Newspaper Page Text
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“Wisdom, Justice, Moderation.”
FAYETTEVILLE* GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 38 188LL
VOL. 1 NO. 48.
General Directory.
CH^^T^tfps.
Mt. Moriah lodtje F, & A M„ meets at
Fayetteville every firot anil third Saturdays
a t 2 o’clock,
County C inmissi nei'3,
L- If. Blalock, Chairman, B. L. Jahnson,
C, II. Eastin, W. N. T. Harp, Dr. E. B.
\Ye.den,A. E. Stokes ex-off (Jlcrk.
City Directory.
Mayor—W. P. lied wine
Marsha!—J. B S mpson.
Counciimem—S. D, Dorsey, ,T W. Gra
ham. T. F. Girrison, S. A. Burks, aiidM.
E.Hil,
CHAS. II. OBB.
WALLACE B. GLOVER
C'liuty Officers.
Clark—A. E Stokes, Fayetteville, G'.
Ordinary—I). M. Franklin, Fayetteville.
Sheriff—S. n Martin, Brook-s Station .
D jpt’y Sheriff—J. P. Ilewell Fayetleviile
Tax Receiver—T N. Farr, Flat Creek.
Tax Collector—K. M. Davis, Fayetteville.
Treasurer—T. M. Murphy, Fayetleviile.
Coroner—J. G Tpeigh's, Fayetteville.
Surveyor—W. H. Pritchard, Brooks Sir.
County Srfcool Commissioner—W. T.
Glower, F at Creek.
f
B. L.
Fourth
District C urts.
496 G. M.—8. A. Burks J. P,
MtGougn N. P and ex-off J . P.
Saturday in each month,
538 G M.-C. R. Wor.Ley, J. P. J. E.
Sp-rdi, N.P. and ex-off J. P. * Second
Saturday in each month.
709 G. M.—N. G. Wallace ,T. P. J. T.
Brogdon N. P and ex- off J. 1*. Fourth
Sat urday in each month.
495 G M.- T. J. Edmondson ,T. P. ,T. M.
Arnall N. P. and ex off J. p. Thud
Wednesda* in each roowh.
I293 G. M.—G. B. Carson J. p.
Bridges V. P. and ex off J. P.
Thursday 111 each montV.
624 G. M.—B. Adorns J. P.
Saturday in each m< n li.
549 G M. —F. Landrum .T. P. M. M.
Collier N. P. aud ex-off J. P. First a:
uidiv in eac>> month.
I248 G M. —T. 8 Thornton T P, II. R.
Holder N. P. and rx-off J. P. TH d
Sitmday in each montti,.
. 1262 G M-S B. L-swis J. P. F. D.
II well N. P. and ex-off J. p. 11 ir . Sat
urday in each month.
J. M
Fourth
Second
ORE 4 6
Successors to DELBRIDGH & ORR.
Book Sellers, Stationers, News Dealers,
■{ FANCY GOODS, NOVELTIES, FTC. )■
110 WHITEHALL STREET ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
AS WE VIEW IT.
Manufactory, 213 W. German St.,
Baltimore Md.
Cor. 7th -.nd E. S.t. N W.
Washington, D. C.
EISEMAN BROS,
Strictly One Price
ClotUm,
DEALER IN
Fine Liquors, Brandies
i
TOBACCOS AND CIGARS.
0 West Metchell St. Atlanta. Ga.
PRICE LIST,
Gai, Qt.
Pure Pickens Co., Corn £2.00 70
Lots 4 gallons amj 3 qrts. 1.75
N. C. Sweet Mash Corn 1.65 60
In lots 4$ gallons, 1.60
W, S Samuels & Co. Sour Mash
Rye 10 years old, 6.00 I.’25
Old Baker Rye, 5. 00 125
Old Cabinet’Rye, 3.5*0 1.00*
Robinson County Rye, 2.25 75
Old ‘Reserve Rye, Y 60 85
Boubon Rye 3 years o’d, 2 50 75
XXXX Mill Creek Whisky 200 Go
70 Pr^ifjRye, 150. 60
Pore Cherokee County
♦ Apple & Peafffi Brandies 8 03 1 00
Imported Juniper Gin, 3 50 1 00
Holland Gin, 2.00 60
Impcrted Port Wine, 3.00 7o
Beer, Pint# per dozen, 1 35
Beer by keg, 2.50
Blackberry Brandy, . 1.60 60
Cherry Brandy, 1.50 60
IR 1 Jugs per gallon, 10 cen»s.
