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VOLUME V.
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mmmmmmwmmmmammmmmmmttw ill mv- .u«cura uu ■ m——■— -
London, with a population of over
5,000,000, complains of a dcath-rata of
15.1 per 1000 inhabitants.
The butter which Senator Palmer, o*
Michigan, mcs on his table is made
tromtho milk of his own hig-bred Jer
sey cows and costs him $3 a pound.
But the senator is a millionaire many
times over and can afford such luxur
ies.
Henry Price, “the father of Masonry
in America,” died in Townsend, Mass.,
in 1780 Now, rather tardily, a monu
ment has been erected over his grave.
The location is prominent and overlooks
the farm where Price spent his last
years.
London has a Christian Police Asso
ciation with a membership of
Is only five years since the association
was started and it has prospered be
yond expectation. It contains at pres
ent 153 branches, which extend as far
as Singapore, Tasmania, South Africa
and Cana la.
Blakely Hall, of the New York Sun,
who has been studying the Chicago
anarchist plots, has a remedy for the
whole trouble. He says that if the
anarchists were caught, well scrubbed,
taught :h; English language and fed on
wholesome fool for a month, anarchy
would soon be a thing of the past.
The Spaniard makes no distinction
between Englishmen and North Ameri
cans, but labels them indiscriminately
as “Ingleses.” “American” in Spain
means South American, arid if you tell
the natives you are an American they are
apt to express surpri-e that you do not
apeak Spanish as fluently as they do.
The Chicago News says: “Mr. Red
stone, one of the Labor candidates for
President,, has announced his willing
ness to perform the duties of chief
magistrate of the nation for S6OO a
year should ho be elected. It will be
observed that this is a departure of
about $49,000 from the present stan
dard.
High life is barred against actors and
actresses in Franco. It is evety where
understood that no actress enters a
fashionable front door in Paris save in
her professional quality. She comes to
act or to recite; says her say, and then
departs; mingle» never with the audi
ence 'who have applauded her to the
skies.
Klingenberg-on-thc-Maia enjoys finan
cially a thriltine3s which few other
German communities, or foreign ones
for that matter, can boast of. It has no
taxpayers within its walls. The yield
of its clay pits not only defrays the
whole of the communal budget, includ
ing school money, but secures besides
to every head of a family plenty of fire
wood and 140 marks hard cash per an
num. Happy Klingenbcrg! . •
Under the name of John Kenwood
there has just died in the penitentiary
at Nashville, Tonn., while serving
three yeais for robbery, a man who is
credibly stated to have been the
younger son of an English nobleman
and brother-in-law of a high Canadian
official, who throughout his trial spent
money like water in the endeavor to
save him from punishment. His real
name is known only to the governor of
Tennessee, and will Dot be divulged.
The Biltimore but teiis of a well
known baritone singer in a church in
that city who inadvertently placed a
slur on the wrong note. He had adapt
ed the air of “The Jewish Maiden” to
a hymn beginning “Before the Lord we
Bow,” and instead of placing the slur
on the first two syllables, he placed it
on the last one, and rendered it thus:
“B fore the Lord we bow-wow-wow.”
The effect was immense. As he had
and still has a powerful and beautiful
voice, his hearers were thoroughly elec
trified at his unwonted and unlooked
for canine imitation. He has never en
tirely recovered from the effect of his
ludicrous mistake.
SOUTHERN STRAYS.
A CONDENSATION OF HAPPEN
INGS STRUNG TOGETHER.
MOVEMENTS OF ALLIANCE MEN —RAIL-
ROAD CASDAT.TIE8 —THE COTTON CROP
—FLOODS —ACCIDENTS—CROP RETURNS.
Alabama.
A. S. Kibbe, a telegraph operator at
Decatur died from yellow fever.
Governor Seay, has appointed W. A.
Austin judge of probate of Elmore coun
ty, to fill the vacancy earned by the rc
signment of John A. Lancaster.
The town of York, a town of 200 peo
ple, on the Alabama Great Southern
Railroad, near the Mississippi line, has
quarantined against the world. No pas
senger from any point will be allowed
to get off at that point. Armed guards
meet every train, and no amount of
health certificates will enable a passenger
to stop there.
