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•%*> *«•* •«*.**'j
The £ Nijgget.:
*D AH LON EG A .JULY 30, 1903.
Auraria Items
A Belated Matter
Eni'l r*
i| hi I In* Daliloneg f> ii.
nsNceond ('lass Matter,
sides in the Civil war, !
ro8 . and their regiments were closely
firing oul the oM month, ; Col. Sidney Herbert of Mail 1 -
Sing in the now, -land, Florida, has for more than
Bring along your watermelons twenty-liye years, had a great
And we’ll sing too. friendship for our townsman, Col. 1
With plenty of beans, tomatoes, j W. P. Price, Sr. It was the for-
potntoos, pies, and to. largo roasting j tuno of these gentlemen to be on
ear patch, we can take off our hat opposit
and exclaim to the world:
parity 1” engaged iri the battle of Bull Run. J
Rov. Dave Burt of Dawsonville, duly 18, and the battle of Manossee, ’
was here a few days last week. July 21, 1861. Col. Herbert has
The latest scientific discovery! for many years been the regular j
has been made by one of the old i correspondent of the Savannah
angers of “Nnclclesvillo,” who has j Morning News.
Some of Unde Sam’s guns are ! reC ently handed down the glorious Wo publish the following para-
being supplied with shells having conclusion that Auraria is in the I graph from one of bis recent let- 1
Official Organ of both City and
County.
Pope Leo’s will was read Inst
week and all bis property goes to
the church except a few presents.
Some of the blockaders are now
running their still by the “beater
process,” which makes no smoko.
torches attached wh
until they strike.
■h illuminati
Hereafter insane convicts will
he eared for bv the state at. the
penitentiary farm instead of the
asylum at Millcdgeville.
A rocking chair has been indent
ed which fans its occupant, that
will cause much more idle time be
ing wasted among lazy folks.
The $70,000 borrowed to run
the present legislature bad just as
well been thrown into the fire for
the good it lias accomplished.
One day lUst week near Carrol
ton, Robert Smith shot and killed
his young wife, whom he had
whipped a day or two before.
The Atlanta Nows says the As
sociated Press is suppressing many
stories of lynchings in the north.
Let us have the news as it occurs,
either north or south,
Mr. Rainey of Terrell county,
wants an appropriation of $5,000to
complete the necessary repairs
on the cnpitol. How much more
will it needs.
I he Acw orlli Post believes f lit'
senate killed an important mens
me when it voted down the mans
ure to elect county school coni'-
missonors by tho people. If it’s
editor lived in some of the counties
controlled by negroes ho would
change his notion.
The biblo school for negro min
isters at the African church at
Columbus last week proved a fail
ure, says tho Atlanta Constitution.
To colored teacher had a suspicion
that tho white teachers were “in
spectors" and refused to have any
thing to do with t hem.
Last week a gathering of ne
groes at Madison, adopted resolu
tions declaring tho south tho best
place for the negroes. The recent
lynchings of some of their color in
tho north have caused them to like
the south best yet they arc not safe
center of t,ho world si nee if you
were to puss a pole through t.he
center of the earth from here it
would come out exactly on the
opposite side.
Wo marvel when wo stop long,
enough to think of the rapid
strides our town has been making
recently. A Bible Institute every
day, preaching every night, inter
spersed with lecturers, not to men
tion other things.
The literary school is still
gaining ground with increas
ed a t r e n g t h and energy.
The average attendance Inis now
risen to about forty and the work
we are doing is by no means val
ueless. We would like to hear
from some of our neighbors.. We
claim the prize, at least in num
bers, if nothing else. Ii anybody
can beat us let them show -their
colors.
Mrs. Rosser, who is a visitor
here from Atlanta, was interested
enough to visit ovrr school last
Friday, not for a show, but t.o see
what wo were actually doing. As
a patron, she has learned by ex
perience with the advanced schools
of Atlanta that the patrons must
keep in touch with the teacher if
they would have the best results.
Patrons should be interested
see
if
I enough in their children to
I that they come every day.
they don’t they fail to keep up
with their class-and hence, had
bettor stay at home.
