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TOWN DIRECTORY.
(9 A you —W. I.. M stiiews, .Tr.
Recorder—J ohn IT, Hull, Jr.
foi'Nrii.vv.N—John '. Dell, H.CAVeUs.
1 . M. Huziehnrst. John F. Lovett, Jr., and
Ib K. C. Nunnally.
.'1 A us it AT, —B. K. Scott, Jr..
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FOUST Y DIRECTORY.
Tax Collector—T l. Cl. Edenfield.
Tax Receiver— U. J. Arnett.
Survkyou— J. II. Moore.
COUNTY Treasurer —Abram llurke.
Fherifk— R. T. Mills. Deputy, E. C.
Davis. .
Coroner— 1 Them as T’arVer.
ordinary- M.M. Totter; Court second
Monday in each month.
clerk superior Court—T h B. C. Nun
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county Board—M. M. Potter,Ordinary:
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Black, Pr-sident. w. Hobby. R. p. Sharpe
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. Commissioner
ret.v-v O.nd County School No
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vember and February.
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TT- F. -WJ^IDJS,
AT ORNEY A LAW,
SYLVANIA, GEORGIA.
Jan 30- 1 f
J.E. SIXGKEETON. E. I*. SING KEETON.
S1MCELLTON – SON,
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Office Rooms— |
Jan R0-‘f
W. Ii.lt 1!BY, W L. Mathews, Jr. |
HOBBY – MA BE¥,
Attorneys at Law,
S YLYAH IA GA
T. W. Oliver, Jr. J. Ji Humphries.
OLIVER – HUMPHRIES
ATTOHNEYS AT LA IF
SYLVANIA. GA.
(1KOUGE R. BLACK. JOHN c. DEI.I..
BLAOY' – DELL,
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SYLVANIA, G E O It G 1 A.
July 2D—tl.
PATENTS
ootainecl, and all business in tne I T . S. Pat
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SYLVANIA, GEO RSI A, SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1882.
UlHt'ATMWAL.
I.etter of School I'oniniissieiier
«. .5. Orr.
Onr State School Commissioner, Prof.
Orr. has written a letter to the Christian
Index in regal'd to the, late education
al convention, held in Washington city,
from which we make the following
extracts :
At the date meeting in Washington
twenty-one States were represented,
mainlyisy –taf:e superintendents. Af
ter a general discussion of the subject
if national ai l, a committee, consisting
of one from each State represented, was
appointed to formulate the principles
which ought to enter into any law up
on the subject which Congress may
pass. The following were the princi
ples agreed upon.
1. A direct appropriation from the
Treasury of an adequate sum, say not im
less than $15,000,000 annually, the
propriation to be continued, from year
to year, for ten years.
2. The money thus raised to be ap
plied to the support of the common
schools, teachers' institutes and normal
schools.
3. The fund to be distributed among
the States on the basis of illiteracy, a
determined by the census of 1880.
4. The application of the. fund to be
made under'tlie State laws and by tli
local State authorities.
5. The eoutiuance of the gift to any
State, from year to year, of at least one
third ot the amount received from th
national Government, and upon tin
faithful application of the fund to the
ob ject contemplated by the act.
These propositions h ere considered
separately in committee, and were sep
arately voted npor, and were each
I adopted by a unanimous vote—a nioc.
ictmu . uaote „|,| e .mu. ...p
A word or two now as to the reason
w ),j c )j influenced their adoption, a
brought out by . the discussions. Tli.
p , j y 0 f going dire t to h treasur j
for the money was adopted on th.
; U'OhkG tk".t the mvid -O'Cs 8”'vh r.'
pi ixsiug, that the whole country is im
periled by illiterate suffrage, and that
the stun given should be adequate, uni
form and definitely ascertained.
The distribution upon the basis of tl
literacy was looked upon as a uieasur
of justice to the South. The act of tli
United States Government, in freeing
and enfranchising the slaves, placed
a great burden upon the impoverished
South-ru States, audit was invoked
to relieve, as far as possible, from the
pressure of that burden.
