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WILL It. IvKAIIAM. I/’ilor ;n*d Maniig**r.
f E' I I 1C
ADVERTISER
l’C>UMIM> KvfcUY M MM.' wv.
FONT OAlNKh, - * * * (»A
fttiiiacription Kates.
On** copy, r»n<’ year...... ..... ■:ID'
4/n« -»py.*t* inoirfh-.........
One eopy.tbrce ru<».th..........
Them OV n<lvnr.< f d |>ri v., ui d 5= In ii not
tttetll tin: «ii*l of th» }<.ur - > ■>. r ii-nt
will bn a<i'i< d.
A«l\»-rt King Kates.
f ln« . (ji ire, (ten Inn <»r It i
€ii*i* ii ■i-r'ioii..........
For eu< li Mih, t f|fn tit it. I'ftion
Nut' r«> in Im ;d I'oluiiiii, 10 '.-ui )■< r line.
Fditi«risl mdiei .where r< jue ted for }<«• r*
Nonul WiadJt, 10 i'« lit |>. 1 1 it!
am, u;«s s m nu ; t»«■ t 1 i.r. i*kh
(mitnun* mu 1 ho | in id for a- etlivr ad
%mli 'ii, i.i .
On. in ti <r<I iiifi r(«d in tin- flu iu< t. I’i
ret If-ry !"•' I in' llullai u*.
A»l\«*rti*.;«i Mil.i ii. 1 rl'-'l wiMi.mt
tj«Mi a: to ttm lUlilil'iT »*I* ni*--rti'.i
jmbli to- I until ordi-n•<l »ut, iunl <*!■;»- ■•!
(•onliiifty. (vlii'i tli*-:ntv<>,'li
till! ni'i due hih fit- 11 r 1
li.illit -t in ;ui<l tin 1 in. in y will I i- »llid
tv.il-II III I'UI 'l.
If It /, /.* a /,*,!//.( v,
V<tittff/rr .1 I'tHltn'.
DIRECTORY.
n
CHUPvCHES.
(Iapti , 1 i *’in i;* ii. I! v.T. Weaver, P:,.
|i>r. I’ll so liinj; I i uni hr l tniiidsa - in e.ii'l
Inniith. HuuilnV-.-eliiiol ' •. in., .l.‘ K. I'iiul
lilt ! Ilj.t, I'lMMT IliecU. , 'J lllil'. tlay CM II
in:'-.
M i i lb*m /1 ('lU'io ii. — lh v .1 o. I.ump tun
Vn-lni’. I'lvndiiiij/ 2 irl iunl 11 !i humiai/ ii
*ihTi mmitli. t'iiii<liiv-,«i-!)iinl '.i a. in. \V. A •
<• raitu n Sujd. l.,u!io.’ I'lavor hum tin Tin-.*
cay hUi'I’.ihhii. Ynting im- ’ JVaycr mud
bigT hi'mIi v ovi'iiini'. Urn; #ar Prater meet-
1 ij; Wi iliii ula v i \ cn’ng.
f’HK*nvnun a v < 111 KCII.- — Sumliiv
s liiuil '.i ,i. in. -I. 1’. II. fti'/wu Sui t,
COUNTY COMMISSIONLRS.
J. K. I’anllin, S. 1>. Coleman. J. K.
Oreo 1 , A. Ii, Foster.* J. N. Bigbic,
f’oi-NTY TurA/t’KKii, J. I*. II. Brown
1 .\X Cwi.bKi’Toii, W. li. Harrison.
Tax Uk ’kivkk, T. II. Davis.
• ’OUONKII, J D Owens
MASONIC BJHECTOKY.
I)auu:y l.mxiK, No. 17. l>;pi!nr mro(
in.' !*l and dnl SiUiml.iv oM'iiii'g*. T. .M
Iti.nvn, St'.., II. 1 ’. <*utm. M.M.
1.\ka vi' 11 k No. 12 — ]'v
im'ctiiiir-' 2 ml NiiturJav veiling, \\ . A
t • tiilmm, H. 1 *.
\t. >.»;*:i!i-iin (’aiI'ii'’!, No. 22 \V. - -Uejsuhu
im *-t ii-• 4 ifi S'ltunlrv i-vt'iiimf. A. t»iu
S* o. li. M.
Iv of II. Caine r.o;!.'.'N,». ll.'-til: i
nii-tdm^ 2 U'-! :uid4th i'lii-Mlay ui:;hl* W. 1
1 . 1 . Ui 11 • • - .■ rt . -. ' 1 ' M !'. wii, Jllctaiu!