With preachers from -Cornelia,
Dawsonville, Hedwig, Diuhldnoga
and Gainesville, and teabhers
from Chamble and Monroe, and
mercantile men from Atlanta,
and miners from the north and
west, must we get up on a stum])
and cry out to the world: “Stand
still?”’ No 1
Out of forty-four pupils only
one has willfully disobeyed the
rules of the school. We withhold
the name now but should it be
repeated we will give name and al
ters to ihe News:
“My esteemed friend and former old |
Bull Bun foeman, Col. W. P. Price of |
Dnhlonega, Ga., contributed a very in- I
fee-resting article to the Sunny .South of
Fob. 22, on tho militia generals and
their soldiers of ante-bellum days up
in the mountains, among the gold
mines. The article was full of historic
interest, ns Gen. Winfield Scott, U.
S. A., wag at one time stationed there,
and Col. Thomas J. Rusk went from
launpkin county to Texas, where he
became Secretary of War and United
States-senator of the young republic.
In contrast to the old militia, with
their quaint uniforms, Col. Price prints
a fine photo-engraving of the cadet
Battalion of the North Georgia Mili
tary and Agricultural College, a mili
tary organization, creditable to any
similar college in the United Sates.
Col. Price is the worthy and patriotic
son of a noble sire—whose name he
bears—who was a brave officer in the
Florida Indian wars, and also com
manded! a company under Gen. Scott
dy#rii»g the removal of the Georgia
Cherokee Indians. This is a belated
item, but one full of historic interest.”
Rev. T. Bright, who allowed
himself tangled up in the Amos
Owncn Cherry Tree Co. fraud has
withdrawn from the ministry, he
says, solely to protect the cause,
until a time when the brethren
shall decide for him to return to
the work.—Blue Ridge World.
M j“/AS, UiW
properdins for s.h- h, ” >M mining |
lb) acres, f, , mles
Da dohega. and adjoinhc' |V' Vc ?* of j
latch. Itye gold-lnarmT- !ir «r
ed up, assaying from *tV <lll!i opt#.!
per ton. with ore mouW i„ 0 W
luti n t(*n stamp min 2r» Vr . to
proposition has , v eh-vh ,' U T Tl ‘M
dilch running thrmHi ,1 w %]
property with Waler e "«i«
command tor all ncwisitri '"?*•> »
We. 1 limbered. 1 , V ™nv.lHner v>
^-ODiaiy tfi..
acres, 12 T1H i. . * '
' * 1 — III 1.( s linnU .... .
500
Thdilonega, itube ahovc l 'i ,I’m'
veins opcnei! in: froa, s ; 1 • H
feci wide, running sp (iu , '" s t*
test. VV L H| ,ft "
600 acres
anywhere when guilty of dark i 80 the P unifihment infliote 5 , «
crimes. ' Mb' would be glad to know if all
! the schools in this section of the
Smith, the 10-yenr-old wife rmir-! , , ,
, county will not join 11s and have
(lever, who lulleu his wife recently 1 1 • ,, ,, • , c , .
’ , j a general picnic on the third Sat-
near ( arrolton, now in Fulton , ■ , . TC ,,
’ , j urn ay m August. If so the picnic
county jail, says he did it because
she would not live with him and
has no regrets watever. The next 1 ,,, ,
liana, 11 there is anyone , who
tiling von hear of hmr> he will be 1 * • 1 , . ' ,
. will join us, please lot us know at
m the lunatic asylum, instead ot
going on the gallows-. His crime
is such as to cause- him to have an
easy time.
of the Union
bfst week re-
The case of Miss Onto Tanner,
charged with poisoning her hus
band in Hal! county some time
ago, was continued till the next
(erm-of the Superior Court of that
comity and the dofendent allowed
to give a five thousand dollar bond
on account of being ill with fever.
The young man who throw a
rock into the car al Gainesville
and bit a lady got five years for it,
which should Ixi a warning to all
those having a disposition to do
such a thing.
