The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889, March 26, 1889, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

ATHENS, GEl R6IA, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1883. PERSONS AND THINGS. turn. The Bible, experience and G* d in universal nature,' are all pronounced against the amalgamation of the races. I have never k own a Scotch-Irishman, Dutchman or Englishman, not even a cold blooded Yankee to improve thr-ir i O<t- rity bv mixing with negroes and Indians. Nor have I ever known the n^gro or Indian much improve! by mix ing with them. The real facts are the negro has no more affinities for the white and yellow races, than they have for him. W Dr. Talmage s«ys: “There was a »ime w h» n I entertained race prejudices, but thinks to Go! that prejudice is gone and i! I set in a church on one side a black roan and on the other side an In- Han and before me a Chinaman and be hind me a Tu-k, I would be as happy as l »m now standing in the presence of this brilliant audience. The sooner we re t' is corpse of race prejudice buried the healthier wi'l be (notour Northern) but Arneiican atmosphere. 7 ' This is the most pronounced social equality and amalgamation IJiave ever heard from my mail. I have denied that the North ern churches held any such views, and hat it was only a ghost of Southern imagination. Dr. Talmage is a repre i sentative mm, and knows the mind and feelings of the North. Dr. Talmage ought to be a good Presbyterian and let God’s divine de crees alone. Did God not ordain the races? The Doctor ought to be trie-* for heresy and put out of the church for trying to violate the divine decrees by making mulattoes out of people which God has made white and black. I would suggest to the good Doctor and his brilliant congregation, to make the experiment of mixirg the races on a -mailer scale, and not have so large a f«nera\ all at once. Let one of the Doc tor's daughters marry a negro, and an- o ht r a Chinamen, and another a Hotten tot, and then let his Eiders follow his example, and take time and see if, on a sin ill scale, they can produce a race 95 per cent, above anything the world has ever se- n. HORSE SWAPPING. AMALGAMATION. ■LOCAL GASS IP PUT UP INTO SHAU _ PACKAGES. Hundreds of useful household goods JESTER TAKES THE CAKE AMONG TRADERS IN HORSE FLESH* His Season’s Bnslness-Proflts and Loss, Mostly Profits—Amusing Incidents from the Famous Jackson St. • Trading Grounds. Jester, the horse swapper, is closing up his trading season. He is highly grat ified with his swaps of the past six weeks, being sttonger of body and heavier of purse. He has a double mo tive in horse trading. First, he is a good trader and makes money ; second, it affords him diversion and relaxation from the confining duties of bis restau rant. ‘:Uow much have you chared during the season ?’’ asked a reporter of Mr. Jester. “Well, I don’t know exactly, I wa* casting up the other night t and found A Reply By Rev. S. P. Richardson O.D, to a Sermon By Dr. Talmajye, Preached lit Brooklyn, N. Y U«i*ch 31, on ‘‘Tlie United State*, Immigra tion Ethology, and the Amalgamation «t A 1 the Races. Text Ac«s XVII and part of the 20th verse, “And hath made of one blood all nations/ 7 (the whole verse) of met for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and bath determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of their hah The whole verse shows clear- ta Huggins. Bottom knocked out of photographs o4- Milia* iral(c.wn ! a* at Mills’ gallery. dawtf Send your orders for lime, cement and plaster paris to J. II Iiuggins. Mixed oats at Griffeth,' Whitehead & Co’s, 40cts per bushel. ltw Co’s, 40cts per bushel Miss Ida Bohannan, the reigning belle o Harm* ny Grove, is in the city. We pay $1.25 per bushel for pea«. Griffeth, Whitehead & Co. 3 w For the next sixty days cabinet photos only, $3 per dozen. Mills. dawif Standard guanos at $29 per ton. Grif feth, Whitehead & Co. ltw '],e solid lacvb w j„g more Bardins than , 1)0Uge in the town. That sell goods cheaper than kodv, is admitted by all L ])r ice. The cash before very will tell —“that’s L ( i 0 es it.” The fact that I house is crowded every I sufficient evidence of I unprecedented bargains Everything USI as we represent it. g week we call your at- ion to: pieces beautiful Checked isooks at yi regular io cent Is. pieces 7-S wide, Printed Bo at io*ccnts, cost 12^- anywhere, ur cent plain Muslins are de- ply Cheap. itation, ly that Go!, instead of intending to unite by immigration and amalgama tion all nationalities, btfi-re dote* mined and appointed their bounds of separa tion. lie gave Africa to Ham, Asia t Sliem and Europe and the West to Japlieth. He also gavo.form, brain and color to each family sui ed to develop the count-ies in which he plijed them. Dr. Taluiadge says: “The advantage of the influx of nations, through mighty additions of foreign population to oro at*ve population I think Uo! is giv ing, to fill this land with a race of peo ple 95 per o nc. superior to anything the world has ever seen. Marriage feth, Whitehead & Co. We are selling good white corn at 54 ce'nfc* per bushel ~ Griffeth, Whitehead 1 w A full line pf the best lamps made, at H. Huggins’. If you