COUXTY.
fMTUKlt'H < liiMliM*. .i .1 TCI- i-!..‘ju<U( Uri
Ii (.h-' i' W Nil li\ r,
.1 T Mi'AUStW. - af iitl’. fh'gulfir t.'iiii, -It:
.Miiailiiv^'iii March a:. ! Si'] n labor,
or Ot.lHNARY.—- li. T.
r.K»ti*. • h’llinarv, Kigulni’ im-vtiiv; ! ,
. MmihI ay in i K'fi niciit!i
< air n rv (Vim-—G. G. I, rk.
.JllJi,'!-.
IK WIN k W ARWK R.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
*V“\Vl!l Pra-*thv In Super’er Courts of
I'ahuilu C’hvuit. ti
j; l\ MANDLYILLE,
1MIYS1UAN and Sl ltCI-OX
u' Cum- u vf. l>uru Sroute,
THE
eesf WAV !■ »
To get a Flmt-ClasaWatcIi
i#Ln oiu lo-Opcriitive lluim. ^ t
HHITKS
LOWEST CASH PRICES
Onh $[.00 a Week o
Thousands of the best .^ItS.OO
Gold Watch over made aro sell¬
ing in our Co-operative Clubs.
Thist« tho ite*t* Cheapest, Most Convenient,
arul only co operative System of sclliftst wutthau
The watches nru Americau I e ver Stem Whalers
rt>nwiuiuR every essential to necurnoy and pnteuti, di;r;t
Htlty. Impruvemeuw nnd have, found iu ndditioa, uusteroiu
absolutely the on’ In u.» other wstch. They an
y fiiMfjud Da»njifw»/X«rf'
menta ma*k iu World, and a. a jmvcU
IhrouRlkMtt with OitXVISJS HI BIS S. Th.
Stem II ind and he: i- tho : . WK
rinplcst made. They are fut y *qt*al jor np
f>rartiHer, aertiract/.durahfhtt/ a;uf arrriee
ir«f*S. Our cooperative Club Sysan
bring* them u iihiu the reach i f every one.
f S t tSW^TCH l^THE KEYSTONE CLUB CO
G N>a 7 (O Chestuni St.,
Fw/I r * * ' ox l* 5 - I*l*-.ltt. Pa
We 1 ter to *.ty Com- • 1 Atit Nl S
fig-- tu. rcivl Agency. V‘A4T60
Cinbs Cons tar. tly FormiuS
Joia Now aud Save Moaey
WE M4VC ACCNCICS IM CVCMV LAftCS CITS
WANT ACCNTfS EVtRVW*-T«i
■ u
V-wY • 3 ■ Ti? F-tivMmg-na.h.rv -?s!™
ft ■miI’Jz*q^**'«*•«'ft* «r.»!e tn
m rTT,’ uweiM.
.J » 1.1 ilfc. „ ..a | rt-c r.
IlMilsta Kid, iwl v»!r,)hif tit
\mmnSei. Sounil»t*(-H!.l, lann.suMr a-k ii»at , M
iMtuirwiij
** >-t>r »■-•!... . »nd »««. -4
Lnmnlkt *U »**!! I.. ........ >.-i;r <mn
I'----------- L-!>«■. I. .*.,»cn I ii. . i,
. n.n- ir- ■ :. r.'I JM ,.!«
’ . M»:t. MUti tfca
{J V V 8 nfP*!Ui.«m.im«i»!.Miw. w m« »»d ...» »:i* f-e
i # ;
» f mm* P>sf > s FSk m * •<» *>’•*•' .»•*••! m I*1V iwtui-ri M 'lt. All m.M’t. li
*4 •*•»»*• «■*, »-•»». n.<-«r »*>•' Mt.lv r, u. «. ui. t caw»<-*
i ll- *•*•«• 'h# h. -l ,. «ms-nv.l.A,r iu -hr w,«M. tud th
I ww.tsii^rpT’T? m i »*» w u.t, t% ih# t ft |i (1 fI
j l«itMI I-.M ». |.w Hv»», Hit i liLlit tMtl
h.u 4
■f -TO Ii«»4at ti*#*. Hi. .1.
