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BY T. W. AYERS,
TBIEIi T i a
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* ■,r i. . .|to * - •«»-■< £■* 4- - ■
M. Gr. & J. COHEN,
>■ LEADERS, DICTATORS AND COMMANDERS l OP LOW PRICES, 7
/ ♦
*W*i Open, this iFjlLti SEASON wit/fa th& LoJr^eSt Stochof
X)rv O-oodsl and Notions, TVTen’s "NT out la’s &t Boy’s OlotKing*
Siloes, Hats, Carpets <Sco.
AT LOWER PRICES THAN EVER BEFORE OFFERED IN NORTH EAST GEORGIA;
THE REGISTER.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
T. W. A YEBS,
' And Proprietor.
m
CO M MUNICATED.
.< 4
a.
FOR, THE REGISTER.
EFFECTS OF KINDNESS*
"SfmSSSXJSt*
Two men Jonesand Johnston, hved
some miles apart, and they both being
public men, through the entetfotence
of evil-disposed people, became very
touch estranged. Jones tOt tolainly
that Johnston was more distant to
wards Mm than common, and asked
him the cause. Be did not explain.
but he said that donee bad been band^
liBg m name in quite an ungentle.
manly manner s though bo refused to
telt brs author, J ones utterly denied
basing ever said anything in dispar.
agement of Johnston’s character to
any person; for he said he knew
toothing against him aoy way. Johns
ton was incorrigible, and all familUar
Uy between the two men and their
families ceased. Mven the neighbors
took sides, and the difficulty WAS ai
ways the topic of the day. A year or
more pasaed -oT, and no signs of
friendship werovifible. They always
spoke when they met, though very
•oddly, andirife Qoe ehltry afternoon Johns.
and a small daughter!
were going home from a long hot
drive.’ The rokd ran some distance a
long Jones' fence. Now, Jones was a
.neat farmer, and took a great delight
In raisihg fine delicious fruits of varU
©** sorts, melons, &c: ttis orchard
Was right on that part of the road or^
and ho and bis wife were in the
ch m near the fence as Joiltton
Came up. A cold nod was all he did
or would allow bis wife to do, aN
though she and Mrs. Jobes were fors
tnerly schoolmates, and were always
On ‘ the very best df terms, and the
bold nes%Mjth eir husbands cut them
to 5 fhe buggy drove by,
m i passed little Sallie
hat nice, large, red
l c on0 V ver J gruff
'
to hush ; but there was
one near by f bat he could not control ?
add thatwas Mrs. Jones. “Stop the
buggy” said she, “Sallie must have a
ant Ralf nothing you have
on or family,” said
J< P Johnston then took
pkf for all a fond moths
*e stirred in her heart
whan JHAWW how kindly Mra. Jones
had noted, and also many of their
romps and plays loomed np in her
like a living panorama. “Mr.
said she, “it is useless to
m bo foolish. Let the child have a
CARNESV1LLE, GA. OCTOBER 12, 1878-.
peach.” By this t!ime Mrs. Jon'eS was
there with a dozen of the finest kind.
When she shoos: bands with her for*
mer playmate they burst into tears.
Silence reigned for some moments.
