Newspaper Page Text
THE GAZETTE
4 * * SUMMERVILLE, GA.
Q- LOOMIS,
Editor and Proprietor.
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
OK TIM*.
Twelve months C- *0 -‘®
Six mootfca v . • *
M'hrea months...... 40 «*’
Correspondencesolicited: but io receive at
tention. letters must be accompanied ty a re
sponsible name—not for publication, but as a
guarantee of cood faith.
All articles recommending c» ndidates for
office, or financed for the person M benefit of
any one, must be paid tor at the rat'e of 6 cents
per line, in advance.
T Contributions of news solicited from every
quart er. Rejected articles will not be returned
unless neccmpanied by a scamp.
tfir Advertising rates and estimates given on
t All letters should be addressed to
J. C. LQQMiS,
SummeKiUo, ft*.
WMDAT 2H 1885.
FROM ATLANTA.
A joint committee of the two houses
have agreed to report in favor of adjourn
ing on October JOth.
Introduced in the house: to adjourn
October Ist; to thank Commissioner
Henderson for copies of his honk, “The
Commonwealth of Georgia." (passed);
to pay meuibeps nothing when absent,
except from providential causes; to pro
hibit the sale of apitituous liquors to fe
males; to provide for the foes ni tax col
lectors fbr collecting taxes for the sale ol
liquor; to incorporate a Georgia depart
ment of a mutual self-endowment and
beoeyoleut association.
Introduced in the senate; to provide a
remedy when judgment has been render
ed i legally, or by mistake, in justice or
bounty court; to require administrators
or executors, who have not given bond,
if any interested person applies, to give
bond, or be removed; to smend section
3523 of the code.
Discussed iu the house, but not passed:
to increase the salary of the secretary ol
the railroad oommission from $1,200 to
$1,500 (lost); to limit speeches to ten
foioutes (tabled); to grant no more leaves
Os absence except for providential causes
(lost); to authorize the governor to sell
the abate rotid for not less than SB,OOO, •
000, or to re lease it for not less than
$40,000 a month ( indefinitely postponed);
to place headstones at the graves of con
federate soldiers at Mariella and ebu-
Where (rtcotßtnitted); to cull a constitu
tional convention (lost); to pay the com
mittee that visited the state lunatic asy
lum during the recess their per diem,
mileage, end expenses (recommitted); to
pay witnesses summoned os experts out
aide oftbeir owncounty (lost).
f pasted by the touio: to hold night
gessioua; to incorporate the classic city
afreet'railroad of Athena, the Athens,
Danielsville, and Eastern Railroad Com
pauy, the Augusta Mutual Endowment
IlSbociation, tho Bank of sorlh Georgia,
and the Roma Western Railroad Compa
ny; to amend the charter of tho Roma &
Carrollton lUiifOsd Company; to prohibit
fion-rei-idbut* of the state from herd ng
itock, or fishing except with hook ami
line, in Murray county; to allow more di
rectors of the Remo and Chattanoogn
Railroad; to strike out paragraph 15,
section 7, article 3, of th? prostitution,
Concerning local legislation; to appropri
ate SSOO to defray the expenses of laying
tha cornerstone of tho new capito’; to de
blare and establish the grade of turnpike
roads; to regulate the registration ol
deeds and bills ofsa e asseehrfty for debt;
to amend the road laws of Walker coun
ty; to provide for the service of writs on
the lessees of railroads; to appropriate
$216 for carpeting the halls of the legis
lature; te appropriate money to refurnish
the office of the principal keeper of the
penitentiary; to allow parties living on
county lines to erect galea across public
highways in oert.sin cases; to require tho
holders of mortgages to cancel the record
of the same when they are paid off; to
Authorize the ordinary to preside in trials
Os lunacy; to regulate the issuing of oom
missions to notaries; to amend the gat
nishment laws; to authorise ordinaries to
appoint guaidians for idiots, lunatics,
and insane persons; to tegulnto practice
in tho superior courts iu cases of appeal
from justice courts; to amend sections
2573, 3046, and 3533 of the code.
Passed by the senate: to provide for a
correct return of property for taxation by
establishing a board of assessment; to
amend the charter of Lal'ayette; tho con
solidated registration bill; the railroad
Commission bill; to levy a tax of half a
mill on the dollar to build the capitob
WASHINGTON NEWS.
George B. Loring, late commissioner
of agriculture, and bis securities, are to
be sued for $20,000, for seeds illegally
bought
The question of the continuance or sus
pension of the coinage of silver dollars, is
likely to be an impmtaut ana in the next
congress.
The demand for $5 and $lO notes is
active, but the supply is sufficient. Prob
ably no more $1 and $2 bills will be is
sued soon.
N. B. Bacon has been appointed su
perintendent of the custom bouse at
Toledo, Ohio. He is President Cleve
land's brother-in-law, and a Republican.
President Cleveland refused to appoint
him, till convinced, by agreement of all
she other applicants, and by other things,
that he was the best man.
