Newspaper Page Text
The Toecoa
f . A . a ... i i, . * r mnrtation t ■) ........ ‘
last w k for being I he gr^at con-
ventu Two were held dur-
ir.g the week—the convention
the w< »eH ; ed i tors a t G a i i ie.-v i j le,
’cn Tie •s :nv,and thegr* at
cc-nv ion at Griffin, on Thursday
of ,• ( ‘."fan hauled, it ^crs. - v , r
V.l Bvi-ton. cost the members
ittil.c-ad fares, hotel bills and other
* - c'h.-t s not le-s than $1
too,000. > pr-'Uy good 'U m to be
oxpei.dcd ,n one demonstration.
On Thursday lust, near Quincy,
t'l . Mick Davie; a colored driver,
B5 r ot horses, were killed
i- v a tr> ke of lightning from r "
lost cloudless He was Ui-
id in hauling load of pc a
nt the time, and a colored boy
AS itting I eliiml him on the
wagon. The bov was unharmed
{ . d also the wagon and harness,
1 at tin* driver amt both horses
We ,• instantly killed.
• . P r. just r edvei a copy of
Comfort,® iliu-’rat lp«r-f of
- i prcu-s j. tiie size of Har[»or’s \N
piJ" '0 . , TT r i. t
J a» ; A >» • iR lj >•
muv ’ " Mcl1 “ ,,r; ’ ,W
n five bright lithographic color
ml upon the same press, at Urn
Piimo time, and is pasted, folded
and dolivrml ready for the mailer
at. the r; ie ■ f -S,< )0 c< >pies per hour.
This p-vess is certainly a wonderful
Piece of mechanism and a
. . , •
in,.nip.) « ' h ' a “ ‘ ll in nt ^
jH’rhvhon ol lilting , nachmoi}
]»i .
A few years a g° Uu‘
gent people could not have been
made, to believe that such a thing
was within the range of possibility.
THE GRIFFIN CONVENTION,
<)n i hursdny last the Geoigia 'u-
metalie convention met at
ara! was v-rv birgely a.tended by
vrominont and representative men
troin all the .-'tali among the
i umber being oiu o\\n Hem. J. W .
nobertson.
Hen. Patrick Walsh, ex-United
t-iates Senatoi, va^ elected ( haii-
•r.an of the convention and presi-
<vu\t of the kurtt: Bimetalie Teague
}:’)d ( ol. Douglass vHessnoijof Giil-
fin, was elected secretary.
P. »S. Senator John T. Morgan,
nf \l I vbama minwch was present and deliv-
gn 1 in favov nf the
'
i p ol . bot i gold and i .-ii\ci i as
liny metals. Short speeches were
also delivered by Senator Walsh,
<\>1 Robertson ox-Congressman II. :
, k . i. FiH.th district
,U 011,0 , ° ’
and otheis. . |
'l lie meeting v. as very harmoni-
,ins,,ml enthu indie, nml resoln-
Dons were adopted very similar to!
1 ?•"» by the lute ■ , .liemphls ,
-■iUci convention. I nil acc«>unt |
''I the mooting and the resolutions ;
will bo found on our first page, to j
, , .. . ... , •' e
llc 1 U c 1 lU 11 { :
l " l * ' j
oui n adei».
HE H NOT IN IT.
11 -mi!,' there is at least one.pro¬
minent liepublioan m the United
States who is not a candidate for
the nomination for the Presidency
r.i 1SB0—“your uncle Ben” Karri-
son Congressman Poole, of New
■V York, . vm-ted him last week '• t lor the
jiurpose tf getting him to promise
to attend a < i rnml Army
at Syracuse «on J. Harrison refu-
&Q€L , to , UO J__ SO, llnu tmallv, „■ noon . lit I 1
1 ”
“ ’
mg pressed by Mr. Poole as to his
reason for refusing, said: “Major,
] will tt‘11 you why I do-not. wish
to go to Syracuse at the timei you
want me to. If 1 go anywhere now
and make a speech the candidates
for the Presidency will say that 1
am a candidate for that office, and
am going for political purposes.”
rr l , tU-n. in . \o.ce . md. CtUliO.i
.. vsiui
it „UtUo earnestiio^nd
p.ess that is to l >e i 1 ,lm, ‘ ,niheGen -
©ral’s make-up. he continued: "i
am not a candidate for the Presi-
dency, have not been, will not
I do not want ti i office, and would
not accept, it.
m 1 hat seems to . pretty .. effectuany „ .
