The Chattooga news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1887-1896, October 18, 1888, Image 1

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THE CHATTOOGA NEWS. VOL. 2 G. E. MARTIN, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon, Taliaferro, - - - - Ga. Residence st .1. N. Taliaferro’s. cTcTirßWiciil m.d’ ’ Physician and Surgeon, Sm£MEBVIL.LE, G-A_. < Dr. F. H. Field, DENTIST, Will visit Chattooga county frequent ly. Those wishing his services will please write to him at Summerville. -"clovTs d. ri versT Attorney-at-Law, Summerville, - . - - Ga. t offers his professional services to the I citizens of Chattooga and surrounding | counties. By close attention to whatever I business may be entrusted to him, he hopes to merit public confidence. "wTIVirHENRY, Attorney-at-Law, I Summerville _ - - Georgia. F. W. COPELAND, JESSE G. HUNT LaFayettc, Ga. Summerville, Ga. COPELAND & HUNT, Lawyers; Summerville and LaFayettc, Georgia. Prompt attention to all legal besiness. ollecting claims a Specialty. Lesley Shropshire Attorney-at-Law, Summerville - - - Gcoigia. » jTmTbellah, j Lawyer; [ Summerville - -_ ~ Georgia L "jOHNTAYLOIL I’.TAVLOK. bHAYLOR & TAYLOR, Lawyers; - Georgia* Summery i i i o CTdSaT J.W.eWIKO. H. SMITH Dean, Ewing § Smith. —< o >— Attorneys" At-Law. ROME, - G-A- “7 \r Bl RiEY, [•— CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER—■{ Office: Adams’ Block, East Sth St., (Second Floor) CHATTANOOGA - - TENN Work promptly executed. WES DREW, The Barber ' kmar lA e v avTa co: u,w ; New Shop, New Razors, and I everything connected with a. first-class - barber shop. Call in. A Br. HENLEY'S _ A Most Effective Combination. Thl.well knovnTonlo and NerGneUKMnJns •T“' ’TnFKVoYs dLrdec, It rail’™ all ein, Rod Hohilitateii conditions of the sjs languid and deblUtateu nnll todllyfunctions; ten.; strengthensthe In tel IM. nnu ; re . | or M ounces.. SALK BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Tlw Original WinJS. * C F. Simmons. St. Louis, Proper I Jkf. A. Simmons Liver Medicine,Est ? d | 3 I 1840, in the U. S. Court nitFkats J. ' 5 H.Zcilin.Prop’r A.Q.Sininions Liv- ~ i er Regulator, Est’d by Zciiin 1868. V'lNh -M- f° r 47 yours 'j CUi Ctl INDIGESTION, DILICCSN LSS, I Vrjt 1)7! ptfsia/ xck Hzadaci<£,Lost nA firiKTiTC, Soon Stomach. lire. * 41 *. Rev. T ]>. Reams, Pastor M. R. ’> fj. Adams, Term., writes: “1 Itl’-ink 1 should have been dead but * i * or y° ur Genuine M. A. Sim s a —mons Liver Medicine. I have , ’.'V , rW'. r \ -otne'.iines h?i to substitute J “Ze iin’s stuff” for your Airdi i’ /t'L'i- / cine, but it don’t answer ths ILiil purpors.” <• ‘ L a< ! FLxI l'r. J« Grave*, Editor Tm Memphis,Tenn, says: A V I received aj a. Lage of your Li, er 1 A Mediane, and hkvc used half of it. Fl ’3 It works like a charm. I want no v better Liver Regulator and ccr \ tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture. H fi <ZS • . _ If vou sell Gin 60 days we will I send you one watch free. This regular $25.00 Ladies I ▼.•c.tch will bo sent C. O. D., V subject to examination, to * any address on receipt or 50 * cents in postage stamps as a guarantee that watch is 0£ BK^mS^SWK* dered in good faith ; if found perfectly satisfactory and | exactly a» represented, you I pay the balance 85.47 at your I express office otherwise you Ico not pay one cent. To in- I troduco our goods, we otter this fine Ladies’heavy gold Cut is half Site, watch pla t e d or filled hunting caso regular ladles size. ’; e l watch which is richly cn* have them in gentlo-i _. p , vc d and ornamented by men’s size at same price. | hand, will retain its beautl- order at once wm get v for a , .. ic(J we nro W. J. Satterfield. , G. H. Rawlins. NEW STORE! NEW GOODS! ' SaliaF'iT fill, 318 Broad Street, Rome, Ga. We have opened our doors for business with a complete stock of bpb Fancy 3ry Goodsi Hcta, Boois, ta ( &o. And respectfully solicit an investigation of Style, ITices, etc. OTTZR, G-OOTDS Are Brand. New and. Fresli From First Hands And. Were Bought For Cash, Enabling Us to Give Our Customers Advan- tage of all Discount. Very respectfully, SATTERFIELD & RAWLINS. 318 Broad St., Rome, Ga. J. B. CARVER & CO., . The Live Crockcrymen of Rome, Keep a Large Stock of Assorted Crates of Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Looking Glasses and Tinware expressly for the Jobbing Trade. Terms and Discounts as liberal as any House in the South. In onr re tail Department you will always find the newest goods,’ the largest assortment and the lowest prices. While at the Exposition give usacall. Ei k iirnnnew o nn ~ A. ißUfim «. 111. SEED, GBAIN SACKS, LIKE, PLASTER PARIS, CEMENT, LAND PLASTER. Cotton Received on Storage and Commission C. A. MOROSS & CO., Chattanooga, Tenn. Send for; Catalogue. CP i fe ~ cr> Ny, t=3a w PARKER BROS., Makers, MERIDEN, CONN. Show-rooms: 87 Chambers St., Bow Ml TDAZEIMZOnsrS, AACICEZE OOALE.A.ISrT’. 243 &• 244 Broad Street, Rome, Ga. THS LARGEST BOY’SWEABIKG AFFAB3L TTJ’ THIS SECTION OF COUKTBY. | Ready-Made Clothing, FOUR GRAND STORES IN ONE: > Furni shi n g Goods, j Hats and Men’s Fine ohocS. OMPLEI dollars worth of goods that corner into our store, thereby saving a large amount in discount. ge in the countr y will offer you No House in the Country Bas Greater AaYantaij es bargains .. -z-WPv Fair and Sctuare Dealing wil'"ANs^*l7s« pZiitVi!»»•*»*•*s ,* .Vi FoxbNATkUv rl. ABH-n-Y ™ and 344 Broa I - - - Rome, Ga. SUMMERVILLE, CHATTOOGA COUNTY, GEORGIA, OCTOBER 18, 1888. IW’ LnGSRIATfIIRJfIER. lOflftE BIOOD A POSITIVE CVREfoRStRomA RHIUMATISM.SCALDHUD or UTTER BO US P!M?LLS OLDoa. CHKOXiC SORES of AU KITANO Au DISEASLS ARISING FROM an IMPURE STATE ov , slFg<BoTTle 6foßss ; 1/ Rp OT !U£ UNIMEKt. 15 IRE BEST oX EARTH ttfiiopifflhft’ MYE.RTAIUS To CURYk T. I.M.G. KT/tEO/AY HAALUBLL CURE • •,-IoR XEIWGI/v •• -Sold EVERYWHERE k h p-L:/ Xashvl i Lit, GEORGIA GLIMPSES —o— The State fair will open at Ma con on Nov. sth and continue till the 10th. Four murder*cases will be tried in Fulton county court, which be gun this week. The estate of the late W. 11. Wardlaw, of Rome, has been ap praised at $35,000. A bear is at large near Brunswick and the people are endeavoring to trap him. So far he has escaped capture. The commissioners of Walker county have appropriated S4OO to build a road from Greenbush over . Taylor’s Ridge. In Bartow county Foute beat; Crawford, republican, only eight votes for the legislature. Craw ford will contest. Mrs. Martin, a deaf woman, was run over and killed by the train on the East Tennessee road near Riv er’s Station last week. Fred Herring, of Lawrenceville, lias ascuppernong grape vine eight years old, from which he has sold $25 worth of grapes this season. Mrs. J. W. Spence, of Hilton Sta tion, in breaking a very large egg for cooking purposes recently found inside it another complete egg with shell and meat inside. W. F. Sims, near Hogansville, runs a six mule farm and expects to make forty bales of cotton to the mule. He has already gathered forty bales and has as many more open. The city council of Marietta has ordered an election on the second Wednesdaj’ in November, to deter mine whether the citizens will vote $5,000 per year for twenty years for water and gas works. A train of wagons one and a half miles long, all loaded with cotton entered Ft. Valley, a small town one day last week. There were one hundred wagons and 225 baler and were all unloaded at the Alliance warehouse. * Only 409 votes were polled in Newton county at the recent elec tion, although there were over 1,800 registered voters in the county. The Enterprise says that 700 colored voters are registered in Newton, most of whom will vote the Repub lican ticket on the 6th of November. Rev. L. W. Stephens tells of a romantic marriage that occurred in Elbert county. A couple eloped to get married, and they, together with the justice of the peace, were going full tilt on horseback, with the irate father of the girl in full pursuit. The justice married them galloping along. It was a novel way to tie the knot but it stuck all the same. Paul Springer, colored of near Buena Vista ,had a desperate fight with a mad dog last week. He had nothing to defend himself from the attacks of the dog and with the daringborn of his desperate sit- I nation grasped the dog by the throat with both hands and finally suc ceeded in clicking it to death. He was terribly scratched and now en tertains fears of hydrophobia, as some stock which the dog had bit went mad. It has been decided by the Su preme Court of Georgia, that where a landlord stipulates tiiat he shall receive from the tenant for rent of land a part of the crop raised there on, and the tenant in discharge of the rent, delivers to the landlord the part of the crop agreed on, the property so delivered is dis charged from the lien of any judg ment, decree or other process against the tenant, and is not subject to levy and sale under a general judg ment against him. A tragedy is reported from Fay ette county, in which Ellis Moore shot and killed L. Heflin. Heflin and a companion had been out on a drunken jamboree. They called at Moore’s house. Mrs. Moore was in I lied. Heflin caught hold of herand tried to jerk her out. Her husband lat once pulled out his pistol, and ■ sent three shots through Heflin’s body, killing him. Mrs. Moore is not likely to live. The A. 11. Stephens property at Crawfordville was sold last sale day at public sale. The six acres lying near the cemetery were bought by the Crawfordsville town council at $35. The “home place,” 400 acres, was sold to T. E. Brestow for $705. The Nunn place, 325 acres, was sold to T. E. Bristow for $525. The Kent place, 190 acres, to J. W. Far mer for $230. The wild lands be longing to the estate were not sold. The cabin of John Jones, of Tay lor county, was struck by lightning while his family were asleep at night. The house was frame building, and was badly damaged by the light ning. Their bedding was also set on fire, and both Jones and his wife were seriously burned and stunned by the fire and lightning. They would have been burned to death but for the assistance of two of ' their little children, who jerked up the bedding and carried it into the yard and put out the fire. r i When the returns from Dade countv were opened in the olliec of 1 v 1 the secretary of state in Atlanta on ] Monday last, Col. Barnett was sur prised to find that J. T. Lumpkin appeared as elected to the senate and house of representatives both. 1 Knowing that there must be some ’ | mistake, the matter was at once in ’ vestigated and it was found that ’, there had been a terrible mixing up ' of the returns in consolidating them ’ When the truth was known, Mr- • Lumpkin was found to have been • elected to neither honor. Mr. Lump ; kin and Mr. Latham were candi ! dates for the senate from the dis , trict composed of Dade, Catoosa , and Walker counties. Mr. Lunip r kin was not a candidate for repre , sentative. In consolidating the re turns the officials in Dade county r gave Mr. Latham.s vote to Mr. > Lumpkin and Mr. Lumpkin,s vote to Mr. Latham which made Lump kin by the returns, senator. Mr. , Tatum was elected rebresentative of Dade county. How Mr. Lutnp e kin,s name appeared as represen e tative has not been explained. This ] was a curious complication of af j fairs, to say the least of it. Prof. White, chemist of the de e partinent of agriculture of Georgia has analyzed some of the water from T. L. Major’s spring, near Menlo, s I with the following result: To t tai solids per U. S. gallons, 14 GO grains; organic matter, 4 20; iron oxide, 4 14; calcium and al umnium sulphates, 4 86; chlo ides P of potash, 1 40. Chalybeate with I I fafnt trace of alum. CHIPS ON THE CURRENT. —o— Girls had better be fast asleep than fast awake. It is said about the only thing a - dare strike is an attitude. The government bought $4,000,- ; 000 worth of bonds last Thursday. , A western man claims that strong brine will cure a rattlesnake bite and hydrophobia. Lucy Parsons widow of the ex ecuted Chicago anarchist, is making speches for Harrison. Chattanooga elected a republican aldermanic ticket last week. There was no democratic ticket placed in the field. A nephew of Stonewall Jackson and a son of Gen. Sherman occupy the same desk in the law office of Senator Evarts. Geo. R. Blanchard has resigned the chairmanship of the Central Traffic Association because his sal ary was only $18,600 per year. Forts' persons were killed and as many more injured, some of them fatally, by the wrecking of a train on the Lehigh Valley railroad near Penn Haven, Pa., last Thursday. Hedges of roses have been adopt ed on some European railways to screen the lines from drifts of snow, and thus prevent blocking. They have proved immensely servicable. The Collossal sugar refinery started in Philadelphia, is not at first to be used for beets, but will make any sugar found most desira ble. Its daily capacity will be 2,- 000,000 pounds. French economy is very evident in the marketing of fowls. Not on ly can half birds be purchased, but legs, wings and breasts are ordered separately. The carcass is used for soup, and even the blood is sold. All the rights of the phonograph has been purchased by J. IL Lip pincott, of New York, for a million dollars, and will 1 •■•controlled by the same company that owns the graphophone a similar insrument. American girls are in demand with the foreign nobility, but wheth er because of their beauty and ac complishments or on account of the long purses of their fathers is a question that cannot be determined. Steamer Naverre, from Havnna i and Matanzas, brings 29,000 bags of centrifugal sugar, weighing 9,500, - 000 0r4,750 net tons, to the Boston Sugar Refining company. This is probably the largest and most val uable cargo of sugar ever brought into the United States, its value be ing nearly $600,000, of which the duties will be about $200,000. The house in which Gon. Andrew Jackson was fined SI,OOO for con ! tempt of court in 1815 is being torn j down. Pending the great battle of Nev.