Newspaper Page Text
CHATTOOGA NEWS.
SO MMERVILLE, GA.
— t
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
[Entered at the Summerville postoflice
as second-class matter.]
JOE W. CAIN,)
> Publishers.
B. B. COLEMAN.)
JOE W. CAIN, - • . Editor. |
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION: (
TMvelvo months, (Cash) $1.25
Twelve months, (On Time) 1.5< I
Six months, (Cash) . (P ,
Six months, (On Time) 7'
Three months, (Cash) 3.'
Three months, (On Time) 4o
The columns of The News are open
for all to express their views upon mat
ters of interest to the general public.
All articles recommending individuals 1
for office will be charged foi at local
rates. Communications to receive notice
must be accompanied by the writers
name not for publication unless so de
sired, but as a guarantee <»f good faith.
No rejected articles will bo returned
unless accompanied with postage.
Advertising rates given on appplica
tion.
AH letters should be addressed to
THE NEWS,
Summerville, < ia.
FRIDAY MORNING, MAR. 30, 1888.
Chief Justice Waite, of the U. S.
Supreme Court, died in Washington
city last Friday.
Janies W. Tate, the treasurer of
Kentucky, is a defaulter to the
amount of about $150,000, and has
fled.
The devil that shows his horn
and cloven feet is a better devil than I
the devil who dresses in the garb of
a lamb.
The trial of James McCoy cost
his brothers nearly $2,500 according
to their own statement. Did' the
lawyers get all this?
The new German emperor cannot
talk on account of cancer of the
throat. Ide can, and does, make
signs though and the whole world
is watching them.
The czar of Russia recently pur
chased from a Georgia seed compa
ny 200 bushels of cotton seed.
Guess his imperial majesty wanted
them to feed his cow.
A man was arrested in Atlanta
hst the charge ofswjnd
f IPPST Is it.p,
this charge is true? And if it is
what is the world coming to?
Air. Donnelly says that in his
forthcoming book he will prove that
Shakspeare was not the author of
the poems and plays attributed to
him and that Lord Bacon wrote them.
A scientist says: “If the land
was flattened out the sea would
be two miles deep all over the
world.” If any man is caught flat
tening out the land, shoot him on
the spot. A great many people can
not swim.
The man who expects to go to
congress from this district without
committing himself for or against
a reduction of the thieving tariff is
certainly basing his hopes of success
upon the ignorance of the people to
their interests.
A brother editor sorrowfully re
marks : “We would like to remind
our subscribers who owe us that we
have to go to bed while our wife
patches our pants. Will you please
take heed therefrom and smile on
us when in town.”
Are there any who see something
belonging to some one else which
they desire? If so they should be
consoled by remembering that the .
world is full of just such people. 1
For who have their desires? Or!
having them, are satisfied?
In a lecture delivered in Atlanta
recently upon Palestine Dr. Findel-'
kind, who has made the subject a :
life study, said there are few chang- |
esin the manners and customs of the
people of Asia Minor from what they
were when Christ was there.
Last Sunday was a beauti f ul day
and the church goers were large I
Douglasville Star.
The above item creates the pain
ful impression that no small person I
attends church in Douglasville. Is
this the way of it, contemporary?
Dr. J. L. Selman is making a ■
specialty of manufacturing Love
Drops. Only 50 cents a bottle.—
Douglasville Star.
We print the above item for the !
benefit of Editor J. C. Loomis and ■ I
others who may need these kind | :
of “draps.” j 5
i ]
Maley Hassan, the sultan of AIo-' j
rocco, recently had some persons I [
who claim to be Americans public-I j
ly whipped. Our government ask- J
ed Muley to make satisfactory rep-1
aration, but this he has refused to f
do. If the persons thus maltreated ii
really are Americans our govern- o
ment ought to trounce this Maley s
headed Mohamedan. w
A Worthy Cause.
