Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME V.
ADVERTISING RATES.
Cr.e inch, firs* insertion ?1.00
Each subsequent insertion 50
Professional Cards, per year 5.00
Reading Notices, per line 10
s3p"Legal advertising must be paid iu
advance.
ISlf Special reduction made by con
tracts for advertising to go in larger
space or longer time.
.{KgjPAil bids for advertisirg are due
after first insertion of advertisement, un
ices otherwise agreed.
B. T. BROCK, Editor.
E. C. OROSCO AT. Local Editor.
(Price $ s .GO s in Advance,
The National Cemetery at Fredereks
burg, Va M is the third in size, there being
over 15,000 soldiers buried there, drawn
from the neighboring battlefields of
Chancellorsville, Spottsylvaniu and the
■Wilderness. The cemetery itself lies on
the battlefield of Fredericksburg and in
the midst of most solemn associations,
yet only .two Decoration Day services
have ever been held there. These were
in 1886 and 1884.
A Swiss engineer named Ritter wants
the City of Paris to adopt his plan for
obtaining an “inexhaustible” supply of
water from the Lake of Neufchateb
Switzerland, 312 miles away. The cost
is given at about $60,000,000.
Some idea of the extent of the use of
natural gas in Pittsburg, Penn., and
vicinity, and the profits of the business
maybe had from the report of one of the ■
companies just presented. It states that
on February 29 the last of the treasury
stock had been sold, so that the entire
capital stock of $7,500,009 is now sub
ject to dividends. Rents, operating ex
penses, interest and* taxes for the year
amounted to 4G.65 per cent, of the earn
ings, or $1,709,792.74. Monthly divi
dends of one per cent., amounting tc
$842,626.50 have been paid. The num
ber of house connections made from the
lines of the company during the year
1887 was 4712. A year ago the com
pany contracted to operate the lines of
two other companies. The united busi
ness of these three companies amounted
on March 1 to the supjilying of 678
manufacturers and 11,953 dwelling
houses, and, through other distributing
companies, the supplying of 113 facto
ries and 10,961 dwellings, or a total of
23,707 contracts.
“The spiritualists of France,” says the
New York Commercial Advertiser , “have
lately been celebrating the anniversary
of the death of their great apostle, Allan
Kardee, who was removed an almost in
appreciable distance from this world in
1869. It will probably surprise
people to learn that about a hundred
spiritualist journals are now published,
of which M. Birmann, who spoke at the
Kardee celebration, gave some account,
and that, according to his estimate,
there are about two million spiritualists
in the world. Wliat seems unaccount
able is that more of their journals are
published in Spanish than in any othei
language. One is printed in Hindostanee,
fourteen in France, one is issued at
Geneva, four in Belgium and one in
Buenos Ayres. The Sphinx , the great
German spiritualist organ, is published
atLeipsic, and is said to be ‘purely
scientific,’ being problematically so and
according to the science of the late ill
fated Dr. Zollner, who, if we remember
rightly, was a Professor at the University
of Leipsic, went mad over spiritualism,
and died in a lunatic asylum.”
The New York Sun's resident corre-'
spondent at Stuttgart, Germany, sends
an extraordinary account of precocious
depravity. A boy of eight, living in
the little village of Oberudorf, became
the possessor of a new pair of boots
which excited the envy of a comrade of
twelve. This premature highwayman
led the little proprietor of the boots into
a deserted quarry, crushed in his skull
with stones, took off the coveted boots,
put them on, walked home, and supped
with a good appetite. The body was
found, and the boots, of course, revealed
the murderer. The boy’s monstrous de
pravity appears to be hereditary, as his
father had just finished a term in prison
for homicide. To set off this tale ol
youthful wickedness, here is one of even
more precocious heroism. An inquest at
Bristol, England, on the body of Frank
Jenkins, aged six months, moved the
jury to a vote of admiration for Johnny
Jenkins, aged four years. Frank, hav
ing been left to play with a lighted
lantern, set himself on fire. Johnny', whe
was in charge, took the baby out of his
cradle and dragged him down stairs,
shouting for assistants. A neighbor
who came and put the names out was too
late to save the child.
SOUTHLAND ITEMS.
PARAGRAPHS, SAD, PLEASANT
AND TERRIBLE.
INU (JSTRIAL PROGRESS —ME EXCURSION
FEVER—RAILROAD ACCIDENTB-SUICIDES
DEFALCATIONS — COTTON REPORTS, ETC.
