The Lawrenceville news. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1893-1897, August 03, 1894, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

(BE LAWRENCEVILLE NEWS. I PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Eawrenceville Publishing Co., Proprietors. r GEO. I). RUCKER, Editor. [ Entered, at Eawrencevflle postoffice as second-class matter. All Cominuniratloiiß, to receive prompt attention, must l>e uddlMwd to tHE NEWS, I.awrenceville, Ga. Lawrenceville,<3a., August 3,1594. The work of democratic or ganization goes merrily on. Thf. government is coining one million silver dollars a month. Nearly all the democrats of Gwinnett county are for Bacon for senator. Judge Hines will be the worst used up man that ever ran for of fice in Georgia. Major Bacon is popular with the masses because he is in sym .pathy with them. The crops of corn and cotton are not more promising than the prospects of democratic success. Populism has thus far failed to make a base hit, and the indica tions are that it will fail to score in the fall. We feel constrained to say that Ben Blackburn’s Daily Commer cial is the most fearless paper pub lished in Atlanta. What the Atlanta Constitution doesn’t know about the financial question would crowd the Ency clopedia Britannica. If Thomas Jefferson up out of the grave he buke the fellows who are ciituJPK ting sins in his name. The democrats of Gwinnett county are in earnest now. They are organizing in all the districts, and are very sanguine. If the full democratic vote is polled in Gwinnett, the third par ty will be snowed under by one Markthei,re liars ii-ymm ■r e e Kor that kind of reform, vote the populist ticket. To-morrow night we will know who the nominees of the democrat ic party will be in Gwinnett. Who ever they may be, they will receive the hearty support of the party. Every day that passes furnishes evidence that President Cleveland is a better friend to silver than those rash fellows who desire to plunge this country into silver monometallism. There are many people who be lieve that Major Bacon will have more votes m the legislature than all his opponents combined. The News would not be surprised to see Major Bacon overwhelmingly elect ed on first ballot. The convention which mot in Atlanta yesterday was the most representative body of men that ever congregated at the state cap itol. They were the war horses of democracy, and they will charge the enemy with a rush from now until the third party is routed in October. The indications are that sixteen hundred white voters will join the democratic clubs in Gwinnett county. A few very enthusiastic democrats believe the number will reach two thousand, but The News does not think so. However, there will be a sufficient number to lay the third party forever in the shade. They will never be heard of after this year. Republican State Convention. The republican state executive , committee lias issued a call for a Convention to be held at Atlanta, on the 29th of this month, for the purpose of nominating a ticket for governor, and all state house officers. As to the propriety of making these nominations there is a wide difference in the ranks of the par ty. The Buck element favor put ting a full ticket in the field, in or der that the g. o. p. may preserve its autonomy, and the leaders be in a position to receive the loaves and fishes, in case it succeeds in ousting the democrats in 1890. The other wing of the party op poses seperate action, and favors turning the bridle loose, and al lowing the rank and file to vote the democratic or populist ticket, as they may prefer. Col. Buck is out of the state, and will not be able to return to Georgia in time to manipulate things according to his way of thinking, and the prob ability is that a course opposed to bis views will be adopted. in the campaign of 1892 Buck issued a circular letter directing! Jhe republicans to support t ■lire! party ticket, esptx ialj^’ The Democratic Platform of 1892. Its Pledges Are lleing Redeemed. The populist speakers and pa pers now profess to be thoroughly in love with the Chicago platform of 1892, under which Cleveland was elected and the control of the government turned over to the democracy, but complain that none of its pledges liavo been redeemed. This charge is not supported by the facts, and we propose to expose its falsity. Cleveland was inaugurated only sixteen months ago, and within the short time that has since inter vened, no party has over done so much towards the redemption of its platform pledges. To verify this assertion it is only necessary to recur to the platform itself. The very first demand is for the repeal of the odious federal elec tion laws, which are denounced as “fraught with the gravest dangers, scarcely less momentous than would result from a revolution practically established monarchy on the ruins of the republic,” and which “means a horde of deputy marshals at every polling place, armed with federal authority ; out rage of the electoral riglfts of tliej people in the several states.” This law has been wiped from the statute book, and federal inter ference with elections in the sever al states is a thing of the past. The next demand is for a revis ion of the tariff, and the repeal of the odious McKinley bill, which is denounced as a “fraud on the la bor of the great majority of the American people