-Orleans Jackson disregarded ■ i the orders of civil authorities and . placed the city under military rule. l-’or this he was arrested after the battle and fined. Congress by ’ a special act refunded the money a few years previous to ills death. Libby prison is an object of spec . ulation among northerners. It was t purchased by Chicago parties last i year with the object in view , moving it to that city for the pur pose of making it a in which to store war relics. It has changed hands several times since, and is now owned by Chicago peo ple, who will probably move it I there for the purpose originally in -1 tended. NO. 37. How to Caln Flosh and Strength. Use after each meal Scott’s Emul sion with Hypophosphites. It is as palatable as milk, and easily di gested. The rapidity with which delicate people improve with its use is wonderful. Use it and try your weight. As a remedy for Con sumption, Throat affections, Bron chitis, it is unequalled. Please read: “I used Scott’s Emulsion in a child eight months old with good results. He gained four pounds in a very short time.”—Tno. Prim, M. D., Alabama. “I gave Scott’s Emulsion to a gentleman 65 years old, troubled with Chronic Bronchitis, with the most excellent results.”—J. C. Ca son, Broken Arrow, Ala. When you are constipated, with loss of appetite, headache, take one of Dr. J. H. McLean’s Little Liver and Kidney Pillets. They are pleas ant to take and will cure you. 25 cents a vial. The man who lias lost his left arm has a left arm that is a right one. Frequently accidents occur in the household which cause burns, cuts sprains and bruises; for use in such cases Dr. J. H. McLean’s Vol canic Oil Liniment has for many years been the constant favorite household remedy. Edward Stewart of Swifton, Ga; committed suicide by shooting his head off last week. No cause was assigned for the act. For>ick headache, female troub les, neuralgic pains in the head take Dr. J. 11. Melean’s Little Liv er and Kidney Piliets 25 cents a vial. Remus Jones, a young man of Atlanta, committed suicide with morphine last week. Imperfect digestion and assimi lation produce disordered condition of the system which grow and are confirmed by neglect. Dr. J. IL Mc- Lean’s Strengthening Cordial and Blood Purifier, by its tonic proper ties, cures indigestion and gives tone to the stomach. SI.OO per bot tle. The yellow' fever is said never to attack a cigarette smoker. The dis ease appears to be without a sin gle redeeming feature. If your kidneys are inactive, you will feel and look wrecked, even in the most cheerful society, and melancholy on the jolliest oc casions. Dr. J. 11. McLean’s Liv er and Kidney Balm, will set you right again. SI.OO per bottle. Hutchison, of Chicago is said to have made $1,000,000 on a single wheat deal last week. In cases of fever and ague, the blood is as effectually, though not so dangerously poisoned by the ef fluvium of the atmosphere as it could be by the deadliest poison, Dr. J. H. McLean’s Chill’s and Fe ver Cure will eradicate this poison from the system. 50 cents a bottle A bronze statue of Gen. Grant is to be unveiled at St. Louis day after tomorrow. Croupy suffocations, night coughs and all the common affections of the throat and lungs quickly relieved by Dr. J. H. McLean’s Tar Wine ' Lung Balm. For some reason Florida cigar makers escape the yellow’ fever. You will have no use for specta ■ des if you use Dr. J. H. McLean’s Strengthening eye salve ; it removes the film and scum which accumu lates on the eyeballs, subdues inila mation. cools and soothes the irrita ted nerves, strengthens weak and failing sight. 25c.- a box. Crop bulletins issued from Wash ington say the weather has gen erally been favorable to gathering the cotton crop. Old people suffer much from dis orders of the urinary organs, and are always gratified at the wonder ful effects of Dr. J. 11. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balin in banish ing their trouble’s. SI.OO per bottle. Marriage is likened unto a lot tery, but it has this difference, that in a lottery one sometimes draws a r prize. ' If you spit up phlegm, and are troubled with a hacking cough, use Dr. J. IL McLean’s Tar Wine Lung '• Balm. S Bowen Belcher, of Bainbridge, Ga.. planted half an acre in sugar cane and sold it standing to J. E. Broom for s6o,whowill realize $12,- 000 on Ills trade.