is ,iue to the chairman
of tho executive committee to state that
w hen this request was made to him by
Mr. Bartow, he suit) that it but a til ici pa.
ted the invitation which lie had intended
to extend to uie. In response to the in
vitation tins procured, l wrote a letter a
column or more in length, in which i
endeavored to the very best of my ability
t i set out the reasons why I thought alt
Democrats in the State should give an
earnest and united support to Mr.
Stephens. That letter was published tit
li the leading papers in the State, and
was read by t hnusui.ds, where the speeches
I eo lid have made would have been
heard by comparatively few.
“I am willing by tiles' facts to be
judged whether the charge is true that 1
tailed to give to Mr. Stephens my cordial
support. 1 announced my support of
! him l:om the beginning, sod never
wavered for ao instant in continuing it to
the end, when 1 cast my Vote for him.
“There is one other matterupou which
1 wish to say something. Prejudice is
sought to lie excited against me by the
charge that my candidacy was announced
too soon after the death oi the Governor.
The (acts are these: i received from
. Oovernor Boynton, on Sunday, two
I telegrams requesting me to go to Atlanta
to confer as ti the Stale's interest, one
of them calling me there on Monday. I
did not go until Monday night, so as 1 1
be there Tuesday morning. I wus very
much surprised that morning to find in
the Atlanta Comititution a dispatch dated
from Macon to the effect that I had
publicly declared my eiindidan'. That
dispatch was sent and published without
my authority, knowledge or consent. I
have no doubt the author of it did so in
good faith upon the basis o' street rumor:
for whatever I may have said to my
friends and in response to’their inquiries,
I certainly designed no public announce
ment at tha* time, and would have
preferred that it should not have been
made for a week later. During that day
(Tuesday) I was called upon at my hotel
in Atlanta by n reporter of the Atlanta
Constitution, with the statement that tho
proprietors nnd editors of the paper
(naming them) had sent him to rrewith
the request that I would state to him for
publication what my intentions wero with
reference to being a candidate in the
approaching contest. I did not at first
comply, and it was not until his third
visit lo in that I consented for anything
to appear. I was then controlled by the
advice ol friends, who said that as tho
dispatch from Macon had been published,
and as other statements would certainly
appear in other papers with or without
authority, it, would he bettor if my inlen
tinnsshoul 1 be definitely stated by myself.
The interview was certainly not sought
by me. At that time tho executive
committee had been culled together, and
the papers wete laden with articles and
dispatches about other pst ties who wore
then prospective candidates.
“I have sought no personal controversy
or antagonism in this contest. I feel
conscious of having done my whole duty
in yi Iding to the decision of the majority
upon the former occasion, and in assisting
to carry out its command; and having
entered this contest, 1 will again, in the
same spirit us before, submit myself to
the will of the people, ns expressed
through the eonv 'iilion. - T<lrt/ra} hrind
,)frssriif/n\
WASHINGTON NEWS.
IVoseJent A t bur is much annoyed l y
oflic) seekers.
A certain set are booming Secretary
Lincoln for the presidency.
II c leading lecture of President
Arthur’s southern policy is “Native white
citizens of Doumorutio ami Cooled.:ratc
anloo dents who genuinely iicc'ipt the
constitution ns it has been amended, and
the laws whic Ii manifestly au hntiza-,
ought to have the heart.' eo-oporalion ol
the Republicans."
Secretary Polger's lie.ill It is very had
lie is traveling, and some think he will
resign.
Congress in it nlo-ing hours apprnpti*
aieil $ 150 000 In pay l ieorge \\ ishingtmi
Custis Lee for ihu Arlington estate, lie
will pruhnhiy accept it ■
Since 1730 the United States govern
mi nt has appropriated s3:l |o4 221 tor
public buildings. Slates norili of the
Ohio have received over s7o,tHio,(itM) I
ti i- sum.
Tho secretary of the treasury bin
pi escribed (A hours a, u wotking day iu
his dcpai I meet.
Some members ofcnn,re.-s are repre
sented as maxing quite an addition to
their salary by aching their share of
public, duet meats.
During tho ti.-eal ye.r ending June
30th, 1332, tho internal revenue taxes
brought into tho treasury $14ti,400,000.
Prow that time to Mutch 21- 1 , 1383 the
receipts w0re5105,225,000: thoe.-iimaton
tceeipts for tho test ol tho year are
$38,400,(XX). The changes in (ho law, it
is thought, will make this $5,000,1X10
less than if no change had been made.
