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—P—
SAMARITAN NERVINE.
gflfjAßlTAfi
S^^rfaS|>»2
H?y «Syl W a claim ft I
■awrtffiT rfinr'v tUo rtrua of all dlp©e*««
Mtai fwoßMoiooiL Its N«Tvtao, XMoftnti
jSmttn tod LaxnUYt
•oa<9Hoos herein referred to. known won u
pppHfloiiffP!
nlnmii sraWm, whereby tbs brain tere
fcwl at morbid reneiea, wiiicii era eraeted by
Am osojwe idwve rafened to.
mttuy ompJoynKmt coosee nervous prostration,
at the blood, etomaefc, bowel, 0*
uSwito or who require a nerve tonic, apootteo*
erstlmnlant.HAVißivev RraivTwnlilmiJruiblo.
tSbooraod. proclaim It the iuo«t woodarfnl In
vMorant that ever saetahiad the stokim eyetem.
*55. Sold bv an Diwpiids. The DB. B. A.
tframnwn HBI). CO.Tl"rovr'AStJc»eptl,Jla
For tcrtimorriale and clroolare seed J*"®!*
Shu. H. crtlteetca. Admit. Sw Jerk Cite. (Ml
Attonneus.
GEO. M. NAPIER.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
LaPnjcttc, • • Georgia.
Will practice in nil the courts and at
tend with promptness and care to le
gal business of eyerj kind.
* Win, E. MANN.
Lawyer,
Ringgold, Georgia.
Will piactice in all the Courts,
State and Federal. Legal business of
every kind attended to. OlHee In front
ot Court House.
MONEYLOANED
On Farms; 5 Years lime,
AT REASONABLE RAISS,
IN WALKER AND OHATTOOGA
COUNTIES.
J3P“Loans for less than $300.00 can
not be negotiated. .
Send stamp tor terms or apply in
person to
GEO. M. NAPIER,
LaFayette, Ga.
JOHN W.HADDOX.’
Attorney at Law,
SUMMERVILLE, - - JEOROIA,
Will practice in the Superior, Coun
ty, and District Courts.
F W- Copeland,
Attorney at Law,
I aFayette, - - - Georgia.
W, Lb practlceln lh« Superi.rCourt.,of Roma
\V :jr C uit. Elsewhere by special agreement. Col
ecting a specialty. __
H. I*. Lumpkin
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette, - - Georgia.
WILL slve prompt auentlon to all business
-JSBStaJlwaWGSSßoildlni.
' Robert Jt. W. Glenn,
Attorney at Law,
LiFatktte, - - - - Georgia.
Will practlceln the Superior Courts
of the RomC and adjoining,circuits and
in the Supreme Court ol' Georgia ui
flee on east side of square m building
with Dr. J . Hill Hammond.
3 as 3m. M|
Miscellaneous Advertisements.
DR. J. HILL HAMMOND,
Physician and Surgeon,
Office in LaFayette on the east fide
of the square, immediately south ot the
brick store, where he can be found at all
hoars, day and night when not profes
sionally engaged.
DttXsT rhea,
RESIDENT DENTIST.
Rinnggold, - - Georgia.
aKJA Offers services in all braneh-
of his profession to the
citizens of Walker and Ctoosa Coun
ties. W irk promptly done at moderates
* All work warranted. Cffice on Nash
ville street, first building west ot W L
Whitman’s store, _____
GEORGIA HO USE
AND RESTAURANT.
CHATTANOOGA. TENN.,
Col. Mi.kit t.D Hints Sti.,
Kept by CH AS. FETTER.
Board $1.25 per day.
Call and see Fetter and get a square
meal and a good drink. The coolest
beer and the best liquor in our city.
for lh« working claw. Bend 10 cent*
for postage, a-d we will mall you mi
a royal, valuable bo* of tample eon,l*
that will pi t yon In tha way of making
more money in a fnw day* than you ever thnu-ht
n«e«|hle at any businefu. Capital not required. VVe
will start you. You ran wmk all the time or In
■pare time only. The work is aniverbally wlapted
t! both saqe* young and old, You can easily earn
from 50 cents to (|5 every evening. 1 hat all who
want work may lest the business, we make this tin
paralleled offer; to all who are not well satisfied we
will send §1 to pay for the trouble of writing as.
