Newspaper Page Text
North Georgian.
Bellton, Ga., January 29,1880.
The North Georgian has commenced
its third volume under favorable aus
pices. It is worthy of support, and if
It does not get it, then true worth will
be sacrificed.—Central Ga. Weekly.
The location of the Normal school
will be decided on February 18th.
Athens is making strenuous efforts to
secure it, and we hope it will be
located iu that beautiful and healthy
city.
Mississippi proposes to provide a
monthly pension of eight dollars to
all wounded Confederate soldiers of
that State. This would be a just and
humane enactment. The cause for
which they bled should not be for
gotten.
Reports from Washington says that
at the approaching Pennsylvania Re
publican State Convention, the next
friends of Grant will announce by
authority, that he is not a candidate
for President, and that his name must
not be used. Is it true?
The plot thickens to steal the elec
toral vote of New Yrtrk for the Re
publican candidate. That the stalwart
managers intend to do it, is a ques
tion which no longer admits of a
reasonable doubt. The only question
is, how are the Democrats to defeat
their conspiracy.—Baltimore Gazette.
The Chicago Times nominates Jeff
Davis, of Mississippi, and Alonzo
Garcelon, of Maine, for President
and Vice President in 1880—a ticket,
by the way, which, if nominated and
elected, would secure a more honest
and capable government to the peo
ple of the United States than any the
Chicago papers arc generally in the
habit of supporting.
Governor-elect Wiltz, of Louisiana,
is spoken of us one of the ablest
public men of the South. He is only
thirty-six years old. Since he entered
public life, ten years ago, he has been
a member of the Legislature, Mayor
of New Orleans, Lieutenant Gover
nor of the State, and at the recent
election was -chosen Governor by a
large majority.
The New Orleans Times says that
the outlook now is that the negro ex
odus from nearly all the Southern Sta
tes will be much greater this year
than last, and it urges the planters to
set to work at once to supply their
places with white laborers. It is all
folly, the Times adds, to assert that
white men cannot work iu the cotton
and cane fields.
When the average size of farms in
Georgia is brought down to one hun
dred acres, or the average of the en
tire country, then and not until then
will the state be in a fairway to be
come as wealthy as nature plainly in
tended she. should be. Too little
manufacturing and too much unprofi
table land-holding arc the brakes that
now retard her progress in a material
sense.
Mr.-(Springer, of Illinois, has intro
duced a bill in the House to amend
the United States election laws. It
provides that when supervisors of
elections are called for by citizens,
they shall be appointed by circuit
courts, and it repeals all laws author
izing the arrest of citizens without
warrant, and prohibits the interfer
ence by supervisors or marshals with
judges or inspectors of elections.
In company with Maj. Hooker,
Charley Lilly, W. F. Findley, and
Maj. Butt, we. walked out two miles
on the line of the. Gainesville and
Dahlonega road, and confess our sur
prise at the, beauty of the line and the
work done on it. Six weeks more of
good weather, and Billy Johnson will
have the earthwork done to the Chat
tahoochee, four miles. This is alto
gether the heaviest work on the line,
and willcost, more to grade than any
other ten miles. -Southron.
An exchange snys: “The news
paper advertisement is a never-tiring
worker in the interest of its employer.
When the bill distributor has disap
peared from the street and the bills
have been trampled into pulp, the
advertisement is performing its silent
mission in the family circle. It ap
pears to a constituency three or four
times larger than represented by the
actual sale of the paper, for there are
few newspapers which do not pass
from hand to hand through three or
four persons, with every issue.”
The North Georgian will please note
the fact that we are not only friendly
to the Teachers Institute of this coun
ty, but in full sympathy with all of
its acts and doings, especially in re
gard to its desire to establish an
educational journal in this State, and
we shall give them all the. assistance
in our power. What we said week
before last was meant only as pleas
antry and nothing more. If we know
ourselves, we are tar indeed from
casting reflections upon such a worthy
institution.—Forest News.
RICE CULTURE.
We are glad to notice the increasing
interest which is manifesting itself in
Northern Georgia, in the growth of
this cereal. It was formerly supposed
that rice could only be raised on the
rich level lands along the rivers in
the lower part of the State, where it
could be easily flooded. But recent
experiments have established the fact
that it may he successfully grown not
only on the high lands further South,
but even in the mountainous regions
of this section. We are speaking of
the species of rice usually known as
‘gold’ rice, from the bright yellow
| color of its husk or chaff. This sort
I is essentially a water plant, but may
be grown on high lands, where flood
ing is impossible, as already staled.
