Newspaper Page Text
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Qood Advertising Mdii
Devoted to Local, Mining and General Information.
One Dollar Per Annum
VOL. XV—NO. is.
DA1ILONEG A, OA., FRIDAY, AUGUST
9 C r
\ W. 13. TOWNSEND, Editor and Propnjti r
C L O T H I N G.
Advantages of The South. J Lumpkin County Jury List,
selecting a country for a
.(Continued from lust week.)
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Largest, Best & Cheapest Stock
Ever Brought Here.
homo a man naturally wants to
find a place possessing ns many
natural advantages and as few dis
advantages ns possible, says the
Southern Farm Magi/.ine. lie
likewise wants a country where
schools and churches abound,
where social opportunities are
good, where population and wealth
are increasing. In the South, in
cluding, of course, the great south
west, all of these things arc found.
Here is to be had every attraction
for the farmer, a good Boil capable
j of highest improvement and yield-
j ing almost every crop known to
j the temperate regions — grain,
] grasses, potatoes and fruits of
endless variety, as well as the dis
tinctive Southern crops—cotton,
corn, rice, sugar and tobacco. A
Northern or Western farmer com
ing South need never cultivate,
unless he so desires, any crops ex
cept those with which he is famil-
j iarin his own country. If ho
I wants to grow cotten and rice he
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i will find ample room for profit-
| able work; if he prefers to stick
to grain and grasses, fo fruits or
j trucking, he can lind locations
having advantages not surpassed
by any part of the North or West.
To these the South adds a climate
which means health to all and
long life to many who cannot
Abundance of Dry Goods and Groceries. I safely stand the rigor of Northern
T. J. SMITH & BRO.
and Western winters. In place
-;;«c;K^rrr • , mmr 'yiiiriinriirnnnMirHiH'iiiHiHi
DAI fLOlSTEGhA.
livery Stable,
Moor© I3ro-, Propr’s.
of snow it offers sunshine ; in place
of sickness from long dreary
winters it offers outdoor activity
and health. In educational and
j religious matters the South is the
' most orthodox section of Amori-
I ca. Its people have not yet been
It lew Slate oq College SI.
drawn a\vay after false gods. It
lias not yet been fashionable in
the South to be a higher critic nor
to make light of sacred tilings.
The old-fashioned camp meeting in
J the country and the revival ser
vices in city churches are still a
RXJIsr DAILY HACK TATSTIi
to and from Gainesville.
FARE, SI 50-
Leave Dahloncg i 8, a. m., and arrives 4:30 p. m.
A Humorist.in Lave.
A certain young humorist once
fell violently in love with a pretty
girl whom ho had met for the lirst
time. The strength of his attach
•ment may ho gauged, says London
‘“Tit-Hits,” by the following !• Her
which is indited to her:
“My Dear Miss M.: Every
time I think of you my heart Hops
■up and down like an excited eel in
chestnut horse powdered with gold,
and the brass pins skewered
through it till me with unbounded
awe. Your forehead is smoother
than the elbow of an old coat, and
your eyes are glorious to behold.
In their liquid depths I see legions
of Cupids bathing like a cohort of
ants in an old Wellington, boot.
When their tire hit my manly
breast it penetrated my whole
anatomy, as a charge of birdshot
ft fish basket. Sensations of um.t j throu R h !) ri P e NT 1 '-
terahle joy caper over it I dec
young kittens on au outhouse roof,
and thrill through it like broken
bottles on the garden wall through
the garments of the nocturnal
“If you cannot reciprocate my
thrilling passion, 1 shall pine
away like a poisoned tly, and fall
from the flourishing vine of life an
untimely branch. And coming
thief. Asa gosling swimmoth in ! .years, when Ihc shadows fall limn
si a
ip
a
mv
a mud puddle, so I swim in
of glory. Visions of ecstatic
turo thicker than the hairs
blacking brush visit me in
«1 umbers, and, borne on their in
visible wings, J reach out to grasp
your image like a terrier snapping
at a bluebottle fly.
