Newspaper Page Text
A Biff Ujrrter Story.
♦" How's tlint lor on inter ?" said the
skipper of a Philadelphia oynterman,
pointing to an enormous shell that lay
on the deck. "It ain’t not only a big
shell,” he ’ continued, "but- it's got a
powerful big yarn that goes with it. ”
The ahcll was certainly (our feet long,
large enough to serve as a bath-tub for
a small boy, and must have weighed
over 200 pounds, as the reporter could
not move it with one hand. It was one
of tlio largest bivalves known, tho
tridaenn gigs*, nlore properly allied to
the dams, but pnssing as a very rospeot-
nble oyster.
"Yes, sir," continued the skipper, who
was shucking oysters, smoking, talking,
and humming a tune at tho sumo time,
“that istor was fetched from the Rost
Indies by an old mate of mine, and hap
penin’ to run foul of mo, ho sars, says
he, 'Bob, you'ro in tho istor liiz and
onghtcr have tho boss istor; kinder sum-
f ilo yer goods like.’ So what does ho do
tut nend this ore ballast aboard. Thore
was two of ’em; one got washed away in
n gale of wind off Pint Lookout, down
the Chesapeake, but tho two of 'em
weighed over 600 pounds, and Gillis, lio
what fetched ’em, said ho eat tho inter
along o’ the hull port watch of the ship
—about twenty, I reckon—and there was
half of that istor left. The critter
weighed el*m- on- to forty pounds, all
solid raont. Ye wouldn't open many of
’eftHu an hour.
"Tho yarn? Well, ns I was snyin’,
Gillis has bite o’ those speculatin' eliejm,
always Ioann', (nr. tho .main chnnoc,
sv.appfci’ kuitres, slothes,Anythin’ so ns
tomnko a cont, nud ’onto ns they make
cm; so when the ship strnok tho IIoss
latitudes Oil was always on the lookout
for curiosities, shells and such, for to
fetch home atid sell. Bo, when the ship
struck the Straights o' Uunda nud kom
to, off ho Roes with it couple o’ niggers
what camo aboard t > git coral and
things Wall, they waa wadin’ along, as
Gill aaid, haulin' tho Owioo alter ’em and
pickin’ np chunks of enrol ami oonebs
and snob, nnd all to once Gil seo a’mt
looked like a flower, all pink and yellow,
and not knowiu’ what it was, up lie goes
and give it a kick with Ilia foot. Tho
next aiiraklie f, 1) ^fyvithui' dose over*
his frftrlflfffli viite, tinfl ‘was gripped ns
ef he’d took root, and lookin’ Wfn I*
see lus foot nipped in one of tlieao ere
shells. Pull nnd haul every way hi!
'.vouUJio Mkla’t moth, nmV they could ‘
not T?otj|,Um(Jkilt>fL U woe,buried in.
the oorar alin Tim tide on the flood; it
I'isMonbout sir feet .in t that country;
\V,dl|||||y fk4>I>edjU£a JttcrWtitHtle
oars au'd Infilled away for awhile, all to
no punnus, ami cprus enough Gil had
lofrMfsnfte aboard, arid tjpo only thing
to downs tsfjh Wr it. So off ono of the
coons started for the bark, and sho' a
lyin’ two milqs away. Tho other ehajr
HtodJi'liyfflll In esse ho gov out; nml
tliccq tlitgr waS, tho tidu a risili’every
minuUi, but ip wboUt tliroe-ipinrteni of
an flour the slii..'h culler eame along.
Tho boys gev Gil n olioer Unit kind o'
bracod him up, and tho skippor had sent
his grog,
with ono o’
wlmliuVand in about * minute tho cm-
tar was all cut up nnd Oil yanked
abimri4»but l'tl be dogged- if the water
wasn’t most up to his chin. Thu next
day wejf fat lnw/tido-hiid got Out
the eri
and ft _
ill conclusion. . .
Advice to n Yotliig Mail.
You ■•’ilj A’erosivh, pyr ba£, flint ovory
time man imdertalius to maimfaoluro a
lit llr-Jiiliie on bid own amount, ho makos
a mortifying failure of it. Ho is caught
at it, ami in ono tenth of tho tiuio it
took him to c«njflvq bis fpqud, In as
many hdSrs asjtlook him months to
prepare if, ho ib exposed, and his hand
made addition to Um Bible is swept
away W Die othpr ri^diisk ot other coun
terfeiters,Yv You see, my son, tho Bible
doesn’t need nty.of thoso nineteenth
centuryJ||(Vifs'«jt its truth f It noeits the
word of no man to establish its genuine
ness; it has stood by itself, “ an anvil
that has worn out many diammors,”
through meatiify after fconttr*? un
changed Iftri Uiraiungenhle, ivory timo
a man miiuhflTcturofCa ’now " verso or a
new chapter wo know it is not genuino,
wo detect the counterfeit. Tho Bible
has no need ot tlio supporting prop of a
fraudulent ark era-lent her Deuteronomy.
