Newspaper Page Text
" 1 TT7 ••c
.
. A A tC. CWb
; i j\
m
*n
v> raw w jj f , Pen-
Tfor j I tli
A
ipholl wa
’ ( i r of Obi
I Deni iti d
that w ; and, a
ed a r ation a
co, when he wanted it,
i t when
not want it. ' i0
v ill
T -r
Id I —. legated to the
rear un ?n
‘ V lit corn
T n when we have
we will feel ) j n -
wo: ;; who
pr ( i n t., or
Ivor c 1-5
Last :ll
hV itil lift tg eanvi l th
and banl f our tc n to as
how much cold coin w s m circu-
iation. \\ r vor did anything ot
ki and chall n Bro. Craig
or any other man to she nv that we
did. If we had, though, we are
satisfied that we would not have
found any.
Bro. II. row - n r, proprietor of
the banks ( ountv U niette, is
ing that paper for o. He
it is a splendid outfit—8-et
Washington hand press, a 32
job press and plenty of type and
other material. Ho says a little
cash will buy it, but applicants
must write or come quick, as the
oifor will not hold out long.
The Gainesville Eagle says the
special Congressional election in
the Tenth district will bo the first
bold under the new registration
law, and its workings will be watch¬
ed with interest all over the State ’
If there is any friction the Legis¬
lature can patch it up at the com¬
ing session, which convenes two
weeks after the election.
A telegraphic dispatch sent out
from New York to the daily papers
announces that one day last week
an agr< m nt was signed by repre-
sen ative^ of the Macon & North-
ern railroad bondholders and Mess.
(horn as tv By an, under which the
Macon & Northern will become a
S ' 11 * the reorganized Central
hail road A Banking Company oi
the Georgia system.
If the business men of Atlanta
m general propose to follow the
example of the Consolidated Street
Railway company in doubling its
fares during the approaching Cot-
ton States- and International Ex-
position, they will v “cutting oft
their noses to spite their faces,
The number of visitors will be very
much reduced, as people do not
propose to be gong, i in any such
manner.
THE “LIGHT” QUESTION.
Bro. Craig, of the Gainesville Ea-
glo, copies a paragraph from the
Elliiay Sentinel asking him to
plain the recent gold bond issue
treasury deficit. He says
tho Sentinel, though a Ropuhlica n.
is iar mor. me st than some
ocratie papers, because it asks for
light. H 1 then savs that “the Toc-
a W S “ '* ' k«\eland Progress
wouldn't v lavedone tlia ; they
neni light; they know it all now.”
Bro. v r aig does us an injustice
hire. YVe are free t( oo-nfess
we don't “know it all on tae ^ cur-
reney or any other question, and
are ever willing and anxious to got
lighton all matters; but we will
not commit t f a !'\* a , H '\ o PnU . '
nol bv calling ;ignt on tae i
cial question i a man win 36S
not know tb< 2. r
rod m ptiou im >y >r me ii-
nai payment and simple legal ten-
der and curren ippipi m, >v. We are
persuaded that the less of that kind
t>r “light * wo have the better. When
w 1(1 that we are i>*r>*. vul irlv ;..
*
,
qUeS n we
i-liuu , , cvitaum in,
ci ip some one
to giV' ;i to us whom we think is
ceficr.lated to do -o. If W0 were in 11
. , . ,
*’• thlVtv arid unknown forest at
AAn ' WC do kr-w much Lev-
*
pvot■ u* i i \ nrance froiH the light ot
- lire-11 v \ hut would want ‘ and * ea’l
K *■”* 'Uii' tiling lift ... IN, lumiil-
a more
hie < NVICT QUESTION.
will expire
. - a s the At-
t n , y i j pa-
\v eighty prob-
t is probable
present Le-
1 A s < ember,
II'V steps
.1 \vl ill l)e done it is im- !
w
i Cl- 1 to predict, and it is diffi- |
cult i,,. to w decide ,vm,. upon the heist ...___ peni- ___
ntiary system for Georgia. It I
nmy h - tb at the present ' lease sys- '
V *-'1
tern will be greatly modified, and
tbat a reformatory will be esta'ir
lished for juversile offenders. The
quest ion of working the convicts
on public roads will also be duly
considered.