I Send money by Post 1 Note.
I Money Order or by Express.
All orders will receive prompt
attention,.•aricFnatisfactior.i gu ran-
lecd.
S. S. MOORE,
S) West Mitclo‘1 Street,
At la i ta. Gt
Subscribe lor Thk News.
EISEMAN BROTHERS,
17 & 19 WHITEHALL ST..
Anr’T.A-NTT’A, - GEOBGTA.
Vendor landscape, ropal In Its splendor.
Smiling with a look half proud, half tender.
Seems a shrouded corpse when dense fogs roll.
Life U glorious when the rays of duty
Shine upon it from a loving soul;
But Its hills and glades are robbed of beauty
If a selfish mist hangs o'er tho whple.
Scorning this great fact, the base man loses
Truth’s best diamond, priceless if he knew It;
Life is good or bad, as each one chooser
Life is as we view it.
Wanting wealth of heart, th(»u!ser's treasure.
Now too small to purchase lofty pleasure.
Boon will lie a deathbed pang, or w rse.
Love, contentment, goodness, Dojies ethereal.
Make the peasant, slender though his purse.
Vastly richer than tho wbolo material.
Star Illumed, unconscious universe.
Mental wealth, whose very touch entrances.
Boundless lies lor all whose minds pursue it:
Man Is rich or poor, just as he fancies:
Wealth is os we view it.
Lite's flame, flickering feebly In tho strongest
Oft blown ut is soon burnt at the longest;
Frail wo live; we’ro nothing In our graves.
Almost awful now, yet daily heightening,
Is our power, that rides tho foaming waves.
Weighs the planets, grasps tho leaping lightning.
Changes fire and air to decile slaves
Man cud humble Nature if she dares him.
Set her Borne hard task, and make her do it;
Mau la weaker than the steed that bears him:
Power is us we view it
Knowing not where Truth's first step commences,
Since tho sagos say our very senses
Teach but fieti.dark we live ar.d die.
Priceless thoughts that time In its long travels
Through past ages „-athcred, op 1 lie;
Science shows the cipher that unravels
Nature’s secrets, writ ou earth and sky.
But the wondrous volume spread before us
Needs eternity to read right through it
All Is darkness! Floods of light flout o'er us!
Truth is as we view it
One faint gasp, and then tho low death rattlel
Thus we end it, beaten in the b.-vtle,
Losing ail things wftlhuir iiarting breath.
Life has glories, but Intensely brighter
Is the glory of a noble death.
When tho soul. Its load each moment lighter,
Heedless now of what the vain world saith.
Seeing visions, pain Sublimely scornwig,
Feels the Icy hand, yet dares to woo it;
Death is starless night, or radiant morning:
Death is os we view It.
—Th* Acadacir.
Offer to the Public AD
Kind of
WAGON,
BUGGY,
CARRIAGE,
U FIRST-CUSS STYLE.
We u«o lhe very best “3 X” Select
find «r riiat can be . bought. Wo do tie
good IKON WORK m soy shops in
GeoigiA.
All Work CossUfidera Guarantee
We have on hand a full supply of the
Mused Flow Stocks,
k
Also, a full. Stock of the
RHODES COTTON PLASTERS.
We are pn ting up th- best
HARROWS
Ever used in Fayette C unty. If you
went a Fiisi-clats Job of
PAiUTISfi OR TRMING
On BUGGIES, WAGONS, Ac , evil ou us.
Coffins Mid3 to Order.
Wo have TIRE SETTERS to usr
without cutting Tiru. Best
BUGGIES AND WAGONS
On hauil for Bile. Prie 8 to rnit the
ouitom-r. Give (in h trial. Price on!