Full particulars, directions, et#., sent free. For
tunes will be made by those who give their whole
time to the work. Great success absolutely sure.
now ' A " m l v°"
80LID BILVER 3TEM wTnDIKG
FULL JEWELED DENTS’ SIZE
WATCH FOR 912 50.
FULLY UUAIMNTEEI>. TUI. ofT.r m.dv for
•0 Say, only. Good. '-r l ' l by Ex(*r,iaC. O. D. f
■abject u inapcclion before purcharlat
i. P. STEVENS it CO., Jewelers,
Atlasts,Ga.
■ I 111 t *7 —f In n:>TT. No reparation
uJ.Vi.' iTTH Teed with ai.y el«** pet . t-.r r ~:k
•liCJ lor say *• pm:
582 ™s£sAsaiirA 1! »“.i*~
Walker County Messenger.
VOL. VII.
THE MESSENGER.
ITfAYKTTE, - - - GEORGIA
SVBSCIIirTION t
One Tear - - * ", U ( ®°
Six Months - - - £0 Gents.
Tlnee Months - - - JSGcuts.
COMMUNICATED.
Ola, Arkansas.
Editor Messenger:
It has heen a long time since I
wrote ior the Mkssenger, but hav
ing received a couple ot copies of
it lately—probably through the
kindness of some good friend,—
which caused ray mind to run
back to the many pleasant days
that I have enjoyed there, and
especially my father and mother
that are yet in Walk< r county.
When I read*f the fine churches
and big revivals and preaching all
over the country every Sabbath, I
think what a difference with us.
There are plenty of grown people
here, who never saw any one bap
tized, and they ecarceiy ever bear a
sermon of any kind. It is a very
backward place in that respect; but
the people are as clever as any peo
ple I ever lived among, and as near
on an equality, You never see one
that seems to think that he is bet
ter than his neighbor.
The farmers are getting along
finely with their crops. There has
been a good deal of corn planted,
and some is up and large enough to
work. There wid be a great deal of
cotton planted.
Thero was more wheat sown last
fall than at any time since I have
been here, and it looks well.
Evertbing so far looks finely and
if a drouth doesn’t come thero will
be a bountiful crop. But that is
the great draw back here.
John M Harp.
April 18th, ’B4.
Ozark County, Missouri.
We had a very cold winter.
Some of the farmers are planting
corn, while others are only break
ing their land.
lam now liyingin three miles of
a new town named Rome.
I don’t think we will have any
peach pie this summer.
We have good society, good
schools, and churches of all the de
nominations.
The wheat and oat crop looks
fine.
Corn is worth fifty cents per
bushel; wheat SI; bacon 10c;
Eggs 8i ; cows with young calves
from $25 to S3O; horses from $75
to SIOO.
This is a stock and grain coun
try. The valleys and hills look as
green as a wheat field. The land
will make from twenty to twenty
five bushels of wheat per acre, and
from forty to fifty bnshelß of com.
There is a great deal of govern
ment land here. A man can home
stead 160 acres, wnich will only
cost sl4. The land can be bought
from the government at $1 25 per
acre. B. F. Siler.
Rome, Mo„ May 1, 84.
Band Kock, Alabama.
Farmers are behind -say too
much rain.
Wheat and oats are shabby,
some of the farmers are done
planting corn.
Cotton is the main crop in this
section.
We have a good Sunday-school.
There are five Sunday-schools in
five miles of this place. I have
visited them all and find them
prosperous.
This section is wide awake and
up and doing.
The stock drovers have all disap
pearel.
We have new Irish potatoes as
large as hen’s eugs.
Jack Frost paid us a visit tbit
week.
Some mad dogs have been killed
j in this State.
The high school at this place has
given vacation till the first Monday
in lu’y.
Our town is soon to have a steam
saw mill.
Hoga are scarce and corn high
and hard to get.
XL e Coosa river has teen out of
its hanks for seme time,
i We hate a full crop of p*scbe»
LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1884.
and apples yst.
Some tan bark has bejn skinned
in this section and shipped north
by railway but timber is getting
scarco, that can be cut.
