The Chattooga news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1887-1896, May 04, 1888, Image 4

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>-1888.-: ‘. BSSSSSWri .-«« XMttmfm™ - .xssMa: f? gg~!ir~~’ T ' '7-rr.‘-'‘""”w -’! ;■•: : : THE n a lihn I I M UIaII xx L* : 01l NT e vr e . ■ L VV u. If, U now universally admitted that a Good, Live, Enter prising Paper 1 o 1 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. T3UTFOR A PAPETJ -&_> TO PROPERLY XV Advertise its county it must have the undivided support of the peo ple in order to enable it to do so effectually. A County Pape-’ properly supported, will render far I more sen ice than can be had in any ■ other way for the same money, or for that matter, for twenty times i 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 CONTINUANCE OF THE SUP PORT THE NEWS HAS RECEIVED, FOR WHICH IT RETURNS THANKS, AND AN INI REASE OF THE SAME. Let. even- subscriber get one new subscriber, and that new subscriber another subscriber, and so on, until THE NLA S 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. -• is Election Year and every person should keep posted as to who offer themselves for office, so they can vote in furtherance of their own interest. On our part we promise to make the NEV. S just as good a paper as the peo ple rvant; of course determining tiiaf. by the encouragement we n.-ieve, for no ■ 1 people really want a good paper that; I cannot have it by liberal support. Re member this. ■ V > < I|B|B|B. , DR. HENLEY'S • I ap ■ A Most Effective Combination. This well known Tonic and Nervine is gainin'? great reputation ns a cure for Debility, Dyspep sia, and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves all languid and debilitated conditions of the sjs tem strengthens the intellect, and bodily function. ; builds up worn out Nerves s aids diifestion : re stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings bac-«- youthful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to t he taste, and used regularly braces the System against the depressing influence of Malaria. l»rice-SI.OO per Bottle of 21 ounces, FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS* Send for Catalogue, i ■ ? Tin? PiPnn W ‘ llb «?r-' Breech-Loading, Double-Barreled Shot Guo. PARKER BROS., Makers, MERiDEN, COHN. Show-rooms: 97 Chambers St., Hew York, ' fjWJHWffiAWhas.rovaihtllonlited the world !:• f the Inst half century. Not least among the wonders | oCinventive progress is a method and j system of work Ih.at can be performed ; all over the country without s'-; 'era: ihe ’ the worker.' from their homes. Pay lib- I crtil; any om did do t’'c work: eille r I se?;, N'ouug op old; no s;> .-i:d ability re- I qll i. C:ipit:l! Iloi Hot !'•<!; YOU are i start •<! fu: t'‘u Ik ff'.crn to of .■ ,t vab. - aiu! i ■ ■ <<r..!n-. t< von. Hint will will In nor j than any! cim.; el',' 1 inll l ■ • 'v->rL. 1. < ni> i 'HiTi’iT ’fn ::: . Address Till--; A <’<».. | Am,'. :-!:;. ?;m:-e. woxbeps exist in thousands of f< mms.biit arc :-ur:j . ;'i by the nmrvels of inventi-’:; Tm so who art in need of pr-iiUal’i ' v-rk th:-! can 'be don ■ '.yi:i'f livina at lu.mi ■', >. ! 1 at mice send their address i i ll::? ■:! .-• •’<>., i Portland, Maine, and receive free, full I information how either sex. of a!'. | can earn from .<» to S2.'> per day and np i wards wherever they live. You are star- I fed free; Capita! not required. Some ! have made over ?50 in a single day at I this work. All succeed. W. M. JOHNSON, .1. R.CLEMMONS •THE OLD RELIABLE/ / \ n u J uiil ....,. . : I bhnmfflUhd, FOREIGN AND D»L’;LSI if' WINES, BRANDIES OF ALL KINDS, THU. BEST RYE WHISKIES THAT ( AN BE BOU- HIT, XNNX ACME. GIBSON, ROYAL ( iBI.' ET, . MANHATTAN CLt B, BELLE .i BOURBON, Di INTER, OLD FA MlL'’ NECTAR. ■ O />orn v y Thisky ! orn v/V msky t yorn V J hisky ' ' hisky They Handle is Manufactured al their OWN DISTILLERY three miles iri Summerville and is known far and near as the best to lie had «nywhere. f agars, < igaretts, Tobacc >, Oj st : ■. Salmm, Cmeker-.. Ac., in large varietv. • « Pi . . I. ami ejEEiARD TABLES/ I''.? IIOIaC-S, A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY, Curious Custom In the Tuscan Highlands. Saints’ Bones—Village Lottery'. In the Tuscan Highlands at the village ! | of Cutipliano they keep high feast on the ; ; Bth of August in memory of Saint Aure lius and Saint Irenivus, whose bones lie : in state in the town church. The sacred : i remains exhibited on the holiday are pre- ; served in richly gilt shrines, with glass i ; front and sides. The skulls are bare in | nil their grinning liideousnessj the rest of the skeletons are happily hid in rich : costumes, the hands covered with silk gloves and the feet with elegant stock- I ings. After mass is over in the church and the people have been blessed, a priest standing at the altar holds up a reliquary containing the bone of a saint for the ailoration of the crowd. One by one the men come up to the altar steps, devoutly ki s the glass that covers the preeiotls bone, aud drop a Popper or two into the brass tray which is carried by an attend ant. After each osculation the glass is carefully wiped with a napkin and then presented to the next in order. The women come after the men. The faith of these is apparently more lively. They seem fully satisfied that by the act of adoration they have committed them selves to she effectual safeguard of the saint, and they turn away their faces radiant with peace and contentment. Here conies a family gioup, a mother leading a little girl by the hand with a baby on her arm. It is touching to see tho earne-tness with which the mother presses tho pouting lips of her infant against the sacred charm and the joy with which she broods over him when she has thus secured his salvation; behind Conics an old woman, wrinkled, infirm, alone in the world, but the weight of her years and trouble seems to grow light when she has secured the good will and inter cession of the saint. So they come in a long succession of every age and condition, but all believ ing and devout. Long after the service i. over the worshippers remain absorbed in prayer, kneeling in different parts of th • church, utterly lost to all that passes around. As ter leaving the church the Tuscans repair to the village green, where a lot tery is in progress, and every one, from the gray head to the toddling infant in vests in a ticket. They are very super stitious about significant ilufilbei's. Ono man chooses eight because his cat at home has that number of kittens, an- ; other twenty-nine because his son fell j aud broke his leg on that day of the month: still c.nother fifteen because there j arc that number of letters in the saint's i name whom they celebrate. Every one is in good humor while the I drawing takes place, and even if their ’ numbers are unsuccessful they leave with i th" conviction that it will surely come ■ up on the next feastday.—Foreign Letter. ! Water Changed to Ijiriotj. There i an animalcule, sometimes! called tho cnglcna sanguinea, or the blood red cnglena, which multiplies so r pidly in some places that the surface of the pool soon resembles a great clot of : blood, to the wonder of those who see it f r tho first lime, and do not suspect tiro cause. Tho little creature seems to be , j abundant all over the known world, and Ehrenberg, a German naturalist, who discovered and named it, suggested that th first plague of Egypt, when the water was app: i''iitly chanced into blood, as I narrated in the EiUe, may have been ■ J caused by a. ] ruli.Jor.s and miraculous < increase of this little Mood led infuso i rian. . V.'ithin very recent times an apparent ’ ! change of water into blood has come to the writer's notice in the White mount : ains, in northern New York, and in Bev- ; oral places in New Jersey. Tho phe nomenon is not very rare. The creature livit causes this change has itself a pecu liar color habit according to its age. In . early youth and middle life its color is a ' vivid gr< an; in maturity end old age it ’ ’ assumes the crimson hue referred to, and often the same individual may bo both ■ r-re; n and red as cither color reaches the . v.rface during the body’s movement, each coming and going in a wave that Hows across tho little creature, or a ' minute spot may be rosy red in tho gen- ! cra.l green, or an cmeral island may ap- i pear in this miniature sea of crimson.— Alfred C. Stokes, 1.1. D., in Harper's Young People. Cause of Decay in Steel. It has recently been discovered by a board of naval experts at tho United States navy yard. Mare’s Island, Cal.,-that the I cause of the sudden deterioration in the ■ steel used in building the new cruisers for the government is not ciao to the ravages of a worm, as was supposed, but is caused by the fungus peronosporus | infestans, so well known as the cause of pot ato l ot. With tho delicate apparatus procured by the government for testing tho quali- . ties and detecting fraud in metals in tended for government uses, it has been 1 ascertained that the minute spons or suds, which float in the air. are introduced into the metallic body while 'n tho molten state during the process of carbonization. They also find that this form of steel rot ; is alarmingly epidemic in much of the government material. A large and profitable field is open to inventorsand scientific men who will de vise means to arrest the spores of this : fungus as they are drawn into the car bonizing furnaces, or who can prevent ; i their growth and 1 ; read either in the ingot or manufacture 4 forms of steel.— ! Detroit Free Press. Wild Siikv.’orius of India. For a number of years tho deficiency ■ in the production of mulberry silk has ! drawn the attention of sericulturists to the rearing of .the wild silkworms of i ! India, China. Japan, America and other . i parts, and a great many r<q>orts have been published on these wild silkworms, ! some of which are already bred in a ! . state of domesticity or semi-domesticity. Many of these wild silkworms produce •' silk of great strength and beauty, and . could all be profitably utilized if bred in ■ their native lands on a large scale. Speci- ' men cecoons and carded and reeled silks of about twenty different species have : been sent to the Societe d’Acclimatation. and they will be exhibited in the Paris International exhibition of 1869, together with the specimens of the moths and’ prepared larvae of the various species.— : Public Opinion. HOME. , X There lies n little city in the bills; V.’hite :’ie iis roofs, dim is each dwelling’s door, . ! And peace with perfect rest it s bosom fills; ; There the pure mist, the pity of the sea ' Comes as a white soft hand, aud reaches o’er I j And touches its still lace most tenderly. ; Unstirred ai.< calm, amid our shifting years, ; Lo: where a lies, tar from the clash and roar, i I With quiet distance blurred, as if ihro’ tears. ! Oh. heart that prayest so for God to send • Some loving messenger to go before i And lead the way to where thy longings end. , 1 Be sure. l>e ven su’M. tliat soon will come • I His kindest angeled through that still door z • into the imiuiie love ?sjiUead the* home. -£. R. Sill. A VICTIM OF COCAINE Gives His Experience with the Fascinah ing Drug—Nursed Back to Health. Dr. Charles D. Bradley’s name first ; came into undesirable prominence in No. | vember, 1885, when he was arrested ! charged with Ming insane through exces Give indulgence hi morphine and cocainb, : the latter a powerful narcotic Os which up to that time little had been heard. Ha was taken before Judge Prendergast, was declared to be insane, and given a sen tence of three months in the Washing tonian home. After a fortnight's stay at the home Dr. Bradley went to Canada, his old homo, where he gave himself up entirely to tho demands of the drug, the fascinations of which completely en thralled him. Practice and home wort gone, and he gave free rein to his vice, lie returned to Chicago and Was sent to the insane asylum, where a complete cure was effected, and he resumed bis practice, only to find himself deserted by hi; clients and his reputation impaired. Consolation for the reverses came with cocaine, to which he again became n victim, mid there were months when ho absolutely lived in the «tate of mipd it produced, securing it by hook or crook until his last possession was gone and hi family beggared. The physician went to the gutter, an i a year ago was begging for cocaine nt drug stores or securing it by fictitious orders ’on druggists. Then he disap peared. Ho was occasionally heard from in Canada and tho cast until last fall, when the papers recorded his arrest in New York city for endeavoring to obtain a supply of cocaine by representing him self as a messenger sent froill one phy sician to another. In the police com tho gaunt, emaciated, ragged man told his story of want and woe, and th< pauses which brought them about. A: that limo ho was using sixty grains <1 cocaine a day. He was sent to Bellevu hospital to die. There he Was found by the manager of the Christian home, where lie was nursed back to mental and physical vigor. Dr. Bradley wns reluctant td dwell on tliy episodes thus briefly given, but con versed freely on other circumstances ol his life. ‘•Until 1885 there was nothing to dint my prospects,” said Dr. Bradley. "It was in that year that cocaine, was fir ! brought to notice through a German physician, but it was only known as practical anaesthetic in operation bj oculists. There was no method knows for using it for other purposes. I was tho first man to discover that it Could lx otherwise used- -in fact, to take the plaei of ether or chloroform. That discovery, so important, to tho world, was most u;n •fortunate for me. When I announced ' my discovery physicians laughed and d dared I was crazy. I wrote a letter tc Mayor Harrison asking him to appoint medical commission to inquire Into tin : value of my discovery, which was tin I administration of cocaino hypodermic ally. I first utilized my discovery b\ testing it on a cat. I dissected a leg c I a cat, exposing tissues and muscles, ni. 1 kept the animal on my desk for hour watching the circulation. There was n. pain, the drug exercising a soothin,, effect. ‘‘Next I began experimenting on my self. 1 found that the anaesthetic influ ence of cocaine is limited. I experi mciitcd on myself again and again to see just how far this limit extended, and learned just where, when and how to give injections. Physicians then be lieved that the effects of the tliug were similar to those of morphine. To dis prove this I tried actual cautery by ap ] (lying to my body red hot irons, but felt no pain, and there was not the slightest sensation as the flesh wither. 1 under the heated irons. For three months every day for a half hour I ex perimented with the drug, and oftei: passed several hours of the night in ii study before a mirror, watching its ef fect on myself. But I never realized that it was obtaining a mastery over me. Its fascinating powers were unknown tc the profession. I was thunderstruck when I found that the drug was absolutely necessary to my mind and body. I be lieve I could have conquered the habit then were it not for a misunderstanding with the man from whom I rented my home. He wanted his house, and when I refused to vacate it my weakness was mode a point by which I was dragged into an insane court. Persecution and publicity drove me to desperate extremes. At the Washingtonian home no one know how to treat my disease. Every body knows the rest—how 1 went to the gutter and lost everything.” “With all your experience with co- . eaine. how do you now regard it?” asked ; the reporter. ■•I think it is a grand drag, with re- ! markable properties, and destined to take i the | le.ee of ether and chloroform. It can be used without danger of death. 11 produces no nausea or prostration. It i. a great specific for nervous diseases, sot 1 certain diseases of the spine, for paralysis, for tetanus, hydrophobia and other con vulsive diseases. It will unite with other anti-.-.; asmodics ;md intensify their ac tion. 1 think I know more about cocaine than most men. but I have no compre hensive idea of its possibilities. Sci entist- are only in the experimental stage with it.” “Wh -.t are tho effects of the drag?” “To begin with, it is like the effects ol . any stimulant at certain stages, but it i;. not stupefying, as is opium. The person taking it has a feeling that everything is I lovely and serene, of perfect content ment mid universal satisfaction. AL things seem perfect. There are none ol | the frightful illusions which come from I liquor or other stimulants. Excesgivt qumiiities, though, cause great irritabil ity. The duration of the effect is alxuil ; two hours, and is succeeded by a feeling I of depression and exhaustion. But there i is none of the disturbance of the mind or nervous system that follows drunken i ness. The victim loses all strength after each indulgence, and there lies the ehief ' danger in using cocaine. It weakens the ‘ action of the heart, making sudden strain! i or excitements dangerous, as was ex ' amplified in the sudden death of a phyei . cian, who engaged in a quarrel with i I barber last year and fell dead during the ; quarrel. He used cocaine. The effects : of the habit are degrading. It will deader . a man’s jrcrception of right, just the ■ same as whisky, anel pull a victim down ; to tho lowest depths of low cunning ami viciousness. ’ ’ —Chicago News. A New Preservative Art. ; M. Tray, the French consul at this ( port, has in his parlor a huge decorative i piece, seemingly of roses, rosebuds, vie • lets, smilax and other flowers and foliage, I apparently carved with most exquisite i delicacy in bronze. The most minute ' curves and vciningsof the smallest petals ! and leaves are preserved with infinite exactitude, so that it would seem as if the piece represented years of patient ap i plication of tho highest skill in this diffi cult branch of art. In point of fact, however, the whole thing was produced in n f w hours, ami at small expense, by ‘ tl’.-- new f s cf pl:the invention . of ?. Ur••nckimui. Em '• bronze flower t.;:d !’"'f im;loses the real original, upor. which the metal has been deposited by electric action, and it is affirmed that the roses so encased retain indefinitely their j perfume, and, even in their deepest interiors, their natural colors. The I same process is applied in the making of j silver flies, beetles and other insects, and even in the coating of lizards and small I snakes for the ornamentation of parasol handles and eano heads. The dead insect or reptile is hermetically sealed Up in its metal coat, and, it is said, will never de' i cay, at least until the metal is worn through, and, as the deposit may be put on as thick as is deemed advisable, they may be made to last as long as people’s liking for them as a novelty endures. The fidelity to nature in these reproduc tions is wonderful. Heretofore something has been done in the direction of plating non-conducting surfaces by giving them a primary coat ing of plumbago, but that always was a necessary imperfect process. The French electrician substitutes for that a bath— the composition of which is a secret— ! into which the objects to be plated are i plunged for a few seconds. When they are withdrawn they dry off almost im- ■ mediately and seem to have upon them a ! faintly discernable coating like the bloom upon a plum. They are then plunged into an electric bath, and any metal de sired is deposited upon them,—-New York I Sun. Brain Photographic Revelations. | A writer in The New York Tribune ! tells the story of the appearance of a I man’s brain tinder a strong microscope that is botli interesting and suggestive. In the brain matter, ho says, were no ' t iced curious markings, some geometri | Cal, Sotild sintions; and . many others that proved to bo characters in the Ethiopia, Syriac and Phoenician languages, which the possessor of the brain, when alive, had made a special study. Now Tor the i suggestive part. Perhaps some day when a man dies we can take out hi, brain, spread it on a microscopic slide, and, in a peep, behold him as ho. really was, not as he pretended to be. Every thing his mind ever took Cognizance of and formed an opinion about will bo open before us like the page of a book: No doubt the traceries will take pecu liar shapes sometimes. Perhaps the brains of some young men, who died young because they were good, will show markings closely resembling Champagne bpttles, flight keys and fast horses. The tracings in the brain of more thtiii Ono ! good bald headed deacon may assume the ‘ graceful forms of ballet girls, the sight of which made such an impression on him ’ when alive and in the front row of the theatre. Shapes that closely resemble beautiful entrain and decollete dresses may be expected in the craniums Os So ciety belles called hence in the midst of their triumphs. In the brains of re porters will bo noticed many ghastly family and public secrets which, out of rcportorial goodness of heart, never were ; given out to the World, And sb we might continue ad infinitum, but we re frain. This scientific investigation must not l>e pushed further. A key that opens a man’s secrets . after he is dead might not be such a hilarious discovery after all.—Pittsburg Commercial Gazette, Astrologers’ Musical Rings. i The ring among astrologers was a favor ite means of divining the future. It was I suspended by a hair in the middle of a i cup known as the draining cup. Ques tions were asked and the ring tapped the I sides of tho goblet in answer, but as the hand of the astrologer held the hair to which the ring was fastened, perhaps there was not so inucli fli.iiiing hi thW las the. credulous supposed.- All astrol ogers, however, had at least seven magic . rings; one for the sun, a diamond set in gold; another for the moon, a crystal in 1 silver; a third for Mercury, a loadstone I in silver; a fourth for Venus, an amethyst i in copper a fifth for Mars, an emerald in iron; a sixth for Jupiter, a cornelian in j tin) n seventh for Saturii; fl tiifquoisein | lead. Many astrologers had a zodiac ring, or ring exhibiting in its setting all tho signs of the zodiac, the general effect be ing that of a calendar or old fashioned almanac. Charm rings are also very common even in later times. Henry VIII had so much confidence in a ring which belonged to Thomas a Becket that ho had it set as a thumb ring and wore it I all his life.—Globe-Democrat. Informed on Each Other. Here is a story told by a New Jersey justice of the peace: “A man from Pennsylvania was arrested in Gloucester for having a dead deer in his possession. He was lined SSO, which he paid, and i I went back to Pennsylvania. About the ■ ’ same time another Pennsylvanian was ! caught in the same way and fined tho I Same amount. He also paid up. It; j ■ both cases the whole fine, under the law, went to the informant against them. 1 knew them, and it always puzzled mo how they came to seem so contented to pay their fines. Well, sir, I have just found out. Do you know that these measly Pennsylvanians had put up a job to come over here to kill our deer, and then each inform on the other, so that the fine each paid went right back into the pocket of the other, and their deer didn’t cost them a cent!”—Chicago News. T.cgcjj<ls of Serpent Women. In the early Egyptian hieroglyphic! tve find representations of snakes’ bodies crowned by female heads; and. indeed, this class of serpents seems to have proved equally attractive to all nations, an evidence of which subtle fascination is that the legends of the “snake mai dens*' still live in the nursery tales of to i (jay, perennially young and beautiful as ‘ though their birth were not wrapped in i the mysteries of a prehistoric age. Os i this family came Larnia, the witch of Crete, whose woman's heart rendered her doubly sensitive to the degradation she suffered during her incarceration within her scaly prison; nor did she, on renewing the pristine' glory of her hu iiMin form, completely 1 >se the essence of her serpent nature. Ilarmonia, tho wife of Cadmus, to be a companion in her : husband’s misfortunes also took upon herself the serpent’s shape, but being devoid of evil intent, never, it is said, shunned, but rather sought man’s pres | ence. Perhaps it is but another form of the' classic Ilarmonia which has become fa- ' miliar to us under the name of the fairy Gentilla, who. in an adder’s shape, sought refuge with Prince Leander from the vengeance of the irate gardeners, but i nt the end of several days dropped her scaly mantle, and. arrayed in super natural charms, munificently rewarded hqr protector. In some of the later ac counts of Mclusina she is cited as a mem ber of this sisterhood. Jean D’Arras represents her as a serpent ‘‘enameled , blue and white;’’ thus also did she pre i sent herself to tho commander of Lusig nan. a fortress which she erected in the early days of her wedded happiness. If then? lit* any who wonder that this union of serpent and woman slwuld have proved attractive to our ancestors, might not the- sinuous grace and enigmatical character of our own Elsie Venner plead | ehqu- ntly for the charms of her myth born sisters?—North American Review. •‘THE GIST ILEFT BEHIND ME.” ccMRBHTeo ran P—. » ■1 O F ■ ■ L?-' yAy A; z - 7:.7 -y y. ’ \ ‘ ' - Ulustrnted bv the use of a Bugpv mnde by T. T. Havdnck. which is not onlv the Leading Bi.Kcy in’‘.his picture, but THE IIWIM; BFGGY OF AWEKH A. Ibis Tlaydock’s Safety Kinir Bolt and Fifth Wheel. Ask your dealer for the T. T. HAYDCCK BVGGY. with the Haydock Safety Iking Bolt and Fifth Wheel. < Life is insecure riding over any other. ('lbis platnro will be furnished on a large card, printed in elegant style, to any one who Kill agree to frame it. 1 [EXCLOSE STAMI-.j T. T. 0 / Send Tor 4'nfnlogtic find ~ Wholesale Price I.f-t. Cor. Plant and Twelfth Sts., CINCINNATI, O. AGENTS WANTED WHEEL WE HAVE NONE ’ NO INVESTMENT SO PROFITABLE, ■Tie Mil® M Eli Cl. YOU wont to soli Real Estate of any kind? Place in ottr bands and we will advertise it. No sale, no pay, and then only a small commission. YOU want to buy? Road tho, following descriptions of Property we I have for sale, on time to good parties. | Eighty acres, IM miles I’roin ssmfarr-1 ville; 12 ac.ca op »». ba lan' '* \Xe‘l timber- : cd with White Oak, Dp-kory. Pine, etc.! Good spring on it; good fiu During pur- ! poses. IL mile from church and school.- Ninety Four acres,about 50 acres open, ' in good condition. 20 acres first class : bottom on Chattooga river. 1 ... level, re mainder hi 4 bh**n. Well watered, good dwelling witii two tenant, houses and good out houses, orchard <>f’(’/'**“•' peach | and apple tree's. 6 miles from SumfiiCt- ! ville, 1 miles from church and schools. Town property 5 acres in tho sub urbs of Summerville. Level; a most desirable site* for h'sidence; good small dwelling with out houses, well and spring affording an abundance; of the best water; good young orchard of choice j fruit trees: also a large number of choice grape vim s. Eighty acre s lyhig vurtl.v within the ■ town e>f Summerville: id ftyfeo e !o‘o'’ , b « remaineler wedi timbered; 25 aefe* b y' h-: balance broken; good day founelntiOfif[ in good fix. Pine for farming purposes, and also well h>cateel for residence’ ■ ; also 1 •ontains large qnai'rtitfes of iron <?re. Town property ■’» lots 2b. 2 front-1 ing on Mam street, one* fronting on! Church street. Level; good wagon aid; blacksmith she>p on corner lot. Most I suitable' place in town for business I house; also desirable locality fordwcll ing. Rest farm in tie- county for its inehexs I and price l . 2<T! acre's: 100 open, e tb.e'rweil I timbered v itfi j inO; '-’ik, walrail, etc., on j Chattooga riv- f. .ifia' Y-a first class hot j tom; well watered and !h ( vdy.wayi suitable for stock farm; about ’ . i- ?d. . the other rolling; e lay femm!:it imi amt gooei fix. Two comfortable small dwell- , ings, 3 teman! hemses, with goeal out i houses: also !;o-ge quantities of rjch iron o v e on port ions of it. Eight miles from S”mmervi : .!('. Farm -102 acres; 50 acres fine? creek bottom. Upland fine? for cotton and vhcat, and in high state of cultivation. ' (n every way suitable tor stock farm, i Two gooei new framed dwellings; free i stone* water in abundance; dmrdUr, schools and post olfice near. • , Earm 100 acres; red and gray soil, 20 acre's first class branch bottom, 70 acres : dearcdr well fenced anel in good state ol : cultivation. Balance heavily timbered. ' Thousands of fine' tan bark; .'’.springs, 1 j well, 2 fraim'd houses anel 3 tenant i houses, all in good fix'. Select orcharel ! and vineyarel. S miles from Summer- ■ ville: 2 miles from postofiice,schools ami I churches. ! Town property I lots 00x120 : 2 front-I ing on Main stre*ct; 2 rear lots, level; good small elwelling, frameel, new, 2! I goe."l brick chimney:', good garden,patch i etc. ?.Iso onei of the mo: t suitable si-< s i I for business houses irt Summerville ’ I Terms easy and exceedingly low price. Farm--110 acre's —red loam and gray soil: 00 acre's open,well fenced. Remain- j der well timbered ami well watered.! Mlood 5 room dwelling, w ith good baru, j etc., on La Eayelte anel Blue Pond road, 1 mile from Alpine, Ga. Farm IIS acres, just across the Ala., 1 line, red and gray soil; well watered, 05 acres open, othqr (•«>vered with finest quality of timber, affording great quan tities of tanbark, incxhaustable* lime: quarry; also supposed epialitios of other j \aiuable* mine rals. Good orchard.grapes etc; good 0 room dwelling, tenant house*, ’ barns. e?te, being near Lookout is suita-I Me and convenient for stock raising. 1 mile from Menlo, Ga. Farm 100 acres, red, gray ami sanely ' soil; line siock farm; we'll watered; SO acres cleared, 20 acre's first class creek | bottom; large epiantitics of fine timber; 1 good 4room log dwe-iling,2 tenant houses, ’ stables, etc.. 1 mile from Foster’s Store, i Farm of lt‘ <; l acres in Floyd county 111 miles from Rome, 2 miles from R. A I>. : R. IL; red and gray soil, well watered; S acres cleared; contains thousand efi ■ tine timber,also rich deposits of iron orc , Town property, about two acres, in | suburbs of Summerville, good small framed dwelling, with two rooms and I kitchen; good garden, patches, etc. Farm of 160 aeros on Sand mountain, two and a half miles front Kartah, 67 ■ open and in high state of cultivation, i balance heavily timbered. Adapted to growing anything raised in this county i especially fruits, etc. good dwelling, 2 tenant houses, out houses, etc. Improve ments now and in good condition; 2 ; good orchards, 2 good springs of freo | stone water; (•bu ndles, schools, and I postofiice convenient. I 2S.— Town property 11M Acres on sub j urbs of Summerville, level, well fenced j and in good slate of cultivation, good I young orchard apple and peach, good , framed six roomed dwelling not quite : complete, prettiest location in Summer i ville for residences. 2fi -Town property—lot 4 in block 16 .with good well upon it. Healthy and desirabl : lo< ation for <i we'lling. SO—For sale or rent, farm of 480 acres, I miles from Summerville; 200 ceres cleared. 35 acre good cree k boLtom; well i watered, good dwelling, out houses, etc. Will well all or a p'?rlion as de sired. 31. Farm 213 acres 2 ! -_. miles from Summerville*, Ga.; 50 acres red mulatto i balance gray. 125 cleared and well • fenced, in high state of cult i vat ion., i splendid framed house with six rooins f | 5 good tenant, houses, am! good barns land other out bouses; healthy location* j contains large deposits of iron ore s, wit h large quantities e*f various and lino ■ 32.- Farm 26 acres, well improved, ! first-class bottom on Chattooga river, 1 I mile* from Summerville; good 4-rejom house*, stables, etc; well, orchard, Ac. I j .Tb Farm S 0 acres 2 miles from Sum l mervilfi-; red mulatto soil, level, 60 acres j open; well fenced and in high state of cultivation, bfthftc*? heavily timbered, good substantial rmprotemonts; 5-rooni house*, barn, stables, orchard etc. .71. For sale or scut, splendid tanyard, fed dir(*ctl.V from a spring; all necessary j fixture's and tools for t-ilining; good two | story tan shop; about ten acres goo», b vei land 6 acres cleared. Very cheap and terms easy. 85.—Farm, 160 acres, gray and red mu latto soil; 50 acres open, balance heavily I timbered. Ge.’od dwelling, tenant house ■ stables, well, etc. ('heap, and on ex j '•ocdingly easy terms. 36. F:*.rm. 500 acres, H'd mulatto and ; gray soil; 125 open and in high state I cultivation, balance heavily timbered; ’ about 60 aeros first-clas* bottom on C'hat- I looga river, well watered «?.••! in every way suitable io stock raising. Four I good dwelling with good and convcnirnt 1 barns out- houses, etc. Supposed to eon- I tain large deposits of iron and other val- • unble minerals. 3 mil'e*from Summer- ■ vilhqGa.. ■ 3.7. Town ]»ro'(Mrty, 12’ 2 lots, 4 fids I (i(ix 150, babince 50. x 120, all in one* body; •in tho healthiest and most desirable part of Summervilh-'.- Carl fie divided i into several beautiful building nites, ■ Good two-story building, six rooms, 'neatly anel comfortly finished; a good JiariUaml good water. .Brice low and 3S. One; half interest in fi corn grist mill on ’l’e lepga creek, 6 miles from Sum merville, Ga., 7 1-2 foot fall, giving an J ave rage of 12 horse power. 3 acres of land, good mill and gin house,"good four room dwelling anel out houses, in good neighborhood, convenient to schools,, i eel. Brice low and terms easy. Farm lt-d acres, 36 acres open, i r< maindef covered with finest timber i the county a fiords, consisting of pine* ■ and all varieties of oak.• specially moun tain oak; good tenant house, stable*, etc; i good well; also contains large' deposits 4 ! of tho richest quality of magnetic iron ore. I miles from Summerville: convet i nient to churches and schools. 28 acres, mostly level, just outside the ' corporate limits of Summe*rvillc; 17 ones* : anel in high state* of cultivation, otner ! well timbe red. Reel anel gray soil; good ' spring. I’ine* farming land ami well i adapted te> fruit raising, etc. ! Best vineyard in the* county, I,(MX) I select hearing vine's, in gooei e*ondition; ' also first class ore-hard of select apple* ! anel peach. I mile* east of Trion Factory, SO acres, 40 open anel well fenced,balance? we ll timbe red; about half laved; all suit , able* for agricultural purposes, and e*s l pecially for fruit growing. Gooei spring ; and line freestone we'll. 2 gooei small | houses. Also e-emtains large; eleposits of rie-h iron ore. Che apest farm Neirth Ga. Farm 100 acres, niostlv broken, 15 cleared, balance' well timbered, /.ray and red soil; goeiel five-reiom frame 1 '! dwelling with outhouses. School and churches convenient. Farm 200 acres, 100 open; well fenceel I and in good state of cultivation. Well j watered. 35 acres fine creek bottom, red anel gray soil, Id • barn, fish-pond, ore hard, cic. Situated oast of Taylor’s Ridge. Farm —S 2 acres, 70 open, we'll fenced, ' rnd in high state* of cultivation; 60 fine I creek bottom, we'll watered; good dwell ing, 5 rooms, stable, etc; also good gin house, anel tenant house. Located in ; Dirttown valley. Farm, 300 acres, mostly level, 115 open ; i in good state <>f cultivation: remainder i very heavily timbered. Dark mulatto : aftd gray soil; well improved; good 8 room dwelling, 2 tenement houses, barn, ! stables, etc. Well watered; 4 miles from 1 Summerville. Town property for sale or rent. Good ! framed 4 room dwelling. Situated in i the healthiest, most desirable locality in Summerville. Ample garden, etc. Town property for sale or rent. Neat framed storc-hoilse, ample? and well > furnished, Iror.ting on main street, ! Stock farm- 319 arrers, 130 open in good cultivation and wei! fenced. Contains a 2Teat quantity of timbe r of all varieties, dark gray and rod mulatto soil, running waler on all parts of the place*; fine peach and apple orchard that m v< r fails to hit; house and other improvement* • good. Fann, 21 acres, 1 mile from Summer ville, mostly level, red mulatto soil, ' about half first class cree*k l.ottom, well • watered. 12 acres cleared and fe need, balance well timbered; good building sites. ’ Farm -150 acres: ICO first-class river ' bottom, (.5 open:, bala.m-e well t ’mbored. ' Go< d 3-ror.m framed dweli :.*; , --nd j stables, etc. For further particulars ns tn descrip : lion and term;-’, call eq.< nor -deb'ess Cl! ATTOOt’A B ' A I. Es-i ■v: .... S'J!: UH vile. C;|