“your uncle Ben" from
the list of Republican Presidential
probabilities for indication's, next vear. and
from present narrows
the contest don , 11 to a choice , . be- .
tween Allison, of Iowa, Bill Me-
Kin ley, of McKinley bill notoriety
•end €*■ I the great Ea ru mogul ot
Republicanism, the Hon. T. “Buil-
dozer” Reed, of Maine.
There is another report, in which
ibis said that Maj. Poole denies
statement in the paragraph
qui'ced. •
OUR POSITION.
1 As wo stated in the first issue of
the News under our management,
we do not believe that the free coin-
age 8 of silver alone w.mM relieve
fc,e )re8Pnt .. .
l «»strcrs or the people,
■
: though it would tend in that direc-
tum.
But we do believe that as an act
of simple right and justice, if there
were no other reason, silver should
lie remonetized and placed on an
exact equality with gold as to coin-
age. Wo believe this lust because
tne ,< constitution of thou l- mted t igi.i States
placed them thei*e, and that is
where they belong. :
The national banking system is,
to all intents and purposes, a le-
galized system of highway robbery
induing b-.-s and a- it is tne
prolific Hi mother ■WHH of all monopoly in
this country, being the first great:
one •Htablished The ehaMishm-nt and makim* it pos-
sible for of all
others which have sprung up, of
course it should be gotten rid of.
Now, this is our position Oil the
currency question f and has been for
vear9 /' T 1>as ’A an q w0 believe J it to be !
• unadul i .!
t,i“ pine, . tera -©d ;
.Democratic principle: \\ Q are in ;
favor of tliO repeal of all legisla-
tiou on the si [ ver question since
1872 _ puUin g , Uvet on an exact
l 1 i; t l -4i ^ (rf i j ..-here it was I
'* 1 ’
put bv * the constitution. . . The law ;
Hoes neither not let limit it limit the coinage the coinage of gold: of j
j
jj Then let the iniquitous 10 1
s ver> j
per cent tax on State bank issues j
be rq , ea]<n i, aqd give us the right j
j, ave a 8 ound local currency.
Jf •* this J" should be done it would
be l.npr.....l frr i j WiTl *■. street l 1o
manipulate the finances in its own
j n ^ eres ^ an( j we would have money j
issued just when and where and in
the quantities 1 needed, without be-
mg exposed 1 to the dangers incident , j
to either contraction or inflation !
of the currency.
Porter Stocks, who was sentenced
to ^ ie penitentiary at Atlanta last
y eal .^ f or the killing of a man nam-
Cassin, j, committed suicide last
Thursday igllt b y shooting him-
one G f the penitentiary
cam p g< i s not known what led
him to comhiit the act, as he was
treated asa “trusty” and his father
bad a strong and uumerously sigti-
ed petition to the Governor for his
p ardoUj h© intended to y>re-
sen ^ - u a da y ov two, and which he
had reason to believe would secure
, •
° ' h
®«tay May Cost cs <he Canal.
It is reported that the new govern-
'»ent of Nicaragua proposes to declare
the canal concession forfeited on ac-
count of the alleged failure of the com-
pany to carry out its contract.