Intho Northern States a great
outcry has been raised against our
methods. The Northern newspa-
P 1 rs tako it for granted that a chain-
gang is necessarily cruel and semi-
barbarous, and that the prisoners
are badly treated and are at the
merev of furious bloodhounds and
V; inch' -Tors In the hands of irre*
L onsible guards. Numerous sto-
vies of outrage and torture have
i. • -n published, but it has been as-
cortainod after careful investiga-
tl )ii that the Suets \\0ie grossly ox-
112 ' rated. While we are not ad-j
*oc " i; B lili (r anv particular ‘ system it I
. °"}y id jUSt . t0 tnUt ,
18 !‘‘ Ur n ' Saj f
aruie the lessees , of p the , convicts
treat them humanely. Self-inter-
est alone would cause them to keep
the prisoners in a first-class phy-
sical condition, in order to make
their work profitable. When cases
of oppressive cruelty are reported
and proved the offending parties
are punished and removed from
office. In all penitentiaries there
are occasional cases of cruelty.
Such cases have occurred at Joliet,
Sing Sing and other prisons, and
they always will occur, whatever
may be the system,
It is impossible to have a perfect
penitentiary system, but we believe
that our Georgia convicts are in
the main humanely treated. The
winter session of our Legislature
should investigate the matter and
study the penal methods of other
| States, with a view to collecting a
mass of facts which will throw
light upon the subject and guide
the next Legislature when it takes
hold of the problem. It is safe to
say that \here will be material
j changes in our penitentiary system,
I but what is best to do with our
convicts is yet an unsolved prob¬
lem.
So far. only fourteen counties in
Georgia have secured apace for
coun ty exhibits at the Cotton States
J i an j International Exposition at
Atlanta. They are Randolph, Mer-
riwether, Clarke, Bartow, Worth,
Greene, Polk, Sumter, Gwinnett,
Cob T Dodge, Glynn, Haralson and
| ^ i0 y<b
_
Speaking of the approaching spe-
’ cial election for Congressman in
’ the Tenth district, the Augusta
Chronicle says: “That Maj. Black
desires a fair election he has de-
j monstrated by his resignation ;
that the Democrats of Georgia de-
sire fair elections they have shown
by passing a State registration law T ;
that tli© people of Augusta want a
fair election is unquestionably true.
The way to get it is for the best
men to take part in it and control
it.”
| The Supreme Court of Georgia
has decided that scalped railroad
tickets are legal. During last year
p man named Lovejoy bought
a coupon from Atlanta to 'Wash-
mgton, over the Richmond & Dan-
v ille—the ticket having been ori-
gj na iiy so id at Memphis over the
| Memphis &. Birmingham, and is-
sue d for the G. A. R. encam T nent
iw, u ashmgton. . Tl The original pur-
chaser sold it in Atlanta to a bro-
I feer. Lovejoy admitted to a Rich-
moud & Danville conductor that
he b 0 ”«rht * o * 11 the coupon coupeii in i.i Ar.anta. Atlanta
He was put off the train, and in
hig suit got a verdict for $150. The
bu 1 ■erne Court sustains this deci-
sion.
There are twenty lawns on one
, ■’ce*t in New York, each of which is
worth XL 1>r * M'ebb l,as paid
vpykXOUO for his residence in New
York. J. J. As tor has given $1,000,000
il! jewelry to his wife. Miss G. Van-
derbilt received $25,000 worth of bo-
ing-out” from party. nabobs Ex-Secretary at her recent 3 com- j
who Whitney.
would like to be president, has a
ballroom in his house the panels of |
which cost $5.000each. Pianos costing;
as high as $15AHk» are common among won£
^is nabobs. At a recent opera the ;
en uelius s jewels aggregated $1,385,000. Cor-
\ anderbilt lias gates from !