There was a comploto Bible centuries
before Slinpira happened, and there will
bo tho snmo Bible ages after Slmpiraand
bis pntent Deuteronomy hnvo together
crumbled) fhto- iqdistinguislialilo ilnst.
Tlio Bible doesn’t need our help, our
testimony, our indorsement. And if
tliero bad never boon discovered in ail
tho world a bit of parchment, n piece of
broken pottery or a scratched stone, the
Bible would bo just ns strong as it - is
to-day, and men would bolievo just ns
firmly and b ust fully in iU truth. Don't
you worry, my boy, beoauso Stinpirn’s
ancient manuscript was written with
London'IMtj'TfhlTdon't fret because the
ark in thovglniihji *tliru» out to be put
together uvtli Pit tiwiinfll'unils. That
all the frauds on the Bible nnd its his
tory nrc bo ■aioWx. anil insily detected
should nmyKonvufoo yoix bow impossh
bio it is Amt Jrfjit tig' work.at God.
Wait uireilTWmo inim fools us with au
Brtilicinlmomy ijjid until seine philoso
pher stores away the sunlight in parlor
lamps,. before voii bejicyo that man enii
successfully lipijatq wimt man never
made.—Burdette.
One Way of flaying Cards.
Tho Portland Oregoniah, says:—Wil
liam Potty was nm-yhid for j creat
ing " a flfsturtianbe. ‘ Two United
States coins multilatod in the
mont peculiar riimdu r' were found
upon him. One was a twenty dol
lar gold pimn and tho other a silver
dollar. Upon one side of each coin was
hollowed gpt a piece nearly in ai/.o of a
five dollar piece. In this was fitted a
couple of springs which connected with
a siding piec-e of tlio rim, and which
were intended to hold within this hol'ow
n small mirror. While tho coins weri
lying undetected <^i a table at pu angli
of forty-fivo degrees behind a stack ol
similar coin ip (front pf the denier, the
latter cournTny A little easily acquired
skill, know by means of tho mirror to i
certainty every card Held by any ono or
bU of Iris opppueuts.
Overboard jumps tho mate,
' l«» «wo ojiades thoy use in
larii^ruus-a u wo miggen- u rno waior
m*t most up to his chin. Tim upxt
' * l lrl wort lilt loVfc^lidoAiJkl got Out
iTijlf'H shill; add that’s tlio yiwn
I Hurt's tkolshelf"auiitftho skipper
A CALIFORNIA FARM.
% Grim IlMeb In Hlit Par Went lid flaw
ll la Mnnnirri-
In her grapbio illustrated article in
llie Ootobcr Cmturg, on "Outdoor In
dustries in Sonthern California,’’ H. H.
describes one of the great ranches as
follows : “Tho South California statistics
of fruits, grain, wool, honey, etc., read
more like fancy than like fact, and are not
readily lielieved by one unacquainted
with the country. Tho only way to get
a real comprehension and intelligent
acceptance of them is to study them on
the ground. By a single visit to a great
ranch, one is more enlightened than be
would bo by committing to memory
scores of Equalization Board Reports.
Ono of the very liost, if not tho best, foi
this purpose is Baldwin's ranch, in the
San Gabriel valley. It luclndes n larj?e
R art of the old lauds of the San Gabriel
Fission, nnd is n principality in itself.
"There are over a hundred men on its
pny-roll, which averages $4,000 n month.
Another $4,000 does not more than meet
its rnuning expenses. It has $0,000
worth of machinery for its grain har
vests alone. It has n dairy of forty cows,
Jersey and Durham; one lnuidrcd and
twenty work-horses and mules, and fifty
thoroughbreds.