Sand Rock in situated about the
middle of Lookout Mountain. We
have a daily mail from Collinsville
and Centre. J. L. D-
April 26th, 1884.
- ..... m » — 1
Floyd Springs, Apr. 11th.
Editor Messenger.
The wheat locks promising.
The farmers make good use of
the time that they cau work.
Owing to the severe drought last
year, feed for stock of all kind* wa»
scarce the past winter, and as a
natural consequence stock looks
worsted. But spring has cotne and
our cows and such, havo become
independent,.
There is some excitement and no
little confusion about the new road
law. The roads have about all been
let to contractors, but owing to the
failure on the part of some to give
bond as per law, the roads in some
sections will have to be re-let,
which will be attended with trouble
and expense; butsotlia world goes.
Illicit whistoy the cause —reve-
nue the effect, have brought some
people to the stool of repentance ;
but alas ! it is too late to pray after
tho Devil comes.
The school at this place, under
the management of Bros. Ohanler
is progressingly finely.
G W Fleetwood has his store,
house completed.
For the first time in several years
we have a post office at this place.
The health of this section is
good. Scribbler.
A Pretty Predicament.
There comes a time in the life of
a man whose besetting sin is char
ily when he begins to wonder if it
isn’t better to he cold-blooded and
frigid to all whom he chances to
meet. I have a young friend who
is just now thinking over this
proposition. His sympathetic na
ture was played upon by the rag
ged offscouring of the curbstone
who polished his boots daily. Al
though tLis very charitable young
man had no superabundance
of wealth, he had two pairs of trou
sers. One pair was of thespic-and
span, latest cut, and costly pattern.
They had hung three days, howev
er, in his room, waiting for an
event on which he had set his
heart. Thcpairhe was wearing had
given away in several places to the
caresses of time. The other day,
while softened by the bootblacks
poverty, he gave him an order on
his landlady for one pair of trou
sers ; his expectation at the time
was t® be at his room and shift the
old for the new before the wretch
of the curbstone could deliver the
the order. Later in the day he went
to his room and diverted himself
of the ancient raiment. He saw
his boy down on the sidewalk, and
thinking to relieve him of a jour
ney up Btuirs, he pitched the trou*
sers out of the window, with the re
mark,‘‘there’ they are.” He then
went to his wardrobe for the now
attire, but nothing was there. Ho
searched the room without avail.
He hurried to the window to call
back his boy, but he had vanished.
He locked h s door and succeeded
in arousing his landlady, who had
a keyhole interview with him lrom
the hall. She informed him that
she bad received his note some
time before and had delivered to
the boy the articles mentioned.
The young man then realized that
thi urchin ou the sidewalk to
whom he had thrown his old trou
sers was not the one to whom he
had given the order.—“Medder.”
To R‘ pair llamag's.
Dear lady, there is probaly nc
use telling you that fashionable life
in a great city * a rough one on
your beauty. Late hours, loss of
sleep and mental excitement will
leave you by and by shorn of those
beautiful tresses which drew lov*
er* around you in other years Ar
tificial substitutes can never pa-s
those rich and glossy locks. Par
ker’s Hair Balsam will stop your
hair from falling out, estoTe it’s
natural color and softness, and
prove cleansing and beautiful to
the scalpl’
B-tter sugar tl an before at lOlhs
to the dollar at Chastain’s.
Behind Earthworks.
BY W. QUAD.
Ah I it was one of the prettiest
June days even Virginia ever saw.
There was such a mellow sunshine
that every flower|and blossom turn
ed its face to bo kissed, and there
was such a happy, peaceful look
down across tho fields towards the
James River that men forgot for a
moment that war existed. In the
treeS overhead the robins called to
Bach other, and once a blus bird
alighted on n wheel of a field piece
which had its shining brass muzzle
thrust through the embrasure, rea
dy to send its shri'King shell
whenever hand pulled the loox
striug.
