The Cherokee advance. (Canton, Ga.) 1880-19??, May 05, 1881, Image 1

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CHEROK ADVAN I • *' ' J di t i, ; All Ml ! and dm rtf/M ‘*T MM I/DM «MI Ml N, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MOANING, MAT 4,. 1481. ' — ■« ■ ' ■ »*V-e* -ft f < A Fot-nge Famine. Tiipothv hay is now selling in 10 ' Atlanta at $1.7/) a Umpired pounds, iind is vory scarce at that, and .Iso. 1). NtTXWktj & ATPAWAY, a?:toB\ets.at.law. cAxioti: - - - bKchtnrT Will practice in tlie 8 ipcrior Court of Cherokee and acljoi -dug counties. Prompt attention given to nil liusinc>a plnccd in their hi nds. Office in the Court House. Apr. 29 tf. Dr. A. M. Parker ‘ duo the practice, of Medicine an vicinity. Office at Ida rea- JPuHr P. P UvS'k, at Cuitt *Q a idenca on M«tn H. F. Payne. Payne A DuPre, A^QKNKYd.AT-LA^, CANTON, - GEORGIA• H. H. McKrityre, Urick, t**u»i«rlnK and STONE WORKMAN, CANTON, GEORGIA. I AM FU/.LY PREP All ED ’ro DO any kind of M.monry or Plastering, at tin* LOWEST P08SI1JLE HAVES. And solicit the pattouage of those desir ing work iu my lino. H. H. MCENTYRE. Jan. 18 ly. J.'M. HARDIN HOUSE, SIGN, CARRIAGE and ORNAMENTAL PAINTER. FRESCO and SCENIC’ ARTIST CANTON, GEOKGIA Jan.18 ly. NEW DRUGSTORE I HAVE OPENED A NEW A AT) splendid stock of pure, Iri sh Drugs in my hriek house text door east from Me Afeu's.nld stand. I shnll keep*as far ns possible every article Kept in the I rug ’in., and if you oil at my Store and don’t Ilnd what you want I will order it lor t oil. , , I shall continue in the practice of Mw\ iolne and Surgery nr. before, nnd take this opportunity to think my mam friends for wli >m T have pincticed for the last thirteen years, f r llteir eonli- dencc and patronage, and ask i he con tinu ncaof tlie same; also 1 ask the prne tice ot all who may feel' disposed to give me their patronage. I respectfully ask the ladies to oall Mud see my Perfumery nnd Toilet goods. I can he found at my store whan not professionally engageu, ready to wait on you Very respectfully, JOHN. M. TURK, M I). Jan 18, ly. TUTTTS PILLS INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE. THE GREATEST MEDICAL TBIUMPH OF THE AGE. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of appetite,Nausea, bowels costive, pain iii theHead,with a dull sensation in the backf part, PaTn under the Shoulder- Blade, fullness after eating, with a disin clination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper. Love, spirits, Loss of memory, with a feeling of bavin* net lected some duty, weariness. Dizziness, Fluttering ofthe Heart., Dots before the lyes, Yellow Bkih, Headache, Restless- ness at night, highly colored urine. IP THERE WABHI1J0S ABE UNHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. TUTT’S FILLS are especially adapted to such cases,one dose unotuwli a (Hang, of feeling as to astodtyh the sufferer. They Increase the €■» ■■ I lie, snd cause tbs body to Tahe on IlfK. Dims the system Is ssonrtslied. and by UiflrTo.iie Action on the Digestive Organs. KenplarhtoaU ureom- duced. Price g eents. WjlsmC *«-. W.T. TUTT’S HAIR DYE, Quay llAianr Whisk*b» elianged to a mossy Bi.ack by asiiude application of this Dvk. It Imparts a natural color, nets Insluntuiieoosly. Bold b,DrngKi»i»,er sent by vxpr<*»< .,11 recei|4 of |l. Office. 35 Murray St., New York. —. pf YaluabU laronaallen Bad | ■U wW to ■■Mrd lllfi mi *Thr)ce tinned is lie who hath bis quarrel just. ’ Ami four limes lie .ho gets his blew in Just. Barnnni ittyd thgt a circus iqan who won’t Admit orphans free cun never hope to go to HeuvenF ‘•Rock Me to Sleep, Mother,’’ was composed by mi old maid who never rocked u baby iu all her boru days. Lady millionaires in “Yitmf>” lit up gaudy epeuiul railway oarriitgrs, and make everybody le«l humble iu that'iwuy. Massachusetts newspapers ‘are to %e prohibited from publishing mar riage notices in the future, because marriage is a lottery. Motto of the good collector : ‘Never pufoff untill lo-mopow whn can be dunned to day.”