We acknowledge the receipt of
‘■Etowah. A Romance of the Con
federacy,” a novel written by Air.
Francis Fontaine, himself a gallant
ex-confederate. The book is writ
ten in a pleasant, graceful style and
on account of its literary- merit
alone deserves a place in every
home. But “Etowah” has other
claims that this upon the Southern
people, which makes it a matter of
duty to purchase a copy of the
book. This can best be shown by
extracts from the dedication, as
follows: “To the disabled Confed
erate Veterans this book is respect
fully dedicated by a fellow soldier,
with the hope that it may be the
means nf inaugerating a practical
sympathy for them commensurate
with their necessities.
“You confronted nearly three
million enlisted men, during four
years of the bloodiest was on re
cord, with a patriotism and hero
ism unsurpassed in history.***
“While $12,000,000 a month
are paid as pensions to the Federal
soldiers, whether wounded or not,
no government pension these South
ern soldiers, and no public chari
ties have been organized, even for
the wounded.
“Philanthropy had never a nobler
; field of labor, and a patriot's grat
| itude cannot find more worthy reci
! pients than maimed heroes who
yielded all in defence of their coun
try.**
As a slight contribution to build
ing a Veteran's Home iu the city of
Atlanta, Ga., one-half of the pro
ceeds of this book will be applied
to that purpose.”
Air. Fontaine wants an agent in
every town, and, as the book is
likely to have a large sale, agents
will do well to secure territory at
once. Address him at Atlanta, Ga.
Why He Looked Bad.
It is said that Southerners living
near Alason and Dixon’s line, and
especially Kentitckians.jfrve a hor
ror of being mistake# fhr North
‘'■ners'.' On a recent occasion a
long, lank, sorry looking individual
who was on a train crossing the
Ohio river from the Indiana side,
; was approached by a portly person
who attempted to open a conversa
■ tion by remarking i
, “From Indiana, eh?”
The long, lank individual flashed
a look of astonishment upon his
interlocutor which gradually gave
place to an expression of grief a id
sorrow.
“Naw, stranger,” he answered
1 “I live in Kaintucky. I’ve had ther
typhoid fever fer six months; that’s
why I look so bad.”
1 We cannot notice what every one
• says in regard to what has appear
‘ ed in these columns in regard to
’ the AlcCoy trial. What has been
’ published was based on the state-
• ment of reliable min, and was the
opinion of this paper formed there
from. We have not dealt in per-
i sonalities or “filthy abuse” of
Judge Fain, and we know our read
. ers will sustain us in this asser
i tion. We still are confident what
I has been said is true; but other
people may not think so, ::u£l 'they
have a perfectright to thenk opin
ion as we have to ours. Those are
I some people incapable of distin
; guishing between legitemate criti-
I cism and “filthy abuse” and it is
j time wasted to notice this class.
Simmons Liver Regulator
\ is what the name indicates a “Reg-
I ulator” of that most important or-
I gan, the Liver. Is your Liver out
of order? Then is your whole sys
i tern deranged, the breath offensive,
you have headache, feel languid,
dispirited, and nervous, no appe
tite, sleep is troubled and unre
freshing. Simmons Liver Regulator
restores the healthy action of the
I
Liver. See that you get the Genu
< ine, prepared by J. H. Zeil in & Co.
1 The present congress is full of
I men who have only sufficient back-,
bone to draw their salaries and i
mail seeds and agricultural reports
at public expense to their constitu-|
ants. And this district, apparently,
is full of men who want to go there
for the same purpose.
Leland Stanford, 17.I 7 . S. senator I
from California, is having erected .
at a cost of SIOO,OOO a masoleum in i
which to be buried when he dies. I
P. S. Air. S. owes the government i
$13,000,000 which it advanced him i
to build the Pacific railroad which ■
he refuses to pay.
Chas. Dickens, the son of his j
father, has been giving public read
ings in this country from the works i
of Chas. Dickens, the father of h.is
son. It is said the son can read as
wi il as the father wrote.
