Newspaper Page Text
Vol. VII.-ND. 12. . _ „
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Robsrt A. Massey
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Douglaoville, Coorgia
[Office in front room of Dorsette Building.
WILL practice any where except ir
the County Court of Douglas county
' “wS^TrobertsT
JLtlomcy at
DOUGLASVILLE, - - GEORGIA.
WILL practice in all the courts. AH
legal business will receivejprompt attention.
Office in Court House.
. C. D. GAMP'
Civil Engineer & Surveyor,
DOUGLASVILE Ga
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Douglasville, Georgia.
WILL practice in all the courts, state
and Federal. jaux3ly.
John M. Hdge,
jt law
X>c3ix*;Laa«ixrillo, «■ Oa.
WILL practice in all the court*, and
promptly attend to all business en
tailed to his care.
J.XJAMEB
Attorney eat X»«a-w.
DOUGLASVILLE, GEORGIA.
Will practice in the Courts of Doug
las,Campbell, Carrol I,Paulding,Cobb
Fulton and adjoining counties.
Prompt attention given to all bus
iness.
Dr? T. R. WHITLEY,
Physician and Surgeon.
Douglmwville, - Oa.
(Office up-<tatr« In Dometfs Brick Building ]
P, B. Verdsry,
Physician and Surgeon.
OFFICE at HUDHON A EDGE’S DRUG
STORE, where he can be found at ad
hnurs except when professionally engaged.
Wpeclal attention given .o Chtonlc cases, and
especially all cnees that huvc been ti sated and
sue still uncared. JaiilSss,ly\
Respectfully offer my services ss physi
cian an t eerceon, to the people of Doug
-laavi lie and vicinity. AD calls will be atten
ded promptly. Can be fbnnd nt the drug store
of Hudson A Edge, during the day and at
Bight at tny res'dence at the house recently
occupied by J- A. Pittman.
J. B. EDGE
DENTISTRY.
T. R. COOK,
DENTAL
SURGEON
II»a located in Douglasville. 20
years experience. Dentistry in all
its branches, done in the moat ap
proved style. Office over poet office.
T. S. BVTLTO
IXouao F’a.lmter
DOUGLAVILL E, - GA
W I L L make old furniture look as well a
new. Give him a trial In this line. Wil
Iso do house carpentering work.
Look I Look 11
If you want a good meal for little
monev, go to HENRY PULI AM S
RESTAURANT, 101 Broad St.
Atlanta, Ga.
Fish! Fish 1I
IF YOU WANT
Vcung*Fish
*OR YOUR FISH POND
x>oisr , i' ron&EiT to
—SEND TO
John W« Franke,
HARALSON, Coweta, Co. Ga.
■—- —■
BURN H A M* £
IMPROVED
JL> Turbine!
Is the beet constructed am
d. r finished, give* better prreeu
K.WsfSRKI «»se. more puwrr andU solr
talfllßuP mvm-j per home pawe<
rmy other rurbine in th,
world
W.ww iMUuphhd «*nt fr abv
HURN Ha M BR‘»S. % York. Pa
Pa KO r ’s™r o nTcT
A pure Family Medicine tbalNerei
Intoxicates.
If yoa have Dyspepsia. Rheumatism. Kid
ney or Urinary tvmp'ainla, or if you an
troubled with eny disorder of the lunar*
alemaeht, b«.we>«, blood or nerve* you rat
beenied by Parker* Tonic,
If you are a lawyer, minister <»r bu*lae«s
Mean exhausted by menu strain aranxtom
•areado nol i»ke stimulant*
bat use Parkers' feale.
If you are • meriuatlc or ftrmer, worn o«
wttk over-work, or a mother mh4.hu t
awiUy orb tuavhu.dduuee try Fatkcre ton
TTTK WT?T?KrV
w Pike county has a balance oi
= $5,128 in treasury.
Over 100 barrels of syrup have
been shipped to Dublin this season.
* There is a ford across Black creek,
1 in Bulloch county, which is about
0 400 yards wide.
r e - ■ - - -
Fairburn has sold more merchan
dise and guano since Jan. 1 than
during any period of her history
carrying the same dates.
A religious fanatic is prophecying
that Carnesville and its inhabitants
’ will soon be destroyed by fire on
account of the unbelief that prevails
there.
About SSO street tax was paid
into the Town Treasury of Dumpkin
last week parties who preferred to
pay a reasonable amount than to
work the street-.
