The Paulding new era. (Dallas, Ga.) 1882-189?, March 15, 1883, Image 2

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HldlHG 1 TCpW Fl'fl I TSio West End hyena, having j a cost of 10 cents per pound and 1 ” ' i done no the environs of that clas- sell for 8 to 12 eta. ner i nnn,1 ( done up the environs of that clas sic town, now puts in its appear- n,lce simultennously at several j places. Now iliis thing is becoin- Tlie hrst tiling yon know Allan- ! .. , , " „ .... . J __ i ing entirely too numerous. Evan Unwell started a little boom on the hyena tine over in West End tawill be trotting nut John H. James or George W. Adair for the unespind term. Ere the remains of oar late dis tinguished Governor were laid away to rest, the question of hit- successor commenced agitating numbers of the press and would be aspirants. This wub indeed bod taste. to help out the police force, and for tho setter preservation of his wood pile, duel en roost, otc., and now, characteristic<>f some men, they want to iniitute him. How ever, the experiment seems to worn well, aucl every man sell for 8 to 12 eta. per ] ound and meet your obligations. Itead the following from the South Georgia Clarion: “Bacon is now worth 16 cents on time. Tliut is about 25 per cent above the cash price. • Four cents for tho use of 1 r cents worth of meat fr< m 3 arch till Septem ber! The world stands umazed at such folly. Bight where the meat can bo raised and lms been raised, a continuance of such r cyistom is equivalent to suicide. Bob Toombs advocates Gover nor Boynton as the man to suc ceed the late Governor Stephens, so says one of the quills of tin Constitution. Well, wj don’t know but that Bob is right. There will be a meeting of tin Bepnblican State Executive Com mittee iu Atlanta, on the 15tl< instant, to consult as to the advi sability of Inaking a nominatioi for governor. Tho old corpse im agines it has been galvanized. Valdostp Times: When Toombs dies Georgia’s really great men will have all passed away, Cobb, Johnson, Hill aud Stephens have gone before. Toombs, likea state- ^ weather-born oak in a with ild atone, stands "grand, gloomy and peculiar.” The Piesident is reported to be despondent on account of bad health. Mr. Arthur has beet, living too high, he should be ad vised to edit,a country newspa per. Once more the denizens of the low lands of the Mississippi, in towns and the rural districts are made to realj^e, what it is to be flooded to death. Advices from Arkansas and portions ol the low er valley represent the situation as appalling. Men, women and children fleeing for safety to the faighlauds froig the great deluge of water. .We do most deeply de plore the situation. We were* just about in the act of going to press and suddenly wc remembered that we had not, in common with all other journals, made a Governor. The bent o! Pauldings gubernational inclina- tive tion seems to be Buconward. W< -are willing lo lent 'lie msttei with tlx convention si ihe bet-i exponent ol tin inoriti of the aevri-aj as|irit"t->. public benufuctor who mates two I The God of heaven frowns cIowl blades of grass grow where one on st c tricked extravagance.” grew before, or saves two shirts j Now this is the right kind o) on the clothes line or one spoekl-. talk with the in lit kind of “mini’ ed.heu on the roost where none in it. The Clarion is fulfilling As you live so, you die, trite but true. We evidently have our re wards aiul punishments iu this life, and according to a mans faith aud works lie parses from this stagoof action. It were bet ter, f ar better to bo a dead Steph ens than a living Ingersoll. Tho Cedartpwn Advertiser went off over to Cincinnati and arouudjd uring her short widow hood aud ret’il-us with all the ma terial for a now dross aud under wear. The Advertis r is now deeply wedded to the iuterests of Polk county, and by the way, is h spanking good paper for her peo ple. We merely,suggest, you know, to that sterling daily, the Atlan ta Post-Appeal, to take out the cut of Mrs Lydia E. Pinkhaui or that of Governor Boynton or pnt them on different pages of the paper,if necsssary to reproduce both at the sitme time. A cau.ial readerjmigkt get their biographies mixed. Never have we witnessed a more quiet or orderly election than this last one, and what is the more remarkable the issue in volved more than-any other per haps which has been settled by the arbitration of the silent ballot box in this county. In one sense of the word it was a strong pub lic seutiment arrayed against considerable * Capitol' invested here, and yet, where men gener ally manifest the greatest excite ment, in all elections where their business interests are at stake, our saloon men met the issue calmly, and no doubt will qi ietly submit