A lady clerk in one of the departments
says that her fellows are slow about mar '
rying because iu discharging their duties j
they find out that men »» not so good as
they imagined before they became clerks, j
* ■ ».o
Attacks on the land board of Texas for
mismanagement of the state lands are
even orore bittor than the first ones.
Killed: in Cincinnati, William Hazard
by Frank B. Berte, by a blow of the fist
behind the ear; in Owenville. Ky., James
and Moses Ballard, in an attempt to res
cua their brother Jack; at Tucson, Ari-
Zina, Alex Levine by Louis Rickbaugh;
near Canton, Miss., Leon Cockrell, ne
gro murderer, killed by one of the po«se
after him; near LivermOro, Cal, by L
C. Cull, bis wife; in Wesson, Miss., Dr.
D. 8. Smith by Dock May, through jeal
ousy; in Savannah, by Moses Wallace,
Aden Bryan, for being in bed with Wal
lace’s wife (separated, but not divorced;
the woman badly cu.), and Howard Wil
liams, by unknown woman, (the last five,
negroes); Sam Ogle, of Knoxville, Tenn.,
by Mary Harmon, of Coal Creek, Tenn.
Casualties: in New York City, Mrs.
Ruetlinger and babe, killed falling6o feet
while escaping from a burning bouse;
nine tramps stealing a ride in a cur of
oats near Guilford, Indiana, three suffo
cated; at Indian Ridge colliery, Pean.,
tvo men killed by collision of cars; in
Shamokin, Penn., two deaths from eat
ing toadstools for mushrooms; near Lex
ington; Ky., two men killed by railroad
accident; near Charlotte, N. C., four
men killed, 23 carloads of merchandise
wrecked by going through a hr dge; in
Schuylkill county, Penn , collision of
trains caused oil tanks to explode, burr
ing $50,000 worth of railroad property;
near Nashville, Tenn., John Hagerwood
and eon killed by falling tree.
M»-
Strikers: coal miners in Shawnee, Ohio,
fop 50 cents a ton instead of 40; tin can
makers jn Baltimore, for increase of
wages from 40 and 45 cents per hundred
to 55 and 60 cents, accepted 50 and 55
cents; 350 coal miners at Janesville and
Shamokin, Penn., against reduction of
wages; in Muskegon, Mich., 500 shingle
mi 1 men for ten hours a day or increased
pay; river coal men ueir Pittsburg, 4,000,
for advance of hall a cent a bushel; at
Manistee, Mich., shingle packers, for
seven cents a thousand instead of six;
near Shamokin, Benn., 1,000 miners,
against reduetton ol wages because own
ers of mines are required by u new law to
Cut and deliver timber for props.
r*.
Suicides: in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
William Luther, tiller shooting at his
wife; in I hiladolphia, Oscar Perry, aged
11 (dime novels); Rev. C. W. Price, ol
Chcrokpe, Kansas, (death of brother anti
sister); in Worcester, Mass., W. H.
Taylor, after killing his wife (insane from
sickness); in Phihidalphiti, Mrs. Hester
Ford, from reading of tho suicide of an
other lady in the neighborhood; in Co
lumbus, Ohio, Thomas Hyland, after
killing his wife; William W. Lyons,
of Atlanta, after a long sproe; near Car
mel, Illinois, William Fiuly, aged 56,
after killing his wife, aged 60.
Georgians hurt by gins: Wash Lord,
of Touuibsboro, hand and arm badly cut;
Qepige Hurper, of Sumter county, first
finger cut off, arm cut badly to tho elbow,
slightly to the shoulder; Wadsworth,
cf Pike county, right, arm badly torn to
’ the elbow;* J. W. Hudson, of Sumtoi
county, three fingers cut off, arm badly
torn te the elbow; a negro of Jefferson
county, throe fingers cut off, arm to el
bow cut to the I one, muscles torn out
Losers by firein Georgia: in Jonesboro,
M. E. Gilbert, merchandise, $790; A. C.
Blalock, houses, Sims, house, A. J.
1 Baugh, harness, Mrs. Langston, tnilli-
I nery, L. C. Hutchinson, house; in Dal-
I Ins, 11. C. Scoggins, ordinary, dwelling,
■ $800; in Appling county, Judge R. 'l'.
1 Williams, dwelling; in Theninsville, Ar
-1 thur Pinson. $2,000; in Monroe county,
Flemming & Chappell einhouse.
I • ■ ♦ •*><’ 1
( Georgia crops: Charles L. MoPheraon,
( of Haralson county, a stalk of oom with
, 2S ears on it, A. J. Hudgins, of Taylor
, county, 3 ears ofcom 12 inches long, 20
rows to tho ear; James P. Webster, of
Washington county, 84 bushels of corn
from three acres; W. R. Davis,' of Mon
roe county, seven bale# of cotton from
eight acres, picked by Sept. 15th, six or
seven more expected from the same
ground.
