Newspaper Page Text
VOL. V.
Highest Prices For Your Farm Produce
Free Hitching Room in my Stable to all Customers.
£ THE sfe
BUSIEST
gTOEE
*&* Lawrenccville
IS THAT OF
TOM AMBRO
*
THE ONLY GENUINE
CUT PRICE MAN IN LAWRENCE Vli
1
... IT--- ' ~~ -z—z z '
From Now Till Jan. 3j
GOOD - OHBAfI
THAN EVER.
THE LAWRENCEVILLE NEWS.
ALWAYS LEADING.
HE IS BUSY
1
Because he sells goods cheap
er than any other merchant
in town; or, for that mat
ter, cheaper than any oth
er merchant in the county.
Just a Few Sample Prices:
Granulated Sugar 18 pounds for sl.
Arbnckle’s Cotree 11c. per pound.
Good Green Coffee 10 to 15 pounds for sl.
A good line of Shoes cheap. A full line of fine Dress Goods.
A. big lot of Jeans at from 10c to BOc per yard.
“A. C. A.’’ Bed Ticking at lie. per yard.
Best Calico going at sc. per yard.
1 yard wide-sheeting at 4ic. by the bolt.
Nails at 2c. per pound or 50 pounds for sl.
1 also carry a first-class line of Millinery goods at Low Prices.
Call and see me and be convinced.
Watch This Space sh:«K
-4-:::::; Remember the Place
IN)R l-OW CKlt lIS
f necessity of having to
I together, but as we do
ft to part in love. We wish
fnt the most abundant suc
lise no question as to his
, and personally he is dear
J. O. Hawthorn,
L. F. Jackson,
V. H. Cooper,
J. S. Pate,
J. H. Hutchins,
Wm. P. Cosby,
Trustees.
land is pastor of the Au
lohuroh and will continue
ministerial. capacity•
Because he don’t
try to fool the
people.
HE Hr IiUSY
LAWRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER, 5, 1897.
MARRIAGE.
! Written for Inn News.
“Marriage is honorable in all,” says
j the great, inspired apostle. It is an
j honorable state and it is honorable to
! marry. Being a divine institution co
eval with tiie creation of man when
placed in the paradisacai garden, it
not only becomes honorable in man’s
estate but harmonizes with his whole
nature. Into this sacred bond —tiie
closest between two living beings—at
the proper age it is right for every
man and woman free front impedi
ments to enter, and instead of dimin
ishing any of the pleasures and ad
vantages of life, it augments them. A
man to be called a man proper, and
perform every duty as he should, re
alizing full success, cannot do so fully
and maintain a celibate life. The same
is true of woman . Man needs a help
meet and is wanting without one. For
this reason “woman was made for
man”asit is likewise told in the in
spired Book; and 1 may here add that
a young widow, writing upon the sub
ject of marriage says: “Woman was
tnadefor man and man was made for
Chamberlain’s Cough Keineriy. It
afforded almost instant relief, — F .
A, Thornton. This celebrated
remedy is for sale by all medicine
dealers.
GARNER.
Special to The News.
Fielding M. Pierce was ceremonial
ly united in marriage to Miss Higgins
last Sabbath, and thereby the twain is
made happy in one.
It is now authoritatively said that
rhe nuptials y*- Wry Holland, a
their marriage vows, There is no ob
ligation assumed, more restraining
and at the same time more solemn in
its complete observation than the con
nubial. For any man (the cause may
be the same with the woman) after
marriage, to tire of home and seek
paramours and pleasurable places of
resort when the evening shades darken
the landscape, what else can be x
pected only discomfort and misery at
home? what else can be expected only
an unhappy married state? Said the
lion. Milton A. Candler: “Tell me
where a man spends his evenings and
I will tell you what kind of a man he
is.’’ The church of Christ, in which
ere believers and his chosen elect, is
:iot by any means a failure, notwith
standing there may be on the church
rolls hundreds of hypocrites aud de
ceitfully wicked persons; no more is
Ihe marriage institution a failure be
cause of persons who have assumed it
live regardless of their own solemn
vows. In life there are no few per
sons in everything which is good and
ennobling that may be said to be fail
ures, notwithstanding they may pre
sent to the world a very glossy outside
appearance —amass riches and gain a
few worldly honors. Strictly speak
ing every man’s life is a failure who
neglects the service of his Creator.