Stock bob ro bi.ying ol e where. Re
spectfully,
TUBWSEED & fiAHRISON,
FAYETTEVILLE. GA,
NOTICE
I will open my school at Robin-
«'n's School Hcujj Monday the
8.)v day of July.
V. P. MILNER.-
Fire insruanoe.
The winter season is nearly here.
Insure your homes against loss by
fire.
Rates aud Companies, gu ran-
teed asgood as the best.
I am representing the AT
LANTA HOME, PHENIX and
Other Insurance Companies.
Call on or address me at FAY
ETTEVILLE.
M. E. HILL
J. H. FRANKLIN.
_NO, IS WEST MITCHELL ST.
Atlanta Ga.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
^-.DEALER IN—' v —>
GROCERIES,
STOCK-FEED
AND HARD WARL
Quality and Pu'ces of Goods
Guaranteed.
Be sure to give him a call
\T u y n it Aihi.tj .
Quite Indifferent, You See.
Father—Robert, is it not about time
that little boys were abed?
Robert (aged C, carelessly glancing
at his watch)—Really, father, 1 ipust
be excused from venturing an opin
ion. It is a subject in wtnch I have
little interest; I have no little boys,
you know.—Binghamton Republican.
Weitern Stas© florae*.
The old stage teams, which the loco
motive and the Pullman car drove
into an inglorious retirement, wero
many of them as fine animals as
money could buy. It took a horse
man to select and put them together,
so they would work well, and in this
regard no man ever exceeded Alex
Benham, who was for many yeais
superintendent of the line from Den
ver eastward. It was said of him that
ho could go into a band of horses, se
lect four or six, harness them to a
coach and each was in its proper
place. Many of these stage teams be-,
came famous all along tile line,, for
speed, endurance and ell the other
qualities which the boys called a
"rattlin team.” One of the most noted
of these four in hands was tho "Little
Roan” team. They used to run in and
out of Council Bluffs, before the
Northwestern road reached that city.
Thert they were scut out on the plains
and gradually worked west, until
they reached Laporte, where they re
mained until the Cheyenne route was
abandoned. They were four straw-
) berry roans of Morgan build, medium
j in size and possessed of the most rc-
| markable strength and fleetness. It
I was a pleasu re to see them travel.
! The last time- the writer saw them
! was in the summer of 1870, when
' they were on the line between Denver
| and Lake Station, then the terminus
or the Kansas Pacific. They went off
1 like colts.
I "Will they run yet?” was asked of
the driver.
"Yes, just as quick 03 they ever
would,” anu he snapped his whip aud
away they sprang into a gait which
seni. the old coacn rattling idong at a
ten mile an hour rate. What became
of the gallant little team after this last
stage trip the writer never knew, but
ho ventures the assertion that ;t was
the toughest, gamiest, fleetest four in
hand team that ever pulied a coach in.
harness.—Chicago News.
Every day that the sun rises upon
the , American people it sees an addi
tion of $2,500,000 to tbe accumulation
of wealth in the United States, winch
is equal to one-third the daily accu
mulation of all mankind outside the
United States.
I An Important Period.
• In thousands of homes all over the
(land tho hearts of pareuts go out. in
the days of early June, to the daugh
ter whose school days will end, who
will be a sweet girl graduate. In her is
[centered a fond mother’s tender hope
[and a father’s less demonstrative pride
and affection. The pretty creature
busy at her studies in this the eleventh |
hour of school days, the fair gradu-
jato is an object of interest not con- 1
'fined to her pareuts or her brothers. ,
.There are other graduates’ brothers j
that will learn to date all the events ;
of their life, backward and forward, j
•from tho day their eyes were greeted I
with a vision of learned loveliness in j
'spotless white, standing before the nu- I
dience and reading such pretty plati
Beaten by a Prince.
In the office of Manager Amberg,
of the German theatre, lay several
phr'.ograplia of a. handsoun.- young
woman, dressed in theatrical costumes
and posed in theatrical ways.
