Newspaper Page Text
IVoi’th
BELLTON, GA., JUNE 1», 119.
If egotism is a prime qualification
for members of Congress, at least one
of the districts of Georgia is ably rep
resented.
The name of Senator George S.
Houston, of Alabama, is prominent
at this time in Washington among
those mentioned for the second place
on the presidential ticket for 1880.
»♦ «
The New York World advises the
Maine Democrats to support the
Greenback ticket, and if they have
sense they Will do so, as they have
but a smalj following in Maine, while
the Greenbackers are quite numerous.
“One tiling At a time,” is General
Ewing’s wise motto. He says the
fight in Ohio is for Governor, not
President. After the Slate fight is
over, then the Ohio Democrats will
clear the decks for the National
battle.
The New England Republicans
will not be united in the next Presi
dential nominating convention. Maine
is for Blaine, New Hampshire for
Sherman, Vermont for Grant, and
Massachusetts for Hayes. So says
the Boston Herald, after a careful re
view of the situation.
Wade Hampton says the South is
eminently conservative. It wants to
be quiet, and does not want to be the
victim or the mover in anything that
will help create trouble or distrust.
He believes in silver money, but
wants a proper relation established
between the two metals.
■■■»♦«-
The June returns of the, Depart
ment of Agriculture show the average
condition of winter wheat to be ninety
against ninety-eight last year. Re
turns from the cotton crop indicate
an increase of acreage over last year
of somewhat over two percent. The
stand is generally good, but some two
weeks later.
Some, of our Rabun county friends
have been captured by the revenue
officers. We are sorry for them, and
still advise conformity to the laws
until they arc repealed. A violation
always break a man up. lie can't
light the government successfully.
Quit it, gentlemen, and feed your
corn to the hogs for the present.
Gainesville Southron.
A terrible tornado passed over San
dersville, Washington county, on
Thursday at 2 o’clock. The Catholic
church was blown down, and the or
gan in it entirely demolished. Loss
ab'oiit SCt,IXNt. 1 No other damage done
in the town except'the destruction of
trees and fencing. The loss in the
country is supposed to be, consider
able.
> *
The Albany News thinks that “the
Legislature cannot, benefit the coun
try more than by the immediate pas
sage of a law that will rid the country
of the thousands of worthless curs
that infest every section of the State.
Tlie sheep raising business is serious
ly impaired by the. ravages of dogs,
and the cry for their extermination or
for a law that would protect the peo
ple from their ravages has become
wide-spread and earnest.”
Within the last week, two brutal
tights between squads of negroes, in
which lives were lost, occurred in or
on the borders of Georgia. One of
these battles was in Mclntosh county,
Ga., and the. other in Russell county,
Alabama. They will attract no atten
tion from political or politico-religious
howb rs. But if one party in either
case had been white, what a fuss
would have been raised about it !- -
Atlanta Dispatch.
The New York Sun gives the sum
total of appropriations of four years
by Republican Congresses and the
amount appropriated for a like time
by the Democrats. The figures are :
Republican appropriations—B73l,-
029.382 12. ' ' '
Democratic appropriations Si2B,-
818,135 49.
Difference in favor of the Demo
crats 4.102,181,215 (>s.
During eight years, up to 1879,
$2204)00,000 have been appropriated
for the support of the army.
>
, Gen. Joe Johnston took the house
by storm when he moved an adjourn
ment over decoration day. He punct
itred a very large stalwart bubble on
Wednesday when, on his motion, the
clunse hi the army lull prohibiting
pvoiwotioiU above the rank of captain
was stricken out. The. republicans
had repeatedly declared llv.t tlie de
sign of that section w,is to make va
capeips To be filled by ex-confeder
ates.-It ■would be better for the
whole country If there were more
such ‘bidgadiwi’ aw Gen. .lohnston in
conqir -s Philadelphia Record.’
THE HILL MURDER CASE.
The trial of Samuel H. Hill, who
shot and killed John R. Simmons, last
January, began in Atlanta on Tues
day of last week, and did not termi
nate until day before yesterday. A
number of witnesses were examined
on both sides, and the circumstances
of the killing, as exhibited in the evi
dence, make the affair one. of the sad
dest cases in the criminal history of
the State. The prisoner was repre
sented by able counsel, Gen. Gartrell
among the number, and an earnest
effort was made to secure his acquittal
on the ground of justifiable homicide,
but after a full and able presentation
of the case on both sides, and a strong
charge from Judge Hillyer, the jury,
on Tuesday night, after a short ab
sence, returned a verdict of “guilty of
murder,” with a recommendation that
the prisoner be sentenced to the peni
tentiary for life. A motion will be
made for a new trial, and failing in
this the case will be taken to the
Supreme Court.
