The Cherokee advance. (Canton, Ga.) 1880-19??, June 23, 1881, Image 1

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TH ECH EROKEE ADVANC ‘noth* y»H emmt «mI 4m rig** <‘SF At 4% VOli *. CANTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE », 1881. I T* . v, NO. 13. V1UIIUUII MU. Mix lots of iMd, 40 SCraa in each lot nod aggregating 940 acraa, More or left*. *n two »uiU'f* Hickory Flat, and on main public road to, Atlanta from CantiSi. About 65 aoreain cultivation, tlie baUulcu lienvv timbered hud*; the soil ia rich and produce* well, lhi* land will be ••>ld cheap for the Ca*h. Remember, it is Immtj limbered and probably mineral, For further particular*, address Tna Advarck, Tbit Va« 1, 1881. Canton. Uu. Vtu TO XTUTBODJ, A BeaUfttl lagk <Wr Ihe Aaklwg, 4l)c 4l)troku 2»buanct. L. J. Oabtrell, ATTO UN BY • AT-L A W, 8* WHITEHALL ST. ATLANTA,GA. Will practice in the U. S. Circuit and District Court* at Atlanta, and the 8u* i pnane and Sa|>erior Courte of the State. ■*»Mr office of THh SINUEtt MANUFACTp KINO do. (or by postal card if at • dh taace) any adult ptrson will be preseat ed with a .beautifully illustrated copy of WjffieW IA<*k entitled nKJtimvii MSMsoffn, —OB III- 8TOKY OF THE snwiiaiB, containing a liandsome aud costly stetl engraving frontispeicce; also, 2S fim-ly engiaved wimk! cm*, and bound in an elaborate blue and gold litliogrnplied cover. No charge whatever le made for ihi* handsome book, which can be «>b- tanied only by application at the braucb and suUirdinate office* of The Singer Maiiulacturiag Co, THfiT RINGER MTO. CO. Principal Office, 84 Union Hqore New York may 12, 5m. NEW DRUGSTORE I HAVE OPENED A NEW AND splemlid stock of pure, Ireali Drugs iii imT l»rick Iniuae in at door oast from Mc- Afeu'* bid stand. I shall keep a* far ua iMesible every aniclr kept io the liar, and if fsti c-ifl itt illy EttiA don't find what you want I will order it lor yo|U. I shall continue in the practice of .Ifed (cine ami Surgery m before, and take this opportunity to think uiy manv friends for whom I have pi act iced for tlie la»t thirteen years, for their confi- dem e and patrenage. and ask llut con tinu nee or tire same; al«o I a»k tin- pne ties ot all who may feel dlspoaad to give roe iheir patronage. I respectfully ask the ladies to cull and uec'ipy Perfumery and Toilet goods. I can Ire found at my •tore wlieu got professionally engaged, rc idy to wait you Very respectfully, JOHN. M. TURK, M D. ’an. 13, ly. ako skmatorrihea. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY —: BY:— MARSHAL A. THOMAS. Aasa Inalai vtlh suo- . 1‘uUosuua MmIcIu*. > ars «u*.rtiu: from ttir«>*imU | of a dtoooss Ikal ultta Us *W- ■ssosllf corod. JSSkss pSwaU 4mH*( trial- “"•far H. W. Nrwuan. Jro. D. Attaway NEWMAN & ATTAWAY, ATTORNEYS* AT-Tj A W. CAM ON, - GEORGIA. Will practice In ilio Superior Court oi Cherokee and adjoining counties. Prompt attention given to all busineu placed in, their hands. Office in the Court House. Apr. 29 tf. Dr. A. H. Parker poll at cm on and vicinity, idenoe on Main Street. Office at Ida ri * B. F. Patrk. P. P Di Pikk. Pajae i DiPie, ATTOR N K Y8* AT* LA W, CANTON, - GEORGIA• H. H. McKntyre, MrUk^ F hulwlNg f 8T0NE WORKMAN, CANTON, CEO HO I A. I AM FULLY PREPARED TO DO any kiud of Masonry or Plastering, at tu« , LOWEST POSSIBLE RATES. And.sflicit the patronage of tlmaedesir ing work jn my line. Jan. 18 ly. If. H. McEN TYRE. J. M. HARDIN HOUSE, SION, CARRIAGE and ORNAMENTAL PAINTER. FRESCO and SCENIC ARTIST CANTON, G HO U CIA Jan. 18 ly. INDORSED BY * PHYSICIANS. CLERQYMEN, AMO THK AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE, THE GREATE8T MEDICAL TBIUMPH OF THE AGE. SYMPTOM* OP A TORPID LIVER. Xiom of »ppettta.Nausaa,b«iwl» oosUra, Path in tnsHaad,with* dull .snsstlon in iE. btok partTPain under tha aSouldar* blade, fullnee# after eating, with a dtatn~. clination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper. Low eplrlte. Lose of memory, with a feeling of harm* neg lected some duty, wearineea, Diulneee, Fluttering ortho Heart, DoU before the eyes, V allow Bkln, H eadache, Heetleee- neee at nigbt/blghly colored Urine. it thxsx wAumroa art uxhixdid, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. TVTTS TILLS are especially adapted to each rase.,one dose rsci ti .iit-ha t liunge r as to astonish the snfTerer. ‘rente the Appetite. midcsuM tbe •he om rink, thus the .r.tem I. “d.suit by tlic-IrToalekrtlonon tbs a OrntHs. Wiseler ktoola ure |>ro- 1«* renin. U Hurra,' DM., Jtf.T. TUTT’S HAIR DYE. Gray Haim or Wn jmk rum cliaitgpd totOiosiir IILACK by ffi *1IItfl»* HMplh-tttHUl of this I»yk. It luiportN » na|ur»l color, tacts InstHiitMiiPously. Hold by Druggist#, or ae-nt Ly express uu receipt of $1. Office, 35 Murray St., New York. C kr. TlTTi a.M'tb ft VUiofcW l.hra.IU. ... a lutSl kwrlst. eW k* iuIM Fill -a ' -V; r . . c \ ^ •<: L ( ’^USlNFSSljNIVfRSlTY , ^ P‘,. - S s S c^, \'' TS? ' / v .