—I’uiladel- pliiu (Jhronicle Herald. Judge Hunt thinks radical changes are needed in the navy. Mr. Hunt must first catch his navy. There doesn’t Stem to be anything left bin Officer*. A little girl being asked on the first das of school, how she liked her new teacher, replied : “I don’t like her; she is just as saucy to me ns my mother.” '‘’brilliant ant) impulsive people,” said a lecturer on physiognomy, have black eyes, or if they don’t have ’em, they re apt to get ’em, if they’re too impulsive.” The .San Francisco Bulletin savs that the Chinese do not manifest any great liking lor the Southern States. Tin* same might he said of several New England Senators. lieCHii#e married men now come down town with rents in their cloth mg and collars pinned to their shirts it is no indication that their wives are lazy.). It merely shows that the millinery opening are not vet over. An old bachelor, who pnr'icnlHilv hyted lileriiry women, asked tin ail- Midresg if she conJil threw any light on kissing. “1 could,” said she, look ing archly at him : “but I think it’s h tier in the dark.” Deacon Jolly remarked to a penu* rims companion that the kingdom ol Satan was to he destroyed, and Hsked him if lie wasn’t glad of it “Y 8.” lie replied. “I Sflppose 80, blit it seems a pity - to have anything ! wasted-” | “Why did General Washington | cross the Delaware on the ice during I the s’orm of an awful night?” asked a teacher of her voting class in histo ry. “I reckon,” piped a small voice m answer, “it was because lie want ed to get on tlw other side.” It lvqmVed u suit in a New York court to induce Cornelim J. Vander bilt to repay, a loan of -#25 which he obtained twenty-seven years ago, for the purpose nl treating seme ladies to a carriage drive and ice c;eam The loan, with interest, amounted to *G8 25. is Vory scarce growing scarcer. The slocks pt forage in the west are said to t>e , Exhausted, and them is therefore I rospoot of higher prices still. The uittcr lias already become serious, iMioft ffs-vi diei'So hwvgw o-amt U* all business enterymises requiring horse labor. The crop* of oats and wheat will he sniallev than iwtial antf the straw will not supply the deficiency. We have, therefore, a long season ahead, until the middle summer when forago bogins to be gathered, of a regular forage famine. The matter demands remedy us far as possible. The farmers should pay cspocinl attention to raising large and rapid forage crops. Wo. especially recommend the immedi ate planting ot peas on a large scale. In this way a vast'quantity of rich quickly grown pea-vine hay can he Vaisod. The pen that hhs been found most suited fortius pur pose is tho clay pea, so largely us ed in north Georgia, Tennessee, Louisiana, etc. It has almost driv en out tho other pous. It covers the ground with a lingo mass of vine that grows rapidly and cures easily, and the stubble turned un der. makes an admirable fertilizer, formimg n splendid basis for after crops. It can also be planted iu the corn, nnd shades the grouud ( neutralizing drouth, and tho fact that'Tfv^ift YttirOTilhw (torn gives it a special value. * Something should be done, and wo urge some such course as the one herein sug gested.—Constitution. faffMtt as a Huslaeiw. — 11 lowing from the Haiti- in/Ffe^yfie Guide,- has in it morw n poetry: enting upon the failure wspaper manager, tho St. lobo tolls a plain truth in owing words: “Tho liiisi- lounmlism will continue to ^ L^VV.LM'".'H4s to ‘l»o^ who haven largo amount of agotisif A limn, who, having od- ited a newspaper until he was for ty, should suddenly announeo him self a Nhvyer, would ho regarded as a fool by (he legal profession; and yot \vd often hoar of lawyers of for ty mamng such pretensions to jour- nalisq|, There is an idea that the busiiiqiwof editing rciftiires no ap- prontigpsliip; that editors come forth ffom law offices and colleges fully (gfiued for tho profession, like Fallas irom tho brow of Jove. It is a miktako ; there is not iu Amer ica toJttiy a single journalist of na tional Reputation who hns* not de voted ihore time nnd more hard work tA his profession than, with equal fitness and application would have nfcide a great lawyer or good doctor/ And vet ninety out of ov- i*ry hti§dm*d men.you meet on tho street will hesitate about carrying a hod or making a pair of shoes, whereas there will probably not bo 0115 in the hundred who can’t, edit ai|y newspaper >h the couutry better than it is edited, no matter in wh«t manner or by whom.” State UepmCtoriaa. ’ ' ; ■ . IV^ 1 .1 !■«-• j Banks which da nob want Hie. state’s fund need'- aot4ffto tlKiu. If their assets and nunagemont is not of *tt. bharacter sound and largo enough to assure tfloir'^tlieVde’pOs. itors. fitch they had bettot let' tltom alone. 