for the benefit of a few,” and accompanied with the declaration that it is a “funda ‘mental principle of the democratic party that the federal government has no constitutional power to im pose and collect tariff duties ex cept for the purpose of revenue only,” and a demand that the col lection of such taxes shall be limi ted to the necessaries of govern ment when honestly and economi cally administered.” A bill revising the tariff has passed the house of representa tives, which has been amended and passed bv the senate. This bill is now in the hands of a con ference committee composed of members of the two houses, and has not yet become a law, because of the objections on the part of the house to some of the senate amendments. That the difference between the senate and house will be adjusted is practically as sured and this pledge will be re deemed before the end of the present session of congress. This measure makes an annual reduction of $75,000,000 from the tariff taxes levied by the Mc kenley bill, and also imposes an income tax of 2 per cent upon all incomes above $4,000, thus com pelling the holders of non-taxable government bonds to bear their just proportion of the burdens of government. Much criticism has been indulg ed in because of the delay of con gress in the revision of the tariff schedules, but this was unjust and underserved in a great meas ure. With a large majority in both houses of congress the re publican party was engaged for two years in the construction and passage of the McKinley bill, a work which the democrats have practically accomplished in one half that time. There are so many conflicting interests involv ed in tariff legeslation that no bill can be passed that is not the Outcome of compromise and con cession. The platform also undertook to deal with the fraudulent pension system put upon the country by the republican party, and to cor rect the corrupt practices that had grown up under it, whereby mill ions of dollars were being paid out each year to those not enti tled to share this bounty of the government and demanded that “the work of the pension office shall be done industriously, im partially and honestly.” Under the present administra tion the process of purging the pension list of unworthy and dis honest pensioners has been pushed so “industriously, impartially and honestly” that an annual reduc tion of $80,000,000 in the amount of pension payments has already been made,and still the work goes bravely on. If the efforts to weed out illegal pensioners were to stop now, the saving of $120,000,000, during the four years control by the democratic party, from this source alone, is an acheivement of which any party ought to be proud. The platform denounced “the republican legislation known as the Sherman act of 1890 as a cow ardly makeshift, fraught with pos sibilities of danger in the future.” Under the operations of this act the treasury was being depleted of down; in the shadow of an over whelming depreciated silver cur rency, gold, treasury notes and national bank notes were with drawn from circulation until there was not sufficient money left in ; tin- arteries of t rade to do the busi ness of the country. Thiscontrac j tion of the currency, and conse iquent low prices of all products, * was due to that immutable law of finance under which the baser cur rency always circulates, while the j better is hoarded. Congress promptly repealed this act, and the good effect is appa rent, everywhere. Factories and ! workshops have been reopened, and j honest labor is being furnished with employment; public confi dence has been revived; traffic is gradually being restored to a nor mal condition, and the enormous reserve that had accumulated in banks is again finding its way into the channels of commerce. This country has been visited by sever al panics, but never in its history was it threatened with one so dis astrous as that of 189!! would have been, but for the prompt and hero-j ic treatment with which it was met j and averted. For recommending this action Mr. Cleveland was lat terly condemned by the disappoint- j ed sore head element, and also by j many good people who did not un- j del-stand the situation and the no-; cessity for such legislation, but j time lias already vindicated, not only his good intentions, but the wisdon of bis counsel. The platform also declared that the democratic party holds “to! the use of both gold and silver as the standard money of the coun try, and to the coinage of both gold and silver without discrimi-, nating against either metal or charge for mintage, but the dollar ! unit of coinage of both metals j must be of equal intrinsic and un changeable value, or be adjusted through international agreement, or by such safeguards of legislation as shall insure the maintenance of parity of the two metals,” so that there shall bo guaranteed “an equal power of every dollar at all times, in the markets, and in the payment of debts.” This pledge of the platform has not yet been redeemed, but we have no doubt that it will bo during Cleveland’s administration. The democratic party favors bimetal lism, and the re-opening of the mints to the free coinage of silver, and only differ among themselves as to the method by whicli this end is to be accomplished. Some insist on increasing the ratio from 16 to 1 to one that will make the intrinsic value of a