TVhen the company secured the grant
’* I ,r0 "> is ®<r to * «u»l six
deep between lakes Nicaragua and
Man .,„ u . u u was then be | teV ert that
the enterprise would cost $150,COO, but
it has been ascertained since that
subsoil is solid rock, and the expense
of cutting the canal would amount to
about- $1,000,000. Tke company oflered
to pay the Nicaragua government $150,-
000 to oe released from this part of the
contract. The proposition was accept¬
ed, but the present government refuses
to sjaml by the bargain made by the
preceding administration aud threat¬
ens to forfeit the concession.
This is bad news, and it is easy to see
the hand oTEngiand back of it all. The
forfeiture would probably cause us to
lose the canal, and Great Brit ian would
then step in and get the concession.
We have gone too far in this matter to
let it drop.
Our policy of delay is responsible tor
the whole’trouble. The canal will have
to be built ...d U mmt be under Amer-
,can control. H England slips m
ahead of us, our interest will force us
' * n l1ear f u t ure t° seize the canal.
and tb e best way to avoid trouble is.to
right ahead now and push this
waterway through. This new avenue
of transportation is a necessity, and we
can never reach out for the trade of the
orient and the countries bordering on
until we build it and com
trol it.—Atlanta Constitution.
WEEKLY PKESS CONVENTION
-
East week the annual convention
q j. \V©ekly ‘ Preas Association of |
" ? ' j & lodd ‘ ^ ‘ ot Gainesville T ‘
! tnd lrom llie accou:its . pnbksned lv ,
in the iocal papers it was a most
successful and highly enjoyable
0 .. eas j ou a p the way through. ciavs,
T i le session lnsted U-o and
■»»»>- valuable , , , and , interesting . , A pa-
... .. . wer0 rea j by differont mem .
bei . g Q £ the association. The con-
veid j on W ouiid uo with a map’nifi- !
eun 4 banquet • „. f n{ inO -*■* nngton i,,-, be - |
t.^i
tel, where many patriotic and sen- |
timental toasts were eloquently re- j
snonded 1 to bv “the hoys.” i !
- •
Eiberton was selected as the place :
nf o. mr-cfiner maa,) of OI the ntx. m>\“ ,mmm anoiml eon-
0
vention. !
The folio Wing officers were elect-
ed for the ensuing M- S. j !
year:
Coleman, president; H.W.J. Ham,
first vice president; R. N. R. Bard- j
well, , vt qi second cncnnrl \ice vice president mmciderrt • AY u A A -, '
, •
Shackelford, recording secretary,
B. F. Ferry, corresponding seereJ. 1 1
tary : J. W. Anderson, treasurer— j
nil sill \.n tvWG-wl I
Alter .... the ,, close , ol the meeting |
the association went on an excur-
sion to Cumberland island, ten- j
dered them by the Southern Rail¬ i
way. I
IS' THERE? j
Is T there anybody 111 this country, , j
asks J the bright 0 Georgia Cracker.
who is , in tavoi . . compie.G - .. . cie- . ;
<n .
monetization of silver driving it
° US U T:r: tii© on i\ ill. t T:Tk tat coin. VU,SS
Is there anybody mtins counti\
who is in favor bf eliminating gold
from the circulation and leaving
tins conntrv on a silver basis, with
silver as the , only , metal ... com .
Is there anybody in this country
| save inmates of lunatic
and those who for partisan pur-
Y poses desire to stir up strife among
the people, , uho , does , . not , , know t m ,
unless parity is preserved between
the two metals one or the other
thing ' Is'hete will happen?
anybody in this country
* -
who knows enough to groan W ,
ien
he is in pain, who cannot under-
| stand that if the first were tc hap-
■ pen the toiling masses would be
helpless in the hands of the few
men who own the gold, and that if
the second were to come to pass
j values would be destroyed and
panic and disaster ensue?
: «> aSmX y M ntTtoknw 1 Kn ' TiiaT I
best friend of the republic is the
conservative citizen who would
avert disaster by preventing the
happening of either calamity?
; Mrs. Nobles' Case.