At length they began to talk. Johns**
ton was Astonished. All he could
he could not feel angry. Jones saw
the situation in a moment, and hfr
termined to make capital of it. He
disappeared for a lew moments, and
returned with an exceedingly
melon. Mr. Johnston,” said he, let us
be friendly and as we used to be.’>
Johnston, then and there surrendered
“Agreed,” said Johnston, they
hMd, . . *- a f •“*.•■ -.J Hw ■■ Mw Mi
? a ", lh ' s ’ tlwir J 8 ? fen ® w
ftdS - They aUeroatel y Ia °g h « d
. d <or ’ ettWe J""®
cr ‘? 80m - 8 cat U>®
“®' on > and 88 they ate it and
J ° hn6t0D declared it to be the beat
e ?? T ta8ted- ® ot there was a
th "“ s than that-peace. While
Were talkln g » bhsty thunder storm
° am0 np antl droro thom a11 t0
Jone6 , dwellin g> where they
agreed next morD ‘"g tbat they
8 P ent a more P ,easant evening. Prom
d,sturbance V? at time the afterward family visited and no
marred their
P e Now, ^* J 0ar 1<eatier whenever yoh
J i
. # calculated
coIdn , f an between in S to create a
c* s yod And
P erson » bo oal W» and bo certain before
^ beC ? m6 ^ 6l l ° Weigh We **
the evidenc e> taking the source it
^om, the promptings thereto,
and ^ de8,gn ° f the per80n aI1 iat0
® on / ,deratlon > and you will very often
find Jt t0 be the ba8d tbat the ^ is 110
rea S round for a difficulty. People
WlU tatt,e ’ wlU g &nera lly also
^ 16; &nd b 7 P a J in 5 ^°<>d attention,
they Cau often be det0cted - If a diffi
C “ lty D0ES abtaa,, J occar » tben ^
b ° 8pokeQ of as aa possible As
LITTLE “ poBsibl0J and as favorably
as possible. We all have felings^ and
one has his Ot her own weakness J And
such being the ease we ought to bear
with one another. If we have been
wronged, it will not mend the matter
to often speak of it j but we will for
get it the sooner, the less we speak of
it® if others have trouble with each
other, let Us by all moans endeavor
as far as we Can to reconcile the par¬
ties ) and on no account let as stir up
old h heartburnings and bickerings,
Let us Jpeak right and act right
ward God and toward man, and it is
our opinion that it will be very
dom that we will get into any diffi¬
culty. When a fuss occurs we often
think of the copy; “Be kind to
and you may expect the same;
Elbert Co. CttAFTSYiLLE.
HuM l5g district.
Editor Eegister Allow us a
small space in the colnms of your wide
spread Journal. Weather ignite cool’.
—Politics hot.—Think some of the
Independents will melt before the
fifth of November.—Muscadines and
Opossums are ripe, and the hunter's
horn is now hoArd.—Cotton piclung
is the order of the day, and a brake
down at fright, of course.—It's a girl
and Buss Walters is called dad.—We
read the Toccoa Herald, and are glad
to see the improvement made by Mess
Wilson & Stribiing, but sorry to seb
t h t ltt esent
occasion inff
ents ought to move the trash from
before them and probably they would
find a snake.—Mess. Charles Bruce
and G-. & Whitworth have been on
visit to their brother and^^ brother-in
law in Hanks county, in the neigh¬
borhood of Burns Mill, and say all in
that section are for Billups.—Bill
Barker, a colored preacherand sttimp
speaker for the Bepublican party of
South Carolina, says that every negro
and Bepublican in Georgia that don't
vote for the Independent candidate
Ought to be hofse whipped. NoW do
you hear what Bill baB to say, Dem¬
ocrats?—We ask some of t|ie Inde¬
pendents to tell Us why nearly every
leading Badical in the Stave is Work
ing so hard for the Independent can¬
didate ?—Away with yofir Badicals
and Independents and ic| f end a
man to Congress from tb. i Ninth
with a Clean shirt and a cro an con
scieoce»—Hurrah for Billups;
Shall the CdUnty Site be Moved?
For lo, these many year* the citi¬
zens of “CarnesrilW'aUd their neigh¬
bors have done all in their power to
build a railroad to their town; First,
They worked hard And subscribed
liberally towards bringing the “El
berton Air Line” by their town.
Secondly, They agitated the question
of building A branch rOad to connect
with the “Northeastern." But alas,
it has all been in vain; The bills on
the one side; and the distance and
rivulets on the other side, all con¬
spired against them. ’ And it really
seems that after all, their tidble and
generous efforts must fail; that they
must be cut off from the world and
doomed as it seems to be a lonely
.City on the hill. Wbat then must
they do ? I would suggest that, as
they Cannot get a railroad, tbat they
consider tbe question of moving their
county site to some eligible point on
the “Blberton Air Line.” I am in¬
formed that a place could be selected
that would be equally as near the
center of tbe county as the present
location, and to say nothing dispar¬
aging of the ancient and honored
site, lam sure a place much more at'
tractive As to beafity and symmetry
could be very easily selected. I am
aware tb&t it Will be bard for some i
of th6 citizens to give np their
material prejudices—besides it will
militate against thqjr pecuniary in
terests, but that will only be tempo**
ary. Let us then for the futhte good
of the county and for the county
J pride tbat beats in every brbast* do
away with these ideas and consider
1 calmly and dispassionately this im~
jportaut question, From what I can
gather, the expenses of the move
county, will be cp^par|tiv^ly it has afrefrdy light 'Wf*®** on
as
new jail, and very soon theCottrt
House will he in a very dilapidated
condition. With these ideAB I l$are
the issue with you, hoping that 1
may hear from some other pen that
iB inore deeply interested thru your
humble servant.