FROM TEXAS.
Howe, Grayson Co., Texas.'/
March 14th, 1888. i
Please allow me to give your ma
ny readers a few dots from this por
tion of the “Lone Star.” Grayson
county has for its northern bound
ary the beautiful Indian Territory
and adjoining the counties of Den
ton, Collin and Fannin.
Its beautiful rolling surface
makes some 960 square miles and
since 1846, when it was organized,
the population has steadily increas
ed, until by the last census its peo
ple number 50,000 souls.
Two thirds of the county is prai
rie, while the remainder is made up
of woodlands, containing oak, ash,
elm, hackberry, pecan, hickory, cof
feebean, sycamore, walnut, niulber
by, boisdaic and other varieties of
timber.
In point of water supply, no
county in the state has greater ad
vantages, there being a long list,
commencing with the Red river,
which dampens mother earth and
furnishes material for steam, and
drinking water for man and beast.
Plenteous springs well up in abun
dance and in their crystal clean
ness gladden the thirsty, meeting in
their constant flow all the wants of I
a progressive people. From quaries
located within the county handsome
dwellings and business houses are
erected, besides furnishing material j
utilized in hundreds of ways. In .
the soils of Grayson county there
is that substance with ■which pro
lific results are obtained. Here
cotton sits on the agricultural
throne yielding from a half to a bale
per acre. Corn is also a staple pro
duction ard yields from 30 to 80
bushels per acre. Oats are a very ;
sure crop and yield from 40 to 80 I
bushels per acre, and have even ■
reached as high as 100 bushels.
Wheat as a staple is not so sure,
hut yields from 18 to 40 bushels
per acre. Almost every vegetable
known to the human race can be
readily grown here, and fruits of
the greatest variety and abundance
flourish with startling success. We
have a healthful and delightful cli
mate. The average temperature be
| ing about 60 degrees. Very light
snow falls.MKie winter is generally
three forths of
is a delightful
I Indian summer.
Our railroads are all known for |
their great carrying capacity and’
I thorough equipments, belonging as
they do to the best known system
I of the railroad age. Here the migh
ty Alissouri Pacific, the Texas Pa
cific, the Iron Mountain, the Mis
soura, Kansas and Texas, the St.
Louis, Arkansas and Texas, the
■ Houston and' Texas Central, the
- Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe and
> theTusco lines all come into this
i beautiful region, spanning and
crossing, opening and developing I
the magnificent distances of pro- I
gressive Texas. I see the farmers ;
of Chattooga have organized a so
-7 ciety known as the “Farmers Alli-1
• auce,” which is beyond a doubt a
grand thing. Will give the farmers
i a few remarks in regard to our Al
'' liance which is doing a great work.
I We have our own stores of different
■ kinds, thresh our own grain, gin our
■ own cotton and in fact manage all
• of our business such as handling
• our grain, etc. The Alliance is now
; building a mill at Sherman, the
county seat, which is to cost be
tween $35,000 and $40,000 with a
capacity of 175 bushels of grain per
■ day. With best wishes to the News,
Yours truly, G. 15. R. Smith.
March April May
■ Are months in which to purify the
C blood, as the system is now most
• | susceptible to benefit from medi
i cine. Hence now is the time to
| take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, a medi-
' I cine peculiarly adapted for the pur
pose, possessing peculiar curative
j powers. It expells every impurity
■ from the blood, and also gives it i
vitality and richness. It creates j
; an appetite, tones the digestion, in-;
■ vigorates the liver, and gives new ■
I life and energy to every function of '
the body. The testimony of thous-'
: ands, as to the great benefit derived j
from Hood’s Sarsaparilla, should I
convince everybody that it is pecu- *
liarly the best blood purifier and i
i spring medicine.
