Newspaper Page Text
niton SVrjjus,.
” - j
H. A. WRENCH, Editor and Proprietor.
SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 1«84».
A c ORBESPONDENT of the Atlanta Her- ■
aid suggests Gen. W. S. Walker, of Sa- I
vannali, as a suitable candidate for i
comptroller-general. As a gallant sol
dier, full of honorable scam, a worthy
citizen, and capable, his necessiti*•*> 1
might be urged as a strong argument
in his behalf.
The republicans elected the congress
man, in Oregon, notwithstanding the
Chinese bill.
That revival of religion broke up the I
bar-room in Eatonton. The dealer was
converted and quit the business. The
authorities refunded the tax that bad
been paid.
The Atlanta Heruld says that there is
a prevalent idea that the office of con-i
gressman-nt-lurge must be given to the
chiefest of the political paupers of the j
State.
Sand and dirt may accidentally get
mixed with cotton to increase its weight,
but beans and peas don’t hop into coffee
sacks without help.
It has been discovered in France that
electricity will make good wine out of
hopelessly sour wine. This will se
riously aflect the yinegar market.
A Cincinnati paper puts over the ac
count of a young man who forged his
father’s name this head line: “On the
road to perdition.” The article shows
that he took the train for Chicago.
Atlanta politicians are unusually busy
just now in laying pipe for political pre
ferment of their favorites. And when
it is known that “those favorites” are
the politicians themselves, in almost
every instance, no one can wonder at
the energy displayed by them at thia
time.
Mr. V ennor predicts that all the rainy
weather this summer is coming on Sat
urdays and Sundays. This is bad news
for the school children, or would be but
for their vacation, and for the clergymen
—at least for those who don’t have a va
cation.
Cincinnati lovers are so ardent that
they will make love to the first person
who comes along; but un old man who
found that he had been embracing a
girl at Eden Park that hail just broken
out with the small-pox, concluded he
had been a little hasty.
The question as to who shall be nomi
nated for the office of congressman-at
hirge is engaging the attention of the
democratic press of the state. The Mu- 1
con Telegraph says it is evidently the
case that the cut. and dried schedule of
the Atlanta bosses will not bo ratified by
the convention.
They have their own fashion of amus
ing themselves out in Oregon. A pro
prietor of a floating saloon, one Slice,
went bathing with three half-breed i
women while all were intoxicated.
4, Mary Saunders, alias, Maude 5.,” j
says the reporter, “was astride of Slice’s
back when both went down and were
drowned.” Whisky knows no seasons
or no climes. It gets in work in the Pa- j
cific equally with the Atlantic coast.
What congress has not done this ses
sion would fill many a volume, and it is
the opinion of the appropriations com
mittee that congress cannot do what
must be done to keep the national ma- '
chine oiled and running before the 20th
of July. The new fiscal year will begin
on the Ist of July, and the appropriation
bills have not been passed for the sup
port of the government during the com
ing year. If, as it is expected, congress
OII ( ) L does not adjourn much before August,
will be a very short vacation, for
Q, — must assemble on the first Monday
Ans.—December for the short and final ses
lainp-Ron.
As has been daily expected, the Egyp
} ro *''‘n difficulty brought forth on a recent
'J' Jnday a riot, in which 200 persons, in
A. (.findinga number of the foreign consuls,
eggs, were killed or wounded. The riot seems
acodjo have been managed in thoroughly
style and fashion. For live ,
as ‘‘ hours the city was in the possession of'
morl the inflamed and excited Mahometan
hold mob, who marched from street to street
wab bunting Europeans, assailing the foreign
consulates, and singing the glories of j
•-■ the Koran. Not until this mob had
tired of wreck and ruin, did the military ,
—of which the city is full—-interfere to
disperse it and restore the semblance of
} quiet.
A special from Danville, Va., says:
Reports from Patrick county are to the
effect that 5,000 persons are starving.