Dr. IL 11. Carlton, in his paper, the
Athens Banner, is out in an article
proposing a plan by which the demand
for the establishment of branches of
the State Agricultural College, at
Thomasville, Milledgeville and some
point in Cherokee, similar to the one
at Dahlonega, may be. made, without
making a further division of the Land
Scrip Fund. Dr. Carlton proposes that
the revenue which (he State derives
from the. Agricultural Bureau, arising
from its inspection fees on commer
cial fertilizers, which amounts to more
than .*20,000 per annum, shall be de
voted to the establishment of these
branch colleges. The scheme is at
tracting the attention of the press all
over the State, and it seems altogether
as feasible.
Reports received at the general
land office in Washington show that,
during the months of January, Febru
ary, March and April last, as many
acres were, taken up as ever before in
any single year, which indicates an
unprecedented and encouraging in
crease in the vohimn of immigration.
It appears, moreover, from state
ments recently prepared at the land
office, that there, are 724,311,177 acres
of surveyed public lands which arc
yet undisposed of, and the enormous
aggregate of over 1,000,000,000 acres
that have never been surveyed.
• ► ■
Some. Democrats in Congress, by
trying to court the favor of the ]{<•-
piiblKnn party , have brought them
selves into contempt. Ovcr-conserv
ativeness docs more barm than good,
and the time has arrived when South
ern Congressman should hold a stiff'
upper lip ami not let the stalwarts
run right square over them, as has
been the ease oftentimes during the
past decade. Tlie’y Should- tie given
Io understand that the Southern peo
ple will not take their lying abuse
forever, and all their vile anathemas
should be hurled back into their teeth
as soon as uttered.—Atlanta Sunday
Phonograph.
'The St. Louis Republican says : “It
is getting plainer every day that the
elementary doctrine in the creed the
stalwarts profess is that the mission
of the Republican party will not be
ended until it shall be made a crimi
nal offense to vote, write or speak
against that party. The election of
Grant to.a third term will only be a
stepping stone to the establishment
of this doctrine in the land, for it will
only be when Grant is made perpet
ual ruler that the mission will be
accomplished. Then it will be trea
son to say aught against him or those
who make him.”
In speaking of the State Sunday
school convention the Gainesville
Eagle says: Much credit, is due to
Col. W. G. Whidby, of Atlanta, who
was one of the foremost men in the
organization, many county associa
tions being organized under the con
stitution of the DeKalb county associ
ation which he printed and distributed
at'his own expense. In all this he
was seconded hv many good and true,
men, such as Hon. M. A. Candler and
W. J. Houston, of DeKalb, Rev. IL
Quigg and .1. C. Barton, of Conyers,
'J.IS. Slewiut and R. W. Smith, of
Oxford, Rqy. D. E. Butler, of Madi
son, T. M. Bryan, of Union Point.
W. W. Lumpkin, of Athens, J. W.
Wallace, of Augusta, Bjshop Pierce
and many others.
Southern States are not the only
ones that prohibit marriages between
whites and negroes. Rhode Island.
Michigan and Maine have very strin
gent law s on this subject.
-«-»
Tlie steady increase of European
immigration continues to be one of
the most noticeable evidences of the
progress of the country towards the
recovery of industrial prosperity.
DR. GOSS' ARTICLE.
We publish elsewhere an article
by Dr. I. J. M. Goss, on the “Germ
Theory of Disease,” which we hope
our readers will not pass by because
of its length and numerous technical
terms. The design of the article is to
show frotn a medico-scientific stand
point the advantages of our climate.
The Doctor’s theory—nnd we believe
it is the theory of our best and most
progressive physicians—is that nearly
all diseases, especially those of a ma
larious character, are caused by cer
tain germs, vegetable, we suppose,
we might call them, which get into
the system from the atmosphere, and
produce fungous or mushroom growth
in the blood and various parts of the
body, and that ozone, which is one of
the constituent gases of the atmos
phere, is the great natural remedy
and preventive of the diseases which
result from this fungous growth. The
well established fact that elevated
lands are more healthful than low,
marshy sections, is explained by the
presence in the upper atmosphere of
more ozone than near the sea level.
We are not learned enough to pro
nounce judgment upon the merits of
Dr. Goss’ theory, but we are fully
assured of one thing—Bellton is as
healthy as any town in Georgia, ami
ought, with its mineral springs and
tine, climate, become a well known
and well sustained summer resort.