Jasper Bragg, of Jcriven county,
s has a gosling which sports four
legs- It wa'ks on two, an I theoth
er pair hangs just behind the ones
used, are fully developed and as long
as the front pair.
- The Fulton county board ofcom
i minsioners declined to pay the cost
of bringing Wilkins, the grocery
fraud, from Akron, 0., back to At
lanta, and as his victim also refused
to foot the bill he has been released.
At Athens, a thief entered the
house of Lon Nichol.-, former assis
tant dooikeeper of the House of
Representatives, and stole a quanity
of jewelry and a large amount of
money. The thief left several dol
lars in gold in the drawer where he
got the meney.
The barn and stable on the plan
tation of N. B. Roberts, twelve
miles north of Columbus, w ere de
stroyed bv the fire Sunday night,
together with 2,000 bundles of tod
der, about 60 bushels of corn and 2
fine mules Two others were badly
burned, and may die.
At Sparta courts negro named
John Ridley was tried for burgla
ry. It appeared from the evidence
that he got on top of depot at Miy
field, ami went down the chimney
into the building, there helping him
self to a number of articles of mer
chandise. It took the jury only about
five minutes to return a verdict of
guilty, and this enterprising burglar
was sentenced to eightyears in the
peniteuttary by the court.
Judge Howell Cohb says that at
no distant day Athens is destined to
become one of the greatest manufac
turing centres of the State. The flow
of Northern capital southward, says
the J udge, will in twenty years utiliza
to their full capacity every water
power within a radius of thirty miles
of Athens, and the natural output of
money in that territory, which a
bounds in water power and of which
Athens is the geographical centre,
will easily run its population to 25,-
000 people.
' C. A. King, of Forsyth, received
ten days ago at the bands of one of
our farmer citizens a cub fox only a
few days old. To test the affinity of
* the cat lor the fox he place I the cub
iu a box with a litter of young kittens
and their mother. Immediately the
mother eat recognized and petted it
as one of her young. Since then she
has been nursing the little cub regu-
B larly and earing for it as tenderly as
if it were really her own offspring.
A negro named Joe Fort was aeci-
* dentally killed at tho Lake Blurt
> mills, near Dodortown, last Thurs
’ day. In some way he was caught in
the machinery, and in an instant was
dashed to pieces. A n effort was made
" to jet the Coroner or a magistrate
g from Liberty, but they could not be
obtained. The Coroner of IF&yne
was present, but decided that he had
t no jurisdiction. No inquest was
i. necessary as the accident occurred in
* the presence of many of the hasds al
e the mills.
j; It is understood in firemanicclicks
. | that Aiuericus will have no I cfs a
i r distinguished person in attendance
on the tournament next week than
i- Guv. McDaniel. White in attendance
* iu Atlanta some days ago a gentle
« man of that city invited him down,
m and the Governor aece ted tha invi-
L* lalion. Since then the department has
ex tew led him a special invita’ion,
£ and arrangements are being made for
u Lis reception and entertainment.
Douglasville, Georgia Tuesday April 28 1885.
f Atlanta has received several bids
for her water works. Five hundred
thousand dollars is the lowest figure
e that will be taken.
On Friday last, nesr the line of
Macon and Taylor counties two nc
t groes, George Davis and Jack Snipe,
engaged in a quarrel, which resulted
in a good old-fashioned fist and skull
- fight, in which Jack Snipe was used
1 roughly. Early in the afternoon of
the following day he succeeded in
borrowing a gun frntn one of his
neighbors, and at night waylaid, shot
r and killed his antagonist, the entire
3 load taking effect in bis right lung,
j Jack was promptly lodged in Ogle
, thorpe jail where he w*ll await the
sentence of the court.
I A woman with a disproportion
ate large foot is by common consent
I entitled to pity. But it is net the
’ size of the foot which good taste ob-
* jects to, but its relation to the rest
of the body. A large woman with
the tiny foot of a girl would be as dis-
> proportionate as the small woman
with a large foot. What is known
in the market as the No. 1 boot can-
> not by any means be made to go up
; on the foot of any woman whose
physical proportions bear any com
parison with those of the Venus de
Medici, which is the representation
of a large and voluptuous woman.
Women who wear the No. 1 bootaro
petite, vivacious, pert, pretty, any
thing you like, but they are not the
; Mediciao type. Large women, says
‘ a well-known artist and expert, must
have feet that, to be beautiful, would
be very ug’y on a smaller woman.
. The No. 1 boot is, to a large extent,
a female hallucination.
