The North Georgian. (Gainesville, Ga.) 1877-18??, April 29, 1880, Image 2

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rVovtli Georgian, Bellton, Oa., April 20. 1880. FOR GOVERNOR, GEN. LUCIUS J. GARTRELL, OF FULTON COUNTY. Subject to the action of the Democratic Convention. To any person sending us six sub scribers and the money, the paper will be sent gratis one year. ■ ■■ I ■■ We arc happy to announce that our columns are crowded this week with advertisements, and we trust our read ers will enjoy the change. Brighten your glasses and peruse them care fully—there’s money in it. The coinage of 35,000,000 of gold bullion into five and ten dollar pieces, just ordered, will help meet the grow ing demand for hard money of small denominations. It will also give us inflation of the right sort. A cowhiding affray was what fur nished Friday’s sensation in Atlanta. It occurred between a Mr. Henry Ban Iman and a Mr. Sleinheimer, the former attempting to castigate the latter for posting him as a “D. 8.,” which being interpreted means “dead beat.” Samuel R. Hoyle committed suicide in Los Angelos, Cal., on the 21st inst. He preferred death to imprisonment in the penitentiary, and shot himself through the heart with a pistol. His remains will be brought to Atlanta for burial. We deeply sympathize with his aged mother, wife and chil dren. The Convention of National Labor Men and Greenbackers will meet at Chicago, on the 9th of June, a few days after the Republican Convention will have adjourned. Members of the Labor Greenback party now assert that their organization will put a ticket up to stay, independent of any other convention. A heavy storm passed over Macon, Miss., on Monday last, blowing away twenty-two houses, including the Mo bile and Ohio railroad machine shops, round house, depot, •telegraph office and master mechanic’s office. Sixteen ears were blown from the track, and seventeen persons were killed and twenty-two wounded. The loss by the recent forest fires in New Jersey is reported to be very heavy. The total amount of land burned over was six hundred square miles. This land was in several in stances worth 81,000 an acre, while even the pine lands were valued nt 3100 an acre. The total loss will not fall below 336,000.000. — ■ ♦ -• William Weaver, whom James M. Jolly charged with the murder of Miss Victoria Norris, was acquitted and released on Thursday last. Jolly was the only witness against him,and his testimony broke down. Jolly him self is now held to answer for the crime, and little doubt is expressed as to bls being the only person concerned in the murder. The Gordon-Stephens war is now well under way. It is purely per sonal. It in no way concerns the welfare of the people of Georgia. It is altogether profitless. It will dis tract the people of Georgia to no pur pose. Private controversies should be fought, out in private. Besides all this, these gentlemen were not -sent to Washington to wage war on each other; and the fact is worthy of their consideration.—Macon Herald. ♦ Now-tt-days when a man of promi nence gets into trouble, they think the press has no earthly right to make public certain little crooked transactions, but these same men be lieve it perfectly right for those un fortunates who from excessive drink, or from some other causes, occupying n lower station in life, to have their misdoings shown up to the world We are conscientiously opposed to such discriminations.