Newspaper Page Text
jNortli Georgian
hei.lton, g.i., .may a;, tnßi.
JOHNT. WILSON,'JR Editor.
tit* T o mqt ponon 9cwlii>g u* or mibiwri
ern mid THE MONEY, the paper will be
•rd yratu one year. We want the Co-oper
ativn o/ every yood citizen ofthUind adjoin
ng Countie* to help meeU our tubm ription
»t. If you are imerented u*. the wel fare of
iu runty, patronize the Georgian, a* it la
•v* iricvwmfhf for Vour advancement. _cff
Anderson Jones, who murdered his
employer at Augusta, Ga., some time
ago, is to be hanged on the 3d of June.
The more vineyards are destoyed
in France the greaterthe export of
wine from the country—a conundrum
for the curious.
The products es Bessemer steel in
the United States in 1880 was 1,074,26
tons. Our country now leads all nations
in tliis field
Nearly nineteen million feet of tim
ber were received nt Darien Ga.’ last
week, and forty-seven vessels are in
port to carry it and other products off -
A colony of eighty-four persons at
St. Peter, Minn., is composed of one
woman and herchildren grandchildren
and great-grandchildren, with their
husbands and wives.
Ohs. Fisk, a groom of six days,
while spending his honey moon at a
hotel at Knoxville, stole SBSO from
S. B. Catlett; theft was discovered,
tuc money recovered and Fisk jailed.
Work will commence this week on
Atlanta, new grain elevate* $25,000
capacity very large; will contain a 75
horse power Corliss engine
Specimens of fossil woods anp lig
nite aioreporthd to eave'been brought
to the surface from a debth of 191 feet
while boring an artesian well at Gal
veston, Texas.
The oldest postmaster in the union
is Edward. Stapler of Sandy Springs,
/fount gomery count, Md lie oasheld
that office fifty year, and has been
under eighteen Postmaster Generals |
lie is 87 years old, and stll lives in
the same house in which he was I
born
An engine ran over the pody of;
Houston l.emery, an infant nearly !
two years ot age, at Montgomery,
completely serving it. The mother
whfl witnessed it, fainted when she
saw the wheel strike her child, and is |
now crazed with grief.
'The Sparta Ishmaclite says; ‘.The
wnelth of a State cannot be judge
by the numbers of bales of cotton
that its planters produce. Some peo
ple in Georgia plunge heodlong into'
debt, to the extent of twelve or fif
teen hundred dollars, tor the privi
lege of raising the worth of a thou*- j
and dollars in cotton. We suppose i
this is done because ,cotton is king.’” |
11 has lately been suggested that
(jvebeik might be made an iron mau
faettuiiig city, ow ing to the vicinity
of the iron mines of St- Tito and Bale
St. Paul, at which pice the ore has
hitherto heed smelted just as taken
from the mines. This necessitated
lli.» transport from the city of a vast
quantity of coal. Butliow it is pro-|
posed to bring the furnace to the city,
ami carry the ore thither to the fuel
instead ot the reverse, thus reduction
the cost of preparing the metal for’
the market in the sharp of pig iron.
►
In Oregon no mpn is alowed to
take a drink at public bar without
lirsr taking out a $5 1 incense, and the
newspaper publish list from time to
time ofthc men who have obtained li
cense. It is a penal offense tor a sa
loon-keeper th sell to a man unpro
vided with a license, in consebuence
of wqieh w hen a man wants a drink
he tries to overcome the pangs i f a
gnawing appetite by taking a calm
wal among the soughing pines, be
hind one of which he finds a quart
bottle—a man approaches and horror
a dollar. Heap of ways to choke a
dog besides dqueexiug his tail.
On Wednesday last s telegaein was
sent from San Francisco to Boston,
informing .Vr, M. 11. DeYoung, edi
tor of the San Francisco Chronicle, of
the dangerous illness of his mother.
Mr. DeYoung immediately started
westward and telegraphed Frida.C
from Detroit the Chicago fora special
train woieli would reach Omaha
in time to catch the overland train,
which stmts from the latter place at
noon. Mr. T. .1. Portter, Genual
Manager of the Chicago. Burlington
and Quincy Railroad, placed his spec
vial cor at Mr. DeYour.g's disposiai
Fhe special reached Council Bluffs at
eleven o'clock Friday morning. The
actual riming time for the distance of
491 miles was twelve hours and twen
four minuets. The last three hun
dre»l miles were mace by oue engine.