RWi ««.» >. i-lm..rltl
\j(hie «»• I*«»«*iw»» I »l >-gc-.l .iisa
i«
w5H?v1kiS Anaiplr#. TIwm
••
fvll II Um **».k. *« *<- 9*1
* Yrr#, su4 *ft»r lows Gihw. kfjA
tk*m ™«*M|4,tfcvv»#««*«}»#««* la ymt Mm ft-v »uJ »<**»'» »»**•
; h« cf »rv#i«lrg 11 ** W.trh
«,>® »f»!» It t* •*" »««* ' .'** t ” Ait-, **
lua.Cl* s’ 1 « » : 1 .*1 ' 11 • < 1 '■ a.«i.'/ *
€*»., ««*. nl i,i , «u U
-v *^
■
•
Tl J tm L _L S H -A £ f: M ■ I * 4 - riSER f a*
PIANOS 1
organs
L&B.&K.H.
FIFTH ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
June I fg .i.ug. I, I8S3.
Woilh $25,000 of I’luuos i.ud Organa
f.-om beat ambers to be closed |
out t ega nllcwt ofvo4 cr vai ur. ;
Sloe 4 toolar^e. Must coil vert
•iiluciili or installment aist-ts.
Worn*. entirely NEW INSTKt’.
itlli.NTS not used n ility.
S 011 K', Nearly litantlis New-used only. it few j
So;ue. used a year or so.—Some,
used two to three years.
Some, (IncSecond llaii''y—token
iu cxrlutiiKe, and made new in
our Ur-at rctmir Factory. He.polishcd
rung. ICestored in Tone
and Action, aud uuult- good tor
years of service.
BAHCSAINS. EVERY ONE.
EASY TERMS.
Yimr OWN VI RMS alm««t.
Very llf-ht IHonthly Piyim iils,
or Stnnll Ca.Hh Pn> inutit and bal¬
ance v. ken you gut ready.
CASH BUYS CHEAP.
Hive you nil the lime wanted
but SPOT CASH will wive yon
money. TRY ITS ON. We will
meet you every lime.
$50, PliAf^OS
$75, SI 00,$! 50.
ORGANS
$24, $35, $50, $75.
,
WRITE FOR BARGAIN JHEET.
CLEARANCE SALE
SUIflEUEF! 1S8S. 1
tUODENSBATES.S.W.H.
SAVANNAS!, 6A,
'
i
— . _
i :! /17. I:. H/RROiN. JOHN J. GhUDRY
Herron ti Giiudry,
,
(-’ui cm --- rs !•- 1-. .’ V r'.h.'iitl, :*. & Co.)
! :oti ox FACTORS. '
i AND
( 1 om tat anion \fcrvha ni$.
.
120 flay Strict, — Savannah, (! mukoia.
i I i.-i’-ral udvani'i- ma ! ■ ms is»Hon eots/iirn-
1 . 4 C’l til In!" /’• *. gntm'ists i-t c<>t
t->:i /oh,': . Jtu : V n will hi- <fiv
• ' U to ; 11 bu.- 1 .. -* -iitrusted to us Oii'jiu
"
l?uckIcin*s.V ruicaSalvo
1 u . !'k s hi th • world for Put?
; I I'lMi Hriii/ /. . > s tos, I l V k-t-r*. iV * s.-iitlih ■ ;i%«vc
Son**. T-t!t -r, ( hupj • •1 Hai, i • k iiUbluins.
Corns an l 11 ckiu 1 LruptfsiiS, ;>•>.*’bsvly
cures Pile.?, or.no pay feet ie» / . is guar- '
iinteinl to give pet * or
* tuoni-v rc? iiih1»hI. P i - cts. i»'i box.
For .V \V, 51. S; eight.
}•/':> S*t T > mi*- *°iu.-v s % 'F*> ^ 1 X
Co;-, l. ......‘
eat.".! r.u- free. Why pay tv'.eil pii e* ’;
^.v; :i v‘R:.y ' ; ?h ' W r, ‘ ,us
*vik Mani ’u n urr..*. 14 te 24 Weils -t..
* I.uJ.uo, N. Y .
rni
ir*. ‘'vididrcs.
The rOLICB GAZETTE will be
r.mil .1. Rot*un‘iv v. m- 'H' l o mu- m'llr **
j,, |.1 1 ^ M ' * “ OKth3 “
j •
I 0 .,s,t , ONT. no!.! '
«.v^w Adin- sail
orders I
HK ILVid’i- . ^V.
^
i.