It was further felt that iu order to be
efficient, sm eessful and satisfactory in
the administration of the education; 1
affairs of a State, local self-control was
indisnensabie.
These reasons all came out fully and
distinctly in our discussions; and after
calm consideration, as lias already been
■stated, all the propositions were adopt
ed by a unanimous vote.
By authority of the department this
committee went before the committees
on education, of both houses of Con
gres.s, in joint session, presented thoi i
views in the form substantially of tin
propositions above enunciated, and
were heard at length in their support
through gentlemen of their own mini
her, selected to make the argument. I:
is impossible to tell what will be the
result. Tiie effect of so much unity
among gentlemen coining from ill!
parts of the country—men supposed to
iiave made the great subject which
convened them a matter of special stu
dy, cannot fail to bo very considerable.
The members of our body mingled free
ly with the Senators and Rcpi'cscnta
lives in Congress from their respective
States during our stay in Washington
ami the general testimony was to the
effect that that there seems to bean
almost universal desire, on the part of
both Senat irs and Representatives, to
do something upon the great question
of popular education.
To give you an idea of what such an
appropriation as that for which we
asked would do for the South, 1 may
state that the share of Georgia would
be over a million of dollars. With tli is
sum, increased by the State appropri
ation, we could keep the schools in op
eration all over the State, eight or nine
months of the year, hold teachers’ in
stitution in every county of the State
for the eetter instruction of teachers
now in the field, and establish normal
schools for the !r Filing, from year to
year, of an adequate number of young
men and women, who have determin
ed to devote themselves to teaching as
a life work. If my brethren of the
different churches could only see, as I
think I see it, that the common school
is tiie only agency that oau give to our
youth, generally, both white and col
ored, such a degree o' intelligence and
■ulture as shall prepare them for un-!
lerstandiug She great truths of the j
gospel and fov becoming thoroughly 1
efficient and useful as church members
surely they would place themselves in j
die front ranks of those who are seek
ing to fully establish and perfect that
agency. I hope all your readers will
ponder the thought contained in the
last sentence.
Emerson’s Tribuute to Farmers
The following worthy tribute to the
farmer is from the pen of Ralph Wal
do Emerson :
The glory of the farmer is, that in
i lie division of labor, it is his part to
create; all trade at last rests on his
primitive activity. He stands close to
nature; he obtains from the earth the
bread and meat; the food which was
not lie causes to be. The first farmer
was the first man, and all historic no
oility rests on possession and use of
and. The farmer’s office is precise
and important, but you must not try
to paint him in rose colors. You C;
"... .™Ko prs.tr cooiplimciits ,» r.t.
and gravitation, whose minister lie js.
He represents the necessities. It is the
eaulv of the great economy of th...
world that makes bis comeliness. Uc
bends to the order of the seasons, the
weather, the soil, and crops, as tin*
sails of the ship bend to the wind. He
, , 'X , , 1 ’Z
takes the pace of seasons, plants and
chemistry. Nature never hurries
'
ul atom ... , by atom, litbo hv by little, Kill., s m,,.
achieves her work. The fanner lie
in mself to Nature, and acquires that
:i vcloiic patience which belongs to
her; he must wait for bis crop to grow
His entertainments, his liberties mid
his spending must be on a farmer’s
scale, not a merchant’s. It were as
false for farmers to use a wholesale
and massy expense as for States to use
Uai'U-kte evo.’SAUiy.. — - - - ■
\le has great"trusts confided to him.