Not long since in conversation with
a young man he made free to disclose
to me what he called “some troubles of
mind.” “My matrimonial hopes,” said
he “are almost blasted, and that by
tattlers and liars who are doing and
saying everything imaginable to break
me up with my girl, and I believe they
have about succeeded.” Disgraceful
aud as belittling as such may be in the
sight of social refinement, and sinful
as it may be in the sight ot God, how
common are such practices through
the country! Only let it be publicly
suspected that a gentleman is making
his addresses to a lady and it is not
infrequently the case that there are a
large number of assumed guardians
for one or both the parties who take a
delight in pointing out the numerous
spots and blemishes in their charac
ters which they discover . All this is
perfidious and suameful. Christ says :
“ VVhat therefore God hath joined to
gether let not man put asunder.” If
God joins together two hearts in mu
tual affection, whether there has been
a ceremony said or not, it differs little,
let not the unhallowed designs of man
interpose to disjoin. It is sinful. The
best pian, it is sai J , is “not to make
matches nor break them;” in other
words, try to wed to please yourself
and let others do the same.
Marriage, as has been said, is a di
vine institution. In it there is no de
filement. Families are thus propaga
gated upon the earth and through faith
transformed into one in heaven. Of
the hundred forty and four thousand
redeemed of the Lamb which .John the
divine saw in his Apocalyptic vision
he expressly mentions one attribute:
“These are they which were not defiled
with women.” Collateral with this, St.
Paul appears to emphasize the ex
pression: “Be not deceived; neither
fornicators, idolators nor adulterers,”
etc.,“shall inherit thekingdom of God.”
In common parlance there are, as it
is said, many “fast men”and “fast wo
men” at the present day; moreover we
are living in what is known as a “fast
age” when events crowd with celerity
upon one another. People are inclined
to drift with pride in currents of their
own conventionalism, regardless of
what is right and proper. There are
many who, if they have not received
the mark of the beast, they have of
their own depravity entailed such
upon their offspring. They present
themselves as the flowers of society.
Let them, however, make what preten
tions they may, let them profess to be
what they may, let their standing in
society be what it may, according to
the sure word of prophecy they can
never enter the Celestial City without
purity of heart.
In conclusion, there is one more
thought that may be expressed regard
ing marriage. God forbade the Israel
ites from intermarriage with the Ca
liaanites. The latter were idolatrous.
They that be of faith are the true Is
rael of God today, and it is still wrong
to mingle and form affinity with the
Cauaanites —those who are idolatrous
in their practices and notoriously
wicked. St. Paul says: “Be ye not un
equally yoked together with unbeliev
ers; for what fellowship hath righte
ousness w ith unrighteousness ? and
what communion hath light withdark
ness? And what concord hath Christy
with Belial?” Therefore we see it is
wrong to form affinity in such in
stances, Mr. Moody has said he never
knew any good to emanate from mar
riages of this kind or for mere merce-
WAR’S HORRORS.
A Ghastly Picture of the Battle
of the Wilderness.
From the New York Post.
“I have no time to bury my
dead, and can give you none,” was
Grant’s famous reply to Lee,
when, under a flag of truce, a ces
sation of hostilities was requested
long enough to bury the dead,
Thus one great and awful
feature of the battle of
the Wilderness was the un
buried dead, that lay for days
and weeks all over the blood-stain
ed field, one of the most horrible
and ghastly sights ever exposed to
human vision. Probably no bat
tlefield of the civil war afforded
such an opportunity for inspec
tion as this.