Professor Mithell, of the American
Academy of Sciences, has been inves
tigating the matter of pain in relation
to the weather. His series of obser
vations were made on a Captain of
the. United States army who had lost
his leg during the war, and who suf
fered severely from neuralgia. The
best “yield of pain” was in January,
February and March, and the worst
in July, August and September. The
amount of pain suffered by the one
legged Captain was in exact propor
tion with the storms occurring
throughout tin' country. A storm,
hundreds of miles away, could be felt
by the sufferer, ami immediately
started all Ids neuralgic pains. Prof.
Mitchell’s summing up was that a low
pressure of the. barometer is certain
to bring out all our aches and pains.
The Albany News appeals to the
people of the South to come to the
assistance of the Memorial Associa
tion of Americus, which proposes to
remove to the cemetery at that place
the ashes es the Confederate dead at
Andersonville. It seems that the
United States Government has recent
ly decreased the size of the National
Cemetery at Andersonville, and in
consequence the graves of one hun
dred and twenty-two Confederate
soldiers which were within the enclo
sure of the old cemetery are left
unenclosed and at the mercy of cvery
tlrtitg ttrrrt—will destroy or mutilate
them. To effect the removal money
is needed.
->-♦-0.
San Antonio, Texas, June 17.
The news from Mexico this morning
is important. The. Express’ Laredo
correspondent telegraphs : “A promi
nent merchant of Laredo, Mexico,
received a letter dated Monterey,
June 11, staling that General Negrete,
commander-in-chief of the Mexican
army, had ‘pronounced’ against Diaz,
withff, (women. Chief Justice Vallar
has assumed the presidential chair,
pro trm, which president Diaz aban
doned to pursue Negrete.’’
► ♦
King Mountain, June 17.—Train
No. 47, of the Air-Line railroad, ran
over a man at the 231 mile post, near
King’s Mountain, N. this after
noon at 2 o’clock. He was badly cut
up. The train hands found a cut in
his throat as if he had been stabbed
first, and then put on the track. He
was cold. The best information is
that he was a crazy man named
-McCall, from South Carolina.
> + -4 -
M e yield our space this week to
correspondents, and hope to do so
again—in fact, we are in a yielding
mood. So write often, friends.
Official information has been receiv
ed at Washington to the effect that
the “plague” which existed in south
ern Russia, is now almost extinct.
Ex-Congressman Smalls, of South
Carolina, is to be appointed collector
of internal revenue for his state.
Ex-Senator Stanley Mathews is re
ported as expressing the belief that'
President Hayes will be renominated. 1
M est Alexander, Virginia, has a
justice of the peace, who has married!'
over one thousand and four hundred
couples.
The various schools of Raleigh. N.
C., last session, »liile and colored,'
auiounted to two ti u .us,nd and sixty-1
five pupils.
The hogs around Enterprise. Miss.,
tire dying rapidly of cholera.
MAYSVILLE MATTERS.
Editor Georgian : As you ask for
correspondence from various parks, I
, have thought that it might not be a
’ miss, in every sense of the word, for
' me to drop you a few lines.
For .some time past, I have been
i wishing to commend you for the high
, ly moral tone and general excellence
[ of your “outride” selections. I do not
I mean by this to depreciate the inside,
i but I do mean to say that 1 know of
I ho paper, “country weekly,” or city
] quarto, whose outside is better edited.
■ This excellence alone should secure
for the Georgian, at the low price at
which it is offered, a place at every
, fireside in the neighboring counties.
I know that editors, like other mor
tals, are subject to flattery, but I have
not the slightest in that direc
tion, believing that you are a married
i man, and knowing that editors are
■ proverbially well, I don’t like to
[ write what I intended; but I saw your
advertisement fur a ‘local editor,' ami
' thofad.’ convinced me that if you are
I (it will come) poor, you are honest,
and the latter quality is the better of
tlie two, ami somewhat scarcer.
But what was I going to write
about? Oh, I recollect now—Mays
ville matters.
Most of the wheat hereabouts is
reaped and shocked, and the shextkers
say that it is by no means a shocking
crop; but its promises to be better
than for several years past, will not
save it from a thrashing.
The corn and cotton fields arc gen
erally “dean,” and give promise of
j reward to the workers, for this kind
attention.
Maysvilb is progressing rapidly in
I the musical line. At the first of the
j yuiar there was not a piano or organ
in or near the village; now there are
four pianos (two of them splendid in
struments) and two organs. Mrs. Dr.
