The weekly star. (Douglasville, Ga.) 18??-18??, May 05, 1885, Image 1

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THE WEEKLY STAR. I M VH -NO. 13. yROFBSSIONAL CARDS. Robert A, Massey ATTORNEY AT LAW, KOoiiglawvllle, O®»ox*igl« ■bfflce In front room of Dorsetts Building.] Lb practice anywhere except in ■the County Court of Doagla* county. I Win. T. ROBERTS, ' «£llorMry «< Jbaw, ■DOUGLASVILLE, - - GEORGIA. ■ WILL practice In all the courts. All Ffaral bosinee* will receive prompt attention. jOfflce in ©oaft House. I (Cd. camp, I .tTIOUXErJT LAW, Civil Engineer & Surveyor, IDOUGLASVILE Ga I B. G.SRIGGS, ATTORNEY AT LAW Douglasville, Georgia. WI f.L practice In all the coarts, State and Federal. Jan 18 ly. John M. Edge, arionJTKjr at law XlouflMrvlllet • O». WILL practice In all the courts, promptly attend to all business un vested to hie care. jr&JAMES Attorney act Tjmw, DOUGLASVILLE, GEORGIA. Will practice in ths Court* of Doug las,Campbell, Carroll, Paulding,Cobb Pulton and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to all bu*- Dr?~T. R. WHITLEY, Physician and. Surgeon. Uouglaevllle, G*. (Uflloe up-stalrs in Dorsett-s Brick Bulling ] F, S. Ver dory, Physician and Surgeon. /"OFFICE at HUDSON A EDGE’S DRUG tiz STORE, where he can be found at all hear* o see pt when professionally engaged, •pedal attention given te Cbtonieeases, and eepeelallyalloMM that have been treated and sue still anenrsd. Jan 18 16,1 y. Respect tally eflbr my services as physi cian and surgeon, to the people of Doug lasville and vicinity. At’ ealls will be atten ded promptly. Cue be found at the drug store es Redson * Edge, during the day and a* might at any res’donee at the house recently •eeeple* by J. A. Piteman. J. K EDGE DENTISTRY. T. R. COOK, DENTAL SURGEON Ha* located ia Douglasville. SO yearn experience. Dentistry in all 1u branches, dons in ths most ap proved style. Office over post office. tTs’blttmr 3BEo*mi4» V*atlx».e«x». DOJGLAVILLE, - GA WILL make old tarnlture look as w»U a new. Give him a trial in this line. Wil lao do house carpentering work, Look I Look 11 If you want a good meal for little money, go to HENRY PULI AMS RESTAURANT, 101 Broad St. Atlants, Ga. Fish! Fish 11 if you want ToungFish rOR YOUR FISH POND wo John W. Franke, HARALSON, Coweta, Co. Ga. ABURN H A M* 8 IMPROVED JeU Turbine I lathe bc»i eooMructed and WF' Aatehed. gives better prirra. MMSMrafw tag*, more power sod t» sold WmlOaMr for »«•“ money p*r hor»e jowit any other Turbine in the CadMSwWP 4TM* pamphlet sent m why BUttNHAM BR'WL, York, Pa FTimnre —mit: A pure Family Medicine that Never Inlogi .-ate*. If yoehevo Dyspepsia. Rheumatism. Kid »ey *rtr*w*ry Cump’siaU. or if you ai s troubled with any dtawedee of the msg , ewmsahe. bowel*. Mood or aorvee you «a be tolod by Fjsrkar aisMti*. It you are a lawyvr, eifntaior er bueieem . Mt saiMswtedl by mental strain or anxious, esrosde aa* take lavoxfasauaa sdmnianu bat noeFsr hare Dealt It ysrn as* a or tenner, worn o vrtUt over-work, or a mother rue down •»U> wboeaatodd duUan.ry c* «Zor*« I A pair of egg* fastened at the ' sitiaH end and resembling a doctor’s saddlebags has been laid in Franklin; A Cobfe bofinty than named John son has causea the arrest, of 22 men on a charge of intimidating United States witnesses. All the dfc fen d'- ants reside in Cherokee; Johnson is the man who swore out a wat - rant for Constable I. J. Morris some time ago. It is thought that the accusa tions in the present instance are groundless. J. W. Cooper, of Dallas, has found a bunch of thread wrapped around a stick which is petrified. He found it near an embankment on the farm of Craven Harris, in Pumpkinvine dis*- trict, and it is supposed to have been lost there by the Indians. Several Indian relics, such as arrow heads, pieces of pottery, etc., have been found near the spot, indicating that an Indian village was once located there. A grocer and a lawyer are two very different persons. If a grocer falls into the hands of a lawyer, he may be badgered and hunted incyurt and out of court until his life is a burden to him. If a lawyer owe* a, grocer a bill, and the latter follows him up a little closely for it his remedy is to slap him iu the face. The law will not hold him lor it Gen. Wide Hampton sail that