coined silver dollar equal to that of a standard gold dollar; others to the free coinage of silver up to the greatest possible amount, at the present ratio, that can be kept on a parity with gold. But the most powerful element insist that free and un limited coinage cannot be resumed, under present conditions, by this country alone, and can only be ef fected, with safety to the people of the United States, by internation al agreement. The latter is Mr. Cleveland’s view of the question, and he expresses the utmost confi dence in the rehabilitation of the white metal to its proper place in the currency of the world during his administration. He is as bit terly opposed to tile single gold standard as any member of his party, and believes that those who advocate separate action by this coutry to be the most dangerous enemies to silver. If this ques tion is studied from an impartial and non-partisan standpoint it will be found that there is great force in Mr. Cleveland’s view of it. He insists that silver was designed be the Creator for use as money, and that the continued use of it throughout the world is necessary to the comfort and prosperity of the people of every nation. But the act of the republican party, in 1878, closing our mints against the free and unlimited coinage of that metal, having forced several of the leading commercial nations of the old world to adopt similar measures for the protection of there own interests and reduced silver to a mere commodity and the price of bullion to the point where tin* amount of silver in a standard dollar can now hi* pur chased in the markets of the world for 60 cents, that it would impov erish the people of this coun try to open its mints to the free and unlimited coinage of all this depreciated bullion, thereby com pelling the American people to re deem it, by coining it into legal tender dollars, for double its actual value. The strength of this posi tion will be more fully appreciated when it is known that the silver j stock of the world aggreavted the j enormous sum of $4,042,500,000, and that of this sum, the United i States only has $015,000,000. The j $8,427,500,000 held by the other —nmmu'i**- "i 'l**- world cannot be ! would sustain a loss of sl,/18,500, 000, to be borne by all the people of the United States. Such a j course would enable Europe "to 1 buy the next 6 cotton crops < >f this I country at 50 cents on the dollar, and thus bankrupt the southern | farmers. Now, knowing that the other na tions of the world will be forced to i re-open their owimniints to the j coinage of this huge mass of silver, . unless we take it off their hands at (double its market value, his idea is that this country should keep its mints closed against them, until they come to an agreement for the j resumption of its coinage through out the world. All the nations of Europe are now favorable to the ! resumption of silver coinage, with the single exception of Great Brit ! ain, and the necesities of her mer cantile interests, which are so in- I ter woven with those of India and ! South America, are such as to force ! her into an agreement with the ; other nations. At a large meeting |of leading financiers held at Lon don last May, a resolution was adopted urging that country to this course, and the question of silver, or no silver is already the leading i issue in the election of the nextj House of Commons. But for ihe firm attitude of this [ country on the currency question, I the present agitation in Europe, over the rehnbiltation of silver j would never have been inaugurat ed, and we believe that the contest will, in less than two years, result | in the triumph of its cause, and j the re-opening of the mints of the world to its coinage. Major Bacon and His Traducers. There seems to be an almost unanimous public sentiment in fa-; vor of electing Hon. A. O. Bacon to the United States senate to sue- [ coed Hon. Patrick Walsh. The j country papers of the state are! | speaking out for Bacon, and nine : I times out of ten the country pa pers represent public sentiment. There are, however, a few papers i in Georgia whose editors seem to have a personal grudge against Major Bacon, and we notice that I they are turning their batteries on him and abusing him at a tc r- I rilile rate. These soreheads mis take thf) temper of the people if they think they can detract from Maj. Bacon’s superior fitness for the senate by untying their bags of gall and dosing an innocent public with them. 'tz*. Those who have heard Major 11R;' con’s speeches for the last three weeks say that no other nmb in Georgia possesses a broader grasp of public questions. He seems to thoroughly understand American institutions and is a lover of them. He sees, with the keen eye of a statesman, the evils that beset us, and ventures, with commendable patriotism, to create a sentiment which will result in the correction of them. On the financial ques tion he is outspoken, yet reasona ble and conservative, occupying a position to unite the factions in the democratic party. Wo believe it will require a great deal of trickery to defeat Major Bacon for the senate. A Dual Position. The Constitution demands that the extremists in the south bo rele gated and the conservatives adjust the tariff on a sensible basis. This is nice talk for a rigid con structionist. On the financial question the same paper insists that