to the decision of tho people. ., . ...... were before. A new era is dawn- in: upon us, Our esteemed contemporary, tbo Macon Telegraph k Messenger, is rather severe in its strictures upon, upon—well upon a myth ical clique that run down, caught and forced into office and sacrific ed the late Governor Stephens. Now, when wo consider the ever present willingness and desire of the late Governor to always be engaged iu the service of his countryi together with an nnpa ve lied, inflexible will power, great firmness, (sometimes called ob stinacy; nna WltTnil, Ins devotion to, and love of his native state; it is a very reasonable presumpt ion that ho was by no means diffi cult of persuasion, or that he went into office ignorant of the duties of that office aud his own physi cal infiimi ies. The.State Democratic Execu tive Committee, at a mooting on the 8th instant, ordered a conven tion of tho democracy of Geoagia to meet in Atlanta on the 10th of April next to nominate a candi date for Governor. Each county is entitled to four delegates aud each county is requested to select alternates and instruct their re spective delegates to vote iu the convention against receiving any one not rogu arly cbosen or that doos not live iu the county he es says to represent. Now let Pauld ing county Hpeak out and take immediate action iu this matter Let the Chairman of the Exeou- Committee call a county meeting that the voice of old Paulding be heard with the others in the selection of Georgia's next Governor. A remarkable laud slide thus reported by tho Washing ton Gazette: “Kev. Joseph Shan 1 *, who lives on Little ltiver, anil who is well known in Wflkes county, tells us of a most rornar- kable land slide on the river bank ou his place. It occurred during lhe recent wet spell. At the point at which tho slide occurred tho river bank is about low water mark. A body of earth ono.huu- dred and fifty feet long and forty eight /eet wide -lid from Wilkes into McDuffie oounty, or rather it slid into the river and changed the current entirely. The in >st of this slide is intact now, and the entire river is ou this side of it, whereas it was before on the other side. This slide parted from afield that was planted iu corn last year, and took off twelve corn rows and eight or ten goo I sized troes, one of the trees meaj- ureing two feet iu diameter. Most of t ie trees are now stau I- ing erect, but they are in Mc Duffie couuty. This is certainly a very remarkable land slide for this part of the country. Mr. Sauk says he has seeu a number of small laud slides on Little riv er, but never before one equal to this. He says that they some times make a loud rumbling noise, aud can be heard for a long distance.” its n ission for the weal of its pat- ions. Next read this reasonable and true prophecy from tho Sun, and meditate thereupon: “Every farmer with whom we talk asserts that be is determined to go his length in raising his own supplies,” says tho Hartwell Sin.. When t his purpose posresses all the farmers, Georgia will become more prosperous tlmu ever be fore in her history. There seems to be an epidemic of suicide iu tho form of a passive wave that is sweeping over the entire length and breadth of the land these modern tiinc-s. Thofe is a problem iu the cause that lifts not found a solution as yet iu the minds of philosophers. But aside from religious fixation and the many fancied wrongs that make tho countless thousands ironrn, there is a largo vein of “moral oli- liqity” that courses through the frame work of society uunoticod and uncared for, A Horrible Accident. During the illness of Mr: John Grubb, miller at Polk’s mill near Villa Bicca, his wife was attend ing to tiie mill for him, and last Thursday evening while moving around near a rolling shaft her lia'r w.is caught by the shaft, and almost instantly the scalp was torn off from fhe eyes over the head down to the neck. The un- fortnnabVlady is still living and hopes of her recovery are enter tained. Paulding Slwriff Sales. Wl!l be co'fl before ilie court lion*e dooi In Ihe town of Ddlue, Pamdi.g county Geo iris, ilnrin the legal leiir- of rill. , oil thellr.-l Tiie-cluy III April 883. Hie foilowiiur pro|niiy, lo-wli: Unr.lvl- di d ore sixth ili'en at In lot of lnnd No 3:8 in the tilth district tnd third mcilon of Pallidum couuty Ge'rgin, levied on us the property ol .1 T Beavers, lo Miti-ty a II 'a tunned from 12.Tub District. G \l of suldcouiiiv. In hivt r ol K Williams, "Kuiimt .1 T lliaveia Levy made and re- tnriiid to me bv .11 A Da; lies L11 Notice given to tenant Also, at suiiie time and place, the In* lere.