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VOL. 1.
.Kill A'f* ,Wli*J ^iSlGIA, IfetiKV ¥OTl?<b ^BkUATtT c V^ 1 .
g*-,4^^#"--4=rt
Cl)t <£ucvokce 34wnct.
OUTFIT Til
1*0 Vi »M : .flab *S '•, ti •
! o^l j*qt<I t »m* *dj ^woit !>©.?»! «t ni*4
X .T V* uwmliLiw ftiO in aJnoin
VS
punished every Friday
® 1 <
BEN. F. PKttttY.
OOLD.
Spr* HJIOY
• >jd^ J
Out iiitiiecxdd uoWl’iU wtwnlarlWt niton*,
IYr fnnu »y fri«*da'an4 ftt'dflbnimf
hoiMi*:,
Far from the scene* of uiy cudriaood K>
d<
^WW «WhMftfr l <
Georgia AUvt <**:."
9Mcial>4br t tcttn Chmtofe County
, , .11
Single copy, one year,
“ “ ^ix months,
“ tkiao rnoutha,
Postage <ft»-
tir JT
1 00
so
.30
Advertising IUt<s extremely
■low—to aim the iiu>t‘«. M j£J
ou I MR
tnue;
Once,
Otioe, Oli
For jah-aemo
*«*>«
and hi
aWd I *
1 - l WiAI|tMhfiHf4fc tnouotonAflD 1 A’fho f 0 n 0 \vipjg we clip from the ,u 1
the.pojwaiMP^nHfllWrnlt^ I had Ma^#«T|oui«SttrfWaWil ttlt//
¥ W4ore 1 solid n»
>«; • t : r . • # **,f !
id. pleaHuroofl honor, I grew;
it theWprirttasanarrowfultone,
leiuo lnu^ieM ads atoti uduw la
rri mo))*
Cliibtkm at one time l fondjedj
Wbeae urn ttiey unml with li
Lkoal advcrtismert* inserted and
•■charged for «m proHcaitied by a reci-ut
-act of the (jeneia.1 Assembly. *” \»
Postponed legal advertisementsoharg-
<cd far at the aamerntv less 20 per cunt.
Local not lees Itteeatu pe- line tortlm
first insertion.
Advertisements will tie run until for
bidden. unions ot'hanw&sv marked, and
■charged for aocordoDglij.
All commanicationa^utemled for pub -,
dication musttiewr tlioamnu* of the writer,
.not necessary for publication, but as n
.guarantee of good failh.
We shall twt In anyway be responsible
for the opinions of'ocntributors.
No commuaication «wrill be udmittod
into our coluuius having for its end a
-defamation of private character, or in
any other way of a aowrrilons import of
{public good.
Correspondence solia'.ted on all points
-of general iiu|»ortanoe —but let them lit
briefly fo the point.
All cominaaicaitiooc, letters of btwi-
>nes8, or money remittances, to receive!
prompt attention, xutiat be addressed to
BEN. r. iPKKBY,
Canton. Qa.
A4l'! ( n member toy f»o<ir*vifiB bad died;!]
Mvwilf and my tww *i«*ns -stood close by|i
her side; ' f
fs»le; took both tlxir bauds, uud whisper*,,
ingsaid— [dead.
Tace care of thy latherA*Jien mother U
The bomcf toad I gase them ; itwnd alt J
could'give; **
Beneath its obi roof they said.lcould
live,
lie t soou h change -oaaie, and, I,ipoor
and old,
■Was turned fixsu its'threshold out in.the
cold. ,, ,
#cntrxl IBkcttorj).
futiier, forgive them the deed they bays
done,
t bough ,tlicy ^ave plunty and ! have
none; '
Though their old father is left all alone,
Far .Tom the asses he doves, faV from hk'
home.
^Joon the cold water* of death rippling
»»y
Will waft my frail spirit to regions <>u
high;
There will I meet -my dear children of
old t
That once turned their Hither out in the
cold.
OBEYING TO THE I.ETTEU.
UY liEN' WJLDE.
fHI/AfJKV.
3VI. E. Ciiuhcu, 8ow®n—Rev. E. K.
Akin, Pastor. Pieachicg every firat
Sunday by the pastor. Preaching on
the 8d Sunday by Rev K E Ledbetter.
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night.
Sunday School at 9 a. u.iBeu. F. Payne,
Superintendent.
Baptist Churcit—Rev. J. A. McMur-
ry, Fastor. Preaching evury second and
fourth Sunday, and Saturday before.
Suhhatb-school at 8 p m., B. B. Tuggle,
Supeeintendcnt.