Ordinarily, after a fight, bury
ing parties were detailed, and the
Jong, deep trench, a common grave,
speciai to f dug, and the dead were at least
MondtJered, but not so here. Grant
This set Id not stop, and the long
It seei utch of country, overrun with
lias stru sby’s guerillas, that intervened
John tween the Rappahannock river
Miss L>u I the nearest union lines, pre
iugyouijited aid from that direction in
ried Sun rying the thousands that were
We wi hi in the Wilderness and in
after Su ht of Spottsylvania court house.
I sat on my horse looking over
’ the portiou of the field where the
fierce and deadly fighting of May
4 and 5, 1864, occurred. It was
four or five days after the fight,
about the 9th or 10th of May. A
small detachment of our regiment
had been sent as an escort to a
train of ambulances to gather in
the wounded, who were being tem
porarily cared for in barns and
farm houses wear the battlefield,
and 1 thus had the opportunity to
view this historic scene. During
the thirty-three years since, it has
been an open question whether to
be glad or sorry that I visited this
battlefield. It has been a night
mare and a horrid day dream all
these years. Often have I prayed
that visions of those upturned
faces, blackened and distorted, or
the staring, glazed eyeballs, of the
stiffened, outstretched hands,
seemingly still grasping for sup
port, those rigid forms wrapped in
Wim and gray, that had fought
their last battle and now lay side
by side in that great charnel field,
might bo blotted forever from my
recollection. Then, again, I have
been glad that I knew so well how
that battlefield appeared, and how
barbarous, brutal and inhuman it
made war seem; glad that I knew
how 10,000 dead heroes looked,
who had faced and met death
amid the wild frenzied scenes of
one of the greatest battles of the
world.
Oiig of the most striking fea
tures to us that day, and the one
most thoroughly fixed in our mem
ories, was that ail over the battle
field, or at least that part we vis
ited, there lay three boys in blue
to one in gray. It will be remem
bered that all through the Wilder
ness fight the confederates were
protected by a system of earth
works and hastily constructed
fortifications and abatises, while
the union troops were compelled
to fight largely in the open, aud
assail the confederates in their
strongholds. From these it was
utterly impossible to dislodge the
enemy except by the masterly se
ries of flank movements, so suc
cessfully planned by Gen. Graut.
We saw in one place where the
men in line of battle had taken
off their knapsacks and laid them
in a long row evidently to be pre
pared to make a charge upon one
of these earthworks of the con
federates, some little distance in
front. These knapsacks remained
almost undisturbed, while the men
lay, some iu heaps, some here and
there in front of the fortifications
they had charged upon. At this
point the union dead lay thick
est. I believe I could have dis
mounted and w'alked a distance as
great as two ordinary city blocks
and never once have stepped upon
the ground-walking on dead bodies
all the way, Indeed, had I under
taken the ghastly journey, I would
have been compelled in some
places to climb over heaps of the
dead.
There was a slight growth of
underbrush at this point with a
few trees remaining. I made a
careful examination and could
not see a limb or twig or bush, but
was marked by a bullet, and some
of them in several places. The
wonder seemed, not that there were
so many dead, but that any lived.
Officers and privates all made a
common cause here, and rank was
forever obliterated, for among the
dead was noticed the shining
shoulderstraps of commissioned
officers mingled with the blue uni
form of the common soldier. The
trees were torn and shattered, the
fearful work of shot aud shell be-
shown on every side. Muskets,
eauteens, haversacks, knapsacks—
any act of ghoulish vandalism;
though, as I saw a letter extend
ing front the pocket of a dead con
federate soldier, and, some of the
boys gathering around, we looked
it over. It was worn and partly
illegible, but we made out that it
was from the town of Hamlet in
the state of North Carolina. It
was in a lady’s handwriting, and
the portion that we were able to
read was as follows:
“My dear Jack; We hope that
you can soon return and help us
with the tobacco crop; but if not,
we do hope and pray to God that
our dear Jack will not be harmed
by those terrible yankees.”
