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VOLUME Y.
THE OLD RELIABLE HEADQUARTERS
FOR
SANTA CLAUS,
■- ■ j£i=-wai m srn m wwm
MAKE SOMEBODY HAPPY,
is AT
WIKLE & CO.’S
BOOK, STATIONERY AND NOVELTY STORE.
CARTERSVILL, OA.
PLEASE REMEMBER THAT
We will sipply suitable goods for Christmas preseots at the most reason
able prices. You are invited to consider the merits
of our entire stock, including
mmmmijmmmm mmwB 9
Beautiful poems in gilt cloth and fancy leather bindings, Photograph and Auto
V
graph Albums in leather, plush and leatherette bindings, Scrap
Books, Picture Frames, Gold Pens. Jewelry, Pocket Books,
c hopping Bags, Pocket Knives, Fancy Cups,
Mugs, Plates, Yaies, Toys, Dolls,
Games, Boys’ Wagons, Etc., Etc. Don’t forget that we have Picture Books and
Gift Books at all prices, from two cents to
fifteen dollars each,,
SANFORD L. VANDIVERE.
Wholesale and Retail
FURNITURE HOUSE.
TO
Sif WOT FIWHITO®i f
I Lave on hand one of the largest stocks of furniture ever exhibited in North
Georgia, and*can fit you up in a handsome suit of fur
niture for little money. Call and see if I don’t
DUPLICATE ATLANTA PRICES.
Sanford L. Yandiyire.
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1886.
THE SWEETEST TIME FOR COURTING.
’Tis pleasant to sit by the parlor stove,
When the coal is brightly glowing,
On a winter night with your own true
love,
W hile the fierce northeaster’s blowing.
But pleasanter far is the summer night,
W hen the dew is on the roses,
And fair Diana’s silvery light
A beauteous scene discloses.
Oh, then to wander through the groye,
Where the breeze with balm is laden,
And softly tell the tale of love
To a fair and gentle maiden!
Oh, the soft, the balmy summer night,
When katydids are sporting,
And w see the fire-flies flashing bright,
Is the sweetest time for courting,^
—Albany Argus.
A BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE TO WOMAN*
Of all the passions woman’s love is the
holiest and purest and most steadfast.
It is a flower that blooms alike in sun
shine and shadow—an evergreen to the
heart, a thing imperishable among the
perishable. The object upon which she
places her love and affection may, as is
often the case, prove unworthy of her,
yet she is unchangable; her clinging, ten
der, holy love never falters. How often
in our walk through life have we seen the
grand reality of woman’s loye—have
seen her entering the gilded saloon of in
temperance and striving to win the hus
band, father or brother away from the
vintage that kills; aye even helping
him who at the consecrated altar prom
ised to love, cherish and piotect ner, up
from the gutter with the filth of his deg
redation upon him, and guiding his stag
gering footsteps along the city’s streets,
clinging to him amid it all, though her
pure white brow be suffused with shame
from the coarse jests of the passing
crowd.
With man it is different. lie may love
fondly, and, as he thinks, devotedly,
yet his love is subject to many temporary
cessations; with the dear one out of sight
his thoughts will too often stray to others,
he will toy with beauty whenever he can,
and for the time being forget her, who in
thought, word and deed, is as true to him
as the needle to the pole. Men will often
indulge in what they term “a slight flirta
tion,” that is, conceive a slight attach
ment for some pure, gentle woman, accom
pany her constantly in her walks and
pastimes, and for the time being giye her
every attention that is required of a pro
fessed lover, then all of a sudden grow
tired and desert her. This is dishonor
able, ungentlemanly,and above all things,
the most heartless and cruel thing he
could be guilty of, for she may have con
ceived a tender passion for him and the
love of a pure, virtuous woman is the
grandest, holiest tr ensure man can win
It brings him a dream of heaven. If he
has won her holy, sinless love, what rem
edy has she? None. She cannot drive
away her sorrowful memories by min
gleing in scenes of gaiety and myrth. She
cannot quench her sorrow in-the flow of
the bottle, amid the clash of glasses, bec
chanalian song, or go down to death amid
the shocks of battle; no, she must pine in
secret, ever hoping and longing for the
false one’s return, yet ever doomed to dis
appointment. Therefore we say to him
who glories in a stainless manhood and
untarnished honor, trifle not with wo*
man’s love.
HELP EACH OTHER.