There are two other varieties—one of
which is known as ‘red’ rice, because
it has a thin coat of red beneath the
chaff, which is white. This will grow
either in water or on high land; but
is not thought much of on account of
the appearance when cooked. The
third kind is known as ‘white’ rice,
because the chaff is white and the
inner coat, like that of the gold rice,
is white. This is also called ‘high
land’ rice, because it is better adapted
to dry soil. The seed may be pro
cured from the farmers in the pine
lands of Charleston county. S. C.,
who raise it in laree quantities.
There are a great many places in
this immediate vicinity, and probably
in other parts of North Georgia, too,
where the lands could be adapted to
growing rice with all the advantages
of flooding. The greatest difficulty is
the. want of proper machinery for
preparing the rice for use. Os these
we will speak in a future article.
Affairs in Maine are apparently as
suming a serious aspect. The Repub
lican Governor of the State has, under
pretext that the Fusionists were about
to endeavor to recapture the State
House, ordered out the millita, and
h»« converted the State House in Au
gusta into a barracks, where troops
are stationed under arms, and where
rations for them are regularly cooked.
It is stated that he proposes, at a very
early date, to disperse the Fusion Leg
islature by force, having been advised
by his friends to end the dual govern
ment at once.
Governor Smith has issued a proc
lamation to the people of the state,
declaring that the military prepara
tions of the Republsean Governor
Davis are entirely uncalled for; that
the Fusionists have never contempla
ted using force, but rely on the judg
ment and sense of justice of the peo
ple for securing their rights, and he
asks the people if they are willing to
surrender their rights ns freemen and
become slaves to military forces, which
are burdening them with taxation and
are undermining and destroying their
institutions.
An exchange, in speaking of stock
speculations, says it cannot fail to
divert one’s attention from his busi
ness, and the eventual result will
prove harmful in the extreme. Don’t
ne.glect your legitimate business.—
Bend all your energies to its success
ful prosecution. In this way, and by
these means only, can you succeed.
Eet the speculators ‘bull nr bear’ the
market, it will not affect you. The
only way to succeed is by earnest,
untiling industry. He who takes a
short cut to wealth, is generally
equally successful—whether he will
or no—in finding an equally short
road back to poverty.
*
It is impossible, says the Philadel
phia Record, that a good part of the
one hundred millions of dollars worth
of sugar now brought into this coun
try yeai ly from abroad may ultimate
ly be produced at home. The maple
tree supplies an annually increasing
field, and beet culture for sugar mak
ing is attracting general attention.
Sorchum now bids fair to come to the
front with saccharine possibilities
that, according to tests recently made
in the West, may revolutionize the
whole sugar interest. The common
corn stalk, too, is about to enter the
field with its granulated sweetness.
• -
A few days ago, Judge L. E. Bleck
ley, of the supreme bench, sent in his
resignation to Governor Colquitt.
' The governor was loth to accept it,
but as it was made unconditional, he
was forced to do so.
He appointed on yesterday Judge
Martin J. Crawford, of Columbus, to
fill the vacancy. A capital selection.
To fill the vacancy made in the'
Muscogee circuit by the elevation of
Judge Crawford to the supreme bench,
Mr. Edgar M. Butt, of Marion county,
was appointed. Another good selec
tion.— Atlanta Constitution.
Dr. J. B. Carlton has a patient who
has been under treatment for dropsy
1 for the last four years, during which
j time he has taken from the patient
four hundred and eighty-four and a
1 half pounds of waler, in nine tap
pings. The. last tapping extracted
821 pounds, over nine gallons, aud
more than the weight of the patient.
I It is the most remarkable case of the
‘ kind on record.—Athens Banner.
KING’S MOUNTAIN CENTENNIAL.
The celebration of this event will
come off October 7th. and prepara
tions arc now being made to make
this a grand occasion, when thousands
of people from Maine to Florida will
visit this famous locality. The battle
which was fought nearly one hundred
years ago, was the turning point in [
the great struggle which gave free-1
dom to the American colonies. It
occurred at a time when the people ■
and army had become dispirited from ;
repeated defeats, and no event in the
history of the Revolution did more to .
arouse the spirits of the people of the
frontiers than did this battle. The
victory was gamed by’ the brave and ;
hardy mountaineers from Tennessee
and the Carolinas, who fought the
trained soldiery of England under
Ferguson. Ferguson fell, his army
was destroyed and a thrill of hope
filled the American heart, and the
drooping spirits of the soldiers were
aroused, re-cnforcemcnts flocked to
the standard of liberty, and a few
more months decided the contest.