As we looked at the letter and
then at the upturned face of poor
Jack, turning black from expos
ure to the sun, and then thought
of that poor wife, or mother, or
sister who was waiting and watch
ing for the retu n of the dead and
mangled soldier at our feet, and,
of the other ten thousand homes
from which dear one ones had gone
who were now among that host of
dead around us, we began to com
prehend something of the brutal,
barbarous nature of war. And,
personally, I would have had a
keener comprehension still had I
known then what I learn
ed a few days later,
that on that very battle-field, and
not far from the spot where poor
Jack lay, my brother had been
killed a few days before. He was
on the skirmishing line, early in
morning of May 4, at the very
beginning of the fight. He was
struck in the thigh with a minnie
bullet, carried to the rear, his leg
hastily amputated, and he died a
few davs later in a hospital.
We had ample time to inspect
the field while our ambulances were
visiting tlie houses, barns and huts
to which the wounded had been
carried, or to which they had been
able to walk or crawl. In some
few places an apparent effort had
been made to bury the slain. But
this only added to the horror of
tiie scene, for portionsof the bodies
were exposed.
We could trace the movements
of the union line by the appear
ance of the field. In a space where
evidently the line of battle had
been before the forward move
ments, the dead lay as if some one
had measured an acaurate line,
aud then placed them in order
upon it. Then, apparently,came the
forward dash, and here and there
they lay as they had plunged head
formost in the rush for the
confederate lines.
So far all were clad in blue, but
where the clash had come and the
opposing lines had met, they lay
side by side or one athwart the
other. Some faces had a smile
upon them, others had a surprised
and startled look, while others
expressed agony and despair, and
still others had a look of hate and
defiance, as if they had fought to
the very death. Looking over the
portion of the field where we were,
we saw broken limbs hanging
from trees where shot and shell
struck, trees cut down with solid
shot or split and shattered, the
ground torn up aud plowed, as the
death messenger sped along, bro
ken wheels of artillery wagons and
ambulances scattered about;
those with the dead that lay amid
them all, made a picture so in
fernal, so barbarous and inhuman,
that the thirty years that have
intervened have utterly failed to
diminish its horrors.
We loaded every ambulance we
had with the wounded and dying,
and started on the long march to
wards Alexandria, Va., where the
nearest help and hospital service
could be secured. Iu fording the
Rappahannock river at the United
States ford, one ambulance was
driven into deep water and two
poor fellows were drowned. It
was a sad ending to their brief
dream of help and home, and one
of the ten thousand cruel, bitter
scenes of that cruel and bitter
war, —Cyrus G. Shephard, Com
pany F, Sixteenth New York
Volunteer Cavalry.
A POWERFUL SERMON,
Preached By Elder James T.
Jordan at Friendship Prim
itive Baptist Church.
Writte i for The News.
The writer of this was blessed
with the privilege ot listening to
an old-time gospel sermon deliv
ered at Friendship Primitive Bap
tist Church of Christ, near \ellow
River postoffice by Elder James I.
Jordan, who (if this scribe be al
lowed to judge) is surely one
among the best church and soul
feeders (“Feed the church of
God”) now iu this laud, amoug the
living children of <*od, born of
compassiou toward thorn and saved
them from their sins and from
perishing in the laud of Assyria,
the lovely and well-behaved audi
ence assembled at the church
house.
The text was read: “Behold,
how good and how pleasant for
brethren to dwell together in uni
ty,” etc.; 188 Ps.
The messenger began by telling
and explaining how they were
made brethren, and who made
them so, and what for - also who
made them to dwell together in
unity, and how made so to dwell,
and what for, and while telling
these glorious things there was a
witness-bearing Spirit of the
household of faith, that it is truth,
Lord. And apparently the whole
household was fed, and every cup
or vessel was filled to the brim,
and almost overflowing with much
joy. It was a glorious feast day
at Friendship. It was a Sabbath
day’s rest indeed —a sweet day of
rest to the poor little weary chil
dren of the kingdom of God. The
message was full of the precious,
sweet wine of the full cluster.