—— «»
Damaged by storms: in Cha.lee coun
ty, Md., corn and tobacco damaged SIOO,-
000 by hail) great damage in northern
Ohio and on Lake Erie; in Mississippi,
especially in Yazoo county, crops very
much injured; in Fayette county, Ohio,
Washington Court House, of 4.000 in
habitants, demolished, 40 lives lost; oth
er parts of the state suffered, but not so
much.
One case showing the need of a board
of assessment is that the city tax books
of Atlanta show $1,000,000 more taxable
property than the books of the tax re
ceiver of Fulton county For the city
tax, the property is assessed by a board;
for state and county tax, each man puts
his own valuation.
Noted dead: Mrs. Emma M. Markley,
of Philadelphia, weighing 550 pounds;
Alexander Rives, aged 80, the oldest
judge in Virginia, and a leading Repub
lican politician; Henry C. Lay, Protest
ant Episcopal bishop of the diocese of
Easton, Penn.
In lowa a state law forbids the sale of
liquor. Saloon keepers took out U. S.
licenses, and continued to sell. Beins
indicted in state courts, they took the
cases to the U. S. court. They claim that ;
the U. 3. government has licensed their
business, and must protect it.
■
Value of property burned: in Chicago, '
$lU0,000; in Hot Springs, Ark., $30,000; I
i in Durhamville, N. ¥., $150,000; in El-
I mira, N. Y , $50,030; in Utica, N. Y.,
$175,000.
11. \V. Beecher pronounces absolute
prohibition impossible, and favors high
license.
GEORGIA NEWS.
The construction tr: in was placed on
the Rome & Carrollton Railroad on the
12th inst.
In Rome potton buyers, for shipment,
refuse to pay ten cents a bale charged by
sellers for delivery. The sellers insist,
and buyers threaten to build a ware
house of their own, and buy direct from
the producer.
Guilford Gunter, of Dooly county, went
home on the 11th iu.t., full of whisky,
found his eon Simpson there, quarreled
with him, and was cut dangerously. The
son says that ho had just cut off a quid of
tobacco, and the cut was inflicted while
warding off a blow.
The directors of the Georgia Midland
have decided to run the road from Co
lumbus to Athens instead of Atlanta.
Col. John A. Johnson, of Dalton, jis
anpeared about the 6th inst. On the
13th, his corpse was found in a cornfield
50 yards from bis home, badly decom
posed. He had shot himself through
the head. He was discharged from the
lunatic asylum a short time ago.
In Atlanta, last Wedneday, Miss Ida
Maxwell eloped and married John K.
Shelton. Her father and brother after
wards went to the house of Shelton’s
mother, where Shelton was. Au alter
cation ensued, arid Matthew Maxwell,
the bride's brother, had his skull badly
fractured. It was at first said that Shel
ton struck the blows, but afterwards the
act was laid to some one unknown. He
was in great danger lor son; : time, but
ut last accounts was improving.
A few days ago a Gainesville negro
digging for fish bait on the seminary lot,
turned up a sealed buttle Containing a
white baby about six inches long.
A Bibb county man swapped horses
with 14 different men in one day, arid at
night went home with the same horse he
started with and $lO3 more in hi.- pocket.
Atlanta officials are prospecting for a
source from which to supply the city with
pure water.
Columbus has organized a barrel facr
tory.
J. M. Johnson, of Eatonton, while
hunting foxes tlnce weeks ago, lost a
very fine hound. Sixteen days after, he
dug the hound out of# hole to which the
dogs luul trailed some animal, supposed
to be a lox.
The in-nniiv of Newt Hammock, of
Rockdale county, is attributed to his
having been immersed sometime before.
Dalton girls arc said to destroy 500
pounds of chewing gum a year.
Fayette county voted thus: for whisky,
335; against, 575.
Mrs. 8. Jenkins, of Butts county, while
temporarily insane, fled from her borne.
Being followed bv h«r da.n liter, she
turned, beat the young lady terribly, and
probably Would have killed her if not
prevented.
Teacher* of publie schools in Giltner
couuty suspended for fodder pulling.
About six babies n week, mostly girls,
nro reported from Elberton.
One Sunday night recently three ne
groes stopped at the gate of James Sum
n< r, of ii x.n coumy, and asked him for
supper. Ho refused. Soon ho saw t hat
hl-gin house was on fire. Suspecting
that the three negroes meant mischief,
he stayed in the bouse. Next morning
they were pursued. I'wo were arrested;
one resisted, und was killed. The two
confessed that tho calling for supper, and
the burning of the ginhouso, were pl< ts
to get a chance to kill ap.d rob him.
Coweta county reports a pepper stalk
from which 4,200 ripe pods have been
picked, ami which bears 15,000 more.
Capt. J. E. Morgan, of Bainbridge,
recently sneered from 4 P. M. till 3A. M.
next day.
Sumter county reports a farmer with
11 children, from 23 down, and not one
of the family can read or write.