It is eminently appropriate that the |
one hundredth anniversary of this'
event should be celebrated in a man
ner befitting the importance of the
event.
On the 21st of February, the pre
liminaries will be inaugurated by the
unfurling of a magnificent American
flag from the peak of King’s Moun
tain. This will be under the auspices
of the Air Line Railroad, and it is
expected that thousands of people
will be present from Atlanta, and
from all points along the Air Line
Road, and from the Carolinas. Col.
Tom Hardeman, of Macon, will de
liver the oralion.—Atlanta Post.
BLOOD UPON*THE SOUTH.
The Rutland (Vermont) Herald, a
dirty, cowardly radical organ, has this
to say about the South:
The Yankee burns slow, but be has
been heating up all these years of
wrong, crueltyand perfidy,and,unless
we are greatly mistaken, the people
of the north are well-nigh the boiling
point of impatience concerning the
south; if she won’t live under law,
then let her die under law; we are all
sick of her loathsome shape; her bands
dripping with the blood of the feeble
and the ignorant, her every-day life a
talc of political murder and fraud; the
olive branch has been stretched in
vain year after year, her poverty and
sickness have been the signal for lavish
generosity on our part; she grasps the
olive branch only long enough to
divert our attention and then tries to
beat our braiun out with a bludgeon;
it will accept everything; it renders
back no sign of reconciliation or obe
dience to law. and the North in sheer
despair says, give us once more a
Republican Congress to make our
laws operative, and a man like Grant,
to do his plain duty, instead of quib
bling how he can dodge It, and we
will yet have cither some respite from
the reign of terror at the South or a
desert; the. South had better be as
barren us Labrado than as hellish as
equatorial Afri< a. If the South is not
ready to let up on political assassina
tion, terrorism and fraud, they will
he compelled to retreat before those
who are willing to maintain a Repub
lican form of government instead of
the despotism dubbed a Democracy
by this gambler and horse jockey civ
ilization that loafs and chops straw,
calling it polities, over corn whiskey
all day, and then turns its drunken
energies to shooting and cheating the.
only creature that will work, viz, the
“cussed nigger.”
RAILROAD NOTES.
Atlanta is spoken of everywhere as
the railroad center of the south.
The survey of the Georgia Western
will be pushed ahead.
Emigrant agents make it lively at
the passenger depot every afternoon.
Au important general railroad
meeting will be held in Atlanta early
next month.
Almost every day some new rail
road agency is established in this city.
The excursion to Cincinnati over
the Cincinnati Southern will certainly
come otf before long.
In a few weeks the office of the
Southern railway and steamship asso
ciation will be moved to Atlanta.
The railroad commission will soon
have, its tariffs prepared and will make
them public.
The King’s mountain centennial
will attract a big crowd from Atlanta.
Special trains will run from Atlanta
and carry everybody at very low rates.
The management of the Aair-Line
will give the public every possible
facility—Atlanta Constitution.
Maine is having a little dose of i
reconstruction. We are going to sit |
by our Democratic fire these cold
nights, and rub our hands and chuckle ■
over it. This whole country is going I
to be reconstructed. We Southerners
have had our dose, and have recov- j
cred. We rejoice to know that the 1
“people that God made” are not go- j
ing to be deprived of the blessings of [
reconstruction—Sparta Ishmaelite.
We need some money—just a little.
NEWS ITEMS.
Mosquitoes are as Lad just now in
Louisiana as in spring.
The wheat in Houston county is
already suffering from rust.
Congress has done nothing during
the week to excite public interest.
Prof. John Koerber committed sni-i
vide, in Atlanta, last Tuesday night.
Squire Harris, of Chattanooga, has
a peach tree which is literally covered
with blossoms.
Two thousand dollars will cover
the losses by fire in Charlotte during j
the past twelve months.
Graham county. North Carolina,
has within her limits, an Indian who
claims to be 141 .years old.
Gov. Corjley, postmaster nt Atlanta.!
telegraphs from Washington that he !
is solid with the administration.
The Lee Monument Association of
Virginia has raised 520.5C>9 for a mon-'
ument to the Confederate leader.
The Forest News says the citizens
of Jackson county have the name of
being the worst office seekers in the
State.
There are thirteen persons in the j
jail at Gainesville, and in the past
three weeks they have made several
efforts to escape.