“It is divided into four distinct es
tates ; the Santa Anita, of 10,000 acres;
Puente, 18,000; Merced, 20,000; smiths
Potrcro, 26,000. Tho Puonto and Mer
ced nro sheep ranches, and have 20,000
sheep on them. The I’otrero is rented
ont to small farmers. The Santa Anita
is the home estate. On it aro tho homes
of the family and of tlio laborers. It
has fifteen hundred nerds of oak grove,
four thousand norcs in grain, fivo hun
dred in grass for hay, olio hundred nnd
fifty in nrango orchards, fifty of nlmoiul
trees, sixty cf walnuts, twenty-live of
pears, fifty of peaches, twenty of lemons,
nnd five hundred in vines; also small
orchards of chestnuts, hazel-nuts, nnd
apricots; snd thousands of acres of good
fmfttnriiKo.
"Prom whatever siilo ono approaches
Santa Anita in May, he will drive
through a wild garden—nstem, yellow
and white; scarlet pentstemous, blue
larkspuf, monk's-hood; lupines, white
nml blue; gorgeous golden cschsclioltzin,
aktyr. wild lilno, white sago—all in riot-
etik! (lowering.
"Entering the ranch by one of tho
north gates, ho will look southward down
Houtis slopes of orehards and vinoynrds
far across tlio valley, the . tints growing
softer and softok, and blending more snd
moke with each mile, till all met into a
blue or purple haze. Driving from
oreluxrd to orohart), down half-milo
avenues through orelinrdsBkirlingseem
ingly endless stretches of vinoynrd, he
IWgfns to roalizo what oomes of plunting
-trees and viues by hundreds and teus of
hundreds of naros, nnd tlio Equalization
Board Statistics no longer appear tohim
evsn largo. It does not seem wonderful
that Los Angeles county should bo re
ported ns having sixty-two hundred
acres in vinesi-whcn hero on one man’s
ranch aro flvo hundred acres. The Inst
Equalization Board report said tho
county had 230,135 orange and 41,250
lemon trees. It would hardly have sur
prised him to be told that there were ns
many ub that in tho Santa Anita groves
Alone. Tho effent on tho eye or sOoli
huge trnobr, planted with a single sort of
tree, is 4o increase enormously tlio ap
parent size of the tract; the mind stnm-
hlus on the vory threshold of (lie at
tempt to reckon its distances and num
bers, nnd thoy become vaster nud vaster
ns they grow vague.'"
Will He Brought Them Back.
A small boy with an intelligent face
went into a fruit dealer's store, and de
positing a box of grapes on tho counter,
stood looking down.
"I don’t want the grapes, my kittle
fellow,” raid tho dealer. "l'vo got ns
many now os I oan sell. Toko them
away.”
“Tiioy arc yours,” tho boy said, look
ing up.
"Mine?”
’.‘Yes, sir. Yeatordny evening I came
alrng here and took this box of grapes
from a stand at tlio door. I knoweil it
was stealin', au’ my mother nlways told
mo not to take anything that did not bo-
loB0 to M*| V»wi X V«S»1A~ , || I«»d|» II', O lint
before I loft homo my little sister that
was sick said : ‘Oh, if I had some grapes
like them I Haw down town, I could eat
'em.’ Wo didn't hnvo no monoy, an’
nobody knowod us, ’oauso wo bad just
moved into tho house. Mother washed
clothes, hut when sister got sick sho
had to quit. When I took tho clothes
homo the Indy told mo to como
noxt day for tho money, but
when I went there tho house
was shut up and the peoplo was gone,
so wo didn’t have any monoy to got
grapes with. Mother said ‘never mind,
we would git some money nftor a while.’
I saw her go into the other room, an’
when I watched her, sho lind her faeo
buried in a pillow on’ was prayin'. I
come away down town an' stood nronn’
a long timo waitin’ to git n chance, an’
after awhile, when yon wasn’t lookin',
I took a box an’ran away with it.”
"Imt. why did you bring it hack?”
tlio dealer asked.
"Because,’’replied tlie boy, choking
down a sob, " When I got homo tho lit
tle girl was dead.”—Arkansuw Trav
eler.
Ills First Cowboy.
A rather timid young man from the
East was traveling through the West by
stage, and, after asking tho stage driver
a great many questions about buffaloes,
bears and Indians, lie finally inquired if
they would be likely to meet with nny
cowboys, expressing a wish at the same
time to see them if they did. Tho driver
replied that they would probably meet
with some before reaching their desti
nation. The young gentleman proceeded
I lo relate some of the lurid stories lie
I had read conceruing cowboys, and while
lie was telling one of the most thrilling
yarns, a party of cowboys returning from
town dnshed around a bond in the road
tiring their six-Bhooters nnd yelling like
clemons. Young Timid rolled off his
seat into the bottom of the stage, and
after tho cowboys hail passed rose up,
pale nnd trembling, anil ejaculated,
"Great Bob! they’re part human, ain’t
they?" I
More Popular Than Ever!