“Since the light of your face fell
upon my life I sometimes feel as if
1 could lift myself up by my boot
jack to the top of the church
steeple and pull the bell rope tor
'morning school.
“Day mid night you are in my
thoughts, and whenever 1 think of
you my heart, like a piece of gnt-
'ta-pereba, seems stretched across
tny bosom.
“Your hair is like the inane of a
the hills and the corn-crake sings
his cheerful evening hymn, you,
happy in another’s love, can come
and drop a tear and catch a cold
on the last resting place of yours
a fleet innately, H.”
'lhe largest yield of Elberta
peaches from one tree ever heard
of in this section is reported from
the oachard of 11. P. Barrett.
About fifteen crates of poaches
| great power in the South. The
i sacrednoss of home is the founda
tion stone of Southern life. With
warm-hearted, genuine hospital
ity the South welcomes every good
honest newcomer. It judges a
man by his character and his acts,
and if these are right he finds us
warm friends as he can find in the
world; if they are wrong he had
better stay elsewhere.
And then from the business
side the South offers the most in
viting field in the world. In
manufactures it has a greater fu
ture than any other part of the
world, for here nature has con
centrated the raw materials for all
lines of industry. In foreign
commerce the whole trend <*f
growth is through Southern ports.
With the certainty of a vast in
crease in manufactures in com
merce, in wealth, there will come
a great increase in land values.
There will he unlimited fields of
employment opening up for the
newcomers as well as for the na
tive. Hero is a land to which the
inspired writer might justly have
been looking when he said:
“A. good land, a land of brooks
of water, of fountains and depths
that spring out of valleys and
hills; a land of wheat, and barley,
and vines, and fig trees, and pome
granates; a land of oil, olive and
honey; a land where in thou shall
eat bread without scarceness ; thou
shalt not lack anything in it; a
land whose stones are iron and out
of whose hills thou muyest dig
brass.”
The following is the Jury as
revised by the Commissioners Au
gust 1, HH) I:
I’OKTKU M’KINGS.
Anderson, Jamos A.
* Anderson, Charles A.
Ash, Wm. M.
* Anderson, Wm, 13.
Cain, Jos. ii.
Cain, Jacob.
Cain, Wm. W.
* Ducket, James M.
Ducket, John Cl.
Davis, Wm. B.
Gay, John A.
* Jarrard, David N.
Jurrard, 1 J . W.
' Moose, E. I).
Nix, Nelson .J.
* Ricketts, John B.
SKOAL I’KICKK,
Bowen, Frank.
* Burner, Aaron C.
Bowen, Marion W.
Barrett, Elic B.
Barrett, folln L.
Burner, James A.
Burgus, A. J.
* Burgos,-Geo. N.
Burgus, Bud.
Burgus, 1 lardy C,
Child res, Joseph P.
Cain, Charles J.
Cain, W. \Y.
Chapman, A. Floyd.
* Christopher, Jos. M.
Chapman, James 11.
* Dowdy, Richard M.
Evans, John.
Evans, Jasper N.
Freeland, J. N.
Grizzle, Joseph L.
* Grindle, Sam D.
Hn.vard, David.
I toward, John.
* Kenuada, Andrew J.
Kcnnndu-, Franco M.
McGee, Ben L.
“'McGee, Wm. A.
Meeee, James L.
Meece, Rufus H. ^
Peck, Geo. C.
were gathered from this tree, and
the fruit was all large and fine.' A bill, introduced by Represen-
Barrett’s bitivc Rogers, of McIntosh, tho
Four peaches from Mr. narreu » " n jy neff ro in the Georgia Legis-
orchard were presented to a Times lature, appropriating $5,000 for
man Monday, each of which meas- ’ the State I ndustrial College, for
mu • r ’ negro youths, at Savannah, was
circumference. p aase( j qy the house of represent!!-
ured ten inches in
Calhoun Times.
tives unanimously.
Payne, P. H.