A huge number ol the citizens of Rome
met at the opera hnu clast Unlay niyhl,
io consult about free bridges and iui
prov.d roads. Mayor Piintup, Judge
Branham, Dr Holmes, Mr. Peatherstou,
Captain Dwiliell. Mr. Yancey, Mr
McWilliuui-, and Mr. Rounsavillo, ad
dressed the meeting. They all recognized
the importance of securing free bridges
and better roads, and that quick. A
resolution that the people of Borne are
willing to unite with the people of the
county to buy the present bridges or bui ti
two new ones, was unanimously adopted,
Li was clearly stilted as settled by the
United States supreme court that the
county hud the right to build new bridges
if it owned or could obtain the land on
both sides of the river. 1). M. Hood,
Samuel Morgan, Q. W. Holmes, Abner
Echols, John 11. Dent, Thomas Burney,
and W. T. McWilliams, were appointed
to learn whether the present bridges
could bo bought, nnd at what price. A
mass meeting of the county was called
for A’ til 3d, immediately after tho
adjournment ol the county convention, to
consider the matter.
in Lumpkin county, recently, a piece
of limber ten feet long and three inches
wide was eauyht by a circular saw, and
dushed in the lace of Mr Baytie, whu was
tending tlie mill, with such force as to
leave a part of the bone of the nose
sticking in tlie end of the slat. He was
knocked lifeless for a while, but soon
recovered, and in five days was lending
the mill as usual.
Senator Parks denies positively the
report that there lias beeii an agreement
that lie should be elected president of the
senate if Senator Boynton should he
elected governor, and says that he wi!j
not be a candidate lor the position,
believing that he can be more serviceable
to his constituents oa the floor and in the
committee rooms thau as presiding officer.
GUANO 8s ACID PHOSPHATE.
I .\ow Have on llnnil Tin- Itt-liahit-
I. X. L. GUANO.
and (
PALMETTO ACID PHOSPHATE.
• /
HOLD BY AIK LAST BEAHON. ALSO
BRADLEY’S PATENT GUANO,
L. & C. GTLTAJESrO.
rniIKHK lust two brand h Imvt* br<*n wold by W. H. Ward law ami Jom-n ,t Wnrdluw. of DeSoto,
I for Mt-v-ru] yearn pa.r, ami till wh httv* tuied it cun now buy It from iiim. Thanking my
frloiid* for their patronage, and hoping to lucre***- y mm lex in future. I remain,
Very Kenpt ctfiilly,
dizi-ton G-. Lee,
BRIDGE BTKEKT, ROME, GA.
J. A. AG MW' A Him Hell !h xtill xelling for me. Iff'Thone for whom it In more convenient
can be uupplicd at Angle h.
ROIJN. A VILEE & BROTHER,
DKALKKS IN
ZELL’S AMIVk MATED BONE SUPERPHOSPHATE,
Tlx- moot reliable fertilizer imeil.
:t
They invite their Chattooga friends t<> give them a call before purchasing.
To those who wish to buy for cash, they are prepared to offer peculiar
inducements. „
GKMKItAI. NEWS.
The pin factories of this emm;ry turn
out two tons daily.
Illinois has established the whipping
post for wife heaters.
There are sag] to he 400,000 opium
eaters in the United Stales.
Meal and rice furnish more nourish
tiient than any other onmmon food.
Strawberry Alleye' nrch, in Baltimore,
is said to he the oldest Meth* die* dtureh
in America.
AM the enke iron furnace* in the Smith.
except that at Oaltdal-. . have
agree 1 upon a fixed price for irm.
There is considerable dread on the
Daciffc coast of the importation ol leprosy
Ironi China and the Sandwich Islands.
Gold coin issued from the New Orleans
mint has been found to he K low the
Standard The matter is u' d>w investi
gation.
Mrs Matit in I** ** ’f (’hat an(n*t f n,
recently gnvo lurih t • h el>il<l w< igliing
on!v 24 ounce*, hu* liv ly mid healthy.
It lived only about a w ek
Northern iiionulaciurorx I- *i
good* find that Souther, er* cun urd**r i
theufttn Western cine* ami th*v •*•*
reduction of railr od freight*.
Women :re said to u*e intenio to com
municate an interest in palenewt to their
complexion. Of course it mbiii causes
.leaih, but what will no* worn' n do lor
beauty?