^/r A! °o l Si ..<101 C * I A L • > G J f S toiec ink Subscribe far tha ADVANCE. Jefferson Davis will Make 1100,000 out of his book, Itesideu Staking a gr« at many people angry. The Rev. T. DeNVitt fortyfying the revised edtfios df Utc New VesUment by attacking it. ^ « ‘(/lei subscriber; “OFbit ars growling about? If you wanf au ar ticle that will cover the whole ground get a Chicago girl's Nmh-s.”—Boston Post. the Everywhere the discuMion is going forward ou the uew revision of the llib’e, and the numerous sermons agaiust it begins to give atgna of re* jt-ctioii by the majority oi the Chris tian sects, •<l. Lat m! 4 uoa»s«WM Iskssmwsfsf k» psi*ena . lMhwiuiW.tl.IUr.keWp ~ i P A popular vote on ins question whether the purchase of spirituous lib uort, with the exception of wine and cider, shail be prohibited, will b* taken in North Carolina io Augua- next. The wish often falls warm upon my heart that I may learn nothing h re that 1 cannot oontinae in tbe other world ; that I may do nolhitg here but deeda that will bear iruit in heaven. Says Henry Ward lit-echcr: None of ns can take the riches and joys of this life beyond the grave." Don't wan't to, sir. We'll take ours this side of thu grave, if We can get 'em ; the sooner the better, sir. A Boston company proposes to in vest 1300,000 in a ootton factory at V r tcksbit rg, M us. These daring Bos* ton capitalists, it is to be presumed, have notread Dawes on Mimiseippi outrages in Louirane. It isn’t public executions that are needed to deter people from the cotu, mission of capital offenses. What is needed is certuinty that every viola tion of the iuw will be puniahed. Public executions tend to harden those who witness them. This is in accordance with a well known law of the human mind. President Garfield seems to have been conspicuously right when he said, with refeienco to the present appointment system, that it “impairs the efficiency of legislators, degrades the civil set vice and debauches the public mind by holding up offices us tbe reward ot mere party zeal.” It it to be hoped thut a change will be effected ut an early date. wAi LsgMMlvc Farming We have read two or three articles la oar exchanges lately, which favor State legislation fur the encourage- Ment of provision trope. One wri ter proposes the passage of a law to Kempt from levy and sale, for three ytars, all provMnt crops, farm ililTKiIJlM**, «*>•. iM’iaf «he land Its lf ootton Mthe sole property hi • to exeomhsn for debrt contracted" the farmer. If each a law was pns6sd,mitl a distinct provision that it shall not have a retroactive effect, there would be no injustice to end- itors, and, so far as we o ut see, would be constitutional, since it would have the effect, only, of staying execution for the period suggested. The poli cy of such legislation is a different question. The legislature can pass laws that wi.l have a tendency to induoe farm ers toadopt a self sustaining system o! farming, aud wliiah will not inter* fere With the legal rights of others, wo hold that it is iu their bounden duty In do it. The object of all leg. ialutioh is the good of the people. The general government lor many years has practiced the “protective system'* of import duties on foreign goods, with the view mainly to build up manafacturi s in iliiscoutry, hut also, to’some extent, to benefit the farmers, especially the sugar and wool growers. The principle is thus pretty well settled that it is tbe du* ty of government to legislate for the protection of the great industrial in terestaf the country, and if this is true of the general goyermneut, it mast also apply to Btate gover* SMS^yxcept where it is expressly VvDhibtlaAJo Um» oonsUtatioa of «4« We arrjft disposed bsIWve, a*A yet ashamed to confefs it, that the farmers of Georgia »:uf of the South by their tvprrantatives in the legis latures, should put themselves uu di-r some kind of legal restraint or system of bounties, by which they will lie induced to refrain Irom fol- lowiog tbe ruinous policy now so generally practiced. We are not wise enough to say what should be the provisions of such a law, but it should not to the extent of actuul prohibition. With (he experience of Georgia farmers of the results of the lien laws, enaoted soon alter the war and wise-, ly repealed several years ago, flesh in our memory, we are inclined to the opinion thut the laws for the collec tion of debt will afford the most promising field for legislation of the character proposed, We have given the subject but lit* tie thought, and merely throw out these suggestions to arouse thought in others.