From a Dover, (Me.) Special.—
Amirtg the lumbermen, whose
camps hive been pitched in the A
roostook regions this winter and
spring, is one in charge of a Cana
dian, one Chanfrau, a handsome
youiiT man wh » enjoys a joke, espe
cially if the Yankees are the butt of
it. About six weeks ag > the st rv
was cin-u1 that (.’haufran and hi
men had O'>»keJ and ea'en a mal”
child, the bones of which were said
to have been hidden in a hollow pine
near Chanfrau’scamp. Three ofthe
Maine lumbermen, who spoke
French heard the rumor and went
to Chanfrau’s camp to investigate
the matter. Chanfrau in some way
discovered their purpose and so h«
and one oi his m.*n held several
consultations to which, ns fir as pos
sible, they attached an air of mystery
One night the Maine lumbermen
went to the supposed tree-sepulchre
and instead of the bones of a chiid
they found carefully sewed into an
old blanket tlu» body of a dead
skunk to which a card was pinned
liearing the words, “Yankee trap”
In the morning the inv stigators
were gone.
James Jackson, of Georgia, who
had been and afterward was a Uni
ted States Senator, was the challeng
ed party. He was an Englishman
by biylh. He killed Lieut. Gov.
Wells, of Georgia, in a duel, and he
flnaliy determined to accept a chal
lenge on such terms as would make
it his last duel. So upo i his next
• challenge, which was from CoL R.
Watkins, also from Georgia, he pre
scribed as the terms that each party,
arme I with a double-barreled gun
, loaded with buck-shot and with a
hunting knife, shovl I row himself in
a skifftoade-ignated point on op
( posile sides of the Savannah river.
JVuen the city clock struck 12 each
( should row Ins skiff to a small island
in the middle of the river, which was
wooded and covered with uq ler
. brush. Ou arriving at tho island
j each was to moor his skiff, stand
. about for ten minutes, and then go
t about the island until the meeting
s took place. The seconds waited on
j the mainland until after 1 o’clock,
B when they heard three gun shots and
e angry cries; then all was still. At
B daylight, as had been agreed on, the
j ; seconds went to the island and found
R ; Jackson lyir.g on the ground in»en
n ; sible from the loss us blood, and his
I I antagonist 1> ing across him dead.
| Jackson recovered, but would never
relate his experience on the island,
gjnorwssbe ever challenged again.
a ; He died in B'ashingtou city, while
e serving his second term as a Sena
-1 ! tor, March 19,1806.
e
J For Sale.
-1 One of the moat convenient and
s j boat arranged dwellings in the town
, I Douglasvili. Terms Cash.
r I For further information, apply at
this office.
s THE E«» OF A CAREER.
I Death of One of Kit tarpon’s old Com
> rn«l oh.
“Died, at Puebla, Mexico, March
3, 1885, James Z. Young, formerly
f of Baltimore.” This notice, which
. appeared in the Bahimors Sun a few
, days ago, records the close of a life
which was full of adventure and ro
mance. Capt. James Z. Young was
a native of England, but came to
■ Baltimore when a boy. His first
emp’oyment was in tbe service ofthe
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Com
, pany. He was for some years a
i baggage master between Baltimore
But be possessed a
daring nature, which dangerous en
terprises attracted. Tbe spirit of
adventure led him West while still a
young man, and he became an inti
mate and comrade of the great In
dian scout and hunter, Kit Carson.
One of Capt. Young’s feats at that
time was a ride of 226 miles from
Fort Laramie to the nearest military
station, which he made on horseback
in 3 days, unparalled speed over such
a route as he traveled. In telling the
story’ ot this ride to his friends he
said his half-wild coursers fl w like
the wind over prairie and through
forest. He rode down three horses
io making the run, taking the saddle
and bridle off the exhausted steed,
and iransforring them to another
which be caught. The second horse
gave out as they reached the bank
of a small creek, on the opposite side
of which he saw horses grazing. He
bad to carry the saddle over his own
shoulders, wading t e creek, and
catching a fresh horse.
The time was about 1856. Soon
after he wascaptuied by the Com
anchee, and lived with them three
years,' conforming to their Indian
ways and making himself a popular
favorite until a chance to escape of
fered, when he bolted. The begin
ning of tbe war found him in Texas.
He had bad enough of exciting times,
howevei, for a few year*, and it was
not tjli the last year of the war that
Im abandonvd pursuits of peace and
became a Texas ranger. After the
war be went to Mexico, and for over
eftf IV he whs the Stea ly
and i‘lialileT,ravtdidg inspector of
the M xieoand Vera Cruz Railroad.