The SifeyHO go. M
Mar.tfict’jrcrs of
: ■ i
ME**--. -; f fl?
vs. - - ■■ sh
_______ -
fT'f/ rffji i: S*
H.-eLtSt 15 . % - - ' V-Ri -jj SSl
J-'ATO*«_
J : «F gam tyr*- « )|
J
V*su,-*4 ■£.«I* •
, V 4 • f v • •< *
M . raff m :
, a
. .
€£l* '<4-i i
■** .‘ i
* — w- ...n
v i . •
-*• - - * »
THE STERLING PIANOS, !
»:uot! roe
Quality of Toaa, Beauty of Design,
FINISH and a da ptabifity for stand¬
ing In Tuna havo no equal.
Even? Phm Warraaied for tm Years
Asd *a£t»f*»'Uoii cunnuiu-i-d t: every pun-Jia*. r.
Also Maaufactur* :hc WcrtD-Kwvowsva
STERLING ORGAN
Faclorios, Derby, Conn.
FORT GAINES, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER ISth, 18S9.
vs&
m%%%
The Chief Btonwon for the jfro.it suo
e**s of Ifowi’s Sarsaiiurilla is in the
article Itself. It is merit that wins,mid the
i:;ct that Hood’s Sarsaparilla, actually ac¬
complishes what is claimed for it, is what
has given to this medicine a popularity and
sale greater than that of any other sarsapa
A/1 ri f \A/in#*' r m, ‘ a or l, ’ 00f ‘ P r,r **
1/lC-i rs It. V/lilo fier before the public,
Hood'* Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt
Elieiim ami all llmnors, Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, lliliousness, overcomes Thai
rircd reding, creates an Appetite, strength¬
ens tho Nerves, builds up (lie Whole System.
■loo<r»Mnr»:ipiiri!!» is sold byajldrug
E'.sts. ?!; six for ?5. Prepared by C 1. Hood
fc Co., Apothecaries, Loweii, Hass. *
Ti Unites I’nid to Wonion.
Confucious—Woman is the mas
ter piece.
Herder—Woman is the crown of
creation.
Voltaire—Women teach us re
pose, civility and dignity.
Ku>kin—Shakespeare has no he*
rocs—ho has only heroines.
John Quincy Adams—All that I
am my mother made me.
Whittier—If woman lost us Eden
such as slio can only restore it.
Gladstone--Woman is tho most
perfect when the most womanly.
Buhvcr—To a gentleman every
woman is a lady in right of her
sex.
Lamaitine—There is a woman at
the beginning of all great things.
E S. Barrett—Woman is last at
the cross and earliest to the grave.
Saudi—A handsome woman is
jewel; a good woman is a treasure.
Hi eh ter —No man can either live
piously or die righteously without
a wife.
X. i\ V’ills—The swcclc-t thing
in lifij i 3 tbo unclouded welcome of'
a wife. .
Heine—Handsome women with*
out religion are like flowers with
out perfume.
v t/ltaire— All the reasonings of
men aro not worth one sentiment
of a woman.
Beecher—Women aro n now race
recreated sinco the world received
Cnrislianity.
Leopold Seliefcr—But cue thing ®
on earth is better than a wife —
that is mother.
Lutlici — Earth lies nothing more
tctidor than a woman’s heart when
it is ihe abode ofpilv.
Siiakcspcarc—For where is any
author in tho world teaches such
beauty as a woman’s eye ?
Michelet—L oman is the Sunday
° ! n ’ a ‘ j not bis repose only, but
bis joy, tiie salt of his life.
Margaret Fuller Ossi!—Woman
’shorn for love, and it is impossi*
blc to turn her from seeking it.
Louis Deunoyors —A woman
may be ugly, ill shaped, wick
ignorant, silly an d stupid, L-.
haidlv ever ridiculous.
■ 1 ......... . ........... — —~m
There aro times when a *elin£. W
of fl lassitU'.ro . . will ... the most .
overcome
™ hm l\ * h « U ; c 5 r*f« m *? v “ for
^”cn°h o b ™;::
. ’T » ' 1 , ^ . , .
F ’ *
Hr... A. r Mc-eans *, e.arsrmanlla.