There were a thousand of us
down behind tho eartl works, and
we were so quiot that tho voice of
the colonel reached the last men on
the flanks as lie cautioned us: “My
lads, we are going to hold this posi
tion against a whole army I”
Seel A thin line of men—skir
mishers to the number of fifty—
suddenly break cover from the
woods half a mile away and ad
vance upon us. They skulk—they
dodge—they drop down and sud
denly rise again and advance nB
stealthily as Indians intent upon
surprising a hamlet. Bah I Fifty
men against 1,000 I No, it is not
that. The octopus is in the woods
—these skirmishers aro the long
arms he is reaching cut to feel us —
to uncover our position—to as
certain our s'reugth.
“Puff! Puff!”
It is the fire of tho skirmishers.
You know where tho watch dog is
by Ins growl. They are trying to
provike the beast to betray his re,
treat. Zip 1 Zip! How the bulletß
sing as they fly over our heads.
There is dead silence behind the
works. We breathe faster and
harder —we clutch our guns with
tighter grip, hut we are silent. To
kill an octopus you must strike at
the body. Sever his aims and they
will grow again.
“Pop ! pop I pop ! Zip ! zip 1
zip r*
“Steady, lads and wait for the
word I” says the Colonel.
There is no excitement among us.
I tear the man on my right shut
his tce'h with a gritting sound, and
the one on my left is breathing like
a weary man in profound slumber
If I should look up and down the
line I might see pale faces, but I
am looxing down ucross the fields
and over the heads of the skirmish
ers. The grandest sight of the
world is to see the Octopus of War
leave his lair and come forth tbns
ling for human blood.
Ah I here ho comes I Ilia feelers
have failed to uncover us, but he
can judge for himself that such a
short line of works cannot conceal
more than a full regiment. He
does not know that our right flank
rest* on a swamp, and our left ot an
impassatile ra/ine, while our front
offers no shelter even for a rabbit.
Look the sight is worth ten years
of your life I A full brigade pours
out of the woods und forms for the
oharge. Regiments and companies
swing into position as if on parade.
The skirmishers redouble their fir*
and ageneralgallops alongthofront
of the brigade, as if to see that ev
ery foot is ou a lino with its neigh
borhood.
Now they get the word to ad
vance, and at the same instant our
field piece* open fire. The erm 1
shell ore staking p'ump into the
front rank and tearing men to pie
ces by the half doz-n, *>ui as the
smoke lifts we find the Octopus
marching on with steady move
ment He wants blood. He will
demand drop for drop—and more I
Ha ! The shriek of shell has chan
ged to the whistle of grape arid
canister, and the men at the guns
are working as if the fate of nations
depended upon them. The smoke
drops down in a grrat rioud, and
one cannot jsee beyond his bayonet.
Now it is rent and shattered, an.> it
lifts and floats away in great pieces
and fragments.
“Now lads—and fire low !”
The Octopus h«s been staggered
—wound, d—hailed—but here ho
corr.es again. High' in front of rn*
I I see a lace and form which I se-
lect as a target. I could kill him
now, hut I grimly wait far him to
cune nearer. Ho is pale with ox
citoment, and as tho man at kin left
is struck dawn, my target loses the
steady step of tho line. But only
for an instant. Now he is not ovor
forty feet awoy. and the fire of
musketry has checked the advance.
My weapon points straight at him.
lan looking right into bio eyes. I
note his brown curls, his high fore
head —the white teeth Bhut tight
togothe in his excitement. He is
not over twenty years old. Hs nas
a mother whose poor old heart wilt
almost break to-morrow. He has
sisters who will refuse to be com
forted for long months. And such
a fair-faced boy must have a sweet
heart whose Very soul will ory out
in anguish at the news ofhis death.
lamgoirgto kill him! The
excitement of the chock has con
fused him. He looks to the right
and left, and then into my eyes,
He is standing almort alone. Ab
our eyes meet he secs .murder in
mine, and reud an appeal for mer
cy in his. Tho result of a battle
does not hang upon the life of a
corporal, Tne war will not be
over the sooner for his death. But
I tako deliberate aim at his breast
and press the trigger, anven before
I feel the shock of discharg I see
the red blood spray out from tha
horible wound, and ho falls back
with ashri*clt upon bislips.