It will occasionally occur to one’s I
' mind that if people were just as l
I good, or even half as good, at at-1
j tending to their own business as j
■they are in talking about other
■ people they would get along some- i
' what better than they do.
—: —-
It is prohsiblethat Speaker Gar-1
lisle, ex-Governor Hoadly, of Ohio, i
now a resident of New York, or E.;
J. Phelps, Aliinister to England, will j
be appointed by President Cleve-1
land to succeed the late Chief Jus- !
tice Waite,
Trion News Items.
Sunday night we had a very hea
vy rain. The factory was started up
Monday morning as usual, but in
less than an hour and a half
the water in the river had risen so
much that is became necessary to
shut down the factory until noon
Tuesday. The river rose at the
rate of twenty-one and a half inch
es an hour in the fore part of the
day, until by two o’clock p. m. it
was higher than it has been in
about two years. There was no
damage of consequence done at the
factory, but about half past one p.
m. a large drift struck the bridge
that spanned the river a half mile
below the factory, and sent it
toward the Gulf of Alexico or some
other big pond. The stone pillar
in the middle of the river on which
the bridge rested was completely
demolished. A portion of the north
end of the bridge lodged just below
where it had stood, but the most
of the structure floated down the
stream. A considerable portion of
the railroad bridge had been put in
position, and a large amount of
timbers were lying near the river
banks. All that portion which was
raised is swept away, and a good
deal of loose timbers also.
John Allman, who was accident
alljr shot in the head last week, an
account of which I gave vour read-
I
' ers in my last communication, is
i doing very well, considering the se
riousness of the wound. The
chances for his recovery are fovar
able.
N. H. Gilreath says the peaches
in his orchard are not all killed by
the late cold snap. It Would be ft
I very nice thing if we could have
plenty of fruit this year, so that
: we could indulge iu fruit pies with
! out paying the moderate price of
114 cents per pound for dried fruit.
A few days ago Air. John Lively
was riding on horseback, when
from some cause the horse fell ahd
I injured Air. Lively considerably. It
was stated that he had the bone of
one ley broken, but I have since
learned that the bone was not bro
ken.
I do not know what Air. Allgood
thinks of the matter, but it seems
to me that the county Ought not to
build another bridge (it the same
place where the Old one stood, but
' should be located at a point just
i above the factory where the road
I crosses the river. When the river
is swolen so that the bridge is most
• I needed, the traveling public is cut
off-from its benefits on account of
the lowlying ground on each side
of the river. At the point before
mentioned, the banks never over
flow so as to interfere with travel
at any time. The road could be
changed by running across from
somewhere near the Penn place to
the factory, and then buck of Air.
Allgood’s home place and intersect
the present road somewhere between
A. C. Rinehart’s and Dr. Rudicil's.
This may seem to others nothing
but a wild notion of mine, but I
; know there is considerable incon
! venience to travelers on the old
j route, on account of the lowground
; on each side of the river.
j Rev. Air. Tucker filled his regu
; lar monthly appointment at this
I place Saturday night, Sunday and
| Sunday night last.
The following persons united
with the church, viz : W. F. Massey,
Mrs. Laura Massey, Aliss Mattie
jMassey, Aliss Alary Alassey, Aliss
Gertie Brownfield, all by letter.
Rev. Air. Tucker left Trion Alonday
v morning in a buggy, aiming to get
5 across the back water in the lane
. between the bridge and old ( Impel.
Cicero Greeson who was with Mr.
Tucker, told him the water was too
■' deep but the Reverend gen
tleman might have thought it wi uld
never do for a Baptist preacher to
ibe afraid of “much water” so he
plunged in, but soon got to where
the buggy began to float and
‘ alighting found the water nearly
up to his neck. He waded some
distance to terra firma. Guess if
, Air. Milner had have been present
jjust then, he might have had a
i good opportunity of convincing the
brother that too much water is not
so desirable after all.