The case of Mrs. Nobles, convicted,
without a recommendation,of the atro
ions murder of her husband, has not
yet reached Gov. Atkinson for hiseoi -
’‘ W ' r *' i on ; SbouM * ,ri “' not f
granted, 1 the woman will end her life
on th* gallows. unless the Governor
should interfere. It is the impression
that a very strong effort will be made
to obtain from the Governor a commu-
ration ot the sentence to Ii 1 e imprison-
ment, and the Georgia press is begin-
ning to discuss the question. Natural-
ly the case is cited, with different ar-
guments, of Mrs. Susan Eberhardt the
| first and only woman hanged in Geor-
gia. Her execution occurred during
the , administration . . . of . Gov. James T M. ..
Smith, upon whom great pressure was
brought to have her spared the igno-
miny of the scaffold. But no sufficient
reasons having been assigned by the
petitioners why executive clemency
should be exercised, Gov. Smith, with
the sternest sense cf duty, declined to
interfere. His decision called down i n
him some severe criticism, but it must
be admitted tbat he only
l,is I 0 '*-
A humane public sentiment naturally
revolts at the hanging of a woman, and
it would doubtless justify, or condone,
the act of Gov. Atkinson if lie interpo
sed executive clemency in the case of
Mrs. Nobles, but if he does not, and she
expiates her crime with her life, we
believe it will be the common
that her punishment was just. Her
crime is more atrocious and revolting
than the oue which sent• Mrs.Eberhardt
ltili'oufmnPtio!!"onlv ' ‘ ’ ■ ‘ j ‘ l .‘ ''
01 tlie ' er > depths ol human
there can be but little ground for sym-
P fl A , lslon sion n 1 ie . case . a,lver , = e to , the
condemned will be anything but an
agreeable duty for the Executive to
discharge, but Gov, Atkinson is a man
of strong will and great firmness, and
he will do his duty as he sees it, with-
out regard to fear of any public clamor'
that may be excited. Judging by the
evidence upon which Mrs. Nobles was
convicted of her awful crime, and the
well known character of the Executive
for firmness, the probability is that
Mrs. Nobles will be hanged. Columbus
Enquirer-Sun.
A Washington Incident.
The other day a correspondent in
Washington accidentally ran against a
member of the old congress.
i statesman out of a job wore
heavy winter clothes and they were
shnij ... and , about , shabby. . . . The man had . .
a sad, tired look about the eyes. The
ex-congressmau was glad to get into a
cheap resturant with the newspaper
n,au and get a glass of milk and a
cuit.
Twenty years ago the standard poli-
Hcian was at the head of a big commit-
tee HpHHHHPHI and few members of the house
equaled him in influence. He told the
correspondent that he.wasout of public
llf ®’ f,,r t! \ u «■* ,i,,!0 in i
and was giad to get out. Still he did
not know what to do. His small sav-
ings would barely support his family
six months, rf he went back to his
aative town t0 resume the practice of
law he doubted whether he could make
a living, as the young lawyers controll-j
ed all the business. “If you are ever I
tempted to enter public life,” he said, j
1 don t do it.
There j ;
are dozens of men in the lower
th'bi"r'»ti'hliPLi.' , TiSj
ed away from tlunp }lome moorings
and are men of business aud few have !
any property. When thev give place i
at the bottom of the ladder. j
This Is a hard case for a man whoen-
tered congress at thirty and leaves it
at the age of fifty.— Atlanta Constitu-
tion *
The Corn Crop.
We clin the following article, on the
corn crop, from the Macon Telegraph :
“Basing its estimate on the last re-
port of the condition of the crop given
out by the Agricultural department,
the Commercial and Financial Citron.-
eie estimates the yield of corn this year
at 2,300,000,000 bushels, against a crop
last year of only 1,212,000,000 bushels,
though it admits the probability that
unfavorable weather conditions maj
yet reduce the yield far below what is
now indicated. There is hardly room j
for doubt, however, that the crop will
be much larger than that cf any recent j
year. The crop in the South is now
almost safe frtui serious injury, and
the weather conditions in the West
have remained favorable since the Ag-
ricultural Department’s report was
made up.