The drought last year greatly curtailed
the crops. A load of corn was received
at the court house a few days ago. A
hundred starving women and children
crowded around the vehicle imploring
so be given a quarter of a peck of corn.
The court house is crowded with men
women and children begging for bread'
Three hundred had not tasted food for
two days. Several wagons with relief
haye been sent fram Danville.
A mass meeting of the citizens of
fepaldingcounty will be held at Griffin
on the 24th instant, to take action in
reference to and organizing for the pur
pose of running candidates for the leg
■ islature in favor of the prohibition of the
P liquor traffic in Spalding county.
. ;
THE GEORGIA CRACKER
Is a character which tradition has
| developed into a n spedable indi • a.a:-
ism in this fjtate. He is t< our remote
and sparsely settled interiors the proto
| type of the Yankee down-easter-a back
. woodsman, but not ft frontiersman, bold,
! fearless, yet not a bully. He is not lib
! eral, yet kind, hospitable and honest.
. Not so notably shrewd as the Maine
| provincialist, but generally holds ide
j ou n in a horse swap ; not so energetic.
yet the morning stars dance to the shrill
music of his praise, and he takes his
substantial supper in the light of a blaz
ing pine knotfire; not so inquisitive,yet
exhibiting a deep seated curiosity in
the happenings of the great outside
world, the centre of which he conceives
to be in tbo nearest railroad town of im
portance. He is a cracker because he is
a curiosity, and is idealized as the typi
cal Georgian, because, as a character,
more or less general to the entire State,
he never disgraces himself. He is here,
j sufficiently typified for our purpose. In
■ another column of the Akops will be
j found a clipping from one of M. Quad’s
Georgia letters in the Detroit Free Press,
i in which he attempts to create a Georgia
j cracker to order, and not entirely orig
j inal to our State, but, misplaced in his
imagination, This new' ideality of M.
Quad’s is recognized in the Arkansas
traveller, and is found in the trail of the
North American Indians, from the Na;-
! ragansett to the Cascades, wherever a
I new civilization bus blazed its land
marks; but he is no more a typical
Georgia cracker than an average Wol
verine or Hoosier. lie is simply a na
tive American, indigenius to free hunt
ing and fishing—too indolent to work,
too proud to beg, too timid to steal. He
is educated in the botany of the Indian,
andean remark the capacities of the
| yaller dog with a never failing precision.
His chiefest concern is the local value of
i a coon skin, the possibilities of a wild
I bee tree find in the neighboring wood,
and the various habits of the finny tribe
and the small game of the ridges. He
can shine an opossum ami ensnare a
wild turkey to its doom. He can look
a bull dog in the eye, calm his ferocity,
and bring him, meek and purring, like a
house kitten, to his fondling. Otherwise
he is much aa M. Quad paints him, but
is wrongly labeled. We say this .much
because the typical Georgian has been
wantonly slandered and the poetry strip
ped from our ideal native, ungenerous
as it may appear to one who has said
so many nice things of us, and spread
them so daintily before his world of
readers.
Mr. (Hyphen* and Dr. Fnlton.
If Dr. Felton should announce his
i willingness to accept the democratic
■ nomination for governor and t he demoe
! racy were asked to support him, we of
I the seventh at least, would coneider it
as a joke of the season. A corporals
guard could not be mustered in his favor,
ret wherein consists the difference be
tween him and Mr. Stephens? Is there
a single argument or reason for the nom
ination of one that would not apply to
the other? It is said that the nomina
tion of Mr. Stephens, by uniting both
wings of the party, will harmonize af
fairs in the state. The nomination of
Dr. Felton would be as certain to ac
i eomplish this object. The friends of
! Mr. Stephens give as one reason whv
, they favor him that ho would command
I the support of the independents. Does
I any one doubt that Dr. Felton would do
this? They are both able men, either
' one of them perhaps, make us a good
| governor. Neither one of them, I am
willing to admit, can be bought with
money. Dr. Felton is as pure a man,
is as far from being corrupted, would
manage the affairs of the state as well
and is in every particular as good a dem
ocrat, as well organized, as Mr. Ste
phens. If the friends of Mr. Stephens
j will give me one reason whv an organ
; ized democrat should support him that
is not as strong n reason whv ho should
support him that is not as strong a rea
son why he should support Dr. Felton,
I will be ready to join hands with them.