"Those are pictures of Fraulein
Loisiuger,” Mr. Amberg said, “and
they came in a letter asking if I
would engage her for a season in my
theatre. She wrote that she had been
pretty successful in Germany as a
siuger and comedienne, and she was
wRUug to come to this country for
$100 a week. How much cheaper than
that I could have secured her 1 don’t
know, for there was not time for ne
gotiations before 1 received a second
letter saying that marriage would
make it undesirable for her to come
to this country. Pretty soon a cable
dispatch appeared in the papers giv
ing the news that this same Fraplein
Loisiuger had married Prince Alex-
andqy of Battenburg. The public
knftws all about that romance, in
which a princo of royal blood fell in
love with a stage beauty and made
her his wife. I shall k^fep her pictures
and letter as proof of how I was
beaton by Prince Alexander.’’—New
York Sun.
One on the Blae Cross Region.
Referring to tho blue grass region
of Kentuckv and its fine horses, a
whito paper. The time of woman s t ,^ at secil °^ and was entei .umed at a
■*-»<* «•«-«**
in the drawing room, nor is the tirno
of its coming beyond tho era of the
;‘‘bud” season. Male hearts cannot pos
sibly resist sucha combination as brains
and beauty; a doubled barreled charge
which Cupid launches from tho ros
trum ori graduation day. “June, dear
June,” is thus fittingly apostrophized
by the poet, for a mouth that gives us
the sweet girl graduate mid the straw
berry (the homo grown, not the travel
a degenerate sou of the governor
talked loosely about things in general,
and among them of a visit through
Mississippi, remarking that lie had
not seen a pretty woman in his tour
through the state. The fair young
girl from Mississippi awaited her op
portunity, and during a short lull in
tho conversation turned and askeil tho
governor if what she had heard of fhe
'stedned teryy) is meet to reign queen piemen of Kentucky were true
tri l &e# h00d0f tWelvl - W i « V d e X XS?of^tha'wtiolo
buig Lulle ^; j oompany was directed to the lady’s
I Thou tlie Worltl Turned 'Round Again. v , ,, ,
He entered a tobacco store oiv Grand _ XT’ sai “. 1 s “®»' I heard that
iRiver avenue with a handkerchief Kentucky gentlemen educate their
pressed to his jaw, aud was at once horses turn their sons out to
an object of solicitude. , grass.’’-Washington Posh
. "I’ve boon there,” said number one,
"and 1 can feel for you. Try pepper-
incut essence.”
•' "1 always put on a bag of hot salt,”
said number two. "Have cured tho
worst kind o’ case in two hours.”
- "Bosh 1” exclaimed number three,
"electricity will stop that ache in two
minutes. Ill never fool with any
other remedy.”
“Gentleman,” said number four as
ho nut ins linger iuto bis mouth to
foe! of mi old snag, "there's nothing
like luiidammi for the toothache. It
comes I rout an exposed nerve, lau
danum deadens the sensibility of tiio
nerve. I’ve used it with success a
hundred times.”
"1TI never advise a man to waste
time fooling around,” saul number
five. "Let him go straight to tho den
tist and have it pulled out It takes
p, a. •! course, but in 11 vo minutes
you*are over it forever.”
The SheU of the Scallop.
Tbe prominence of tho scallop in
heraldry has been raentioued. It sig
nifies, when found iu a coat-of-arms,
or cftTYon upon a mortuary monu
ment, that tho person has been a cru
sader to the Holy Laud. In the old
days it was known as St. James’ or St.
Jacob’s shell, and was worn by pil
grims and crusaders, sewn to “their
garments or fastened upon their
standards. Many legonas cluster'
about it, ami allusions to it are riv
et ue at in the poetry and romance of tho
middle ages, while it often plays a
significant part in tho religious a-1 of
that day. Out of this, aud its natural
beauty of form, h i arisen tho wide
adaptation of this Granulated or "seal-
ii'fipd" -.hell tn docorativo designs in’
both the painters’ and sculptors arts;
—Ouve a Week.