'Plmt the lutV mlgtd ‘bo amemled so as to-make tho bonds deposits bold, wo suggest. Tlmt this bond sboiild be United Status or Stale of Georgia bonds wo think would not be amiss. The funds, however, with a good personal bond, nnd the BUpreme court decision to hack it, are sate, providod the governor exercises common forethought in his soloe- tiAns. We fool confident that tho depository act has acted beneficial ly for the entire people. We be- lievo it 1ms made impossible much chicanery heretofore possible. As such we ara heartily ip favor of it and cannot ugruo with tho officers Of the State and souo of our'con temporaries iu crying tho legisla ture made u mistake. There has been no mistake in this not. in the selection of the banks it seems tlioro wevo two mistakes, nnd thoso the governor can best account for. Tho others, wo haVlTcVefy reson to be lieve, are strong, hightoned insti tutions, which can stand the prior ity decision and ne honestly glad of it.—Columbus Enquirer. f .i men urc so eager to 11n'n. A. H. Stephens recently took .Senator Brown, of Georgia, to Bln- dVhsbnrg, to show him the duelling ground there, saying there was no knowing how soon he m«ght have occasion to use it if the prest nt prac tice of senatorial remarks being mis- undeistood in debate continues. Tlie Pence Period No, the country will not be sav ed by rakiog uj> ami proving one outrage more or less against the South much as one might infer from the current remarks ot repub lican “statesmen” and organs. The surgeon’s knife has cut out the cancer which was sapping tho life of the republic. This is a time for healing and the iitteruncb of those things which mako for peace. True, the politicians wish to ignore the clear truth of the situation and manufacture of “issues” to cover a scrabble for a few offices ; but tho people are not deceived, Notfi the drift of public sentiment us you find it on the streets and in the cars. On the theory of a popular superstition the ears of certain sen ators ought to itch painfully all the time. The word of the people to the senate is that adopted by Ush er Syntax in “Cinderella at School” —“Don’t frivol so!”—Springfield Republican, rep. Under the heading “Labor in Houston County,” the Peiry Home Janrnal says: “In the superior court here last wetk there war a case in which one farmer prosecuted anoth er lor hiring a lartti hand thabwus already tinder contract for the year- The jury gave a verdict for the plain tiff, und tlie court imposed^ fine of *30 and costs. Without touching the merits of this psrticular case, we desire to give expression to a few opinions in regard to the effect upon farm labor that a system which al lows coni tacts to be violated with impunity will produce. The case cited brought on prominently the fact that there is in force a Georgia iaw that forbids any one hiring a laborer who is already under contract to work for some one else.” Why make money is a problem; they certainly do not spend it freely. They care nothing tor tho good things of life. They seem to val ue money for its own sake. Most men stavt in life with a bright ob ject before them, the means of at taining which is money, and so they resolve to make monoy. But tl'o means push tho end out of sight. A new fascitiation springs up, which banishes the younger dream. Tho real pushes the idoul from-,its seat. Money acquires, or \ seems, to acquire, a value of its own; it becomes both means and end, qnd making it grows into a habit seldom lost: Tho proverb says that “Use is second nature and it is fully proved, when the natural aesire of men for happiness is obliterated by the habit of mak ing monoy. Wbaueng out Tools,—Farm tools will rusi out sooner than they will, we^r out. Many tar (per ■ injure their Win" implements more by eX- posttre To I he than by An implement which with good cure * e ®PP* n would last twenty years, when expos ed to the weather, becomes useless in five yeurs or even less. A farm curt which, with good ns 'would lust almost a lifetime, will Inst only a few years, when exposed to the weather. The explanation of ih» reason why farming does not pay witli many is found in this neglect to take cat) of the farm tools. All farm implements ure costly, and the farmer who has to buy three or four times as many us his neighbor be- j cause he does not take care of them, rot course will not -find much profit in farming. The same carelessness in any other kind of business would insure equally as disastrous results. ... AoUwMggmiSftt*.. .Georgia noeff^a’Ye’w Legislators f wfio are bold enoil git to UVe a' it,a«(l for retail^ lejjisWtjjpn. It need** protection against,the plying ot tbo* game of lottoj^ |\vipdltng in tbc #tote. r It needs additional, aafeguards thrown aronnd Lba 1ml-r lot bbx. It Hoot Is - to Uavo * vlua-p, husbandry delivered from the ,V« tut placed iqr*n it by worthless *ms. It needs protection for tho young against tlie gambling bells that uboutid In our cities. It needs pro tection for depositors against the' “operations” of bank managers. It ’ needs a check to the growing cviIb" of intemperance. It needs tin ac tive, intelligent, well-sustained system for the encouragement of. proper immigration. These arc, some of the needs of tho State, and wf trust there are members of tho* present Legislature brave enough to meet all these wants bf the State. The summer sossiun will afford them on oppertnnity of doing much gpod, in the interest of the people: 1 and wo trust they will acquit themselves like men und patriots.' —Sparta Ishinaolito. Skmatou Uhown’s Changes.