Fra mv * J, one ,rou * tbe wes B a ffarden-
. Berlin .
er man and plants fromItaly, i.
At the Bur leu-Sloane wedding there
were DO million: ire-, with the aggre-I
V>» A tA .000,000. I
Letter from Hon. f.oms Davis.
l>rf/a«E ‘ikSTvis
to a friend in this city, giving-his views
on the financial question :
Pekih. Oklahoma Tor, Aug. 22. DO,5.
I <ee from the Toccoa paper that Hoo. TIoke
Sm tu will address the citizens of Habersham
county, at Toeeoa, on the 31st inst.
Seeing the item referred to. I iuld not re
frain from dropping you a few lines in regard
to what I believe to be the mad important is-
sue ever presented to the American people to
decide.
How it will be solved will depend largely
«P<>» the virtue and intelligence of the
pie. As for my self, I take lit tie or no stock
deeply i^ted in any^n* of so mud!
vital _________ importance r _________ as the one „___,,. which from the
v
papers to . be agitating
seems the public
Georgia. Because in it is wrapped up the fu-
turc shuffling of the state and What shall be
her future position among the States of the
Union, and especially ti c Southern States.
The fight going on between the 10 to 1
pie and the conservative, common sense busi-
lie s public for sound money and honest priu-
ciples is being watched with interest through¬
out the West and the South. Whatever
Won Georgia takes in regard to this matter, its
influence will be far-fbaching in her own in-
ternai and domestic aftai s, either for weal or
for woe. I have the utmost confidence in the
honesty and intelligence of her people, and
that her actions will be guided in this matter
by a close adherence and observation of her
own motto, “Wisdom. Justice and Modera¬
tion,” and thereby she will preserve and
maintain that high standing and reputation
that is so justly liers, as being the first and
foremost of all the Southern States in those
matters which reflect the highest advance¬
ment of modern civilization.
I cannot think that the people of Georgui
would assist m putting a veto upon the rising
tide of better times. However, ldo not for-
get that the price of progress uml honesty,
* be lioerty, is eternal vigil mice, and it is oflen
necessary to keep constantly agitated ques-
tionsofal1 importance to the people, lest they
become care ieS s andIndtfterent in the general
"Torthis raasdtl, I hope you and all of the
boys have not allowed our Democratic club
in Toccoa to fall to pieces; and if you have,
don’t you think the sooner the same was rc-
surreeted the better? There will be work to
be done, and every person who is inte-ested
in the preservation of the- fair name and fame
of Habersham bounty and the State of Geor¬
gia wifi be called on to declare his position
and views.
As to myself, I am only sorry that I cannot
be at Toccoa when Mr. Smith makes his
speech, but I know he will find our best peo¬
ple in accord with the administration. I shall,
however, be '.n Toccoa between the 15th of
September and 1st of October. I am not at
this time coming home to stay, but I hope to
be. able in a short time to again take up my
abode among the old red lulls of Geoig'a,
where, 1 trust, 1 shall hereafter be allowed to
live and die.
Hoping but you will keep the boys stirred
up nnd posted on the matters referred to above,
1 remain, sincerely your friend,
Loins Davis.
Our Interests in China,
If the Chinese authorities persist in
refusing to allow the British and Ame¬
rican consuls to be present at the pend¬
ing investigation of the anti-mission¬
ary outrages in Kucheng, England and
the United States will probably take
joint action to protect the rights of
their citizens in China.