The l tah wool output for 1SS9
will be nearly 12 , 000,000 pounds,
at prices ranging from fourteen to
nineteen cents, \\ith an average of
17 12 cents. This quality is cxcei
lent, owinu to the fine feed Secured
by May rams. The expert of
ton has been , very brn*k, ii. so that
scarcity has been occasioned nod
prices will be stiff this summer,
• *#<»—---
Far better than the harsh treatment of
medicines which hi>tubiy giipe the pati
eat and destroy ii. ii the coaficg of the stem
ach. ....i. Dr. ti- J. t AlcD«ni ii-i ^.n’. D[ rirfi* hid ami u. Fe
ver Cure, bv mild yet effective action
cure. Sold at oO cents a bottle.
<3-—
Last year in Cambridge, Mass.,
there nearly - , . 14,*.«00 .- AA female . .
were
P^Bs assessed. This year the as*
scssors, making their inquiries un*
dcr the new law requiring them so
10 ^
w »tvJ to be asstsstd.
Undo Sprmltllcr’s Philosophy.
I was about to close this letter
when “Uncle" Spradillcr garden, er.mc in
from working the and ask*
ed mo to pul in a little philosophy;
‘ to make it go oil' easy like.’ Hero
it is:
“Dcre is preachers in dis Country
till you can’t res’, and dc called
race get mo'dan any odder. Be
ire, bble is, da had or call ter plow
an’ da got mix an’ 'cided it wus a
cull to preach. I refer dis much
from de loose way dat some of dem
j handle do text.
“Do li/e of a farmer am a good
life, an’ you nee’n be shame ob yo’
callin’. Xebuchadcrezzaration was
wus a farmer an’ a great hart at
keepiu’ down the grass. Sum ob
dc bos' mon in do country wus rase
; from po’ lan’.
1 “When 1 sco a culled pnsson
1
homin’ his lied high in do spring
time an' braggin bout do cotton
lie’s gwino ter make an’de uig crod
it lie got at dc slo’, I kin see do
sheriff coinin’ wid dc fus’ frost, an
[ wonder how much dat TOulo ob
<
bis is gwinter bring at do sale.
“The woiT am growin’ more bet
tcrer cyrv day. I got so now I
| doan min’ lendin’ a man two dol¬
lars, cf be leaves his watch for sc*
| curily.’’—F. L. Stanton in Home
and Farm.
How Forms Aro Mortgaged.
In the repoUoftho Bureau of
Statistics of Labor for tho state of
Ohio, for the year 1888, the follow¬
ing list isgiven showing the amount
of farm mortgages in the States
named :
_
Ohio SSOUOOO^OO
Indiana 398,000,000
Illinois 620,000,000
Wisconsin 250,000,000
Michigan 350,000,000
Minnesota 175,000,000
Iowa 351,000,000
X ebraska 140,000,000
Kansas 203,000,000
! Missouri 237,000,000
Total farm mortgages
in these Stales 63,425,000,0C0
By the census of 1SS0 tho total
value of all the farms in these
States were reported as $5,107,040 -
j 003; what an increase in this value
! tho census of 1890 will show re*
mains to be seen, bui tho contrast
of the two aggregates given is
j startling, and these arc the most
thriving agricultural states in the
Union.—From tho Economist.
Sick headache, wind on the stomach
biliousness, nausea, are promptly and,
' agreeably Little Liver banisited and Khlney by Dr. J. Pellets. il. McLean’s 20c.a
vial.
—"**•*•'»*«----
A Wild Turkey S«_*!icme>
The wild turkey is a bird that
lias almost disappeared from the
‘acc of the earth. But it will be
j comforting to sportsmen to learn
that there aro still sections of tho
country where this gamesome and
toothsome fowl abounds in eompar
alively plentiful numbers. »Such
is said to be the case in some parts
1 of Mississippi. But if the record
recently made by an old hunter
down there is kept up, tho supply
will not last long. The hunter in
, question enticed a flock of turkeys
into a lonely place in tho woods by
scattering rt, 'rn on the ground,
| l'his opei . on was performed sev*
, nicT , • formed - ILbX ...
toon
* daily *«^ breakfast. *» «•>* lie then ^ laid ^ for
them, and one morning fired
th<j gock> kining e ; ghlecn onU
right at one shot. The niGcteentb
escaped with a broken wing, His
neighbors feasted on turkeys for a
; iveek.—Washington Post. *
j John Smith the World Over.