while on bis Mississip; i plantation he ssw a tame crow that could laugh and talk. The bird would say, “Hello!” “How are you ?” and several other thirds of like import. It wa* the most wonderful raven since the days of Birnaby Rudge . and Edgar Poe. One morning a vast number of crows assemble 1 11' a tree on th* plantation and prepared for a pow-wow. The tame biid fl -w among them, and saluted the congre gation with a brisk— “ Hello 1 How are you F’ His astohishc l brethren scattered tn a arm, as if they had Imcd fired upon from a mountain howitiz ;r. The marvelous fowl ot the air was ' to have been taken to the New Or leans exposition, but it* *ud len dis- , appearancs prevented. Gen Hamp ton surmises that Same negio shut i him by mistake.* Saturday two men slopped at a negro cabin about a mile from An-1 dersonville and asked for a drink of ; water, which was given them. The older man asked permission to ait down and rest. He was coughing when be sat down, and was very weak. He grew weaker and was unable to go farther that night. His compan ion remained with him until he died Sunday morning about 1 o'clock. • The negro woman in the cabin says ' the young man then took all the mon ey the old man had and left, saying he ■ was going to get acoffin and have him buried. He never went back, and > has not since seen. The two men, it seems from the evidence before the Coroner, were selling medicine, roots, herbs and such like. They traveled . on foot and seem-d to have little. ' The young man bad a Clip pled hand, but a definite description of him con- ■ not be given. The old man was about 60 years of age and bad a gray beard. The Cononer was unable to ascertain the name of the dead man. The jury rendered a verdict that be eame to hi* death from natural caums, A Y*«a* Lady Mal«M«a. Vienna, April 21.—Five train* of strychnine, administered by her rwn bands, ended Ibe young life of 1 Mies Lydia Clements, a young lady, daughter of Mr. David Clements, living near Snow, this county, last Wednesday, Mis* Clement* was young and attractive, aged 22, and was engaged to be married to Mack Adkins, a young man living near > . Vienna. Yesterday was the day, b fixed for the wedding. Last Wed nesday M : as C., in her father’s sb- 5 scence, went to bis trunk, where she ' knew he bad some strychnine, took i out the vial, and dissolving the con- 1 tents (about five grains) in a little • waler, swallowed the draught. To r make * sure thing of it she linstd out * | the vial and drank th* solution thus I obtained. She then told her sister i: • what she had done and rredfoa! aid • * was summoned. She at first refused r to swallow an emetic, but was finally prevailed on to do so, but to no pur ; pose, as the deadly drug bad already , taken t fleet, sad she soon died ia ilerribie coavulsiotts. The motive * prompting the suicidal set is an a known, as there ws* qq parental op- ■ puaiuon to Ure match. There was I no eomesuc trouble to which it could have been ALlnbuied, Draglasvilb. Georgia Tuesday May 5 1885. In 1883 a negro named Bill Lee, in Ltifopkit}, sferiotfely stabbed an other nbghhhrid Afterward shot at Sheriff HoldeVt Arht) trfed to arrest him; Bill mftae his e&apet, A few weeks a Mississippi detective, While looking iu Alabama for a fugitive from his bwh State, spotted Bill and captured him. He was harried tb Lumpkin last week. The Governor bffered a reward of SIOO for Bill’s capture. Bill claims that he only fired his gtin at Mr. Holder to frighten him at the time he made bis esoape, and says he had no desire to kill him. He is of the opinion that detectives are sharp people, and says that the one who arrested him attened several meetings at the church with him, disguised as a ne gro, and sung and prayed as loud as any negro at the meeting. As Lump kin Superior Court convenes this week, the probability is that Joe Brown will soon receive an able bodied recruit from Stewart county or his coal mines. BMein* With Outlaws. Lancaster Pa., April 25.