-t of Hinali W nlinvcn Martini WII— 11 it it in mid Smalt lYuison, In loir of land Nos IlfHP-lllbl and’.S41 id 3rd Dlst’ct an.I llril see)Ion o Paulding county', On is the property of Ninth W'ulravin ilar- ilui W. I i Inn if and I .in nil Pentium to sat isfy a II la issued ficm 1083 District G d of said con lily,In I’uvor of J- hn Wal ls vs J M liUtvciencc n 'm n stiator of 11 0 Lawislice deceased, Ivey made ;tal ret' ri id l.. me by .1 If Blalock I. G Notice cl veil to unnnt In |M>-e-sluii Also, ut the a me lime and p ire .he l ouse on tola No-, one anti two in Id ck H, ol the new survey, at the depot between P 3d Ca. tor's gin hose iod J B Coopers sto-e hnr.se, in the •mu ol'Llallas, f’nuldirg county tie i> satisfy a Fi l a i.-sunl from IO8O1I1 district f» Mol sail county, in litvor of C C S-oirel apaiuat t hurley Mel vin and said lioues. i cry no de und re In med to me by J S Adair L. C Nolice given lo ten iu: in no e sioii. na: it a cooped • beiiff ( bi.las Ga, Feb 28lli 1883. Good roads is one of the great ost nocesssties to tile advance ment and progress of the busi ness intortstsof Dallas at present. No town will prosper if the pub lic roads are neglected, and this way overseers all over tho country have of rushing over their section just to make a clean report at couvtis certainly very detrimen tal to the business of their r - spechve towns as well as the roads. N. W. Roberts & Son, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS, — AN D— Dealers in Wood Burial Cases and Caskets. Orders promptly filled day or night. Soliciting a portion of your patronage, we are very truly yours, N. W.EOBEBT8& SON, Dallas, Ga. Dr. Wm. C. Connally, Practicing Physician In all the depart ments of mcciciue ami nursery. Amply supplied with all necessary means anil npp'iauco* lor the relief and cure of sut- cring humanity. Ofllceni the Dallas drugstore. Resi dence ni'po-lte Ciirlbtlau Hotel. Alwayi raady for ilu y, jiin’y 83-tf On every road loading out from Dallas m >y be seeu wagons laden with guano, but as yet our peo ple have not contracted that su icidal policy of carrying along with the stuff the fateful “ti ne ratiom. When that time comes woe bo unto you, farmer. You cairiot raise cotton exclusively at Notice! Having gold out e-y business to Messrs Springer & Haines I have turned over to Mr T N Sanders all work on hand to date. Parlies owning these watches ate hereby noti fied that they must call at Mr. (San ders's store and p»y for the repairs wit-1 n thir.y days from this dots, or die watches will oe sold for repairs W li dale Dallas Ga March lu 18S3 m\ LOOK! LOOK! -FOR THE— NEW CASH STORE RAWLS, BROTHER & CO. We have just opens* • tnupftte Meek ef Off Goods, Grurirc, Hardware, Titian, (Merr, Etc Of all kinds suitable for the country. WIE DEFY COMPETITION All we ask Is s trial to prove that we art;ready and able to Sell as Cheap as the Cheapest. •9. It. T. BHOW1M, Stovea & Thrware,- AND CONTRACTOR FOR ROOK ING AND G UTTERIN G, DALLAS GEORGIA, (Shop on northeast cornel- public square in old Masonic Building;. TTnvIng purchased Ihe business of Mr. John Anderson,In the nbnvo line, I take pleasure in itnnoimcllig to the piddle that I have a lull stoek of tinware and stoves, whit’ll I propose to sell cheap. I uni also prepared to contract for doing roofing mid guttering. Repairing a specialty. All work entrusted to me done promptly and In the best workniun-like uiniiiicr. Give me u trial. Cm 95 s-K M £L ? H 1—* 92 £ bi * s s g. p » H O g m ^ -A. ^ o 0^0 o M o Me f-K OQ M 1-3. I- - ^ P |l39S3Bsl o Come One, Come All, Aim sna ron TOtmaaisvat. WK MAKE A SPECIALTY OF FAHMIXO IMPLEMENTS. We Sell the New American Sewing Machine. “ Ho! Every One That Thirsteth 1” GO TO THE TRIANGLE BAR, On Main Street, Near Depot And drin^ pure Win©!*, Luj'iore and bra ;h lies. We have alwaya on ha ml the b*. st brunils of Tobacco and Cigars* —AL«0— - t n\t kssnikst nr mcrnmim. Evcrvtlihing guaranteed. Po ite itfention given to customers. Call and see WEAVES k STRICKLAND. THREE AWARDS and *. GOLDAXEDAI* AWARDED THE tmiM B, y. II. It'D SEWIJit BACHISE CtlPASB Tliei International Cotton .Exposition ATLANTA, GA., 1881. Which is ONE award more than was given to any ether Company, and the GOLD MEDAL is the only Medal of any description award ed on Sewing Machines. SLTTITERN OFFICE NO. 5 PRYOR ST., ATLANTA, G A BRANTLEY, ATKINSON * CO., Senoia, Ga. More Popular than Ever! • * * Aeoent Improvements MADE IN THE White Sewing Machines, Adds much to theg Many Excellent Qualities or thb SUPERIOR MACHINE It is an especial favorite of the la dies, tailors ami others who use then for the many sdvairtimes it possesses over all other sewing, machines. Every vvhhe Muchlnr is warranted are years tinU n written warran'y given to each purchas er. The public are solicited' to examiue them b note buying a machine. J. D. & T. F. SITH, Wholesale and Retail Dealers, 59 Broad St.