The difference, if there is any, is in fa
yorof Dr. belton. i'i,e manner in which
he has taken and held an open and
clearly defined positive, the courage
and energy he has displayed must com
mand some respect, however wrong wo
think his course has been. The democ
racy of the two men are on a par, and I
should prefer Dr. Felton because he is
younger and more active, could better
| d.sehurge the unties of the office ami is
I a north Georgia man.—Democrat, in
Cedartown Advertiser.
<ll«velaud loinuorisin.
An enthusiastic friend of Cleveland
predicts a population of ILOOO for hei hr
I 1890. ' j
The Board of Aiderman have decided
■ to leave it to the voters of Cleveland to
I say w hether or not the city school tax of
I to cents on the hundred dollars shall be
levied.
W heat buyers think the price of the 1
new crop of wheat w ill open at 90 cents
! per bushel in this market. We don’t
think the farmers will be willing to take
less than one dollar.
Work on the building for the Spoke and
Hub Factory is moving forward rapidly
and will be completed in a few days. The
company expect to commence oppera- |
tions some time in August.
pied, at his home, three miles east of
tins place, on Saturday morning last.
Jacob Collett, aged about 65 years.
In Spring city, Rhea county, Tenn., on i
the Bth inst.. B. C. Franklin, aged 78 I
years. Decease had been a consistent
Christian and member of the church for
more than sixty years.
In the 12thdistrict of this county, on
Tuesday evening last, Joe Howard, son
of M alter Howard, aged about 25 years.
The largest peach orchard in the
South, if not in the world, is located
near Griffin, Ga. It contains 50,000
trees and covers almost 600 acres. On
the same farm fare 4,0n0 grafted apple
trees and 5,000 fine pear trees. The '
< l , n^> ne ~lis - vear will expe “J that of any
acre wheat farm or cotton planta- I i
THE IOWA TORNADO.
1 Condition of the Stricken People Pile- ’
llU H_Ovt:r 300 I'uinili.M Homdeu,
Last Saturday night the tornado made I
a destructive sweep through the thickly j
settled portion of lowa, some 150 miles i
in length, and on average of h;.lf a mile •
wide, from the southeastern part of the '
- State we have the names new of fifl dead '
and 500 wounded; half of the latter are :
grievously hurt, and probably a fifth of j
' i them fataliv. Over 300 families have |
I had their homes totally destroyed, and
there are now at least 1,500 persons
I homeless and in want. Tim loss in
property will exceed $2,090,000, and I
may reach $3,000,000. In the town of •
Grinnell alone over $400,000 is destroy- '
: ed, it will take at least $300,000 to put I
the people there beyond need ami ■
distress. It will take SIOO,OOO nt once
' to put the wounded people in condition I
1 to cared for. It will take $1,000,000 at,
lowest to keep the sufferers from want >
, and so help them to put the humblest ;
of roofs over their heads. The people of i
lowa are responding generously. The |
citizens of this city have subscribed I
i SB,(MX) this morning and will make it <
| $20,0<»0 before night in money, and are]
I sending provision and clothing. It I
; will take help of every humane city and '■
' j town iu the west, and of every liberal ;
i citv and tow n in the east, to put comfort
I ami safety between these stricken
! people and further suffering and fatality, i
All that the people of lowa 'can do will I
be done to alleviate the condition and
i ! repair in part the losses of the sufferers; !
I but. it will take one million dollars to do
j it even in halt way comfort and recom
p oise, and eonle of the State, who
have always borne their share and done
their purlin all National calamities, may I
filly ask the people of other communi
| ties to help them in this hour of great ca
; lamity. and to this end I ask tiiepress ■
| throughout the Vuited States to place
i the facts before their readers and give j
; their timely help to its sufficient purpose
I of raising ami providing aid at the e irli-
Lest moment possible. Every condition
of w"ase exists that most tenderly appeals
| to the pity of the human heart. Wounds
inflicted by the debris tiw filled the air
like a chaos by electric balls of fire that
seemed to traverse every inch of space,
and that exploded with fearfully fatal
cffi-ctH, will, many of them, defy all
skill and nursing, even with the tender
i estcare. Ihe fury of the storm, w hich
w as clearly of electric origin, and w hich
: indeed may be described as having been
I electricity itself, may bp undestood from
: the statement that at various places it
took up in its great spirals or funnels
housas a thousand feet into the air, and
took up and carried large droves of cattle
through the air for thousandsof feet and
dashed them dead in heaps. Many thou
sands of cattle, hogs and other animals
now lie in the track of the tornado, and
are already rotting ami adding to the I
horror the foul odors of putrefaction. 1
The horrors of Ihe storm, the unspeaka- j
bio cruell ies it inflicted and the pitiless i
woe of its coming in the night, when the |
dead were not known and the wounded
could not. be found; the sad state in
which it has left hundreds of families
before prosperous, cannot be described
in words
The “Cracker.”
If yon never saw' what is called a
“Georgia eract;er” you have mis sed an I
exhibition worth seeing. He is the j
poor white man. He is poor because lie |
is lazy. He is lazy because there is no 1
hard work about it. He has figured !
the busines of existing on earth right I
down to aline thing. He can live cheaper !
in the country than in town, lie )
“squats” on somebody’s land, or rents j
it until ejected, after years of non-pay- I
meat; and his house is not what troubles ;
him. Anything with a roof on it ami a !
chimney at mw end is a house and a |
home. It leaks, but it only leaks when '
it rams, and the “cracker” figures on
about so much rain per year. The j
wails are full of holes and crevices, but |
they let as much air out as thev let in, i
and so it is in an even thing. The eliim |
ney is built of stick? and mud, and he I
sees no particular reason why a chimney I
should be plumb. If the door will swing |
he or some one else may shut it once iu |
I awhile, but if the hinges are broken or '
the door Bags, that ends that.
The “cracker” has a family. His !
wife is tall, raw-houed and sickly, and I
she goes bir«-foot because it saves shoe
leather. The children never wear hats
nor shoes, and are never w ashed nor
coinbed unless there is a funeral or a
wedding close by. The furniture con-
I sists of straw beds, two or three chairs,
I a pine table, two kettles, a few pieces of |
i crockery, two or three knives and forks j
, and spoons, and if the plates wont go
I 'round some one eats of!'the table. The |
i wlmla business can be loaded into a 1
j eart in a few minutes and drawn any- i
j w here in the world by a dying mule.
The “cracker sows a few seed amide- '
I pends on the Lord to hoe amt reap and j
I store the product. He owns a cart and '
| a mule, or a cart and a spotted ox, and
if that ox can draw man and cart and
I fifty cents worth of wood to market there j
i is no yearning after Vamlerbuilt’s mil
| lions. T hirty cents goes for plug tobacco
an 1 whisky, and the other twenty’ for
groceries or “fixings,” ami as you meet
the noble duke on his homeward jour- ;
I ney he ‘whoa's’’ up on his ox, shoves I
I up his old straw hat and remarks:
I “Stranger, I calkerlate ye don’t know j
I ol some good place whar’ a hard-work- j
ill’ pilgrim kin aim a decent livin’ fur I
his distressed do you?.”—M.
tiuad in Detroit 1 ree Press.
NEWS IN GENERAL.
Ihe greenback state conventin which
met at Nashville Monday, nominated
■ J. R. Beasley for governor.
i Ihe average republican majority on
I the Grogan state ticket is 1,800. Leg- ;
islature republican by a majority of ten. '
I The legislature of Rhode Island, on'
■ luesday, elected Senator Anthony as'
i Ins own successor. This makes the j
■ fifth time he has been elected
1 The first lot of new’ oats in the St. I
! Louis market, received from Texas, was I
sold at auction on Monday a55 cents in |
the bulk and 5S'., cents in sacks.
Out of twenty-two contested election !
eases live have been reported and acted ;
upon by tiie house. Seven have been '
reported and await action, and ten are
pending in committee.
Four hundred and twenty-five million I
dollars will be required to pay pensions '
tor the next four years. The'nm ess uilv
ineftea -ed force in the pension office will
cost $1,742,000 per annum
The Worth Star predicts that five ■
years from date whisky will he abolish- i
ed m every county adjoining W'or h, if
the people act well their part. i ii
Market—Groceries, Produce, &c.
> EGGS —Per dozen, 13.
| BUTTEtt —Per pound,
POULIBY—IIeus, ZO&ZS; chickens, 10-315.
BEES AX—Per pound, '
POTATOES—Sweet, per bushel.fl.oo; Irish
' 11.75.
ONIONS—Per bushel, 12.00. »
WHEAT—R- I, white, 41.25.
CORN—Per bushel, <’..10.
| MEAL—Per Vud.eL 51.10.
HAY—Per cwt. SI.OO.
OATS—Per bushel, soc.
WHEAT BEAN—Per cwt.. $1.35.
iJ’tIEH t'RUlT—Apples, peeled, fi; unpeeled,
.'M3.:.; peaches, 7<&5, *
HlDES—Green, perlb.4®sc.; salted, (k.; dry
; salted, lie.
TAI,LOW—Per lb. s@f!c.
MOLASSE.S—Per gal.
SYRUP —New Orleans, Issia;*s.
FJ.OUR—Per cwt. $3.90f<n54.20.
COFFEE—Per lb. 12®l«c.
SUGAR—Standard A, II; extra C. 10; yel-
| low. 9e.
LARD—Tierce, He.; per lb. 15.
IN AV A.<l v <‘t'i issemoiit m.
SHERIFF’S SALES.
AYYII.L BE SOL!) BEFORE THE COURT-
V V house door in the city of Dalton, on th ■ first
I Tuesday in July, 18x2, between the legal
hours of sale, the following property, to-wit:
Ihe following city lots in Dalton, viz: 3 lots
on East .M-u-rts str-'et, I jtterod <l., e. .and f., each
’ front in-.: 50 feet on south sld ■ of said street by 180
feet in depth; n>m* lots on McCainy street,
' manih'iT I H. 20. 22 and 21. each fronling 50 feet
| on the east side of Mc.Uamy street by 150 feet in
- liepEi; .ill levied <>n by.virtue of a If fa frotn
W hitfield superior court in favor of Lizzie W
■ Green vs ttie Dalton City Co. This June, 1882.
Also, at the same time'aud place, a house and
| 1 In the city of Dalton, Ga.. on the east side of
McC.m>y ■ t.-<- t. Ixiillg 50 feet f ront and running
back 70 feet, beiiigin tiie south end of Dalton, and
-oath of the colored t’resbytermn church, now
, »<-em>iwl bv l ied Jone,: as the property of
Tin i-y >v Hamilton. Levied on by virtue of a
tax li la. state and (,'ounfy vs 'l'm-ley & Hamil
ton. Crop*•••t.f pointed out by L N Tinsley.
•|.< vi d on by s 51 < oylo, L C, and returned to
I me.—[i'rsl -e -'2.711.
FRED. COX, Sheriff.
1 June 2, 1882 td
R- E. PARKER,
WITH '
Atkins,
McKeldin
& Co.,
WIIOI.E.SAI.E D’.-'.AI.EItS LN
HAT, CAPS,
.-.M> •
STRAW GOODS,
35 I’eaelitree Street, Atlanta, Ga. 35
|sep2l ly]
At this season, various diseases of the
■ bowels are prevalent, and many lives are
lost through lack of knowledge of a safe
and sure remedy. Perry Davis’ Pain
Killer is a sure cure for Diarrhea, Dys-
i entery, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Summer
Complaint, etc., and is perfcolly safe.
Bead the following;
UATNunmoit, N. V., March 22.1881.
. Pranx Davis* I'Aix Kii.i.v.r nt eer to
j fci-taal relur for cramp and pain in the stomach.
Joseph Buncrn.
„„ . Nicholvili,c, N. V., Fell. 2,1881.
ihe r-r ? -v medicine I know of tor dvHenl-ry.
utmlera me rbus, and cramps i u the stomach. Hava
used it for it is sure cure every tune
Julius W. Def,
~ , V.otngona, lowa, March 12,1881.
I nave nyed your Pain Kji,t.bb In severe cases of
cr ■ nip. colic.aiid cholera morbus,and it grave almost
i Instant reflet l. E . Cownaiff
T. . CAHSESVIEI.E, Ga., Feb. 28.188 L
i l or tweiityyoars I have used your Pain liii.i.r.n
In my family. Have used it many times for bowel
complaint*, and i t a.'.ru euret. Would not fe«l sale
.vithout a bottle in the house. J. n. Ivns.
tt Saco, Me., Jan. 22,188 L
Have used Pejiry Davis’ Pain Killeb for twelvu
jears, ft i-j sure, an>l reliable. No mother
i should aJow it to bo out of the family.
If. L Nates.
, . , Oneida, N.Y., Feb. Ilf, 1881.
Wc bejjan iwinjr it o\er thirty years aud it
always Rives immediate relief. Would hanuy
to go to bed without a buttle iu the house.
W. O. Sperry.
„ , CoNWAYBono, S. C„ Feb. 22,1881.
. q? ar ,‘y every family in this section keeps a bottlo
In the house. Dn. E. Mokion.
_ U. S. Consulate,
Cbeffed, Rhenish PitussiA.Feb. R, IBRL
I have known Perry Davis' Patn Ku.i-EB almost
from the day it was introduced, and alter years of
ooseryatipn r.nd use I reward its presence in my
household as an necest>ity.
I. S. Potter, U. S. ConeuL
• y . ~ , , IWrton-on-Trent. Eng.
• I naa been several days suffering’ severely from
Hiarrho'3, accompanied with Intense pain, when I
your Pain Killer,and fonud afimostinstant
J. Noone.
. . SI Montaguj: Sr., London, Eng.
Lurinjfaresidenccof tweutjatfireojearsinlndia,
! nave mvon it iu many cases of diurrhma, dysen
tery, and cholera, and nover knew it to fail to give
rehe f- B. Clamdge.
( No family can safely be without tliis
invaluable remedy. Its price brings it
s ithin the reach of all.
For sale by all druggists at 25c., 50c.
and SI.OO per bottle.
I’ERIvY DA\ IS & SON. Proprietors,
Providence, R. I.
———
DR. C. P. GORDON,
Physician and Surgeon,
DALTON, GA.,
' ,iis professionalservi<-(-s to the citizens
ol Dalton andsurroiimliiigcountry. I'romut it
lention will be given to all cases—Sleclk al. .Sui u
ic-tl ami <>l>si.-irie;i|— entrusted to Ins care.
DR. J. C. RIVINGS,
Physician and Surgeon,
DALTON, GA.
Oliice on i raws >r<l tree;, j c is jy
IDR. K. P.WBIG-HT
Will attend as Consulting
Physiinna oi-
In important in the c >i;nties ot WnitUdd i
Vv v Murrav, Bartow and
nalkei. L.iargos mo<k‘’*ate. Oftkv aVtbo Par
h>r !>rug Store of D.-. R. i . w right. Dalton, Ga.
DR. J?. FANN, (
is ’niinvTis'r,
DALTON, GEORGIA.
Dlllee: Up-stairs, <>n Hamilton street, opposite ,
Nationa! Hotel.
J'?± K '’ ’ “'A ItoSi'Et '-MTUY Soucm,t>.
1»- w. HUMPHREYS?
wVt i <»vii<\v-ut-L,a
D ii.Tt’N. GA.