Hogan’s music class is advancing
rapidly, and if she meets with as
large patronage as her skill ami
energy deserve, she will have as
many pupils as she can attend to.
Your humble correspondent thinks
that the Maysville Institute, with
Mrs. Hogan’s music department, af
fdlds every facility for a thorough
education at very moderate cost. Had
you been here at the recent exhibi
tion, you could have but been highly
pleased with its success.
There is another entertainment in
preparation, that will probably come
off' in the course of a month; but I do
iiot feel at liberty to “tell tales out of
senool, mUfl I become a more'expe
rienccd reporter, and learn what not
to tell. Perhaps you will be invited
to attend.
Rev. Dr. Heals, of Jefferson, is ex
pected to deliver a temperance lecture
here next Friday r ight.
Sunday will be the regular season
iCr communion with the Presbyte
rians, and they will have preaching
' on that day ami Saturday previous, by
[ Rev. Mr. Cartlcdgc, pastor.
; For fear that I may be writing for
[ your waste-basket, instead of for the
j columns of the Georgian, 1 close, and
[ that without a P. S. Stella.
I’. 3. I forgot to tell you we had fine
rains Sunday and Monday. S.
——
Ba< iielou’s Retreat. I
Near Bellton, Ga.. >
June 15th, 1879. \
Dear Georgian : I attended divine
■ service to-day at ‘Lula Bridge,’ on the
; Chattahoochee river, and listened to
two excellent sermons, preached bv
Revs. Deavors and Austin, two good
I divines. They preached to a large
[concourse of people, who seemed to
: be deeply impressed with the eloquent
[delivery of God’s Word, and many
’ mouners called at the altar seeking
i religion. I noticed two other minis
ters present, Rev. Mr. Clements from
[ the Glade Mines, and Rev. S. IL Gai
(‘lev. from Trinity Methodist church.
: Tlie meetings at ‘Lula Bridge’ are. in
teresting, and should be attended by
! more people on this side of the river,
[regular preaching days, the 3d Sunday
rand Saturday before in each month.
: There will be a protracted meeting
■here, commencing on Saturday before
I the third Sunday in July,
■ The little band of Christians of the
1 Lula Bridge station are trying to get
‘ money to build them a church at the
i place, on the other side of the river.
. where Bell’s Chapel formerly stood,
I Subscription lists are in the hands of
; W. I). Pitman, at the Bridge; B. W.
j Lockhart, at the Glade Mines, and S.
i 11. Gailey, at Trinity. I trust that
[ those who arc able will help all they
. can and never let the building of a
House of Worship fail. I forgot to
[ mention that Miss S. M. Lockhart has
j a subscription list fur the ladies who
] feel disposed to give anything towards
j building the church. Ladies, help Miss
[ Sussie all you cau. Bachelor.
The cotton-worm is going through
the crops of Colorado county, Texas.
THE GERM THEORY OF DISEASE.
By I. J. M. Goss, A. M., M. I)., Marietta,
Ga., Professor of Materia Medtea in the
Eclectic Medical College of Georgia.
I see an essay this week in a news
paper. headed “Ozone and its uses,”
in which the writer speaks of the
bioplasm disease-germ, but does not
clearly define this new discovery. He
says, however, “that this discovery ;
compels the abandonment of the
former system of physiology, and
enables the scientist to construct a
new one upon the enduring basis of
facts.” This ought to be the case,
but is not. The old Paracelsian sys
tem of pathology and practice remain
the same, ignoring all new discoveries
of physiology and pathology. The fol
lowers of the immortal Wooster Beach
adopt all the recent discoveries, both
in pathology and physiology. The old
system of medical science is based
upon the idea that disease is produced
by certain unknown morbid influences
and pathological conditions, that are
to be expelled from the system by
purges, emetics, diaphoreli .s, expec
torants, diuretics and alteratives, and
some give tonics, anodynes, narcotics
and stimulants. That these views are
erroneous we have only to notice the
fatality of yellow fever, cholera, can
cer, consumption, diphtheria and many
other diseases. Yellow fever was de
monstrated to be of germ origin by
two microscopists, one at Savannah,
Ga.. the other at New Orleans. It is
caused from the entrance into the
blood of minute spores, emitted from
a certain species of parasitic fungi that
is developed upon decaying animal or
vegetable matter, under high tempera
ture, ami a want of ozone in the atmos
phere of the section. The spores of
this peculiar form of fungi are so
small that they readily pass through
the pores of the skin and mucous
membranes into the blood,which they
decompose, and produce the well
known phenomenon known as yellow
fever. And to cure tins disease, ozone
must be supplied, together with such
powerful antiseptic remedies as will
utterly destroy the spores of this
fungi in the blood before it is decom
posed. Typhoid fever, dysentery, diph
theria. dyspepsia, cancer, syphilis, ca
tarrh, scarlet fever, and most epidemic
and contagious diseases are thus pro
duced and spread in such locali ies as
are deprived of ozone. To illustrate
these facts, we may take our micro
scope and watch the spread of -the
\botritus the potato mould, which
causes the potato to rot; also th<‘
tiiedn. the lemon mould, the puccinia
growing upon wood, causing dry rot.