—The chase after the Buzzard gang of thieves, who have infested the Welsh mountains for many years, his developed many interesting sto ri sos mountain life. A farmer who tills a piece of ground on th<s moun tain s-dc missed his two daughters one night last weekend search about the farm failed to s' ow any trace of them. They were innocent and very respuctabi* girls, but remarkably 1 well developed for their age. The 1 parents, knowing that they were much sought after by the young men j of neighboring farm houses, suppos- ( ed the girl* were there, but when it ( was learned that they bad been seen going up the moun ain in the after- | noon the family became greatly ' alarmed. Midnight came, but the' girl* di I not return, and he mother then rem- mbered having heard them say something about a dance on the mountain top. Knowing that the only habitation there was the house ’ occupied by th* thieves, she start' d aloe tip live »ooualaiu side, unarm- , «I and with only a lantern t<) pick her way along the dangerous path. The morning light was breaking on tbchorizen when she reached the robbers' d*n, about whioh so many romantie stories have been written. There sal bar daughter* and there sat Ab* Buazard, the leader of the gang, I with bi* rifle al bi* side. Th* girl* 1 had been dancing all night with the outlaw*. Au KutraarWlnury •t»ry. Mr. J. Polk Brlnaon own* a plan tali on and the oil McKinnie Mil* iu Emanuel county. He thing* i there is soma strange preservative : property in the water of his mill pond, which cover* some 200 or 3000 acres, and tells the following facts in support of bi* opini.m. There is ;on old settlement, perfectly visible by th* unusual clearness of the wa ter, and ten feet under the surface, - there can be seen the remains ot an old distillery, cider trough, a dairy, ' etc., iu a perfect state of preserva tion; near by i*tbe well, well-curbing all sound as a dollar. The fork use 1 for the well-*weep is still standing with no sign of decay. This settle ment Is said to have been made suv enty-five years ago. He also says there is a pine pole which has lain submerged for the past forty years, • which is apparently as green today as it was the hour it was put there. Among other strange things which h* tell*, I* the following : He says t here is a very large pine log, in the •ame state as the above mentioned pole, half of it was exposed above the surface, but that the exposed half ba* been worn off down to the e mu l by the terrapins slipping on and off it. I The jx>nd is alive with the multi tude* of fishes of the finest variety, i which Mr. B. is making a source of p ofit. He wentfiibing early Mon day morning, and himself caught 158 i bream with a hook and line. The fi«h would have weighed 150 pounds, i He brought hi* catch to Millen, and sold the last one in a few minute* for the cash, at a dollar a dozen The alligators swarm in the water* of this , pond, and are usually from s x to sight feet in kngth,and be aven that be bad to beat them out of bis way | lb< othar day while fishing. These j reptile*, be say®,do not go into win ter quarters, as i* their habit during cold weather; but when the weather • becomes cold they occupy the large | warm spring* which are numerous in the pond. i Mr. Brinson say* that it is strange but Uwe, that all perch have a gra- • vel size of a No. 4 *bot in their heads. C&a any oae explain this ? Washington, April 28. During bis life A. T. Stewart bad in his mind the erection of a mam moth hotel in Washington that shou d cover an en tire block of ground, and should sts nd toneyer as a monument to his name. The mantle of Mr. Stewart, so far as sujh a project is concerned, can be said to have fallen upon the McLeans, of Cincinnati. For several years these enterprising gentleman from the West have had their eye on the block immediately opposite the Ar lington Hotel, bounded by Vermont avenue. Fifteenth, II and I streets. Little by little they have acquired parcels of real estate in that block, and it wa* by this time they would have owned* the entire rqnare Through some slip in the arrangements, however, the property known as the old Metropolitan Club, at the corner of Vermont avenue and and H street, has been purchased by State Senator Robb, of New York, who will make a resilence there The McLeans, however, nothing daunted, have determined to push ahead with their hotel on what land they can get The plans will be made with a view to the future absorhtion of the entire square, and the part that . will be erected at once is expected in itself to be tb£ finest hotel in the country.