* THE RECENT IMPROVEMENTS MADE IN THE
•J H Ml .!] «, |l f »J
— AI»0H MUOII TO THE—
Masj Mnt Qualities
— OF THIS-
Superior Machine
It. is an especial favorite of the ladies
tailors ami others who use them, for
the many advantages it possesses over
all other sewing machines.
Every AVIdte mnehine is warranted
five years, and .a written Guaranty
given to each purchaser. The publi
are solicited to examine thorn before
buying a machine,
J D & T F SMITH. Wholesale and Retail Dealers, 59 Bread Street
The New American In the Ilf pit, nnd that In
It In Unlit running end KlmpRr, nml that In
Ithwuulcof lhi> flnent material, >ml ItintTfl
It floas wot Ont of Order, anti that'is
recommend it
^liotly.
v«‘ii hftlo girl* »|iortitf» ItjigjHMiliv
p u « A, B X. E
■rmfra wll bny lt to brtc them trouble.
It !• the 8olf-Thread4ng Machine no
much ndvortioad, tend so highly re
commended.
It is the great SBU'-THUEAOINO SHUTTLE
MACHINE op much advertised.
It ia the great SELF SETTING NEEDLE MA-
CHINE so much adverti&cd.
It Is the UUUA3LE, SIMPLE and LIOHT*
RUNNING MACHINE m much advertised.
It lithe new AMERICAN
32CWXXTG MACHINE
thnt we nre n w advertising, thnt pooplo tnny know
of tlio (irentant Smviiur niaulilun In the World,
nnd will buy no othor until they liuvo tried tho Now
If wo should have no Agent In your plooo, p’oano roquost tho MERCHANT
you iloal with to order ono for you. Hold on easy tonna. Bo mV for Ciroular.
Agents will do well to aaoure tlio agency for these celebrated tfewlnfc Machines, nna
do eo by applying by latter to ue. We want Agents In all unoccupied territory.
| Add rents (Agents
- J l "Wanted.
.A. cents
■^7* anted.
Ainm is. ii. a & and mm macim
\ GAMP, Manager, Atlanta, Ga., or RAWLS, MHOS. & GO., Local,
. D 11 Ills. On,
W A
Agi nts
Thirteen Years In Active Service,
The timo enlisted for has not yet expired. Honorable competition never
hurts in tlio wsr that is now being waged by merchants one against nnother.
I desire to call tho attention of my old patrons as well ns the public in
general that I 1
Can And Will Sell
Goods «s cheap ns nny man who purports to be doing an honornblo busi
noss -t list is
DOING AN HONORABME BUSINESS,
Otherwise I have nothing to say. My name is the stylo of the oldest busi..
ness house in Dallas and I have been a constant residrutof this county for
thirty-nine years. The peoplo know me and my record ns a business man is
generally known. Therefore como to me with “SPOT (’ASH” and you will
he delighted with the result. I keep family groceries includiug Coffee. Meat,
lea, Sugars, Honr, Rice, etc. I keep canned goods including canned fish mack-
ere Oysters, Sardines, etc. Pickels, plain and mixed, Powder, shot and caps,
matches and tobacco snuff, ami cigars. Patent and standard medicines.
A fine and well selected stock of ( ’rookery from Caxon ifc Co. of Clinton St
J otteries, Linton N J. a supply ot tin from the Atlanta Stove and Tin House
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS AND CAPS, I MAKE A SPECIALITY
In notions such ns hosiery, suspenders, corsets, spool cotton, collo retting
scarfs, etc., otc, I am complete. My dry goods aro from tho old and well es
tablished limiBe of Johnihifyey it Co. I also keek saddles, leather and shoe
if you don t see what you want ask for it, and when you come just say you want
6omc goods for spot cash nnd you will be surprised ns well as delighted with
tho bargains you will certainly recieve. I dety competition nnd in prices will
show up with any one Try me.
Your Humble Servant,
F. M. GANN.
The Welland Canal.
Few Americans have any idea about
the Welland'Oanal. I looked at this new
achievement of tho Canadians lust week:
tlio Great Western Railroad of Canada
runs beneath tlio canal by a tunnel; the
old Welland Canal, which is still used,
lies some two or tlireo miles to the west
of tlio present ono. Tho old canal was
a towpaUi conoorn, and did not admit n
steam-tug coincident with tho vessel.