—Atlanta Sun day Phonograph. The gold fever is spreading, espe cially in White county. The Lumsden Bros., at Nacoochee, have taken out 2,700 pennyweights in nuggets from eighty square feet of earth at a total expense of sixty-live dollars. From a pocket thirty inches square they have gathered 212 pennyweights in small nuggets. Another party that strut k the same bed took out, before they began to clean up, a nugget weighing 10f> pennyweights, and several others not quite as heavy. The Americus Republican is not fully advised as to the extent of the opposition to Gov. Colquitt in other seclions of the State, but is free to say that there is a great deal in that section. It knows of none who are enthusiastic in his support. It verv much tears that it the Governor ami his friends persist in forcing him on the people. Georgia will soon be in about the same political muss as Vir ginia. His enthusiastic supporters in this section are tew auu tar between. OUR GRAND OLD STATE. The rapid progress of our noble old commonwealth is attracting the notice and eliciting the generous congratula tions of the press of our sister States. The Montgomery Advertiser says: “Our sister State across the Chatta hoochee is, we are glad to say, in a prosperous condition. With a quarter of a million dollars in her treasury above all demands, with which she is buying up and retiring some of her four per cent bonds, and with an in telligent and industrious population, she is in a fairway to ‘wax fat and kick,’ so to speak. We are proud of her prosperity. We have a love for the good old State, and take genuine pleasure in noting any evidence of her rising fortunes. Like all the other Southern States, Georgia had her period of trial and tribulation, when a Bullock and his herd roamed over her pastures and throve on her substance. But she was one of the first States to throw off the foul brood and assert her right to be governed by the honesty and intelligence of her own people. Now, thanks to good government, she has her head above water, and evidently means to keep it there. “And yet Georgia pays about three times as much interest every year as Alabama does. Not only is her debt greater than ours, but she pays a higher rate of interest than we do on the greater part of that debt But she derives a very considerable revenue from railroads, and hence, though her debt is larger and her rate of interest higher, yet her greater sources of revenue enables her to get along with a lower rate of taxation than is collected in this State. Nevertheless, we do not envy her good fortune. On the contrary, we heartily wish her a continuance and an increase of it.” The following is an extract from a Lawrenceville (Gwinnett county) let ter to the Brunswick Seaport Appeal: “The. only candidate for Gubernatorial honors who is seriously mentioned in this section of Georgia, is Gen. L. J. Gartrell, of Atlanta. The feeling is growing that the Independents and Republicans together may try to hatch up some mischief, and a man of vigorous mental power, great energy and wide spread popularity, will be needed to meet the emergency.— Everybody in Georgia is well aware that General Gartrell has all these requisites. He is an uncompromising Democrat, and yet has mingled so little in politics since the war, that he cannot be accused of belonging to any ‘ring.’ The Independents could make no headway against such a man, and if he found it necessary to take the stump, he would either overwhelm or conciliate the opposition. This great laWycr is one of the master minds of Georgia, and if the people of this section have their way he will be our next Governor beyond a doubt. An Atlanta correspondent, signing himself'A. B.,’in a communication to the Augusta Chronicle and Con stitutionalist. says: “I hear a good deal of speculation about the next Governorship, and I think that I can forecast the action of three counties through which 1 passed to-day—Ful ton, DeKalb and Rockdale now stand almost solid for Gen. Gartrell. The General, like most men of really great abilities, knows how to win friends, and when be once does it he retains their friendship. Os course 1 venture no predictions as to the result of the cam] aign, but Gen. Gartrell’s patriotism, integrity and