Air. Allgood has placed a boat in
i the river where the bridge formerly
j stood, and streched a rope across
I the stream so that the boat is un
! dor control, no matter which side
'of the river a person may be. This
i will be a great convenience to trav
i elers.
Air. John C. Wilson's littledaugb
i ter, Dora, is very low with pneumo
: nia, and may not live many days,
i James W. Wotten has paid for
his paper up to Feb. 4th. Aliss
Nellie Bandy sends the News to an
i uncle in Arkansas. This is the
i correct thing to do. Any person
; who has ever lived in this county
i will be pleased to recieve the News
■ every week. Will some one • Ise
j send it to a friend? N. H. Coker.
The quintessence of politen ss
! has been reached at Afilan, Italy,
where cremation is practiced, and
■ where a nobleman during a recent
i frost strewed the ashes of his first
1 wife on the pavement to enable his
second wife to reach her carriage
without slipping.
FROM BRONCO.
Among our fertile minded young
men public debating seems to be
the latest shoot. ’Tis not often
that two hundred and fifty people
assemble in the country to witness
such exercises, but this was the case
last Friday night. Question was dis
cussed lengthily by a number of
speakers, among them Messrs. John
Shattuck, Duke Rogers, Chele Ben
efield, G. D. Bradley, and Professor
Shattuck, who is a very pointed,
logical, and yet, beautiful speaker.
From beneath the concave dome of
the starry heavens he bore his au
ditors feelingly to ethereal regions.
Mr. Benefield embroidered the
minds literally of those who heard
him. Mr. Bradlej’ moved his hearers
to many smiles. The Temperance
ville school is contemplating a
bright little entertainment at the
close, third week in April.
A young lady from near Chatta
nooga who has been visiting at this
place returned home laden with
■ hearts, I presume.
Mr. W. M. Blackwell is at home
from Louisville, Ky. Suppose a
• prefix of M. D. is now attached;
; but fear to say so lest it meets with
a rebuff from him. Nevertheless
we imagine it anil that is not all
. we imagine either. The midnight
, [ lamp will burn in a Broomtown
! parlor from now on ; but such is life i
; without a wife. The friends of Mrs. |
. T. E. Shaw, who are legion in Bron- !
. co, were glad to entertain her for a ,
. short while. Mrs. Ben. F. Hunt,of j
Villanow, visited her mother at!
i Valley Store. What West Ar-1
muchee grand juryman left .his hat
Jin Bronco court week? He was’
■ bound by Jaw not to tell anything: [
i law is law and talk is talk, and we '
i shall tell it on him for accidentally
J finding it out. Mr. J. M. Clarkson
J has fourteen bales of cotton and
| forty-seven head of fine beef c ittle
! for shipping soon. Mr. W. F.
Blackwell bought for $l5O twenty
J acres of hind, from Mt. Austin
I Bradley near the foot of Pigeon
[ mountain, where fruit never fails,
J for an orchard, vineyard and ber
l ries, so I learn.
’! Any who find they are retrograd
’ I ing in “dudeisin” would bid them
t [consult our two loquacious Bronco
t! patterns. Their latest “fad'’ an
1 [ amusing kleptomania. Lookout,
f! ye pretty shepherd dogs, fashion
’’ ; will swoop down and make whole
fl sale consumption of you unawares.
c Our merchants have had an inva
i? I sion of traveling salesmen for the
" i last two weeks. Some appreciated
‘[socially their visits, I imagine.
’ Willie.
>
The Adventists in Ohio are pre
t paring for the end of the world,
i which sad event they think will oc-
* cur during the present year. Per-
I haps there are no people who are
. in more need of preparation for
1 this catastrophe than those of Ohio.
I
The man who stays in a telephone
exchange has many connections—
I by wire.
' Bl
s ® I
t rswijNj Njl
iiiy
: POWDER
j Absolutely Pure.
►’ This powder never varies. A marvel
S of purity, stength and wholesoineness.