At the wreck of a train 14 years ago,
by t ie breaking through of a bridge
near the City of Mexico, which was
a terrible acciden’, attended with
great loss »»f life, he saved many wo
men and children, plunging into tbe
water and snatching them half drown
cd from tbe wrecked cars in the wa
ler. Re contracted rheumatism and
other ai ments by bis exposure on
this occasion, and his healtii was
never robust afterwards. About six
year® ago the train on which he was
running was attacked by robbers. A
doz nor more greasers, as the low
est Mexicans are called, got aboard
in the City of Mexico, and a few
miles out they slipped the eng.ne
from the passenger and baggage
cars, stopping them, an I plundered
from the express car $68,000 in sil
ver. They killed the conduct r and
left, Capt. Young for dead, felled by
a wou d on tbe bead from a butt of
a musket. At another li no the
train robbers made a noose of a tele
graph wire aroun I his neck and were
about to bang him. He was sure bis
last hour had come, and when they
taunted him with fearing death in
that way he told them it was all one
whether he “was bange I or shot, tor
death soon c n mes to all.” The rob
bers a Imire l his stocism and spared
bis life. Tbe Captain of the band
j is now. it is said, in a good position
under the Mexican Government,train
robbing having been nearly put
down by the present government,
and there being less profit and safety
iu it than formerly.
Capt. Young left a Mexican wife,
to whom be willed his property, and
bis mother and brother, W. H.
Young, live at the
brother being passenger conductor
on the Painsville and Youngtown
1 Railroad. •He was formerly a con
ductor on the Baltimore and Ohio,
between Baltimore and Washington,
and be has railroaded in India and
Africa. He has just returned from
Mexico, which he visited on the
death of bis brother. He thinks the
mines, railroads and other business
in that country offer a fine opening
for American enterprise.
NOTICE.
Is hereby given that I have no in
terest in tbe mercantile firm of Sel
man, Smith A Co., known as the
Farmer’s Store. Having sold mj
entire interest therein to tbe present
firm, consisting of R. D. Smith, J.
M. Abercrombie and T. H. Selman,
, in the month of September, 1884.
J. E. PHILLIPS.
♦
Subscription: 90 Wa»lk Per A&aut.
James Hix has just been sentenced
. io Carrol] county to (en years in the
chaingang. On the night of Nov. 8
1 last James Hix boarded a freight
train at Bremen, on the Georgia
‘ Pacific Railroad, for Temple, where
t he got oft and into the depot and re
mained from 7 to 11 o.clock. He
( was under the influence of liquor and
( endeavored to raise a difficulty with
Mr. Harper, the agent, sever if times,
i but did not succeed. At 11:20 o,clock
• the east-bound passenger train ar
rived and Mr. Harper went out t<>
receive the mail and express, as was
his custom, followed by Hix. As
; ter receiving the mail and a package
of money he started back to tbe depot
just as the train moved off. He had
put out his lantern in order to get
rid of Hix. When near the depot
he heard some one following him,
and in an instant some one caught
hold of his arm and told him to come
back out. Mr. Harper was on the
platform. He replied, or rather
asked Hix, for he it to turn
him loose. Hix again said, “No,
come back out here.” Harper
turned around partially and there
he beheld Hix with an uplifed knife,
and before he could siy a word the
knife, descended, sinking to the hilt
in Mr. Harper’s left eye Hix then
jerked him out on the ground and
stabbed him four times more, liar
per succeeded in getting up, raised
an alarm a.id a party soon had Hix
ar rested.
A severe storm of Wind hail and
rain swept over the northern and
middle portions of Stewart comity
Friday night. Hou es and fences
were blown down, and extensive lev
ees on the Cal’ochee valley were
broken as high up as the Hightower
place. No damage was done to the
bottoms on the latter place, but all
the preparations for planting below
this pointwill have to be made again.
The planters on Grass creek valley
have suffered in like manner. This
is the third year of disaster to the
vallej’ farmers by reason of floods.
—'B'lteny trees con be transplanted
trotn the woodsy lifts can be done in the
tall or the spring. The little trees
Should be taken tip carefully, with as
much of the root as is possible, and
planted in a well-prepared «oil the same
flepth at which they stood before. The
tree will respond to clean culture as
sendily as corn, or will sbow neglect by
a slow, stunted growth, if weeds and
■grass are loft to grow about their root*
Ihh z Jd.