We fear the spirit to help each other is
too little cultivated by many of us of the
present day. In the pell raell rush for
self and promotion of self interests, we too
far forget and disregard the interests of
our fellows. Now we are so constituted
socially, and the duties and obligation ß
resting upon us as members of a common
brotherhood are such as that we cannot
ignore them, live to ourselves and pros
per. Our surroundings and relations in
life are such, that we are to an extent de
pendent upon each other. The man who
shuts his eyes as it were to these facts,
and becomes hermatie in his habits of life,
falls far short of his mission upon the
earth. Likewise the man who blunts his
nobler sensibilities by a devotion of the
talents which God has blessed him, with
the sole view to the promotion of his own
selfish ends and purposes in utter disre
gard of the good of others, is also far out
of the right way. Are not a visit a vast
deal to many of us acting and working on
this line?
Have we forgotten that in division is
weakness, in union is strength? If not,
then let us cultivate that spirit of fellow
feeling that prompts us to aid, that one, or
the other, as far as may be in our power
to do so. If we see a fellow man down
under the cloud of adversity, and strug
gling to dispel its gloom, by a kindly and
timely act may add much to his efforts in
this direction. If we see one in the
clutches of an evil habit and struggling to
rescue himself therefrom, a slight effort
upon our part and a kind word of en
couragement will add much more strength
to his efforts, than a cold indifference and
abuse.
The National Educator tells the reader
to place his shoulder and right foot length
wise close to the wall of a room and lift
his other foot from the floor. The thing is
impossible, but the preformance seems so
easy to the uninitiated that always some
one can be found to make the attempt,
which never fails to be awkward and
amusing, besides being an excellent illus
tration of the centre of gravity.
For drunkenness,drink celd water; for
health, rise early; to be happy, be hon
est; to please all, mind your own busi
ness.
IIOW IS THIS FOR AN OUTRAGE ?
Treatment on the Agent of the S. F. & IT,
R’yat Jacksonville, Fla., by a Negro
Policeman.
A few thorough-bred, white skinned,
straight-haired Georgians are evidently
needed down at Jacksonville, Fia., to do
missionary work. Read below, from the
Jacksonville Times-Uuion, about the ar
rest and treatment of tha agent of the
S., F. & W. Rj, in that city, by a color
ed policeman, a few days ago:
“Yesterday morning a most unwar
ranted assault was committed upon Mr.
John A. Stephens, agent for the Savan
nah, Florida A Western Railway in this
city, by Polieceman HuggiDgs, of La
Villa, which will bear a thorough exam
ination.
Mr. Stephens left the dopot to come
to the city about 11 o’clock, and being
in a great hurry walked very raidly un
til when near the corner of Bay and
Bridg& streets, where he met a couple of
gentlemen who desired to see him on
some business, and who stopped him.
The two last named gentlemen were
standing on the outer edge of the walk
and Mr. Stephens stopped right in front
of them, with his hand resting on the
arm of one, and the position which he
took did not occupy more than twelve or
fifteen inches of the outer edge of the
walk. They had not been standing
there a minute when Huggings c ime up
and told them to clear the walk, as they
were about to do anyway, as Mr. Ste
phens was on his way to the city to meet
an engagement, but before Mr. Stephens
had time to move, Huggings grabbed
Mr. Stephens by the arm and with an
oath informed him that he was a prison
er. tried to remonstrate, but it
was of no U3e. Huggings exclaim
ed. “G—d d —m you, you are my prison
er, and I will have you to go to jail,”
whereupon he was dragged up through
the heavy sand to the La Villa lock-up
and theu told that by depositing $lO for
bis appearance at court he would bo re
leased, which he did and was then turn
ed loose. While on his way to jail Hug
gings remarked, “G—d d—m you, such
men as you have got no respect for col
ored folks, anyhow, and I am always
glad to get hold of one of you to run in.”
When Mr. Stephens told him that he
would give him necessary bond for
his appeareuce if there were any
charges against him, the policeman
ordered him to shut his mouth or he,
Huggings, would break hie d—d head
and lie was going to carry him to jail.
On liis way to the jail he continued to
abuse Mr. Stephens in the most dis
graceful manner and frequently treated
him to violent jerks and other insults.
Mr. Stephens and his friends are very
indignant at this outrageous insult, and
if thero is any law by which Policeman
Huggins cau get his just deserts, ho will
certainly get them.”
HE’LL DO.
