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THE COUUAN T-A M E RIC AN.
. Publlahed weekly by
Wiilk <k W'ilunuham, Editors and Proprietors.
Office Second Door South of Post Office.
Official of Bartow County and the City of
Cartersyille.
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L,e*?al advertisements inserted and charged fo
as prescribed by an act of the General Assembly,
the fee beiuK due after first Insertion. If not paid
promptly, we do not. guarantee a second inser
tion.
Local notices ten cents per line for first inser
tion. For a longer time, lower rates.
Advertisements will be run until lorbldden,
unless otherwise marked, and charged for accord
ingly. All considered due after first insertion.
All communications intended for publication
must bear the name of the writer, not necessarily
for publication, but as a guarantee of good
faith We shall not in .any way be responsible
for the opinions of contributors.
No communication will be admitted to our col
umns having for its end a defamation of private
character, or In any other way of scurrilous im
port of public good.
Correspondence solicited on all points of gen
eral importance—but let them be briefly to the
point.
AH communications, letters of business, or
money remittances, to receive prompt attention,
must be addressed to
WIKLE & WILLINOHAM,
Cartersville, Georgia.
The Dalton Citizen pays: “The mining
interests of Bartow are being rapidly de
veloped.”
Perhaps after all Ingalls’ object was
to boom Cleveland, and if so, he succeed
ed admirably.
Nearly every property owner of Car
tersville is in favor of the establishment
of a system of waterworks.
The Commissioners of Fulton county
have reduced the license to wholesale
liquor dealers from SI,OOO to SI,OOO.
In just eighty-one days St. Louis will
be full of Democrats, and at the same
time many Democrats will be full in St.
Louis.
The stock raiser will find Bartow
county admirably suited for his business.
We have the finest grazing lands in the
world upon which fine stock can be prof
itably raised.
The last Monday morning papers ap
peared without their usual supply of
telegraphic news on account of a severe
wind storm at Washington last Sunday
night, which blew down the wires.
Cartersville should not lose sight of
the Rome & Northeastern Railroad. It
would do the town no good to have the
road strike the county north of us.
Did you ever think of it? Cartersville
is about the only town in the country
that doesn’t pretend to have some way
of putting out a fire. This is au alarm
iug fact.
The Waco Messenger is anew venture
which is published in the interest ot the
Farmers’ Alliance. It is a neat four-page,
six columns to the page*, sheet, and we
wish it much success.
Watermains, eight feet under the
ground, at Marquette, Mich , froze this
winter. It will not take much induce
ment to get the people of such a region
to leave for the Sunny South.
A great many Georgia farmers are
this year planting flour corn, which is
said to make a fine flour, equal to that
made from a medium grade of wheat.
Our Bartow county farmers should try it.
The average citizen ofCherol&e county
seems avaricious lor public pap. Between
fifteen and twenty candidates for offices
at the disposal of the yeomanry of that
county this year have already cropped
out.
It would be a big thing for Bartow
county to have her late exhibit at the
Piedmont Exhibtion traveling around
the country with the display the Central
ltailroad propose to send to the North
ern fairs.
The Thomastou Times says' “Hatred
of the South seems to be the dominant
feeling in the North.” Oh, no, Brother
Waterman, you are mistaken. It is
only the politicians that are stirring up
the strife.
The Columbus Enquirer-Sun, with that
enterprise which has characterized it of
late, has secured the services of Mr. Sid
ney Lewis as its Washington correspond
ent. Mr. Lewis’ letters will be a leading
feature, and the Enquirer is to be con
gratulated.
As sure as the sun rises in the east and
sets iu the west will the tide of immigra
tion turn southward. Progressive towns
and cities of the South recognize this
fact, and are preparing to scatter broad
cast advertising matter. What will Car
tersville and Bartow county do in this
respect?
The Tribune of Rome says: “It has
been rumored that on account of ill
health, Judge Fain, of Adairsville, is out
of politics. The Tribune has it from
good authority that such is not the case,
and that friends of the gentleman are
going to push his name for a position
n the coming election.
The First Gun in the Ninth.
Although it is early in the day theeam
paign for Congress in our sister district,
the Ninth, has already opened. Judge
George N. Lester fired the first gun last
week in a speech at Lawrenceville, in the
county of Gwinnett. This district, like
the Seventh, is noted for the fierceness ol
its campaigns, and it is quite likely that
in the coining conflict it will maintain its
former reputation.