Owing to the unhealthy condition
of the Kentucky penitentiary. Gov. '
Blackburn, last week, pardoned out )
eighty-seven convicts.
The heaviest snow storm of the
season prevailed throughout Wiscon
sin, last Friday and Saturday—being)
from twenty to forty inches deep.
I offer for sale my interest in the ’
Drug Store. If you want a bargain,
call at oucc. I moan business.
D. M. Breaker.
Lawyers are accumulating to such an )
extent in Gainesville hat the South- !
ton is afraid that the city limits will
have to be extended to give them room
Disastrous earthquake shocks have
been felt in Cuba. At San Christobal
the public buildings were shaken down,
and several persons were hurt by the
I falling walls.
The steamer Charmer, with twenty
oue hundred bales of cotton, has been
totally destroyed by fire fifteen miles
from the month of Red river. Fight
lives were lost.
Augusta is emphatically the Lowell
of the South. All other claims to
this grand distortion arc bogus. Facts
and figures at hand to prove this as
sertion..—News.
Avalanches of snow from the cliffs
above the city threaten houses for a
distance of two miles along one street
in Quebeck. and great consternation
I prevails among the inmates.
The Union Pacific, Kansas Pacific
land Denver Pacific Railroads were
i consolidated Saturday, and the new
combination will be known as the
i Union Pacific Railroad Company.
I Uncle Daniel Pittman is still talk
ing greenbacks to the people of At
j lanta and surrounding country. Uncle
i Daniel is one of the smartest men in
‘ Georgia, and ought to be iu Congress.
I So says the Darien Gazette.
i A Maine man who didn’t care two
! shakes of a lamb’s tail about news
papers, rode fourteen miles through
a fierce snow storm to get a copy of n
weekly that spoke of him as “a pro
minent citizen.”—Boston Post.
Speaking of the foreshadowed move
ment of the New York Republicans
to change the mode of choosing Presi
dential electors, the St. Louis Times
says : “It looks now like elections in
) this country had come to be mere
[jugglery. How long such travesties
ion fair balloting will command the
I obedience of the people and the
) necessary respect for authority, will
depend on circumstances or accident
I only. And herein patriotic and
> thoughtful men see much which mav
I well create anxiety.”
A Thurman “ boom ” has started.
■ The friends of the Ohio Senator claim
that he can, if New York adopts the
plan of selecting electors by Con
gressional districts, secure at least
eleven electors in that State, andcarrv
California, Nevada, Oregon and Colo
rado. These (the Pacific Coast States)
with the South, would make his total
vote 151. It is assumed, as stated,
that he would secure 11 votes in New
York nud 15 in Indiana, leaving him
New Jersey, Connecticut and Ohio as
the battle ground in which to secure
the other eight votes necessary to his
election. It is claimed that he would
be certain of Ohio.
Provided with a pen, meeting Mr.
Sam Weller’s requirements, viz: ‘One
that don’t splutter,’ a veracious chro
nicler might record volumes in praise
of Coussens’ Lightning Liniment, the
best remedy in the world for rheuma-;
tism, lame back, sprains, bruises, etc.
For animals, it is invaluable, when
used for spavin, gall, ringbone, etc.
Farmers should keep it on hand in I
ease of injury to a valuable horse. I
For sale by J. B. Hughes & Co. ‘
TO THE VOTERS
or THE
33rd Senatorial District.
It affords me profound pleasure to
' think that many of my friends esteem
me sufficient to represent them in the
Senate, and while I am thankful be-
I yond expression to them, I am forced
' by honest convictions of duty to de
i cline the ‘race.’ I now hold an office i
: conferred upon me, I trust, by the
■Supreme Ruler of tlie Universe,,
which fully occupies my time and.
! talent, and my highest aspirations at!
present is to prove myself worth}’ the
position.
Again thanking you for your eon-)
■ faience and kindness, I beg that you I
■ will permit me to decline the use ofi
mj’ name in connection with the Sen-:
, atorial office. Verv Respectfully,
E. S. V. Briant.
—.
The railway status here is reported
las still unsettled. It is said that
Colonel E. W. Cole, though euchred
1 by the Louisville and Nashville Rail- 1
i road, is by no means crushed, but is !
1 preparing for a new combination in '
, which the Cincinnati Southern will.