McCAMY f
At (onio.VN-at-Law,
DALTON. GA,
HERRON’S! I
Special Announcement for the Springil
We present to our p tlrons, and the public generally, this Season the mo»tcoin-B
plete assortment oi Goods ever shown here.
They were purchased for CASH, and we now offer them at INSIDE FIGURES ?
BUT SEE US AT ONCE, AS AVE SELL AT
BOTTOM PRICES FOR CASH.
We know that money is scarce this year with you, but remember that
Prices wsll be in Proportion to Your Purse
audit we have the. Goods you want, and you can spare the money, now is the
| time for yon to secure
THE BEST GOOD* for tiie LEAST MONEY
I —AT—
FO’JNTAIN HEAD FOR S ARC A! IMS.
tmwwnh ftiwri wy. irw iWM jjay-ty-twiM arn pawwawt
Xa & 9 O IJiL X 2. «3. r 3T
and
<do. ' .
CHATTANOOGA, TEhSN.
Successors to the WILDER MACHINt WORKS.
We aro offering lower than ever before
GIN ENGINES, GINS, PRESSES,
and SAW MILLS,
WIIVOEWW r E‘WHEEL.S.
THE “WHITE’’ SEWING MACHINE,
The Ladies 7 Faverite!
J IT IS THE LIGHTEST RUHfIiNG
- '“A tiie most ci’iet; prettiest.
Effigy*: . .
A y I 1 i,as ,iiore convenience* than
ft-—li any<jthelJiai:liine -
\ y, it is warranted five years and is the
easiest to sell, and gives the best satis
faction of any Machine on the market.
■ £
H -IB v \ Intending purchasers are solicited to
\ oxa mine it before buying. Responsi’oie'
< dealers wanted in all unoccupied ter-
I ritcry.
•>. i>. Ac or. i?’. H^ai r rir,
Wholesale ant! Retail Dealers,
marll till jan! 59 B riiat ] Street, ATLANTA, GA.
KtMffiCWtK A»T'SKO-JCW. .'.jjj - myucnff.e. jjnjj
J. IL. SCHULTZ <& CO-
DEAI.EKS IN
Fresh Meats, Sausage, Etc.,
Hamilton St.. DALTON, GA.
notice.
UFE H\V T STARTED Olli ( <>i;\ Mil I
VI an !tvHl do
(■l sto m giLading
THRICE DAYS in the week—Tuesda’s Thurs
days and Saturdays. Bring on your corn a.id
feed.
Dalton Steam Ginnisi"- ami ’Hiliiv (V, ■
TUT
FJLLO
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER,
Robs of Appetite, Bowels costive, Bain in
ttie Head, with a dull sensation in the
back part, Pain under the Shoulder I
blade, fullness after eating, with a flisjn- 1
cunation to exertion of body or mind, I
Irritability of temper, Low sp rit/, with
a Seeling of having neglect d some duty?
Weariness, Dizzine.,B, Fluttering at the i
Heart, Pots before the eyes, h'ePd'v Skin.
Headache generally over the- light eye".
Beatlessneas. with fitful dreams, liighly
colored Urine, end
SWlUj^ T:cr -’’’
TUTT’S PILLS are especially adapted to i
euch cases, one dose effects such a change
of feeding ns to astonish the sufferer.
I They Snereane the Appetite, and cause the
: body to Take on Flesh, thus the system is
nenrbhed. and by their Tonic Action on the
IMgeatlve Organ* Regular Stools are pro- I
duced. Price &■> cents. 3» Murray st., X. F
TUTT’S H®W£
ChtAY Hair qnWmsmi changed to a Glossy I
Black by a single application of this bvr.. Him-
I P ar J s a natural color, acts Insta.-itani usly. Sold
Dy Druggists, or sent by express on receipt at fl
OFFICE, 83 MURRAY ST., NEW ItHtsi
(-.!"«?. MIHVIL ft. VsluaM. Inforwsili.n .nd X
Vsntul Bctppte will be Ird MUSE uu nppUeetlou. f
4$ ys 1 * $8 Send to
'•! ■~vi»
” ua&riw* , a-Ihiko, fca.