More economical than the ordinary
kinds, and cannot be sold in competition
? with the multitude of low test, short
-5 weight alum or phosphate powders.
Sold only in can':. Koyai. Baking Pow-
- dki: Company, 10> Wall street New
York.
- THE CREAK of all BOOKS of AD-
VENTURE,
I" Condensed Into One Volume.
’ Pioneer Heroes
, AND
> DARING DEEDS.
The thrillingadventures of all the hero
’ explorers and frontier fighters with In-
* dians. outlaws and wild beasts, over our
whole country, from the earliest times to
the present. Lives and famous exploits
of DeSoto, LaSules, Standish. Boone.
j Kenton, Brady, brockett. Bowie, Hous
ton, ( ’arson, < 'lister. (’alifornia .lor, Wiki
, Bill, Buffalo Bill, Generals Miles and
. Crook, great Indian Chiefs, and scores
* of others. Splendidly Illustrated
i with 220 fine engravings. AGENTS
WANTED. Low-priced, and brats : ny
‘ thing to sell.
> Timo for payments allowed A-geids
, short of funds.
PLANET PVB. CO.. Box 6881,
Philadelphia, Fa. I
<
wxsb gw
>-1888.-'
THE
chattooua
NEWS.
}-o-' }-i>( J
It is now universally admitted
that fl
(Jood, Live, Enter
prising Paper
does more for the section in which
it is printed than
ALL OTHER AGENCIES COM
BINED.
It is the channel through which
the natural advantages and the lo
cal enterprises of the community
are made known to the outside
world.
It helps the schools, encourages
and booms enterprises of every kind
that go to develop a county, and in
short is invaluable in more ways
than we have space to tell, forming
a weekly medium of
ADVERTISING
which is so essential in these mod
ern days to success in any field.
BUT FOR A I’Al’F.-Q
TO PROBERTA XV
Advertise its county it must have
the undivided support of the peo
ple in order to enable it to do so
I effectually.
A County Pape?
[ properly supported, will render far
! more service than can be had in any
other way for the same money, or
for that matter, for twenty times
| the amount. Business men and
| practical people everywhere recog
nize and admit this to be true.
On this hypothesis—
Mutual Interests—
Mutual Advantages—
WE RESPECTFULLY ASK A
I CONTINUANCE OF THE SUF-
I PORT THE
NEWS
HAS RECEIVED, FOR WHICH
IT RETURNS THANKS, AND
AN INCREASE OF THE SAME.
i Let every subscriber get one new
| subscriber, and that new subscriber
I another subscriber, and so on. until
! THE NEWS finds its way not only
[ into every household in this county
! but in adjoining counties also.
rpilE PRICE is $1.25 CASH,
X or $1.50 ON TIME.
It is Election Year and every
| person should keep posted as to
! who oiler themselves for office, so
they can vote in furtherance of
their own interest.
On our part we promise to make the '
NEWS just as good a paper as the peo
ple want; of course determining that by
the encouragement we recieve, for no
people really want a good paper that
cannot have it by liberal support. Re- ;
m ‘inber this.
v )
( ' \
I|B|B|B.
Legal Advertisements.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County;
To all whom it may concern: W. c.
Scott, guardian for E. P. Scott, has an-'
plied to the undersigned for letters' of
dismission from said guardianship: This
is to notify all persons concerned that
said application will be heard at niv of
fice in Summerville, said count v, <>;, the
first Mon.lav in Mar next. This y , r ..i l
17th, 1888. ' JOHN Mattox',
Ordjniiry.
Year’s Support.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
To all whom it mav concern: Emma
Hardwick, widow’ of S. P. Hardwick late
of said county, has applied for a years
support, for herself and minor child,
from the estate of said deceased: This is
to notify all persons concerned, that
said allowance has been set apart by ap
praisers appointed for that purpose’, anti
that stud return will he passed upon bv
tile undersigned at this officii on the first
’ Monday in .Mav next. This Mur 21. 1888.
JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
To all whom it may concern: T. L.
Major, administrator of the estate of E.
H. Satterfield, deceased, has applied to
the undersigned for letters of disinis- •
sion: This is to cite all and singular the
next of kin and creditors of said deceas
ed to be and appear at niv office on the
first Monday in June next and show .
cause, if any they can. why letters of V
dismission should not he issued to said
T. E. Major, administrator of E. 11. Sat
terfield, dec’ll. March sth, 1888.
JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
Leave to Sell.
GEORGlA,Chattooga Conntv:
To all whom it may concern: IV. If.
Penn, administrator of the estate of JgS
William Penn, deceased, has applied
the undersigned, for leave lo sell theW '
lands belonging to said estate:This is towHg
notify all persons interested, kindred
and creditors of said deceased, that ■
said application will bo heard at my ■
office on the first Monthly in April next. 4*
This Feb. 23rd 1888.
JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
! Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA, Chattooga County:
To all whom it may concern: John. A.
Patrick, late of said county, deceased,
departed this life testate: that James
TV. Patrick, named in said will as its
executor has also departed this life,
thereby leaving said estate without a
I legal representative: this is therefore to
cite all and singular the next of kin and
creditors of said Jolin A. Patrick to lie
and appear at iny office in Summerville
on the first Monday in April next and
show cause, if any they can, why letters
of administration de bonis non, with
[ will annexed, should not he granted to
[ the clerk of the superior court of said
county, or some other fit and proper
person, upon the estate of said John A.
Patrick, deceased. This Feb. 11th, 1888.
JOHN MATTOX, Ordinary.
TAX NOTICE.
I will be at the following places for the
! purpose of receiving Tax Returns for
the year I.sxs on the <l:iys mentioned be- <
I low:
' Trion, Monday, April 2. bi. May 7.
Subligna, Tuesday, April 3, 17. May s.
i Haywood, Wednesday, April 4, IS,
j Dirttown, Thursdav, April 5, 19, Mav
| 10.
! Coldwater, Friday, April <>, 20, May 11.
Seminole, Monday, April 9, May 11,
June IL
i Dirtseller, Tuesday, April 10, May 15,
! June 12.
Alpine, Wednesday, April 11, May 16,
j June 13.
! Teloga, Thursday, April 12, May 17,
' i June 14.
' Raccoon Mills, April 30, Mav 28.
Saw Mill, May 18.
Summerville, 2nd, 3rd and 4th Satur
days in April and May, and 2nd and 3rd
Sat urdays in J uno.
5 Then the books will close and all de
-1 fanlters will be double taxed.
JOHN T. HOLLAND, R. T. R.
1
W. M. JOHNSON, J. R.(’LEMMONS.
''the old
/ )
■SON
CLEffIONS,
DEALEBS IJST
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
WINES,
BRANDIES OF ALL KINDS,
THE BEST RYE WHISKIES
THAT CAN BE BOUGHT,
NXXX ACHE, GIBSON,
ROYAL CABINET, y
MANHATTAN
CLUB, *
BELLE of BOURBON,
DEXTER, A
OL D KAMI Ii Y NECT AR. ▼
The
I
Corn
orn l/u/ hiskyxj
orn I Y hisky Nf
orn hisky
They Handle is Manufactured at
theii- OWN DISTILLERY three
miles from Summerville and is
known far and near as the best to
be had anywhere.
Cigars, Cigaretts, Tobacco, Oysters,
' Sardines,
Salmon, Crackers, &c., in large .
variety. -M
FOOL and BILLIARD TABLES.
r»-[TWO HOUSES.!
STATEMENT OF COUNTY TREASURER.
The following is the amount of
! the respective funds in the County
Treasury, Mar. Ist, 1888:
Pauper fund
< tenoral fund -’’J’i"'??
Jail fund
Road fund 184./O
Total