Newspaper Page Text
r AYER’S
Cherry Pectoral.
•—«» other oompUinti are so insidiens in their
.Xk the throat and lunfis:
•TT m U ifled with by the majority of suffer-
ordinary cough or cold, resulting
from a trifling or unconscious ex
*** J, t, often but the beginning of a fatal
*** USS’S CHKRKY PKCTcBAL hu
it- efficacy in a
• Luthroat and lung dlaeaaea, and ahoald be
in all ca-ee without delay.
a Terrible Cough Cured.
tiered my lunge, induced
f of “Z strength. By th.
of the PacTOBAL a perma
nontmued use oiw f&m now year ,
hfarty, and am. aatiafled your
r' wnnV PECTOMAL DIC.
C*»»» rB HOBACK FAIBBBOTBM."
Bocklugham, Vt., July M, 18®2-
Croup —A Mother’s Tribute.
' in the country last winter my little
taken ill with eroup;
boy ’ th « if he would die from strangu-
B seemed as .he family suggested the use
teflon. One of the w of
of Swy? kept in th. 'house. Thia
which was alw y J frequent doses, and
j * M “‘Siiirf.t ta lei than half an hour the
* te our delight in less i u _ The
t h nat*tb e bCHKßßY Pkctoral had
my darling’s life. Can you wonder at
©ur gratitude ? S,n “7 s ly^a a’Cedoty.”
159 West 128th St., New York, May 16, 1882.
«T h»vn used AYER’S CHEKBY PECTORAL
■ * flmilv for several years, and do not
hes?tZte f to pronounce it the most effectual
> Ute Crystal, Minn., March 13,1882.
«< t anffpred for eight years from Bronchitis,
, after trying many remedies with no suo-
and eurid by the use of Ayer’s Cher.
AU y JOSKI-H WALDS*.”
* Byhalia, Miss., April 5,1882.
but For its use I should lon£ ? ince have <l,ed
from lung troubles. . - J2 |^ BAOWU, ‘
Palestine, Texas, April 22, iwr.
No case of an affection of the throat or
lunes exists which cannot be greatly relieved
by the use of Ayer’S Cherry Pectoral,
and it will alway» cure when the disease is
not already beyond the control of medicine.
prepared by
<- Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists.
| X Vpili. jra
RICHMOND AND DANVILLE RAILROAD.
Passenger Department
On and after October 12th. 1884. Passenger Train
ervice mi the Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line div
■•ion of this road will be as follows :
JST
Exnress Mail
No. 51 No. 53
Daily. Daily.
eave Atlanta 6 (Kt p m 840 a 111
rrivo Gaiuosvillo 8 13 p m 10 38 a ni
Lula A... 8 41 p m 10 54 a Hi
Rabun Gap June.. B ... 92wp n> 1120 am
* ,roa. 10 04 p m 11 55 a ni
vartt D ... 10 08 p 111 12 51 pni
' ... ... .E 1246 ii»’ 2 2a u in
—T—T- -WO a ..>< 3 54 p rn
Gastonia G . 423 a m 526|. m
Charlotte H 5 2tl a rn| 6 10 p in
Express Mail
No. 50 N. 52
Daily. Daily
.' Leave Charlotte L*. 1 *
Arrive Gastonia 230a tn 1 41 pni
u i-. Spar’anlrtrg .. 48»a>n » »»>
>L. t Greenville .. 543 a m 463 > 111
» Seneca 728ar06 29 pni
' Toccoa . 8 32am IMj’”
“ Rabun Gap .Junction I 9 26am 8 -•> P m
.. j jU ] a ,110 00 am 856 pm
•' Gainesville 110 28 am 1925 p m
■ Atlanta f 1 00 P mill 30 a ni
Accomm daiion Train (Aih-Link Bei.le)
Going Nor b.
Leave Atlanta 5 30pm
Arrive Gainesville 740 pm
Accommodation Train. ( hr Link Bkllk).
Going South.
Leave Gainesville 7 00 a m
Arrive Atlanta.... t 920 a m
No. 18.- Local Frucht, Going South.