competency are so widely known—(he man him self so universally popular, and his fitness to successfully combat Inde pendenlism and Radicalism so gen erally conceded, that the impression now rests upon my mind that he will be the next Governor of Georgia. —■ » ♦ - ■— ■ "■ The Republican factions arc too busy now in manufacturing lies about each other and their candidates to in dulge in the wholesale manufacture of Southern outrages on the colored brethren. When they get through quarrelling among themselves as to who shall be nearest the throne in dividing the spoils, and the decks are cleared for action against their com mon opponents, we shall get whole broadsides at a time, loaded with horrid murders, riots, bloodshed, rapine, slow torture, burning at the stake, skinning alive and swallowing whole. This io. but the lull before the storm. If Grant is nominated it will become necessary to run the out rage mill on a higher pressure than ever before, and the atmosphere will be murky with the smoke of burning blood.—Maine Standard. Democratic sentiment on the Presi dential que.'tion at Washington city is j calm and serene, according to the New [York Herald’s correspondent. The j Democratic Congressmen are said to i believe that Mr. Tilden is out of the race; that the Cincinnati Convention I will act wisely, and that the Chicago Covention will blunder. Dalton was visited by a severe storm Monday night last, and several houses in the place won ’unroofed. SIGNIFICANT UTTERANCES. State Senator John C. Jacobs, of Brooklyn, permanent President of the regular New York Democratic State Convention, and who has been chosen one of the delegates at large to the Democratic National Conven tion, has heretofore been a staunch supporter of Mr. Tilden, and enjoyed intimate relations with him; hence considerable significance attaches to some remarks made by Mr. Jacobs in i the New York Senate, Thursday last, 1 in a colloquy with Senator Woodin,, Republican. Mr. Jacobs said: “The Republican majority in the Senate need not look for one moment to Democratic division this fall, if it is necessary to succeed without Mr. Tilden. The Democracy of this State can get along without Mr. Tilden, and the Democracy of the country can get along without him, and if we find it policy to nominate somebody else, somebody else will be nomi nated, because we mean to win in this election. We would sooner take a very good Republican who loves < his country better than he does his party, and make him President, than submit to the corruptions and abuses of the existing government. “The Senator says I have declared myself an anti-Tilden man. If I am an anti-Tilden man it is because I do not think he can be elected, and be cause I think too much of my country, even with the veneration and love I entertain for Mr. Tilden, to support a hopeless candidacy. Ido not believe for a single moment that Mr. Tilden will be a candidate unless he thinks lie can be elected, and I think I can say for the delegation chosen to repre sent the Democracy of the State at Cincinnati, that a large majority will oppose the nomination of any man that they think cannot be elected. Now. you gentlemen who wear the collar—is that the name?—that wear the collar of Mr. Conkling, take no tice from us of the minority that the harmonized Democracy are on hand; that they will meet the common enemy, and meet him with a good man, a noble leader, a true patriot, a man devoted to the best interests of the country, and that they will elect him, and that when hey have elected him, he will take bis place at the head of the government at Washington. “My own individual opinion to-day is that Tilden is not the strongest man, but if the Convention think he is, the Democracy will support him.” - - 1 * It is not often that we find in a Northern journal so frank an admis sion as that contained