In the autum of 1830 a traveling book
peddler, who afterwards became a suc
cessful publisher and the head of a firm
whose name is well known in the United
States to-day, came to the door of a log
cabin on a farm in E istern Illinois and
asked for the courtesy of night’s lodg
ing. There was no near inn. The good
wife was hospital but perplexed, ‘ for,”
said she “we can feed your boast, but we
cannot lodge you, uuless you are willing
to sleep with the hiied man.” ‘ Let’s
have a look at him first”, said the ped
dler. The woman pointed to the side of
the house, where a lank, six-foot man, in
ragged but clean clothes, was stretched
on the grass reading a book. “He’ll do,”
said the stranger. “A mau who reads
books as hard as that fellow seems to, has
got too much else to think of besides my
watch and small change.” The hired man
was Abraham Lincoln, and when he was
President, the two meumet in Washing
ton and laughed together over the story
of their earlier reucoutre.
GEORGIA’S PROSPERITY.
Asa community Georgia is prosper
ous, Because the public burdens are
comparatively light; the privileges and
opportunities are amply sufficient for all;
the protection to Jife, liberty and prover
t/ vouchsafed by law is equally guaran
teed to every one, and there are none of
sound mind and body who cannot if
they will earn the necessaries and com
forts of life.
Every man is in a measure the architect
of his own fortune, aud his rewards are
dependent upon the proper exercise of
bis talents. Ail are not talented in like
degree, consequently all cannot earn
rewards of equal value. The man in
Georgia who is able to work and does not
earn a comfortable living, cau attribute
the failure to his own lack of energy oa
talent.
Malcontents and grumblers assert that
Georgia is not a prosperous community.
Probably they judge the Slate by their
individually measure of prosperity. At
auy rate, we defy them to controvert the
st itemente here made.
Charles Tong Sing, who was steward
of the Jeonette and also a member of the
Thetis rescae party, aud was afterward
convicted of assault with intent to kill
1 another Chinaman, and sentenced to
' seven years’ imprisonment, has been par
-1 doned by the Governor of New Jersey.
A ISIU vr-Dor.V.
. U. N. NONE.
She was a winsome country lass,
8o William, on a brief vacation,
More pleasantly time to pass. *
Essayed flirtation;
And, as they strolled in twilight dim,
While near the time for parting crew,
Asked if she’d like to have frem him
A billet doui.
Of French this simple maid knew naught,
But, doubting not ’twas something nice
Upon its meaning quietly thought.
Then in a trice
Upward she turned her pretty head,
Her rosy lips together drew
For purpose plain, and coyly said
“Yes, Billy, do!” *
ENVOI.
And William did!
—" -—■■■■■ ** ♦
KEEP BUSY.
Try to keep busy. Leisure leads to
idleness, idleness to bad associations, bad
associations to drunkness, and drunkenutsi
to shame and disgrace. Have nerve, have
pride, have firmness, have a will to halt
and you are armed against the worst of
vices. No man ever drowned sorrow and
trouble in the bowl, but many have made
mountains of sorrow out of small hills of
trouble. If your hand should get burnt,
putting it in the fire will not cure it.
Remember that this world is not a world
of sunshine. There are days of sorrow
for every one. Gloomy thoughts come to
all. Men were not created to sip the
pleasures of life like the gaudy winged
butterfly to sip the summer flower, and
then perish and die at the first cold, with
ering touch of winter. Man was created
for a purpose. He is happiest who makes
others happy. Give courage to those
around you by being brave yourself and
there will be more sunshine and less
shadows for you.
THOUGHTFUL MOMENTS.
The most completely lost of all day3 is
the one on which we have not laughed.—
Cham fort.
He who is most slow in making a prom
ise is the most faithful in the performance
of it. —Rousseau.
Society is a troop of thinkers, and the
best heads among them taka the bast
places.—Emerson.
We attract hearts by the qualities wo
display; wo retain the qualities we pos
sess.—Suard.
Scientific scrußny may take things to
pieces but it can’t put them together
again.—Wm. M. Hunt.
If life, like the olive, is a bitter fruit,
then grasp both with the press and they
will afford the sweetest oil.—Richter.
My answer to the question, how I was
educated, end3 where it began; I had the
right mother.—President Dwight.
Pleasure has a fleet foot; let us enjoy
what to-day brings. To-morrow’s store is
beyond mortals.—Sophocles.
When death, the great reconciler* has
come it is never our tenderness that vve
repent of, but our severity.—George
Elliot.
However well proved a friendship may
appear, there are confidences which it
should not bear and sacrifices which
should not be required of it—Abbe Roux.
They are not the best students who arc
most dependant on books. What can be
got out of them is at best only material;
a man must build his house for myself.—
George McDonald.