1 In T Latin T ,• , be • is Johancas Smithus.
the .. Italians .. smooth .... him with
ever
.Giovanni .Smith, tho Spaniards
render him Juan Smithus, the
: Hollanders adopt him as Hans
Schmidt, the French flatten him
oul 38 ^ ean Sraeet, the Rasssian
sneezes a-d baF&s as he says I vac
SmiUowskc. In China he ia known
as Jovr.n Shmidt, tn Iceland as
Johne Smithson, in Tuscaroras you
all about Pocahontas and
! Powhattan when you hear them
fa n Ton Qua Smittia. asjihcm In Wale.
they speak ot'him Setnidd,
>u Mexico ho i<r v Japti YSmitti,
amo pg U: eek^ ruins the guide
C St| “
'.V-*
;
_
Si hooK And (Georgia
(Jirls,
Teaching is first a science, then
an art. First the Knowledge, then
the application.
Hike other branches of technolo
gv, it may be advanced by rational !
experiment or by rash trial. But
the evil results of working in the
dark are worse in this than in any
other calling. If a bov* spoils a
block of wood lie gets another. If
malpractico kills the patient
there is the greatest possible pi n*
denco among the dead, for, as Mol*
ierc says, they never complain of
the doctor who killed them.
Xol so with the unskilled teach
or. Its evil cfl’ects follow tho pu*
pil at homo and abroad, at work
and at leisure, in health and in
sickness, through time and cterni*
*y
Millions of minds have been mar
rcc ^ 'Snorance and indolence
^ IC barbaiit} and stupidity, ihe
evil precepts and worse examples
s l' or b Iho want of sound
professional training of teacbors.
On the other hand, liic master spir¬
its of tho world, from the days of
Socrates and “The Great Teacher”
• \ % t
to tho present time, havo left on
record tlioir methods and maxims
for developing thought and form*
ing character. These must be stud¬
ied.
You arc a liard*working man.
Your son is a grown*up dude, and
you know it. Why? Because neith¬
er you nor his teacher have known
the noble heroism of voluntary la¬
bor, self'denial and hardship.
Training means drawing, The
teacher who can not alluro his pu*
pils to the paths of virtue, snatch*
mg him from the paths of vice,
gently forcing him, .like young
Hercules to make deliberate choice
of a lifo of toil with an old ago of
honor, so fur ia that teacher a fail*
fire, . ; « ,
All this will be accomplished on¬
ly when the teacher adds to uatu*
ral tact tho educational wisdom^of
m
ages. The experience of half a
nay, tho voice of all the
centuries, declares that education
0,,1 Y can truin 0UI ‘ youth to ari cn*
ergy that knows no obstacle, to an
industry that.leaves no time for
Geminate vices!
Normal schools were invented
in Germany nearly three hundred
years ago, introduced into Scotland
a hundred, and into America just
fifty years ago. All our neighbor*
ing states arc beginning to feel their
benefit. “Why stand wo here idle ?”
There wa 3 once a town of Hart*
fords and Libboys. They married
cousins with cousins until they dc-,
scended below tho grade of tespect
able cattle. Such might be the fate
°^ a town or a state that repelled
^&ht from its neighbors. It
would die out in darkness.
Normal is derived from NORMA,
a ru ! e > model, or pattern. The
normal school has au annex, a mob
EL sc b°ol taught by the most ac*
ooroplishcd Normal teachers, and
* a $ C1 ’ Lbe course by Normal pu*
P‘ ,a who havo witnessed tho teach*
,n £> “ nc * " ‘ l0 now take it up under
^be eye and criticism of a normal
feather,
What have wo in Georgia that
answers this purpose? Not one
school for training yonng ladies to
teach !
We arc thankful for every word
o»r Icgislaturo tt.caks in behalf of
A —/ D y .° se ° r -
§ O ns can di S a goo^l living , out of
almost any few acres in Georgia,
and if he will not dig let him suffer
But daughter—well may she
say : “1 can not dig, to beg 1 am
ashamed.' What she can do and
do well, in that pray help her. i
STRICTLY PROFESSIONAL
the Normal school must be. It is
not a high school; it is not a pre*
paratory school for the university.
Its first and chief purpose is to pre¬
pare the graduates of all other
schools to teach in the public
schools of Georgia. Aside from
ibis purpose il has 1.0 right to be.
In some states tho normal ,~bool
has taken up mixed work—it will
have no ctreuso for this in Georgia.
Its course of study hererhohld. he
a:to f other proiessional giving on
lysuch elementary instruction as
comes incidentally with iilustrat*
• ng tho best methods of* toackrng.
M,„d has ,u laws and
VOL. % V .*• .NO* 7.*
%
lions of knowledge in accordance 1
with tlnjso laws, For this purpose
one woJMrainjxd, good teacher is
worth a score of poor ones.