Oft OEM
F. A. M.—Meets every flret and third
Mondajfa.at 8 l*. M., in Masonic Hall.
Jabez Gaiot, W. M.
J. W. HunflOK, Sect’y.
co rjrrr officers.
O. W. PUTNAM. Ordinary.
JABEZ GALT. Clerk S. Court.
E. «. viRAMLING, Sheriflf.
JOS. D. DO®BS Treasurer.
A. L. KINNE l v r, Tax Collector.
J. L. JORDAN, Tax Receiver.
Wm. T. KIRK. Cor<^r.
W. W. H WKINS. Surveyor.
C. M. McOLURE, County S. Com.
Du. J. II. SPRIR, ]
M. A. KEI! H.
Rev. M. PUCKET, }
A. T. SCOT r. i
J. B RICHARDS, )
County
Board
of
Education.
Head Tube.
SVe want correspondcnls at e»»nli
loeali'y in the county who will .-eotl
Uii every week items for publicotion
Any one sou'lling ns such will rec> ive
tlic Arvanck free of nil charges.
Win> will !•■• thf’drut to accejit ibis
offer ? Won*' \on, kind reader, send
ns something lot ,</Ul ih'Jt ipsiltf Ij'otn
uni in') orhoyd
My father thought that '‘pay as
yon go” was good udttioe to me when
it left home.
I had been brought up to^elieve
that whiR my father didn’t Know
wasn’t big enough to ifind without a
i*(K) candle power nncoscope, so I
took the advice and put among the
curies of life
When 1 reached the irailroud sta
tion, and a brakeman, who seemed to
l<e employed for his health rather
than for his usefulness, told me to
purchase a ticket, I said^
•“No, sir, not till I go; I pay as I
80"
A writer from liiaganiawysi Thog<
who want to see the. Worses hue Fulls
ant
a d
P*VP“
* 'to® , upon lh« a.ia
era. we do n«l iieikiva tmM » i
material injury to home t
Itt RlMleU ll9iI»lt(XiaUll«M)'a» ; ‘^ ( j 1-
ahairftivF'tr, biHAAi i*T o fl . v * * - * tTlll * > ^ ok M r f ; in8 ' eHd of Mm Am. n .it
m gJVrMfin'ld'inf •» he miereWtMIkklki^MiT#port printing patfQfniJU*
bin HmptyswhekkotkRlWr to muka, ™"***'' nesiklW f gttr^^<&»¥A, )
•Tvtand not .Hk. than •UlttlclMp bow aw »!„, —J.:.
.. - T -—*— lo »vork one vttai ftRWb''lblHWl and
time
I did, too. I paid the conductor ;
it
and it cost 10 cents more than
would to have paid before 1 went.
Bot 1 had implicit faith in tny
lather’s counsel, and clung to my
rule.
0k reaohing my degtiuatioa I en
tered .a hotel and registered. The
clerk, a pretty little lellow, who
seemed to be employed to advertise
the different perfumeries and cosnset
ics and to put in his leisure in whist-
li.jg through bis teeth to the bell
boys and impressing strangers with
the fact Unit the hotel could afford
to employ a man who had a past-due
mortgage on the northern hemis
phere and- was negotiating a loan
ofi the sou them, asked me how long
I «ha going to stay.
1 told, hi Ml a week.
“Twenty-one dollars.’’
•*Y« e, sir,” I answered, *‘that’s all
l iglit. 1 pay as I go.”
“Any baggage ?”
“No, sir. - ’
‘Then/said liv, ‘you must pay in
advai ee.’
•tin , ~ir, tny rule of life is to pay
us I go; i will not pay as I conn.’
I2e Oegnsi eiusing my name from
the regifi/ci and muttering something
ah uu veg'-tables—beets in particu
lar—♦" hen I reached ov< r the conn
te) a n)
tny
letw't'eu his c- i;llal-hiv puMfd bait
, WhM . A.-»jftWK' , U
tlK*y are at lib.u hWItl* ‘hWt uWu i
urrMngemfcKfc)* 4\t4 M* WPh¥itird
by tlisttfpphoakitsM|NVM>)f Mil chil
dren, tu the usaSMt* of' clothing and
truining. Schoiditff-4«( indndsd in
thd west, xsiki^iidWoolKiA* theahiys
shouUl.be sv«G 4# Min public, solmof
at least ihiavi VK|04<m in i he yeur.