Leave Charlotte 5 35am
Arrive Gaffney’s 10 07 a tn
“ Spartanburg 12 20 pio
*• Greenville 5 27 p ni
“ Central 8 10 p m
ft No. 17.— Local Fkek.iit, Going North.
1 Leave Central. 445 am
Arrive Greenville 7 06 a m
Hu 7 " Spartanburg ». 10 40 am
" Gaffney’s 117 pm
“ Charlotte •• 725 pm
All freight trains on this road carry passengers.
All passenger trains run through to Danvilio and
Richmond without chang<. connecting at Dauville
with Virginias Midland Railway, to all eastern
Jties and at Atlanta with all lines diverging.
. No. 50 leaves Richmond at 1.30 P. M. and No. 51
I* arrives there at 3.45 P. M. 52 leaves Richmond 2.00
■g A. M. 53 arrives there 700 A. M. The local
, freights stop at above a tenons 20 to 30 minutes.
It , Buffet Si.kei’ing Cars Without Change.
a. On trains Nos. 50 and 51. New York and Atlanta.
L via Washington and Danville, and also Raleigh
K and Asheville.
> ■'••ins Kos. 52 and S 3, Richmond and Danville,
pk and Washingron and Augusta, and Washington and
NewOrleaus Returning "on No. 52—sleeper Greens
boro to Richmond.
ry Through Tickets on sale at Charlotte. Green
ville. Seneca, Spartanburg, and trainesville to all
points South Sppthwest North and East.
A—With N. E. R. R to and from Athens
B- “ ■• Tallnlah Falls
i C— “ E. Air Line Elberton and
» , v Bo wersville
D —with Bine Ridge 11. R to and front Walhalla
E—C. and G. R. R. to and from Newberry, Al
ston and Columbia
F—with A. &S. & S. J. A C. to and from Hen
dersonville. Alston, Ac.
G. —with Chester and Renoir to and from Chester,
Yorkville, and Dallas
H. with N. C. Div. C C and A to and from
Greenville. Raleigh, Ac
EDWIN BERKILEY, Superintendent.
A. L. Rues. Gen 1 Mia. M. Slaughier. G. P. A
VOETHEASTERN RAILBOA I)
.3 si’RRiNTEMIENT'S OFFICE, 1
Athens, Ga.. May 12. 1884. S
On and ailerMonda; May 12th, 1884, trains on this
road will run as foil > vs:
NO. 53
I A«h«» 8 00 a in
Arrive at Lula 10 00 am
Tallulah Falls 100 pm
1“ “ Atlanta 12 50 pm
NO. 51.
Leave Athens 4 30 pm
Arrive at Lula 700 pm
“ “ Allan’s 1130 pm
I a , NO.' 50
i I Leave Tallulah Falls. 7 40 am
if 1 “ Atlanta i4O a m
Arrive at Lula... 9 50am
“ Athens 130 pm
NO. 52
Leave Atlanta 4 40pm
Lute 7 40 pm
Arrive at Athens 9 20 p m
Tallulah Falls Accommodation.
Leave Tallulah Fats 6 45pm
Arrive at Rabun Gap Junction 7 50 p m
• Leave Ra’mn Gap. unction 8 30 p m
I Arrive Tallnlah Fai La - 9 30pm
• • Tallnlah Falls a<, otnfbodations will run on Wed
nesdays and Satnn ,ys. All other trains daily, Sun
| I days excettod. tVnection made at Lula with pass
B eager trains era F.iii mond A Dai. vi’le Railroad, both
IL East and West.
ia tTE R G. P. A.
> once, ays p r. BERNARD Sapt.
The Hartwell Sun.
VOL. IX., NO. 19.
LETTER FROM TEXAS.
Lanier, Cass Co., Texas. ?
Dec. 20tli, 1884. j
Editor Sun : Having in by-gone
days contributed awe 6 bit to your val
uable paper locally from the dear old
county of Hart, and remembering :•
personal promise I left in Georgia t<»
write at least one letter from this wes
tern country for your paper, I will now
endeavor to verify that promise, n I
hope to answer many inquiries of mv
correspondents back there.