An old feud between two prominent
families in Shelby county, ended on
Monday in the killing of George Turner,
at Coosa. The feud ends forever with
this tragedy, ns Turner was the last male
representative of his family. Alex Mat
tock, many years ago, married Turner’s
sister against the protests of the Turner
family, and out of this grew the feud,
which resulted in many bloody encount
ers.
Florida.
A commission of three, representing
the striking cigarmakers in Havana ar
rived at Key West. They telegraphed
to all large cities North asking aid for
the strikers. The strikers and their fami
lies number 20,000.
Georgia.
Augusta will levy a tax of 1 per cent,
in order to get the city in shape for the
Exposition.
Mr. Itober H. Richards, a prominent
business man of Atlanta, died of heart
disease while on a visit to Asheville, S. C.
On account of flood damages, Augusta
has postponed the opening of the Expo
sition until November Bth. It will close
December 15th.
Henry Kennedy, a carpenter, of Au
gusta, Supervisor Farmer of the Port
Royal Railroad, Higgins, and Mr.
Williams,, a boatman, and an unknown
man and woman were drowned in the
recent floods.
The Confederate Veterans of Atlanta
dedicated a* beautiful hal\ on Monday.
Gov. Gordon, Judge Wm. Lowndes Cal
houn, Capt. E. P. Howell and Henry W.
Grady made speeches. Many G. A. R.
men were present.
The Georgia Railroad ran eight en
gines and loaded cars on its bridges
across the canal at Augusta to keep them
from being spept away by the flood.
The bridges gave way under the exces
sive weight and several wrecked engines
is the result.
The flood in the Savannah river has
covered the rice plantations near the Sa
wanna, and the rice crop is nearly, if not
quite, a total loss. Reports from the
country districts state that the low lands
are all under water and the roads and
bridges carried away, so that travel is
almost impossible.
A cold-blooded murder was committed
in Atlanta Saturday night. A colored
man named Si Campbell, quarreled with
his wife late in the afternoon, and when
the woman had retired for the night, and
was sound asleep, Campbell deliberately
placed the muzzle of a pistol close to the
woman’s face and fired twice in rapid
succession, killing her instantly.
North Carolina.
At Charlotte, Sunday, a daring incen
diary set fire to the ice factory, and but
for quick work the building and ma
chinery would have been destroyed. The
factory had been idle since August Ist.
The incendiary bad used quanfitiA of
rosin, cotton waste and shavings to start
the tire.
Fire broke out at Beaufort Sunday and
spread rapidly, burning the sheriff’s of
fice and three other buildings on Turner
street; Handlers and House, on Dicken
son street, and a two-story house occu
pied by colored people. The Winfield
Chadwick building was partially burned.
Loss about SIO,OOO with very little in
surance.
A white man named Clauduas Parish,
of White county, was before a justice of
peace Saturday charged with com
mitting an assault on his twelve-year-old
daughter. After hearing the evidence
of the child, her mother and brother,
which was conclusive, Parish was com
mitted to jail. The case caused a de
cided sensation. Parish was brought
away quietly to escape lynching in his
own section.
Tennessee.
Nashville authorities ordered a close
observance of the liquor law, and all sa
loons were closed last Sunday. The
preachers have organized a vigilance
committee to see that the Sunday law is
rigidly enforced.
Jim Shackleford, a farmer living on
Dog Branch, whipped his twelve year-old
daughter to death. He had ordered the
child to bring a bucket of water from a
spring, and because she did not come as
quickly as he thought she should, he
seized a piece of plank and brutally beat
her so that she died after a few days.
Texas.
State Health Officer Dr. Rutherford,
who was at Galveston on Sunday, de
clared a strict and absolute quarantine
against New Orleans. Quarantine offi
cer Blount, at that point, was notified
to quarantine against all vessels coming
to that port from New Orleans, and a
similar embargo has been placed upon
railroads.
DEVOTED TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE RESOURCES OF DADE COUNTY.
TRENTON, GA„ FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1888.
Kentucky
Another raid was made by the McCoys
on the Hatfield settlement at Cattletsburg.