TJie now canal tins fourteen feet of wa
ter when tliero is high water, but in sum
mer drouth it is said to bo less than four
teen feet. It is a mnguilieoiutv con
structed work, and excites surprise that
tlio Americans should liavo permitted tlio
Canadians to nnticipato them. Yet it
will bo observed that tho facilities for a
canal through Canada aro much better
than through tho United States. The
axis of tho two lakes, Erie and Ontario,
passes through Canada; tho Niagara
River issues from tho extreme eastern
end of Lako Erie, while Lake Ontario
overlaps Lake Erie considerably in Can
ada. It is rather startling to seo mov
ing through tho apparently solid ground
(for the country is very high where the
new canal is built) tall massivo ocean
steamers, full-rigged ships, etc,, some
times as continuous ns a caravan across
tho desert. They go along silently, not
n sound or whistle escaping them, and
the visitor sometimes thinks his mind
is deceived and thnt the landscape is
haunted.
"How many races aro there?” was
asked by a Kentucky sclioolma’nm. Up
sprang a sliock-liended youngster, with
a vard-wide smile on his face, anil ex
claimed: "Three—tlie spring meeting,
midsummer speeding and fall fairs.”
“Our” Money,
Before tho day of your marriage buy
i nice bureau; have a fine lever look with
two keys put on one of tlio little drnwers.
Have it taken to your chamber,
.md when you conduct your wifo to that
room hand her oue of tho keys and say
to her:
“Into that drawer I shall pnt all our
money. It is ours, not mine. If you
wish to know what wo can nfford, you
may find out by oponing that drawer.
Go to it whenever yon need money.”
You may lie a wise ninn, yon may be
what they call “smart as lightning,”
lmt you will never perform nnother act
ns wise or smart ns this. I began my
married life in that way and have con-
stantly looked back to it ns the happiest
step iu my life. Such is the advice giveu
by Dr. Dio Lewis.
A Dayton, Ohio, man writes to "the
paper that his child "had fifty fits in
twenty-four hours,” nnd ia now well
hearty, aud rugged. Oil, well. Are should
think it is very likely. A child that has
made a record of fifty-two fits, in twenty-
four horn's, ought to be tough enough to
hoard ail tho year round. Tho Asiatio
cholera would balk at that infnnt.—
Jfatukcge.
"Doc-ron,” said a man to his physi-
eiau who had just presented a bill of $50
for treatment during a recent illness,
“ I hnvo not much ready money. Will
yon not take this out in trade ?” * 0h.
ves," cheerfully answered tho doctor-
"I think that we oan arra ige that.
What is your business?” "1 .un a cor
net player." was the replr. —Jlavper’e
Bazar
PHOB’RISBKJN'A.L. CARDS
D
R. 8. ROBERT80N,
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON,
Tender* his professional services in the
practice of medicine in all its branches to
I he citizens of Dallas and surrounding
country. A#*Office No. 5 Acworth street,
near court house.
W K. FIELD HR*
GKO. P. ROBERT i
JMELDER A ROBERTS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Dill.., Paulding County, Georgia.
Practice in *11 th. court*. Prompt aiteu-
lion given to looking after wild land claim*.
Collection, a ap.cintty. i ly
J M. SPINKS,
-'attorney at law,
Dillaa, Paulding County, Georgia
Prompt attention given to collection, in
nny part ot the Stain. Wild land, looked
utter and intruders ejected.
Tt. E. CASON,
DENTIST,
Has permanently located in OAR-
TEH8VILLE, where he 1. prepared to
do all kinds of Dental work at pri ae» to
SUIT THE TIMES.
He will he pleased to tee all his old
friends and many new customers. If
’ou n»cd any dtntal work done call on
dm.
WM. E. CUNNINGHAM,
PRACTICAL
—•AND I'RCmiETOB—
GATE CITY
SEWING MACHINE EXCHANGE
REPAIR SHOP,
85 Decatur 8t., - ATLANTA, GA
Some folks would say that the above
is alitt'e t. much mixed up to be very
good in either of its departments, and
that Mr. Cunningham cannot be a very
good wutchmakci if ho works on guns,
sewing machines, anil anything else
that comes along
Now let me siy to those who may fa
vor me with n perusal of this that my
experience in watchmaking runs back
over a quarter of a century, and that
part of my business it under mv own
personal supervision, and that I propose
to do the best possible work on every
oh entrusted to me.
