Newspaper Page Text
Ilel! is a Texas town that deserves its
name, judging by the brutality of three recent
murders.
Mrs. Hatcheldcr, of Bangor, Me., a glib
and persistent talker, has had her husband
arrested for attempting to pull out her
longue.
The crest emblazoned on a San Francisco
millionaire's carriage, a rising sun, is consid
ered appropriate, because he has risen from
stage driving and his wife from domestic
service.
William Brown is to be hanged at Fort
Smith, Arkansas, for accidentally killing a
man ; hut the chance shot was intended to
take the life of another, and bad aim was
held to be no defence under the law.
The Cincinnati Enquirer publishes a list
of Ohioans who hold office under the Federal
Government, filling three of its ample col
umns. The list docs not include postmas
ters, but consists largely of hangers-on at
Washington.
A pension of £4.000 was granted in 1790
by the British Parliament to the heirs and
descendants of William Penn, in considera
tion of bis meritorious services, and of the
losses which his family sustained in conse
quence of the American war. It is now paid
to Col. William Stuart, a descendant.
Beacon Falls is a mill town in Connecti
cut. The inhabitants are chiefly operatives
in the mills, and own no property. The
taxes, therefore, fall on a few persons, who
manage to keep them small by doing without
police or police courts. The two Grand Ju
rors, or magistrates, refuse to grant warrants,
and the constable never makes any arrests.
Differences between individuals are settled
on the monthly pay days, either by arbitra
tion or fisticuffs. Offenders are whipped by
self-appointed committees, or driven out of
the place.
Several years ago, in East Tennessee, near
the present site of Rugby, two intimate
friends, Guill and Dent, quarrelled, and Dent
stabbed Guill to death. Before dying, Guill
made an ofd negro servant, who had formerly
been a slave, promise to avenge him, but in
a fair fight with a knife. Dent fled to Texas,
but returned, and was found by the colored
man, who told him his purpose. Dent met
him near the grave of Guill, and the duel re
sulted in the death of both.
The father of Charlie Ross, writing to the
latest discoverers of the lost boy in Canada,
says tiiat the last spark of hope has gone out,
and he mourns the lost one as dead. After
giving reasons why the Canada boy cannot
possibly be Charlie, be adds : “I have always
believed that my Charlie, although only 4
years and 3 months old at the time he was
taken, would remember his brother Walter,
who was taken away with him, and had also
thought that he would even have a distinct
recollection of tbe feeling ol loneliness that
he must have experienced when he found he
was in the hands of strangers and separated
from bis parents.” On another recent occa
sion, Mr. Ross said: -The only tidings I
have ever 4 received of Charlie since he was
atolen was the demand for a ransom of $20,-
000. If I had paid that, I would have had
him long before this. As it is, I have spent
$60,000, and have not got him.”
Judge Jameson, of Chicago, granted a di
vorce to a wife on the ground of habitual
drunkenness in her husband, though tbe evi
dence showed that the man was no more than
a very moderate tippler. “Is he fit,” his
Honor argued, in his remarkable decision,
“to be tbe father of his wife's children ? The
greatest cruelty that can possibly be inflicted
upon a woman is to make her the mother of
children likely to become drunkards. The
Legislature would be justified in providing
that, where a maq has so indulged in drink
as to have tainted bis blood and thus made
it probable that his offspring will take by
inheritance a tendency to vicious courses,
that fact alone should be good ground for a
divorce, although he may in all other cases
l>e a kind, indulgent husband, able and will
ing to give his wife an abundant support.”
The last system proposed for the improve*
meat of the Mississippi river is an engineer
ing project of extraordinary magnitude. The
object to be accomplished is, in brief, to col
lect the vast volume of water furnished by
the spring floods of the numerous streams
and lakes constituting the headwaters of the
river into immense reservoirs, for the pur
pose of maintaining a steady depth of four
feet in the upper Mississippi from July to
November. To do this will require the con
struction of forty-one dams, seven on the
upper Mississippi, fourteen on the St. Croix,
twelve on the Chippewa, and eight on the
Wisconsin. The first set of dams will be lo
cated at the outlets of Lakes Winnebagosish,
Leccli, Mudd, and Vermilion, and at Poke
gama Falls, Gull Lake, and Pine River. The
total holding capacity of these reservoirs
will equal in extent an unbroken sea of 400
square miles, with a uniform depth of eight
feet. The plan specifies that all the reser
voirs shall be constructed of earth and wood,
no suitable stone being found in the region
in sufficient quantity. Congress has already
granted an appropriation for beginning the
work at Lake Winnebagosish. where it is pro
posed to build a dam sixteen feet high. The
total cost of dams, including telegraph lines
for operating them, is set down at less than
$1,500,000.