the salva tion of the party lies in relegating the conservatives and leaving the extremists to legislate. There is beautiful consistency in the two positions. What the people want is the legislation that was promised in the declaration at Chicago. The pledge on finance, while not a de mand for the free and unlimited coinage of silver as the Constitu tion would have it appear, was, nevertheless, a positive pledge to make silver money of final value I and give it the same chances before the mints as that accorded to gold. The conservatives are trying to ig nore this demand and the Consti tution condemns them. The platform also makes a pos itive declaration in favor of a tariff on a revenue basis. There is no | equivocation. The alleged ex ! tremists are trying to carry out this simple demand, and the same ; paper goes to the defense of the | conservatives, who are standing in the way of the party pledge. If the extremists are to be rele gated in one instance, why not in all—so that party promises may he consistently ignored. What the country needs today, is more extremists—more of the ] men whom the Constitution would relegate. It is only these men of positive force that ever amount to anything when pledges to the peo ple are to be redeemed, and it is I only such men that keep alive the principles of true democracy. It is the pull-backs, the dogs-in-the manger, the cowardly conserva lives like Gorman, Hill, Brice A Co., whom the Constitution would j applajSd and appease, that have | stooddn the way of a manly ro ; demotion of party pledges. Tlie Democratic Platform, For three or four days our es teemed contemporary, the Atlanta Constitution, has devoted much of its editorial space to advice in re gard to the platform to be adopted j by Thursday’s convention of dem ocrats. The general effect of this advice is that this is no time for (lodging or equivocation in regard to the political issues in which the people are interested. This is the general effect of its advice, but con sideration of all that our contem porary has said, leads us to believe that it is interested only in one particular part of the platform, j “The people are perfectly willing to tolerate perfunctory indorse ment of individuals,” it says, which means, of course, that it is not opposed to compliments paid President Cleveland by the conven tion so long as they are personal to him and do not deal with the acts of his administration, for the, reason that it will regard such! compliments as meaningless, j What it desires is that the demo jcratic convention of Georgia shall ; declare explicitly in favor oi the ! free coinage of silver at the ratio of 1(5 to 1, thus adopting the Pop-j j ulist platform on the silver (flies-1 ! tion. Its advice, repeated day as- j j ter day, and insisted upon in the! strongest language it can employ, j is that the democratic convention I do this thing. Is this good advice ? In what j position will it leave the demo crats of Georgia if the prospect is realized that during the next cam- i paign the silver question will be i the dividing issue in national pol- j itics? Our contemporary insists that this step is necessary, ifdem-j | ocrats are not to repudiate the principles which, they have always j asserted and upon which they have ! always acted. In other words,! j that the free coinage of silver is j ! the traditional democratic policy land that the failure of Georgia j democrats to assert it will prove | that they cither lack courage, or are false to the principles and tra ditions of their party. No state convention can legis late on a national question of this kind in such away as to blind the opinions and actions of democrats. The authority which can-do that is a national convention, repre senting the national ptiMy. If the free coinage of silver ijr demoerat mUy through V ati'Jt ml- ,fl| its '"Jen tion. made? i Vi'laihly-jt Amity ■ the plalßVjm nHfcfc claim that it .-aW-U, ignore entirely the- precedent tie* free coinage which are required inj that platform, which every demH crat is in honesty bound to coiil strue as a whole. It is true fll mir contemporary, among < >l has sought to give to the this interpretation, but it moved to do so, in oiir.i -o nun'll by I lie desire to. liml^B true meaning as by the fact fluff it was itself thoroughly commit ted to the free silver propaganda before that platform was adopted. The adoption of that platform was a defeat for the free silver extrem ists of the democratic party, among whomo was our contempo rary, but it lias steadily refused to acknowledge defeat, and is now trying to turn defeat into u per sonal victory, by persuading the democrats of Georgia to put upon the platform the interpretation up on which it has insisted. To adopt the populist silver plank would be either to put that.wnterpretation upon the democratic party plat form or to defy the national demo cratic party on tins question when it is about to become the great is sue in national politics. We have never seen any room for doubt as to the meaning of tin silver plank of the Chicago plat form. It seems to us a perfectly explicit declaration in favor of a bimetallic currency. But while this is true, wo have not denied to any one, to any individual demo crat, his right to interpret the platform for himself. He has that right, and no action of our state convention can deprive him of it. A resolution