Such sweet bread and wine (gos
pel truth) from above, and fresh,
does surely feed and clothe and
cherish the souls of the feeblest
children of God, “born of an ill
corruptible seed by the word of
God,” etc. It strengthens, builds
them up in a most holy faith. It
was surely pleasant, dwelling to
gether in unity in Christ, in the
true doctrine of Christ and His
apostles, in experience, in faith,
love, joy and peace and also prac
tice; yea dwelling in a new heaven
(happiness) and a new earth
(dwelling place) where those thus
dwelling are blessed with all spir
itual blessings in heavenly places
in Christ, with a feast of fat things
from the Lord’s own house. The
sermon was, at were, waterpots full
of new wine on the day of
the wedding feast, poured
out and borne to the governor of
the feast, then to the guests, and
all weary ones there tasted its vir
tue and made to rejoice in Christ,
the Saviour of poor sinners. It
was a precious balm to the souls
of every child of grace in spirit. It
was full ot comforting words of
truth, bringing healing, peace, joy,
love and rest to the weary travel
er Even those enquiring, and
asking, Tell me, “oh thou whom
my soul loveth, where thou feedest,
where thou makest thy flock to
rest at noon.” The sermon w r as a
sweet, refreshing cordial, to the
chosen and manifested people of
God. It was an opened box of
very precious ointment, poured
out upon the head, yielding the
sweetest perfume. How beau
tiful are the feet of them that
preach the gospel of peace and
bring glad tidings of good things,
good things, that Jesus has “al
ready done to save poor lost sin
ners from their sins, not what
good things the preacher or crea
ture can do, and must do, in order
to be saved, and to save others;
Jesus is the only saviour, and God’s
children know this experimentally.
“By grace” alone “are they saved.”
A Visitor.
KILLIAN HILL.
Special to The News.
Wm. Nash, Jr., of Atlanta, was
out Sunday.
Jack Boozer, of Snellville, the
manufacturer of the celebrated
“Boozer Hats,” was in our burg
Sunday.
Mrs. Nancy Davis and daughter,
of Sweetwater Park, visited Thos.
K. Jones and wife Sunday,
J. 0. Moore and family, of
Sweetwater Park, visited relatives
here Sunday.
Several from our ville attended
the exhibition at Luxomni
Saturday night.
L. M. Phillips and family vis
ited relatiyes at Braden Sunday.
T. H. Nichols and family vis
ited relatives at Cruse Sunday.
John Black, of Braden, visited
kinspeople Sunday.
Mrs. Cinda Cole & Son, of near
Snellville, visited her daughter,
Mrs. Lula Nash, Sunday.
Wonder when the next ten cents
exhibition is going to be ?
Some kind of a roving varmint
has been arousing the feelings of
some of our inhabitants here for
the last two weeks. It makes its
rounds soon after dark.
Let’s all pull with brother Mc-
Nelley for the fair organization
for the future. Bogin in time and
“let er go.”
Last Thursday being a pretty day,
we decided to take in the fair and
Midway Heights of Lawrenceville
to see the fruits of Old Gwinnett,
the banner county of Georgia. We
complete was the “Coocnee-coo
chee,” and the “chutes,” but nev
ertheless we dreamed of the Gwin
nett “Kloudikes” that night. In
deed we saw enough until the fair
next year.
LILBURN.
Special to the News
T. L. and J. D Cain have com
pleted their new warehouse.
Wood hauliug is now the order
of the day.
The corn husking at Mr. Bill
Smith’s Friday night was enjoyed
by several of the citizens.
The owl has lit and it is now
rumored that there will be a wed
ding in our midst some time sts|p.
Several of our young people at
tended prayer meeting at Beaver
Ruin Sunday night.