— • “It is said that Mr. Bvowa, ef Geor gia, believes the democrat leadership of (he senate may make him the pros, idea tin l oh nil td ate iu* 1884. lie ought to know that ns mb ever* stepped from the senate into the. presidential chair. Destiny Is fegeinet* him. There has aeser been a pres I-, dent by fire name of lftiown Y, Tribune. Mr. Brown probsihly baa no such ambition, hut strnnger thi( Helping a F<llow Up. Tommy is tugging away at another urchin who is pitifully crying on the ground. “VVliat are you doing Tommy?” “O ! only helping a fellow up.” That is right, Tommy. Now, take that as your motto through life, to help a fellow up. There is that drunkard who is down through drink, and there is the man who is po.tr, or sick, or tempted. Give each u hand, and help a fellow up. What would become of Martin Luther, when lie was a young man singing in the streets for his bread, if some one who hud an eye tp ob serve him and a heart to (eel for him, had not put. out a hand and helped a fellow up? There are thousands to day who never could have stood where they nor are it Iriendly bouIs had tot extended aid und helped a fellow up. “Do your best” is a good motto, but the trouble is that many people wont even try to do their second best. There is u Indy in Calhoun coun ty, III., who, although seventy years old, has recently married Iter sixth husband. Her last deceased husband was named Knee, and the man she has just married is named Farris, a romantic feature of her Iwst matri-* rnoniul venture is that Mr. Farris was her first love, but fate interven ed and prevented their union. All of her dead husbands are buried in the family graveyard upon the larm on which she resides. Fine weather prevails throughout tiie country, and the appearauce of the crops is rapidly improving. It is now thought that the wheat crop will exceed five hundred million of hnsnels—or more than was ever pro duced in one year in this country. Other northern crops are looking well, and in the south there are no grounds for despondency, provided the Mississippi can he kept within its artificial walls. If crops are good, the times will be good also. The most conscientious hotel pro* prietor in the wdHd lives in Elber- ton. He will not sell even a cigar on Sunday. Asa rule the flower of the family does nothing toward providing the daily bread. presidency. Because a tnsn has not hitherto stepped fiom the senate to» the executive ohsir, that is no rsason why it may not bsppeh. Became there liss never been n president by the numu of Brown, the ohanees are greater that there Nill tie ose.—Au gusta Chronicle. M iss Moseiy, a domestic in n fam ily ut West Middlesex, Fvnn., (lied sudden ly a few weeks ago. Her fam-j ily had moved to Missouri previous to her death, and she wus giveu a respectable burial by her employer, Friday some frieuds arrived from Missouri to remove her remains * to the west, und on opening the coffin today it was discovered that the young lady had been buried alive, while in a trance. She had awaken ed in tlie grave and turned over on her side. She was lying face down ward, hands clenched iii her huir, and her distorted features pjtunjy showing the intensity of the suffer? iug she hud undergone. Advertising Cheats. It htiB become so common to write the beginning of an elegant, interest ing article and then run it into Bomo advertisement, that we avoid all such chent8and simply call uttention to the merits of Hop Bitters in as plain honest terms as possible, to induce people to 1 give them one trial, as no one who knows their value will ever use anything else.—Providence Ad vertiser. f Only One Remedy. Neither the earthquakes, nor the western floods nor the death of thq sultan of the Sodoo islands, no.r the. appointment of Marcellus Thprutoa to the clerkship in the department oi the interior, has had any eftVct on the Senatorial deadlock. There seems to be only one desperate mmedys Mahope must call out a Democrat* Senator und kill him.—Angus* Evening News.