TrimeMce.
The Morning Sun, ol Chattanooga, has
suspended for lack oi patronage.
Dayton policemen have commenced a
rigorous raid on the gambling dens.
The attendanee on the services of the
Spiritualists, W'ho are camped on Look
out Mountain, near Chattanooga, is quite
large.
Col, Jones S. Hamilton, who killed
Rhoderick .Gambrell at Jackson, Miss.,
some months ago, has entered suit against
the Memphis Appeal on account of pub
lications of that journal concerning the
tragedy.
LoniMiana.
T he Brush-Westinghouse electric plant,
in New Orleans, was burned on Monday.
Loss SIOO,OOO. The city hall, parish
prison, police stations, and levee were
furnished with light firm this point.
The ninety-ninth anniversary of the
fall of the Bastile was celebrated by the
Frenclj colony of New Orleans with
great enthusiasm. A salute was fired at
sunrise, and at noon, in the French Op
era-house, patriotic addresses were deliv
ered.
North Carolina.
Two freight trains collided on the Wes
tern North Carolina Railroad, near Ashe
ville, wrecking both engines and smash
ing up a number of cars. A negro
brakeman was killed, and five persons
wounded, though not seriously.
Kentucky.
A battery of eight gas tanks in Lud
ow exploded on Saturday, injuring fif
teen men, four of them fatally. Gas is
generated from naptha for lighting the
railroad shops and for use in Mann bou
doir cars. The escape of a small quanti
ty from one tank caused an explosion,
which exploded the other seven.
Florida.
John Woods shot and killed Joe Wil
liams, at Jasper, on Sunday; both col
ored. Williams had but recently come to
the county from South Carolina, and was
working on a turpentine farm within a
few miles of that place.
Officer J. C. Beasley', of Jacksonville,
was noticed to be in an advanced state of
intoxication while on diiy Monday. He
remained on duty until about 9 o’clock,
when he got on a street car and rode as
far as the barber-shop of Dan Dandross,
on Bay street, a short distance west of
Bridge, when he dismounted and entered
the shop. The barbers, seeing his con
dition, helped him to a lounge, where he
laid down and went to sleep. After re
maining there for several hours in a stu
por, he roused up somewhat, -when it was
noticed that he was growing very pale.
He soon went off into another stupor and
died. His remains will be transferred to
his former home in Madison for inter'
ment.
Alabama.
The Louisville & Nashville Railroad
let the contract for nineteen miles more
of the Huntsville branch to John W.
Worthinghnm & Co. of Birmingham.
The contract specifies that the work must
be completed and the road ready for trains
within ninety days.
A train on the Georgia Pacific Railroad
went through a trestle near Coalburg.
Engineer Jas. McDougal and Engineer
Kitchen, both of Atlanta, Ga., were se
verely injured. Three colore,d men —
one fireman and two brakemen —were
badly hurt. The engine and three cars
were totally wrecked.
An attempt was made on Sunday af
ternoon by unknown parties, to wreck
the west bound passenger train on the
Georgia Pacific Railroad, near Lincoln.
Just around a curve a heavy steel rail was
placed on the track, in a position to
strike the engine head first. Fortunately
the train was running slowly when it
rounded the curve, and a broken pilot
was the only damage done to the engine.
South Carolina.
A Charleston grand jury recommends
the establishment of the whipping post.
It was tried in Georgia just after the War
and failed.
J. P. Kinard, of Newberry, and J. E.
Coleman, of Marion, both graduates, of
the Citadel at Charleston, have been
elected to professorships in the academic
board of the Citadel,
Mose Hampton was stabbed to the
heart by Gus Gray and killed instantly,
near Hamburg. Their children had been
quarrelling and Gray tried to stop them.
Hampton interfered, knocked Gray
down, got on him, and was stabbed
while on Gray.
Col. Jas. L. Davis was killed near
Windsor on Saturday by being run over
by the engine and cab of a watermelon
train while lying upon the railroad track.
He is supposed to have fallen there, over
come by the beat of the sun while re
turning home from his office.
Joseph Supe, a crazy tailor, committed
suicide on Saturday, in Columbia, by cut
ting his throat from ear to ear with a
pen-knife. He did this after trying to
kill his wife with a saw file. He had
been released from the insane asylum
about a week before, and was undoubt
edly insane.
At a reunion of Confederate soldiers
in Lexington county, two brothers
named Reedy, forced- a quarrel upon
Manuel Williams, a peaceably disposed
man and a veteran, who, in self-defense,
shot and killed one of them with a pis
tol and st ibbcd the other through the
heart.
DEVOTED TO TIIE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RESOURCES OF DADE COUNTY.
TKENTON, GA.. FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1888.
Arkansas.
The race troubles in Crittenden county
are over. Temporary appointments have
been made by the judge of the circuit
court to till the offices vacated by the
colored officials. The governor wil! have
to appoint men to fill out the terms of the
exiles.
Six persons—three men and three wo
men—were drowned while crossing the
Arkansas river near Fort Smith, on Sun
day. Their names were John Logan,
Jess Morns, Tom Davis, Sallie Jackson,
Mary Pettis and Carrie Davis. The party
had been attending a dance, the night
before, and were on their way horns
when, in the middle of the stream, the
boat upset.
There are four coal mines in Jefferson
county, employing convict labor, and
about 1,200 convicts are employed. A
few days ago a committee went to work
to ascertain if any ex-convicts had regis
tered to vote in the August election.
The committee have not yet completed
their labors, but they have ascertained
that about 1,200 ex-convicts are now liv
ing in the county, and about four hun
dred of them have registered, expecting
to vote at the next election.
Texas.
A north-bound passenger train on th»
Fort Worth & Denver Railroad was pre
cipitated through a bridge on Monday
night, and Engineer William Smith and
Fireman James Wilson were instantly
killed. The accident was caused by r
washout.
O. E. AVitter, Fred Tucker and James
Thompson, printers, who went to Dallas
from Chicago two years ago, and Walter
Wall, started in a boat to explore Trini
ty river, which runs about four hundred
miles through a wild country, in a ser
pentine course, to the sea. On Sunday
Witter was brought back dying. He re
ports that the explorers were taken sick
about forty miles from a human habita
tion and all would have perished had not
a hermit fisherman given them succor.
AVall died and was buried near the an
cient town of Talico. Fred Tucker and ■
Thompson were left behind, and theii
fate is unknown.
Ciieorsia.
Atlanta is to have a new' market house.
Burglars in Atlanta chloroform people
and rob houses at their leisure. Several
robberies in that style have taken place
recently.
Second Mate Brama, of the Belgian
bark Brabant, loading naval stores was
struck by a swinging barrel of rosin at
Savannah and instantly killed.
The “skilled” burglars that have been
operating so successfully in Atlanta*,
proved to be seven white and four col
ored boys. All have been arrested.
The chemical works of O. A. Smith in
Atlanta, w'ere totally destroyed by fire.
Loss, $50,000; insurance, $7,000. The
fire originated from a spark from the
smoke stack of the works.
A colored boy named Birdie Brown,
was arrested on Sunday, in Columbus,
charged with forging Superintendent
Henderson’s name to street car tickets.
The boy was employed in the office and
managed to secure a lot of unsigned
tickets.
Officer Abbott, of the Atlanta police,
attempted to arrest a drunken colored
drayman named Stokes for acting inde
cently, when he was set upon by a crowd
of the drayman’s friends. Had it not
been for the prompt arrival of Chief
Connolly and a posse, the officer would
Lave been killed.
The location of the new brew'ery foun
dations at Augusta, was settled on Sat
urday, and the work of construction will
begin at once. The owners have a rail
road track already to their lot for the
hauling df supplies and the transporta
tion of the brewery product. The beer
will be ready to flow by the time the
Exposition gates are opened.
Gen. James Longstreet, of Gainesville,
was on the train which was wrecked on
the Virginia Midland recently. He was
jammed in by a mass of car wreckage,
but finally managed to get out through
a window. The general is said to have
looked back at the window and said it
was a wonder to him how he got through
it.
Two convicts escaped from the guards
a week ago at Graysville, and all hands
joined in the chase with blood-hounds,
but they were so fortunate as to avoid re
capture. Two men were arrested in At
lanta and thought to be them, but Will
Tyson went to them and found they were
Dot the ones for whom he w’as searching.
During his absence two more escaped,
but after a vigorous search one of them
was found near Cleveland, Tenn. The
punishment for running away is fifty
lashes on the bare skin.
Col. John N. Dunn, of Atlanta, has
lied from a surgical operation. He was
born in Benton county, Ala., January 2,
1835, but at the early age of seven moved
to Bradley county, East Tennessee,where
he spent his early life. He was educated
at Iliwassee college; studied law after
leaving college, and practiced for a short
while at Cleveland, Tenn. AYhen the
South seceded he entered the Confeder
ate army and fought bravely. He was
lieutenant colonel of one of the regiments
from eastern Tennessee. lie moved to
Seorgia just after the War, and for sev
eral years made Quitman, Ga., his home,
practicing law there. He moved to At
lanta in 1870, and opened a law office,
but was forced to quit practicing, on ac
count of bad health. He commenced
ousiness in 1871 in the firm of Dunn,
Alexander & Co., and from that time
until this has made a great success of his
business. He organized the Atlanta &
Uawkinsville RaLroad and was elected
president, which position he held at the
time of his death.
Why is a lover like a kernel of com?
Because he turns white when he pot's.
THE WOULD OVER.
CONDENSATION OF FACTS BY
'PHONE AND TELEGRAPH.
SOMETHING ABOUT CONVENTIONS, RAIL
ROADS, WORKING PEOPLE, CAPITALISTS,
EUROPEAN CROWNED HEADS, ETC.
Gen. Diaz has been reelected president
of Mexico.
Italy is to give the elective franchise
to women.
Sir John Henry Brand, president of
the Orange free state, is dead.
Immense saw mills at Louisville, near
Quebec, were burned on Saturday. Loss
$109,000.
Gen. Ben Harrison, the Republican
candidate for President, has been quite
ill at his home in Indianapolis, lud.
The centennial celebration of the in
auguration of civil government under
| St. Clair was celebrated at Marietta,
! Ohio.
, Littlefield’s boot and shoe factory at
Avon, Mass., burned on Saturday, caus
ing a loss of about $100,000; partly in
sured.
, The rate war from Chicago to the
East still continues. Dressed beef is
now sent to New York at seven cents per
100 pounds.
At Maryboro, Ireland, on Saturday, the
Kerry moonlighters were sentenced to
penal servitude for terms ranging from
. seven to teu years.
The Russian government will take
measures to compel the use of the Rus
sian language in German preparatory
schools in the Baltic provinces.
The Deßers mine in Kimberly, near
Capetown, the scene of the recent acci
dent, has been explored, and the fatalities
foot up 24 whites and 200 natives.
The Emperor William - departed on
Saturday on his St. Petersburg.
The royal*yacht Alexandra, bearing the
emperor and his shite, sailed from 'Pots
dam for Spaudau.
The heat has been unparalleled in Ath
ens, Greece. The temperature stood at
104 degrees in the shade. Many deaths
occurred. The currant crop has been
damaged 25 per cent.
Gen. Boulanger, who was wounded in
the neck a few days ago in a duel with
Premier Floquet, of the French govern
ment, is in a precarious condition and
may die at any moment.
Gambetta's statue, in the Place du
Carrousel, was unveiled on Friday. M.
Floquet, prime minister, who fought a
duel with Boulanger in the morning,
delivered the oration. Leroyer, De-
Freycinet, Meline and Spuller also spoke.
David M. Pascoe, a compositor on one
of the daily papers in Philadelphia, Pa.,
was arrested on a charge of having ap
propriated $1,2: the International
Typographical Troion of North America,
of which organization he was formerly
treasurer.
M. Frippel introduced a bill in the
French Chamber of Deputies on Monday
providing fer the abolishing of dueling.
M. Frippel, in introducing the bill, re
ferred to the recent Floquet-Boulangei
duel, and demanded urgency for the bill,
but the Chamber rejected it.
A fire occurred on Saturday afternoon
in the storehouse of the Hamilton Cotton
Mills at Lowell, Mass. There were 1,200
bales of raw cotton and 800 bales of man
ufactured cotton in the storehouse ready
for the print works. All of it w r as more
or less damaged. The raw cotton was
valued at $60,000.
The officials of the Burlington Road
at Nebraska City, Neb., claim to have
unearthed a plot to blow up the new
bridge over the Missouri river with dy
namite shipped there for that purpose,
it is claimed, by the striking engineers.
Officers also claim that dynamite was
Shipped to Pattsmouth and Rugo for
similar purposes.
The wife of John Putnam, of Neosho,
Wis., has been for years seriously afflicted
with rheumatic trouble, and was in bad
condition up to the time when her home
was struck by lightning and she received
a terrible shock. Strange to say since
then she has been entirely free from any
symptoms of her old complaint.
Five thousand persons assembled at
Uyde Park, London, on Sunday to take
action with reference to the imprison
ment of Dillon and the death of John
Mandeville. The resolutions adopted
protested against the course of the gov
ernment in the case of Dillon and de
claring the death of Mandeville due to
ill treatment he received while iu prison.
An express train was wrecked about
daylight Sunday morning, thirty-three
miles west of Winnemucca, Nev., by a
broken rail. The engine passed over
safely, but a fruit, baggage and United
States fish commissioners’ car were badly
wrecked. All the sleepers were thrown
off the track, but no passengers were
hurt.
The Chateaugay River country, N. Y.,
was visited recently by a terrific cyclone.
For miles the northern Chateaugay
country has been devasted. Inestimable
damage has been done to property, such
as buildings blown down, trees uprooted,
fences carried away and farm land laid
waste. A man and boy at Westville and
a man at Port Covington were killed.
Laffin & Rand’s large powder works,
near Cressona, Pa., blew up on Saturday,
killing George Gilman, Charles Reed and
Henry Birnich, who were the only per
sons about the place. The bodies were
throwr 200 yards from the scene of ex
plosion. The buildings were destroyed
by the fire which followed the explosion,
the force of which was felt ten miles
away.
Mayor Hewitt has issued an appeal to
the citizens of New York on behalf of
Mr. Hartt, who was foreman of a shoe
factory and discharged one of the work
men for theft. The Shoemaker’s Union
demanded Hartt’s removal and secured
1 it. They secured his discharge from
■ other factories in which hp obtained em
ployment.
Reports from John Zacliar, the faster
of Racine, Wis., are, .that ail attempts to
obtain nourishment fiom the light food
administered to him have proven futile.
The milk and other food taken is not re
tained on the stomach. This has left
him in a very weak and exhausted condi
aon, and he will most probably suffer
ieath as the penalty of his fifty-three
lays’ w'illfu! fast.
There is great excitement over reports
from Skeena river that Mr. Clifford, who
was in charge of the Hudson Bay com
pany at Hazelton, and one of the special
constables sent from Victoria, B. C., had
been murdered by Indians The Indians
are thoroughly excited, and threaten to
exterminate all the whites in that part
of the country. H. B. Roger, of Provin
ce!, left for the scene of trouble with a
force of special policemen. The steamer
Caroline arrived Saturday night and will
probably convey a force and “C” bat
tery to the mouth of the Skeena river.
The Indians who are causing the trouble
are the worst on the coast, and are large,
powerful fellows, and nearly all well
armed.
HE DIED ONCE.
The latest about Gen. Sheridan is that
he actually died once but w T as brought to
life again by the matchless human skill
of his physicians. It was on the after
noon of Thursday, June 7. A hem
orrhage of the stomach had been fol
lowed by a hemorrhage of the bowels.
There w'as no pulse, no respiration. The
firm jaw had dropped, the eyes were
wide open and glazed and the bands
were cold as ice. Father Chapelle turned
from the bedside and said: “All is ovei,”
and then passed sadly from the room.
Mrs. Sheridan sobbed in prayer for the
dead hero’s final rest. Suddenly, Dr.
O’Reilly discovered that the heart began
to beat after fine minutes’inaction; the
proper aids were applied and the general
soon grew better. The general is slowly
recovering at his sea side cottage, at
Nonquit, Mass.
WILL INVESTIGATE.
The Riforma, commenting on the pas
sage of the resolution by the United
States House of Representatives for the
appointment of a committee to inquire
into the evasion of the contract law,
Jfcth special reference to the influx of
Ralians into America, says: The Italian
government will be on its guard to see that
neither the American nor any other
country shall take measures contrary to
«ternational law in opposition to the
™ghts conferred on Italy through diplo
matic relations.
INTERESTING MEETING.
Quite a large attendance is looked foi
to attend the Southern Secretenal Insti
tute at Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga,
August 13-26. The object is for the de
velopment of workers in the Young Men’s
Christian Association, combined with
pure air, healthful exercise and refresh
ing rest.
THE EUROPEAN WAY.
German policemen broke into the house
of Queen Natalie, of Servia, seized her
child and shipped the young prince back
to his father. Before the abduction the
queen made an affecting appeal to Em
peror William, but it was of no avail.
AT AN END.