—such a one as Washington ought to have. Chicago, April 25.—During the past winter there have occurred a number of audacious burglaries, to the perpetrator of which the police could get no clue. Three weeks ago , a detective happened to glance iu at i the window of a pawnshop and saw j Henry Keating pawning a pair of • opera glasses. The deteotive notic -1 ed him sneaking towards the rear 'doorand gave chase and capture! | him. Seceral tickets were found ; on bis goods were all ' recovered air# Ll Rifled as the.stolen projwty -J mysterious . casts rep< " ?s^ ai Ti)-duy Keating was held Court in i bonds of to answer twenty ‘ seven charges of burglary. He told ae interesting story. His father served undW Gen. Giant Lu dqj Fif.y-sevenft Iliiwoi* volunteers. ’His mother tarried him, an infant, in her arms Into heart of the Mis sissippi At the battle of ShilA both were killed, father and mother. He was rescued from among the dead and dying by • Union soldiers and sent to the North. Educated in th* streets, he worked at nearly all the trades, and final ly became property man for a travel ing theatre company. Two years ago ha married happily and a child was ; born to him. Last fall lie had saved $1,309. He bet §SOO that Carter Hartison would be elected Governor of IHinios and then lost the remain ing SBOO at faro the night of the election. Exasperated at his ill-luck ; he deliberately determined to become j a burglar, though he had never be fore done anything dishonest. Guilly of Border. Pittsburg, April 15.—Milton Weston, the Chicago millionaire, was to-day sentenced by Judge Bar ley to five years imprisonment in the j Western penitentiary. About a j year ago there wis a bloody riot at ; Murraysville, Westmoieland coun ty, between the employees of rival gas pipe lines, one of which was own ed by Weston. It is said he fur i nished his men with arms and am i munition,—anticipating a fight. Obadiah Haymaker, of the oppos ing force, was killed and several o;her men weie slightly wounded. Absalom Bowser, Weston’s right hand man, was convicted of the ( crime#bd sent to the penitentiary ; fur twelve years, but was af.et ward released on bail pending a rehearing iof the case by the Supreme Court at Philadelphia. Two weeks ago M eston was convicted cf the same crime. An immense number of witnesses testified to his high sta n ing in social and business ciri Is, and his lawyers presented flattering certificates of character from the Judges and municipal officers of Chicago, but tie jury decided against him and brought in a verdict of guilty of murder iu the second de gree to-day. Arguments were made for a new trail, which was refused ’ by the -court, and sentence was passed on the prisoner. His counsel , will ask th* Supreme Court for spe . cial allocatur, granting Weston’s . release on bail pending a reheagipg by the Supreme Court. . ' Subscription: »>. M *mm*s PerAahuu * The Height of Waves. Many experiments have been made (* measure the height of waves in all con ditions of weather. One authority goea as high as sixty-four feet and another al low as five feet, giving it as his reason that the penetrating power of wind can not reach bnlow that depth. Os this philosopher it may be presumed that he was a martyr to sea-sickness, and that he must have contented himself with making his calculations in his study. On the other hand, a height of sixty four feet is almost as absurd, though it is more in than five feet can possibly with our conception ot the altitude of the majestic surges which roll under the impulse of storma of wind along tii« surface of the great oceans. It is t. s tluxt the earthquake wave has been known to rise to sixty feet; yet surges of.thi* kind are happily scarce, since when they occur they are not only In the habit of razing whole towns tipon the coast lino where they break, but of carrying some of the vo seis they may encounter at onchoi- in the neignborbocal to the distance of a day’s walk inland. Practical experi ence, however will look with suspicion upon most of the scientific theories touching the altitude and velocity of waves. Prof. Airy’s table couples speed with dimensions, and, as a sam ple of his calculations, it may be shown that a wave one hundred thousand feet in