’1 hi- is rerarded :i« rcniaikahle time.
Ex-Senator Gordon of Georgia says !
that he has been i t the North a great
poal since the war and has noticed .
more interest in the South in the past
six months than in the ten years be
fore. “It looks a« if every man you
nice is anxious to make an invest- i
ment in some Southern industry or
property, or is willing to be showned
that there is a good thing down there.”
The New Orleans Picayune says
that ther* lias been a marked change
in the drift of cotton this seaso, and
the tendency lias been southward. The
erod has been augmented over eleven j
per cent., yet the quanity of cotton car- ,
rted over land has decreased 100,00
bales from the figures of last year to
' correspond.ng dale. The principle de
crease in this direction has been at
St. Louis, where there has been 99,000
bales ices cotton handled II an last
year. She shipments through Louis
ville have also fallen off 50,000 bales.
According to official account the
total production of spiiits in France
in 1889 was 1,581,068 hectolittres, ex
ceeding the quanity in 1879 by 93,189
hectolitres, and dresenting an exdess
of 35,169 hectolitres on the average
production rs the last ten years. The
various substance used ir. the manu
factory’ oavc by no means contributed
in the same propotlins in successive
years. The production frain wine
and cider has considerably diminish- '
cd. The manufacture from farina
seous substance, has for many years
considerbly progressed, nearly reach
ing the level of (he production es
spirit from beets. The neutral spir
its have been intreiisiugly used in the
last three or four years in the manu
factory of foctiouous wines so make
up the peficit o natural wines.
Clinirmae flswell, of the Republican
National Committee, has issued u cir
cular, inviting expressions of opinion
from Republican throughout the coun
try in in regard to the best rules to be
rules to be adopted for electing dele
gules to the next National Convei7-
tion in 1884. The last National Con
ventional required the National Com
mittee to prescribe and announce
rules on this subject within twelve
months from thme, 1880,and, in March
last, the whole matter was rest red to
a sub-committee,consisting of William
E. Chandler, of New Hampshire;
Thom ss (,'■ I’latt.ofNew York: .John
M. Borbes, < f Massac],usatts; John
M. Martin, of Kansas, and Chauncey
I. Filley, of Missoury. Mr. Jewell
gives notice that the suggestion de
sired will be rccrived by him at Hart
ford, Connecticut or by any member
of the sub-cnmmittec.
A history almost as sad and roman
tic as that of Romeo and Juliet is at
tached to Green .Mount, the wi ll
known cemetery at Baltimore, Md. '
The properly was once owned be Oli
ver, a wealthy Englsh merchant, his
only ehilda beautiful girl of twenty,
was loved by a young man wose only
tin Illness to become her husband la; •
in the fact that a personal feud cxis- j
ted botwsen him and the girl’s father. I
They met clandestinely and planned ,
an elopement. The father found it
out, and gave order to I.is servant to;
patrol the ground by night ami shoot
all trespassers. Disguise iu man's
clothing the girl attempt to escape,
and was shot dead at the gate. Grief
strieked her father erected a mauso
leum npon the spot, and deeded the
j entire properly lor a cemetery
The Marietta Journal, under the
caption. “A Romantic Marrige.’’gives !
the following; “Ea>ly Wednosdav
morning there appeared on our Street - ,
a rustic couple desireing to be united
in double blessedness. The mother of
the girl accompanied them, and seem
ed to be engineering the allair. The
young man was shoeless hatless and
moneyless. A large black patch
adorned the knee of uis bridal pants 1
J/e was otherwise plainly dressed
likewise his intended bride. He said
his age was nearly nineteen year,*, >
but his size ami physiogr.omv indica- i
that he had not seen over sixteen
summers. The girl looked to be
about twenty-three years old ami ,
seemed eagar for the nuptial. Her |'
mother bought the license, ami sever-,'
al citizens consolid lied their nickels:
ami bought the young man a hat ami
j a pair of shoes. It seems the girl had i
stolen tne young man from Mr. Asa I
, Darby 's house at night and eloped i
with the boy, and the boy deemed it •
j his bouden duty to succumb. After P
several unsuccessful attempt to get
‘ some one to’ieiforin toe marriage cer- i
, cmony, toey finally persuaded Rev.
J. II Harris to tj o toe knot, which;
was w itness by quite a crowd nt the
G lerk’s ofliee at the court house, and '
then and there I rial, Evhnsand kirah
E. cantreH were made husbrud and ,
wife. They reside on Mr ysa Darby's
farm, seven miles west >f Marietta''
—
The finest h i efoil table cloth in
North Ga at J. H. Huggin's Lula
store.
SHERIFF SAj.ES FOR JUNE.
W ill be sold. -the Court House
i uoor. in tite town of Homer, during the
legal ht'ur* sale, on the first Tueadjay
jin Jmie next, the foliowni’' propt-rtv,
One nrnth un*levided interest in One
1 Hundred and Twenty-five acres of im
proved land in said County, on Little
: Nails creek, in said count} . whorvon < ai
ry .Jordan now resides. Adjoining lands
ot the estate of F. G. M«>ss, Marion Jor
dan, Leonard l)ait»»u and others, and one
undivided ninth interest in two hundred
acres of unimproved land in said coun
ty adjoining lands of Thomas .Jordan.
Bishop Lawrence and others, all the
lands belonging to the estate of Francis
Jordan. L< vied on with an execution i>-
: sued from the Superior Court of Banks
; foiinfv. again»t A. J. Jordan, in f;Aor of
J. 15. Jordan, administratrix* of J. it.
1 Jordan. Lev,cd on as rhe property ol A.
!J. Jordan. Carrie Jordan now in po.> s» -y
j sion. Property pointed out by A. C.
j Moss, attornev
ALSO,
at the same time and place, the
whole interest m the r» mainder ol »S. C.
Smith, in a tract of laud lying on die
Hudson r ver in said county, containing
three hundred acres, more »»r ieHfl, on
the Hudson lliver in sad county,
on w hiuh Elizabeth Smit:i now re.ddv?,
and has a life estate in said lauds. Saiu
interest in remainder of 5. (’. Smith, will
be sold subject to th< life estate of Eliza
beth Smith, now in poss. ssion, contain
ing Three Hundred acres more or less,
adjoining lands of W. C, Cha nbers,
John It. Chambers, AV. G. Scales, and
others, levied on as the property of S
C. Smith, to satisfy a ij*’a issued from the
Justices’ Court, <>i the JiJth, district G.
As. in favor of J. J. Findly ami Jas. M.
'fewery, against L. C. Smith, propertv
pointed out by A. ('. Moss, attorney, and
levy made retiired to me by L. P. Hardt, ■
L (I
ALSO,
at the sautA time and place, one undiv'.- i
ded fifth interest in <»nc Hundred and j
Forty acres, more or less, lying in said
county in th»- 207th district <r. M. adjoin
ing lands <>f J. A. Chandler. «»n tin* east,
Isaac ('handler, on the North and West,
and E. C. David ami James Wade on tin*
south. Known as the R. C. Nunu pbiee.
said propert} levied on to satisfy a liia i
issue*! fiotn the Justice court of 25.5th dis
trict G. M., Jackson county in favor of
Isaac < ’handler, against S. J. Barber, lev
ied on as ihe property of S. J. B.uher.
Levy made and returned to me by I). F.
Chandler. L. Property pointed out by
plaintilf, all the above parties have been
not ified in terms of the law.
A LSO,
;it the Manic time and place one red cow
about seven yai s old and calf aaouf
<• glit months old, levied on to satisfy a
fifa issued from the county court of El
bert county Ga., ih favor of J. P. Smith,
ami aga'nst D. C. Nelins. Levied on as
the property of D. < . Nelins. Property
pointed out by A. (’. Muss, Plaint:!! > at
t rnev.
May.Vfdß. E D. OWEN. Sheriff.
Gkoh<;ia, Banks Cocnty.
Notice is horepv given that, a petition
has been tiled in mv office auconlin o t.)
:m Act passed oy the General Assembly
of said Stale praying an Election tobe
he hl '»n the First Monday in July next,
by the qualified voters of said county,
upon the question of Fence or No Fence.
Said act was approved Amriist 2»»:h 1572.
‘This Api il J.O ISHI. T. F. HILL, Or.dy.
Geobgia- Banks County,
Will be let to the lowest bidder at pub
lic outcrv on the First Tnesdny in June.
’KKI, before th** < <»urt Home donr in
Homer : he bui’d'ng of a Bridge across
Middle Liver, known as theL’iie Rr <!_-< .
near Hcnrv Kagsdale. Speo'fieatious
and requirements on fi’e in mv Office.
may? t<l T. F. H ILL, OnPnary.
i.'Kontii\ Banks t ounty.
Whereas G. S. Martin >nnl»i - tn the
undersigned for letters of Gua;<liansh'p
ofthc p<»rsi us and ) ro; erty of Leo! < D
Fd" ird. W. Myrtie. F.. and Alexander
J ii. Martin, minor < hihlrcn ot G. S M »r
--! tin. deceased. These are th ’refere. to
require all persons com erned to file in
mv office, on or before tlm First Monday
in June next, their objection, ( f anv thev
have), to sa «’ app<»’ntnient. othciwise let
ter of Guard anxhip w II Im grant' d the
appl’cant. G ven umh r inv bind and
• •fficial signature. This Mav2d l-Sl.
! mays.4w. T. F. HILL. Ordinary.
GEORGIA • ' •; »
I G.S. Marfin, rpplies tome t r perma
' pent lett< «»f adinistration on the < state
of G.S. Mtin. Sr., deceased.
i Thereto’.' all persons interested are
; hereby n tified fl..it said letters will he
granted ro the applicant at the Jun •
term next of the C*'iirt of Ord : tiarv for
said county , to be bifid on the First Mon
day in said month, unless good cause to
the contrary be then shown.
may2-4w. T. F. H 1 LL, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, I■> \ \ k ' Cot ' i \
Hatt e Stephens applies to me for per
manent letters of administration on the
estate of .John Stephens, dec isefi.
I Then lore all persons conrrrm .l are
■ her* by notifie d that said h ttiis will L,«
1 granted to the applicant or some suitah.e
■nd proper person at the June term,
next, of the Court of Ordinary t.»r sa d
rountv to lie he’d on the First Monday
in said month.
may 2-4 w. T. F. 111 LL. Ordinary
GEORGIA, Banks Cot ntt.
\\ her* as. Me. M. N. Hardv. ad mini s
tiator ot Mary Tnpp. deceased applies t<»
me in due form for letters of dismission.
Ther. lore all persons interested will
t ike notice that letters of dismission
will bi i granted the applicant ot the Au
gust Term next, of the conn of Ordinal v i
, of >aid county, null ss good cause h«. th* n
hewn to the contrary. Tins May 2d,
u ayo-i’ni T. F. HILL, Ordinary.
G E<)R( JI \. Banks C<»t nty.
Mrs T. J. P< ikins. Guardian of Parth- -
'ilia Pei I. n> . pplies to the Court of Or ii- J
i nary of » d county, fur dismission
, from said Guardianship.
I Thentore all persoiix interesti d will!
j take iv.tice that letters of dismis
! .'ion wili be granted her at the July term. !
next, of the Court of Ordinary of said i
■ County, to he held on First Mondav of
I said month, unlessgood cause be shown j
1 to the contrary.
i apa2i‘-tdc. T. F. HILL, Ordinary.
11. 15. 1’123? 1? V ,
ATTORNEY AT LA
Gainesville, Ga.
Practices in Hall. Banks. Jackson
and adjoining counties. aprlO-ly
■’ " cek , >l2 a day at home easily
II •— ’ mad. costly outfit free. Address
_22 :l ' A * '*•' Al ’>-'lst-i. Maine.
ki’ni •sak:"'’
N s N , A
Cal', at J. H. Ilitggin’s Lula store,
and ico hi- nice let of Dress goods.
Richmond and Danville Railroad.
PASSEXGER DEPARMENT.
o
On and after .Vay 15th. 1861. Paaaenger Train Service on the Atlanta and
vnariotte Air-laae division of this road will be as follows.
f T y ai ’’ *'■ E x P re? * s . IU. S Fast Mail I Siwanee
jASTWARD. No. 43. No. 47. No. 49, j A ’mo’tion
A- B. C. i No. 21.