“The corn crop is the most important
single crop of the country, and if the
prospect that it will be an exceptional
flue one this year be realized, it will
do much toward putting business on a
firm basis again, It will make the busi-
ness of the railroads profitable again,
will relieve the farmers of the West
from financial embarrassment to a great
extent while «llevin ¥ Souther,, farm-
ers of the necessity of spending money
(or the support ot their stock. Ko one
toi perhaps, could contribu-e more
to the full restoration of confidence and
j ea d furt’ -t toward a complete resump-
tioi , industrial and commercial ae-
ti
, a is another article on thee sam
ject, n'om the Atlanta Journal:
•The farmers of Georgia seem to have
profited by their last year’s experience
and have planted a still larger crop of
00rn th .„, t |,. u wk i d , , )n , vcd
a blessing to them. But tor die flue
corn crop last year they would have
suffered far more than they did from
the low price of oolton * The conipara '
Gve abundance oi corn and liogs iu
Georgia last year was an incalculable
blessing 10 the State. In many
ties corn was offered for sale for the
first time m . many years, and , more meat .
was raised than had been produced lor
a long time. Reports from
par * f. ot the ^ State . indicate • 1 * that .. j
J s .
™ 1U be 0t - u d stin SLU1 further IUIUiei advance ' ,' a of E the
hog and hominy reform this year. Most t
0 f the acreage that was taken from cot-
ton this year was put in food crops. It
is almost certain that the coming crop
of cotton will bring a much better pri S
than the last was sold for. With more
m0 ney for their cotton and a greater
proportion of their own supplies raised
^ home, the farmers of the South will
j tind themselves at the close of this year
be tter off than they have been in a
longtime. The average yield of. corn
isalmosttmade; »
s "“"' «“ «“ «**••
A play called “ L'he New South, vow
running in Chioagc, is calculated to
give the Northern public a very queer
j dea 0 { the social life of Ibis section
xi»e Chicago Record thus summarizes
the plot:
4n election is in progress in the State
of Georgia. Jefferson Gwynne stands
for one of the Congressional districts,
Capt. ^..y.iscalledloassist Harry Ford, with a body of cav-
the 1’niM.l States
The aristocratic Gwynnes »*!>«?’.VlhepSlK think he
is
come tp protect the tlnck voters. Samp-
^ jefff^oK?? eleStiJ^for^SnSdl-
ration. The latter horsewhips Samp-
son. A quarrel between Gwynne and
C apt. Ford follows, in which the for-
mer is slightly wounded by tljp
tain, ’ who is compelled 1 to defend him- 1 ,
„ witl] tlle seabbar(1 ot w , sword
while Ford hurries away to summon a j
physician, the chastised Sampson re-j
turns, sees >onn„ voiih°* O-wythic wynne uneon'«oiaus unconsciaus
upon a bench in an arbor, picks up
Ford’s sword, thrusts it through one of.I
the latticed killing wings the and kills Gwynne. |
The under the circumstances of young is Southerner coritri- |
a
vance that elicits from the audience
exclamations of horror instead of ha-
tred. The idea hasn’t even the excuse
of ingand originality. sickening It is peculiarly effect revolt-
has a upon the
Ford is convicted of the
murder. After serving two years he is
leased out to Georgia Gwynne, who
loves him. He employs his freedom m
searching for the assassin. 1 he de-
—m «
1otc
nigger dialect, bayonet rule —y at the polls, -
:noonS hiners and society people, and
a romantic illustration of
workings of the chaingang system.
«*• *** an " -V "Microus affair is
seriously presented to Northern
ences as a picture of life in Georgia as
it is unde r the conditions of the new
South.
If the playwrights cannot do better
than this they should take « rest and
let “I ncle Tom s Cabin and the teibe-
rJan bloodhounds come to the front
again. The average Southern play is a
nuisance, and it will continue to be so
until some writer who understands
So"them life and is in sympathy with
it produces a drama that will be some-
tb j D |r better than a burlesque or a fe-
Y ensh exaggeration.—Atlanta Consti-
tution.