In Chattanooga, on toe 16t.h, Robert
Jenkins, local agent of the Sillier *ewirg
mneliini company, being behind in hi*
accounts, blew out hi* brain* ra her than
lace detection end disgrace.
()by K. Owen, teller of ti e thir 1
national bank of St Louis, began stealing
from tlie bank in 1875, and took $209,0 K)
before ho was arrested, a short time aco.
Ho goes to he penitentiary for ten \ ears
A New York agency reports that the
letters received from its 600 cot
respondent* show a decided improvement
in the financial condition of fanner* in
every Southern State except North
Carolina.
A petition to abolish the city charter of
Chattanooga, leaving it to be caPed "the
taxing district of Chattanooga." with
about halt the highest officer* appointed
by the governor, is be ft re the Tennessee
legislature.
The hardest steo . such as wi I turn the
edge of any saw, may he sawed with a
smooth edged revolving disk of soft
metal, on which sand ts regularly poured.
The pressure again.*' tho steel forces the
grains of sand into the odge of the softer
metal, making small teeth.
On the 19th the communists of New
York City celebrated the establishment
of the Paris Commune of IS7I. 1 here
was a large crowd. Herr Mi st, during
his speech, said that the Paris Commune
was too humane, and that the commune
of the future would he established
“without regard to humanity, and with
:i firm hand to wield the sword of
destruction.”
In the Pukes Nutt, affair in Pennsyl
vania, it is generally believed that Pukes
be rayed Miss Nutt under promise of
marriage, backed out from his premise,
wrote the letter to her father thinking
that he would keep quiet from regard to
his daughter's reputa ion, 'out and that lie
had stirred up a hornet'* nest, ar.d
determined to kill Nutt a> the shortest
way to quiet.
Near Fredeiiok, Mu., Simon Coni- *
bouse caught tire during the nigh* of
the 13th. He ran out qh • * ct ild.
His wife threw five chiidt o of the
window, and he caugi t t m The
house wa* at ut i• * tab i . urged
her to jump. >he Mai * e one
child that wi. ■ : the
building fed, ui ' -re
mained of r aud icb
; sho died.
OATS.
fhe who <ivr wild oa'* will reap wild
oats. () r young friend* do not hdi* ve
this, hut it is true, whether it be believed
or not.
Boy* often begin t hi- sowing a? an early
age. without any thought ofhe reaping,
have an d* $ that it is 'spools' t
be g>o i, rhv if is 'soft' to he careful to
keep clear of til flt t is wrong; that it i
in inly to chew, to wear an Ito swogjer;
i hat it .* ‘smart t lc* care'es a* to whu
paren * and teacher* wi h.
Young men fan y that the/ are proving
their independence by staying away from
the Bi le cl and throwing out doubts
a >ut 0 i H'i v Phey pride them
aelve* o t*et nj ' 'ut oi leading stri igs,
on iheir vbihty n> choose their own
eouipans. arid to judge for them-elvr
how they will spent] their evening* and
where h > Ai l pi-, ir %-ir Sabbath.
Ttieir i ns* jkc a i upward earl at the
menu n > tin* and •'* young men' who
ho d•• ■'und . seho and and prayer
meeting Ih y mve g> ten be> od t hi.-!
Now in t ir hearts they know that
‘tin: sain'* are light anil *!u y thenfelve*
wnmg lhe> hvc i,. pica of going o
in the neglect •! <i<>d and rtiigi ii ul
tll Ml fhey v-x ;•* • t* lave a goo 1
ti ne wtiti- yo iug ami jutei in life to
turn over a m w leaf, and to couie out all
right iii the end. Th y are sow ing their
wild oats.
But who i- to reap what they are
; sowing? And what *bai the harvest be?
* ‘Whatsoever a man soweth that shall
he also reap/’
Character i forming. It is formed it:
t youth. Men at thirty and forty arc
i commonly what they are at twenty, only
ripened and hardened; and at twenty
they are to be what they were at fifteen,
only lume set. From the quartic* 'hat
are dug in.det Jer:i*uleiu uti ie creamy
' limestone is cut that is .soft to the knife
or chisel when fiist taken out, nut that
! hardens into solid rock when exposed to
tho air. So it is with us. In y >uth we
j readily take shape under the influences
which we invoke; in manhood we find out
! characters are set. We stamp our souls
wlnle young and plastic with the impress
that they are to beat t . aftei lift*. Let
our young men understand that sowing
wild oats m youth mean* a harvest ol
sorrow and sin Kven it repented of. the
; old seed* are there to be fought and be
wail. Ja* long us life lasts. Butter—fat
better —is it never to sow seeds of evd.
No uian ever regretted that be begu t
; se ve God in ' is youth. —Forward
The f-dl .wing are g wo in A:>pl ton s
! Cych j vo li t as symt tom* ! a;.| reaching
j madness in dogs: an unaccustomedgloou y
and suspicious disposition, with mrvous
agitation and restlessness; momentary
i attacks (.} ha lueinatinn, both as t* sight*
! nnd *< tin is; ui unnntutnl and dep av and
j appetite for indiges iile ut and innutritinu*
i substanjes; a peculiar and unnatur i bark,
a ropy and vi-cid cot dition of the saliva;
an insane and agg essivc irritability of
tem| er. I hat the mad dog has a horror
of water, ana wtil not drink, and that the
disease is most fiequent in hot weather,
arc popular errors. Mac d* gs drink
frequently, i.i.d, wi on the progress of the
disease innkes it difficult to sw allow, they
often *tick t eir noses deep down in the
water in the effort to satisfy their thirst.
More ting a go m\i in March and Aj ru
than in any other monti.*
••A Girl's llioirt*."
It was in adr .g •‘tore, of com <*. An
interesting n cidents occur in drug s ores
—that is Mary *ll. he was pretty,
with blue eyes and golden hair; one ol
that kind *f beauties rfe poet would have
cailcil au "ant t• m v.: ihe fact that a
colon, ut i iuij les on her lair frontispiece
P elude iai .. ught if a ci.-lestm! being.
./•’Wing titbi ; it v- ha'u- u ♦ e’erk,
-t' asked f-> wav - (.);, ,ent for
dlse. ■; si. mg it
‘ •*. -b-.itk. T/ih . v i./e fore the
Summer sun.
PI.KASANT FOR SMOKERS.
Another of the humble industries of
New York is the collection of ciga.
stumps from street and gutter. Some
half a dozen Italians make a business of
buying them from the horde of youthful
scavengers who live in the Dalian quarter
of the city. An active boy or girl, will
collect half a bushel of stumps in an hour
or so, the work being done from daylight
to cight'o’olock, and during that time all
the principal s-reets in the heart of the
city are gleane 1. Thf children receive
no fixed price for the stumps, but ten or
fifteen cents a pile is usually paid. The
buyers wash the filthiest and spread them
out to dry. A day or so later they are
ciumbled into shreds, and allowed to dry
twenty-four hours long before being
packed in fl jur barrels and shipped to
New York. A bartel of this stump
tobacco is worth two dollars and a half,
but a few years ago when there was a
strong demand for it in Philadelphia, the
Itaiiari dryers received a little more for
it. The stumps were formerly made into
snuff in Philadelphia, hut this filthy
grade of tohacoo is now bought by man
ufacturers of cigarettes and fine cut
chewing tobacco. A whole-ale t haceo
nist of many years' experience declares
that when ti e stump tobacco is ground,
bleached, fl_voted and male up into
cigarette paper, no one hot an export can
detect the difference between it and the
new leaf. AI of which must be exceed
ingly pleasant for the cigarette ootisumei.
A Chicago Mrchast*Experience.
After I lud become almost skin and
bone, with neither strength, appetite nor
ambition left, and the doctors cnuidn'i
help me. Parker's Ginger
Tonic, cured uie completely.—M B
Wesicott. Lam:* M'f r. Chicago.
Diamonds have been found in Georgia
in a belt ol' variable width, extending
from Carr I roomy northeasterly across
tbe .Stall, and e:.tending in the same;
direction to the Potomac. Dr. M. r.
Stephenson win roared lor them sys
tematically this summer.
/wUnfawiG ForailSkinN
l Remldy s’jrx as Diseases j
V TETTER. ITCH. SORCS. PIMPLES./
WRING WORM J
J (■£,
THE FOR
nm^m
Symptomsar.-Pi *:> . . i ilvhinf, worsen!
oigbt; item- If |. . * vc, .■ crawling at>out
the rectum, th* j,rival i'Art.>a' *■.Ofnaffected. Asa
phraaaut, couou)i.-al auvl ixwitiro cure, Swatne v
Ointmkst is superior to any artul m tb market
Sold l y druggists,or s**nd M c?a. in S*ct. Stamps. 3
BoJKM.S* 26 Address,Dk. rWAYNn&S I'h 1* . Pa.