Should a removal Iheome necertary,
itoau be urjtHn(wd)f?v writtuag to the
coitmittee. The .^ocieU reserves
the i ight of mo^mf h V>y at uny time
foi'just causj*. , A/L the, ixpeusvs ol
Mansportatibib Aftt pawl by lhaBoci
ety.
like to proeore aome of these boys
il they will oonftitft f>r: StetvaVt he
run give th^^neceifsary
mation* * l ■'
Should any of our citkcua feel
that they could and would comply
with Mtc Tequirements, and
’’ft
of Naagava uiustpl faUcv, come out
socftw orlthoy will not able to
lorm an Idea of what It was, fbr 1
think is goflYg if) change its lornt
more quick If t au (t has for a cento
ry past. AUjendy a grent cUung-* has
taken place iu iLsappealnnce. About
two years ago (he «hoe was rent in
twain, and a vast rent made in the
toe of die cliff over which the gr.at
river falls. The cousequeuoe is that
instead of driving ..straight down u
circular wall of water, the course of
the column is rudely broken in the
middle, and a foaming torrent Col
lapses in a jugged gorge of »he cliff,
i thus splitting tha cascadejnio two homes.to those boys wltojMtve
f sides of a horseshoe, with acatarucj. gathcrefl froth thff IWnnern'
in the center. Much more mist, too, --‘ 1 ' 1 * ” 1 ** *• 1
is produced by the cataract thun was
formerly occasioned by the sheer full
of the horseshoe, and the view of the
falls consequently obscured.
The river nl'ght have fallen for
■centuries over this solid weir of
hardest schist; but u fissure having
been made in nature’s masonry, it is
not unlikely that the river will con-
tin ue its excavation, begun near
Lake Ontario, and do its work more
qu ckly than of lute. Now that a
breach has been made in the fortress,
it seems certain that the volume of
water, acting as u perpetual batter
ing ram on th; wall of each side of
it, would soon detach other portions
of them, u”d thus alter the whole
form and character of the famous
Horseshoe Fulls.
attfttlte pvfcpstfMlfccr^tioavyr *♦$)
in f>e primoofiadvtrMs—ruik, WMBkuoq
hiafcjhdtni oouapsHed lo UnUR*
Mint id trip • «|K>» \
upon ileMhiAg ngp»«a MtMn U ^
reoc mid a p^pos 4 tuf npnfcn If
*1 I
V
tun r a* < .
Xotcik
l c* mq ifiod v
t •♦a Ai-iml ijlLL ^
IsnT^n ▼ t ? f*nT
qS sho
Hi
rtn J v
teri
nimal.pt this seas n . sjiel
oubl be'BroviaMl for sf'nck ud‘
rlA,- . ...
aieu rt^riessal-y. All a/ilidAld
should hav^ fc|.Yftw ot MenVf’Ulftt' lli
\ipoh. Tliejr ifrWjdld ’-hati* n vrfflkty tlf
food, tar be ohWnged every' fpw j mi,
Water in wihtsr is* -very essr^nttnlflnvt
stock. Wafedmid food should bs fl««u
Wl| .niqhsd psgultrly. rL'tsysiiuuld.WM
If any oi wuv farmert would) i ropr, bi w «Hi ,4«d Aid.
high bred animals ur« qaes tft de
mand. • . *. , 7 ;o *
and cared for by the Children’s
Aid Soeity, they bavo a right to
make applioation Jo Francis Fon
tuiuc, Ueorgia Commissioner of
Immigration, 77 East Tenth street,
New York City, or »T. S. Newman,
Secretary Department of Laud and
Immigration, Atlanta, Qa. Since
the ubove was put in type we have
received a letter from the Land
and Immigration Department, At
lanta, which we present to our
readers elsewhere, and ask their
careful attention and kind consid
eration.
ELGQUEN< E.
Eloquence in a man is as difficult
to define as fascination in woman.
Is an indescribable something which
carries us uway captive, we know
or^aiiiz-d a collision between
knuckkis and a point, midway
not why or how. And it is almost
infinite in variety. Burke was, and
is, considered one of the greatest, if
not the greatest of English oratots;
yet the House of Commons never
adjourned after a speech of his to
enable the members to regain their
men cal balance. The House of
Commons did do that for Sheredun.
None will deny to debater first class
oratorical ability, yet he could never
sweep an audience with him as did
Clay. Burke and Webster will live
lorever in priut; Sheridan andClay in
that, fond tradition which is quite as
loiperishublc, il not as satisfactory.
Sargeut S. Premiss was pfobiblv
more eloquent than either Sheridan
or Clay, yet lie exists only as u dim
and fading memory. It is doubt InI
whether the very highest order ol
eloquence can h > preserved in any
other way. The subtle spun that
pervades it at d gives to it irresistible
power evaporates in type. The body
is there, but the soul bus fi d. 8o
t he grandest eloquence maybe said
to die with the breath t"at carries
it to tin- ear. Doniot'heins and
Cici ro—we rend them with delight,
but what mu*} tliev have be* n to
tlioHi- who heard the words ol living
fire rus * ,Irotn ilie speaker * ips.