First, in order to be conservative, let
me say that to move from Georgia to
Texas is not a transit from a sin-smit
ten country to a Paradise; neither a
cutting loose from ignorance to th hieh
in the intellectual balance. N<», far be
it from me to try to leave such an erro
neous impression. Georgia le.-i is fine
homes as any country, and hci . >ple
are not inferior to those of any State
in the Union. Yes, I love Georgia,
her intellectual refinement and her fa
vorable resources in every way; but
after a stay of years among her good
people, during which time I made no
headway, my pecuniary circumstances
became embarrassing and the needs of
my family urgent, hence tny change of
base.
Now, I find Eastern Texas fully up
to my expectations in an agricultural ■
point of view. A mixing and com- j
mingling with her good people for a
twelvemonth enables me to truthfully
say that they know just Low to make a !
poor Georgia man feel at home among
them. Morally and religiously Texas
is abreast with anj’ people I ever saw. 1
The school system is splendid. The
section in which I am located is about
seven-eighths in original forest, heavily
timbered with long yellow pines. The
soil is of a light brownis’ cast and
sandy. Water plentilul. The land is
weii adapted to the growth of any and
everything usually grown in this lati
tude, and upon the whole we can but
say that a working man has only to see
this country to be fully convinced that
it is the place fora poor working man
to make a living and procure a home.
Land ranges from $1.50 to SB.OO per
acre, according to improvements.
If men would only lay aside the
prejudices so extensively cultivated
among some people in the Eastern
country, and young working men would
settle up this forest their chances to
succeed in life would be far better than
to stay in Georgia or any other place
lounging around the old home, waiting
for the old man to die that they may
suddenly grasp an unearned fortune.
The citizenship here is mostly com
posed of families from Georgia and
South Carolina, who welcome any good
laboring man among them.
Summing the whole matter up in a
nutshell, I think, that after substract
ing all the disadvantages from the ad
vantages, Texas will be able to give as
large a dividend byway of attraction
to wood, honest home seekers as any
State in the Union.
More anon. T. W. Jordan.
Sam Jones in Jackson, Tennessee.
Rev. Sam Jones has returned from
Jackson, Tennessee, where he labored
two weeks with great success. The
meeting there he reports as one of the
most remarkable he ever saw. About
300 conversions. The press of the
city say that for depth and breadth the
revival power was beyond anything
ever witnessed there. The day Mr.
Jones left, the Mayor of the city, whois
nut a member of the church, addressed
him a letter from which the following is
taken :
Mavor's Office, Jackson, Tenn., Dec.
19, 1884. —Mr. Jones: I want to thank
you <>u behalf of the entire population
of this city for the great good wrought
iby and through you for the past ten
idays. You have given the town a
great moral shock from centre to cir
cumference. A noted says he
is readv to run up the ‘‘white flag,
that Sam Jones has the only ‘‘game’
that will win. A score or more of the
boys have called the saloon men to the
front door, settled their bills, and said
in your own language, I’ve done quit.
I have scarcely heard an oath on the
streets for the past week. A general
HOME DEVELOPMENT ANU PROGRESS, MATERIAL ANO MORAL.
reformation has seiied upon the com
munity. The air is full of reformation,
and I thank you and God for it. The
only regret I have is, that I, as well as
every other individual in the city, did
not hear every word you said while
1 here. You carry with you from here
’ the thanks and pravers of a grateful
1 people, whose condition in life you
i have gnatlr benefit'd.
TALMAGE ON THE NEGRO.
If I were a black man with a family
to support, and I was determined to be
industrious and sober, I would go
South. The climate is more lenient,
the feeling of white people toward the
colored is more kindly and Christian
than with us. Knowing well the feel
ing toward the colored people in this
section and in that, I am persuaded
that that race will get justice done
them sooner at the South than at the
North. We cmnot teach the South
how better to treat the black man until
we treat him better ourselves. Imag
ine a scene: State house, Boston,
within five minutes of Fantieil Hall,
and within one minute of the historical
commons. The legislature assembles
and white members take their places.