in favor of the free coinage of silver at the 10 to 1 ra tio, without the safeguards that would insure bimetallism, would commit no Georgia democrat to the acceptance of that doctrine. The only effect of it would be to prove that the democratic party of Georgia, as officially represented, I is, on the principal issue of the | day, more nearly in sympathy i with the national populist party ; than with the national democratic party. Besides it would give a personal triumph to our Atanta contemporary that might relieve it. to some extent of the embarrass ment brought upon it during sever al months past lb’ a presistent an tagonism to the democratic admin istration and the! policies of the j We i object to this being done at the ex j ]>enso of the democratic party. We object to the democraic par ty of Georgia being placed in an- I tagonism to the national democrat ic party. It has not been so placed | heretofore bv the passage of resolu- I ions favoring free the ■9-. 1 * SEBMSSs ; |§ EWiiirtTftirmimi ML % of^M^^HPPßq>ortance. But when this question comes to the front, now that the tariff ques tion is about to be settled for some years to cone, the situation is changed. The disorganizing effect upon the party of such resolutions would be the same as if in 1890 the democrats of Georgia had declared in favor of a prohibitory high tar iff. We say this because we are convinced that the national demo cratic party will never consent to | the free coinage of silver except on terms that will insure the contin | vied uso of gold as money—that will inspire the bimetallism in which the democratic party has from the beginning firmly believed, j j Therefore if the democrats of i j Georgia declare in favor of free coinage in the manner proposed, they will find themselves, when the next national campaign begins, obliged either to support a party with whose main purpose they have officially declared that thejj do not sympatize, or else to repudi ate the action- of this convention j in passing a populist silver resolu-! tion. To say that bimetallism is a I traditional policy of the democrat- j ic party is true, but to say that the free coinage of gold and silver i i at a ratio which does not represent j the relative commercial value of! j the two metals is false. At the 'time when, the constitution was; adopted both gold and silver were j univefplly employed as money. They were the money of the world. Nothing else was. They were the I world’s money, not by the legisla | tive enactment of any country, but by tlie universal acceptance of ) all men. Governments, in mak j ing them legal tender for debts and regulating their use as money, merely accepted a situation which they had done nothing to create. The constitution, therefore, in de- no state should make and silver legal j| < gibing legal mon " iffld had not already X3t The democratic Xq bimetallism Efif By ; ; J V ■K ' W. ' ■ /- r will dHHFn Telegraph. Government Control ofliailroads I i-Gtmoral Master Workman Powder]}' of tire Knights of Labor discussed the great railway strike a Prospect Park New York, last Sun day. In the course of his speech he said : “It is not Pullman, and it is not Debs, who is responsible for the present state of affairs. It is! the fault of the system. The time in •st come when the govern ment w’ll control the railroads. That is the time we are looking for, and its bound to come.” By “we” it is, of course, under stood that Mr. Powderly meant ; the railroads employes. Mr. Powderly, how'ever, did not under take to show how the railway em ployes would be benefited by gov ernment control of the roads, nor did he discuss the question or the danger to the liberties of the peo ple that such control would threat en. A year ago there were in the employ of the railroads nearlv 1875,000 men, all of whom, it is to be presumed, are voters. The number increases every year, us the number of miles of railway increases. If the government con trolled the railroads it would vir tually have the support of this vast army of men for almost any purpose because, having control us their wages, it could coerce them into almost any course of action. Suppose an ambitious and un scrupulous man should be elected president? Would it not be a comparatively easy matter for him with such a vast army of railway men, together with more than 100, j 000 of other government employ es to retain the olhcc of president; against the wishes of the people. With 1,000,000 men and all the! transportation lines of the coun try he'would occupy almost an impregnable position for any pur pose he might have in mjid. The giving of the eontrolmf the NOTICE! I calll the attention of the public to my Blacksmith and Carriage shops, now 70 fee long and I hrve the lumber ready to build it 30 feet longer, which will make it 100 feet long. With the most skilled workmen and plenty of material and plenty of room I am ready to do in a few minutes most any job of repair work, also, I build buggies and wagons to order. FARM IK:—I will guarantee we po the best, I on buggy jobs and wagons. 1 employ > to at my shop first-1 ias.%. KING: ! and nails for each. I capeet in a very short time to man ufacture that of the best material. Now, and solicit the work of al in my reach, and all my work done according to or der and at reasonable price possible. mjs. V. BROWNLEE, Trip, Ga. A HOST COMWbTE LINE Of Men’s Boys and Children’s Clothing, Ilats and Furn ish ing of the very latest styles and of the very best quality. Prices cheaper than the same quality of goods can be bought at any other first-class clothing house in North-East Georgia. Call and be convinced. J. J. C. McMAHAN. 