It is interesting to know at this time
upon what grounds the new candidates
will appear before the people, asking them
to displace their present representatives
and send them to Congress instead.
After telling the people of Gwinnett
what a badly taxejl people we are, Judge
Lester said:
“I am a candidate for the nomination
to succeed Hon. A. D. Candler in the next
Congress of the United States. Mr. Cand
ler is also a candidate. I have nothing
to say against him, but he haa been there
long enough. We need a fresh horse. Ho
will have served three terms, making six
.fears, a.jd has drawn from the treasury
$.30,000 for his services. I do not think
he has any more claims upon this dis
trict. Two years ago I supported him,
but he has had as much as he deserves
and can now afford to give way.”
Judge Lester says he hs always been
a Democrat—never flickered. He began
work for the party when he was fifteen
years old, and made hundreds of speeches
before he was 21. He says:
“Since the war I have held only one
office, and that was Judge of the Superi
or Court, and this 1 held by appointment.
I do not think that I have been treated
right. Other men who have done noth
ing have been honored with good paying
offices. Have I done anything to debar
me from sharing the honors and pay of
the party? My character is unassailable-
That is blowing my own horn, but in
these days a man who does not blow his
own horn will find that it will not be
tooted. I never was a candidate befer •
you, and if you will send me to Congress
this time I will ask for no more favors.
I think I can represent you, or I would
not ask it ”
Upon questions that mostly agitates
the people just now he says: “I am not
a free trader but want the revenue col
lected by ipiport duties, and the articles
of necessity put upon the free list and
the luxuries taxed high. I am opposed
to monopolies and to the government
fostering them by taxing the people.”
We have not, of course, the space to
give a lengthy synopsis of the speeech,
but we quote the above merely to give
our readers some idea of what direction
the campaign in the ninth will take. It
seems that it will be upon personal
grounds alone that the candidates will
go before the people. What the out
come of it will be cannot be said.
Hewitt and the Labor Unions.
Confronted, as we are to-day, by the
great labor problems, it is a lamentable
fact that so few of our public men have
the courage to grapple with the quos*
tion and treat it in a manner commen
surate with its magnitude and theexe
gencies of the case. The politicians seem
to live in constant dread of offending
and alienating the labor vote. Proper,
wise and conservative labor organiza
tions are valuable institutions, and serve
to a good purpose; but when they grow
oppressive and tyrannical, they have
t ranscended the scope of their usefulness,
and the laws of the land and public sen
timent should be invoked to keep them
within check. If those who assume to
teach and lead the people on all ques
tions pertaining to the public good and
those who are in authority, are afraid to
speak and act upon matters involving so
much to the general welfare, then upon
whom must the safety and perpetuity of
our institutions depend? It is a source
of genuine pleasure to find a public offici
al of real nerve, like Mayor Hewitt, of
New York, who is not too cowardly to
speak freely his convictions. In a ban
quet speech, delivered a few nights since,
he said:
“ Think of the problem with which you
are confronted to-day. For ages the
world has been trying to get rid of ty
rants, and has been trying to get politi
cal freedom. W hat was the rule of the
tyrants of old compared with the despot
ic claims made in this country to-dav
that it shall be in the power and name of
one man—call him Powderly or cail him
Arthur —to paralyze the industry of the
United States? Was there ever in the
history of man a despot who laid claim
to any such power as that? At any
time in the history of the races has it
ever appeared that a conclave of ten or
a dozen delegates should be sitting in a
room, as they are to-night, to deter
mine whether the bread and fuel shall be
withheld from those who are willing to
work for the support of themselves and
their families? Who is to stand up in
is crisis and preach the truth? If the
men who have been raised in colleges, in
the mathematics and in the humanities
are cowards, and because they want
votes are afraid to get up to speak the
truth, theu God save the republic, for
man can’t do it.”
It is useless for the citizens of a town
to expect foreign capital to come in and
put the place on a boom when the home
capitalists do not show their faith by in
vesting in enterprises of public benefit.
The duty of everv citizen of such a town
is therefore plain. Every man should in
vest as much as he is able in works cf
public benefit.