A colored man has been accidentally
elected, lie comes in to take the oath
of office. As he passes down to his
seat what do I hear his co-legislators
say ? “Put that gentleman of color
■ near me ?” “Welcome to the halls of
legislation ?" “Down-trodden race got
[justice at last?” “Image of God cut
in ebony ?” No ! They all snuff the
breeze and the hair on the back part of
the head rises in wrath till it covers
the bald spot on the top, and one and
all they cry: “Nigger!”
As for myself. 1 am so peculiarly
constructed that I have not a particle
of race prejudice in my composition,
and I declare that. J ' “■ •.
ly contented seated in a church with a
colored man before me and one behind
me, and one on the right hand of me
and one on the left of me, and a black
minister in the pulpit and a black choir
to lead the music. But we are not all
alike constituted. I find a merry Christ
mas thought in this consideration, re
sultant from my recent observations,
tliat a thorough Christian feeling is to
be established between the black anti
white races. Within a few years this
scene occurred in the state house st-
Atlanta, Ga.: A colored clergyman
standing in that building said he was
thirsty and was looking around for a
drink. A white gentleman standing by
said : “I will get you a drink.” The
gentleman departed from the room, and
after awhile appeared with a glass of
water. Some one said to the black
man : “Do you know who that is who
is getting you a glass of water ? “No,”
said the black man, “who is it ?” The
answer was: “Gov. Colquitt.” When
the black minister received the water,
he said: “Thank you, Governor; but I
cannot drink it.” He poured it upon
the floor, saying : “I pour this as a li
i bation on the altar of Christian feeling
between the white and black races. On
the prospect of a better feeling among
the nations I Fay, “Merry Christmas.”
From the standpoint of the compe
tent house-keeper home cooking is a
larger, nobler and better thing than
the general idea given it. It is chem
istry, it is common sense, it is health
and good appetite, and it is a safe-guard
against many lurking temptations and
’ wicked devices. The children who are
properly fed are fairly started in life.
1 ’ The business man who is properly fed is
likely to be more successful, and certain
i to be more amiable than his friend who
never enjoys the privilege of eating a
. g.iod dinner. The science of cooking is
beneath no lady’s honest attention. It
i is an accomplishment of which any
; young girl may well be proud. It should
, be taught by mothers io their daughters,
and practiced till it can be done with
I ease and dexterity.
• JOS. N. WORLEY, t ( IRA C. VANDUZER,
Elb«rton. Ga. i I Hartwell, Ga.
: Worley & VaiiDuzer,
’! ATTORNEYS &COUNSELLORS AT LAW
3 -ITTE have formed a partnership for the practice vs
, \y m the counties of Hart, Madison, Frank- 1
■* lin and Habersham. Prompt attention will be givea
to all causes intrusted to us, and the senior mcmeer
‘ will alwavs attend the trials of causee in Hart oeaa
p ty Superior Coart and Ordinary’s Court and else
where when necessary. 392-444
II O**e in Hodß«s Law Office, Hartwell.
HARWELL. GA.. JANUARY 10. 1885.
A ROMANTIC CHICAGO STORY.
A romantic little story reached the
ears of a reporter of the Inter-Ocean
yesterday. It touches on sickness,
pills and love. A certain charming
voting lady living in one of the south
ern suburbs was taken seriously ill a
few weeks ago. Her parents, who are
quite wealthy, employed the best med
ical talent obtainable but the worthy
disciples of medicine who examined
her pronounced her eaae incurable, and
said-’.hat she was beyond human aid.
The parents were in despair. By some
accident the father heard of a young
doctor who had hut recently !<»cnted in
the village, and whose list of patients
was not at all large, hut who had ever
given satisfaction when called upon.
He was asked to sec the sick girl. He
called, looked at the patient steadily,
then turned to the anxious parents and
said, firmly and decisively :
“I can save your daughter 1”
“Do you think so ?” was the excited
query.
“I know ao!” was the positive an
swer.