The Reward for Jeff*. Davis.
There stands to day on tl.e books of the
Treasury an unexpended balance of $2,9G8 of
the reward of SIOO,OOO offered for the cap
ture of Jefferson Davis. President Andrew
Johnson, by proclamation of May 2, 1865,
offered a reward of SIOO,OOO for the capture
of Jefferson Davis, but Congress did not au
thorize the payment of the same until 1868.
Congress hedged the appropriation with the
strictest provisions and precautions as to the
payment, requiring every one concerned in
the capture to be fully ideutified beforo re
ceiving any portion of the * reward. There
were a grea*. many claimants, and the Treas
ury officials had much trouble and difficulty
in arriving at a correct conclusion as to who
really were entitled to benefits. In conse
quence of the thorough examination required
the payments have been distributed through
the years from 1868 to the present time. In
1869, $12,000 was paid; in 1870, $879; in
1871, $1,611 50; in 1873, $2,051 ; in 1874
$79,904 12; in 1876, $293, and in 1879,
$293. The amount yet unpaid ($2,968 38)
belongs to a half dozen or so privates in an
lowa cavalry regiment, wliose identity has
not yet been established, although if the
Treasury officials were permitted to take their
own word for it enough of them took part in
the capture to constitute a brigade.
Defective Cotton seed.
From Southern Texas, where the farmers
have legun to think about the new cotton
season, we have already received a few scat
tering letters complaining of the injury to
seed caused by the rainy fall and winter sea
son ; and if we are not mistakeu this will be
a prolific source of trouble throughout the
South before a good stand is achieved for the
next crop. Many thousands of dollars were
lost from this cause last season, in Middle
and South Georgia, and in the cotton-growing
region of Florida.
Asa rule, no very large amount of cotton
seed is kept through the winter in the Cotton
States, tbe only considerable demand for
seed, except for planting, being from the
cotton seed oil companies, and those using
up most of what they crush in the fall and
winter.
This year, to be sure, the oil companies
will continue tbeir operations later than usu
al, owing to the extraordinarily late character
of the cotton season, and some of the compa
nies that shut down in the early part of Jan
uary for lack of seed have already started up,
using seed from the January picking; but
this late-gathcrcd seed is, as a rule, of exceed
ingly poor quality. In fact, for planting
purposes this seed would be worse than use
less.
Besides the wholesale retardation of plant
ing through waiting for the germination of
one hatch of seed, and then perhaps being
obliged to sow another lot, a good deal of
loss is occasioned by the fact that under the
present system planters have so little confi
dencc in the quality of the seed they use that
they sow three or four times as much gener
ally as is really needful.
The excellent practice of testing the seed
just before planting time is made use of in
some parts of Georgia. The quality may be
very readily determined by counting out one
or two hundred seed and planting them even
ly In a shallow box of mellow soil, and, after
watering the box with warm water, set it in
a light, warm place. In a few days the seed
will germinate, when they may be counted,
and, if only seventy-five or eighty out of the
hundred come up, it will show that the quali
ty is sufficiently good to justify the use only
of a bushel to the acre on any but very stiff
clayey soil. On land of the latter character,
or on any land very poorly prepared, it may
be safe to use a bushel and a half, and over
this is never necessary if the seed are of good
quality.
Three to five bushels of seed were all well
enough, perhaps, when a planter wanted to
insure a “perfect stand” of three stalks in
the hill, and hills nine inches apart, but now,
when intelligent and progressive farmers are
getting to see that not over 7,000 stalks are
desirable, and that in most cases 5,000 arc
better, they find a bushel of seed amply suffi
cient. Even when drilled this i* enough, and
when tbe land is checked half this quantity
will insure a perfect stand. — Cotton.
Cherokee Census.