, The News axd Atlanta Cox^titctiox
one year fob 51.25
The Seventh Day Adventists.
Speaking of the efforts to get the Su-
premeCourt to come to the relief of the
Seventh Day Adventists in Tennessee
and Georgia who have been sent to the
vhah ; S=n« Or doing secular work on
Sunday, the Chicago Tribune says:
The question of religion appears to
be one of those which the framers of
t U Iqatet 'tiro©
enrirely when to tbe
tbe constitutioI1 was adopted
Connecticut had an established church
—the Congregational one—and in all
S>undaj observance hiw?
are'Vow.” In'* many of^fhetn^unday
travel was forbidden, Sunday amuse-
ments of the mildest character were not
toleiated. and the man who thought n
wrong to work Saturday was told no
one would force him to work on that
day, but that if he worked on that day
which the majority of the people look-
^ni''ti'^ s |. lder q
who complain of the religious laws of
the States in which they live will have
to look to the State for redress and not
to the national government, which does
not seem to have any more to do with
marriage and divorce question.
This is a fair statement of the situa-
tion. But it is said that the Tennessee
authorities will soon have another ques-
tion to decide. The Adventists say¬
that no punishment and no human
power can force them to work on Sat-
urday, their Sabbath. If they gain t his
point the chain gang will get only live
days’ work iu the week out of them.
Upon the whole, these scrupulous re-
ligionists are very inconvenient citi-
zensto have in a community. When at
libercy they want to disregard our Sun-
b f in ,be ch »!"
claim two rest days in the week..Satur-
day as a matter of conscience, and Suu-
day as a matter of law
impossible tropic. It is
to deal with it justly and at
the same time satisfactorily.—Atlanta
Constitution
Dr * Ta,,uase ’ s Clieerful View -
M r e are at the opening door cf ret urn-
in S national prosperity. The coming
crops the re-establishment of public
confidence, and, above all, the blessing
of God, will turn in upon all sections
America the widest, greatest pros-
Parity this country has ever seen. But
that door of successes is not yet fully
open, and thousands of business men
are yet suffering from the distressing
times through which we have been
passing.
Some of the best men in the land have
• men whose heart-, have en-
listed in every good, and whose hands
have blessed every great charity. The
church of God can afford to extend to
them her sympathies, ai. d plead before
heaven with all availing prayer. The
schools such men have established, the
churches they nave built, the asylums
and beneficent institutions they have
fostered will be their eulogy long after
iheir banking' institutions are Jorgot-
ten. Such men can never IV.gj. The}
* iave their treasures in banks j tat never
break, and will be million*!: es forever.
—Ex.
Mrs. A. H. Cox, chairman of the com¬
mittee on Household Economies of the
’Woman’s Department at the Cotton
States arid International Exposition, is
enthusiastic over an exhibit i*jth-> form
of an object lesson iu dom^tic econo¬
my and culinary science, it *s a part
of the New York exhibit at the Expo¬
sition, and will be a model working¬
man’s home. A neat cottage, such as
can be built for less than one thousand
dollais, will be erected, and furnished
on a scale of expense suited to the in¬
come of an average workingman, on an
income of five hundred dollars, with a
wife and four children. Every item of
expense in the way of dress, clothing,
food, etc., will be prescribed, and a real
live family will live in the house. It
will be demonstrated that they can live
comfortably on this sum. The full ar¬
rangements of the house will be shown,
and the bill of fare cooked for every
meal of the year at market prices.
Old Paper.- at this office, for .sale, at 20
cents per hundred. The very thing fur wrap-
i>i„a paper.• and Kipm .raler ca pet,
»
Blue Ridge & Atfeniic Railroad.
TIME TABLE XO. 32,
In c ffect Sundav. July 21st, 1895, 8 A. M.