In this age of civilization the Chinese
will not be permitted to molest the cit¬
izens of friendly nations who are en¬
gaged in peaceful and lawful occupa¬
tions. It xvill not do for the govern¬
ment of China to throw the responsi¬
bility upon unknown outlaws who can¬
not be reached. The evidence shows
that f he recent outrages upon the mis¬
sionaries were encouraged by some offi¬
cials of high rank and viewed with in¬
difference by others. We have nothing
to do with the viceroys and subordinate
officials. The central government at
Peking must be held responsible. It
must grant redress or indemnity lor
the injuries sustained by our citizens,
and it must be made to understand that
our missionaries and other citizens
must he protected during their resi¬
dence in China.
England and the United States are
not likely to send their armies into the
interior of the Celestial Empire, but
their war vessels will make it very un¬
pleasant for the Chinese who are en¬
gaged in commerce* and possibly sev¬
eral ports and various tracts of terri¬
tory will be seized and held for a time
until the Peking authorities make
amends for the past and give a satis¬
factory guaranty for the future. Noth¬
ing less will be accepted. Two of tlie
most powerful nations in Christendom
cannot tamely submit to a repetition of
the outrages.upon their citizens which
have occurred and which are still threa¬
tened in several provinces in China.—
Atlanta Constitution.
The Origin of Jingo.
A correspondent of the Boston Her-
aid recalls the origin of the word “jin-
go,” now so widely used on both sides
of the Atlantic. Some years ago, at the
time of the Turkish atrocities in Bul-
garia, (so vividly described and so vig-
orously reprobated by Mr. Gladstone,)
the advisab i,it5 ' of En * iish int erven-
^ited . by Large
was a war party,
w bos e members were of all shades of
political opinion and joined forces only
on this one point. There is no public
quest . . England
ion m that does not
sooner or later get into the songs in the
music halls, and so one of the most pop-
ular singers of the day wrote a ditty,
with these Hues for a chorus;
We don’t want to fight; but, by jingo! if we do,
We've got the men.'wvN-e got the ships, we've
*,u. the too.
r Thiasong was received by the patrons
ot tbe mu& i c halls with every
Nation of enthusiasm, and the refrain
, 'i incK k found its way into the newspa-
P Ll '* An anti-interventionist journal
one morning contemptuously referred
editorially to the extremists as “jingo-
-> ^h. w„rii J nnt
v ' ard heard on the „ floor of f „ the ’f House of 1
Commons and quickly thereafter took
its place in the popular vocabulary, be-
; no ° - nresentlv _I_ =;imnlified ' ir>rn qinkt ^
°
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NEWS, IT IS
ON LY $ 1TEB YEAR.
Southern Industrial Condition.
t J" of’ Z'Zul 0*,tew^kU3i^
the 19th inst., the Chattanooga Trades- !
• man reports continued activity in in-
dustrial and commercial circles. Rail-
road earnings show satisfactory gains
over last year. The demand for lumber
i increasing, and prices on all stand¬
ard lumber have been advanced. Ma-
ehinery is in active demand, and an
encouraging feature of the week is the
large number of new industries report- '
ed. The phosphate industry is receiv- !
} nff in considerable attention, and inter- |
est the manufacture of cotton in the t
f mth *^ on cont ant ; n Sietd f s active ,s dna ‘ b The maintained; . deu,antl j
*
t bn 10 Tm» Jurnsu> 1 ) 0 /mC! cs and O » 1/1 nn rolling 11 .n,v mills '. 11 - being
taxed to their utmost to fill orders for
immediate delivery. But few orders
T arc being taken further except for August de- j
very, as a advance in prices is I
expected. Idle furnaces in the iron
districts of tlie South are being over¬
hauled, and several plants in Alabama,
Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee will ;
be , P ut ,n . blast within the next sixty ,
days. The coal mines are busy, the
fall business having already begun, and
the reports of manufacturers in all lines
0 f industry are favorable as to the pre-
sent and future condition of trade,
Thirty-seven new industries are re¬
ported for the week ending August 19
the most important being iron works
at Greenville, Ala., a sheet mill at Bir¬
mingham, Ala., a $100,000 manufactur¬
ing company at Hot Springs, Ark., and
a $50,000 oil mill at Charleston, S. C.