- Peck, A. W.
" Redmon, John II.
* Spencer, Wm. G.
* Stargol, Josiah C.
* Smith, W. II.
Stringer, W. T.
St ringer, Allen M.
WAKOO.
* Abercrombie, Young G.
Abercrombie, Young A.
Abercrombie, John.
* Abercrombie, James.
Abercrombie, Wm. D.
Brady, Walton S.
* Bryant, John L.
Gillespie, James I (.
* Gillespie, Win. P.
Glaze, Joseph It.
(Junior, John A.
lliifl' Frank.
■ Huff, Alfred.
Mayes, Robert N.
Martin, Thomas Z.
* Martin, J. J. H.
Morris, Wm. J.
Martin, Jacob.
Peck, Wm. L.
Parks, Harvie F.
Pierce, Lonnie.
* Pierce, Harvey L
Pierce, Ernest.
Peck, Ben.
Parks, Thomas L.
Reeves Frank.
Roberts, David O.
Reeves, John T.
Sullens, Jos. S.
Stringer, Engine.
* Stringer, John B.
Whitfield, Drew J.
YAHOO LA.
Anderson, John A.
Avery, Joseph B.
Ash, Wm. W.
Butler, John.
* Caldwell, Joseph B.
('aldwell, Andrew W.
Conner, P. L.
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ATK REGISTERED
-vvN
Th(‘ Most
Com plei e Li 11© of
A 11 < l All Oil lei* Iv i nds oi
1 ins, Ladies oi Childrens Shoes
EVER BROUGHT TO
X) A H L ONEGA-
Other Goods Too Numopous to Mention.
W. P. PRICE, Jr.
C. W. SATTERFIELD,
Dea lee in
FAMILY
GROCERIES
A TST D
General Merchandise.
Calhoun, Allen.
Calhoun, Wesley,
ivis, Floyd.
n
Davis, Thomas.
Fergus'on, Joseph A.
(i l izzie, James A.
Gaddis, D.'tmis M.
Grizzle, Wm. S.
Hi
C. M.
Head, F. A.
Jackson, Arlhor L.
* Jackson, Arnos 1).
Lee, Thomas.
Lee, William W
Lee, Pinkney L.
Mote, 0. M.
” Mart John,
Mote, I lent v L.
* Reid, Wm. II.
Ridley, Joseph.
Smith, James L.
Waldon, S. T. R.
Wilkins, James E.
Wimpy, James W.
Idle Away Your Vacation.
There is too much strenuous life
in our vacation periods, say end
nont physicians. 'American men,
when they get, ti fortnight off,
rush into sports that they are not
accustomed to. Instead of get
ting rested by their days away
from business they exhaust their
energies in unaccustomed e\' re is
os. To be sure, they get bronzed
up with the sun, but their
physical being is not restored for
the work that is ahead of them.
What is really needed by them,
aooordii: ■; ’•» tire specialists, is ab
solute r -t, days of luxurious id
ling, of whiling away time some-
ienv without too much exertion.
iJien i lie entire frame and mind
■t thori v.glily relaxed and -re-
fi'i aliened up, tho nerves get w,
tonic they have not been ac
customed to, and, when the office
or the store or the shop is return
ed to the man is in far better con
dition for the duties he resumes.
Get lazy for once in the year, is
tin! way one physician puts it.
' i i ve yourself a thorough rest.
Find out what it means to stay in
bed longer limn you have hereto
fore done. Find out how much
pleasure there really is in swing
ing lisjh -sly in a hammock" in n
eooi spot ; in loafing on a piazza,
with your fret cocked up on the
b; lustrade. Giye yourself an in
sight into the washerwoman's
heaven, the place where people
folds their hands “and just do
nothing.”
Bo downright indolent, says tho
doctors, and you will get v the
greatest benefit possible from your
vacation. Don’t indulge the idea
that if you are not constantly on
tho go your days of leisure are
misspent and doing you no good.
Get a more sonsible view ol
tion and what it means.