want a goo-; except feed bill, I bad 15 horses, a pock et knife, a chromo and a Jew’s harp as profits. It will take about 2 of the 15 to pay my feed bill, so I will have 13 horses and other odds and ends as the p-ofits for the season. I estimate the 13 at about $50 a head, so I have made about $650.” “Pretty good season isn’t it?” “Yes; but I always make money trad ing horses. I have never made less than $250. The only way in which traders get me is in making me “set up” to tobacco, cigars or oysters. They know I keep a restaurant and th-y in sist on my “setting up.” I don’t mind much, as a plate of oysters or a cigar is often a “clincher” to a good trade. I do feel like protesting sometimes, for as soon as oysters are mentined, not only the man I’m trading with hut the whole ship’s crew of traders step up and “speak to be in.” Of course I can’t ob ject, as I am at home and I spread a table for the crowd. Despite the treats, I come out “on top.’’ If the old posts and bricks on Jack- son street, along where the famous tra ders do their 'swapping, could speak, they would have many an amusing an- best burning oils for wholesale and re ta 1 trade. Sole agent for genuine red “0” oil. Try it The fast train an the “old and relia ble,’’ was tweivy minutes late yester day at noon. The delay was caused by a lost box. Miss Lainar Rutherford, of Athens, and Miss Maud Barker, of Atlanta, will visit Miss Sallie May Hill in Wilkes county very soon. For buggies, Surries phaetons airo carriages, go to Kirin & Martin's, as they have the best assortment and the best quality ever before in the city. For buggies, surries, phaetons and car- offering. riages, go to Klein & Marlin's, as they have the best assortment and best quali ty ever before in the city. .wit Look through J. H. Hugeins’ beauti ful line of dinner sets, tea sets and chamber sets. No use sending »r going off to other cities to bay these goods. Carry your horse-shoeing to Klein & Martin' where you can get it dene first- class at reasonable prices. You will Then show his picture of this new development to his Northern friends, who drive the negro children out of their white public schools. If the North will fix up large gardens and in vite the negroes to come up North among their friends, and then enter into a hearty amalgamation, the negro prob lem may be solved. If the good Doctor will take the time and pains to review the history of na- tion«, their decay and final fall, he will gee that in most instances their ruin was the result, both religiously and po litically of mixing nations and amalga mation.(LjA forbade the Jews to mix with oilier nations. Dr. Talmage, in the Inghams that cost you 12^, we at io cents. [ce line Satteen Prints gt 8£, h io cents. (pieces beautiful LhAllies at 7 a, worth 9 b yards Ruching from 5 to 35 Kc prettiest Lace Curtains, 3I j- long, only $1.00 a pair, worth Irkey Red Damask, warranted lb inches wide, only 30 cents a Sdozen beautiful all linen Nap- Bat 25 cents per dozen. This is I drive and will ali go tc-dav. ■dozen white Napkins, pretty In, at 75 cents dozen, former ■ §MO. Itndid a’l linen Crash at to I. worth 13^. » wool tilling Spring Suitings at |nts, veal value 15. lien Art Thread. This is somc- lenurelynew for Embroider- pnch cheaper than silk, and l are fast. Come in and see- ft and let us te l ecdote to tell. Alas! that the specific t»x should break up all this. The tra ders will have to seek new grounds just outside the city limits. Jester is unique among horse swap pers, as he always gives a full history of bis horses’ ailments. S**me time ago he bought a mule that he thought 'per fectly sound, but he soon found other wise, for when the mule lay down, she had to be helped to her feet, which is no great recommendation. Soon a fel low happened in with a fine looking the races to the same analysis? Why just take one thing, “the blood.” A'l animals have some* one thing in com mon with man, seeing, hearing audtas’- ing belong to the ass as well as the man. If all the races are one when put into his big eridror, wiil they not still be one when he takes them out? If the putting ©f all the races into the big caldron, wi h all their diflere' t colors and odors,would malic them all Scotch- Irish, it might be well to put them in, but s-o far as the experiment lias been ma le up to date, the tacts are that in exact proportion as you put in white, black, or yellow, it comes out white, black or yellow in the very same pro portion it was put in. If the white and black m>X they will be mulattoes in ill coming generate ns. I have never seen the results of amal gamation on so large a scale as the Doctor proposes with his great caldron; but I have s< on the white, black and In dian, all mixed up in one person, but of your -neighbors or friends about the Klein & Martin wagon, and go to their shops and examine them before buying You will find that they have the best wagon in Northeast Georgia. Did you know that Klein & Martin had the best horse-shoeing shop in Athens, and that they havo a lot of stables and sheds-in connection with their shops, that you are welcome to use, free of charge, any time you are in the v city? why he wanted to get rid of bin mule. Tbe trader looked at the mule and as he saw no serious objection replied: “$20 boot.! 7 “Remember,” replied Jester ‘‘you’ll have to help her up when she gets down.’’ “Twenty dollars will help her up” quickly, responded the other, and the trade was ch sed. Another trader soon came up when the mule of difficult rising, changed tion. As her owner was riding her home that night she fell down in the tan yard branch, and after much whipping and twisting, being unable to get her to her feet, the disgusted trader came back into the city and borrowed one of Jes ters raw-boned thoioughbreds to get home. If you bad taken two of Carter’s Lit tie Liver Pills before retiring you would not have had that coated tongue or bad taste in. the mouth this morning. Keep a vial with you for occasional use. * AT COL. SMITH S CAMP. A Splendid Railroad—How tbe Convicts are Getting On. Mr. A. B. C. Dorsey, of Gainesville, passed through the' city Thursday on his way home from Col. Smith’s convict caimp, where he carried two white men short term to all about family. S. P. Riciiaudsox. Are fioe from all crude and irritating matter. Concentrated meJicine only. Carter’s Liit'e Liver Pills. Very small; very easy to take;‘no pain ; no griping; no purging. Try them. - A Lucky Carriage Painttfr. R. L. Malone has ju>*t returned from Greenville, where he has been receiving the congratulations of his friends on his great good luck He held one-twentieth of lick-t No. 17,160, which drew the third capital prize of $50,000 in the drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery Company on the 12lth of February and bis share *fter deducting cost of collect ing was just $2,495.00, as we saw on his deposit book of the City National Bank. It is not every young man who picks up such a sum so easily as this, and he is | correspondingly elated. Mr. Malone is a young man of about twenty or twenty- two years, a carriage painter by trade, and has never bought many tickets in the Louisiana State Lottery, though he says he proposes to stick to it now as long as he has a dollar to spare. He is a pleasant, easy good natured fellow,and has been enjoying himself since his sud den access of wealth.—Griffin, (Ga.) I Nous, March 6. MAYOR’S* OFFICE. Mayors’ Office, Athens, Ga., March 23d.—All contiguous property holders and residents on the street leading from the lower bridge to tbe gate of the Ath ens M’fg Company having consented in writing that said street be closed; all per sons interested are hereby ordered to show cause at the regular meeting of beautiful line Curtain poles [brass fixtures at 40c. each, you |cc. (Isewhere. |e cheapest lot Hamburgs and We are prepared to lend Money in sums to suit borrowers in Clarke,Oconee, Jackson and Franklin. Time, from 2 to 5 years. Terms reasonable. |t Lacts ever shown to the |e of Athen=. M 0 * 5 - Lillies’ Mourning Col- M Cuffs. Collars 4AC. each, luffs 7k. a piar, worth 15c. r bargain.) pw Belts in all shade, the latest out, at 40c. each. All the [novelties can be found at Burp rise Store, The desinte- I s ol high prices. Advice to HotnetB. Soothing Sybup Mbs. Winslow’s should always be used for children teeth ing. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all T ain > cures rind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea, twenty-five --ent** • bottle. ». 11 Clayton Street, Athens. Ga. (In arithers & Talmadge’s new building.) P ies! Piles! Itching Piles. c ymptoms—Moisture; intense ltclil g and stinging; most at night; worse by scratching, it allowed to continue tumors lonn, which often bleed and ulcerate, becoming very sore. Swayne’s Ointment stops the Itching and bleeding, heals ulceration and in most cases re moves the tumors. t druggists, or by mail, for 50 cents. Dr. Swayne & Son, Philadelphia - 12-4 OF STOCKHOLDERS’ MEETING. The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Georgia, Carolina and Northern Railroad Company will be held at Athens, Ga., Thursday, April 4th. The transfer books will be closed until April 5th. A. L. Hull, dAw-td. Secretary. NOTICE weakened and none are benefitted. All All the different families of the same race may be benefitted by mixing, like the Scotch and the Irish, but never by mixing the races. If God had intended the amalgamation of all the races, why did He, by creation, or miraculous in terposition separate the races, and ap point them bounds, and give to each the place of his habitation. The negro is not a human invention, nor is the whi e or yellow man, but a divine appoint ment. The three colors are primordial, and ate not radically changed by food, or climate. The negro was black four thousand years ago, as he is now. God says hejeannot cliange'his skin any more than the leopard can change his spots, and yet the Doctor would change God’s decree. • Europe and the North brought the negro from- his God-given home, and j sold 1 im to the South, then becoming dissatisfied with what they had done, destroyed a half million of Southern white people to set the four million of negroes free. In their modes of war fare they showed that they were capa ble of the deepest depravity, and really acted worse than common Savages. Now they are dissatisfied with the freedom ot the negro, and their most popular and sensational preacher sounded the burie note on the 3d of March in Brook- lyi° N. Y., to rig up a big caldron into which be proposes to cast both negroes and whites, and stew them both down to a common mulatto, and destroy both the white and black races, and substi tute them with a race of mulattoes, a type of humanity God never made. There is not a mulatto or mule in the and a negro who had serve out. ■ “How did the boys like the eamp ?’’ was asked. “Ob, they seemed to take it pretty well. They were chatting and joking all the way down, and when we got there last night we bad the shackles put on them, so as they ean go to work today and commence serving out their time.’’ Bum Childers, one of the number, who was sent up for stabbing, is a hard case. He is very talkative, and while waiting at Edge & Dorsey’s store Tues day, a crowd soou gathered around him. In the course ot conversation some one asked him if he liked the idea of going to the chain-gang. He said he didn’t mind it much. He was going down to see how he liked it, and if he was not pleased he didn’t expect te stay very long. ‘ v Mr. Dorsey is very much pieased with Col. Smith’s new road. He says the bed is in a splendid condition, and the train makes very good time. The other day the distance from Pleasant Hill to Dunlap (seven miles) was made in eight minutes. This is certainly good running, and far ahead of a great many railroads. Col. Smith has about one hundred and fifty convicts. They all look well and scorn to be enjoying good health. wore very fortunate in n 8 a big lot of Hats at below regular market We of course sell heap. Nice line assort- Is a peculiar medicine, and is carefully pre* pared by competent pharmacists. The com* bination and proportion of Sarsaparilla, Dan delion, Mandrake, Yellow Dock, and other remedial Agents Is exclusively peculiar to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, giving it strength and curative power superior to other prepa rations. A trial will convince you of its great medicinal value. Hood’s SarsaparQla Purifies the Blood creates and sharpens the appetite, stimulate* the digestion, and gives strength to every organ of the body. It cures the most severe cases of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Roils, Pimples, und all other affections caused by impure blood, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Headache* Kidney and Liver Complaints, Catarrh, Rhea* matism, and that extreme tired feeling. “ Hood’s Sarsaparilla has helped me more for catarrh and Impure blood than anything else I ever used.” A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y. .Creates an Appetite “ I used Hood’s Sarsaparilla to clean*} mjr blood and tone up my system. It gave me a good appetite and seemed to build me over.” E. M. Hale, Lima, Ohio. “I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla for cancerous humor, and it began to act unlike anything else. It cured the humor, and seemed to tone up the whole body and give me new life.” J. F. Nixon, Cambridgeport, Mass, Send for book giving statements of cures. Hood’s Sarsaparilla SoldbyalUlruggists. gl; sixforjo. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass* lOO Doses One Dollar The Lyndon Manufacturing Company will sell Sash, Doors and Blinds in any quantity at carload prices. 2 -ll-2taw-5w&w5t WARNED. All parties are warned not to hire Monroe Hill and Jose Hill, for they are under contract with me. J. N. Chastain, Harmony Grove. Ga. LITTLE PEOPLE. How little people know of what is be fore them, and the wisest are often the j most ignorant. Those that pretend to be the most knowing about jewelry, Skiff, the Jeweler has always found the most ignorant. Diamond Spectacles. An excess of animal food and a partial closing of the peres of the skin, during the winter months, cause the system to become filled with impurities. These can be removed and Ute blood purified and invigorated by tiSing Ayer’s Sarsa parilla. Price $1. There is a probability of Dan Wag goners leaving Winterville, jand going to Smitbonia to practice lvs protession. He is a graduate of the University of Georgia, and is a promising young phy sician. Uly e been paying $3.50 [ s soun <ls loud, but if you in, we will prove it [ !?£ ve a few dozen Alex- Athens to be held at 4 o’clock, p. or., on tbe first Monday in May next why said street should not be closed and declared to be no longer a public street of said city. Witness my hand and official sig nature. J. A. Hunnicutt, Mayor of the City of Athens. Ivid Gloves in five but- / oc -> and the lacing at Uftt bargains. Don't 9* ?• Corset at ? ^ * s a little gem Quid sell readily at 65 1 we only bad the cheek Is Nature’s own true laxative.lt is the most easily taken and most effective re medy known to Cleanse the System when Bilious or Costive; to dispel Headaches, Colds, and Fevers, to cure Habitual Con stipation, Indigestion, Piles, etc. Manu factured only by the California Fig Syrup Company, San Francisco, Cal. For sale by'Wade & Sledge, Wholesale and Retail Druggists, saw mill, gins, etc., and when Col. Smith’s road is completed to Daniels- ville it will open up a fine territory for the Athens market. primordial type, in the kingdom of