—Christian Index. •• - “ - •• — IIJU. Tha Tnsa Fhllaanphy sf Marvt-} An OM NT*. Young people marry thair oppo* •ites iu temperment and general character and such marriages are generally good ones. They do It instinctively. Tim young man doe** not say, **My Muck eyes require to bo wpd wjtlt, b\ue and my nver*ve* ified with Hotuewlmtur dullneds and reserve.” When them oppo sites come together to be wed they do not know It, but each thinks the other j tut like himself. Old peo ple never marry their opposites; they murry their similars und from calculation. Bach of these two ar rangement* is very pr^pey. In their long journey these opposites will fall out by the wav a great mauy times, and clmrnt thu other hack again, und by and by, they will ho agreed as to tho place the^ will go, and tho roud they will go by und both become reconciled. The man will he nobler and larger lor being uss>)ciated with so much humanity unlike himself, and she w ill be a noble woman lor having mpubood bosid* her, that necks to porrect her deficiencies aud supply iter with whut site lucks* if the di versity be not too groat, and if there he reul generosity and love io their hearts to begin with. The old bridegroom, having a much shorter journey to make, must as* sociate himself with one like himi self. A perfect and oompletd mar* riage is, perhaps us rare an perfect psrsooal bcaaty. ifteaaad svosnen -frail snap has *Mtr Ht/thfffi'Ffrt It appears that this plantar had been planting Urgely ot cotton for several years and buying bis sup plies ou time, Falling behind avery year until he finally got behind about eight hundred dollars. He went to one of hit creditors and proposed to give * mortgage on his whole jffanurtoh ff K trmffd funiish film a nother year'll supply, and in settlement ol the $8(Vo, which the creditor agreed to do, am| after the pajairs were signed the merohaut said to (he planter: "Now, iu the fall, when you get your cotton ready tor marked bring it in. I will give you the highest market price for it to softie this claim.'' But the plauter replied'that* he was not going to plant any cotton, Nhich seemed to astonish the mer chant, and he asked: ■ "Hew do you expeot to pay this claim ?” "I will plant grain und try a new plan. I can't got out ot debt hy plaiting cotton, but keep getting deeper in.” The farmer wont ahead and plan ted his entire crop in grain, and Li the fall when he had harvested his crop he found that he hod enough to pay his mortgage, and he came out about $800 ahead. Under the caption “A "Model Farm,*' the Monroe Aav<?rtiser asys: "Mr, John P. L*>, who owns ,u farm mostly within tbs eorperale liMifeef Foray tk, threshed his small * tOBI/ MUrfafcU Pa. There is no reuson to doubt that enough money h»8 been stolen from the U. 8. Government by Washing ton officials, since the war, to have more than paid the public debt. The men who have been foremost in these rascally raids, have been loud est in their declarations of the dan gers that would result from a Demo cratic triumph. They are sincere. Such a triumph would result in great danger and inoonvenience to them. This fact will! account for Grant’s anxiety to see Hancock defeated, Grunt, the mendicunt and tramp, has made the discovery that Carl Schurz is a carpet-bagger. Tbe old Seizer bragged in a half-witted har angue, deliver-d in New Jersey dur iug the last Presidential campaign, thut he himself was a car|>et-bagger. His recent reflections on Schurz, then, amount’, to a declaration to the effect that the German is as mean a creature a* himself. Schurz i* doubt less a very poor sort of a white man, b’i' it in nonsense for Grant to be trying to write him down to his own ow level. The uiitutorrU mind has often a short way of tuking hold of great trutba wlrioh men of culture might