The West Virginians were worsted. The
McCoys attempted to arrest an innocent
citizen —Richard Carey. He never had
anything to do with thp trouble. They
were stopped before they succeeded, and
their action so enraged the neighborhood
that nearly every man on the creek
(Peter) took his gun and went in pursuit.
They came upon the West Virginias* at
Paw Paw mountain, where a lively bat
tle took place. In the melee two of the
West Virginians were killed and two
were badly wounded. None of the Ken
tucky crowd was hurt.
Louisiana.
New Orleans is* discussing a belt line
railway scheme, intending to build a
grand union depot, into which all trains
can run. As it is now, the traveler who
passes through New Orleans has to
.make a transfer, and the belt line and
union depot is intended to do away with
this.
An awful crime was perpetrated at
Breaux Bridge. Friday night, when a
gang, supposed to be composed of five
members (so far unknown), attacked a
negro cabin, and shooting through the
walls, mortally wounded a colored
woman, who died a few hours afterwards.
From there they went to another cabin
where they outraged colored women,
and then whippeel a colored man. The
negroes have made no affidavit as yet.
The white population are very much ex
cited over the matter, and resolutions
were adopted pledging protection to the
colored people, and declaring that the
perpetrators of the outrage shall be pun
ished.
South Carolina.
The breaking out of yellow fever at
Hendersonville has created considerable
consternation at Charleston, Henderson
ville being the Summer resort or a large
number ot wealthy Charlestonians. Im
mediately on receipt of the news of fever
at that place the mayor issued orders
quarantining, it and this complicates mat
ters, as many' women and children were
on their way home, having run from the
fever. No person from Hendersonville
or any place in that vicinity is allowed to
come to the city now without certificates.
Reports from all sections of the State
continue to be of the gloomiest kind as
regards the crops. One of the strangest
and most serious causes of the damage to
the cotton is the sprouting in the bolls,
a feature which has heretofore been com
paratively unknown in the annals of cot
ton planting. It seems that a good (leal
of cotton was open when the rains began
about September fir-t. The continuous
rain prevented picking, and the rq -m
bolls bad to be left in the fields. The
seeds in the bolls are now beginning to
sprout, rendering the cotton useless for
market or any other purposes. Sprout
ing is reported from almost every section
of the state, and what promised in Au
gust to be the largest crop of cotton ever
produced in this state looks now to be in
a very bad condition.
Virginia.
Henry W. Grady, of Atlanta, Ga., has
been invited by the committee at Stans -
ton to receive the Confederate monument
to be dedicated there on October 27th,
to the Confederates from other states
that are buried at Staunton. Governor
Fitzhugh Lee will tender the statue as
representing the soldiers, and Mr. Grady
has been invited to receive it in behalf
of the younger element in the South.
Steps have been taken for the construc
tion of an electric line of cars from Rich
mond to the historic battlefields of Seven
Pines or Fve Oaks. The distance is
seven miles, thousands of old Union
soldiers visit the field annually from
Richmond, at a large expense. This line
will minimize the cost of the litt'e trip.
The directors of the Atlantic & Danvibc
railroad have secured the money neco
ry to complete the line to Danville.
THE CROP BULLETIN.
The weather crop bulletin, issued by
the signal office, says that reports from
the corn belt, including Indiana, Illinois,
lowa, Missouri, and Nebraska, indicate
that the weather during the past week
has been especially favorable, and that
the corn crop, which is. very large, is
generally secure and past injury from
fros*. The frosts which occurred during
the week along the northern border of
lowa and in Minnesota, Wisconsin and
Michigan did some damage to the grow
ing crops. Over the west portion of the
cotton region, including Alabama and
Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louis
iana and Texas, favorable weather dar
ing the week greatly improved all grow
ing crops, and cotton picking is in
progress in all these States. In North
and South Carolina all growing crops
are seriously injured by heavy rains and
dangerous floods. The weather during
the week was especially favorable for
tobacco in Kentucky and Tennessee. The
weather in New England and the middle
Atlantic States was generally unfavor
able for ripening crops. Farm work is
retard od.
THE LATEST.