Miss Velma Garner, of ’Possum
Corner, passed through our town
Sunday.
Miss Callie Pharr, one of Da
cula’s charming young ladies, vis
ited Miss Morgue Pharr Saturday
and Sunday.
Prof. Gober, of Braden, passed
through town Saturday evening.
Mr. Wash Mills, of Norcross,
was in town Monday.
One of our young men recently
stated that he had found the girl
for him at Braden, Ga. We wish
to congratulate the young man on
his success.
We had the pleasure of attend
ing a novel entertainment given
at Bradwell Academy, Luxomni,
Oct. 28rd, and must say that it
was the nicest of its kind we ever
witnessed. Supper was served
from six to soven, and after all
had enjoyed a hearty meal, the
regular exercises were taken up,
of which a dialogue, “The Haunted
House,” was the first on the pro
gram, and was so nicely acted,
that the hair would rise on any
one’s head, while they would im
agine that the “haunt” was near.
Several other pieces were acted
nicely and then the exercises closed
with “A Professor’s Visitor” that
was highly welcomed by the spec
tators, When the curtains closed
every one took a hearty laugh and
went away praising Prof. Dußose
for his nice entertainment.
Leonard Pharr, one of Dacula’s
business young men visited our
town Saturday.
TE^GLE.
SpeciHl to The News.
Rev. Fleming, of Elberton, filled
his regular appointment at the
Methodist church Sunday.
Miss Della Braswell i# quite sick
at this writing.
Mr. Rowe Duncan, of Atlanta,
visited home folks at this place
Friday.
We have heard it repeated fre
quently by several who didn’t take
any part in the fair that it was
100 per cent, better ex
pected. These are fellows that
don’t take any newspaper, either.
Wm. Harrison and family were
the guests of Mr. Pool Sunday.
The “brothers in black” held
their annual campmeeting near
this place last week, with a good
supply of “licker” on hand. The
colored brethren have had a“high
faluting time.
We do not wish to worry the
patience of the readers of this pa
per nor to be partial in naming
candidates, but what about put
ting Joseph T. Forrester in the
field for sheriff ? We do not know
that Mr. Forrester would agree to
make the race, but what we want
is a hearing from the people.
Mr. John Maddox, a handsome
young man of Grapevine, and Miss
Lizzie Sizemore, of this place, were
united in the holy bonds of
Wedlock Sunday. We wish for
them a long life and may their
happiness forever “flow like water
down a ’tater row.”
TUCKER.
Special to The News.
Cotton is nearly all out. Cool
nights and warm days are do
ing their work.
What promised to be the heav
iest cotton crop in the history of
this community has turned out to
be only an average one, all of the
late crop drying up, while the
bolls of the middle crop matured
before they were grown.
The debating society is still
booming. The “Dish Rag or the
Broom-?” was the question last
Friday night. The dish rag won.
The meeting of the Crescent So
ciety at the home of the Misses
Kimbrell was highly enjoyed by
all present. Misses Owens, Davis
Kimbrell and Brown recited well.
The finishing touches are being
put upon the academy. Mr. Earn-
work? We have a cotton picker
—a sho’ ’uough thing— a cotton
picker as what runs on two wheels
and looks like Venable Brother’s
dinkey at Stone Mountain 1 We’s
the stuff! We’re goin’ t«r keep it
here. The fat ole feller as what’s
with it says he’s just tryin’ it to
see if it’ll work, and that he’s goin’
ter take 'er away when he gits
ready. We’ll see about it! That
ole feller is mighty officious every
way about our cotton picker. He
won’t talk to a feller about it—he
won't tell us whose't was ’fore it
cum here, nor where it cum from
nor nuthin’. But we found out
just ’is much —his name is Moody
and he’s been living. 4n Chercago
and he’s just trying to sell it to
Mr. Wash Houston, what lives in
Atlanta. De ole fat feller put two
hosses ter it Monday evenin’ an’
driv out ter Mr. Ambrose’s farm,
an what der yer think ? It
wouldn’t work! He’s workin’ on
it yit, and’s goin’ ter try it ergin
’fore long.