The Price of Printing Paper.
A ariTAW.B texture for a hild-
luadeh j*. rs-'ii would bemo’lnur.
The present cost of printing paper
is one of the most mysterious results
of the recent business boom, and it is
a result that hns come to be duite a
tax upon the press and upon all pub
lishing concerns. Tne price has in
creased one third, and the advance is
purely arbitrary, lor there hus been
no corresponding increase in the price
of rags, strati or wo °d. Fortunately,
hpwever, it is in the power of congress
to come to the relief of both publish
era and paper makers, for the lattei
claim that owing to the duty on soda-
ash and other chemicals used lor
bleuchmg purposes they are compelled
to pay exorbitant prides put upon
these things by the home nionopiu-s.
They say thut il the duty upon these
things was moved or reduced they
could afford to reduce the price of
printing paper. Now, » tax upon the
puper manufacturers is really » tux
upon the p*-opie, uud congress cannot
too soon repeal it. All- bleaching
chemicals should be admitted doty
free, ami the duty or. printing paper
itself should be reduced from 'en to
twenty per centum. ’With tin- bleach
ing agents admitted free, no foreign
pa ( er maki r can afford to compete
wi'ii the America mills and pay a
duty of ten per e ntum. On the
contrary, the latter eould s nd their
paper :o foreign markets and success
!uilv Compete with Europeui* mills.
Tin* repeal ol tin- duty on bleaching
agentsai'dch rhiCalsVill *jfs.> remove
an on eons ihx upon the munnlal:
lUft-rs o| 0 lion line,,i good* .i nt. i t
g hiss ware.
IS i lin a- (he n w tp ip r c ■ -
Ceiled* in -r inci'e.tse • I iniriy•.niv<
per centum in die price of piniiag
paper is a dir. ct run] upon their profits
Cj,WM.Ni,pH<*l*K» .rr,Wllfa(<H»* . t
do not 1
coarse sand, being fee) lor ninoh
whole ct^rn will somctlh^^roauce
ea moifTf t
will produce cholera. The gas ftron
fermented manure piles will cause it.
If fowls drink filthy, stagnant water
for a length of time, it will produce it*
Wheat screenings containing muoh
smut will get lowls out of condition,
if it will not produce cholera, ftogso-
fimes when too many potatoes ar#
used with corn meal and wheat bran
dough, cholera will be pfodubed. Ia
using potatoes, add a fablespooofal
each of aalt Snd cayenne pepper to
two gallons of meal bran ahd potatoer
Warmth saves feed, helps fattening,
and prevent sickness among animal^
Damaged corn should not be fed to
horses, because it br.ngson inflamma
tion of the bowels and skin disease.
A successful fruit grower, plants
tansy at the root of his plum trees, and
says that be is not annoyed with
curculio.
Give hens constant access to lime in
some form. Hens must have the raw
material in order to man u fact ore
shell. They cannot make them owl
of nothing.
The best remedy for the sting of a
bee, wasp or hornet, is liquid ammon
ia, and nothing will equal its dila
tion in water in allaying the irritation
caused by mosqnitos.
* Sheep need variety of food and
freedom of action. In winter they
require shelters on:y against heary
ruins und melting gnowa
Poultry droppings make a valuable
fertilizer, and apnTied to cold, wet
soils, for corn is decidedly beneficial
When salt is added it prevents th*
manure from drying up burningthe ■» *1
plants.
Pear blight has been arrested, ia
isoiiic instances, in affected trees by
syringing thsm with a weak solution *
of potash, and i< lus proven a pro.
venlive when app’ied to the healthy !
•trees.
Hog* wlu-n nearly fat are liable to
have disordered stomachs through
over feeditig, I'ct'uefpg ther food. Thfe
b• st antidote for this is charcoal
Charred corn cobs or chaired Corn
have a good eff tv.
Parsnips, cun' .ts, tnrnipi?, and
especially maiiL'fl wurzels, will-all
tu 1 n ply*. \ ‘ **• >' ■ il»i» ■ i \
'IT,-i- M. .te ought not to be given |o ;
aw i always cooked and ” r :
um.v*‘(1 with !>■• , peds, corn, >^ts, or . ‘ !
barley; All wlfifeli mast be‘ ^rottiitl ’ ‘ '
T.
into rriee.l.