History can be formed by permanent
monuments and records; but lives can
only be written from personal knowledge,
which is growing every day less, and in a
short time is lost forever. —Johnson.
My experience goes to prove that the
effect of wine, taken as a preliminary !o
imaginative work, is to blind the writer to
the quality of what he prodaces rather
than to raise its quality. —Thomas Hardy.
Beauty too often sacrifices to fashion.
The spirit of fashion is not the beautiful,
but the wilful; not the graceful, but the
fantastic; not the superior in the abstract
but the superior in the worst of all con
cretes —the vulgar.—Leigh Hunt.
Such a liberal education as will tit the
man in due time to grapple most effectual
ly,with my specialty, consists more in
training than in acquisition. The man
that is thoroughly master of his own
powers will master any sphere or theme
to which he is called.—President Bart
lett.
I consider there is no more respectable
character on earth than an unmarried
woman who makes her own way through
life quietly, without support of husband
or brother, and who retains in her po
session a well regulated mind, a disposi
tion to enjoy simple pleasures, fortitude to
support inevitable pains, and sympathy
with the sufferings of others.—Charlotte
Bronte.
“It is strange,’’said a New Yurk police
c mrt just C), “how many cooks become
drunkards. I knew as a fact that a large
number cf iho best cooks in private
families lose places and become wards of
the island through their fondness of the
bottle. I have seen the best of cooks in
this court, and have seen some here who
served in families that I kuesv well. I
think their fault is due to the tempta
tions they meet with. They generally
have the liquors used by the families
who employ them in their charge, and
get into the habit of using them on the
sly. From occasional slipping they form
thedrunkard’s habit and meet the drunk
ard’s punishment.”
diV hat a miserable liar is man when b-,
cannot believe himself.
WORDS OF W ISDOM
Truth, like tie sunbeam, cannot be
soiled by any outward touch.
It is the stru 'gle and not the attain
ment that measures character.
Imitation and' sham in any character
are but synonyms for weakness.
Good will and a good name is gained
by many actions and lost by one.
Depend upon it, he is a good man
whose intimate friends are all good.
Great gooJ often remains unaccomplish
ed mereiy because it is not attenuated.
Creed i3 meant to influence condueL
Character is the aim and test of doctrine.
Opinions alter, manners change, creeds
rise and fall, but the moral law is written
on tablets of eternity.
Don’t judge a man by the noise he
makes in the world. Two trade dollars
in the pocket will make more jingle than
SIO,OOO in bills.
Beautiful souls are oftea put into plain
bodies; but they cannot be hidden, and
have a power all their own, the greater
for the unconsciousness or humility which
gives it grace.
To repress a harsh answer, to confess
a fault, to stop, whether right or wroi g,
in the midst of self-defense, in gentle sub
mission—these, sometimes, require a great
struggle for life and death, but these three
efforts are the golden threads of which
domestic happiness is woven.
Mrs. Francos Hodgsiu Burnett’s direc
tions for writing a novel are as follows:
You must have a pen, ink and paper.
Use the first with brains, the second
with imagination aud the third with
geneuity.”
A Polish couple c illed ou the clerk of
courts in Luzerne county Pa., for a mar
riage license. A few days after the dam
sel came back with another for a licente,
stating that the first young man was too
pior to marry and he relinquished his
right to her for the consideration of $5.
Greenlawn cemetery in Indianapoli
has a vault in which are several coffins for-
years old. In examining one of these
the sexton came to the body of a woman
named Mary A. Mills, who died in 1816.
The body wa3 petrified, aud after forty
years the eyes of the corpse was blue.
Old residents remember her as a comely
French girl.
The American, schoouer Highland
Light, which was forfeited to the crown
by Chief Justice Palmer and ordered to
be sold, will be bought in by the Domin
ion government and fitted up as a cruiser
under the command of Capt. Loravy,
who effected her capture. Though' the,
last of the vessels captured under the
treaty of 1818, she is the first confis
scated.
Probably the last letter ex-President
Arthur ever wrote was addressed to Wil
liam W. Wright, of Geneva, It was
dated Nov. 13, and received the day of
the writer’s death. It acknowledged the
receipt of a sketch of Judge Folger by
Mr. Wright, who, besides being an
active politician, is a man of good Lterr
ry taste, aLd was written in a firm, bold
baud.
The Empress of Japan gave pe.imis
sion to the ladies of her court to appear
before her, state occasions, in Eu
o >ean dress. The Japanese Lave hither
to been remarkable for their moral and
social plasticity, and the efftcc of the
new' order will no doubt result in a short
time in the whole of the upper classes of
Japan affecting European or American
costumes.