MEADOW.
Special to The New».
The fair is over, and everybody
enjoyed it.
The entertainment given by
Mrs. V. F. CogginsSatV* '
was enjoyed by all. i
A. J. Dob 1 ' l^y
father’s farm. 10 Ea <
Our village was c*»
last Sunday.
Nearly everybody went to
ant Hill last Sunday.
Quarterly meeting was hei*
last Friday at Trinity. A nicS
time is reported.
Rev. Sam Braswell preached
farewell sermon at Trinity lasl
Sunday. His sermon was unexfl
celled. w
D. P. Langley ate his Jfcrge wa*
termelon Saturday. |.
Miss Flora Adams will close hJ
music class Friday. ?
The new rocking chair was va
cant last Sunday. j
Bird hunters are cleaning un
their guns for Monday. We cer-J
tainly havo some experts. j
Messrs. Will Brannan and Doll
phus Langley are hunting, posl
sums for the market.
right, boys; you will get
some day.
ZION hill. '-“'■'■SB
Special to The News. 1
No sickness to note at this wjf I
ing. |
Several from here atte» I
meeting-at Friendship last £ 1
daj '- JU
The singing at Rev. A, J. Weblfl
last Sunday night was enjoyed J
all present. ■
Jim Waddell, of near Lawrenifl
ville, attended Sunday ecj|B
here last Sunday. * ' B
Prof. J. B. Gresham, of SnS
ville, will teach school here nS
year. B
Sandy Roads was well reiß
seated at Sunday School 4 IBS
Sunday.’ * 11 *
You can’t afford to risk yfoBH
by allowing a cold to
pneumonia or
stunt relief and and a
are afforded by One Minute JB9I
(Jure. Bagwell Bros. 888
Disfigurement for life
or scalds may bo avoided ■Bo.foo:
l)“Witt’s Witch Hazel
great remedy for pilgs
kinds of sore4.#hn skin ’ .. j
p-o ifnnr
—. 4 1
TAX COI.LECTOR’S XOtß||
SKCONI) ROUND.
I will be at the following plaoßH
the dates given for the purpose 088
looting state and county taxes f(BB
year 18U7: SH|
l.awreneet file Tuesday Noveftlbißß
Martins, Wednesday Nov. 3. ffijH
I.iiximiiii. Thursday, a. m., earlyßß
n|
Berkshire, Thursday Nov. 4. BB
Pinkney ville, Friday Nov. 5. BB|
Duluth, Saturday Nov. 6. HH
Pucketts, Monday Nov. 8. §Bfß|
Sugar Hill, ’Tuesday .Nov, tt. BBS
i iiiuilu iii'. W ednesday Nov. 10. ■pSjj
Hog Mt., Thursday Nov. 11.
Cains. Monday Nov. 15.
• las, W l ll lams sin
late, Nov. 15
'■arl^H
B- i -mi! 1 - Tin-, lay Nov. 10 B
ilarhms, Wednesd-v Nov. i 7. VBBj
Daeula, Wednesday, p. ni. Jfl
o’clock ) Nov. 17. JBHSB
Bay I I eek, I liiir-'iai Not. 1 B
1 rip i hursday . p. in. , late, nBBHB
Cates, l'rnlay, Nov. 18. BBHB
Bw. kl.lodge, >al urday Not, -'BBB
W. A. Wright, • omptrolleßßn
al requires that the lax hooks lfi||||||
and Ii tils issued tij Deerinber B||||||
C. A.
Tax Collector liwinnett LH
Bucklen’s Arnica SB
The Best Salve in I be worß
Bruises, Sores, 1 leers M|M
keter Sores, Tidier, CD-
,Mains, < 'urns,
Dee and posi! 'Veit
mt
NO. 3