in a recent declaration of the Philadelphia Times to the effect that the ex- Coiifcderuto Generals in Congress is cause not for alarm but for congratu lation. “The North,” adds the Times, “has, most unfortunately, cast her sol diers to the rear for partisan managers who accepted the profits without the dangers of war, and the revolutionary debates in both Houses painfully re minds us of the blunder every week.” All the outcry about “Rebel Briga diers” has simply been for effect, as is proven by the fact that the Repub licans have welcomed with open arms the few ex-Confederate* who have gone over to them.—Sav. News. ■ - In the Executive session of the Senate, Friday afternoon, Mr. Hill, of Georgia, made n motion to remove the injunction of secrecy from the Executive proceedings upon the nom ination of Simmons to be a census supervisor in Georgia. The Star says Senator Hill made a long speech upon that occasion in favor of the confirma tion of Simmons, in the course of which he spoke in very complimentary term of thv Independents in Georgia. The supposition is that, he wanted to give this speech circulation with tin' view of commending himself to the Inde pendents aiul gaining their support. His motion was beaten, however, as nearly all the Democrats and a num ber of Republicans voted against it. Bro. Stone, of the Athens Chronicle, who was in town, one day last week, says : “We spent a few pleasant hours w iih some of our friends in Bellton the other day. * • • The hotel kept by ‘mine host’ Thrasher is one of the I best eating houses on the Air Line I Road, and the proverbial geniality of i ‘Cousin John’ is not greater than that of ‘Bart.’ We formed a number of pleasant acquaintances, among whom we may mention Rev. A. W. (juil lian, the preacher in charge of Bell ton circuit. He is an old Atlanta typo, who has laid aside the ‘shooting ' stick’ to engage in the great work of ■ the Master. We were glad to learn j that he is much beloved by the people ! in his work.” Brother John Blats, of the North' Georgian, publishes one of the best ! and most level headed little papers 1 in Georgia, and it Banks county don't pay him enough in subscription and advertising to sustain it they are sure to regret it in future. Gentlemen, you never will get a better paper for the same amount of money and under the ■ same circumstances while you live. ■ Gainesville Southron. NEWS ITEMS. New York city has four hundred and ninety-seven churches. Congress is still in session fixing up the Presidential campaign. The wheat crop is reported good in ■ some portions of the State. i Memorial day was generally ob , served throughout the State. The corporators of the Clayton Rail- I road will meet in Athens on the 25th ' of May. It is now thought that the census ' enumerators will not make over three dollars per day. There will be a general Sunday school celebration all over the State, on the first of May. The annual meeting of the Georgia Press Association will be held at Cuthbert, on Wednesday, May 12th. The Georgia Radical delegates to the Chicago Convention, stand eight for Grant, ten for Blaine and the oth ' era for Sherman. Thos. Wall, who robbed the South ern Express, twelve years ago, was tried “in New Orleans last week and 1 ■ convicted. He was brought back from ' Australia. The Elberton Gazette, in speaking of Cid. Foreacre, says “as a railroad man be is unexcelled anywhere.”. The Gazette never printed a more , truthful .sentence. It is reported that the Atlanta syn dicate. who ventured to speculate in Louisville and Nashville Railroad stock, lost to the tune of SIOO.tMH). by i the st<s:k dropping from 159 to 115. j Gen. Joe Johnston has never liked Congressional life, and has declined a re-nomin.n'ion. He says he is not adapted for the position. How few men exhibit an equal modesty ami candor. Os the 1 I,(XX) Methodist Episcopal ; ministers in this country, there are. according to “The Methodist," only eleven who have blots on their names, and three of these have been con demned nt justly. There is a one-armed woman living in Gordon county, who very recently gave birth to four children, and only a year ago the same woman gave birth Io three children. We suppose thAiusband has concluded it is about time to ‘passaround the hat.’