well covet. Here is an illustration touching the order of nature. A minister asked an old negro his rea sons for believiug in the existence of a God. “Sir,” said he, “I have been here going hard upon fifty years. Every day since I have been in this world i see the sun rise id the east und set in the west. The north star stands where it did the first time I saw it; the seven stars and Job’s coffin keep on the same path in the sky and never turn ont. It isn't so with man's work. lie makes clocks and watches ; they may run well for a while, but they get out ol fix and s'and Stock still. But the sun und moon and sturs keep on the same way all th<-‘ while. The heavens de clare glory "of God.” r l he thri/ing town of hllberton, Ga. tried o sm*|Fort t /o piqa-r* and fail ed. at d in c-uiseqlienee the Vt-ws und Gazette hu^e consolidated. are married fractionally, now it small fraction,'then a large fraction. Very lew are roamed totally, nod they only, I think, after aoase 40 or 50 yeura ol gradual approach and experiment. Huoli a large and smeet ft uit is a complete marriage, that it needs a very loog summer to ri pen in, and then a long winter to mellow and season. But a real, happy marriage of love und judg ment between a noble man and wo* mau is ono of the things so very handsome that, it the sun were as the Greek poets fabled, a god, lie might stop tho world in order to feast his eves with such a spectacle. Prejudice Kills. "Eleven years our daughter suf fered on u bed of misery under the care ol several of the best (and some of the worst) physicians, who gave her diueaae various names, hut no relief, and now she is restor ed to us iu good health by as sim ple a remedy as Hop Bitters, that we had poohed at for two years, be fore using it. We earnestly hope und pray thut no one else will let their aick suffer as we did, ou uc- count oi prejudice against ho good a medicine us Hop Hitters.”—The Pare n ts.—Tele gram. Private Secretary Nichol went to Garfield ono morning recently, and said: “Conkling says he wants a chance to look you in the eye aud tell you you are a liar. How much louger, General, are you going to stand Ihis sort of thing?” And he re ports Garfield as replying in those deep gutteral tones thut he uses when most excited : "He wants to look me in the eyes, does he? Let him come into this room, and I will look him in the eye when he comes in, and give him hy hoot whon he goeH out.” Troubh- that has been bruin ' si iuv time is hard to bear. for braovs only a hundred acre*, and on it ha plsntvd earn, oottoa, oats, Nh-aty bash* «ta. Hi* small graiu crop amounted to five hundred bushels, and only about fourteen acres were nwo. One acre yielded one huudfed and ten busnela of oats* After cutting and feeding his stock on oats for six weeks before thresh ing, he harvested two hundred ao|( eighty-five bushels of shelled oats, lie saved one hundred and two bush* els of us pretty wheat as can be round. He sowed one quart ol Dallas wheat sent out by the Agricultural Depart ment, and notwithstanding it was eaten by a liorre, be saved twenty* five quarts. He lias also saved bar ley and rye for sowing purposes after feediug bou .tifully while green. Mr* Lee's success in farming, we think, teaches two tilings uery conclusively. First that tsis is a grain as well as ft cotton country. Seasons are not any more propitious for him than others, yet he succeeds iu making a bounti* ful supply, not only Tor his family und stock, hut he annually fattens a number of cattle, making the best beef we get in the market. Seoond. He does not buy a pound ofcommsr- oial fertilizers, und thus demon-- strates that the arguement of the ne cessity of guano is to a large extent imaginary. True he plants less than twenty acre* in cotton, but he make! nearly a bale per acre and nothing paid for guano. Hie farm is raadft richer every year, because the crop# are rotated, good, strong manure is applied, stubble is turned under and care taken to prevent washing* lit naea tbe best agricultural imple ments.” Most of the German emigrants are between twenty-five and forty yeara of age—the most yBeful part of life—a large majority of them are men, leaving a great surplus of women in Germany. They were educated at the expense of the gov* i rnment, and many of them leave without refunding tho money. In tlie lust decade, it ia stated that enough able-bodied men have left Germany to form three grand army, corps.