It looks as if the anonymous corres
pondent will now have to go. Several of
the leading newspajiere refuse to publish
communications unless the real names o
the authors are appended to them. With
tears in our eyes we waft affectionate
good-byes to our old friends, “Tax Pay
er.” “Veritas,” “Subscriber,” and the
rest of the boys.
President Northern, of the State
Agricultural Society, is magnifying his
office. He is doing more lor the society,
and for the agricultural interests of the
State, than any of his predecessors. He
recognizes the fact that it is within the
scoi>e of his duty to do something more
than preside over the conventions and
the fairs. May his tenure of office be
loug.
Mr. W. L. Glessner, immigration
agent of the Central Railroad, gives no
tice that he will distribute, without dis
crimination, all matter sent him adver
tising any town, county or section of the
state. The people of Bartow and Car
tersville should place in his hands a lib
eral amount of literature concerning our
wonderful advantages and resources.
His address is Americus, Ga.
There is nothing needing more atten
tion at the present time than the public
roads of Georgia. In nearly every coun
ty they are a disgrace to civilization and
the manner in which they are worked is
the biggest farce of the age. Our coming
legislators should do something to rem
edy the evil. Change the present law and
work the roads by levying a road tax, or
else turn the county convicts upon them.
It turns out that the purchase of
Alaska from Russia, by the United States,
was not a bad investment after all. It
put this country in control of an impor
taut part of the fur trade, aud recent ex
plorations show that gold, silver and
copper are abundant there. It occupies
about one-sixth of the territory of the
United States, and is more than twice
the size of Texas. The latter covers
more than 240,000 square miles, and the
former 520,000 square miles.
The Coußant-Americax copies a short
article this week from the Manufacturers
Record upon the neglect of nearly every
growing town in taking proper sanitary
measures. Every word of the article is
perfectly true. No matter how healthy a
town may be it will not stay so if proper
precautions are not taken. As Carters
ville grows our sanitary affairs should
be taken care of. For this reason more
than any other a system of waterworks
should be established at once, and as our
population increases we will be com
pelled to provide a first-class system of
sewerage.
Joseph Jefferson in Atlanta.
Editors Courant-Amercan: Mr.
Joseph Jefferson will appear in Atlanta
Thursday March 22nd at DeGive’s opera
house in “Rip Y"an Winkle.” The sale
of seats will open one week prior to his
appearance. Arrangements have been
made with the W. &A. R. R. to sell
tickets for one dollar the round trip
to enable the citizens of Cartersville to
attend Mr. Jefferson’s performance.
There will be no ticket speculation of any
kind permitted. Seats can be secured by
mail. Yours, truly,
A. L. Erlanger.
A Chicago mail who had erected a fine
residence was surprised one day to learn
that a rat had been seen iu the cellar.
The plumber was sent for and given
orders to stop up the rat hole without
regard to expense. He did so and hand
ed in his bill. It called for $1,333.35.
He had found it necessary to completely
overhaul and change the sewerage and
drainage system of the premises to keep
that rat out.
I The Oft Told Story
Of the peculiar medicinal merits of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is fully confirmed by the volun
tary testimony of thousands who have tried
it. Peculiar in the combination, proportion,
and preparation of its ingredients, peculiar
in the extreme care with which it is put
up, Hood’s Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures
where other preparations entirely fail. Pecu
liar in the unequalled good name it has made
at home, which is a ‘’tower of strength
abroad,” peculiar in the phenomenal sales
it has attained.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
is the most popular and successful mediein6
before the public today for purifying the
blood, giving strength, creating an appetite.
“I suffered from wakefulness and low
spirits, and also had eczema on the back oi
my head and neck, w hich was very annoying.
1 took one bottle of liood’s Sarsaparilla, and
I have received so much benefit that I am
very grateful, and I am always glad to speak
a good word for this medicine.” Mus. J. S.
Snyder, Pottsvilie, Penn.
Purifies the Blood
Henry Biggs, Campbell Street, Kansas City,
had scrofulous sores all over his body for
fifteen years. Hood's Sarsaparilla completely
cured him.
Wallace Buck, of North Bloomfield, N. Y.,
suffered eleven years with a terrible varicose
ulcer on his leg, so bad that he had to give
up business. He was cured of the ulcer, and
also of catarrh, by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
•old by sll druggists, f1; alx for fS. Prepared only
fcy C. I. HOOD * CO., Apothecaries. Lowsll, Maas.