American Extravagance.
It has 1 oh g been maintained that in
the average American home the cost of
living-—that is, of the food supply—is
a t least 100 ner cent <Veater than it
need be . Experiment has demonstrat-
e d~this time and time again, but many
housekeepers, especially among those
" ba ' e the greatest need to practice
economy, cannot be brought to a reali-
zation ol the extravagance of their
manner of cooking,
In many public schools physiology is
now one branch in the course of study.
Tliis affords an opportunity for the in¬
telligent teacher to impart to our future
housekeepers some knowledge of the
relative values of food, and with this
knowledge as a foundation will proba-
bly learn some day to utilize many food
producers that are now wasted. The
cooking schools aredoingmuch to bring
about that time by showing us how to
! prepare appetizing meals from what
j our mothers would have thrown away,
|and also how in a pinch to serve the
j same article of food every day for a
week, but prepared in so many entirely
different ways that the head of the
house does not complain of a monotony.
—Womankind.
Dr. Gustavo Niederlein,Commission-
epffor ilie Argentine Government to
the Cotton Stales and International
Exposition, arrived in Atlanta during
the past week with the first car loads
of the exhibit of that republic. The
I exhibit has been assigned a large space
in the Forestry Building, and will be
installed before (be first of September.
This is the first collective exhibit from
a will foreign government, to arrive, and
exhibit shortly be followed by others: The
of Argentine includes a fine
display of woods, hides, fleeces, cereals
and other products. Dr. Niederlein,
who is Government Inspector of agri¬
culture and forestry for Argentine was
the commissioner for that country to
both the Paris Exposition and the
World’s Fair. The Argentine exhibit
has one thousand and seven hundred
different pieces, including one hun¬
dred and fifty different specimens of
fleece, five hundred of cereals, two hun¬
dred and fifty specimens of dyeing,
tanning and medicinal plants, twenty-
five species of snakes, and several hun¬
dred specimen* ef wood, in which the
country is very rich. Oil paintings
will also be hung around the walls, and
taken altogether, the exhibit will be
one of the finest at the Fair.
It is a very difficult but highly inter¬
esting undertaking which a certain M.
Mantois has in view for the Paris ex¬
hibition of 1900. He proposes to con¬
struct a telescope nearly 200 feet long,
with an objective glass more than four
and a third feet in diameter. By means
of this enormous lens he hopes to bring
the moon, to all intents and purposes,
within six miles of the gay French
capital, and to be able to throw the im¬
age of the moon, as it would look at
that distance, upon a screen, night af¬
ter night, in a hall holding half a thou¬
sand spectators. Astronomers in gen¬
eral declare that our earth's satellite is
I nothing more than a dead world. Ne¬
vertheless, the idea of viewing at com¬
paratively close range a lunar land¬
scape, even if devoid of all signs of life,
could not fail to prove highly interest¬
ing to the general public. It will cost
a good round sum and call for much
skill to embody M. Mantois’s plan in
actual achievement, but that there
would be “money in it” few will doubt.
A Waste of Money.
I he New N „ ork , ... V or.d ... has discovered ,
a new educational job. It says :•
In an interview to the Albany Argus
the state superintendent of public in¬
struction estimates that the introduct¬
ion of new physiologies into the public
schools will entail an immediate ex¬
pense of not less than $590,000.
This money might better be burned
for the good it will do the children of
the state. It will tie extorted from the
I tax payers under an act pretending to
! promote a better knowledge of the phy-
si illogical effects of stimulants and
narcotics, but really intended to enable
a publishing house to supplant with
t heir own books the physiologies now
in use in the schools,
; Our contemporary goes on to«ay
that morality and religion are thus
uia de a cover for the tricks of trade
an «j f or t jj e corruption of legislatures
and the degradation of education. It
concludes with the following;
The case is not exceptional either.