—For felons lake tbe root of tbe plant
fcnewn dragon root, or Indian turnip,
either green • r dry; grate about one
a ♦ w»pov*h»l into four tablespoon
fuls Ou _iveet milk; aimmer gently 8
few nffiiutes, then thicken with bread
oruml . >nd apply aa hot m
Tbis can be heated again two or three
times, adding a little each lime. If the
felon L Ju*t starting this will drive it
book; ff somewhat advanced it will
4raw It out quickly »ud gently. It ii
well to put a little tallow on tie pooh
kJee, especially after opening, to pre
vent stick mg. This same poultice h
good for a carbuncle, or any other ris
ing. — Kxebonfft.
—-To whiten flannel, mode yellow bj
pee, dtwo’vo one and one-heif pqundi
w white ,-oap in fifty pountb of soft
water, and also twu-lLirds of an ouncs
ot spirits of am num Lx. immerse ths
flannel, stir well armind for a sherl
time, and wash in pure water. When
black or navy blue linens t-re washed,
soap should not be used. Take instead
kwo potatoes grMed into tepid soft
water (after baaing Utrra waMied and
peeled), into whleh a teaapoonfal oi
ammonia has be-n pot. Wash the
fruea with Chia, and rin«e tbem tn odd
blue water. They will need no starch,
and sbonld be dried and Ironed oa the
wrong side.—Boston BudyO.
A $20.00 BIBLE REWARD.
The publisher* of R itlei<e’s M mthlv of
fer twelve valuable re sards in their Month
ly for May. atnon? wnich is the follow.ng:
We will give to the person telling
us tow many verses there are, hiving only
two words each, in the Nev Teata-neal
Sjriptnres (nottbe rwiaed edition;) by May
lOch. lAHS. 8 lonld two or more correct an -
swera be received, the R;W»rd will be divi
ded. Toe mooey will be forwarded to the
1 winner May 15rh, 1835 Psraons trying f>r
tbe reward must send 20 cen s in silver or
postal notes (no postxge sumps taken) with
tbeir answer, for which they will receive
the Monthly for June, in which the name
•nd add rasa of tbe winner of the reward and
the cone* answer will be puolisnel. and
in whren several more valuable reward* will
be off»rerl Add re- Rutledok Pvblissiso
orMrasY, Easton, Pa.
Tlie ** I Jttle Deieetfwe.**
*!• Scala fnr tn W rt*.
F«r Family, OSfrr or Store.
The “ little Ihetevvtf-Tw.**
itwrr Seale MrWX. tad hr oironta
WBW** auciao m-tUK caToucMA, io.
i SOsnrrEift
J i'/
■ : z<'- ; -
Sitter 5
~ >/ the use of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters
’ ths haggard appearance of the oounte
' nssoe and sallowncss of dyspeptics are
j snpplanted by a healthier look, and as the
food is assimilated, the body acquire* snb-
I stance. Appetite Is restored, and the nerv
, ous system refreshed with muah naeded
slumber, through the use of this medicine,
which te also bsaafieial to persons of a
rheumatic tendency, and an inestimable
, preventive of fever and ague.
For sale by ali Druggists andDealaro
generally.
J c~~~ ~ ■■■■" 1 >
: The Ga. Pacific Railway.
LOCAL TIME TABLE.
In effect Jan. 4th 1885.
| Leave Atlanta (Whitehall Station) 900a n.
Concord 9 40 a ni
Mableton IMb in
Austell 9 51 a. m
Sait Springs io us am
Douglasville 10 18 am
Winston 10 32 airr
Villa Rica 10 48 am
Temple 11 V7 am
Bremen 11 80 um
at Tallapoosa II 58 am
Oxford 1 46 p m
Anniston 2 15 p m
Birmingham 5 W p m
Eastward-No. 2 Atlanta Express—Dally
( The direct short line between southwest.-rn
cities and Atlanta aud all Georgia, North and
South Carolina and Virginia Points aud
Eastern Cities )
Leave Birmingham, A. G.S 10 31 p m
Anniston . .. 7...1 25 p m
Oxford 151 p in
Tallapoosa 8 38 p tn
Bremen 4 (Xi p m
Temple 4 £1 p m
Villa Rica 4 4t p m
Winston ....4 58 p iu
> Douglasville ~..0 12 p m
Salt Springs .... 5 27 p m
Au-teil ....5 81 p in
Mableton 5 44 p ni
Concord r> te pm
» Arrive at Atlanta (5 39 pm
} Mann’s Bond »ir Buffett sleeping cirs be
tween Atlanta nn l New Orleans, without
’ change on N 05.59 and 51-
4 Elegant sleeping c between Atlanta and
| Birmingham on Nos. 52 and S 3.