“Save my daughter, and name your
price for your services,’’ exclaimed the
loving father.
“Then I must have entire charge of
the case,” said the young doctor.
As the other doctors had given no
encouragement whatever for her re
covery the case was readily placed in
the young physician’s hands, lie went
to work patiently, earnestly, took
entire charge of his fair patient, watch
ed over her day and night. Inn week
she began to improve, two weeks found
her out of danger, in three weeks she
could sit up, and at the end of four
weeks she was well and could take long
drives with her devot’d doctor. He
had indeed redeemed his pledge—had
One day, after the complete recovery
of the young lady was positively as
sured, the father called the young doc
tor into bis library. Taking him by
the band, he said : “Young man, von
have saved my daughter. I told you
that if you did ao you would be com
pensated at whatever price you chose
to fix your services. lam now ready
to carry out my part of the agreement,
us you have so nobly done your work."
“Do you really wish to pay me my
own price ?" asked the young doctor,
anxiously.
“Indeed I d<», sir.”
“Then I ask you to give your daugh
ter to me in marriage,” was the unex
pected request.
The old gentleman was naturally a
little astonished at the nature of the
answer. He hesitated a moment then
touched a bell. A servant answered.
“Tell Hattie to step here,” was the com
mand.
In a minute the daughter entered the
room. The father and the young doc
tor stood facing one another.
“Hattie,” said the old gentleman,
“do you feel that you have fully recov
ered ?”
“I am as well as ever, father.”
“Do you imagine what your doctor
wishes in compensation for his services
in saving your life ?” was the sternly
put question.
“No,” said the girl anxiously, “but
I am sure he deserves anything reason
able.”
“But I consider his charge extortion
ate,” was the emphatic rejoinder.
“What is it, father! I feel sure that
Doctor would not be unreason-
able.”
“Not unreasonable! Why, Hattie,
he asks that I consent to his making
you bis wife. What have you to say to
that ?”
Hattie blushed violently for a min
ute ; her little foot played with the rug
on the floor; then looked up archly,
first at her father «nd next to the young
doctor, who had mean time uttered no
word, she said :
“ v ou say, father, when I was sick all
the other doctors gave me op and as
sured me nothing but death ? ’
“And Doctor took my case
under those circumstances, told yon he
would save me, and nursed me back to
health and life ?”
“Yes.”
“Then, father, it strikes me that if I
was an auditing committee and had to
pass upon this bill. I'd argue that the
one that brought me back to my health
from apparent death would be pretty
safe for me to bo intrusted to when
health wm fully regained. I would
check bis bill O. K., and say nothing
about, extortionate charges.”
The wedding will be duly celebrated
in a very short time.
Maltreating the Old Folks.
You maltreat, an aged parent. You
begrudge him the room in your house.
You we impatient of bis whimsicalities
and garrulity. It makes you mad to
hear him tell the same story twice.
You give him food he cannot masticate.
You wish he wi re away. You wonder
if he is going to live forever. He will
be gone very soon. His steps are short
er and shorter, lie is going to stop.
But God has an account to settle with
you on that subject. After a while
your eye will be dim and your gait will
halt and the sound of the grinding will
be low, and you will tell the story twice,
ami your children will wonder if you
will never be taken away. They called
you ‘“father'' once; now they call you
“old man.” If you live a few years
longer tiny will call you “old chap."
What are those rough words with which
your children are accosting you ? They
are the echo of the very words you
used in the ear of your father forty
years ago. What is that which you
are trying to chew, but find it unmast
ti<able, and your jaws ache and you
surrender the attempt ? Perhaps it
may be the gristle which yau gave to
your fallicr for his breakfast forty years
ago. A gentleman passing along the
a son dragging bis father into
the street by the hair of his head. The
gentleman, outraged at. this brutal con
duct, wns about to punish the offender,
wneu me ohi man arose mm
“Don’t hurt him ; it’s all right; forty
years ago this morning I dragged out
my father by the hair of his head!”