It is true, that these forms of fungi
jare much larger than those that cause
disease in man, yes their mode of ac
tion is similar. Dyspepsia, a disease
that troubles many persons through
: life, is generally first produced by
over-eating or hasty eating, causing
I fermentation, which is the generation
of torula vantrieulii— the east plant.
Various forms of the animal parasite
[called fusciuln, generate rapidly in
the body, and produce disease. It is a
well known fact now to all good
[ microscopists, that skin diseases are
; caused by varieties of the parasitic
fungi called aehorion srlumlrimi. Can
■ eer is caused by a parasite called
\riialoma ::cii rlmxii, which permeates
and destroys the flesh. Catarrh is
[caused by a parasite called amaba.
Diphtheria has been demonstrated to
be caused from a parasite called diplo
spmium and is quickly cured
by antiseptic, washes, and remedies
that act antiseptieally upon the blood.
All these forms of parasitical fungi
can be destroyed by proper antisep
tics. No man can investigate disease
without a good microscope. And it is
passingly strange to see what preju
dice medical men cultivate to every
new discovery, either in pathology or
therapeutics. When Schonbien, a cele
brated German chemist, forty years
ago, discovered a new ariform sub
stance, which he called ozone,) a
Greek name for odor.) no one seems
to have noticed his discovery, or as
sisted him in utilizing this very supe
rior antiseptic. Such is its'germ
destroying power, that upon mountain
situations no epidemic pestiferous va
pors can long remain. Such localities
are exempt from yellow fever and
other like diseases. This fact was
tested at Chattanooga last vear by
many families moving upon Lookout
Mountain, near Chattanooga.
Not only does ozone destroy all the
small forms of parasitical fungi, but
there are other medicines that destroy
many of them. Sulphur is well known
to destroy many of them. Sulphurus
acid and the sulphites, made from it,
also destroy many of those living
entities. Eucalyptus globulus will de
stroy many septic germs, such as form
on the tonsils in diphtheria, ami upon
wounds in gangrene. Many skin dis
eases are caused by living parasites,
and only to be cured by using such
mineral and vegetable remedies as
destroy these parasitical formations.
Sulphur is known to destroy many of
them, such as itch and drv tetters.
Sulphurus acid and the sulphites, cure,
prurigo and other diseases of like na
ture. The sulphites destroy the torula
vantrieulii in dyspepsia, and thereby
arrest fermentation Fermentation
cannot be produced or maintained in
a moderately strong solution of the 1
sulphites of soda or potash. QuiniaJ
Euealyptin, arsenic and some other !
chemicals, destroy malaria, and there
by cure marsh fevers. This fact has
been demonstrated for raanv years.'
ana anti-parasitical remedies
above namw .„f, «,ith as much or
more certainty than we
have only to apply them ’to u., con .
vinced of the truth of this assertiou.
Sabadilla veratrum has been lately
proven to destroy the amaba. anil
thereby arrest hay-fever at ouoe. Per
manganate of potash destroys putres
[ cency anywhere.
j The invalids are often at a loss what
Ito do to invigorate their debilitated
! body—to restore their wanted health.
Friends may advise to seek some
vaunted watering place in the moun
tains. which has been published by
; the avaricious vampire who owns it,
'as the greatest leatth-iettorer in the
world: others advise some certain
locality, perhaps perfectly unsuitable
to his or her coi.diiion, and they are
perplexed to know where to go. Let
all such know that any place ten or
twelve hundred feet above the sea
level cannot fail to furnish the invig
-1 orating gas. called ozone, which al
ways mingles with the air at such
' altitudes.-B-llton, Ga., and Marietta,
Ga., possess these advantages. They
i are on very elevated situations, and
hence have a highly ozonized atmos
phere, which cannot fail to assist in
the recovery cf lost health and vigor.