I. ve A:;xnta 400 A M .I:*.' p. M •;..<» pJI ! -,;o p>[
Arr. b:i wanec-T> 5:18 “ •• 4 :i7 .. .. .. .. - .<
■; ,p ,la jj <_ i; 45 “ “ bM “ “ y ; (w o a I
loecKi..-! “ *< : .. .. !010
- S-UI CJ. . .(4 “ j S;4(> « .< ..
“ Greinv’il.H I0.T8" “ (' JOd’O « .. i',7. . ,r
■‘ Sl.artan'-K !?:'.4 P. M. I ll ;40 • - ’;1 .. .. Z
“ Gastonia-L 2:30 “ “ ! 2:04 A. M 4‘7 •* ••
<r Charlotte-M 3J-5 “ I 3:1 J •• j a <. |
xvt.' r-.- ,■ • Mail, N. V. Express, t’. 8. Fast Mail, Suwqnee
WESTWARD No. 42. No 48. No Arhu't'n
J . No. 22. |
L’ve Charlotte-M ;2:.» p. ,q. p J ;!ll A u , r , I(1 x
'• Gastotr.a-b 1-7 “ •• ): ;o .. .< | j. J "" {
“ .spartani rg—K 3:50 “ “ 4,0.5 ** ♦. ■ * 5,; *. u
“ Greein *ile— H 5.07 “ “ .518 “ o 4’ 05 «. .. 1
“ Scm , a G fi-51 “ “ 7p » .< u 5.07 « « I
“ Toi-coa F 8.(11 “ “ 5.45 <• .< r.;W •• ’
“ Lula E !(:!(> “ “ <) ‘H “ >• -;« <. , 1
5,.-J, : 1 U ; ; ;h O .. 10:54 U .. s .-j .. .. 5.0 ’.V M J
Arr Atlanta | 12.05 A M p.’.’JO P. >f 1(IW ) .. « I .. ..
y—■■ .
< '<>11!!<»<•( i<>ll>{.
A with arriving trains of Georgia Central and A. A SV. P Railroads
B wdh arrivin’.* trains of GeorJa Central, A. Wl* and \V A Railroads,
t. huli arming trains of Georgia Railroad.
D with Lawrenceville Branch to and front Lawrenceville Ga
f. with Northeastern Railroad of Geor-i 1 to and from Alliens' Ga.
t with Elberton Air Line to ami from Elberton, Ga.
•'[ "u ‘ < olu l ' I nbia ’*»'! (sieeuville to and from Comlmnbia and Chari ston, SC
K w ith Spartanburg and Ashviiie. and Spartanbug, Union ami Columbia to
jindtrom Henderson ami Ashville, and Alston and ('olunibia.
xi "'h . h 7 t,;r ‘.‘"j lotion' Narrow 1. iag<- to and from Dallas and Chester.
M with (. C and A—C t—R A D and AT & O for all points West, North
and East. ’
X " Cn r ,,li,, . ;l Utvission R A D Rail Road to and from the North.
./ 1 ulitnan sleeping Cars, rv(ce on trains Nos 47 and 48, daily, without
change, between Atlanta ana New York. ’
1 POPE.
General Passenger Agents,
H. T. MENG'S,
Marble
Works,
MAIN STREET. NE \ R DEPOT. -- • - ti.(l _v ESC! /. kE(; t
OKI >ERS WIIJ. I |J VE PROM PT \T iT vi )X
icr <6:. PtciiAitt. itAitits * ’1 P *•„!.?,'ti.A, . 11
apr. 14-2tu 1 ’
MH MS,
IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY,
GAINESVILLE, GA.
Manufacture and repair all kinds of maehinerv, such as Stationary r d
Portable Steam Engines. Grist ami Saw Mills, Gohl .Mining Maeliiu.'n '
I- orgiug and Casting of every kind ami shape.
For Machinery and Macbsnc Supplies of even kind. Steam Fittlu” of eve
ry description. n
TUE VfORKS AKE ALL NEW
And we can and will supply Northeast Georgia with No. 1 work of all
kinds done at :i First-Class Foundry .md Machine Shop.
R. 11. BUTLER. W.C. MOUNT. T. W. GILMER
J. ALEXANDER, c. C. PHILLIPS
i h’opriei ■<>!•>;.
npr.l 4-2ni
Cl KO. WOODS A' CO/S
Upright Pianos A Parlor
i e $
, 8 rhrf a
■
■
Bast? r • s#.:' „N.
