Newspaper Page Text
THE CHATTOOGA NEWS.
VOL. 2.
PKOFESSION/VL CARDS.
G. E. MARTIN, M. D,
Physician and Surgeon,
Taliafbkko, - - - - Ga.
Roßidenco at J. X.
C.C. LRUDICIL, M.D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
S U MI M EBVILLE. -
Dr. F. H. Field,
DENTIST,
Will visit Chattooga county frequ
ly. Those wishing his servi'-es \
please write to him at Summerville.
CLOVIS 1). RIVERS,
Attorney-at-Law,
Summerville, - - - - <,a -
Offers his professional services to tin
citizens of Chattooga and surrounding
counties. By close attention to whatever
business may be entrusted to him, ho
hopes to merit public confidence.
W. M. HENRY,
At to r n ey - at- La w,
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.
WESLEY SHROPSHIRE
Attorney-at-Law,
Summerville - - Georgia.
J, M. BELLAH,
Lawyer;
Summerville -_ ~ Z __
JOHN TAYLOR. J- D. TAYLOR.
TAYLOR & TAYLOR,
tawyp r s;
... _ (.loorgiv-
Summerville -
L. A. DBAS. J.W.EWINO. H. JMITH.
Dean, Ewing & Smith.
—< o >
Attorneys-At-Law.
boms, - " _
j. W, BURNEY,.
}._CONTRACTOR AND BI ILDI.R ■! j
OpviCß: Adams’ Block, East Bth St., |
(Second Floor)
CHATTANOOGA - - TENN
Work promptly executed.
WES DREW,
The Barber
fi.UF“ New Shop, New lli'Z.ors, and
everything connected with a hi' la - •'
barber shop, Call in.
FRAIERS&
best in the world.
n. wrnrlni; onallilrs are nnrurpaasr-l, actnnlly
from InlmtlOllL E GEN FI Nt"
I'Oll SALE BY PEALEBS GENERALLY.
AWT FISHT |
KI The Original Wins.
_ C !■’. Simmons, St. Louis, I'rop’r
c“j M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, list’d
I | I*4o, in the U. S Court DEFEATS J.
1 JI. Zcilin, Frop’r A. Q.Simmons Liv- j
<r Kepu!Jior, E<’<! by Zcilin
y.A.S. 1.. •.!. 1-B lor v |
A C ‘ l r 1 I.NDIG- ■ BILIC’LCM.bS,
A ft<k LYsr-KVSIA,SicK llfadaciii:,Lost
S'»i-;: S~o:i.\cu, Etc.
X © A Church, Adams, Tenn., \vr’Le*:“l
J think 1 shoul-.t bare been but
f »r your Genuine M. A. S m
£ X mor* Uver Medicine. I have
«omctirae« h»d to substitute
kVj I “'iediu’* RtufC’for your Medi-
T cine, but it 4on’t answer the
I »,<•»• / P«rpo»e.”
/ Dr. J. IT. Grave’, Editor Th*
*■ , Memphis Tenn. far*:
\ I I reoiTed n package of your Liver
1 J. Medicine, find have u’cd half of it.
p-i y It »*orkslike a charm. 1 want no
|H I better Liver Rct.n inter and ccr-
\ tajnly no more of Zedin’s mixture.
sOOHEWATGHFREE
If you eel 16 in 60 days we will
I send you one watch free.
I This regular $25.00 Ladies’
i watch will bo sen’; C. O. D.,
subject to examination, to
ff’gahCV.* X any address on receipt ot 50
' cents in postage stamps as a
'x'ii 1 j'gu.n ’ that watch is or-
“ cered in good faith: it found
J 1 rf ' "‘-ly satisfactory and
exactly as represented, you
pay the balance $5.47 at your
expre -s office otherwise you
ao not pay one cent, aoin
troduce our goods, we offer
, this fine Ladies’ heavy gold
Cut is half size, watch is P i a tod or fi lied hunting case
regular ladies’ size. We £ atc h w hich is richly en
a!so have them in gentle- ffraTC d and ornamented by
men’s size at same price. Rand, will retain its beauti
ful color and is warranted
fine expansion balance, ouick trc,:n b ats pc.
hour) accurately r- Tulatei and adjiuved. i.-hlj jewc
ed, patent escapement,g-a 49®.
famous for their accuracy ineso wnu
Ulin g<fcrCTWC.— Dcarl»jm Rational L>-.rk,
. W. J. Satterfield. G. H. Rawlins.
NEW STORE! NEW GOODS!
, WASiSftl KV. tr;.
SatlflMi & Wk,
, 318 Broad Street, Rome, Ga.
We have opened our doors for business with a complete stock of
bph ard hsy Dry goods, Mons, Ssois, Shs, 10,
And respectfully solicit an investigation of Style, Prices, etc.
OVR G-OOZDS
Are Brand £Tow and Fresh From First Hands
And Were Bought For Cash, Enabling
Us to Give Our Customers Adv an
tage of all Discount.
Very respectfully,
SATTERFIELD & RAVELINS.
318 Broad St. 5 Home, Ga.
J. B. CABVER & CO.,
The Live Crockerymen 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 our re
tail Department you will always find the newest goods, the largest
assortment and the lowest prices. While at the Exposition give us a call.
u. A. kuildsYj a uU.
SEED. C-BAIH SACKS, LIME, PL JSTEE PABIS, CEMENT, USB PLASTER.
Cotton Received on Storage and Commission
C. A. IVIORGSS & CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Send for
Catalogue;
r . THE PARKES
Breech-Loading,Double-Barreled Stet
PARKER BROS., Makers,
NSERIOEN, CONN.
Show-rooms: 97 Chambers St., Haw York.
INZECKHtE ’&c QOZUV;LA.nsrV.
21-2 & 244 Broad Street, Rome, Ga.
THELABGESTL’DEjYjLZLE.SIFriZLSUAI-TDBO'C’SVZSABra'G J-.uN TIiIS c 033 COtnSTTiaTZ’-
] Ready-Made Clothing,
FOUR GRAND STORES IN ONE: >- Fu r n ish in g Goods,
J Hats and Men s Fine Sho=xS.
, , . , rn ■ it ■ p...vl -md be convinced what, we sav is true. Ours is one of the LARGEST, BEbT EQLIP-
Wo buy di~’l Ir«~ «.« IU« i»bb«’. P ™o«. »> pay »sl, lo..very
.Inl’aTq wor'h of "oods that comes into our store, thereby saving a large amount in discounts.
i.oi.ais woip.j > - ■ e -j . < mid no house in the country tvill offer you
jN~O IdlOTiS© ill IjjlG UOlllTtr y BLSUS (J:T@gLb@l jfxOL 'x UjAllctU -ofe such BARGAINS as can be bought from us.
» -r~> v ’ Our business has grown from the SMALLEST to the LARGEST.
F< "7 B’cLli 8 OG'URjT’O AjSßillHy With greatly increasd facilities we propose to offer to the trade every
imLeemont that MONeL ENERGY ABILITY can command. examination of our stock will prove that for SEASONABLE GOODS
ami d ABLE PRICES Pie BEST”’ YOE is EmmOHS S MCK©© C'OS.
.842 md. 144 3road Street, - - - Rome, Ga.
SUMMERVILLE, CHATTOOGA COUNTY, GEORGIA, NOVEMBER 1, 1888,
, VIEGWWItR.
FORIfcBIOOD
A POSITIYF. CVRE fORSCROfijriA
RIiLUMATfSM.SCA.LD HtAD OR TETTE.R
BOILS PIMPLES OLDoil CHROMIC SORIS
Os ALL KINDS and AU DISEASES ARISING
FROM Ah IMPURE STATE CtTheBLOOD
■•plPekßoiTle 6foßss
tU’®Uv Q OT.
r Z T .LIKrMEI<T.
b TRE Best cX EARJH
ff II f.oplMl lig
■ RWfMERT’’'
htY£R TAILS To CURg.
X . JL o JVA » W <
,\5 TfIEOXIY iMfaiubll curb
’ • • FOR XEUWGW- • •
hYiURTub’
br.lT
The Pine Straw Bagging.
A number of bales of cotton cov
ered with the pine straw bagging
have passed all the tests and in
spections of this country and been
shipped to Europe. There is no
good reason to doubt that this new
bagging material will be equally
acceptable there. This is all that
is needed to establish it as the com
mon bagging of the future. 'Die
coarse cotton cloth bagging would
no doubt answer the purpose about
as well, but wou'd cost as much or
nearly as much, as the jute, while
the pine straw material would cost
little more than the labor of man
ufacturing it. Should the report
of its reception in Liverpool be fa
vorable, the one or two mills now
engaged in the manufacture of the
pine straw bagging will be over
whelmed with orders the balance of
this season, and before the cotton
crop of 1889 is ready for picking,
mills r ill be established over the
soutl' for its manufacture—in all
probability enough to supply the
demand for the covering of the
crop of hextyear.
This will be a great and beneficial
economic change for the south—not
only cheapening the price of prepar
ing the cotton crop for market, but
keep at home the millions of dol
lars heretofore spent annually fori
jute bagging. It will establish a
new and permanent industry among
us, and utilize a material heretofore
deemed worthless, if not a pest in
some places. It is quite probable
too, that other uses will lie found
for the pine straw fabric, such as
rugs, mats, and perhaps cheap and
coarse carpeting. “Necessity is the
mother of invention” in that as in
many other eases, and the practica
bility of making a strong and light
fabric out of pine straw having
I been demonstrated, there is no tell
i ing the uses to which it may be ap
plied by further experiments and
improvements.
, It will be an act of retribu
tive justice if the jute baeging
manufacturers and corners have
destroyed their own business by
their greed and extortions, and it
certainly looks at present as if this
is just what they have done.—At
lanta Journal.
W. T. McEnry and W. E. Jones, I
botii of Waynesboro, Ga., had a dis
pute over a business transaction
and resolved to settle the matter
by fighting a duel. McEnry was
arrested on his way to the place of
assignment and the difficulty was
settled by the intervention of friends
Both parties are highly connected.
Cleveland, 6., is bankrupt. The]
money, $450,000, belonging to the
citv is ou deposit in the banks, but
the bondsmen of the defaulting city
treasurer have attached it and the
city is without funds pending the
result.of the litigation.
A handsome offer has been made :
to Col. Robert G. Ingersoll by a |
foreign manager to deliver forty
■
lectures in Europe next spring. |
The w-ar about the location of ■
the county seat of Grant county ;
Kansas, Ims broken out again. In I
the election on Tuesday last the i
town of Ulysses received a majori
ty of 2,150 votes, but the people j
of Appomatox charge fraud and the .
I wholesale purchase of votes. They
also charged Gen. Taylor and Col.
Grayson, w-ho had been managing
the campaign for them, with sel
ling them out, and they seized Tay
lor and Grayson and forced them
to assign warranty deeds for all
their property as well as checks for
$60,000 on all the banks where the
two had money. Payment had
been stopped a»d proceedings will
be commenced to set aside the
deeds.
Os the 96 counties in Tennessee,
31 have nojjrailroad.
N. K. Fairbank, the millionaire
lard operator of Chicago, made
$500,000 in “Old Hutch’s great
corner in wheat.
A turkey gobbler at Darlington,
S. C., sat upon some guinea fowl
eggs, hatched a brood of chickens,
and is now’ taking proper care of
them.
Horace Greely’s statue is to be
placed in City Hall park, Now York.)
Sitting in his armchair the great
editor may keep an eye on the Trib
une.
Since the war of ’7O France has
spent 7,710,000,000 francs besides
the “ordinary estimates.” And
money doesn’t grow on trees in
I France, either.
Gen. Sheridan’s memoirs are
ready now, but his executors, for
wise business reasons, will not have
the book delivered until after the
election, or about Dec. 1.
Seven white men and ten negroes
wore publicly whipped at the whip
ping-post in New Castle, Del., a
short time ago. The crimes for
which they were punished were lar
ceny and burglary.
There was a man in town one
day this week offering a ’possum
for sale. There is no end to enter
prize to a Randolph county mau. It
took a whole night to catch the
’possum and a half a day to sell it,
; but he returned to his home with
* thirty cents in his pocket.—Shell
man l’i ogress.
The strip of country known as
“No Man’s Land” will hold an elec
tion this fall, with a view to organ-
I izing a teritory. This strip has
* been divided into seven counties of
twenty-four townships in each
county. It is believed the majority
of the people of “No Man’s I.and" ■
want the Springer Oklahoma bill
pissed. ‘
Lawrenceville Herald: —A good
joke is told on one of the bailiffs
attending court last week. The I
i judge directed him to go out in
town and tiring him the 42 Georgia
meaning volume of Georgia re- I
ports. The constable was gone |
for some time and returned stating]
tiiat he had searched the town over ',
and could not find a member of the I
42nd Georgia regiment.
j The Republicans concede a Large
j Democratic majority in New York
■city and its surroundings, but say;
' that they will arrest the progress j
I of Democratic majorities at “Spit- j
| Ling Devil Greek,” or some Dutch |
i name that must mean that, the ■
j boundary line .is very suggestive,
; but the Democrats have gone into ,
j this contest witn a determination |
ito triumph over the Republicans ;
mid all their allies.
A Sacred Number.
From the Christian Observer.]
Undoubtebly seven is the sacred
number. There are seven days of
creation ; after seven days of respite
the Hood came ; the years of famine
and plenty were in cycles of seven;
every seventh day was a Sabbath;
every seventh year the Sabbath of
rest; after every seven times seven
years came the jubilee; the feasts
of unleavened bread and of taber
nacles were observed seven days.
The golden candlesticks had
seven branches ; seven priests with
seven trumpets surrounded Jericho
seven times on the seventh dav : Ja
cob obtained his wives by servitude
of seven years; Sampson kept his
nuptials seven days, and on the
seventh day put a riddle to his wife
and was bound with seven green
withes and seven locks of his hair
were shaved off; Nebuchadnezzar
was seven years a beast; Shadrach
and his two companions in mis
fortune were cast into a furnace
heated seven times more than it
was wont.
In tiie New Testament nearly
everything occurred by sevens, and
and at the end of the sacred vol
ume we read of seven churches,
seven candlesticks seven spirits
and seven seals, seven stars, seven
thunders, seven vials, seven plagues,
seven angels, and a seven-headed
monster. Such are merely a few
instances of the sacred use of the
number common to all nations and
all religions.
There is a well known lady in
Wilkes county who has enjoyed
perfect health since the earthquake
of two years ago. For several years
up to that time her health had been
declining, and she was then quite
feeble. The physicians said the
. trouble was that she never perspired.
When the great earthquake came
she was considerably frightened,
I and in a few moments the perspira
> I tion came freely from every pore.
She began to improve from that
[ moment, and soon entirely regain
ed her health.
This is what a prominent mem-
ber of the Chicago board of Trade
says : “There are now’ about 63,-
000,000 people in this country who
will consume five bushels of wheat
per capita each year. This amounts
to a yearly consumption of 315,000,-
j 000 bushels of wheat. To seed the
; acreage of the wheat lands of this
I country 54,000,000 bushels more
j will be required. With a produc
| tion of 370,000,000 bushels, this
I leaves just 1,000,000 bushels for
I export. Not a great amount surely.
'
| Wabash, Ind., is enjoying a gen
' nine sensation, which bring out the
' fact that women can keep secrets.
A gentleman living in a neighbor
: ing town came to Wabash the other
' day and astonished the people by
I announcing that he was the hus-
I band of one of the most popular
young ladies in AV abash society,
I and there was consternation among
i several young men when the lady
I readily admitted that she was mar
| ried secretly three years ago.
A sparrow with white wings was
I seen in Rondout, N. Y. the other
’ afternoon. It lead an army of near-
Ily 100 brown sparrows for several
! hours. When the “curio” alighted
I the others would alight, and when
NO. 39.
it circled about or flew in a straight
line they would immediately follow
suit, keeping always, however at a
most respectful distance.
Next month will witness the com
pletion of the ninth edition of ‘The
Encyclopaedia Britannica,” which
has been ten years on the stocks.
Twenty-one apples picked by a
New Holland, Pa..farmer completely
filled a half bushel measure. The
smallest weighed exactly one pound
and live ounces. The entire lot
tipped the scales at 24 pounds-
Prince Bismark recently gave a
fete to his servants and tenants at
Friedrichsruhe to celebrate the dis
patch to Berly of 5,000 telegraph
poles cut in his forests. Bismarck
has supplied Germany with 100,000
telegraph poles during the last ten
years.
When you are constipated, with
loss of appetite, headache, take one,
of Dr. J. 11. McLean’s Little Liver
and Kidney Piliets. They are plesa
ant to take and will cure you. 25
cents a vial.
W. G. Gilliland, of Graysville
Ga., was run over by a train on the
Western and Atlantic road at the
Market street crossing, in Chattan
ooga, last Friday and so badly in
jured that his death occurred four
hours after the accident happened.
He leaves a family of small chil
dren who are motherless.
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.
Over $400,000,000 are invested
in mortgages in Illinois.
For sick headache, female troub
les, neuralgic pains in the head
take Dr. J. 11. Mejean’s Little Liv
er and Kidney Piliets2s cents a.vial.
New York city sent $62,000 to
the yellow fever sufferers.
Imperfect digestion and assimi
lation.produce disordered condition
of the system which grow and are
confirmed by neglect. Dr. J. H. 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 American wool clip is esti
mated at 300,000,000 pounds a year.
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.
Archbishop Corrigan is the
youngest of the Catholic bishops
and has tile largest see
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. .1. 11. McLean's Chill’s and Fe
ver Cure will eradicate this poison
from the system. 50 cents a bottle
Statistics lately published in
England show that there arc 700
men in the world worth $5,000,000
and over. Qf these 200 reside in
England. 100 in the United States,
100 in Germany, 75 in France, 50
in Russia, 50 in India and 125 in
other countries.
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.
The senate passed the bill dona
ting $8,475 to the widow of Chief
•Justice Waite.
You will have no use for specta
cles if you use Dr. J. 11. McLean’s
Strengthening eye salve ; it removes
the film and scum which accumu
lates on the eyeballs, subdues infla
mation, cools and soothes the irrita
ted nerves, strengthens weak and
failing sight. 25c. a box.
Adam Forepaugh, the great
■ showman, has wagered SIB,OOO on
Cleveland’s election.
Old people suffer much from dis
l orders of the urinary organs, and
are always gratified at the wonder
ful effects of Dr. J. H. McLean’s
Liver and Kidney Balm in banish
ing their troubles. SI.OO per bottle.