The pleasures of the legislators
will soon come to a close.
will be at Castleberry bridge, on
the Etowah, one mile west of Au-
onoe. It is quite likely that the
Plainviow and Betz schools will
be with us.
A correspondent
County Herald of
A dispatch from Macon to the
Atlanta Journal says: A negro
woman created a sensation on Pine
2825 Keeley St.,
Chicago, 11,1,., Oct,, 2, 1902.
I suffered with falling and con
gestion of the womb, with severe
pains through the groins. 1 suf
fered terribly at the time of men
struation, had blinding headaches
ami rushing of blood to the brain.
Wlmt to try I knew not, for it
seemed that I had tried all and
failed, but 1 had never tried- Wine
of Cardui, that blessed remedy for
sick women. I found it pleasant,
to take and soon knew that 1 had
the right medicine. New blood
seemed to course through ray veins
and after using eleven bottles I
was a well woman.
Mrs. Bush is now in perfect
health because she took Wine of
Cardui for menstrual disorders,
bearing down pains and blinding
headaches when all other remedies
g failed to bring her relief. Any
sufferer may secure health by tak
ing Wine of Cardui in her home.
The first bottle convinces the pa
tient she is on the road to health.
po: ts A ink Carder, who chums to 1 street a few days ago by appear-
be a preacher, as stating at lilt. I ingin three different outlays of
Pleasant•<he second Sunday as fol- tiuc silk drosses in the same day.
lows: V hat whenever the gospel I She paraded with all of tho vanity
shall have been preached to all na j of a peafowl, and as for once in
tiona then the world shall come to j her life proud that she was a “nig-
nu enn,. t has been preached 1 to get 1 .” The police suspected that
all nations-and the end is here."’j she was too much on easy street,
Such a prediction as this by iney j and they spotted 1 her. A thousand
v ho-are supposed to be leaders is 1 dollars’ worth of stolen silks and
one cause o> so many people hav- line clollfwig wore found in hes
in- no confidence in their doc- bouse, and this lod to the wholesale
trine. Please give ns a rest. ; arrest of earbreukers, and
A half-grown white girl, a berry ■ irau '- r ot nt>aTO ttlki VC8 who have g
patch, a pnssiog negro—the reader!* lru * J ' Uu « tow »* J “^" l "
knows the rest. Only this time-- i e j" ulll .v” this section. The of-
the place being Fust Whitehall, j l,cor ‘ s ttmd: they will send about
Vermont, the lynchers were per ’ ! Um “ swt ' ils ” lo the penitentiary as
suaded to give up and go home i a ro * ultof tho detective.
before t-hey had succeeded in break- ! The An
iii'2" open the jail. \\ lieu they hear know t\v
some months hence that the negro “How long will it be before men |dor ^rca^luhe'followin'g property'to-
For advice in cases requiring
special directions, address, giving
synvptonja, "The Ladies' Advisopy
, Li Department,” The Chattanooga
tliOj p Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
W—0
wins run thnueT '.i.T"
eres This proiu-nv , eirt '»
; tains very valuable ! ( '°n-
| Water in abiindain-! f!„ ,.' ] 'This.
I mining or oral ions. v ' '; ,v yry
I and n farm of GO acres , l * . ml),r ei
I Titles clear and perfect ' ‘" IVi!l ' cn .
|AV. M. McAfee
11KAL ESTATE A0E.NI ’
Daiilonkga, (Ia.
A curious story has come to
light at Quitrnan in connection
with the freakish weather which
has prevailed in that, as well as
other sections of the country, this
summer. A farmer near Morven
had gotten his crnjis thoroughly
clean and his farm in good condi
tion in the spring and had paid off
bis hands ou a Saturday. The next
day a terrific wind and hailstorm
completely destroyed his young
crops. lie replanted, and a few
weeks ago his crops were again in
a line condition. Again on Satur
day night he paid off his hands
and this time remarked: “Well,
I’m ready for another d —n hail
storm now. And sure enough a
hail storm came and utterly ruined
the fields again.--Ex.