Besides an air titled with ozone, Bell
ton has two chalybeate springs,
containing iron, but manga
-1 uese. lithia, magnesia, sulphur and
other minerals, which make the water
highly ozonizid and very invigorating.
[ Persons from low and unhealthy locali
ties, will not only find a cool and pleas
ant summer retreat, but air and water
to aid in the restoration of lost health.
, Board being cheap and good. Bellton
presents attractions equaled by few
pieces in upper Georgia or elsewhere.
And I may state that I am not inter
. ested in Bellton. but write for the
benefit of invalids who may wish to
come, etc.
A(’Tr T AL_BUSINESS.
STUDENTS ON CHANGE AT
•ffzwo FOR CATALOGIf
Circulars ni.vlej tree to huv address.
mayai-Cni H. F. Ml><>RE, Piesirt. nt
M 0 X E Y > ~LOAir
UNITED states
HOME AXD DOWER AXtSOCIAT/0X
or PENNSYLVANIA.
i bicorpi/rafcd (,’havtrr Perpetual.
Capital, 81,000,000.
■ Paid Capital, 400,000.
. [ IT ECEIVES deposits for accumulation,
j IV iss 1.-S certificates of deposit for an
, I riilit;. and dowi v. grants loi.g- term loans
! on city, town. Farm and Church proper;
i t.v. a* from s to o. per cent per aniluni
' ' Office Gulf Department, Atlanta. Ga.
I E. A. WHITCOMB.
! _nray22-3m Manager.
Tills WAY TOR
XPR/Xt; A XD XU.VMKK GOODS'.
V. W. DuPRE,
’’TEIi spend ng two weeks in New
I; \ oik. in diligent and constant sparvh
> j ’<<r new style* find i,ow U now
• prepared to show the most stoek
I >f Dry (i<»ods. Notions, Shoes, and
? I Cloth ng ever put on the shelves in North
• j East Georgia. In inv Dress Goods Depart-
• merit arc to be found Linen Lawns at 7e;
, Muslins nt H and 10c; Poplins 10 to 15e:
■ A’.paens l.’r and up: Cashmeres 20 to 7Y<.
An endless lot of Fancy Dress Croods, lO
1 i to fiOe. My black and summer silks arc
- bargains. Parasols loe to S3oO: Folding
I Fans 12i«‘ to S 2; Kid Gloves 25c to $1 ?j.
. In my Shoe Department you will find anv
’ thing yon may call for in G’ent’s, Ladle-:’,
Misses and Children’s Shoes, ami prices
I i just right. I am agent for Canfield's world
- renowned hand-made Shoes for G’ents
. every pa r warranted. I am agent for
. Keep’s Shirts, Collars. Cuffs. Kid Gloves
and rmhrellas. Keep’s Shirts have no
' equal; every piece warranted: price
M . stock of Linens, Trimmings, Tablo
, Damasks, Napkins, Towels, Embroidries,
. Zephyrs. Kmt Shawls, Etc., is complete,
. and prices down. My Clothing Depart,
mein is worthy of mention—here you can
find anytL'ng you call for—suits at $1 25
i t<» S.'X.MM). .suits top Ch Idron, Boys and
; Men. A tine stock of flats in fur, straw
; and wool. Semi for samples.
C. W. IhTUE,
| may22-3m Gainesville,' Gn.
L. J. (i.VItTRELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
I
ATLANTA, €4A.
I JPACTICES in the United States Cir-
■ unit and District Courts at Atlanta,
b and rhe Supruine and Superior Com ts of
the State. mavls-tf
month guaranteed: sl2 a
Vr <i;<v hoine made by the in
dustrious; capital not re<|uir
ed: we will start you; men, women, boys
> apd girls make money faster at wirk for
; than at anything eisp; (he work is light
. and pleasant, and such as any one can go
right at: those who are wise, will send us
i their addresses at once and sec for them
; M-lyes; costly outfit and terms free; now
• ■ is the time; those alread.v «t work are lav-
ing up largo sums of money.
Address, True & Co., Augusta. Maine.
JOHN M. FINDLAY,
at
gaixesville, ga.
YY’ILL give prompt attention to the
Collection of Claims. Office with
[ Lstes 6: Son. aprl"-3m
A. J. SH AFFER, mTd7
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
GAINESVILLE, GA.
SPECIAL attention given to diseases
\,- COl ? mon 0 women. I will guarantee a
I radical cure in all cases of Dropsy, after
examining patients. mayl-ly