St —A
A 'Pa '■ p" ; ' ! \ J ‘ r '
GEC. 709 P f ' CO. 5 J?P;GB7 Pfl«
Vli<St au MoUditv
A Mo. IL:’ Qu.jhtv *'T. > :i .' .rut the
Brimsmond Pori ook : lintr Ac tion.
GEO. 7700 D J CO.’S PARI/IF. ORGANS j
EA*’-* 3J DFE AliD 1 EED STOI3, i ‘
- Vkv., ~,4 ■ <.... Grf , 4 . Var . tn „ v; j _
Tli y exmAc I j • . • ••; h ■p , ■ p.i r ’
,a.- . T jC-7'A.' P'*”-l-sre.:.
CIS V-K-ttochm Stsrr. r...- . WAXZP.3OMS. T 2 Adarn. r..«t.
LIBERAL TERMS tv; ..Gi-XTS, TCj Tare WANTED r • \-11-- -TT
WIUTP.E THESE INSTRUMENT: AFH X--1T t ‘
, "lorestoFi Cologne
Mew and FashlostaMe pe-fa*"*. R,fre«li!nr, Lasli.T
Id by dealers in Drnrs «;r* » ir-y La-.ds. }!.»r«ix A ( 0., X. a
Ginrer, Bcrhu, V.nuln.k MfJineia and
»any of the be tfn k -s 1 wn .r-. c unbincd in
Parker’s Ton: . in.o a r.i i icof such
raried and <■• •• ? p’ - -’, £ , : .- • f'-.'.-e it the
I Greatest Elood I •tinner an J Liver .. A.i.orand the
Beat Health & Struth Rcstcrcr ever uaeiL .
! It cures Dyspepsia, Rhc tirri’i-ni. '«cyri!.:ia.Sleep
iessneas.a ,*iJ diseases of the S.yr.tach K weisj ungs,
Liver, Urinary' Irganand all ! cmale Complaints.
A you are wasting a-cay wi;h Consuippticn cr
any discas-. c c the Toktc to-day. No matter
what yo’.:* ymp'nr « ar% it wiH •-urt y he'p y■<.*!.
Remember! 1 ’.is T r.ic n-vrr intti.xicates, cures
drunkenness, is the Best F&m ly Medicine ev» t
r.ar! entirely ditiArent frem Bitters, ('. inp r
Preparation;, and other T'u.ics. >ur drttrgv ic n
supply you—j an J $r sires. N ne t’enim’e with
out signature of Ilisccx & C c. , C hcir.i-ts. N. \ .
‘arker’s flair Bata-SSt
BAB
M.:?E T3AS 100 SI TLEB OF TT2
MASON Si HAM Li I
ORGAN C>
n o nmv r ••. u l.vrly in'id e, f i
’ J BTYLE i >!‘f. /;■ ». n*L t)
= ■iv ’ laicsr and smanest .*• ze :>• •). *
! rV?I- r ’J kh< cd as the E.\BY
u i » A N , at on 1 v 3."-?, to a 1 »r <
O TVCM VB’V : rsorlr-v- :
(>•. yiiO ‘.a< 1., mxtv ■■it ; -<
•"’ » ' ./■ ' .'At ._i :•> . . ' . v
•J -. > J.’ t $ I<> r ’t**'’-. '? • t><! :’.p: '• is]i p-. i
S* i a'.w/j/* I: i* svx.:.
i r J'-.f.’x. fr«»ni j C.JSp 4 r quarter up 1
j JABY is cspeJally afiup. <1 .’. J lr. i,
,ui v, ill i ■I- nd equally useful i r a .bn
r.g fine q.of t"ii3 mid jmi-vp?, «i «■> A (
•om paa>* rc<Abi-i\ ... •ict.,l
lartaof 1 y iim-tune3,anthems.!«ongt>,auu ;.opi i
.icrcd and secular music gem xafiy.
lloi'T refunded if it docs not rftcr t:ld L ’;
satisfy tho pjrch''..?or.
Guaranteed or durable a? the h’.*per cr-i •
LLua: hated Catal GUES R id I'. k>j i.. ?