This week thirteen desperate
criminals from the Folsom prison
in California csoijx'd after stabbing
one of the crmv-iut apards to death
afid aiiMbe? v/.-a seriously cut.
At Vicksburg, Miss., a white
Woman is in jail for shooting and
killing a negro, in self defense,
she says.
At a row atCamnk, Ga., Sun
day night, two negroes were killed
and six wounded, while gaming
near a church.
Judge Ilenry G. Turner, recent
ly appointed justice of the trouble if taken
Supreme court, of Georgia, took , is,.
the oath of office last Thursday. * S}ra! S hten h \ }
I Ill., writes: “I had a very ba4
If Bro. Kells fcissinw bill In comes F back pained me so 1 cou >d
„ , . T ... tor s treatment did me no good
a law no other president will oyer JJRE advertised and took one
como to Georgia, for they ml have not been affected since,
like to be kissed, and so do we. |edy.”
—7 led Him Without Succass
At Fall River, Mass., about one , Ky., writes: “I had a severe
million spindles are idle and will l ree of tlle ' 3es t physicians in
likely he so during August on acs ,e ^‘ th ° ut su K ccc f s - 1 then took
count of tho high price of cotton. 6s cured me permanently. I
The first bottle gave imme- D
cured me * h
ful remedy.
Ml
ILadies
NOT
n
OUT
of
A_ 1 e 111 y i t e d.
to Cali and Examine Our
Cheapest and Prettiest in
Dakione
sra
Having marie satisfactory ar
rangements to continue business
at the
|M&r-PREDKNT LOCATION.
i will continue selling
I C'j«- O O (1 £*►
& is
►Our stoclfe or»nsi:«ts of everything usually kept in a store and we*
will make it to your interest to trade with ns. Give as a trial.J
♦
! II. I>. GURLEY. !
OM E3WW
DEALER IN-
:usta Herald wants to
SHERIFF’S SALE.
Georgia, Lumpkin County.
Will he sold before the court house |
door of the county of Lumpkin on tlu
has been sentenced to two years
or acquitted through a technicality,
no doubt the disappointed lynch
er.s will accept the inevitable phi 1
osophically. There is ’perhaps
something in climate after all.—
Macon 'I’elegi aph.
vo things. One ox them- is 1 5 l “ e8(ia y T \ u <
.H 16 | legal hours of sale to the highest bid-
may wear stylish clothes again !"'Al,, . .. . , .
without looking slouchy? and the 5 years old. Said property levied on
other is, “How long before girls !! 8 c5i e pro > ,er f t A oi '.-VJ. Tayior, to sat-
* hsfyau execution issued from the Su-
may wear stylish fagurea without j perior court of said county in favoi of
looking as crooked as a dog’s hind 1" r’ mol'i’ tran H 1 ere ’ 'BGinst. the said
1 n„ , . A. j. xaylor;said property being in
legs. \\ hen their parents got too possession of \ j Taylor.
poor to buv the n’wgiuo- ! thisGth day of July, 19U.3.
^ " J. M. Davis, s'heriil.
1 stili have a lot of
^ O U H
and
HATS
that 1 will sell at and below first
cost. 1 have just opened up a
beautiful lii.e of Lawns, Dimities,
Organdies and Appliques thud
can t la* beat for beauty awe? puicu.
My stock is complete, amt pfficwf
to please any one, all .1 asb is your
inspection and I will gunj»Rte«
to please you in quality, beawfty
and price.
Thanking you for past favors, I
tru-t to merrit your [latrouage in
the future.
Yours for Business,
Cji! ti.
In Sim mo 11 s I > u ’ 1 dii ig- ^
<► ;
| THE DAHLONEGA HOTEL|
"B t 1.1 if *»*• iVf <>>«•/ IdSTan i-.-dUlia t . F
^ aa<Ier'Mew BLaiaa^ifia^iat,
X Js now epe i to the jiutilic, with a table supplied with
% best the country affords.
£ Rates: Per day. Al.Vl
Furniture entirely new.
ner week Gb ner month