100 Domi Ont Dollar
DR. J. G. GREENE.
having located fh Cartersville for the purpose qf
practicing medicine and surgery, offers his pro
fessional services to the public. Calls promptly
answered. Office up-stalrs over Mays A Moon’s
stors; residence on the corner of Market and
Stonewall streets. * JanlS-d u
*AKIH C
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of purity,
strength and wholesomenes*. More economical
than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in
competition with the multitude of lowest short
weight alum or phosphate powder. Sold only in
cans.
Royll Baking Powder Cos.,
juneft-llm 108 Wall St., Y. Y.
*rVlL *ELsH ARl*"
M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use R
B In time. tknd br druggists.
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved %
mv life. —A. H. Dowkll, fl
v Editor Enquirer. Eden- *
■ ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. ■
IPISOI
The best Cough Medi- I
cine is Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. Children m
take it without objection. < ||
By all druggists. 25c. *
Tlj J CURESMTaLL^EFAILS?
U Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use fsl
Petition for New Uistrict.
GEORGIA—Bartow County:
To the Honorable board of County Commis
sioners of said County: The undersigned citizens
of the 851st district, G. M., Bartow county, a.,
residing in the northwest corner of said militia
district, respectfully represent to you that a
large number of the residents of said part of said
district, are seven miles from the justice court
ground and voting precinct, and your petition
ers conceive it to be necessary and expedient to
lay out anew militia district off of said 851st
district G. M., and your petitioners further rep
resent that within the said portion of said dis
trict there is sufficient population and persons
subject to militia duty to authorize the estab
lishing of anew district as provided by law.
Wherefore, your petitioners pray that your hon
orable board appoint three commissioners, citi
zens of said 851st district, to lay out and define
the line and boundary of said new district, and
such other order and proceedings as are necessa
ry and lawful to carry out the objects petitioned
for, and petitioners will ever pray. This day
of ISBB.
S E Calaway J A Madden
.1 W Pivetes Fountain Whitaker
I E Wood Vf T Gentry
H J Wade W M Nichols
O H Henderson I I Owen
H M Owen J A Magruner
G W Chapman Jackson Yancy
Dan Williams N S Griffin
J C Chapman M Martin
A J Greens Richard Leeke
W G < row man D L Adlin
H W Minston F T Dodd *
W A Hennell L D Jolly
RF Jolly Jc Jolley
A Martin W A Dodd
Jas I Vaughn J c Dodd
GA Fink J F Mayson
G T Freeman R B couch
L J Nickolds D L Martin
H E Matfield K chapman
W D Sphere T N Youngblood
H Hill .1 c Wilson
John Riggens Maek Wilson
W H Frash F M Wilsen
George Thomas J c Ligen
John Martin Sam Flecher
Peter Buford Charlie Jackson
Jas H Dodd W B Satepes
B H Tales J B Mulinx
Jeff Freeman James Freeman
Thomas Drummond T I Bright
Thomas Amolet Alic Perry
Geles Furguson T c Kelley
J A Satebus Butler Kennedy
A H King F M King
J W Edwards T W Tinsley
I G Gifsom.
County Commissioners’ Court, Bartow County:
Regular Term, Feb. 7, 1888.
Upon considering the within petition it is or
dered that L. D. Jolly, Fountain Whitaker and
J O IJgon be and are hereby appointed commis
sioners to lay out and define th lines of the dis
trict as proposed in the within petition, and re
port the same to this court, and it is further or
dered that said commissioners, if necessary, em
ploy the county surveyor of said county in the
performance of this duty.
Jno N Dobbs,
J L I rick
W J Hicks.
W L Adams,
J c Milam,
coinmissioßers.
GEORGIA—Bartow county:
This is to certify that we, the undersigned citi
zens and commissioners appointed by the honor
able board of county commissioners of the above
county, do agree that the line shall be as follows:
Ist. to begin at the northern line of the 851st
district, near P. H. Reynold’s, where the district
line crosses the Maj. Woolley road, from thence
following the said road south until it reaches
Jordan Ragan’s; from thence following the set
tlement road until it reaches Robert Eaton’s;
from thence following settlement road until it
reaches the T. D. Jones place; then following the
Taylorsville road to. where it Intersects with the
cedartewn road at J. c. Mayson’s; from thence
following the cedartown road until it intersects
with the Alabama road; from thence following
the Alabama road west to where it strikes the
Floyd county line. This Feb. 23d. 1888.