• jfV'F.A f \ g - t . - ry^^y-. • <y^.. - j
- <*HiiJCKidk * Pr
pleas at: r: sate; positive!
GONOnfIHd^SLEET
Also prevents C> u.tagl>n No loss of rinn or
change of Ji t Overwhelming *a-e*. uninis
takahle < r.r s und i:n! andeil :; -fa*-turn An
I
Sent by express <• receipt of pr,. e. Address
BONKOCSNfE CO.,
Bole. nta Sou’heru 6taU*s. ATLAN TA, w. t.
KHtHhliah(l f 4H Years.
lIKNKV A. SMITH
Wholesale and Retail,
Bookseller and Music le.ler,
Rome, Georgia
School, Claasiear nl Mia'xtl&uo
oub Bookt, s'taticiivry. Ph’turw*,
Frames, wall }‘n.*r. Plank ihHtks.
S.rttea, hnvelop*s. Pens,
Ink. arid Fancy article*
Agent f*r Northeru Georgia fo*“
Ludden A Hales, of Savauuab. tor
the sale of
PIANOS AND ORGANS,
am! will duplicate their extra
ordinary low price*. Large stock
of Instruments on hand.
DR. M. W. HAWKINS,
lI.VrB*T,
Summerville Georgia.
Offers his s**rviceß to the public. He haa h-d
many years’experience, ami feels confident of
givinir satisfaction. All work which gives way
within a year will lie made good without extr
charg*. All work done on the latest and most
approved style. Work will le done at his house,
or at the house of those wishing his services.
CHEAP s ;,?^. l , rißr
All in goo4l order—Grover A Baker. Wheeler A
Wilson. Florence, Home Shuttl\ Americnu,
Singer. Philadelphia. Home, etc. PrtiCEs. $4.
$. s . SIS, and sls. Send foi circulars.
H. H. SOI UKH, ( !i ittauoog-a, Tenu.
BP^4-C'&£-V *
H CBStS WHJRC AIL ELSE FAILS, h*
r**J Beet Cougn Svrup. Tastes good. WSJ
KK Use In lime. So:d by druggists. H
I
CE£jL ‘
B llrr BCBINEM imn KBUTV
9 8 Silk Atlanta, Uh,
For Illustrated Circular. A live ;u aial Bus!-
oess School. Established tioeniy iwrs.
Note? Men !
Dr. John F. IIancoc::,
loti President of tl.o X&licual I iu.r
niaceutic:! Association of the Unit* i
States,
*
** Rrowi-’i Iron Pite-s h-x
heavy fc.de, is t. uccdtfd lo be a f.r.j
t tnic ; the character of the r.anu*
.turers i* a voucher f r . > pur.:/
Aiul louiiiimu excellence "
Dr. Joseph R obi: eta,
President Lnltimore riiarmaccuik-i
College, sj.ys:
" I indorse it ns * medicine,
reliable as a itrvttffthemoje tome,
free (rum alcwh fc.lti I'U.skua.
Dr. J. Faris Moore, Fii.
D., Professor of Pharmacy, Pulti
morc Pharmaceutical College, says:
" Brown's Iron Peters Is a sale
and reliable Medicine, posi.
free from alcoholic poisons, and uil
be recommended as a tome f r <
among ihove who oppou klcuiioL"
Dr. Edward F.arickpon,
Secretary liakimore College of 1 har
macy, c aj s •
" I Indorse it ax an excellent
medicine, a good dtjjcstive
and a r.on-uttoxicant in the ft..kit
sense. '*
Dr. Richard Sapincton,
one of l.illimore*s oMcst ami i. ->t
reliable s^ ;
" All who have u*- iit prai eiu
fct.'jp#tar .( virtues, ;. ,tl t.ic well
jpucter of t’.e hous which
tixxke* u i a sutneaent guarantee
04-# bvi< all tuut is U.iimed, for
ihery ar men who could not be in
duced ►,♦!!• r anything else hot at
msdicuic i r puolic use."
A Druggist Cured.
ro, MJ., Oct, iB3o.
CciulaanCn Brown's Bit
ters ci:ro! Bit of a bad attack of
lu-iigestion ;.*ui fullness in the tiom
tch Having tested it. I take pleas*
ure in it to my cus
tomer*. and asn glad to say it givvs
entire satisfaction to all.”
l_-o. \i, iWtaAN, Druggist.