Dr. 11. S. Tanner, who became famous
about eight years ago l>y fasting forty
days at Clarendon hall, New York City,
arrived at Chicago, 111., from New Mex
ico. He is apparently in perfect health,
and his girth is such as to suggest any
thing except abstinence feom food. The
doctor is pursuing another branch of
semi-suspeuded animation, viz., hiber
nation. He declares that bears and other
hibernating animals do not use their
lungs duriug the hibernating season, and
he is convinced that man can hibernate,
and will permit himself to be sealed up in
an air-tight coffin and laid away until such
time as he shall designate for it to be
! opened.
THE WOULD OVER.
INTERESTING ITEMS BOILED
DOWN IN READABLE STYLE
THE FIELD OF LABOR —BKETUING CAUL
DRON OF EUROPEAN INTRIGUE—FIRES,
' SUICIDES. ETC. —NOTED PEOPLE DEAD.
i' ,
Bismarck will follow Von Moltke’s
example and resign.
Charles A. Percy made a second trip
through the whirlpool rapids at Niagara
Fails on Sunday.
Samuel Pruett shot and fatally wounded
his wife in a courtroom at Kokoma,
lad., during the progress of a divorce
suit, and also shot J. C. Blacklidge, he
claims accidentally.
Political correspondence at Vienna,
says the negotiations between Russia
and the Vatican for the establishment of
diplomatic relations.have collapsed, ow
ing to the opposition of Pobiedonesteff,
procudator of the holy synod in Russia,
of the Polish clerical authorities in Aus
tria and of the ultramontane cardinals in
Rome. '
Bitter feeling has been engendered at
Pittsburg, Pa., over the establishment
of a parochal school by the Catholics in
the first ward public school building.
Seven Protestant ministers denounced
'Catholocism from their pulpits on Sun
day. Arrangements were made for mass
meetings in that city and also in Alle
gheny to protest against the use of public
school buildings for religious purposes.
T. J. McGuire and Samuel Remer, em
ployed in a South Omaha, Neb., packing
house, engaged in a beef-skinning con
test. The maten was for SSO a side and
the gate receipts. Two dead beeves
were brought in, and when time was
called, both men set to work. McGuire
removed the skin from his subject tirSt,
doing the job in four minutes and fiftv
two seconds. Remer’s time was five
minutes.
A Roman cablegram to the New York
Catholic News announces that the decree
of the holy office on the Knights of La
bor question, favorable to that organiza
tion, has been forwarded to Cardinal
Gibbons. It will be remembered that in
April, 1887, his holiness, concurring
with ideas set forth in a letter of Cardinal
Gibbons in favor of the knights, decided
that there was no cause for action. The
Pope also decided that in Canada, where
a mand ament had been issued against
knights, members of the order could re
ceive ..b3olutiou on promise of obedience
tfuture decisions of the holy see. The
matter having been placed before the
holy office, th;s decree is the result. It
settles for good the question as far as
Rome is concerned, —provided, of course,
that the constitution and aims of the or
der remain the same.
THE FEVER.
One feature of the epidemic at Jack
sonville during the past week is the fre
quency wi'.h which it has attacked phy
sicians and clergymen and other active
workers in the cause of the sick and suf
fering. Drs. C. J. Burroughs and C. H.
Mallett were bo;h prostrated on Thurs
day, and Dr. Daniel gave up and went
to bed on Friday. The ranks of the
clergymen have been thinned, but all who
are sick give signs of early recovery.
The condition of Rev. J. B. Bickrell is
not so hopeful as could be wished, but
has not as yet become critical. Bishop
Edwin G. Weeds is still well and doing
good work at all times and places.
Bishop Moore and the ltev. Father
ny (recently recovered) are both active in
the work of nursing charity, and may be
seen at almost any hour of the day en
gaged in the noble mission of relief to
tie suffering. Just about enough new
doctors have come in to fill the local va
c icits caused by sickness. More are
n eded. Ihe following temporary as
signments have been made by F. H.