Mon b Nun. ! Daily H , lih.i'dv-i 12 1 Sat’y IS
5n v On v Kx STATIONS. jffoon Only
, . ,
A j. A , M ,-iwid| I P M.
^ J ^ | g f Jbp iul■ d1i\1i Lutls A r 'i TijC® .-gsgisas
i
5 x 0 s!5 5 55 Turnervil'e i j
5 25 8 30 6 10 AnaudaF
5 45 8 451 6 30 Clai kvsville 1
qqq ' 9001 ^45 Demorest a;
G M 15 A 9 15 M P. 7 M. 00] Ar. Cornelia Lv. n p. cc
\ A
AV. A r . LA I.'PAINE. Receiver.
a UPSCOItSB,
■—-Dealer in-
4 £T . J. I 1 ftl ^ Lu K LIQUORS
Vfoorlem and other ^ Iveevs. i
DEW CORE WHISKEY
. ., prr .. ITY
* b '
CIG^ANS ^ ANN ^ TOX5ACCO. ' '
Special attention g' ven to the jug trade.
ESBLTOII,
•June20 3m
"'BV TH&
i&%v/ay 0
j VcJr fry (p\
^nd^lv'c 1 1 y
Tichetiors P T iW Antiseptic > ^
•A/^er) !)e isfpcv'oUd Wit!) OP
AOffo if will pojiFi Je!y cure.
Mereij a ssuggestion. ;
!
The National Democratic platform
of 1S92 declared : “We hold to the use
Q f botb and silver as the standard
monev 0 f the country, and to the coin-
a{re 0 f b oth gold and silver without dis-
criminating against either metal, or
cbar g e f or mintage." These are a few
plain, simple English words, ami any
m an . editor or layman, who cannot un-
fierstand them and decide whether he
Js j n f aV or of the proposition or not,
OU g bt to get himself bored for the sirc-
pj es and make arrangements to attend
anight kindergarten. We merely offer
tbis SU o- ffe stion for the benefit of the
pyjing = political infants who know all
aDO nt the financial question except the
meaning of the plain English language
of the Democratic platform.—Georgia
Cracker.
THE TGCCOA NEWS b
TOCCOA. GEORGIA,
1 & BRYANT, PROFS.
Jn. ^ ja
A;
Having taken charge of this well known jour¬
nal, we now appeal to the people tc come to our
aid and assist us in making it
STATE.
We do this the more confidently, from the fact
that we are. ourselves Georgians—having both
been raised in Northeast Georgia, and loving
everything tending to,advance her interests,
and being proud of her past history and the high
position she is now taking. Therefore, we feel
that we can .labor earnestly and comsc: entiously
for the advancement of every interest of
■HI I a I P & SECTION
Which we propose to do at all times and under
all circumstances, to the best of our ability.
NOW IS THE TIME
To subscribe and get alj your neighbors to d<5
likewise.
J3 - •C>- ic
•1k l S-cff '■vj;’ =4- v yta- KH • 4 r-V ■"% Pi-. . Ui-V.’-’ tfb A, V- t -,r.- .r.T V. '.F fyl Vj J x
r' ^
At once, and keep posted cn the local, general
and political neWs of the day, as we propose to
give a full summary of each.
While it will not be a bitter partb san, the
NEWS is
fleioeiaTio m Prut’
------ ------ — A---
And will ever be found battling for the main¬
tenance of the grand principles enunciated by
Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson and the other
fathers of the Republic,.
ABYERTSSEY , _ 1 TiNV p TP ©
J^Jfer.TSvIAIseT! i i "u^ 4 cs p-r*+ /arl pit - Write! ERLtGS. or Stieri Lil r and 1 r>a + aJ o c-
«3 and get rate, and terms
We are also prepared to oXecute, in . the . . best
style J of the art and at moderate prices, everv
: • ^ 0x ^
JOB PR. I Nil 11 ^=1 AM a
Call and see us, or address
CHRISTY & BRYANT,
TOCCOJL OEOHOIA: