The Chattooga news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1887-1896, June 08, 1888, Image 2

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CHATTOOGA NEWS. SC MMEKVILLE, GA. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY. [Entered at tlio Summerville postoffice as second-class matter.] JOE W. CAIN,) > Publishers. B. B. COLEMAN.) JOE W. CAIN, - • • Editor. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION: Twelvemonths, (Cash) .. $1.25 Twelve months, (On Time) 1.50 Kix months, (Cash) 65 'Hx months, (On Time) 75 Three months, (Chish) 35 Three months, (On Time) 40 The columns of The News are open for all to express their views upon mat tors of interest to the general public. All articles recommending individuals for office will be charged sot at local rates. < ’ommunications to receive notice must be accompanied by the writers • uno not tor publication unless so de sired, but as a guarantee of good faith. No rejected articles will be returned unless accompanied with postage. . Advertising rates given on appplica- All letters should be addressed to T-iIE NEWS, Summerville, (la. FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE s, INSS. Judge J. W. 11. Underwood has declined to make the race for the legislature from Floyd county. Frank !’. Flemming was nomina ted by the Democrats of Florida for governor of that State last week. The legislature of Louisiana last ■week elected K. D. White U. S. sen ator to succeed Senator J. B. Eustis. The largest amount paid to any retired, officer now living is $104.- 000 to Gen J. C. Robinson, form erly of the I’. S. army. Gen. Sherman has received from the government $60,000 in pensions and allowances since he retired from the army four years ago. If Thurman is nominated for the vice-presidency by the St. Louis convention, red bandana handker chiefs may be expected to be all the rage. Boston sent to Africa iast year one milion gallons of rum. But to atone for this she also sent along :i few missionaries to convert the African. Gov. Martin, of Kansas, recent ly pardoned a man serving a life sentence in the penitentiary for murdering his wife on condition that he abstain forever from, drink. Belva Lockwood, the woman's rights candidate for president, is bumping herself. She says she beat Blaine in 1884 and that she can do it again in 1888. Bully for Belva. Col. F. W. Copeland, of LaF.ayette is a candidate for Solicitor-General •of the Rome circuit. He is in every way qualified to fill the office and if elected will no doubt give satis faction. A company to be known as the Coosa River Marble Company is to be incorporated to work the exten sive and valuable marble beds of Alvin D. Hardin about six miles below Rome. The Kentucky distillers have agreed, to limit the production of whisky during the coming year to only 11,000,000 gallons. This will have the effect to make Kentucky whisky very scarce outside the lim its of lhaf State. A contemporary asks: “How shall women carry their purses to frus trate thieves?” Why, carry them empty. Nothing frustrates a thief more than to snatch a woman's purse after following her a half a mile, and then find that it contains noth ing hut a recipe for spiced pitches and a faded photograph of her grandmother. A French astronomer, who has bet ;i closely observing the planet Mars through strong glasses, has made the discovery that Mars is not only inhabited, but that the people there are actually building canals after the fashion of this world. Now if th‘- French astrono mer could make the further discov ery that the Marxians play base ball it would awaken more interest than ver in these, our distant neighbors. ‘Last year th-? Nr'.v.s sn n ' fr estcd Hon. J. C.f . Black, of Augusta, a suitable person to succeed .Mr. ■ Colquitt in th? United States sen-i ate. Il was the first paper in the State to mention .Mr. Black in that' cuiiu'cli'-R. .•» number of papers nil o\er liic Statu are no.v ndvocs,- ting Lis tdection. Mr. Black would make an excellent senator, and would be an honor to the office. Tie i is no politician and in i;i s cn-• Hie i i of lite will '■■■■' ■ ■ •i. ■ . ; , not the man the offb e. W, smeer.dy !1 h<me th'* office •••ill gm Mr. Black: j: Congressional Chances. We have succeeded in making our readers acquainted with the views of Messrs. Reece, Shumate and Clements upon the tariff ques tion. As well as can be judged thus early, the candidate nomina ted for corgress from this district will be one of the gentlemen named • above. Judge Branham and Col. Phillips are practically out of the j race, and their supporters, reali- > zing this, will make no decided es- > fort in their behalf. Col. Phillips ' mav get the vote of his own county, Cobb, and Judge Branham may get < the vote of FJpyd, but neither are ! by any means certain of a single ' vote. We have heard that Judge Branham intends to decline making the race, and to throw his influence ’ to Ca.pt. Reece. If this is true, the Captain will be a formidable com petitor. The views of the three leading - candidates are, in the main, the ■ same. All are good men, and the ? interests of the district would not suffer in the hands of either. Gen. Clinton Fisk has been nom i inated for president by the prohi . bitionists. t The clock works more than any- - thing else. But it does it under ; . protest, for it strikes every hour. >■ Mr. Blaine, in a letter to Wliite- - law’ Reid, again says he is not a - candidate for the Republican nom ination for President. n Jefferson Davis was eighty years s old last Monday. Thus he outlives 1 his tradticers. May his shadow not grow’ less for years to come. e If all the railroad bridges in the s United States were placed end to - end they would bridge the Atlantic I ocean from New York to Liverpool The Atlanta Constitution has r found out that the C. R. & C. rail o road is being built. That paper is a bound to have the news regardless j e of expense. The general assembly of the - Northern I’resbyte”ians has deci-■ e ded to discard the new version of j r the Bible and to stick to the old a translation. Next Tuesday is the day sot s apart by the State Committee for s the counties to select delegates to e nominate a governor and State e house officers. r ~ It is reported that Gen. Pierce Young has withdrawn from the e race for senator from the 45d dis -1 trict. If this is true Col. Watt r Harris will have a walk over. 1 Judge (to prisoner)—“lt seems to me I have seen your face at the bar of justice before.” e Prisoner—“No, Judge, I have 3 been waiting on Mike O’Dugan’s . bar and there is where you saw f me.” s ' The practice of carrying conceal ed weapons cannot be too severely condemned. A man who carries a concealed pistol for the purpose of and in anticipation of using it is I little better than a murderer, for by doing so he shows he has his own consent to use it—not only if the need arises, but if the opportu nity occurs also. Many men have I met an untimely death decause they carped pistols. The instances , where they are needed are few and ■ far between, and the instancesm , which they cause death are many. ! They are no good to carry them concealed : let them alone. Hens as Missionaries. In enforcing, in a recent sermon, the point that there are no condi ; tions, however unpromising, which may not be utilized for developing; good results, Rev. S. W. Lee, of Mobile, Ala, relates how Rev. D. C. ’ Brown, a circuit preacher, raised i his missionary assessment. He was sent to a very poor circuit in North ! Georgia. He recognized that if he! raised his missionary money he I would have to adopt extraordinary! measures. This he determined to do. He made a round on his circuit and asked his sisters of the church if they would give him a hen each. Forty-live of them com- I plied with his request. He also had i ! them promise to set these hens and i to let the proceeds go toward the ) mission: y cause. At one time he i had forty-five missionary herik.each sitting on as many eggs as she!, could well cover. In the course -of | a few weeks the preacher had per- ■ , haps as many as 509 missionary! chickens. When t hey reached that i' interesting age in the life of aj eldcken known as the “frying size,” ! they were sold, and the proceed;'j applied to the missionary cause. p LETTER FROM JU, CLEMENTS. House of Representatives,) Washington, D. C. May 28, ’BB ) Mr. J. W. Cain:—Dear Sir— Your favor asking my “views upon the tariff question” came too late for reply last week. The power of the government to exact from the citizens a part of his earnings is a great one and should be exercised only for legitimate and constitu tional purposes. Every dollar ex acted beyond the necessities of gov ernment honestly and economically administered is so much oppression. For several years past the reve nues under present laws have ex ceeded the expenditures, large as they have been, and it is safe to say that they have been several millions larger than they would have been had there been no surplus. Last year alone the excess was sixty millions of dollars and there are one hundred and fifty millions now accumulated in the tieasury of sur plus. With this on hand and in view of the annual increase of rev enues it is perfectly safe to reduce at once the annual income seventy live or eighty millions of dollars. I 1 believe that the reduction should be made upon the necessities of life in , daily and universal use among the people. As far as possible many of j these should be put on Hie free list, ! and others greatly reduced. But | we must deal with things as they ' are and as we can. With the solid opposition of the Republicans in i the House ancl in view of our small . majority of only about fifteen we ' cannot hope to pass just such a bill ! ■as I believe would be right. The interests <Jf the people of this great ' country extending from ocean to | ocean and from the gulf to the I lakes are so varied and conflicting, ; embracing the great agricultural, j commercial, manufacturing and 1 mining interests of the most active I and progressive people of the whole j world, that it is difficult to frame a I ! measure that can secure the votes | : necessary to pass it. The funding I ! bill of the Ways and Means Com- ! ; mittee proposes reductions by add ; ing to the free list a large number ■ i of articles of common and necessa- [ ry use among all the people, such ! as wool, woolen goods, blankets, i underwarc, etc., salt, cotton ties, ! soap, and many others amounting! to about $22,000,000; also reduc tions on articles left on the dutia- j ble list, amounting to nearly $30,-1 000,000, and the tobacco tax in all ! forms, including the license for sale I thereof except on cigars and che-1 roots amounting to about $24,000,-! 000. I believe other articles might! have been put on the free list and I the cost to the consumers thereby I reduced, but this bill if passed will be a long step in the direction of equality and justice to the whole ! people and would leave for circula- ; tion among the people this excess, j so much needed for that purpose I but which is now being absorbed by ! the treasury, there to lie in idleness causing stringency and threatening ! panic in thp financial world and in viting extravagant and wasteful ! appropriations. Any legislation upon this question with our very small Democratic majority, and a part of that not in accord with the proposition to reduce the tariff, must, of necessity, be the result of concession and compromise. It is that or nothing. Therefore I am for this bill as the best that can be done now. If the great body of the people—the consumers throughout the country—only realized the amount of tax paid by them daily in the enhanced price of the goods they use, caused by the tariff, and the fact that about four-fifths of this tax goes into the profits of the i protected monopolies they would demand a reduction of their bur- ! dens in a manner that would not |be ignored. There is no authority’ i in the constitution noris it consist lent with honesty and good morals I for the government to lay prohibi tory taxes for the purpose only of taking from the earnings of the many to insure the profits to the few. It should collect taxes only for public purposes limited to the public necessities and beyond this leave every citizen self-reliant, to pursue happiness and prosperity under equal laws. Very truly yours, J. C. < h.EMENTS. Rice beer and “blind tigers” are entirely’ fashionable in Rome now. Telegraph blue is a new’ shade in ladies’ dress goods. This is for electric girls. There are six colored candidates for sheriff of Valusia county, Fla. Evidently there are no “black hor ses” tied ptij this contest. IN MEMORY’. God, in His all-wise providence, has again visited the Baptist church and Sunday’ school of Summerville; and taken from their number one of the most beloved members and pu pils, Della Maxey, the only daugh ter of J. W. and M. J Maxey. She died of typhoid fever Saturday noon, May 26th, at the age of II years and 18 days. During the part of her sickness in which she was ra tional she was often heard to ex claim : “O, merciful Father,” which showed her confiding trust in Him in whose army she had become en listed. One evening of the series of meetings of 1886 she joined a little band of girls, some of whom were Christains, who were going to a quiet place for prayer meeting. After hearing some of her associ ates tell of the great love of the Re deemer she gave her young and tender heart to Him who said: “They that seek Me early shall find Me,” and accepting the first oppor tunity she, with some of her play mates, presented herself as an ap plicant for membership in the 1 church, which was granted with j much joy. After which she was ! always one of the members who ! grasped a Bible and w’ent to some i undisturbed spot there to sing, talk and pray’ with and for those who would go with them, desiring also to be Christians which often re ! suited in the happy union of si.als i with Christ, and such results would j persuade them to leave their place I of prayer and meet us at our door, ! telling us by the angelic smiles ! with which their faces were clad, ■ that they had won other souls for the Master. We are assured that, ! though she was young, a Hower not full blown, and only a short time in ' the Savior’s vineyard, she had tro ) pilies to cast at Jesus’ feet, and i that she has been gathered from I this earthly field and carried up ! higher, there “To be kept in the I j Crystal Vase in the deathless man : sions above to make Heaven fairer ! and sweeter with her immortal ! bloom.” She was a frequent visitor ! of our family, always by her ch mr j fill voice and light footsteps bri:ig ! ing pleasure into the home circle. ! She often gathered with us around ! the table—often knelt with us I around the family alter—which bound us together both in natural ! and spiritual love. We offer our i prayerful sympathies to the bereav ed family, hoping that her death may be sanctified to their good. Father and mother remember our ! Savior said: “All things worl? to gether for good to them that love the Lord,” and also his prayer: “Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me, be with me ! whet'b I am.” Let your anticipa ! tions be for that time, when, with j ecstasy’ beyond our comprehension, you will meet her on the shores of i eternal bliss, to part, no never. And I another comforting thought is that your family is now represented in ; heaven. While she will be sadly missed by father, mother and broth ! ers, throughout their home; she j will also be missed in her class, by j teacher and classmates; in the choir, the social prayermeotings, the “girl’s prayermeeting,” and in the families she visited. Others may take her seat in the Sunday i school class; but still in memory we preserve it as hers. She will ■ never more mingle her voice in the praises of God on earth, in which , she so much delighted; but we feel she sings with heaven’s minstrels, j in sweeter and clearer strains, the i praises of the Lamb. “Ween not, dear parents, for sh? is J at rest, i She is sleeping, but not forevernmro, i But loaning her head upon Jesus’ On the banks of the ]X'ariy shore.” Fkiexo. i Mention of Judge Thurman’s! ! name for the vice-presideney recalls | | the fact that every occupant of that! . place who was more than sixty ! years old when elected has died in | office. The list is limited to five: I Clinton, Gerry, King, Wilson and ■ Hendricks. It is a fact not generally’ known, says a writer in science, that if any one holds his breath, wasps, bees ! | and hornets can be handled with , j impunity. That’s all right, but to hold one’s breath and hold a wasp with impunity at the same time is more than most people care to un dertake. , I At a holiness meeting near du- i cago the other day’ a man rose in . 1 ! his seat, crying that it had been re-; i vealed to him that a woman in the ! audience was Christ incarnate, and ' i that the whole assemblage should . fall down and worship her. Ho no ■ ■ doubt was “stuck” and meant to I say she was an angel. DOTS FROM DIRT TOWN. Farmers have about finished cut ting wheat and are not exuberant over the crop, rust has almost ruin ed it. Miss Lillie Shropshire visited Rome last week. She is giving per fect satisfaction as a music teacher. S. E Jones is visiting Cedartown and Cartersville this week. Guess he will go to Powclvillc too, but he rather likes to go there on the sly. Miss Kate Dixon, of Walker county, spent last week visiting here and the way a certain Doctor made it convenient tb pass this way looks as though he had quit singing “Maid of Athens.” Quite a number of our people were disappointed about the time of the close of Sam Jones’ meeting as a large party had made arrange ments to attend last Saturday ami Sunday. J. C. Faroes worth visited in Rome last week and he still thinks the Texas Valley route a great deal nearer and better than the Summer- I ville road. Dr. R. I). Jones and wife returned Monday from a short visit to Ce dartown. Dr. W. S. Kendrick of Atlanta visited his mother last week. i Our community was greatly shocked Sunday morning to hear of the death of Mrs. A. G. Baker, who died rather suddenly the night be fore. She leaves a large family to mourn her death. Truly the ways of an all-wise I’rovidefice are mys terious. Strange to the bereaved ones that the wife and mother should be taken when she is so necessary to their comfort and 1 happiness—needed so badly to rear 1 her children. In such, overwhelm- i ing afflictions there is comfort only ■ in God’s promises. Dixie. 1 Now is the Time to use Hodges Sarsaparilla with , I lodide of Potash, the grert purifier i for the blood. A certain cure for rheumatism, scrofulous affections, ’ anil all deseases peculiar to females. I 1 Renovates and invigorates the sys- • I tern. Physicians reccommend it. j i Take no other. Rangum Root ' Medicine Co., Manufacturers,Nash ville, Tenn. $1 per bottle. Sold by ' all Druggists. 1 Cedar Springs. < i The rains are throwing the farm ers behind. .Mr. J. W. Morrison hired a negro i, boy by the name of Ben Anthony , who has ran away. I hear he is , hired in your county near Melville. It is said he is a bad boy. R. A. , Mathis’ renters have also ran away leaving him in a bad fix. I guess | the ’Squire will have to wttrk out;, his crop instead of electioneering. I . Mr. Samuel Miller died on the ! 27th of May and was buried at Mill Creek. Peace to his ashes. He was 70 years old. Matrimony dull. I have been stuyding about try ing Colorado. Z. T. Lawrence, who is there, writes back favorable news. ! It is hard, though, to leave a fellows sweethert. I don’t see why John Rees don’t marry. It is leap year ' and Join, will never have such an other chance. G. W. 15. Tha Romarkable Cures Which have been effected by Hood's Sarsaparilla are sufficient proof that this medicine docs possess pe culiar curative power. In the se verest cases of scrofula or salt rheum, when other preparations had I been powerless, the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla has brought about the happiest results. The case of Miss I Sarah ('. Whittier, of Lowell, Mass., | who suffered terribly from scrof ulous sores; that of Charles A. Roberts, of East Wilsofi, N, Y.. who I had thirteen abscesses on his face! | and neck; that of Willie Duff, of Walpole, Mass., who had hip dis ease and scrofula so bad that phy- ' sicians said he could never recover, ! are a few of the many instanced in ! which wonderful cures were effected by this medicine. Barnes Greely, a brother of the founder of the Tribune, is a farmer in Pennsylvania. lie is an eccen tric man, and while he advocates the doctrines of the Prohibitionists, he thinks that too much water is a dangerous thing. He. attributes his excellent physical condition at the i age of seventy-five to the small I amount of water he uses, both as a beverage and for clensing purposes, j . Chickens and pigs are his favorite , live stock, and they roam at will ! I over his house. Mr. Greeley says ; , that his brother Horace gave him a j position on the Tribune in its early j days, Jjut he did not like it., and i ' after a short trial returned to Ijis pigs and chickens. Trion News Items. The track on the railroad was laid to the end of the trestle work where it joins the bridge last Satur day afternoon between four and five o’clock. As the men who put up the bridge had foreclosed a laborers' lien against the same which had not yet been settled, the track layers were ordered by Constable Carroll to not lay tiack on the bridge and so the work came to a stand still. Yesterday (Tuesday) the matter of the lien against the bridge was settled, the men receiving seventy five cents on the dollars for their claims, and work on the bridge was resumed. The track will be laid across it today, and then they ex pect to move forward very rapidly laving two miles a day, as the force will be doubled. Another strong force of convicts will be put to work on the lower end and in a couple of weeks, if nothing interferes, the tracklayers will meet and the trains will pass through from Chattanoo go to Rome. The first engine and train of cars came to Trion last Saturday p. m. but stopped just at the f4Rce back of the church which is corporate limit, but yesterday p. in. the engine and train rolled i into the town proper : a portion of the train crossed the wagon road i near the river. I learn that Mr. Allgood wasp not so well yesterday as he had ; been for some days. We had hoped i to hear of his being able to return ' here in a short time, and yet hope I such may be the case. N. 11. Coker. ; .—... An 1 important Announcement. New York, May 5, 1888. Gentlemen: I feel In duty bound ' to you, as well as to all sufferers by rheumatism, to write to you my ex perience with this terrible desease, and the use of Swift’s Specific, hop ing that these words will be benefi cial to all who suffered as I did. About six weeks ago while in bus iness, I was suddenly attacked with excruciating pains in my feet, knees and hands. So severe the at- | tack that I took to my bed immedi ately, and in two or three days my joints were swolen to almost double their natural size, and sleep was driven from me. After suffering the most excruciating pain for a week, using liniments and various other remedies, a friend, who sym pathised with my helpless condition said to me: “Why don’t you get Swift’s Spe cific and use it? I will guarantee a cure, and if it does not the medi cine shall cost you nothing.” I at once secure 1 the F. S. CJ . and using it the first day, had a quiet night and refreshing sleep. In a week I felt greatly benefited. In three weeks I could sit up and walk about the room, and after using six bottles I was out and able to go to business. Since then I have been regularly at my post of duty, and stand on my feet from nine to ten hours a day, and am entirely free ( from pain. These are the plain , and simple facts in my case, and I will cheerfully answer all inquiries relative thereto, either in person or by mail. Thomas M arkii.i.ie, Il W. 18th street. New York. Treatise on Blood and skin dis seases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta Ga. The first thing a shoemaker needs j is the Inst. Rats. Maxwell, the St. Louis murderer will hang July 13th unless execu tive clemency is interposed. It is estimated that the railroads of the United States carry 480,-1 1)00,0')') tons of freight per year.; This is equal to eight tons of freight. | per hea-tl of population. 00Ml I I'-''' * ! Zs ROYAL g I . ! | POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel i <»l ;>uri‘v slvnirlii and v/holesomcmrss. Mor" e-’-omm.'.-al than th-.- ordinary kinds, and eamm: lie sold in eonipeition : wit i tin- multitude of low test, short- , weight alum or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. Bovar. Bakixii J’ow.- i>i-:i! Covi'anv, 100 Wall street -tew ; York. It Is a Curious Fact That the body is now more suscep tible to benefit from medicine than at any other season. Hence the importance of taking Hood’s Sarsa parilla now, when it will do you the most good. It is really wonderful for purifying and enriching the blood, creating an appetite, and giv ing a healthy tone to the whole sys tem. Be sure to get Hood’s Sarsa parilla, which is peculiar to itself. Rev. Dr. Clifton, of Syracuse, N. Y., has proven to be the best weath er prophet of the age. About 90 per cent-, of his predictions concern ing the weather come true. He has succeeded admirably in telling a few days ahead what kind of weath er it will be when it begins to weather. E. P. O. Don’t waste time and money and undergo needless torture with the knife when Ethiopian Bile Ointment will afford instant relief and certain cure in every case of blind, b'eeding, itching, internal and external piles. Rangum Root Medicine Co., Manu facturers, Nashville, Tenn. SI.OO per bottle. Sold by all druggists. An exchange says that a man with small means should marry a woman of small waste. How p(h)unny. A florist in Montgomery, Ala., named James Cardwell, who has been suffering for twenty years past with a supposed pulmonary trouble, coughed up a pin from Jiis right lung recently. He has- now’ a distinct recollection of swallow ing a pin forty-seven years ago in Glasgow,Scotland, when seven years of age. He remembers th? anxiety of his family at the time, and that his sister was dressing in front of the mirror. The pin is an inch long. Be Sure If yon have macle up your mind to buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, possessing, by virtue of its peculiar combination, proportion, and preparation, curative power superior to any other article. A Boston lady who knew what she wanted, and whose example is worthy imitation, tells her experience below: To Get “ In one store where I went to buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla the clerk tried to induce me buy their own instead of Hood’s; he told me their’s would last longer; that I might take it on ton days’ trial; that if I did not like it I need not pay anything, etc. But he could not prevail on me to change. I told him I knew what Hood’s Sarsaparilla was. I had taken it, was satisfied with it, and did not want any other. Hood’s When I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla I was feeling real miserable, suffering a great deal with dyspepsia, and so weak that at times I could hardly stand. I looked, and had for some time, like a person in con sumption. Hood's Sarsaparilla did mo so much good that I wonder at myself sometimes, and my friends frequently speak of it.’’ Mrs. Ella A. Goff, Cl Terrace Street, Boston. Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. ; six for? 5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD <t CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar revolutionized the world last half century. Not least among the wonders of inventive progress is a method ami system of work that can be performed all over the country without the workers from their homes. Pay lib eral: an vom can do ’the work ; either s<‘.\, voting or old; no special ability re quired. Capital not needed; you . are started free. Cut this out and return to us and we will semi you free, something of great value ami importance to you, that will start you in business, which will bring you in more money right away than an v‘. fling else in the world. outfit Fitee. Address True A ( <>., Augusta, .Maine. * Legal Advertisements. Sheriff’s Sale. GEORGIA, Chattooga County: Will be sold at the Court House door in Summerville said county, on the first Tuesday in July, isss, at public outcry, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following property, to-wit: Twenty thousand teet of plank and one hundred crossties. Said nroportv will be found in the Satv mill vard of'Kilgo <V Davis near Poplar Sm ing church in said county; also m e voice of bulls and two yoke of oxen, mm cart and two wagons. Levied on as th" pronert v of defendant. M.S. Kilgq, 1»> virtue of the fori closure <>f;t lien in favor of John Ross against W. S. Kilgo issued from the Conntv Court of said county. Property pointed out by plaintiff’. Levy made and returned by JI. W. Bryan, L. C. June sth, IS,ss. .LT. Worsham, Sheriff. TAX NOTICE. I will be at the following places for t he purr»o.sc of receiving Tax Returns for the vevr isss on lite davs mentioned be i Io"’: • ; Trion, Monday, April 2, Mat Subligna. Tucsdav, April .:, 17, May S. ' lia.yv.mod, Wednesday, April 1, IS, Coldwater. I'riday, Anrild, 20, Mat’ll. Seminom, .Monday, April 0, May 14, ' "liirtseller, Tuesday, April 10, May 15, ’"vpiit'o, Wednesday, April 11, May Iff, ’’ 'i'.Lga, Thursday, April 12, May 17, June 14. , ~ Raccoon Mills, April May _s. Saw Jlill, May l-s. , , Scmm-rvilh-, 2ml. ’.r.l rr.d Ith Satur days in April and May, and 2nd and 3rd Saturdays in June. , ~ , -Tl-.en tli books will close and alldc haiilters will b" double tarn d. I N T. HOLLA N l‘. R. 1 ■ R. ‘ STATEMENT CF COUNTY TREASURER. " ’ The following is the amount of I the respective funds in the County i Treasury, June Ist, 1888: Panner fund ?1,125.1-1 ’ General fund • 4!*:.99 Jail fund 32.27 ! Total t?l ,<m!.4O