Caldwell, who has charge of the medical
corps. Dr. A. W. Knight will take the
territory east of Market to East Jack
sonville; Dr. Clay will take
Lavilla, north of Beaver street,
i,nd Hansomtown; Dr. Donohue, of Cary
ville, Fla., will take Campbell’s addi
tion, Fairfield and Oakland; Dr. George
C. Mathews and Dr. Eddy, of St. Louis,
will take Lavilla, south of Bean street;
D . Yahoo, of Ocala, will take charge
of Eat Jacksonville, with headquarters at
Dr. Fairlie’s drug store. Dr. Bryant, o!
Houston,and Dr Shetral,of Savannah has
been assigned to the district bounded by
Clay stre et, on West Market street on
the east, and Springfield and Hausom
totvn ou the north. There is room : t
St. Luke’s hospital to accommodate thir
teen more patients, and the hospital is
now in excellent condith n. Six private
rooms, suitable to patients who desire
isolation, are vacant and they are neatly
furnished and most comfortable apart
ments. Dr. Sollace Mitchell says be has
thiity patients now at the Sandhills and
ample accommodation for sixty or seven
ty more. He proposes to move on'
and make his home there until
the frost puts an end to his labors.
Dr. Porter received the tele
gram: Camp Perry, September 16.
Dr. S. Y. Porter, Jack-onville: “Suggest
to the people coming here that they may
bring sheets, pillow cases and towels, ami
_g(t them some evening after fumigation.
No piL.ows. Will fill cases with fresh
pine straw. —Hamilton.” Saturday’s
weatlur was somewhat pleasanter as no
rain fell, but a hot sun pound scorching
rays down without mercy and exhalation
arising could be s en line thin mist.
“This is yellow fever weather,” said a
doc'.or, “and you may now look for a
large increase in the number of cases, but
it is a great relief for the sick, and that
we think good,”
NATIONAL CAPITAL.
THE WASHINGTON SOLONS GET
TING IN THEIR WORK
I
WHAT 18 BEING DONE FOR THE ARMY AND
NAVY LIVELY DEBATES IN CONGRESS
—NOTES.
f —— -—m
CONGRESSIONAL.
In the Senate on Monday, Mr. Mitchell
introduced a bill to reduce letter postage
to one cent an ounce. Laid on the table.
A motion to reconsider the vote passing
the Chinese exclusion bill was defeated
in the Senate—yeas 20, nays 21. So the
bill remains passed. Mr. Hoar offered a
resolution (which was adopted), in
structing the committee on finance to in
quire as to the cotton tagging trust and
what legislation is necessary to counter
act it. The House bill to enlarge the
powers and duties of the department of
agriculture and to create an executive
department to be known as the depart
ment of agriculture, was taken up, the
question being on the amendment strik
ing out section 5, which transfers the
weather bureau of the signal service to
the department of agnculture. A lively
debate followed. Without action, the
bill was laid aside In the House, on
motion of Mr. McMillin, of Tennessee,
Mr. Cox, of New York, was elected
speaker pro tern to act during the ab
sence of Mr. Carlisle. No quorum being
present, no business was transacted.
GOSSIP.
If President Cleveland signs the Chi
nese exclusion bill, Secretary of State
Bayard, will resign his position.
A leak occurred in the new silver
vault at Washington during a recent
storm, and when the doors was opened
the next morning, there was four inches
of water in it.
Senator Brown has had passed through
the Senate, Mr. Clement’s House bill to
pay Charles Bradwell, colored, of Gaines
ville, Ga., for four bales of cotton de
stroyed by Sherman’s army in Savannah,
during the War.
THE ENGLISH COMMISSION.
The commission appointed by the Eng
lish Parliament to examine imo charges
ma le by the London Times against Mr.
Parnell and other Iri'h members of the
House of Commons, (tyened its first ses
sion in the probate court. Owing to
the limited size of the court room it was
impossible to admit more than a select
few of public representatives of the
press, who Bccuprwi the- bulk of -the
space, two hundred reporters, represent
ii A provincial, London and American
newspapers, having obtained tickets of
admission. After a day spent in legal
“sparring for position,” the commission
adjourned to October 22, without having
gatop into the merits of the-case at all.