In a majority of cases the books used
in the schools of the country are not
because the teachers approve them
or the public demands them, but be-
cause they are thrust on the schools by
the agents and lobbyists of manufactur-
ors who have come to look upon the
corruption of public morals and the
prostitution of politics as necessities tf
their regular business.
Fortunately Georgia has not suffer-
ed much in this way, but as we grow
T$£'
truth is, the schools need only a few
uew text books, anJ frequent changes
td the list 8ho,,ld bt ‘
suspicion. .
‘
—Atlanta Constitution.
Boys’ Col y C> T i * . T l T\T 1M •
•labe Jones, of Madison, was in town
^ r 'tiaj.
Mr. E.R. Deaton,adiftinguishedteie-
graph operator of Madison, after a
pleasant visit to friends and relatives in
fcMs eity ’ returned to Madisou Monday,
Mr. _ Jno. Alexander Simpson, who
has been visiting friends and relatives
in Lowndesville, Molt'ettsville, And-
erson and Greenville, returned home
Saturady.
Orate Walker, of Tugalo Valley, was
in the city Thursday.
Haskell Powell,of Tugalo, spent Fri-
1,515 , in Toccoa.
J,m T . Joi T « es and Ml ” s Anna , Belle T , ,, Ra,n „
were in town Thursday,
Dr. B. \V. Stonec.ypher got a clean
shave Friday,
Swinton Powell, of Tnga’o, made a flying
visit to Greenville Wednesday*
Homer Kennedy went to Tugalo re¬
cently.
We think I indsay Fennel must have
gotten into trouble regarding the dis¬
pensary law in South Carolina. That
is all tlie reason we can give to account
for his continued absence.
One of the operators of the American
Line was sending a train order, sent as
follows, “No. thirty eight 38 eng 13 land
no seventeen 17 eng 632 woll meatte at
Aierseviell enstedeof Altowe.Sig.X.Z.”
Mr. R. 1). Martin was sporting a mus¬
tache this week, but it was invisible.
Earnest Deaton is a telegraph oper¬
ator of some experience; but he inva¬
riably uiakes the mistake of sending p
for h. The other day he was asked by
telegraph why he did it. His reply
was : “ It is all pabit, I can’t pelp it.”
Who was the girl that went half-way
to the depot Friday to ask liei brother
if John Simpson had returned home?
A certain young lady in town lost
ker ring the other day and could not
find it anywhere. She became very
much grieved over her misfortune and
was about to consult the police, when
she found it in her hustle. Now the
question arises, llow did it get there?
A little girl was asked what the
preacher talked about Tuesday.. She
replied “sheep.”
lied Hill, <ia.
Somebody stole my chickens.
And 1 wish they'd bring them hack;
One of them was a red one
And two of them were black -
Two of Beni were yellow ones
And three of them were brown,
And I’m afra'd that some “black nigger”
Has carried them off to town.
Hr Will Mabry and wife, accompanied by
Mr. A. vV. Gillespie and iatnily, of Walnut
Hill,- went on a pleasant trip to Tallulah Falls
this week, and report a very pleasant time
with their relatives and friends at the beau¬
tiful Tallulah,
Miss Bila Davis, the accomplished teacher
of Allen’s high school, will give an entertain¬
ment at the close of her school. We wi-di
them Success.
I have a large gourd on a vine and I want
it to grow a (leal larger yet, so I named it—
can you guess?—I named it “Cotopaxi.” Do
you reckon it will always be green?
The woman who is braVe enough to march
boldly up to the hymeneal altar, to bo made
the Wife of “Cotopaxi,” will be more heroic
and a much braver woman than Cleopaira,
for the woman who marches’to the guillotim
for execution and suffers her head severed
from her body knows the death she must die,-
while “Mrs. Cotopaxi” would be minus this
knowledge—the life she lives or the death she
dies.