1 No. 52. [Fast Express.] No. 53-
J P. M. A. M.
!1I oo Lvo. Atlanta Depot Arr. 7!•
H Jo Simps >n Street ” 7 0*
1117 Howell, <4», B 51
11 30 I’eyton, Ga. 6 M
•ill 34 Chattah<M»choe, 8 82
11 49 Concord, Ga. fl 15
I 11 58 Mableton, Ga, •04
, I'2 10 Austell, Ga 5Si
. I'2 21 Hatt Springs, Ga. ft 40
12 40 Douglasville, 5 1>
* 12 57 WinsLO'i, 4 M
I 1 17 Vlllaltlce, 4 3*
j 141 Tempi-, • 4•*
4 2 4'2 Tallnpeoss, 84X
‘ 3 06 Mu<cadin», 2 07
■ 3 3'4 Ed Wardsville, >B7
8 56 Heflin, I 1»
0 446 CnoCimlocco, 12 *5
t 4 34 DeArinuivllle, li’
4 P. M
.55 Oxford, JI M
• 5 Uxann«, 11 52
» 0 Anniston, Il 48
. 27 Riversiae, 10 IS
* 634 Seddon, 10 «5
S «51 Eden, . 94S
), 713 Cook's Springs, 920
7 85 Brompton, X Sft
7 50 Leeds, 8 8 5
■ 8;) Irondale, 748
' 850 a m Arr Birmingham, Lve. 7 Ift
• Read Down Head Up.
1— —. :.'.:a
8 Westward.— Connect at Oxanna with K. T.
. V. <fc Ga.,an lat Birmingham with C.< N. O.
’ <fc T. I». and L. &N.
I Eastward.—Connect a' Ytlsnta with R. A
□ D., Ga. R. 11., Cent. R. R. of Georgia, E. T. V.
A Gs., W. & A., and A. A W. P. K. R.
* Connect at Aaniston with A. AA, railroad
3 for Talladega.
« 1. y. SAGE, L. K. BROWN.
‘ Genl. Sup'. G.F. AT. A
!I ~ Tas ITotice. '
• SEONI) ROUND.
• Tuesday, May s'4i, at DonglasviHe,
Wednesday, M*y 6 h at
Acale.nyin forenoon, at Connor* Court
G'ou id in the aft*ra*M>i.
Thursday, May 7th at Polk's; Mill tn the
_ f renoon, at 11 iiluw Caestnut in the after
noon.
Friday, May Bth at Wilso i’a Mill In the
forenoon, at Fair I’<ay court ground la after
noon.
Saturday, May 9th at Abercrombie’s Mill In
the forenoon, at J. 8. Dorsett’s in as ternoon.
Monday, May 11th at J. W. Brown's Milt
; in forenoon,at Chapel Hill In the afternoon.
/ Tuesday, May 12th at Ferguson's Mill la
1 forenoon, at Chestnutlxig ia| afternoon.
f Wednesday, May 13th al Salt Springs la
forenoon, at Crider’s shop iu afternoon.
ItiißD AND LASTROUND.
Tuesday, Junetnd, at Douglasville.
r Wednesday, June 3rd at Connor’s Court
J gtound tn forenoon, at Wtmtoa in afternoon.
c Thursdav, June 4th at Hotlew Chestnut la
3 forenoon,at Bereah church In afternoon. *
j Friday, Juneftth at McWhorter's shop la
1 forenoon, at FalrPlay court ground In after*
I no r »n.
=• Saturday, June 6th al Crombie’s mill la
forenoon, »t|F. M. Collins’ in afternoon.
Monday, June Bth at Brown's mill in sores
noon, at Chapel HUI In afternoon.
Tuesday, June 9th at John Busbee’s in force
noon, at Cueslout Loj in afternoon.
Wednesday, June 10th at Sait springs la
forenoon, at Crider’s Shopin afternoon.
L will be at the court bouse in Douglas*
- ride, on Tueedsy, July 7th and also, oa Jrl,
8 u 9tb, 10th, and iLb, at which time the
» b fobs will bs closed. Piease notice carefaby
| the tirnoa and places of my appointments,
• i aid m*et ms there prompt v.
J ’ E. U. CAMP, T. R. D. C.