Tire commission will make the iqjkiry
as thorough it was an itsue
O’Donnell and the Times, reserving to
themselves the power to gall anybody
who might be able to throw light on the
issues therein involved. The .inquiry
would be carried on in accordance with
rules of ordinary courts. Before pro
ceeding, Judge Hannen asked Sir Charles
Russell for whom he appeared. Sir
Charles replied that he represented 84
Irish members of Parliament.
FOREST FIRES.
A dispatch from East Saganaw, Michi
gm, says a fire has been burning in the
woods of northern Michigan two weeks,
and although several towns and valuable
property have been threatened, no serious
us es have resulted up to this time. A
disaster is reported on Saganaw, Tusko
!a an 1 Huron railroad, resulting from
f >rest fires. An express train, while
uinning twenty miles an hour, ran on a
piece of track beneath which the ties had
burned, and the engine, express and
baggage car and two coaches left the
rails and ran along the ground about two
lengths of the train and the engine
turned over in a ditch. lhe engineer,
fireman and express messengers were
thrown clear of the wreck and escaped
v. ith bruises and burns. The fire on the
tr ick was immedeiately communicated
to the conches and the passengers and
crew barely had time to run through the
train and escape by the rear coaches be
fore every particle of wood work in the
train wis burned.
A STRAGE BET.
Two Swedish farmers named Ole John
son and Hans Erickson, of Nebraska
City, Neb., made a strange bet on the
presidential election. A written agree
ment was drawn up and placed in the
hands of a prominent business man.
According to its terms, in the event of
Cleveland’s election, Mr. Johnson for
feits to Mr. Erickson his wife, Johnson
to have and to hold against the lawful
claims of any and all persons whatsoever.
If, on the other hand. General Harrison
is elected, the agreement stipulates that
Mr. Johnson shall receive fr-m Mr.
Erickson one Jersey cow, valued at $ >O.
All the parties to the wager are in earn
est, including Mrs. Johnson, wh > ex
presses a hope that Cleveland will <-e re
| elected.
THE PHILADELPHIA IDEA.
Mayor Fitler, of Philadelphia, Pa.,
has transmitted to Washington, D. C., a
resolution’adopted by the relief commit
tee of that city, which asks that to pre
vent the spread of yellow to Northern
cities, the U. S. Government establish a
military cordon.
NUMBER 29.
iiOITY DIBEGTBBY|
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Ordinary J. A. BeuueU
Superior Court Clerk ft. 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. P. Taylor.
TOWN COMMISSIONERS.
B. P. Majors, B. T. Brock, J. P. Bondi,
J. A. Cureton, J. B. Williams.
J. P. Bond, President,
B. T. Brock, Secretary.
B. P. Majors Treasures,
J. T. Wool bright, 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 Ordinary..
Meets first Monday in each month.
Justices’ Court, Trenton District
Meets second Saturday in each month.
J. A, Cureton, T. H. B. Cole, Justices.
Rising Fawn District meets third Sat
uicljy in each month.
J. M. Cantsell, J. A. Moreland, Jus
tices.
IYISS9NIC LORE.
Trenton Chapter N<>. 60, it. A. JL
S. H. Thurman, H. 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
thereafter.
Rising Fawn Lodge No. 293 F. aT
A. M.
S. 11. Thurman, W. M.
J. M. Forester, Secretary.
Meetings Saturday night on and befc_
each full moon, and two weeks thereafv
ter, at 2 o’clock p. m.
CHUR H 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
B•■days in each month, at 10.30 o’clock
a. m. Prayer meetings every Sunday
night.
Byrd’s Chapel.— Services second and
fourth Sundays in each month at 3
o’clock p. m.
Rising Fawk.—Services first and thir<
Sundays in each month, at 10.30 o’clock
a. m. Prayer meetings every Wednesday
and Sunday nights.
Cave Springs.—Services first a;
third Sundays in eaeh month at 3o’clo
p, m. Furnace at night.
'mm
eg :d of education.
B. F. Pace, President; G. A. R. Bible,
R. W. Acuff, W. C. Cureton, JohD
Pink. #
NOTICE.
Any additions to be made to the abov
changes or errors, parties interest®*
would confer a great favor by notifyir,_
us of the same.