The Cherokee census of 1880, taken under
authority of the native law, exhibits a Chero
kee and mixed population of 20,336, and an
actual population in the country of 27,001.
The cattle of the nation number 67,400 ; the
hogs, 108,552 and the horses, 13,643. During
the war vast herds were destroyed or stolen,
and the nation is just recovering from the
losses it sustained at that time. Only sixteen
of the Cherokees are hunters and five fisher
men. Out of a population of 5,196 males
over 18 years of age, 3,549 are farmers. A
single district last year exported 1,200 bales
of cotton, which is anew crop in that country.
About one half the people can speak the
English language, and, as English is the only
tongue taught or used in the schools, it is
expected that the whole nation will be
thoroughly anglicized in another generation.
Liquor is excluded from the Territory by the
intercourse laws, and the nation also has
stringent prohibitory lawsofitsown. Property
is not held in common as alleged, but by
personal title, and the Cherokees are very
jealous of their rights in this respect. The
prevalence of crime in the nation has been
greatly exaggerated. There are but twenty
eight inmates of the penitentiary. A lare
proportion of the cases of violence reported
are caused by the lawless invasion of the
Territory by white men and the attempts to
eject them. The population has increased
twenty-five per cent, since the war, and the
native officials refer to the growth and pros
perity of the people as evidence that the
experiment of civilization in their case, at
least, has not been a failure. The Cherokees
are more tractable and industrious than the
majority of Indians ; but the results of their
labors seem to show that the plan of giving
all the tribes land in severalty, and gradually
weaning them from nomadic life, is the one
chance for the salvation of the race.
Cracking Wheat into Flour.
Minnesota millers no longer “grind”’ wheat
into flour. They “crack” it, and the people
of the Northwest claim that the new process
makes their hitherto inferior wheat the most
valuable in the world. Burr stones are things
of tho past and Hungarian steel rollers have
taken their place. These rollers are about
thirty inches long and eight inches in diame
ter. It takes five sets of steel rollers to finish
the flour. Each set of rollers run closer than
the preceding. After the wheat passes each
set of rollers it is bolted or sifted through
course cloth. This cloth lets the disinter
grated particles of wheat through and passes
off the bulky and larger pieces, which are run
through another and a closer set of rollers
and cracked again. The last rollers have
little else but wheat hulls and waxy germs
of wheat, which do not crack up, but smash
down like a piece of wax. The germ of a
kernel of wheat is not good food. It makes
flour black. By the old millstone process
this waxy germ was ground up with the
starchy portion and bolted through with the
flour. By the new system of cracking the
kernel instead of grinding it this germ is not
ground, but flattened out and sifted or bolted
our, while the starchy portions of the wheat
are crushed into powdered wheat or flour. All
the big mills of Minneapolis now manufac*
ture by the new process.
An Interesting Experiment.
Louisiana is rejoicing over the prospective
success of a movement initiated some time
ago to substitute Italian for colored labor in
its cotton and cane fields. The first instal
ment of these Italian emigrants, two hundred
and ten in number, have reached New Orleans,
and it is reported that other laborers of the
same class are expected in large numbers
during the winter and spring. Heretofore
the drift of Italian emigration has been to
wards South America, and principally to the
Argentine Republic, of which Buenos Ayres
is the capital, and the province of that name
the richest province. The climate there ap
proxi mates so closely to that of Southern
Italy that it agrees well with the emigrants
from the latter kingdom. Whether they will
find that of Louisiana equally well suited to
them, or the labor in the cotton and cane
fields congenial to their habits and constitu
tions, must necessarily be at present a matter
of doubt. The attempt to introduce Chinese
labor into Louisiana failed signally. The
present attempt to substitute Italian for negro
labor may fare better. It is, at all events an
interesting experiment, for all accounts agree
that as a laborer the Italian is honestf, frugal,
temperate and industrious.
A Camp-Meeting Anecdote.
An incident of camp meeting life, detailed
by a clergyman on a Baltimore steamboat, is
thus reported in Forest and Stream:
An old couple had supplied themselves
with a bottle of pennyroyal oil with which to
keep off the mosquitoes. They extinguished
their light and retired, forgetting the antidote.