The former officers of Habersham
county were on trial la-t week for swind
ling the county. Ben Martin was charg
ed with entering the court house a> d
stealing sl4,Mfin county orders- He
plead guilty. Robert Groves was tried 1
as accessory. While the jury were out,
Martin asked leave to withdraw his pica
of guilty. 1 fallowed, this would have
prevented the conviction of Groves, as no
one can bo convicted as accessory to a
crime not confessed or proven. The ver
diet was. misdemeanor; sentence, SI,OOO
fine, six uon-hs in jail, a year in chain
gang.
The Dahlonega Signal reports a cot
ton stalk eight feet hich, spreading six
feet two inches, stalk 4} inches around,
with 287 bolls and forms.
D. W, Wyatt, of Laurens county,
righting an overturned boat, caught iu it
a catfish two feet long.
Thomasville negroes have been greatly
alarmed by a rumor that mediosl celleges
had sent parties thither to kill negroes
for tho dissecting table. They would
hatdly stir out alter night.
The ConstihUitui estimates the trade of
Atlanta, wholesale and retail, fbr the
twelve months ending cn the Ist inst., at
$100,000,003.
J. P- Wade, from North Carolina, is
in danger of tho penitentiary for marry
ing Miss Rebecca Crosby, of Baxley; not '
that there's any siu in marrying, but—
he left a wile behind him.
Two years ago, in Atlanta, Philip Mc-
I Intyre, aged 15, married Virginia Ccg- j
gins, aged 13. He now asks for a divorce, ;
saying that on account of age neither I
party could ooutract a valid marriage,
and that his feelings have changed. He
promises to support the child, and to j
promote his wife’s heppiuess in any
practicable wav. . „ |
The city court of Rome has 400 cases
of illegal voting on hand; non-payment of
taxes. Fines so far. sls; costs reduped;
solicitor $3; clerk, $2; sheriff, nothing.
The farmers of south Georgia are har
vesting their rice. The crop is less than
usual, but of better quality.
Io Rabun county, some tin.e ago, J.
S. s 'mith had two Smith boys (oot rela
tives) arrested for stealing hoes. They
proved their ipnocenee. For satisfaction,
he dragged their mother and her small
children from her hou-e, and set it on
fire. She died from exposure. Her
brother, Tom Gaines swore vengeance?
Smith hid, but a few days aeo they mot.
and Smith fell dead, with a bullet through
his brain.
A Marietta negro handles bees, yellow
jackets, bumblebees, etc., without being
stung.
A Cobb county farmer, with his wife
and two daughters, attended church the
other night, and walked home, a mile
and a half. While undressing, one of
them remembered that they bad ridden
to church. The farmer walked back,
and found his team w here lie had left it.
W. O. Smith, of Thomaston, having
been on a spree for a week, went home,
took a vial of laudanum from the mantle
piece, and raised it to bis mouth. His
wife jumped o:it of bed, and knocked it
down, breaking it. Hard work prevent
ed him from being killed by what he had
swallowed.
GEN EKA L NEIV6.
The wheat crop of the United States is
now estimated at 350 000,COO bushels.
Ti e c-otton report for September is
percent below that for August, but two
per cent above the Scpteiupber average
for the last ten years. Corn is reported
one per cent lower than in August, and
one per cent liigbi r than in last Septem
ber.
James E. Holmes has recovered from
Carolina Centra! Railroad 4,475 as dam
ages for being ejected from the first-class
car and forced to ride in a car filled with
tobacco smoke. He claimed $5,000.
Francis Lloyd and wife, of Louisyille,
becoming converts to the lalth cure, tore
in pieces a paid-up life insurance policy
for SI,OOO, on which they were drawing
a small dividend.
Four years ago Charles Avery, a poor
tenant tfthe Widow Synimcs, in Enchm-i,
married her. She died, leaving ss,ooo
to him, and $200,01X1 to her daughter by
her first husband. Determined not to be
cheated out of the fortune, he abducted
the heiress, and forced her to marry him
at Council Bluffs, lowa. Two weeks ago
an English lawyer came to Council
Bluffs. Aye:y look to the wooue, an<t
his wife returned to Englund with the
lawyer.
It: Fairfield county, 8. C., since July,
ten families have been whipped and or
dered to leave, lor miscegenation.
Spittip ij recommended as a cure f>r
corn 8.
Within 28 days 60 postoffioes have been
burned or burglarized. The average loss
is less than SIOO.
A young la Jy of Charleston, Missouri,
had two suitors, a sheriff and a doctor.
She lived the sheriff, but her
forced her to marry the ductor, us they
preferred him. Many years after she
and the shetifl, lovi g each other still,
left »'l behind, hied io Waukesha, Wis
consin, and lived there us husband nod
wife till she died. In answer to repeat
ed telegrams from the sheriff, camo the
short response, “Bring home the corpse.'
>t hen it came, tho husband was too
completely gtief-stricken to attempt vio
lence.
An Oregon man applies for a patent
for a machine to register dreatnn.
In San Francisco, recently, several Chi
nese were found in a cellar, boiling hu
man bodies, to separate the flesh from
the bones, scraping the bones clean, and
packing them in boxes to ship to China.