In the great household of Nature the
f irmer stands at the door of the bread
iMotn and weighs each loaf. It is for
h m to say if men shall marry or not
E rly marriages and the number of
births are indissolubly connected with
an abundance of food. The farmer is
a hoarded capital of health, as the farm i
is of wealth, and it is from him that j |
the health and power, moral and in
tellcctual, of the cities come. The city |
is always recruited from the country, j
'The men in cities, who are centres of j
eiiergv, tlic driving wheels of trade,
and the women ofbeautv and genius
—are Hie children and grandchildron
of the fanner, and are spending the
energies which their fathers’ hardy
silent life accumulated in frosty fur
row-.
lie is a continuous benefactor. He
who digs a well, constructs a stone
foundation, plants an oi chard, builds
a double house, reclaims a swamp, or
so much as puts a stone seat by the
wayside, makes the land so far lovely
and desirable, makes a fortune which
he cannot carry away with him, but
which is uinfill to his country long af
terward.
Who ar ■ the farmers servants? Ge
ology and chemistry, the quarry of the
air, the water of the brook, tlie light
ning of the cloud,. the casting of llie
worms, the plow of the frost. Long
before lie was born the sun of ages de
composed the rocks, mellowed his land,
soaked it with light and heat, covered
it with vegetable film.then with forest,
and accumulated the sphagrum whose,
decays made the peat of his meadow.
•-----------------
a selul»c»s at.<? Siurtfirinemr oi
Co flee.
Since coffee possesses the quality of
stimulating the nervous system, it is a i
matter of course that in many cases its j
effect is rather injurious. Phlegmatic
people, especially, need coffee and (hey
are fon l of drinking it; for a similar
reason it is a favorite beverage in the
Orient, where its consumption is im
mense. Bui to persons of an excitable
temperament the enjoyment of coffee
is ^urtful; they ought only to take it
very weak. With lively children it
does not agree at all, and it is very
wrong to force them to drink it, as is
often done; while elderly people, who
are in need of a stimulant for the de
creasing activity of their neives, arc
right iu taking as much of it as they
choose.
In households of limited means it is
often necessary to use succory with
coffee. We do not pretend to pro
nouee this, if taken in moderate quan
tity, hurtful; but we do say that it is a
poor substitute for coffee, and that there
is nothing in it to recommend its use.
A fur better mixture is milk and sn
gar; and there is good reason for it;
both milk and sugar are articles of
food. Milk contains the same ingre
dlents as blood ; and sugar is changed
in the body into fat, which is indispen
sable to us, especially in the process of
breathing. Having taken no food
through ., . the ,, night, • i , the i loss our blood iii
has suffered during sleep by perspira
tion and the fat which has been lost by
respiration must be compensated for
in the morning. For this milk and su
gar in colf.-e are excellent.
It is good for children to have a taste
for sweetened milk or milk-eoffcc in
........i*. ...............* *->
them if they like it. Nature very wise
ly gave them a liking for sugar; they
need it because their nuise must be
quicker, • , their ,, . respiration • stronger, , to ,
„
facilitate the assimilation of food in
their bodies, and also to promote
growth. Not that adults need no su
s „„.........
is formm from the starch contained in
the!r food. For this purpose the di
V(i ‘ I - • 1
( ' as< ‘• ,li ‘'idoiv. they are given . sugar.
instead of the starch to make it from,
Manv diseases, particularly rickets,
prevailing mostly among the children
of the poor, are the consequence ot
feeding the child with bread and po
t–toes • these contain starch, it is tr
-
' M 'ing v < J too week to < uauge than in
to fat - the result 5s that the. flesh falls
awav and the bones grow ° soft and
;
*»ut „ . . he who, , to ptomote di„ slum,
takes coffee immediately after dinner
does best not to use sugar or milk—for
both, so far from helping ‘ “ digestion, ” are
an auditionnl , bidden , , to , the full „ Mom- , ,
acli, and disturbs its labor more than
coffee eon facilitate it.—Popular Sci
ence Monthly.
—
,
Some boys and girls have an idea
that money can do almost anything,
but this is a mistake. Money, it is true,
can do a great deal, but it cannot
everything. I could name you a tlious
and tilings it cannot buy. It was
for good, and it is a good thing to have,
nut ail this depends on how it is used,
if used wrongly, it is an injury rather
than a benefit. Beyond all doubt, how
ever, there are many tilings better Ilian
it is. and winch it cannot purchase, no
matter how much we may iiave of it.