Pro Bono PubticOi
“Martha, does thee love me? J ' asked
a Quaker youth of one at whose Shrine
his heart's holy feeling had been offer¬
ed up. “Why, Seth,” answerd She,“we
are commanded to love One another)
are we not?'^ “Ah, Martha, bht does
tbee regard me with the feeling the
world Calls love?” “I hardly know
what to tell tbee, Seth. I have great¬
ly feAred that my heart was An erring
one; I have tried to bestow my love
on ail; but t may have sometimes
thought, perhaps, that thee was get¬
ting rather more than thy share/’
Leisure, the highest happiness on
earth, is Seldom eojoyed with perfoct
satisfaction exbept in solitude, tndo*
once and indiffereneb do not always
afford leisure, for trne leisure is fre<«
queutly found in tbat internal of re¬
laxation which divides a painful ditty
from an agreeable—recreation; toil
some business from the more agrees
able occupations of litbraturd and
philosophy.
“Do not marry a rtidower," said
the old lady; A ready-made family is
like a plate of coldpotatoes," “(3h,I'll
soon warm them over,” replied the
damsel, and she did.
• ' / V
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_
Occasionally we hear of a wise
man making and bis Appearance in Wash¬
ington, then we scan the papers
to see what lunatic asylum he escaped
from.
When Emerson recklessly rtfote ev¬
ery natural action is graceful bad he
ever seen an angry woman throw a
stone at a cow?
Yeung Swell; “1 should like to have
my mustache dyed.” Polite barber .
“Certainly, did you bring it wit
you?”
VOL. 111—NO. 46
m
Support YoHr Couftty Paper;
The Louisville CourierKjoUraal
“One of the first duties of a(
9 od citizen is to aid id sup*
his SoUUty paper, for that pa*
per can do more to promote the morn
intellectual add Material, Interest*
his county than any or all other
agencies. Show us a county Which lib 1
erally supports’a good hewSpaper, and
we will show you a county rtfao&’S
people are intelligent,enterprisingadd
prosperous. A good newspaper ffodr*
ishes only where the people df thd
county are known abroad fof thei?'
prbhpefity in ail the pdrsdith of life
About the best county to move Irod
i8 one which does dot support indif=
’foifehtiy Us nei»*a*ir. Abdttt mml
county to move into ih
stippoHf and sustains its newspaper*
Good folk, for gold or hiro,
Uttt help mis to a crier,
For riijr poor kdart is mil AJav,
After two eyes that passed this rtay;
It is a wounded heart,
Wherein yet stioks the dart;
Faith and truth writ round about it*
It was a tame heart, and a dear,
And never used to roam;
Bat having got this li&unt, I fear
*1 will hardly stay at hdme.
For God's sake, walking by the way.
If you niy hoartdo See*,
Either impound it for a Strafo
Or Sehd it back to iho:
When ah artist climbs over a ienbd
to get a nearer View of a handsome
bulldog, he must take the chances of
his sketching the dog or the Jog’S
sketching him. r,
Probably at the last artful day;
when Gabriel sounds his tfhmpet;
if he does not Stop onbe ot twice be¬
tween thd blasts, auJ Say!” shout “fteneral;
General, Colonel, t not mord
thah two%fifthsof the hlen in Amen**
can Cemeteries will get np
Mr. Bifell attempted to kids A V°hbg
lady At a pic-nic last week, but Stum- 1
bling he fell dortu. The giHft now ball
him blunder-bliss.
Cucumber socials are in Order, ti
ybii like to go to cramp meeting*; Thd
agony is in tents.
When an accordeon has wdrtfed
its way into a pawn shop its redeem*
et does not live.
The label upon a bottle ol Sgdd
remedy, requesting the patient td
shake well before using, is SaperffuonS;
Did yoh ever see a cow Slip?—tlx.—
Yes, and we have seen a bull doze; tod.
Did yoti ever see a btlck Saw?
Hort to raise beets—take bold of
tbe tops, and poll.
A man who owes more tbati Be
can pay Is naturally more-oeC.
----»- ■ ■ ■■ - 'fiA
The Cincinnati Times wants to s£g
tbe Bdft strike somebody of its siZe;