The Chattanooga Times says that
while passing through the South Trede
gar Works, Judge Kelly had his atten
tion called to a colored lad who had
fashioned a handsome shoe buttoner
from a steele spika and a paper knife
from another spike. He bought the tri
ll ja from the boy and then said to tne
gentleman who was piloting him : “That
boy ought to be in one of our industrial
schools, where he would have a chance
to develop his evidently fine mechanical
powers.’’
A short time ago several of the promi
nent Republican organs declared that the
ship builders of the country had com
bined and would not submit any bids for
the construction of the new cruisers, and
the statement was given out with a howls
of joy and a regular green-coru dance.
That these newspapers hoped to embarras
the administration by lyiug, is evident
form the fact that the largest and most
responsible ship building firms in the
country submitted bids which arc very
saisf -ctory to Secretary Whitney.
Dining with the Sultan of Morocco is
more of an honor than a pleasure, accor
ding to the account of a recent visitor
connected with the French Embassy.
The Sultan is ever more of a spiritual
monarch, a sort of crowned ex-officio,
and therefore it is beneath his sacred
diguity to dine in person with his guests,
and he deputes a representative from his
suite, i lie palace is too sacred a shriimi
to be die scenes of such festivity,sbD|,
dinner is usually-served in the C f
• i town oi
the summer place, outside in tLis
Fez. When the flj ofed maj .
second-hand way hot> aud the diu
isty the weather a tow p a i ace garden,
ner was serv|t e j ea iou and pomegranate
buttercups, corn-flowers
trees, ies grew so tall that they min
with tho boughs, aud the'guests
AVd hard work to tight their way on
' horseback to the table, or rather tray.
NUMB IK : 2
INDIANS iu:ahy to fh.mt.
The 1' lorida Seminole* Kxasperuied, and
Threaten a Ma>v;,ei e of the Whites.
Jacksonville, Fla , December 9.—For
several months past, according to reliable
information which has just reached this
city, bad feeling has existed between the
Seminole Indians in Dade and Monroe
counties, in the extreme southern portion
Oi toe State, and a baud of cow
boys encamped on Lake Okeecbabee.
The cow-boys tend the herd of the south
Florida cattle kings and the Indians
j claim they have been driving on and kill
ing their cattle and hogs. Demands of re
dress were met by the cow-boys with
threats of a resort to bullets.
Three weeks ago the exasperation of
the Indians reached a ciirnax, and several
shots were exchanged, but whether with
fatal effect is not known. War dances
have been danced in the everglades
during the past two weeks, and the bucks
are said to have donned their paint and
feathers. Many of the settlers have re
moved their families to the islands along
the coast for safety.
ihe scene of the trouble is remote from
railroad and telegrapaic communication
and accurate particulars are almost unob
tainable, It is reported, however, that a
delegation ot Indian chiefs are en route
to Titusville, the nearest town of any size,
to lay their grievances before the mayor,
whom they look up to as a big chief, and
erroneously suppose invested with power
to suppress the outrages. He can do
nothing but notify the federal govern
ment. Whether he has done so is not
known,
A gentleman who has just returned to
the city from Titusville says the people
on the outskirts of the everglades fear that
a massacre of the whites will result if the
trouble is not adjusted within a few days.
The settlers claim that the Seminoles can
muster five thousand fighters. Should they
go on the war path,their suppression would
be almost an impossibility, as the ever
glade swamps are almost impenetrable
to any one but the Indian inhabitants.
Should news of an Indian outbreak reach
the Apaches at Fort Marion and Pickens,
it is feard they might become dangerous
ly restive, though escape would be diffi
cult if not impossible.
‘Beg pardon, sir,’ said a Chicago hotel
cleik, as he tcck a very small gripsack
handed him by a belated traveler, Who
had come in on the 1 1 .30 p. m., and
asked for a room, “but our rules require
cash iu advnee from guests with little or
UP baggage. Boy, show the gentleman
up to room 357. sixth floor. Dollar aud a
half, sir, if you please.”
guest. ‘I am an lowa
drugg*Li|f>i prohibition town.’
‘A thousand pardons,’ exclaimed the
clerk. Boy, take the gentleman to room
27, first floor. Never mind the cash
Sir — never mind the cash.’ —Chioago
Tribune.
W€ina(brdial
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ratCPARKD OKLT BT *“*9!
Volina Drug and Chemical Company/
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