The Octopus is beaten back. I
go over the works and find my
target. Thuse brown curls arc
damp wi’h death —tho fair face
was white as snow —the ground
soaked with blood so precious
thatjevery drop will call for a hun
dred tears from women’s eyes. The
hluo eyes are wido open, the lips
parted, and as l bend over him it
seems as if hi» voice crime back
fi ran instant to whisper tho ex
clamation ; Murderor I
And that wus emr! That was
one of tho acts whioh helped to
make a victory for thousands to
shout over—for flags to ripple —for
rockets to ascend—for children to
cheer and women to bless high
Heaven I
la The Alamo.
The garden wall, which formed
the outer fortifications where Da
vy Crockett and his 140 compan
ions held at bay a Mexican army
of 10,000 is gone, and the A'amo
plaza extends to the doors of the
ancient buildings. Tho nunnery
portion has been transformed into
u whoffisalo grocery, and the firm
sign is spread across tho front of
the old walls. An imitation of a
rnun-iird has been added to tho
..wo stories of tho convent, and
above the roof of each end rises a
turret pierced with woodengune,tho
modern tribute to the structor’s
famous history. One can hardly
miss a guido, for the battle cry
of the second Mexican war, “Re
member tho alamo!" echoes in the
Han Antonian’s memory and
the detail* of the matsaere are ns
flesh in his mind as aro those of
the killed of Ben Thompson and
King Fii her in the Vaudeville
Theatei last week A little hack,
but joining on tho end of the con
vent. stands the massive building
in which Ooekett and his reduced
hand retiled and made their last
fight. The door stads wide open and
the* floor is C' ver d witli fragments
of evergreen wreathes and trim
mings.
A church festival was the last
use to which tho Alamo was put
and the lumber for the tables
has not been removed. Your
guide will take you into the dun
g<n just to the left of tke main
entrance and show you fbo cell
surrounded by solids,tone walls six
feet th : ck. This was ths cremato
ry where the Mexicans found
sweet revenge in roasting the bod
leaof the men who bad fought them
off so long.
Th*n you go up to tho second
gtoty and ! »to a little room twelve
feet square with on* door
and one window —the same
tide’s walls. It was through this
window that the T* xans pointed
tlnir fie hi p ec*. and with their few
remainiiigs charges mowed swatl s
thought tho Mexican ranks. Then
when the last gr*in of powder was
NO. 41.
burned thoy took tluir positions
where they could work with their
long knives to tho best advantage,
and as the besiegers pressed in the
foremost dropped in thoir trucks
before the thrusts of the defenders.
Here in a corner, when the last
shots were firod from tlio window
Crockett took up his pisiton with
his Knife. He was sheltered from
tho window and faced the d, or,
He Killed seventeen Mexicans and
thair bodies lay piled up on tho
tloor in front of him. Then they
pinned him to the wall with a long
spear, and lie bad hacked that half
through with bis knife before they
gaye him his death wounds,
In the rear of this old chapel is
shown the court yard where the
single ma'esnvivor of the Alamo
garrison mingled with the attack
ing forces and esoaped to tell tha
story of thnt awful day, and then a
room Is shown where, under a
greon hido, a woman unsealed
harself aud Ler bHbo when the
Mexican So'di«rs made thoir first
wild search intent on slaughtering
every human being, regardless of
age and sex.
Dead.
Tho alligator that was sent from
Florida to the editor of this papei
is dead. After life’s fitful fever,
he sleeps ns well as circmstaces
will admit. The gentleness and
persuasion of man have thus far
failed to placo sn alligator on a
social basis. In this world of
selfishness the aligatcr has seleo
ted his own course and desires to
Kcramb'e for himself. The glass
tan*, with a bed of gravel where
the reptile could crawl out and sun
him3elf, was looked on. not in the
light of a great favor, but as a mat
ter of course. There never was, in
either one of his eyes, a single
gleam of thankfulness.
His tank was shared passively
with a brother that came in the
same assortment with him, but
there passed between theso descen
dants from a parent stem a single
sign of recognition nor a word of
kindly greeting. They would
tom elimes, in a kind of dreamy
forgetfulness, hump their noses
together, hut they would immedi
ately turn away without a charge
of countenance and fall into drop
reverie. Tennyson, the one whose
cold claws are now folded in
death seemed to be in average
health until a few moments be
fore the summons ouno.