The great iron lockout is practically
over, and a general resumption of the
Pittsburg, Pa., mills is expected. There
are still fifty firms in the Manufacturers’
Association that have not yet granted
the demands of the workmen.
MURDER WILL OUT. •
Bowles and Smith, who were among
the locomotive engineers arrested at
Chicago, 111., for complicity in the crime
of placing dynamite cartridges on the
rails of the “Q” road, have confessed.
Bound to a Tree for Tortnre.
Playing Indian is the latest diversion
of a party of youngsters whose wealthy
parents live in the pretty cottages at
Glen Ridge, near Bloomfield, N. *J.
They adorn their hats with feathers from
domestic fowls and dusters, and prance
around in the woods and fields of the
neighborhood to the terror of timid boys
and girls who are not in the game. The
boy’s ages range from 10 to 14, and they
make as much noise as a band of full
grown Arapahoes on the warpath.
Recently' they caught Willie ZtJ-ler, a
nine-year-old boy, and prepared to tor
ture him, and perform a war dance
around him. They tied him to a tree
and piled brush around iiis feet, making
it appear that they were going to burn
him. Whether they would have carried
out the plan or not is impossible to de
cide, for before any matches were pro
duced the terror-stricken prisoner faint
ed. The boys thought they had killed
him, and were so badly scared that they
ran away, leaving him bound to the
tree.
Willie’s mother was informed at his
plight by a little girl. She ran to*the
tree, and after cutting the clothes liua
with which he was tied, carried him into
the house and sent for the doctor, who
said the child would probably be a loug
time recovering from the shock.
NUMBER 20.
COONTY iRECTOBY
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Ordinary J. A. Bennett,
Circuit Court Clerk S. H. Thurman
Sheriff W. A. Byrd,
Tax Receiver Clayton Tatum
Tax Collector Thos. Tittle.
Treasurer B. P. Majors*
School Superintendent.. .J. P. Jacoway.
Surveyor .W. F. Taylor.
TOWN COMMISSIONERS.
W. N. Jacoway, B. F race, J. <*A.
Cureton, J. A. O’Neil, B. P. Majors.
W. N. Jacoway President.
B. F. Pace Treasurer.
B. P. Majors * ‘ • Secretary,
John Cuzzort City Marshal.
COURTS.
Superior Court.
J. C. Fain Judge.
J. W Harris, Jr Solicitor General.
Meets third Mondays in March and
September.
Ordinary’s Court.
J. A. Bennett Ordi nary.
Meets first Monday in each month.
Justices’ Court, Trenton District.
Meets second Saturday in each month.
J. A, Cureton, T. 11. 8. Cole, Justices.
Rising Fawn District meets third Sat
urday in each month.
J. M. Cantsell, J. A. Moreland, Jus
tices.
MASONIC LORE.
Trenton Chapter No. 60, R. A. M.
S. 11. Thurman, 11. P.
M. A. B. Tatum, Secretary,
Meets second Saturday in each month.
Trenton Lodge No. 179 F. and A. M.
J. A. Bennett, W. M.
T. J. Lumpkin, Secretary.
Meetings Wednesday night on and be
fore each full moon, and two weeks
tln-reafter.
Rising Fawn Lodge No. 293 F. ai
A. M.
S. 11. Thurman, W. M.
J. M. Forester, Secretary.
Meetings Saturday night on and befc_.
each full moon, and two weeks thereaf
ter, at 2 o’clock p. m.
CHURCH NOTICES.
M. E. Church South.— Trenton Cir
cuit, Chattanooga District—A. J. Fra
zier, Presiding Elder; J. A. Prater, Pas
tor in charge; S. H. Thurman, Recording
Steward.
Trenton services second and fourth
Sundays in each month, at 10.30 o’clock
a. m. Prayer meetings every Sunday
uight.
Byrd s Chapel. —Services second and
fourth Sundays in each month at 3‘
o’clock p. m.
Rising Fawn.— Services first and third
Sundays in'each month, at 10.30 o’clock
a. m. Praver meetings every Wednesday
*ud Sunday nights.
Cave Springs— Services first ,ar
third Sundays in each mouth at 8o’c!o
p, m. Furnace at night.
BOaRD OF EDUCATION.
B. F. Pace, President; G. A. R. Bible,
R. W. AculT, W, C. Cureton, John
Clark.
NOTICE,
Any additions to be made to the abov
changes or errors, parties interested
would confer a great favor, by notifying
us of the same.