—Cedar-i town A vertiser. For sale or rent, one of the most conveniently located and pleasant residences in Bellton. containing ten rooms, all plastered and in good con-■ diiion : large yard and garden ; a Well of pure cold water, and outbuildings. Immediate possession will be given. For further particulars, address Mrs. E. A. Daniel. Bellton. Ga. x oqr I <b ic. from my p’are. n-*.ir O-l|*. i*’ Ville G.i.. on th** night. «»f the I.Sth o April. IRSn. out* Lav horse, 9 nr 10 years old. in ‘h n older, b'aze <«r *tar in* fore li- ad. while bind feet, sore w n-lgal’s an-i shavrd with harness. A’*o <m<* chestnut sorrel mire, in or 12 years <>UL spu in built. blaze in the face, mane on the left side and sore gear marks. A libeial reward will be pa’d for their dvhverv, or any m ormatton chit w.ll lead to their rec<»v-*rv. JAMES PINKSTON. :ipi2f»-rf Gillsville, C, » <j. Sv. uiTirctiiiL fJHIE PRONOUNGED LEADER IN * LOW PRICES in G i n-*<v h». t th- I only Merchant w!c» went to N.-»v York th s season to; | SEEING AND SE.VMER GOODS. , Ihs Stock, which is twice that of anv I ot his pievmu*- purcba-es. is now n li >7 /ors.s/-O/;A’/.’Oo.Vs, |, u ,. T1 „ ••<ju.il in th s seetion. His Stock o ' Dress (»<"»<i \ White G -<»<ls. i'nibro d r;es. L.i --< vs. ( orsets. Ribbons. H«»sirrv. Glnv>*< Z- phyrs. S.lk Tics. Er - . is <ll that cou'd i be desired by the most fastidious, and h < purrs on <*a h and ev<»rv artie <• guaran l- ed ns l<*w a* the same goods ran be bought m any c ty in G-*.>rgi i. II > .-lock ot Mch.vand Boy s Clothing ■s the :»ig<-5t an-l mo t varied in Ga n- - vide. Men's Suits tangin- from S ’ to •CO. il.s stock ot Gent’s, Lnd os’ and <’hil <lien s Shoes, Slippers, E:c . Etc., is un surpassed in any market—all styles an i ■nades at the very Lowest Prices. He has also the most complete line of Straw and Fur Hats for Gents anti Boys, and pt* t y Hats for young men. MILLINER K DERA RTMENT. He has opened in connection w th h s Dry Goods a First-ria.* Mdlinerv De partment. under the management of M 5 s S!arv Headen, a lady ofnnqne.- mable ta-te. and who has ba<l larg.» experience m the larger cititm. In this department is to be found i he largest stock of MH in tv Goods—Hats. Bonnets, Flowers, Ribbon* . ami Hat Trimmings anywhere this « de ! of Baltimore, and a uniform line of Low Prices on everything sold. i A visifto th.s sterling house will repav you. Good goods, low prices, qu ck sales, small profits and polite attention to all i are some ot the standing rule* of ; apr2!»-2m c. w DUPRE. First Excursion. laitOM Lula to Athens and return, on Saturday, May Bth, leaving Lula at I h o’clock and arriving in Athein m 1! ;M ; Leave Athens at 3:.50. Fare tor the round ' trip 51 from all points north of H.irnionv Grove—all points below 75c, Good eider will he preserved. W. TV. Hol’SK. A. J. SHAEFER. ALT)? RHYSICIAN AND SII.T IE IN GAINESVILLE. GA. SPECIAL attention given to diseases ► ~ common to women. [ will guarantee a radual cure in all ci -sot Drops' art. r examining patients. apu;ls-l» DAVID B. DOUGHERTY, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN 0111 M, IIVI tlltlßS, SHOES, Notions, Etc., Etc. MV STOCK IS VERY COMPLETE, and by far the largest that I have ever oflend. Every avalahle space in my h<»u-c is tilled to its ut trap ic ’v. and in order that yon may conceive a i idea as to the immensity of mv S ock, I will g v•» the dimension* of my stere—it ii» f’fty-five feet wide by two hundred and forty-ti e feet deep. No Dry Goods House South, not excepting Ba’tim re. compares with t in s : z<*. J c'aim to carry the Largest Stock in niv Ine South. My stock of Goods i* immense, including everything m th** new combinations—P»»r< : an E Teets. 