It is a circle. My father lived into the
eighties and he had a very wide expe
rience, and he said that maltreatment
of parents was always punished in this
world. Other sins may be adjourned
to the next world, but maltreatment of
parents is punished in this world.—
Talmage.
Keep Your Best for House.
There ia no place where good man
ners are of more value than in the
home. It is the moral agent of good
breeding ; it is the law that governs the
manifestations of kindness and good
feeling, and also the law that restrains
unkind and ignoble traits of human
nature from expression.
Keep your best temper for home. In
society, on the streets, in business,
everywhere, it is easier to control that
attribute, if we guard the hasty word,
the peevish tone, the irritating action
in the home circle, and study to wound
none of its inmates.
Keep your best spirits for home. No
where do gloomy ami depressed spirits
tell so disastrously as at home, The
parents may have just cause for anx
iety and care, but it is wrong and un
just to shadow the young life of chil
dren with anxieties they cannot appre
ciate, ami cares they cannot under
stand. The tendency to brood over
trouble or misfortune increases with its
indulgence. So, also, the disposition
to be cheerful and happy at all times
increases with cultivation. This is by
far the most admirable trait. Those
who are sunshiny and cheerful always
have the most friends, and where are
friends so true and loyal, and so desira
ble to perpetuate as those of home and
family ? The old comparison of the
bent twig is as true in this case as in
any other, and children who grow up in
an atmosphere of foreboding of the fu
ture, anxieties about the present, and
cynical reflections on the motives and
! actions of people al>out them, are train
! ing a tendency to be miserable and sad,
and in their turn cast shadows, instead
lof sunshine, on the path of all about
them.
I am placing my notes and accounts out
I for collection every week. Any one owing
me may find the amount with an officer to
collect—l told you I would not wait.
I. J. LlKkjßJk
WHOLE NO- 434
***■«• ***’* , '’.'*& */*■
w 6TOKACH
S
noetetter’e Stomach B’ttera la the article
for vou. It atnaulatet the . < '..ag energies,
invigorates tbs texly and atieers the mihd.
It enables the system to throw of the de
btlitatmg effect. of Undue fktigae, gives
renewed vigor to the organsol dige.tiou,
arouses the liver when inactive, renews
Oie )aded apetite, and encourages bealtbftil
repose, lls ingredients are safa and Us
credentials, which eon sis* tn the hearty
endonement of pervows of every stoss M -
society, are roost eoovtcalng.
For sals by all Druggists and Dealers
generally.
SXPOSITIOH
Jieus Oileond
•oenlng December 1,1884; CM ng May 31,1881
-VNDIR TIfIIAVaHCUOF THI-
United Stales Government.
J $1,300,000,
Appropriated by the General Government*
$500,000,
Coalributed by the CiUxena of New Or lean*
$200,000,
Appropriated by Mexico.
SIOO,OOO,
Appropriated by the State of Louidana,
SIOO,OOO,
Appeopvn.. , r> > ...
From SSOOO to $25,000,
Appropriated by Innunierabl. States, Cities
apd Foreign Countries.
E»wySt«H and Territory in the Union rep.. M nto<
sod nearly ell the Leading Natwn and
Countries of the World.
Ths Biggest Exhibit, the Biggest BulMlngand the
togged IndoatHal Event In ths
World* History.
arrucnwM fob ixhimiib ar.umov ne< aiw
Sovas wißsnraca avn a anamaa vaiuerv
or SUHJKCTS THAW THO"1 or .*■
UrteUTION SVSH HSl.a
The cheapest rates of travel rrw known is
the annals of tranaportalisn secured for ths
people everywhere.
For InforniaUrxi, address
E A BURKS.
Director General, W I. *C.C. K.,
Naw oni.BAKS, I.a-
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It lias 12 pages chock full of news, gos
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will Wild il to pav for the trouble of anting C»z
Full particulars. iliractioua, etc., win tree I ortunto
will be made by thoac why give their whole <>»•«•
the work Great MWW »•£»
delay. Start now. Arldrea. btlNftON « CV-.
Portland. Maine. u< *-
Take your County Paper.