11 11.striitcd ( iron,; r. A life .ten,ml ll.ini.
_ Mvw» School. ‘ Jilablislieif twnty years.
LIBEL Hill DIVORCE.
Mrs. Mali??!:. ’Jei olluli i.l ,l,n \v. MeCoUinii
' —W hdiield Stipe,aor < oari, a prll Term, ISS2 I
I.tool for Di', i<■ —Rule to perfect service.
YT A PRE MUNG TO THE COURT BY THE ■
I ■ urn tin- .-liei-iiT Hint the d.'leridatit does I
I hot rt.-vilijin said county and that Redoes not re- !
I le in his late; it is on motion of < muscl I
i h ; 'P,>ear and plead at ;
: tbi next utrin of thia court, else the case be son. I
I aidere I ih default and the plaintUf allowed to I
nroei-ed and lha; tills rule be publf-n.-d in ’The
; l>.i WU Argus once a inonth for four in inths I
JAMi.s R. EROWN,
.1 tictge
E. Z. 11 ERNDOV. PlC’s Ytt’v.
I i>. t via., 7. ISK2.
j l '“'‘ m,U ’" >,S ot "’bitHeld I .
_njG. ia.irfm H, C. II WILTON. (I,rks. t .
s.iioirfib: ; ;
Atigu-t <. 'J-dne, u.-arJ i-ly.
_____ .....
STAR CANDY FACTOR Y.
Ji SEIMAN & 00i
MANUFACTURING
CONFECTIONERS,
| WHOLESALE TOBACCONISTS,
4ND
V GH€OCEI€S,
NO. 321 MARKET AND 232 BROAD ST..
Represented by )
J- a. ti CHATTANOOGA, tenx.
JESSE HOLLAND,"
Livery and Sale Stable,
DALTON, GA.
'dioii *- 1 o . and comfortable convey Jinxes, on
■ >n.' ’ nciSGiia’id.- leruiß. ' Rjs |y,
£ 7 ■■ j
riLsT i ::v.ium at four cin-
■CI \ Y \T! \P. isj I -ions AND V.'liiJU
EVER LX HI BITED.
' ■ For terms, rdsq iy
<1 li oa p- •> t ;» it ti IS <• Mi 1 •
HGWAHD HY3RAUUC CEMENT,
Manutiietuied near
KINGSTON. BYRTOW COUNTY, GA.
To THE BEST IMPORTED PORT
1J land t imeut. Send l>.-r circular. Trv ihia
before buying olsewiicrc.
Ruler. Jr, ■ to Mr. A. J. West, Pres-
I'.' Hi i ner .Li e Iron < onipany, Ced/rfown. tla.,
■who ha-1 Imiit a splendid d mi,' (.uml .f7,u,!'>.) u.-ing
i ‘hir eenieni. and pronouncing il die best he ever
; lined. M ■■> re.fertoG' u. Wm. M.tcßae,Siiperin
tendcui v, . X'. A. Railroad C.m pa.iy. who lull
icon ii-mg It for piers for bridges and culverts
•m ins i-mro.id. lor yea;-: ii.'ao to Ulipl. JoM
I’oMeil. Superintendent (!. roisc Rai're ad. who
hit- built several reservoirs withit; totbepave
iiiei't in fr nitof the lop' tornmrlj occupied by
Smith A lire., in Rome.’iSa.•, for silos, i
E.xpi 1., 11, \tlaiila, i.a; ll>c. . ■■■ jJfsrsT J
Vauiiali. tor iieeo WO.'Lg '•*•* »t -y 1 '
f ■/ whh h cemem is us. J .
W him >V. L. M mis,
•■i'., r Ol A
rfwBMBB X v
>tt mM s
,* SBI
' "’•••' ’' ■ > ' ii.,
r '' y