He hud taken a hatb and was
lying on the gruvcl, when his kee
per rioted a change of countenance
Revolution of expression, with an
alligator, his ever been regsrded as
a precursor of coming dissolution
Tin owner was summond to the
gravel-side of the sufferer. He
seemed to be Buffering with men
ingitis, for his head was bent like
a bull tongue plow, and cords hith
erto unobseryjd urose to the sur
face of his neck, bo tightly drawn
that they almost through the tough
hide.
He opened one eye and closed it
slowly. A Florida man who stood
nsur the tank shook his head om
inously, and an old Florida dog
that had doub'less gone through
many narrow escapes, walked oil
to one side and shook with laugh
ter. Teiiry-on reached out one claw
and began to feel around. He
tbeu extended his hind leg*, brac
ed himself and slowly turned and
lay on his back.
The old Jog observing this move
ment, walked away again and
laughed in a retributive chuckle.
The sufferer lay fora timo, breath
ing at lung intervals, and then,
turning, he raised up on bis elbowe
Icoked at thusun an i fell buck
dead. This proved that he was a
sun worshiper and consequently
settiea a questiou which has long
been in dispute, llaibcrt Sper.cer
holding tha alligators worship tbe
moon with the morning star ’as a
delega'e and ibe north star as an
alternate. —[Arkansaw Traveler.
Hysteria and .Yervotis Prostration.
We giye our reader! an extract
from « cheerful letter, written by
Mrs. Elizabeth 8u ilh.of Richmond
! hid., who says: *' Samaritan Ner
i vim cured me of bss'eria and nerv
i us prostatio'j." Comment is use-
I e»s.
1). I*. Henderson & Co.,
fiuocessors to J. H. Jady 4 Co.,
iiu.i<i:,iiHi tors for
| Ooults,
| .Stationery,
Wall f iprr,
Pic I u ’c Frame*
and Moulding*,
Drawing Mate
rial*, ('roquet
Set*, Rase
- iiiillsAßnli,
D. P. HENSERSOfc & CO.,
RYAN BLOCK.
700 Xuiket Street, lictwoen 7th & Bth
1 BALLOON f|
M Store. B
<TV v'Vti-', '":■>■■ 3
irjESSSfe.
The place for Bargains in every
department.
From a ‘2OO yd* *ix rord
spool ot thread lor 3 cent*
to a «ilk dress,
4-4 heavy I*rown Domes
tic O l-4c hy the Itolt
Sea Island 5 cts and up.
Large White Quilts only 75 cts.,
Corsets 25 cts and up. Towels
from 2! to 50. Come to the Bal
loon for your Drygoods, and sew
ing machines of all kinds. Sew
ing machines from ?3 00 to oce
hui (lr«d.
HE H SOUDER.
Drs. Wooten & Holmes,
DRUGGISTS,
jlATOpir
\\ liolmhlc Dtiftlert in
Drugs, Chemicals, Oils,&c
As special ngnnts
FOR KEROSENE
Thoy can offer unusual inducements to
buyers.
IN OILS THEY HAVE
The lowest prioca in North Georgia.
Wheeler -Wilson’s Hew
3XTO. 8.
IT UUXS Tin. UOHTENT A vl» HAS
NO NOISY SHUTTLE.
IT 13 NOT DANGEROUS TO HEALTH
LIKE THE HEAVY RUNNING
AND NOISY BHUTTLE KACHINEB,
AG 10NTH HANTHD.
•SEND F«)K I'KirH I.IST AND TKUMS.
Wheeler Jti WI«on Mr«;. Co.
Atlanta, Ha.
Instantaneous Photo
graphs.
J. 8. YOUNG, - - - - ROME, GA„
Is net only muklitg the finest of Pho
tographs, but Is for nil nervous per
sons or children ruHKhig them by the
instantuoeons process. liring vour
lmhies und get beautiful pliotographs
of them, such at you will bike pleasure
In showing to your friends.
Mr. Young copies mid enlarges all
kinds of plotiircs at prices to suit
times. Any person wishing pictures'
copied ciiu write for further inlomm
tlon. J. S. YOUNG, Homo, Ga.
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