! play an important part, and which
i may compel the Louisville and Nash- i
j ville to confirm the contract with the i
I Central Railroad. Atlanta is indig- 1
! uant over the Mobile outlet and the
proposed steamship line from that i
point, and also at the failure to push '
ahead the construction of the Georgia i
Western road. It is beginning to be ;
realized now that Colonel Wadley is
: not the worst enemy of cither this
I city or the State of Georgia. Well-1
, grounded rumors assert that tho Ma-;
■ con and Brunswick Railroad lease
, will not be confirmed, and that a new [
| sale will have to be advertised. At- [
| lanta special to Savannah News.
The Southern Farmer’s Monthly for ■
[ February will contain questions and 1
'answers from a rice planter of Geor-j
Igia to Mr. Jordan Myrick, of South I
I Carolina, written in 1824. Mr. My
rick had been awarded the premium
of the gold medal by the agricultural
society <>f South Carolina, for produc
ing ninety bushels of rice to the acre, i
These old documents were found i
among the papers of the late Hon. )
' Langdon Cheves, and will doubtless :
| be. read with interest by all interested
I in rice culture. The Monthly will also
I contain an elaborate article on the cul
| tivation of “upland rice” by a gentle-
I man in Middle Georgia who has given
the subject close attention.
The following dispatch was printed
iu yesterday’s Nashville American:
Atlanta, Ga., January 24.—Two
• men, without license,enticing negroes
!o go to Mississippi, were fined $l5O
• and costs each.
This must be a mistake. There i
jno law requiring a ‘license ’.Jja ent’wkJ
j negroes away. Nobodj’ cares how
i many negroes are induced to go to
Mississippi, or any other place. This
is a free country, and they are at
liberty to go where they when
they please, and stay as long as they
please.—Atlanta Post.
Hon. A. IT. Stephens, speaking of
[the check given to Col. Cole, in the
lease of the Central road, says that
the grandest project of the century
i for Southern prosperity has been
rruthlessly destroyed by a pack of
I Northern millionaires, who would
ispend one hundred million dollars
! any time rather than allow the South
to prosper mid become commercially
independent, and that aid and com
fort are afforded by venal Southern
; men, who would sell their country or
i principles any time for a mess of
I pottage.
j For sale or rent, one of the most
.conveniently located and pleasant
residences in Bcllton, containing ten
rooms, all plastered and in good con
: dition : large yard and garden ; a well
I of pure cold water, and outbuildings,
j Immediate possession will be given.
) For further particulars, address
Mrs. E. A. Daniel, Beilton, Ga.
; The impression lias gone out that I
have a copartner in the practice of
| medicine. I will here state that lam
[ on my own hook, as heretofore. Many
• thanks for past patronage, and hope
■ there will be no reason ror complaint)
in the future. Prescriptions filled at'
reasonable prices.
J. B. Dillard, M. D.
F U LT 0 N H OISE.
1 54 J Decatur street, thirty yards from 1
Car Shed, Atlanta,'Ga.
I Clean Beds. Goods Meals. Everything
New. Kaus $1 per day.
; A. A. HAMMETT.
A. J? SHAFFER. AL"l)„ |
P/IYSICIAX AXD SVKGEOK
GAINESVILLE, GA.
• CSI’ECIAL attention given to diseases I
i ► ’ cumiuon to women. I will guarantee a 1
rad.. al cure in all cas-sof Drousv after I
) examining patients. mayl-ly
ATirCLINAIuX -
proprietor
diliaixl House,
ATHENS, GA.
CL7’ Jtoartl, $2.00 per day. aprlM-tf 1
Special Notice.
WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, agree
to the following rates tor services
as specified, from which there will be n>
deviation except in charity practice :
Office Prescription so
Visit and Prescription in corporate
limits (day flo
Visit and Prescription in corporate
limits (night) $ 1 00
Visit and Prescription within one
mile (dav) i oo
Visit and Prescription within one
m le (night) 1 ,10
Mileage (day) 25
Mileage (night) SO
Obstetrical Cases islmpie) strict/jf
cagh............................. 5 00
Obstetrical Cases (protracted) strict.
IU cash 1000
Obstetrical Cases (instrumental)
Striet'y ..-ash 20 00
Examination with Speculum 2 00
Operation for Felon (office) I 00
Opening Abscess (Office) 10)
Bleeding office' 1 (»
Extracting Toeth (adult) .50
“ “ (dec du«u.~) 25
Gonorrhoea, Prescription, cash .... 500
Consultation within the corporate
limits 5 ix)
Consultat'on outside the corporate
limits io 00
The above charges do not include medi
cines.