breadth wiH travel at the rate of 588.80 feet jxw second in water that is ten thousand foot deep. Thus is possi ble, but it is difficult t o a®oept such 000. elusions as exact. At ail events, there is nothing more deceptive than th* height of Wave*. The tallest seas inth* world run otf Cape Hora, where, whether the wind blows east or they have a holiday ground within *. belt of eight or ten degrees that oom* passes the globe without the intervei> tion of a break of laud. Any man who has run, say, before a -trong westerly gale round the Horn wiil know the mag* nitudeof the seas which follow his shqx Viewed from the eteru when the vessel sinks in ti.e trough, the oncoming sea. that is about te undernui tlie ship and. lift her scaring to the Hying heavena will seem to heave ks rushing summit to the height of the mizzen-top; but when the summit is gained by the ob server, and the waves viewed from there, it will then be seen that those crests whioh from the deck looked S long way »p, will now appear to be a long way doum. Lt Is a common shore going pliraso Uitil lhe seas run -moiuk* min high.'' The Hen implied te no* very generally accepted by sailors, though the term may be sometime* used by them for convenience. Tho truth is. if waves were as tali as they are popularly supposed to be, no ship could by any possibility live in them. They are lofty to the fancy, because a* sea they are usually surveyed from low freeboards. To a spectator on a steamer with a six-foot height of side, an Athu> tic or Pacific surge would necesaaril* appear a* a mountain as compared Ml the aspect it would take from toe xtedl of an old line-of-b/.td* ship, with • ttdrty-toot “dip," or from one of theM lofty, glazed, and cesudialed structure* whioh In former times took six month* io jog soberly from the Thames to th4 Hooghly.— London Tclcgraplt. -—James Lyon, of T&nola, Ga., b*< thirty children.— Atlanta CoimiiiutiaM. Pumpkin* and Potatoes for Cattie. A reader asks “What is the value cl potatoes, either cooked or raw, as oom* pared with oom, and does it pay to raise pumpkins for oattieP“ The ciroumstanoM of each feeder will determine, to a great extent, th* question as to whether or not it will pay to grow pumpkins, or other kinds of food for cattle. But Inasmuch as th* cost of raising pumpkins is generally confined to the planting of the seeds in , the field with oorn, and to the labor of • gathering and cutting the crop for the , stock, it is not likely that much low will •aiult from raising plenty of them and 1 feeding freely to cattle. That they may form an excellent addition to the diet ol ■ milch cows is 100 well knewn to require stating. That great benefit to fattening stock will follow feeding with pump- ‘ kins, as from feeding roots, can not oe doubted. And as It seems to be a settled fact that the farmers of the Middle and Western States will not ‘rfues” with raising roots fur farm stock, as long a* maize remains the great staple feeding crop, it may be well for them to grow pumpkins as a good substitute, costing little or nothing. But It will scarcely pay to do as thousands have done, pro ‘ dace a large crop of pumpkins and leave them to freeze and rot in the field, [ while the stock gnaw s a half starved r existence from the straw-stack and from > storm-bleached cornstalks. In feeding L I pumpkins it te better to remove th* > seeds, as In considerable quantities they > act as a diuretic. P Extended experiments have been 1 Tiads with potatoes in feeding, but it ■ would be difficult to say how profitable , they would be as food for cattle h* , different regions and under varying dr ’ cu met an cm. Scientific analyses can do something to help decide the question! I but it has been found that the practical t results do not agree with those w*:ich j such analyses would lead us to expect. The market value of potatoes and other ‘ foods, the costal production, etc., must i be considered in reaching a decision, j It te quite clear that with good oorn -oiling at ten cents per bushel, and po ’ atoes worth twenty-five cents, as ha* * en the case in the West, the latter - »d not be a profitable feeding crop. s t when potatoes sell siowiy at ten uts per bushel and oorn at fifty cents, a • tifference might be in tenor ot po - —Jhro*rt« Parmer. OOSHITE|S <■ - SlffißS In order to enrich tho blood, and thu* tanpart fresh vigor to an enfeebled system,, stimulate flagging digestion with th» national Invigorant, Hostetter's StomaeA Bitters, which, by infusing energy into tho operations of the stomach, promotes, nay,, insures thorough digestion and assimilation, and consequent nutrition. A gain to appe-- Ute v vigor and flesh, is invariably found to follow a course of this deservedly pop-, uiar tonic, which is, moreover a reUablv preventive of malarial fevers. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. The Ga. Pacific Railway,. LOCAL TIME TABLE. In effect Jan. 4th 1885. etr - ■ ■ Leave Atlanta (Whitehall Station) iOtaa Concord t 4t ans Mableton • tt a Austell ».6T a. * Salt Springs 19 es am Dougiasvllie 10 18 am Winston.. IS *2 am Vlllaßica ....18 4* ax Temple 11 87 aau Bremen ItMtini at Tallapoosa II M asu Oxford 1 46 p Me. Anniston... S it p mu Birmingham 6 M p m. Eastward— No. J Atlanta Express—Dally ( rhe direct short line between Southwesters, cities and Atlanta aud all Georgia, North a>*~ South Carolina and. Virginia feints aa*. Eastern Cities ) Leave Birmingham, A. G.B ...10 80p *n« Anniston li 36 p ■»-. Oxford .*...... i M p ■*,. Tallapoosa .. .. . * M p B- Bremen .......4 08 p m, T< tuple ....4 M p mu Villa Rica 4 4< p as, Winston 4 i* p afa. ~ Douglasville *l2 p sa L Salt Springs ... ....i S7 p m Austell • 34 p m Mableton ....■* 44 p m«> Concord 60 pmi.. Arrive at Atlanta «*0 pm Mann’s Boudoir Buffett sleeping oars be tween Atlanta and New Orleans, without , change on Nos. 50 and 51 xlegant sleeping ca-s between Atlanta aufk Blrmiughaui on Nos. 52 aud 53. No. 52. [Fast Express.] No.SK p. m. a. II ou Lvo. Atlanta Depet Art. 7Ma li io Himpson Street 7 *•> H 17 Howell, G», *« 1130 l*eylos, Ga. Site 11 m cbattabooeheer SHt 1149 Concord, Ga. *M. 11 56 Mablston, Ga, *>*te 12 1* Austell, Ga. *te 12 39 Salt Springs, Ga. • M 12 40 Douglasville, • M 12 67 Winston, 4 K 147 Vlllaßica, « 3» 1 41 Tempi-, 4 «• 2 <3 Tailrpeosa, I 4* 3 0* Muscadine, 9 C » ,VJ EdWardsvllle, iK 3 50 Heflin, 1 M<- 4 40 Choccolocco, II *•. 4 53 DeArmanvlilo, il > 56 Oxlnr'*, II tS 6 lunni, 11 8* 0 ADDiaton, H 4* 27 I C 84 Eeddott, 1* 8* 1 6 51 Eden, • 4t 7 13 Cbok s Springs, *3O 7X5 Brompton, IM 7 50 Leeds, • ** 8 30 Irondale, 7 *L 3 s<) am Arr Birmingham, Lve. IB- Down Rea* Up.. Westward,—Connect at Oxanna with E. T. V. & Git..and at Birmiugbain with C.* X. O» AT. P. and LAN. .. .. . Eastward. —Connect at \tl*ntawith R. dt D.,Ga. K. K., Cent. R. R. of Georgia, E.T.V.. &Gn., W. A A.,and A. & W. P. 8.».. Connect at Auuiston with A. AA, railroad: for Talladega. w _ 1. Y. SAUK, L. 8. BROWNT. GenJ.Supt. G.F.AT. A. j Tax Notice. SEONJD ROUMD. Tuesday, May 5Ui, at DouglhtviHte Wednesday, May 6th el Weudiurtoe's Academy in forenoos, at Connor* Co*rt Ground in tb* afternoon. Thursday, May 7th at Polk’< Mill In the forenoon,at Hollow Chestnut ia the after-, noon. • Friday, May Bth at Wilson’s Mill in tie f.-renoou, al Fair Play court ground In afts« -. noon. Saturday, May 9th at Abercrombie’s Mill In the forenoon, at J. S. Dorsett’s In afternoon. Monday, May Uth al J. W. Brown s M >ll In forenoon,al Chapel Hili in toe atternoou.. Tuesday, May 12th at Ferguson's Mill Uu forenoon, at Chestnut Log >■: afternoon. Wednesday, May 18th at Salt Spring* 1* | forenoon, at Crider's shop in afternoon. THIRD AND LAST ROUND. ' Tuesday, Jur.slnd, at Douglawille. Wednesday, June 3rd al Connor's Goer*. ! giound in forenoon, at Winston Id aftoreeos*. Thursdav, June 4tb at Hollow Cbeslnntl* forenoon, at Bor sab church In afternoon. Friday, Junsith at McWhorter's shop la forenoon, al Fair Play court groend in after noon. * Saturday, Jans 3th at Crombie's mdl ta yorenoon, ai|F. M. Collins’ in afternoon. Monday, June Bth at Brown’s mid in fore noun, etCbapoi Hill Inafternoon. Tuesday, June *tb at John Busbeo’s ia fore noon, at Cnestuut Log tn afternoon. Wednesday, Juns 10th at Salt Rpriac* Ist forenoon, at Crtdor's Shop in aftoruooa. I will be at tno coart bouse la Deazlar viiia on Tuesday, July 7th. and «iso, ea Jpfy Btb. Sth, 10th, and 11th, at which time Ao books will be closed, P.esaeaotieo cnrefaUy the times a/ d piacce of my appointments, and nitct me there pr»»n»p» y. Lu.ua r r z.B.©.a a