Address, JLLODEN &
:cra /.• I >• H” ' Zu ’• ’ •,
A. J. Si! A EEL J. All).
i'HNSfCIAN AW) SJ li■: > ;
GAINESVILLE, GA.
<l’i;(’lAE att--.il <CI giv.n to di,.;,
■ common t. women. I u i'l ici.e. .
I • ml »-.il cure in a 1 < :i>! i>. o -
•. i ii. i:’ :i. path lit ; . mii ri
BELLTON
iiIGH SCHOOL.
MALE VND FEM A'ILL
AJ the branches of an English i < I
assail Pi 'paratiiry Ehiufai.i iai,it
.11 the most t.horuiigli inaa.i t.
RA TEX OF TUITION
Due at the exp’ratioa o:‘ c tc’i non' i
Piimarv •fi '•>
j Coiiiinuii School ... 1 .hi
! Ac.nlp.ire 2 «n»
1 High School 2
j H7'For circular and pa. t iu’’!ai > mbh?-
J. T. WILSON, Prine
' B- Pton.G.i.. March 21. ISSL—kn
:j— ——THE GRI'AT
i, 2_—Aj| APFETIZEiI
■ TONIC.
'• -'fX. ! coiiSHciiai
k] coruns,
' Aj ! g CONSUMn iOl
fr BRONCHiris:
'hair; ——————
'-?t 'S. ’’ ; ASTHMA,
- * J v F** ' w.vcw- J.C.
*
I AIsSLS
Ttl<- 1!X y
<L^- Z ■
■. .
I- ■’.',..1 rx Jl_hc») lx II a;
: U -L f
-v. i tTri ul t! 0 a’"oc I
’ '•’S? t I’l ea«< ..bin it !o.e
’ ’ • } r, geoufi\ conij i)
V’- In . i
i I XJA A t J M‘lC' is AAj
I I I 1 KO< K ar.n h i ’I
'j | Boetl.hu I'AL><
t I i Jp.opcrth’H
—■ -I. ilfiui.-ivc H'nit
f . -* ' I;i p;.'. tiz.er acr. it
XJ t ; jj, .
A er . j c ‘i has been
laKg'l' O. Fit! .ff, CommUnlone
u’t» r :.ii Ificvenne, : -bingk n. bC .
i -t h, !-o, *• luLU, LO( KRD ! HYE i
a:;rc- . «le rems jyi’i Pcrtond cuniplah.b al
I’ ”1 c . 3 aMo hi inul preparation unfcritl
S. Ke ii'J St ifitrs, anri v,brn pg stamped,!
s<Jd by BRU OIsTS. GROCERS, ntd d
pcreoas, v. Lhout spvtu! Ux, ’ or liccute.
PA j7m*‘S > t be deceived by fe
U-.1 J | > UeS i v .o tr . to palm oiT R< k
i Rye for Lav ren- b £ Mahtik’s T *LU, R
aj.i RYE-whL-li is the orly MEDICATE
! c- ie genuine has their name oi
Proprietary t tamp on each bottle.
P*;t in Ci■ rt Size Bottlas. Prien $’
LA’.. i; A MAKTIN, Pro: ’ A
CHICAGO, ILL. ‘ .
Cold by DRUCCISTS and CENcI
DEALERS Everywhere. •
w. IL SIMPKINS.
.4 TTORNE F A T LA H',
IIA EMO NX ORO VE, G
T7'Faithful attention giver
collectvms ami all other busi
Clients' money never .spent, •
promptly forwarded.
Notice to Debtor* and Creditodt
GEORGIA, Banks Covxty.
Notice is hereby given to all p
having Jcman.ls against the e.<:
l.nssell Holcombe, late of said ! j
dec’d, topresent them to me. pm
made out, within the time
scribed by law, so as to . lu-v
character a:id amount : Am.'
persons indebted to sal.l d>-
are reijuir. <1 to make immediate |" ■
to me. B. F. Sl IHIATH. A-l
mar'.O-tit Ku*a-ll H- • : '-
i- .i. i.AirniEUb. ■.
AT IUR NY AT /..I IP.
ATLANTA, GA.
KKACTJUES in the Unit I >• |
■- unit ami Distrh’i (’onG- *' r ■
ui l the Supreme and Sup* ’ ’
ht- ,Stsi.f«• iili' 1 1