Surgical Cases will be charged accord
ing to kind and amount of service.
(T7* Accounts due when the ease.’s dis
missed. D. M. BREAKER. M. D.
J. Ti DILLARD. M. D.
Bcllton, Ga., December IH. 1579.
>• <* h <* <1 ti 1 o
ATLANTA AND CHARLOTTE AIR LINE
RAILROAD.
SO. 1 —MAH. TR MX—XASTWARn.
Atlanta i.to p „i
Arrive at Bullion 5 27pm
NO. ‘J—MAIL TRAIN—WZSTWAnn.
Lente Charlotte 12.10 a <ll
Air.ve at B-lltnn 5.45 a m
NO. 3—OAV rASSEV.-.Klt -KASTWARO.
Leave Atlanta Luo a m
Art ve at Bellton G.. 50 a m
NO. 4—I>AV P ISSNNC.RK -WKsTWAIin.
Leave Charlotte 1042 am
Arr veal B-slltou 7.17 p m
NO. 5 — local rnZIUHT— t vstwaro.
Leave Atlanta 7.<C> a m
Arrive .it Bellton 12.30 p tn
NO. H— LOCAL FRRI.SHr—WZSTW ir.O.
Leave Central >1.50 p tn
Arrive at Beilton 12..36 a iw
G..1. Forkacrk. General Manager.
W. J. Hov.-rrox,
Genet al Passenger and Ticket Agent.
NOHTHEASTERN RAILROA D.
On and after Monday. October lith, 187 J,
trains on this Road will ran as follows,
dally, except Sunday :
Leave Athens 3 50 p tn
Arrive at Lula 6.J0 pua
Arrive at Atlanta 10:30 p m
Leave Aliauts 3.;4) p in
Leave Lulu 7:40 p ui
Arrive « A'hens 10:00 p tn
The above tr ims also connm te closely
at Lula with Northern bound trains on
A r Line Uailroad.
On Wednesdays and Saturdays the fol
lowing additiunsl ci*:n wdl be run:
Leave Athen* <> 45 a m
Arrive at Lula 9 45 a M
Leave Lula 9:20 a ui
Arrive at A liens 11:30 a ui
This train connects closely at Lula tur
Atlanta, mak ng the time le Atlanta only
"our hours an I forty minutes.
•1 M EnWAnne. Nne-r'ntendent.
THE WHITE
■ Sewing Machine
THE BEST OF AEE.
~~Unriua!cd in Appearance,
Unparalleled in Simplicity,
Unsurpassed in Construction,
Unprecedented in Popularity,
And Undisputed in the Broad Claim
or BUHO TH*
VERY BEST OI’I.HATINO
QVICKEST SEIJ.ING,
HANDSOMEST, ANB
Mort Perfect Sewing Machine
IN THK WORLD.
K
Ths grca t oepularlty o! the White Is the most coe
vincing tribute to its excellence and superiority
over other machines. and in submitting It to the
t-ado w e put it upon Its merits, and In no instance
has It err yet failed to satisfy any recommendation
In its faxir.
The demand forth* White has Increased to such
an extant that we are now compelled to turn eut
-A. Cexxxplwte GwerrCng- l^*rt t~lw
every tlxrwe xaJHx.-u.taa Axt
the 4-y to atijpply
tlxe -e~naj".4.l
Every machine Is warranted for 3 years, and
sold lor C'sh at liberal discounts, or upon easy
payments, to suit the convenience of customers.
M-AWSTS WASTES IM UMOCCOTID TEZSITI2T.
WHITE SEWImTmaCHINE CO.,
N 2 358 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohlo»
WM. 11. SIMPKINS,
ATTORNEY AT L A H',
HARMONY GROVE,
JACKSON COUNTY, GEORGIA.
It < ’AJ I ATTENTION given to
Collections and all other Business.
.ient> money never spent, but promptly
forwarded. aprl.-tim
~MASTIN XV. RIDEN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
AND
SOLICITOR OF CLAIMS,
HAINESVILLE, GA.
C ant'cli TIOI ' S in Northeal, f Georgia
•.spec' aftv“ , H“ ga “ ls, 1 tb< ' Un ‘ ,ed Hta ' e *
Notary fnr'tr if e 18 aBO a Commercial
aotai x tor Hall county. aug2l-tf
To ) per da ? at ho “»- Samples
St?£« CV,° rth *° free ' Address,
STiheoh 4 Co., Portland, Maine.