The mosquitoes were very bad, and, after
standing it as long as they could, the old lady
got up and got a well filled ink-bottle instead
of the oil, and gave the old gentleman a thor
ough lubricating with tbe fluid, face, hands
and feet ; she then annointed herself in a like
manner.
They again assayed to court the drowsy
god, but could only get an occasional nap.
Finally the old lady got up and struck a
light. Giving a glance at the bed she had
just left, she beheld, to her horror, a colored
person, as she supposed, stretched in the
place of her spouse.
She quietly got the poker, and beat the old
fellow over the head before discovering her
mistake. Later on in the night, we found
the old couple on board the boat with us, he
with his head nearly a9 big as a bale ol hay,
and she caring for him with the greatest so
licitude.
The Literary Revolution.
CHANGE OF BASE.
This very remarkable enterprise continues
to make such progress as to astonish its
friends and astound its enemies. Its greatly
increasing proportions have compelled the
removal of its head quarters from the Tribune
Building to the very large and beautiful
building, No. 764 Broakway, which is in the
very midst of the “ book district” of New
York City, aud, therefore, of the publishing
enterprise of the nation. This building,
though six stories in height 25 feet frtntand
101$ feet deep, is sufficient only(for
and retail store of the Company. Tiro manu
facturing is carried on in several large build
ings located in other parts of the city, though
it is contemplated concentrating them soon
in one immense factor}' to be erected.
Their list of recent and early forthcoming
publications are extremely interesting to all
who enjoy what is choicest in literature. The
Library Magazine is unique in both form and
character and altogether delightful in the
richness of its contents. Of the books an
nounced, Green's larger “History of the
English People,” reduced from 'slo to $1;
C arlyle s “ History ofthe French Revolution,”
reduced to 40 cents; Carlyle’s “ Heroes and
Hero Worship,” 25 cents, and the “ Revised
New lestament,” which is promised to be
manufactured with rapidity heretofore un
heard of, will attract special attention. It is
worth while for every one who has not already
seen it, to send and get the illustrated
pamphlet, “Book Making, and Typesetting
by Steam,” which will be sent free upon ap
plication. Address, the American Book
Exchange, 764 Broadway, New York.
TEETHINA.
(TEETHING POWMUS.)
ttttttttttttt
Cures! ho I era Infantum. Allays Irritation and
makes Teething easy. Removes and prevents
Worms.
Thousands of Children mat / be sated ev
er!/ year by using these Fated era.
For sale at DR. PENDERGRASS’ Drugstore.
T. FLEMING. J. H. FLEMING. 11. FLEMING.
T. FLEiMIJVG & SOXS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Hardware, Agricultural Implements,
Wagon and Buggy Material, Blacksmith* Tools,
RUBBER BELTRYG, TE XX ESSE WAGOXS,
HARNESS, DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS,
Carpenters Tools,
A FULL LINE OF HARDWARE.
We Would lie (Had to Stow Yon Onr Coeds and C-iye Yon Prices.
Very Respectfully,
T. FLEMING & SONS,
September loth. Athens, Georgia.
JUJDSON’S
JUDSON’S MARBLE WORKS.
ATLANTA, G-EORGTA,
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN
Italian and Rutland Marble, Monuments, Box Tombs, Head and
Foot Stones, Iron Railing for G-rave Inclosures, &c.
OFFICE AND WORKS ON CORNER OF LOV'D AND ALABAMA STREETS,
Opposite Georgia Railroad Depot.
Orders Solicited and Promptly Filled. Prices Reasonable. Tens Casb.
Addrcss D. N. JUDSON, Atlauta, Gu.
Atlanta Charlotte
Air-Line Railway.
Passenger Department.
Atlanta, Ga., January 15th, 1881.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
ON and after January 16th, trains will run oh
this road as follows.
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
(EASTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 6.J0 A, M.
Leave Lula G. 31 A. M.
(WESTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 9.3S P. M.
Leave Lula 9.39 P. M.
NIGIIT PASSENGER TRAIN.
(EASTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 5.55 P. M.
Leave Lula 5.5(3 P. M.
(WESTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 9.57 A. M.
Leave Lula 9.58 A. M.
LOCAL FREIGHT TRAIN.
(EASTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 11.33 A. M.
Leave Lula 1i.58 A. ,M.
9 (WESTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 11.07 P. M.