Over 330 l hi nest, corpses, dug up from
scattered cemeteries all over tho state, in
various stages of deuum posit ion, were
found. To prevent investigation, two
live skunks had been procured.
. Near Dodge Ci’y, Kansas, three cow
boys met a trace on the 13th inst., and
began shooting at the passengers. One
returned the fire, and killed a cowboy.
The other two cowboys rode off.
Trouble is anticipated between the
United States and >V. j . t Virg’ii ia over
back taxes due the state from the Chesa
peake & Ohio Railroad.
In Allentown, Renn., for 18 months,
Miss Shiffert has gone to bed every night
at 9 P. M. and slept soundly till SP. M.
tho next day. All efforts to wake her
fail Her health is good.
Senator Mahone has can-ed great in
dignation in Petersburg. Va.. by trying
to horsewhip 'lhomas Hunter and Alex
ander Donnan, Jr., two young Demo
crats, accusing them of leading his son
Butler astray.
Chinese in Baltimore stew locusts with
rice for food.
In Chattanooga Mary Britt and Mrs
Whitley fought till they were tired
nut by the bedside of Mary’s dying daugh
ter.
At Celine, Ohio, three or four youths,
hurdly of age, sons of leading citizens,
are in jail as burglars.
In Chester, Nebraska, a nob started
to hang Warren Coon for repeatedly whip- I
ping his wife ar.d threatening to burn the
: town. His wife’s entreaties saved his j
i life.
Mrs. Anoa Wood Sloan died recently
in Missouri with uo perceptible cause ex
cept the bite of a spider on the forefinger.
A purplish swelling extended up the arm,
across the breast, and down the other I
arm
Last Wednesday a cyclone swept across
southwestern Ohio, spreading destruc
tion. Washington Court House, a town
of4 000 inhabitants, was nearly demolish
ed. Forty persons 10-t their lives, and
SBO,OOO worth of property was dastroyed
in that town alone.
Chicago pork packers sell the hoofs for
car spring-; the blood is hardened, and
made into knife handles, buttons, etc.;
nothing is wasted.
Last Thur-day was tobacco day in
Louisville Ky., or the celebration of the
sale of tbe 100.000th hogshead n f tobac
co. 7h fi procession was eight miles Ion?.
The 100,000th hogshead weighed },190
pounds net and brought at auction
$3,023.
Miss Nellie Dean, young and accom
plished, daugiiter of a rich lumber deal
er in Chicago, is working in the factory
ut Rockford, 111., at 60 cents a day. At
(he close of a bantering conversation her
lather off-red her a dollar for every cent
she would arn there, and she proposes
to test him.
Near Boyce Station, Tenn., a turkey
gobbler I as hatched a dozen chickens,
and scratches fai hlully for them.
In Sumner county, Tenn., Miller.
U->S. deputy mar-hal, disappeared sev
eral weeks ago. His body was recently
found buri. d wiiliin 300 yards of the
hou-e of John Bradley, whom Miller,
when last seen, was on his way to arrest
fbr illicit di-tilling. The coroner’s jury
declared Bradley the murderer.
During the pjght of the 13th inst.,
Mormons threw filth through the win
dows of U. 8. officers in Salt Lake City
who had taken part in the recent prose
cutions for unlawful cohabitation.
—>
fciMt a Single Gray Hair.
"You may laugh and think me a vain
thing,” writes Mrs. J. R. C , ol San
Francisco, to a friend in this city, “but 1
have not a gray hair io luy bead, and yet
(sad to say) 1 am fifty and a day. Re
cently my hair was not only quue gfa.
but quite thin, too. Parker's (lair Bal
sam — made in New York. I think —did
wonders fur me. Try it if you have oc
casi in. It really docs what I say. and
restores tho color also." Not a dye, not
creasy, highly perfumed. Only reliable
50c. dressing.
EXTRACTS FKGM OUK EXCHANGES.
Now let some able “end man” in tho
legislature introd o:e a bill, "alias joke ’’
to furnish all widows under 60, and a 1
maidens over 30, with husbands. — Hart
well Sun.
Why will a woman swear devotion a-id
love uncontaminaled fur u man, and, be
fore he is out of hearing, make the sume
vow to another, and allow him ihe same
tmijltariti ? ine r nstan<.y di-gn-ts a man,
ami destroys his 1 .ve— Fort Caintt. Ad
vertiser.
Our subscribers will pl, ase bear in
mind that it lias been a haid squeeze for
us to get through this year; tiiat wo are
siill squeezed io the small end cf the
horn, and lh r. it will be an act of charity
to rattle a litt'e chink at us as soon ns
some cotton can be marketed' Lumpkin
Independent
Xervotisne®*.
The moment there is danger of impair
ment of the mind from exessjve nervous
exhaustion, or where there exists fore
bodings of evil, a desire for solitude,
shunning and avoiding company, vertigo
and nervous debility, or when insanity
has already taken place, Pkrvna and
Manaein should be implicitly relied on.