L D Jolly,
Fountain Whittaker,
J c Ligen.
commissioners.
The within petition and order therein, and re
port of commissioners laying out the new dis
trict, is hereby approved and ordered to record.
This March th, 1888. Jno F Dobbs,
Jas L Irlch,
W J Hicks,
W L Adams,
J c Milam,
commissioners.
Road Notice.
GEORGIA—Bartow County:
J. M. Veach and others have made application
for a second class road, leaving the Cassville
road near Mr, Ballinger’s place, leading by the
places of Green and Robt. Loveless and intersect
with the Kingston road between the residences
ot B. F. and James Shaw, which has been marked
out by the commissioners and report thereof
made on oath by them. All persons are notified
that said new road will, on and after the Ist
Tuesday in April next, by the commissioners of
roads and revenues of said county, be finally
granted, if no new cause be shown to the contra
rv. This the sth day of March, 1888.
♦ J. C. Milam,
Clerk county com uissloners roads and revenues.
BAKER <& HALL,
The most extensive dealer** in North Georgia in
General Hardware,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,
BUGGIES, WAGONS, HARNESS, ETC.
Can supply anything from a Knitting clll& GUHI Beltillg,
Needle to a 100-horse power Engine. 3
Plows, Harrows, Corn Sliellers and
all kinds of
S&sli, Doors and Slinds. Agricultural Machinery.
Wagon and Buggy Harness, Saddles,
Engiues, Saw Mills, Blacksmith Tools, Bridles, etc., in great profusion at
Guns, Pistols, Powder, Shot, Etc. VERY LOWEST PRICES.
*THE GOWER BUGGY 'N^
is still being hajidled bv us. Being llf
made of first-class material and a 11 I
home institution, the reputation of 1
which has long ago been made, we
make a specialty of it. However, we j' I
keep a full line of other work, which I / t
we fully guarantee. We also handle J j I
TENNESSEE WAGON
We assure the farmers that they need not go elsewhere for anything they want
in our line, for we have everything they need in their business at prices that can
not be beaten. In fact we are headquarters for Hardware, Agricultural Imple
ments, and Machinery for this section.
I’ll' TI? 9j IIA 8 I RsnlfAl'C We do a General Banking Business and
KiUr bll ® ■lllLilij DflllAeOi and solicit deposits, Loans made com
mensurate with security. BAKER & HALL, West Main Street,
CARTEnSVILiIjIE!, CVA.
(INCORPORATED.)
PHILADELPHIA
PHOTO-ELECTROTYPE CO.
707 and 709 Filbert Street.
Relief Plate Engraving for all Advertising and
Illustrative Purposes.
jan6-ly
'STItESBORO_TO_THE FRONT!
W. E Pueket, Dealer in Gen
eral Merchandise,
Wishes to announce to his many friends and
customers that he will be in the field for 1888 with
increased facilities for handling a big business.
COTTON AND COUNTRY PRODUCE,
He handles nothing but the best goods at the
cheapest pricep and gives nothing but the best
prices and all kinds of country produce.
Guanos and Fertilizers.
I will handle the best grades of Guanos and
will be enabled to give the farmers ol this section
the very best terms.
Thanking the people for their past patronage
and hoping for a continuance of the same, I am,
Yours to command,
W. E. PUCKETT,
Merchantand Cotto i Buyer of Stilesboro.
dec22-ly
Pemberton’s Lemon and Orange
ELIXIR.
Is the greatest Liver Medicine in the World.
Combining the Medicinal Properties of the Fruits
and Egyptian Tamarind Flower.
This wonderful preparation requires no change
of diet, being pleasant tr take, and leaves the
system in perfect order. Use no* more strong
cathartic and liver pills, purging the system and
deranging the digestive organs; but use this
Pleasant Vegetable Preparation
and you will never use any other. Every bottle
is sold under a guarantee to do what is claimed
for it. It is a sure and perfect cure for all dis
eases arising from torpid liver, such as
Constipation, Chills, Fever, Headache, Dizziness,
Biliousness, Indigestion, Bad
Breath. &c., &c.