8.-<- cade. Satin and Silk Mixtures, ami Evening Silk-« and Sat : ns. A great var etv of Black, Colored and Trimming Silk*. I ke.-p nothing in Black ami Colored Dress Silks but the best makes known to the trad *. My past fifteen years’ experience ; n the Who’e-«ale an 1 beinj th » buyer for the old house of A’ilvey Dougherfv. fam larized me with first hml< o i a l Goods in my line. I have a separate Wholesale Depart n- nt from mv Beta I. M- are bought for this Department by solid packages, for c.ish, and front this r Beta iis supplied. My enormous sa'e.s warran* me in selling closa. I h.ivo I i.ilt in iarge trade under tftv one pr-cv system and short orndt phi t. « am not afraid to compare Good* or Prices, i’lease call and exa nine my Sto<*’c, or send for sample**, and they will he promptly forwarded to you fr«*o of eh irg.». CARD FROM J. P. ECHOLS. In reply t<» the cormnnni••ntion on tlie vase of J. S. Williams, for bigamy. I have this to say —the pt isoner was brought before m»‘. and I thnii 'ht the prosecutor h id proof to convict him : ' but he had no proof hut some letters and one U-letrram, and he :t*kcd me if j I would take them as evidence, ami I said I would not. ami I ruled them out, as I did not regard them is bind ing testimony; and under the eir<um slatievs I discharged th«‘ prisoner to save the couuty a large expense; and I deny that I begged the prosecutor j to turn the defetid int loose; I did not ■ say that it was no harm to marry ' often. There are men in Bellton J who try to he mighty smart. If they ; would Just look at themselves and j try to rule .adultery out of Bellton., they would do better, and perhaps let ? others alone. J. P. Echols. Bellton. Ga.. April 21. 1880. flMilS PAl’t’R ma be Dmn-i <hi ti •• I I Gf.o P. Rowki.l &•. Co s NeW'papr- Ai'.vcitimig Bureau. U 0 Spruce * where advertising contracts ma. be niivk | for it in New York. —— .- - I Wa ii i oil To :ntro<lur<* m every county in the United State* THE HISTORY OE THE IHRLE. Th*- best work to soil that ha* ever lw.-n ' pub i.-h'-d Splendid Premium to cvcry MibM-ribiT. For ciieular. and t. nu.-a,. , ply ai one. The Itenrr Bill Pi.hli.hinjr Co., 41.43 and 4., Shrlncket. Si., N..; w rh. th - clinard. ritopitiETon | louse, .4 TH E N S , (I .1 . Ii / lloanl, <..■< " |h*i day. apr24 ts ADMIXIS7 /: I TOR'S SALE. ! -If.oh ua. Banks Cocstv. By virtue of an order of th.' Court ot I Ordinary of -n .1 eouniy, will b-- sold, on I th*- first Tueeday n M.-iv. |.ss<i. before Ih. ■ Court-house door, in Homer, with i> th- J lawful Ituurso- sa-e. the land belonging ! •■> the relate ot Mary Tapp, deeeasml. a l | joining the land of Job Hill. John J. J 'iheppatd and others, couta ning IXI> acres I mon- or less, with about .Oa.-res in <m:t ! vmtioii—lire remainder in old field p-m --ai,d nr g oal mre.-t. Sold fur the ben.-iit . iif tin- heirs and creditors. Terms i-a h M< M X. HAI.’UY Adtu’r de bonis non ot Mary Tapp, rle. ’tl One Hun ?lred Lots TO GIVE AWAY. • ''ONE AND LIVE IN RELLTON. 1 W il.l, GIV E to any good fatni’v or 4 person a boautifiJ town lot, who w I -«‘trle here ami put on th*- lot improv*. ; u.-nts to the amount of two handled ami fifty dollars. Conn- and look nutrtTi-tf M. BCICE. Bradley’s Catarrh !S > 17 1C ic I"” JAS been used in private practice 1 more than four years, and has not failed to C( HE in a single instance. J am a.ready receiving orders for mv .‘''nnff from persons atHieted with thia universal scourge O' the human race—some of them ; from Ph; adelphia—where cures have been [ performed by my remedy, upon eases of I long standing, defying the skill of the ; most learned aud scientific physicians. Price—per box. postpaid. Address, DR. H. S. BRADLEY. nmr2.