But it is never well to wait so long before
treatment is commenced. The early
symptoms are loss of strength, softness
of the muscles, dim or weak sight, pecu
liar expressidh of the face and eyes,
coated tongue, with impaired digestion;
or in others, certain powers only are lost
while they are otherwise enjoying com
paratively good health. In all these Pe
run a and Manalin should at once be
taken.
Mrs. S. Smith, Hillsville, Lawrence
Countv, Pa., writes: “ Dr. S. B. Hart
man & Co., Columbus, O.: I have hyena
great sufferer for ten years. It seemed as
though every organ in my body was dis
eased at one time or another. I had about
given up all hopes, v. I,err I commenced
taking Pebvna and Manalin. I im
mediately began to improve, the soreness
and pain disappeared, strength gradually
returned, and now 1 am as well as ever
in my life, an 11 owe it all to your Peru
na and MaNALIN. I recommended it
to my friends and it gives better satisfac
tion than any other medicine I ever heard
o'.”
j Miss Maria Roderick, Warren, Ohio,
writes: "It is with pleasure and many
thanks that 1 write to you to tell you of
the great benefit 1 have derived from ihc
use of the Temina. I have used several
bottles of your 'PjKHUNA, and fan safely
say it has Tone me a great deal of good.
I have intjlroved ever since I commenced
its use."
Mr. T. J. Webber, Plymouth, 0.,
writes : “ I am selling your Perun a, ahd
having a good trade on it. It gives ex
cellent setisfaction.”
Mr. Thomas Acton, Brooklyn Village,
Cleveland, Ohio, says: “ I received a
severe wound in nay foot by tramping on
a spike. It inflamed and was painful and
swollen. I had every reason to fear lock
jaw. Your simple suggestions as tc local
applications and the taking of your Pe
busa and Manalin were followed to the
letter, and, thanks to you, mv foot is en
tirely well, and I am happy.”
Pe-ru-NA is sold by all druggists.
Price $! per bottle, six hotties $5. Il
you cannot get it from your druegtst. we
wiil sen ! it on receipt of regular price.
We prefer you buy it from your druegi-t,
but if he hasn’t it do not be persuaded to
try something else, but order from us at
once as directed
8. B- Hartman & Co..
Columbus. O.
TTT7T TJfor working people. Send ten cents
XIXjJjA pen tose, and we will mail you sere
a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will
• put you iu the way of making more money in a
few days than you ever thought possible at anv
business. Capital not. required. You can live
at homeland woik at space time only, orail the
time. Ah of both sexes, of all ages, grandly j
successful; 50cents to $5 easily earned everv
evening. That all who want work may tes't ‘
business; we make this unparalleled otter: To i
all uho are not well satisfied we will s?nd $1 ta i
; pay for the trouble of writing us. Full par- r
; titulars, directions, etc. sent free. I_nraer.se i
’ nay absolutely sure for all who start at Once.
1 Don’t delay. Addiess Stinson & Co..
Port’and. •
I.egal Advertisements.
-■-'■—■■•T ■* " . - — 1 1 I
Sheriffs Sale of Land.
GEORGJA. Chattooga County;
Will be sold on the Ist Tuesday in October
next, at the court hbtise door in said county. ■
within the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder, for cash, the following land, to wit : let
of land No. (167) one hundred and sixty-seven,
in the 14th district and 4th section of Chattooga
county. Georgia, containing one hundred and
sixty acr»e more or less, said land being the
Same for which J. M. Smith. T. J. Smith and 4..
D Smith hold bond for title against Thompson
Hiles, and on which J. M. Smith, J. D. Smith,
and others, now live. One hundred acres, more
or less, of said land are in a cood state of c*ulti
vat’.un; the balance is in original forest. On it
are three first-class dwelling houses, with
arl necessary outhouses, such as barns, stables,
Cte , and also three first-class tenant houses,
with necessary outhouses, and also one sto e
house; All of said lot of land is well sup, bed
witter water. Said lot of land lies in a rich section
of Seminole district, and has thereon some of
the best upland in the county. Said land was
levied on as the property of J. M. Smith. T. J.
bmich and J. D. Smith, which they hold and pos
sess under bond for title us as iresaid. to satisfy
seven fl. fas., six of whi h issued from the April
Term. 18S5, of County Court of said
county, and the other one from the July * erm.
18K5. of the Quarterly County’Court of said
county, for the purchase money of said lot of
land, all in favor of Tbonipvon Hiles’ v.i. J. 31.
Smith. I\ J. Smith, acd J. D. Smith. This 3lst
day of August, ISSS. T. J. WoKSHAM. Sheriff,
Sheriff’s Sale of Land.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
Will be sold on the Ist Tuesday in October}
next, at the court house door in said county,
wishin the lega hours of sale, to the highest bid
der, for cash, the following land, to wit: Sixty
flve acres, more or less, of lot of laud No. one
bundled ; fifty acres, more or less, thereof, ly
ing in the northwest corner of said lot. and fif
teen acres, more or less, thereof, lying jn the
southeast corner of said lor; and also srxt y-flve
acres, more or leas of lot No. eighty-one, lyinji
on the we.-t side thereof; containing in all one
hundred and thirty a. res, more or less, all in
the 13tn district an J 4th sect ion of Chattooga
county. The same is the placd on which .Mitch
ell Wilder now lives, and for which he holds
bond for title against Thompson Hiles Co.
Hxtv acres, more or less, of said land is in a
good state of cultivation; the balance, in origi
nal foreet; having thereon one good dwelling
house, with ill necessary outhhuaes, alvo a ten
ant house, a good spring near the dwe>iing>atid
the character of said land first-class. S”id land
was levied on as the property of 31. Wilder,
which he holds and possesses undt r bond for
title as a’orcmeuttoned. to satisfy five fl fas. ia
favoi ot Thompson Hiles & Co. va Al. Wilder,
four of wh’eh issued from the July Term, 18*5,
of the Quarterly Couuty Court at sard Couuty,
and one of which issued from the’ Justice Court
of the 9-iMth DUt. G. 31., the May Term thereof.
1885, all for the purchase money of said land.
This 31st day of August. 1885.
T. J. WORSHAM. Sheriff.
Sheriff s Sale of Land.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
Will be sold on the Ist Tuesday In October
next, at the court house door in san! county,
between the kgal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder, for cash, the following house and lot
in the town of Summerville in said state and
county, to-wit: fronting sixty feet on the Sum
merville and LaFayette road, running back six
ry feet east to a ditch, being a part of lots of
land Nos. 22 and 50 in thefllh district and 4th
section of Chattooga county. Georgia, joining
or the north the laud of L. Rhinehart, and on
the south the land of Mrs. M. T. W. Thomas
The same being the house and lot which R
Drake owns and passes es. Said house an i lot
were levied on to satisfy a fl. fa iu tavor of R->a
<t Roberson vs. R. Drake, issqed from the June
Term 1885, of the Justice Court of the V23tb
District. Said house was levied on as the prop- ’
erty of R. Drake. Tb-n August 31st, I«'*s.
T. J. WORSHAM, Sheriff.
Sheriff s Sale
GEORGIA, Chattooga County.
Will sold on the first Tuesday in October
next, before tie court house door in the town
of Summeivillc. within the legal hours of sale
to the highest bidder, for cash, the fulfcwing
property, to wit: Efgh’.y acres of the wes: part
of lot or land No. 159, in th u 14th Diat and 4th
See. in said county. Said lands welt watered,
forty acres, more or ’ess. of said land are in a
g od stale of cultivation; iae balance is in tim
ber land. Said land is now in possessk n of R. -J.
Lowty. and levied on as his property »o satisfy
an execution isaued from tho Justice Court of
the 1083rd Dist. G. M. for principal sum of twen
ty two dollars, besides interest and costs, in fa
vor of James A. Bale ve. R. J. Lowry; nl-o to
satisfy an executi n issued from the Justice
Court of the 1083rd Di.i. G. .M . for principal
Funi of forty-six debars, besides iptejsiat aud
costs, in favor of James A Bale vs. R J. Lowry;
also to satisfy an execution issued from the
Justice Court of the lUMrd Dist. G. M., In favor
cf Putapsco Guano Co. vs. R. J. Lowry. Said
property was levied on by N. J. Edwards, con
stable of the lUSJJrd Dist. G. 31. after due search
was made and no personal property found. This
July 31, 1885. T. J. WORSHAM, Sheriff.
Application fcr Dismission,
GEORGIA, Chattooga County;
To all whom it may concern: John S Cleghorn, i
CiceroC. Cleghorn, and Wtu. H Penn, execu
tors of John W. Tenn, deceased ap ly to me for
letters of disinissioo from said executorship,
and I will pass upon said application on the first
Monday in November next at iny office io Chat
tooga county. Given under my hand and offi
cial signature, this July 15th. 1885.
JOHN MATTOX. Ordinary.
County ana Road Tax.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County;
It is ordered that a tax of three and three
fourths tenths of one per cent (47 1-2 cents on
the be assessed on the t ax able property of
the county, for county tux, to be collected the
present year, distributed as foil >w«: for Jail
fund, 9 per cent of said tax; for Pauper fund,
22 per cent of said tux; for General fund, 69 per
cent of said tax. It is further ordered that an
additional tux of twenty five per cent of the
state tax be assessed tor road purposes, as re
quired by law; said road tax to be collected at
the time of collecting the county tax, by the
Tax Callactor. This August 13ih. 1885.
JOHN MATTOX. Ordinary.
Appl cation to Sell Land.
GEORGIA. Chattooga County.
’ To all whom it may concern; George D. HoHis I
administrator of John’ Rowe, of said county,
deceased, has applied to me for leave to sell the
lands belonging to said estate. This is to noti
fy all persons concerned that said application
will be heard before the court of Ordinary at
this office on the first Monday in next.
Witness my baud. Septenib rist. 18<5.
JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
Application to Sell Land.