The “Old woman in red bloomers” asks the
public multy-beaded to excuse her for being astride of her
heard beast of burden. 8he says she
tbouirht “Co she ! Oj;a.\i” counting a billion and
relative of was the being that pursued by a Very
near and she took that one position was that carrying might her,
she
travel faster. I think she is excusable, and
don’t think it need to have gone to the pre.-s
.any way. VASHTl
Hotel Arrivals,
Edwards Holse—J im Stanford, Ben Du
berry, J J Bowden ClarkesviJe, Little Fa.e
G6cde City,* Dr. Harvey Gainesville, H Estes
Gainesville. Geoige Garrett Pelzer, Miss Lil¬
lie Bleeze N Y., George Erwin Clar esv le,
Mrs. John W. Hooks Savannah. YV. D. Burch
Atlanta, Dr. John x\li!let, Mr. Camp Atlan¬
ta.S P. Duvall N Y.
WANTED!
jj S"|0 1 you you nice.y, want a provided good position that w*ill pay -od
AJ* salesman collector? you are a g
and
Wc want many live, energetic men to can¬
vass, sell singer Sewing Machines and collect
If there is an agent in your community we
can locate you elsewhere in a good section.
We furnish a nice, lightrunuing wagon, ag nt
to furnish horse and harness, and niukea$50U
bond. We offer a good salary or commission
contract, hustling, one under which a live, cnefgetic.
aggressi.e man call make and save
money. Men of character and good make-up
do well to secure work with the company, h r
if su cessi’ul will be promoted io a po-itiou of
greater ed compensation. responsibility .add and trust, wiili increas¬
i ess
THE SI8GEK M’F’G CO.,
j. H. HALLEY, Manager,
awgl— 8t Atlanta, Ga.
Jones & Bowde f ^5 T
Attorneys at Law,
Toccoa and Clarkesville, Ga.
All business intrusted to us will receive
prompt and careful attentiou.
fooK man ,*V V ? J
Jtill fjo fat^r r/.z.di
Whc t )of MM /Em
ioterejt —
• ro •
DT lichenors Antise ptic
Jta> & boff&e^b}^ CranQpi°r (piic
Kc-Cpitin Aij ajkycx/r >f<x*
THE TJT *~x. G C C Off N E W S
TOCCQA. GEORGIAj
CHRISTY & BRYANT, PROP’S,
Having taken charge of this well known jour-
nal, we now appeal to the people tc come to our
aid and assist us in making it
ONE OF THE BEST IN THE STATE,
We do this the more confidently, from the fact
that v/e are ourselves Georgians—having both,
been raised in Northeast Georgia, and loving
everything tending to advance her interests,
and being proud of her past history and the high
position she is now taking. Therefore, we feel
that we can labor earnestly and comscientiously
for the advancement of every interest of
OUR PEOPLE & SECTION
Which, we propose to do at all times and under
all circumstances, to the best of our ability.
NOW IS THE TIME
To subscribe and get all your neighbors to do.
likewise.
1141 tit tmt ’k # tllli lit I ilftllla
SEND IN YOUR NAME& MONEY
Atonce, and keep posted on the local, general
and political neWs of the day, as v/e propose to
give a full summary of each.
While it will not be a bitter partisan, the
NEWS is
(jjg TRlCTLY jj EKOCBftTie IN p RiNSSi>LB£ >
Ana vi3.1 ever be found battling for the main¬
tenance of the grand principles enunciated by
Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson and the other
fathers of the Republic.
ADVERTISEMENT
Will "be inserted at- usual rates, Special rates
to liber-1 advertisers. Write, or call and see
us and get rates and terms,
V/e are also prepared to oXecute, in the best,
style ox. the art and at moderate prices, every
kind cf
ltd 02 A MINTING.
Call and see us, or address
CHRISTY & BRYANT,
TCeGOA. GECRGU/