4 1 1 7 Clayton, St., Athens, Ga. Apr. 27, 90 d. might be the first step toward the ! overthrow of the republic and the j destruction of the liberties of the people. Even without such control the movement toward a more central ized government is extraordinarily rapid. The pending strike is not being dealt with by the states in which there is lawlessness, hut by the national government. State courts and state officials are pow erless. The federal courts and the I army have been appealed to, and j they have responded. Mr. Powderly might say that this fact is an argument in favor of government control of the rail roads. If he should take that po sition he would have to admit that the favors increasing the power of he central government. He might be pushed even further and be compelled to admit that he fa vors a change in the form of gov ernment. The populist'favor the same pol icy in respect to railroads that Mr. Powderly does. Do they not see the direction in which that policy leads? —Savannah Morning News. Stick To Facts. | We are always pleased to discuss public questions with our neighbor, , the Atlanta Constitution, and are j in favor of conducting such discus ! sions in the friendliest spirit pos sible. The Constitution and The Journal differ honestly on several points of policy, and it is unavoid able that these differences should ihe plainly expressed with what ability either paper can command. But we must insist that the Con stitution shall stick to facts. When a proposition is laid down the most important thing is that it should be based on a fair prem ! ise. The Constitution’s effort this morning to discredit the action of j Secretary Carlisle in having silver carried from bullion in the treas j ury at the rate of $30,000 a day is palpably unfair. We suppose the Constitution did not know any better than the degree of information which its | article indicates, but it ought to I know better. Its statement that this coinage !of silver does not add a dollar to ! the circulation is ridiculous. It is a fact that about one-fourth of ; the dollars so coined are an addi ’ tion to our volume of money. It would require only three-fourths of the bullion now in the treasury when converted into dollars to re deem the notes which were issued for its purchase. What does the j Constitution suppose will become jof the other one fourth? The pro cess which Mr. Carlisle is now pur suing turns it into money and puts , it into the channels of circulation. The Constitution takes the ab surd position that the coinage of all the silver bullion the govern ment has Would make only exactly as many dollars us it cost the gov ernment. If that were true we could enter at once upon the free coinage of silver without fear and in exact accordance with the re quirements of the democratic plat form that the parity of gold and silver shall be maintained. § The Journal has referred to Mr. Carlisle’s action in reference to the! coinage of silver to show that the administration of President Cleve land is no* opposed to silver but that it is making every effort in its power, which is consistent with a j sound financial pqlicv and the j PROF KSSIONAL. E. S. Y. BRIANT 7 Attorney at Law, I.awrenceville, Ga. Will practice in adjoining counties and in Atlanta in all tlie courts, from the Justice of the Peace to the United States Courts. Special attention to collection of claims. Refers to H. D. McDanjel, ex-gov ernor, Monroe, Ga., G. I>. Il?ftfcVtlanta, Ga., R. B. Russell, dug Judge Alex Erwin,. t C. H liiiA N<N Attorney at Law, Laweenoeviijjs, Ga. Practiced in all the courts, state and United States. Special interest given to abstracting titles and representing estates., JUH AN & McDONALD, Attorneys at Law, Lawrenceville, Ga. ~ Will practice in all the courts of the Western Circuit. Collecting a specialty SAM J. WINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Lawrenobville, Ga. Also negotiates loans on real estate. DR. 11. T. DICKENS, Physician and Surgeon, Lii.burn, Georgia. Chronic “Female Diseases a spe cialty. DR. L. 11. JONES, Physician and Druggist, NORCROSS, GA. Drugs at City Prices MITCHELL & BUSH, Physicians and Surgeons, I.awrenceville, Ga. Prompt attention given to calls, day or night. J. C. HARRIS, M. IX, Physician and Surgeon, SUWANEE, GA. DR. .M. T. JOHNSON, Physician and Surgeon, CART., GA. v All calls promptly responded to. v M. A. BORN, Physician and Surgeon, Lawrencevible, Ga. C. B. NORMAN, Brick Mason and Plasterer, , NOKCROSS, GA. | I J Does none but first-class work, am” j will go to any adjoining county. t j Write me if you want good work done. 1 J. W. BARNETT, -j Lawrenceville, Ga O— 1 . >■* Practical Painter,(trainer and Deco rator, House and Sign Painter, Paper Hanger and dealer in Wall Paper and Paper Hangings. Estimates on all kind of work cheerfully given at short notice. DK. E. K. RAINEY, DENTIST, T.awreneeville, Ga. (MI;.. n\.T \ Inland's St ore. guaranteed. jHMHHH 1.. \. Williams, >l. 11 i\ ;>i _• i.... 1 11 ul llu ;. i■■ ' |.r el i. t..r I la- I‘■■BBS 1 .olio- in mx dwelling. an l^re&jj&SH found I here da} mol night, uJHHj