Chattooga County.
To all whom dt may concern; Geo. D. Hollis
administrator of Win. T. Latimer, deceased, has |
applied do me for leave tn sell the real estate of ;
said estate. This is to notify all parties inter
ested to show caws if any they have, whj the
prayer of petitioner should not be granted on
the first Monday in October next. This Sept 1,
1885. JOHN MATTOX. Ordinaly.
Road Notice.
GEORGIA, CnattoogaCounty;
All persons interested are hereby notified
that if no good cause be show? to the contrary
an order will be granted by the undersigned on
the 25th day of September, 1885, establishing a
new road or a change in the present public road,
down Shinliona valley, in the 968th Dist. Q. M.*
in said county; commencing at O. T. Whorton’s
weh. leaving the present public rood, going in
a westerly direction aloag the present settle
ment road, through the lane between G. T.
Whorton and W. M. Satterfield, and between
the farms fW. L Thomas and R A Wood, to
the Alabama state line, as marked qu by John I
W. Clos&, road supervisor. August Nth, 1885. !
JOHN MAl’iOX. Ordinary.
Application for Dismission.
GEORGIA. Chattooga county;
James W. Selman, Administrator of Chesley
D. Sains, represents to tkH court in his petition,
duly filed, that he has fully administered Ches
ley D Gains s estate; this is therefore to cite
all persona concerned, heirs and c editors, to
show cause, if any they can. why said adminis
I trator should not oe discharged from his admin
istration, and rece.ve letters of dismission, on
the first Monday in November next. July 27th
1885. JOHN MATTOX. Ordinary. ’
DOUGLASS & CQ,
and Livery Stable.
(JILT'S old stand.) i
BROAD STREET - ROME. GA. k
' Splendid Top Buggies. H acks, etc., wii h good 1 !
I sate horses, always on hand. Prices to suit the 1 !
! times. Au--19-ly. I i
W. T. JONES’
MARBLE WORKS,
104 Broad St., Rome, Ga.
moinumeints,
AND
Marble Work Generally,
Always on hand or made to order.
large selection ready for lettering and
delivery at shortest notice.
hundreds of New Designs of the
MOST aMODEKN STYIE of
MONUMEN IS,
HEADSTONES.
TABLETS, Etc.,
Just Received.
Prices Lowe- than ever Offeree
in this Market
Satisfaction Guaranteed. Write- Cor
designs and estimates.
H. 1 Smith,
Rome, Ga.,
Wholesala and Retail
HEA LER lAt
Miscell.'iqeous and Standard Books
Bibles, Poetical, Gift and Juvenile
Books, Christmas Cards, Photograph
.•uni Autograph Albums, Scrap Books,
Picture Frames, Writing Desksand
Work noxc», Games, Toys, Dolls,
Vases in great variety.
Kanos *»» Organs
at manufacturers’ wholesale prices for cash, oc
on instaliuiedts.
tub
CHICAGO
COTTAGE
ORGAN
Has attained a standard of excellence
admits of no superior.
It contains every improvement that inventive
gcixius, skill and money cun produce.
OUK EVERY
Cr.GAN
AIM . '
WAR "
IS RANTED
roa
IT ’ rQ
.JXCEL. YEAE3.
These excellent Orjons aro eeiebruted for vol
nine. quality of tune, quick response, variety of
combination, nrtlatio design, beauty in finish, per
festcoiistnict, u, making them tho most attract
ive, ornamental and desirable organs Rr Lomeb,
schools,cburchM, lodges, societies, eta.
ESI A BUSHED REPUTATION,
ENEQI AEED i ACaEITIEN,
SKILLED WORKMEN,
BEST MATERIAL,
COMBINED, MAKE TUIS
THH POPULAR ORGAR
Instruction Books and Piano Stools.
Cotalogueo and rrieol.lMU.cn application, raza
The Chicago Cottage Organ Ctk
Corner Randolph and Inn Streets,
CHICAGO. ILL.
THE LIGHT RUHNHIG J
TC-r-_ ■; j
SEWIHG MACUI’IE i
SIMPLE
Io J 5
S ) ,y 3
' h THE ONLY SEVANG L’.’.OHINE i
IL TH ATt IVES 11
r" HAS NO EQUx'
i WECTBi-Sfcn- •<
GI 'a'' 1" 1 1 • ', 13
SEWiUG MACHINE CC
ORANGE MASS’. !
30 UNION SQ H.Y. CHICAGO it’
ST.LOUiS MO.ATLANTA GA
J
Henry. Cain. & Kirby,
slbl VERVILLif G \.
W. ’iADDOX,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA.
Will practice in % ha Superior, County, and
District courts.
V~D~D TP S€n<i six cents
I I k I x I -for postage, an<r
receive frse. a costly box of goods wh*ch
hplp you to more money right away than any-’
tiling else n this world, all, of either sex, suc
ceed from fit st hour. The broad road to fort
une opens before the workers, absolutely sure,/
At one* address. True & Co.. Augusta. 3fa<ve.