Leave Lula 12.26 P. M.
THROUGH FREIGHT TRAIN.
(EASTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 5.20 P. M.
Leave Lula 5.35 P. M.
(WESTWARD.)
Arrive at Lula 8.41 A. M.
Leave Lula 8.53 A. M.
_ Connecting at Atlanta for all points West and
Southwest. Connecting at Charlotte for all Eas
tern points, Through Tickets on sale at Gaines
ville, Seneca City, Greenville and Spartanburg to
all points East and West.
G. J. FOREACRE. Gen. Man.
W. J. HOUSTON, G. P. & T. Ag't.
Coffins ! Coffins!
IM ILL keep on hand, in Jefferson, a full sup
ply of
AND— -
BURIAL CASES,
of all sizes, and at prices to suit the times. Every
effort will b? made to serve parties promptly and
satisfactorily. Respectfully,
sept 3 W. A. WORSHAM.
lfr-f Outfit furnished free, with full instruo
tions for conducting the most profitable
business that anyone can engage in. The busi
ness is so easy to learn, and our instructions are
so simple and plain, that any one can make great
profits from the very start. No one can fail who
is willing to work. Women are as successful as
men. Roys and girls can earn largs sums. Many
have made at the business over one hundred dol
lars in a single week. Nothing like it ever known
before. All who engage are surprised at the ease
and rapidity with which they are able to make
money. Yon can engage in this business during
your spare time at great proiit. You do not have
to invest capital in it. We take all the risk.
Those who need ready money, should write to us
at once. All furnished free. Address True <!t
Augijgta, v ( j ; j^,
RHIPAY agents
IJAUA 1 * WANTED.
W E W ANT A LIMITED number of active, ener
getic canvassers to engage in a pleasant and prof
itable business. Good men will find this a rare
chance
TO HS/TuA-IKE MONEY.
Such will please answer this advertisement by
letter, enclosing stamp for reply, staling what
business they have been engaged in. None but
those who mean business need apply.
Address FINLEY, IIARVEY & CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Outfit sent free to those who wish to en
gage in the most pleasant and profitable
business known. Everything new. Capital not
required. We will furnish you everything. $lO
a day and upwards is easily made without staying
away from home over night. No risk whatever.
Many new workers wanted at once. Many are
making fortunes at the business. Ladies make as
much as men, and young boys and girls make
great pay. No one who is willing to work fails
to make more money every day than can be made
in a week at any ordinary employment. Those
who engage at once will find a short road to for
tune. Address 11. Hallett & Cos., Portland,
Maine.
Yourselves by making money
OE 1 A * when a golden chance is offer
ed, thereby always keeping poverty from your
door. Those who always take advantage of the
good chances for making money that are offered,
generally become wealthy, while those who do
not improve such chances remain in poverty. We
want many men. women, boys and girls to work
for us right in their own localities. The business
will pay more than ten times ordinary wages.
We furnish an expensive outfit and all that you
need, free. No one who engages fails to make
money very rapidly. You can devote your whole
time to the work, or only your spare moments.
Full information and all that is needed sent* free.
Address Stinson & Cos., Portland, Maine.
G. W. -WALKER’S
'( i elHHlel (s IJ SHOPS ,
Main Street, G-ainesville, Georgia,
MANUFACTURER of
Phsetons, Buggies and Farm Wagons.
I RESPECT FULL\ invite the people of Jackson county and the public generally to call *.. i
amine my work before purchasing elsewhere. As I AM STILL TN THE (M ppr \‘cr
NESS, with GOOD STOCK. GOOD WORKMEN, and CLOSE ATTENTION To l’UsiNFssA
am prepared to offer them an}’thing in my line at 1
TLocls. Bottom Figures!
*' • t u\ V J
So send on your orders and work. Orders by mail promptly attended to.
Repairing Done in all of Its Branches.
Respectfully,
Feb. Oth, ISSO. 0. IF. WALKER.
BALDWIN & BURNETT,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
ZBOOTSI SH OESJS,
j\ r o. o Broad Street, Athens, Georgia.
WE HAVE just received the largest and most complete stock of Hoots and Shoos ever brought
to Athens. The quality of our goods is of the highest order, and our prices within the roach
of all. We deal
in this line, and promise the most courteous treatment and perfect satisfaction to all who
may call. '
TO MERCHANTS:
Our WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT is complete, and we guarantee prices as low as
any house in the South, and will save you freight.