-i-tf Gainesville. Ga. I > <’‘iis«4<>ii ZXolico. J Hie fit h day of March, IS7.S. Congress ' ' passed an act which gives a pi rision to all soldiers of the war of 1812. who served 14 days, or were in any en*'age ment. aud to the surviving widows of such soldiers, no matter when married. Proof of loyalty not required. Also restoring to the Pension Rolls the names of all persons now surviving who wen- pensioners for service in the war of 1812. or any of the Indian wars, whoso names were stricken from the Pension Kulls at commencement of the late war. Proof of loyal tv not r«*q-uire<l. I am provided with the necessary blanks and w.ll give spec al attention to these M. \V BIDEN. Attorney at Law and Claim Agent, aug-l-tf Gainesville, Ga. to &•>( | P‘ r home. Sample wn r »h v. f r eA Address' Stinson £ Co*. Portland. Maine. <• 11 O <1 !1 1 O ATLANTA AX B C!I VRLri’TE AIR LINK - RAILROAD. xn ’-Mill. TRUV-yVTWARn. ; Leave A •’hill ’:i . . p m At v m BvUtoii p m NO. 2—5! \H. TftttN*—WKNTM Alfn. ■ Leave charlotte 12.10 am i Arrive at B-lbon Vtf • m NO. i—I>IV !*A>*i:n-iKK -iCWr.YKKO. Leave .Atlanta. L'«o a m .Arrive at Bellton <».50 a ni Ml. 4 -DAV PA*sK N'iEU WT> TW HID. I.l* IVC »’ha:*o :« ..!o.4’:i Anive at Be :10-i 7. <7 p i , yo. .i— n Ah r hkh.l! r—v<TW mid*. I.e o .It n * 7.U*i ain , Arrive al Be it 'll :2.*>u p i No. •» - L<» IL I Kt: I .11T W»-:sT W». * T.’-avt* C'«u ■ ra: ..... ... p m Arrive at FLIBon ... ■’.'<s mi i G. .L Fore v:bk. Gmoral Manager. W. .1. H-ir ’•ton. i Gene*al Pas ciiger m*i Ticket Agent. NORTHEASTERN RAILROAD. | i»n and after Mo-iday October tkh. 1«7!», •ra n* on this Road will run as follows, ' I < ; .lv. except Hund <y ; I Leave .Vh-IM. ... .’ ’’1.71 P I i krr vc a Ln i 2*» p m i Arrive at Al'in.a p m 1 I.eave A’lania. .... ».4) p~i I Leave Lula 7:4 • p in j kn ve a A he in 10.0(> p m | The above t»ain< al o p-otiiircls clos v i it Lula with ?Nortl»crn bou el trans on , Vr L ne. B iilr » id. <>n We.lne-««|:ivx rind Saturdays the fol o*m ahi on J tra-n will be run: j Leave Ath n • i> 45 a in kri.veat Lu;a Ki4s a m ' L'-avc Lula U;2O a a • kn.ve at A h**im 11:*V) a in This tra n c.oniert< ei<».<«*ly a' Lula for | \t mtn. mak ng the time r<» Atlanta only f -ur hour- and <«>rtv minutes. J M Edwards, Suporintendent. The white SEWING MACHINE THE BEST OF AXX. Unrivaled in Appearance, Unparalitileil in Simplicity, Unsurpassed in Construction, Unprecedented in Popularity, And Undisputed in the Broad Claim or etma th. V323LV BEST 01-EIiATIXQ QUICKEST SEIXING, ANI> licst Perfect Sewing Machine IN THE WORLD. The grci I popularity ot lh« White l> the rnnt eoe- ■ Jncing tribute to Its eaceltenc. end superiority jver other machines, and In submitting It to the ' .rade we put It upon Its merits, and in no Instants aaiiteirryetfalted to satfsty sm reconumnoaUon •n Its tarot. The demand for the White has Increased to such I an talent that we are now eomp.llad to torn out ! Complete Stertrlsag- every tlareo xaJ.xxvi.toa lax I txxc <3.ay to axxppljr , tlxj dLama.xaci.l i i Every machine Is warranted for 8 years, and I Sold for C'Sh at liberal discounts, or upon easy payments, to suit the convenience ot customers. wajz«s wactsd nr chcxvpied tiseitcit. WHITE SEWING-MACHINE CO.. No 3fiß Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio MASTIX W. RIIVIEN, ATTORNE FATLA IF A N' D SOLICITOR OF CLAIMS, GAINESVILLE, GA. ('I<>LLE<’TIONS in Northeast Georg’a and I'laini* against th* Un tod St ites a specialty He i* also a <’oinnvrcial : Notary for B ill county. aug2l-tf L. J. GARTRELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ATLANTA, GA. | I I< ‘ES in the United State* <’ir 'l 4 Ci! 11 J 1 ’ 1 11’ 1 1> str ict Court* at Atlanta, J A ■'’Jpren'.e and Superior Coarts of th* State. marlo-kf