Our state supports public schools.!
Doubtless this ia good public ceon
omy. Two or three .per cent of
the funds now devoted to public
schools, if wisely devoted to train*
ing for tho work, would in the
near future double their utility.—
IT. II. Smith in Atlanta Journal,
English Capital.
In the nast few months the press
has had much to sav about the
largo amount ot English capital
that is being invested in various
kinds of industrial enterprises ip
this country. The reason riven is
that tho government bonds 0 f
Great Britain aro being replaced
by now ones bearing two and ones
half pox* cent interest, and tho poo*
pie there are seeking a more proli*
table investment for their savings,
Tho I’ritish gold that is coming
here through large investment com
panies is not so much that of heavy
capitalists as tho savings of trades*
men and wago errners. Some have
expressed alarm about this influx
of English capital, * but it is need*
. 10 It t. should , ,, rather . bo
p f. a matter ai
ot congratulation. It is a very
high compliment to tho soundness
and integrity of business in this
country that tho shrewd, money*
making, monoy-naviug pcopm of
England should send her savings
bore in such largo amounts for safe
investment. They C()iisidor it the
s “ fcst country-in tbo world for in.
vestment. This capital will be a
benefit to tho country. It will
help develop our wonderful resour¬
ces, cnlargo our manufacturing in
duslrics^ and give eipplopmeqt to
thousands. A 3 tho rate of interest
on money follows tho law of sup*
ply and demand, tho addition of
millions to the capital of tho couns
try will lower tho rate of intcrost
aud benefit tho borrowers. %
History gives no parallel to the
wonderful development of agrieul*
lure iri Ibis country, mining, manu*
facturing and every other lino of
industry. It commands the attenv
tion of tho civilized world. And
it is tho highest kind of a compli¬
ment to our country that tho lead*
ing commercial nation should send
her surplus capital hero for safe
and profitable investment.—Farm
and Fireside.
What Defeated Him.
r x*C 1 ongrossman Ford of Mi chi*
.
gar. tells a New York reporter how
he came to bo . defeated for con*
gross. ,.r
“I mado a ftpeech.” he said, “to a
big gathoripg of Hollanders, of
whom there aro a good many in
my district. In talking gf the po*
litical issues I got off this: ‘X ho
democratic party knows no north*
or south, no cast or west, but it
does know the people at large/
U i Yot’s dot Mister Ford mean by
dcr bcoples at large?’ inquired one
cf the muddled Hollanders of Tim
Tarsney, tho cx-congressman who
defeated Howell G. Horr, lately ap¬
pointed consul to Yalparaleo, after
the meeting.
“Why," said Tarsney, “Mr. Ford
means by the people at large, the
Dutch who took Holland.”
“Ish dot so?” said the angry
Hollander, who realized that Tars¬
ney was enjoying a joke at his ex*
dense. “Yell, der beop'.o at large
vill dook dot Mister Ford by der
eleetdion yust like der Hutch took
Holland/
_
“I never knew that the Holland¬
er Tarsney had joked with had
voted against me.until two weeks
after the election, when, encounter¬
ing him upon the street,. I said to
him : . ‘I say Nicholas, what the
devil beat mo in this district?’
•‘Nicholas looked at mo quizzi*
cally, and then said : ‘Oh, l guess
you vhas krjow too many beoplcs
at largo like dot tar.rn Tim Tais*
ncy/”—St. Loiris Republic. ‘ *
7 ? ‘ '
A , ‘ h ’e moot recently »?.««> „ r . AA bwhol.
ofro , ytade from
! ow Vd c W a . to a B 0,t ' 11 Craguay
I‘ «a S the firat glam consgomeut
Mffs. “t« fJtSS, .'ih
ca, though it I. oap.oUd that
01 a wul follow. , !
Pop 6 us 'V> 1 -ufa life of exposure are
>Miy is it * Black ]Hfcri».'*1|I ■*
1
, t The origin of the name*)*
Maria” for the police force j afrol **
wagon has b^^jv a mutter *4 spet
Union in iho min.Is , ! ■ • , v
people, tho and ivmteroqs h|v|^|k‘Vn
questiuttR akfcgtt »
l.'lio an cr. < ors to These >
may ha > o been, in aomjb fjrspoets,. '
_
correct, bgt perhaps the best- JO**-.
swer is given>.by,tb SltRHAllah®;'
of recent datei , k tit the.
twilight of. thojset . Hos-.