.•, u . r . t !l . ■ ! ; v .wf, ■„. ! • '] e • Jartoni uw ! m>- * ui. j fcutl’rfio'// ir
G- I"V E US -A. C .A. LL .
BALDWIN BURNETT.
. JL 1 . . i i< !i *
Athens, On., October Ist, 18S0.
HURLEY & SMITH,
io " i J) 3* ;J ? • L.T J;; JmlJj tinhl oil? '’o Junonoc no .Jen! iLeA
(SUCCESSORS TO HODGSON DliOS. and I). C. HURLEY.)
Athens, - ■ ■ ■ Gr£t.
bj Cl IWO lUI HiJ • ' ‘ ’ o ’J 4
WE MANUFACTURE AND DEAL IN
_ .. # r rmitt . .
Find Vehicles of Every > Description 1
line Hand-Made Harness, of Superior Leather.
Wapn and Harness Repairing Promptly Done in tie Best Manner and at the Loret Prices.
WE HAVE ON HAND A FEW OF THE CELEHRATED
HODGSON BROS. BEST MAKE OPEN BUGGIES.
GREATLY REDUCED 3? RICES.
WE WARRANT all of our work, and CHALLENGE anj' one else to produce as good for the SAiViE MONEY
\ v.sv\. \ euVvwsv YA.scvv\\cye.
• r ”, HURLEY & SMITH,
Hodgson Bros, old stand, Oconee Street, Athens, Ga.
U. S. I have associated with me in business Mr. FRFiD. C, SMITH, of Atlanta. Ga,, a fine
Carriage trimmer, and with enlarged means, line shops and good ( workmen in every department,
am better prepared than ever to give my friends good work at reasonable prices. Sincerely thank
ing them for their liberal patronage in the I>aSt, and soliciting itUcontmllnncc. ’
1,1 (iozAm: I am, very trulj*, D. C. HURLEY.
Marble Works
■ ! u I ..,1 ■ n i< Urdu fuo o h oe .V*
WIST ID U
M IST XT IF* Ak O fi IP <0 XX "'ST ,
. : -,i . : :t • .. : '> rt jo,. \
I3ST
GAINESVILLE, "GEORGIA.
'! bniiß &rtT
*' 1 .1. .) a liiJU*) U /iOi'ol! - .1 .V. Ui J
W E cal l the attention of the public to our new and the ONLY MARBLE WORKS iu Northeast
Georgia. \. e are prepared.with airtple capital, large experience and skilled workmen, to
fill orders on short notice for GRAVE STONES beautifully and artistically finished,
Monuments, Marble Mantels, Etc.
,^V C P laran teejdl work in our line, and will sell as cheap as the same can be procured in any
market. North or South, and respectfully solicit the patronage of the public. Ollicc on Main St.,
near the Depot. vrrrry
MADDEN $ MENGS, Proprietors.
December 17th, ISSQ. , .
~ ' ‘
Dr. J. B. DEAD Ell HU. ISS,
HAYING BUILT AND FURNISHED A SPLKNpID
BRICK DRUG STORE,
HAS OPENED UP A FULL LINE OF FRESH AND
Pure Drugs and Patent Medicines
taSiZifc S° W I>rcparCd l ° fUrDish l ’ ,; pUlJic Wilh <M-jUling.Msa.Hy found in .
PAINTS , QILS,
I APMSII, L)YP KTHJWi'Si
PAINT BRUSHES, TOBACCO .
CIGARS. SNUFF.
STA TION ER Y, PENS, PENCILS,
J NK. t JAI R ItR.CSIII. >.
COMBS. TOILET SOAPS ,
PER FUMER Y, DENTRIFICES.
MATCHES, BLACKING, '
BLACKING BRUSHES, s c ., 4c.
Special Attention Given to the Compoundiff u of Pi\esci'i t > ■
tions at all lloiu's.
D ith thanks for the liberal patronage bestowed upon him in past, lie still offers his i< •
Sessional services to the public, and will endeavor to answer calls promptly and treat diseases v. 1 i
skill, after the most approved methods. Charges as low as the lowest.