As’i your for Brown's
Iron IJittlrs, and take no other.
One tri .1 will convince you that it
is just v. h-t ) uu need.
.1013 4 Vi . lIAIHIOX.
attobssP.lt i.aw,
SI MNERVILLE, OEOKfiIA.
Will practice in the Superior. County, and
District courts.
Legal Ailin li>< uh iiD.
I egal AllvertibementH Payable lu Ad
vhik c. Don’t you forget it!
Application lor Dismission.
| GEORGIA, Chattooga Courtty:
i VVli4*rea Amos S. Alexander, administrator of
John N. Alexander, represents to the court in
1 hie petition duly fifed that he has fully ndniinia
tereil John N Atexamler’a estate; this u there
fore to cite ill pernors ••oneemed. heirs aid
creditors, to show c.ius 1 . ifa 1 y they cur., on the
first Monday in June next, why said adminis
trator shoo'd ntd t4* discisnrgeil fiom liisadmin
istration, and receive the usual letters of din
ted ail <4 fi. Witness my hand. Kebruarv Hith.
JO UN MATTOX. Ordinal y
Appl cation for Discharge
UICOHGIA, Cliatto ga County:
J O. Smith, guardian for Mary K and John
R Gilbert, iper B. O. Smith, twi-urity.) having
applied m flie emir; of Ordinary of add -ouuty
for a diseharge fron his gnaidlanehip of Maiy
K. and John R tilbert: this is thetefore to cilo
all persona ronrernid to show cause why th
.-aid J. O. Sn.ith should not be discharged from
I s guard aiisliip of Mary K and John li
Oilbert. and rce.dve the i sual letters <>f *ll
mission, on the first Monday iu April, 1888.
Witness my hand and official signatura. Feb.
2d. I*H.J JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
4
Application for Discharge.
STATE OF GEORGIA. Chattooga County:
Whereas 'Wesley Shrops hire, executor of th
w,ll of William Biown. represents to the court
ui his petition duly filed that he has hilly *d
ministered said William Brown's estate, (except
certiin unclaimed famlsi this is therefore to
cite ail peraoua concerned, heirs and creditors,
to show cause, if any they < an. why the said
4'xecutm should not be dUcbarged from hin
executorship, and receive letters rf dismission,
oi. the tlrsi Mi nday in May next. Witness my
hai.tl, Juiiuaiy 'iOt . i*s.‘s.
lOHN MATTOX. Ordinary.
KING OF THE SINGERS.
Above is the exact representation of the
Sewing Wlach : ne we sell for S2O
It is in every respect the very best of the
■Vi user ' t > Ec uf TI aril in c,
H'/iicA di r Hy Jar 1b f wont j/Oj.ulur Jlackitit* in
t.'ip Uorttf .
Finished in the best manner with the latest im
provements for winding the bobbin; the most
convenient style of table with extension, long,
large drawers, and > eautifui gothic cover, it
stands with out a rival
laiiij; *,f linger Tl;irliiiirx.
Having adopte*! the plan of selling Machines
without the aid of agents, am by givii gto the
purchasers the benefit of the commission usually
given to the agents, enable them to obtain
machines at oiic-lialf of the regular prices.
W* th* ref<>r* sell for £2O the at.ove style of
machine, fully w-a* rant it ft>r three years! W
<lc >i ot to jmi/jor it until you *rt ir/itit you
(irf I'injii({j e only wish to know that you vrsnt
to buy a sewing machine and are willing to nav
•’JO for the best in the market.
v *> rite to us. sending the name ..f vour nearest
railroad atatiou, nnd we will send the machine
and give instructions U"a 10nr yon to examine it
befon you joty/nr it WILLMARTH *V CO ,
1 *2B N. 20th St.. Pi.iiadelphia, Pa.
ATcrvoos Exhaustion.
Prematura Decay,
Loss of Memory.
An PO-page Cloth-bound Book of wh< lesome
Advice to Voinwr Men. by a Regular Physician.
SENT FREE 0 . 0 of two thnyM?eot
" stamps. Address
THE HEALTH JOURHAL, MILWAUKEE WIS
DOUGLASS & CO.
Feed anil I,ivery table,
tMsv’a did stsuid.)
lIHOAD STKKKT CO.LIE, (,A.
Splendid Tup Haggles. HacL.-. t tc„ i:h good
safe horses, always on liauu., l nees to suit IL,
times. ..Ang-ia-1,.