The sewing muchtne department of
my business is in tlie hands of thorough
ly competent workmen, and I guaiantee
every machine that is repaired at the G.
C. 8. M. Ex. and R. 8. (hall be well and
orouglily done.
Now, if you have a machine thut
eds repairing, send or bring it to us,
d if we don’t make it work all right
won’t charge you a nickel. We also
ve an assortment of second hand in i-
hnes that will do good sewing, which
will soli cheap.
r. d. McGregor,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
DALLAS, GA.
[Office in the Court House.]
I give ray entire attention to the
practice of law. Promptness is my
motto. Collecting n specialty.
July fi tf
Thompson & Spinks.
Ivy F Thompson and W. E. Sp i
have formed a partnership for the prac-
ice of Law, to be coDiinid to cases in
Paulding Superior Court, under the
firm name Tliompson& Spinks
An American who bad a jolly German
friend wished to become acquainted with
the German's charming wifo. “Veil,”
said tho German, “ofo yon dreat, dot
vill lie nil liglnlt 1” After (ho treat tho
German led him over to where tho lady
was sitting witli a number of friends.
"Katrina, ' aid tlio husband, “you know
ilut many’ "No,” said Katrina, mod
estly. “Veil, dot’s him I”—Louisville
Courier-Journal.
"No," said Mrs. Shoddy, "I don't
rare so much beenuso I never had any
children; I never liked children,
jou know. But I should like
to have oue, so that I could hnvo a nurse
in a lace cap to take care of it when I go
to tlio sea shore. It’s so stylish, you
know. ”— Chicago Inter- Ocean.
To continue love iu marriage Is a
scieuco. It requires so iittle to kill
I hose sweet emotions, thoso precious il
lusions, which form the charm of life;
and it is so difficult to maintain a man
a! tlie height on which nu exalted pas
sion has placed him, especially when
t lint man is one's lmsbaml
"Was man descended from a bear?”
asks the Detroit Free. Press. Not iu
all cases. Why, a Ncvadn citizen tlio
other day went to the other extreme,
when a bear came along aud tlie citizer
took to a tree.
"The smell of freah paint iu a room
may be effectually gotten rid of by plac
ing therein a pail of water in which a
few onions have been sliced,” says an ex
change. To take away the smell of the
onions, burn the house down.—Oil City
Perrick.
THE ELECTRIC
is guaranteed to mend a greater variety
of artielee and hold atrooger than any
other cement ever invented. It will
mend leather, china, glam, wood, mar
ble, .tone, ana I* stronger whe e mended
than elrnwhere. It It a heu ehi I i neoe*»
ally, and if you try it once you will
never be without it in the bouee.
Agente wanted. State and c runty
right* for mle. Add revs for circular*,
the E.eotrio, or Text. Gypeum Cement
Or., 86 Decatur Street, Atlanta, G >.
$9"*This cement took (be premium at
the (Jotton Expoiltion.
DR. J. M. HARRISON)
Practicing Physician.
DALLAS, GA.
[Office with Dr Robertson]
Tenders his professional services to
the citizens of Dallas and surrounding
country. july 12 ly
Dr. Wm. G. Connally,
FRAC I'lCINU PHYSICIAN.
In all department' of medicine and sur
gery. Amply supplied with all neces
sary means and appliances for the rdief
and cure of sufferiug humanity.
Office at the Dallas drug store, lies’-
dcnce op'posite Christian Hotel. Always
ready for duty. jan2- r )tf
N, W, ROBERTS &
All styles Moulding, Brackets and
Balusters made to ordor.
We arc nro dealers in all styles of
Wood Burial Cases and Caskets Robes,
Linings and Untertukors' Hard ware,
which we will furnish nt all hours, day
or night, promptly.
N W Roberts & Son,
DALLAS, GA.
—FOR SALE BY—
CONNALLY t CHRISTIAN,
-DRCQaiSTB-
DALLAS, . - GEORGIA.
Vi
lUGHtRUpNGl
°%hewHome^ d
•SEWING MACHINE GO-
CHICAGO,ILL.’
’ORANGE, MASS.
AND ATLANTA. GA.— „
B. F. MATHEWS & CO,,
DALLAS, GA.
COX, HAMMOND & MaSSEY
Attorneys at Law,
Will practice in the Superior Courts of
Douglnss and Prulding counties. Snits
against railroads and criminal defences
a specialty.
Cox & Hammond, s Atlanta, Ga.
Robt. A. Massey, Douglassville, Ga