1 ’ the Ulobe ,p f Loe
" 1 ' - saya, m i® : .
. . ^
A cu °f. CL <*. otglUti.c,
nK ' ] assessing 1 . 1 ,
bon, kept iksaiUu’s, bqnrdn;^
^°wn at the old bind,
n 'S*‘t. r. •} avl}\ol drunkco tars f
''ito a row and began throwing th®.
8 chattels out of herthonao'
Die., waicft war tCRllicd in but , xv a*
soon . °Vcrpowdcrcd, ftnd dismay
8 P* ca< I abroad .through the ntrc- 6 %^
^hen,Maria Btalkod out of'hor hnbM
*bition and sloped furll; or otitrag#;
^ co 1 lfvritwo of tbo loading
*°ndors and Qaruy.ing them bodily
U P Lho,old‘watch house/ then
st;in ^ Ir) o near where U
H0W c, ’°saos > Ilanorer street.
*^* !ic k Maria’ was known thboughs
out tho city J for hbr yiodigidus
8trefigth tho . d fot yertr3 she aided
police in quelling rows, aud ' 1
had boon known to tuko' thre®
stl ’ong men to the'Dvatcll house’ at
[ ,nco > 0: ’ at one tim^l So, years af
Lenvard, whon tho firSApolico‘cart’
was made it was called tho
Maria’—hence the name.” 1
. m
• ■ 1 i
----ami r 1
When mdure Mters nnd require help ■
fier. ^1.00 pj^ < *
per bottle,
.......I,
The Remaining Territories.
• A- *i - f y #*
After liic admission of tho. Iwo
Dakotas, \vashinglon and Montana *
thcro will still remain, five torrito i* s
ries that wiU bo candidates for ads^
mission. Tour of them have at *
some formed constitutions that
havo been left’ to season. T>^c of-*
those, Idaho and Wyoming, aro t
now engaged in cither swamping ♦
constitutions.p,r making new oncs^.
Tho third one, Hew ..Mexico* is
.
about to engage in the sauio work. •
The question of tb o, admission of
v .
these five territoriea will probably
come before congress at tkp next
session, The latest .cstimato- qf
population mado.by officers of thesf
several territories shcf'ws tho popu.
lation to bo as follows : t rX|
Arizona I 4 $ 60,000?.
Idaho 100 , 000 ./
New Mexico 100 , 000
.
Utah ■ • t ’ 210,000 T
Wyoming i»; -j: 85,000 :
Tho figures here given, especially .
for Now Mexico and Utah, will
probably bear trimming. No ter- •
ritory has the right to statehood •
by virtue of population or other* .
qualifications. Thoro is no statuo
on a.toari tory tbo,right •"
bt admission. Thoro aro, of course,
direoJ^mts. But tb ead
federal government ,ciror<^^ tlto
sovereign right both of adt^sion
and rejection.—San Francisco Bui*
letin. ..
% J
_
- ' -4
Pimples, blotches, scaly akin, ug¬
ly spots, sores and ulcers, abscesses
and tumors: unhealthy discharges* •*
such as catarrh, eczema,ringworm,
and ether forms of skin diseases are
symptoms of blood impurity^ Take
Dr. J. H. McLean's Sursaparil.'*..
A Fly fetching Plant.
» . * I 4
' r 4 vT
No doubt many of oar - .aders *•
havo noticed a plant which grows- •
in abuudaucc.cn the Savnnah,PJoff <7
’.da and V/cnlern railroad be. ween
this point and Albany. Iti*a long t
boll'Shf.pcd yelloy; and gree > plant/ .
and grow;; in cluster, and /most? -i
covers tho ground in sorrm damp -
and swamp places. It is onllod
tho.pitcher plant, or fly- catYiorr 1 •
its koJLanical name wo arc i ot fa ■
millier with—but wo allude *0 it to
note its peculiaritiies.It is ; t wer.*- *
table fly-catcher, and il3 moulii, or
funnel shaped top is open inil-il n
fly or other insect alights upon !t •'
to foed upon its^sweots, which they
do, ate d as they an Ur .tboAunol.,
the.top will.fold,up and gradually ;
contract ruldvit. forces the-.inspct
dpwa to ltd baru, when they arc ap- I
absovhed-hyl tho-.plant -
ZlT/pZ^ wlrf ^I.Uing of i^uAnlu U^opcu
reveal tho remains
ty of IcjJjgm
,j ous