Sold by all Druggists at 50 cents per bottle.
MANUFACTURED BY
PEMBERTON MEDICINE C 0„
Atlanta, Ga.
For sale at wholesale and retail by
M. F. WORD, Druggist, Cartersville, Ga,
|THAT FIGHT
TO The Original Wins.
M C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, Prop*!
|| M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, Est’d
m I 1840, in the U. S. Court dbfeats J.
Jj .I*% H. Zeilin, Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv
er Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin 1868.
B l4n M. has for 47 years
W cured Indigestion, Biliousness,
\ RxL Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost
Appetite, Sour Stomach, Etc.
WA Rev. T B. Reams, Pastor M. K.
— Athink I should have been dead but
q for your Genuine M. A. Sim
mohs Liver Mfcdicine. I have
sometimes had to substitute
l||l err*,] “Zetlin’s stuff” for y*ur Medi-
I /CflWjra/ cine, but it don't answer the
t/*•*•*/ purpose ”
I VqfOPUl Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor TJu
Memphis, Tenn. says:
* I I received a package of your Liver
A a Medicine, and have used half of it,
Y It works like a charm. I want an
'I better Liver Regulator and ceS
|H \ taini 7 no more ofZeilin’s mixtarcl
W. C. Edwards, F. D.
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER
•
Repository in new store room on West Main
street, Cartersville, Ga. jan27-ly
W L DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
The only fine calf $3 Seamier Shoe in the
world made without tacks or n ill*. As styl
ish and durable as those costing #5 and $6, and
having no tacks or nails to wear the stocking or
hurt the feet, makes them as comfortable and
well-fitting as a hand sewed shoe. Buy the best .
None genuine unless stamped on bottom "W. L.
Douglas $3 Shoe, warranted.”
W L. DOUGLAS 4 SHOE, the original
and only hand sewed welt $4 shoe, which equals
custom-made shoes costingfrom $6 to #!).
\V. L DOUGLAS SHOE is unexcell
ed for heavy wear.
W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE is worn by all
Boys, and is the best school shoe in the world.
All the above goods are madein Congress, But
ton and Lace, and if not sold by your dealer,
write YV. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
J. P. JONES, Asrent.
Cartersville, Ga.
Notice That
John Taylor is Himself Again!
He has enlarged his shop at the St. James Hotel.
He has a full team now, William Johnson and
Westley Allen. He has a retired shop where the
“rugays” will not annoy his customers. He does
not, solicit the patronage of roughs and vaga
bonds, he promises to observe good behavior,
have clean towels and sharp rAzors, in the 47th
year of his career. He flatters himself that he
knows all in the barber business from curling and
braiding down. He has been considered to be
the best hair cutter from New Orleans to New
York for 35 years. I only want you to call and
be convinced, and all customers desiring to be
shaved twice a week will be furnished cup and
brush free. My shop will be open from 6a.m. to
8 p. m.
John Taylor, William Johnson & Cos.
G. H. AUBREY. CHAS. McEWEN
Aubrey <& MoEwen,
Dealers in
Coal and Insurance Agents.
The public patronage respectfully solicited.
Money to Loan on desirable security.
June 16, ’B7,
BARTOW LEAKE,
INSURANCE.
Loan i Real Estate Agent.
Money Loans made on the most reasonable
terms. P. O. BOX, 123.
july2l-ly Cartersville, Ga.
a great^yeafT
In the history of the United States is now UP o ]*
us. Every person of intelligence desires to keep
pace with the course of its events. There is
hotter way to do so than to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
Its news facilities are unsurpassed by any paper
in the South. In addition to the fullest Associ
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During the present session of Congress vvasn*
lugton will be the most imvrtant and most in
teresting news centre in the country. I°®
Washington Correspondence of the Telegraph i
the very best that can be had. ,
Its regnlar correspondent furnishes .the late**,
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special letters from Hon. Amos J. CummiuK®’
member of Congress trora New York, Frank u.
Carpenter, and W. A. Croffut, three of the be* l
known newspaper writers at the Capital, a
cuss the livest and most important issues of tu*-
dav.
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if President Cleveland and the Democratn
party. In the coming national campaign tne
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