If a man has not a good education.
all his monev cannot buy it for him.
He can scarcely ever make up his early
waste of opportunities. He may say,
as l have heard men say: "I would
give all I have if I ouly bail a good ed
ucation and a well-trained mind but
he will say it in vain. His money alone
cannot obtain it.
Neither will wealth itself give a man
ora woman good manners. Nothing,
next to good health, is of more import
ance tlian easy, graceful, self-possessed
manners. But they can’t be had for
mere money.
A man who is what is called ‘•shod
dy.’' who lias no taste and correct man
ners. will never buy them, though he
would, no doubt, like them. They are
not to be had in tiie market. They are
nowhere for sale. You might as well
try to buy the sky, or clouds, or sun
beams.
Money can’t purchase a good eon
science. If a poor man, or a boy, or a
girl—any one—lifts a clear conscicnci
that gives off a tone like a sound beli
when touched with the hammer, thou
*»o sure he is vastly richer than the
millionaire, who does not possess such a
conscience. Good principles lire better
than gold. All the gold of Golconda
couldn’t buy them for a mail who hasn't
them ai readv.—Christian Union,
E.HOKV NI“i;Ittt'S
Atlanta Constitution.
We print elsewhere from the. Macon
Telegraph the reply of its editor. Col
Albert R. Lamar, jo the recent letter
Mr. Emory Speer. As the letter ap
peared in our news columns, it is fair
that the reply t hereto should occupy a
similar position. The remarks of the
editor of the Telegruyh are in pleasing
contrast to the personalities which de
stroyed the force and effect of Mr.
Speer’s letter, and we mention this for
(he purpose of calling the attention
all concerned to the fact that the day
is past in Georgia when persona! abuse
or attacks upon private character can
be substituted for arguments. The
time has been when a discussion
riablv ended in the bitterestporsonali-
ties, but that time, we trust, lms pass
ed.
It is greatly to be feared that the
spirit of office-seeking, which chooses
to call itself independentism. has not
taken into account the credulity of one
of the classes to which it is compelled
to appeal for support; it is greatly to
he feared, indeed, that this greed for
office cannot be brought to appreciate
the delicate nature of the problem
ivlli(:k casts its direfu! shadow over the
| an d. Mr. Speer’s position is one httjM of
great responsibility, but when Macon
to abu-mg the d lor ot the
Stdmr^.lhhn with lakes 'llie murder wholly
of young Rountree. he a
superficial view of the matter. Beiiiml
vecything that may be said, is thede
(}11 i ufr attitude of the negroes. Mr.
Speer is no more responsible for this
than the people ot Athens themselves,
who lutve winked at aud tolerated and
pv ..... the s , )h . it 0 f so-called
hulependentism. the first result o<
which was to teach the worst elements
of an unfortunate race that they were
g| a( ii v give Mr. Speer and his
friends credit for the best intentions.
to deal, they failed to take into eoifsid
er it ion the ideas which naturally
impression upon ignorant
minds.
'™l tleariv interest )d
iu keeping the peace in Athens siv
that it is one of the direct results of in
dene , ndeutisui, , and , cinmmstatiecscOiu .
people who make it possible are ta:
more responsible for independent ism
so-called, than Mr. Speer, and upon
their shoulders must finally rest the re
spniisibiiity of the deplorable event
w i,i c .), w-ill have the efiectof crippling
the usefulness of our most cherished
institutions of lenrnin*r. I he real ques
lion, therefore, isi.ot whetlierM:'. Speer
is personally or individually
1)io foI . t | le murder of young Rountree.
but whether it is one ot the results ot
of that spirit of independentism leader and oi
which Mr. Speer is the rop
resentative. Upon this point via* as -
V y s g»t.'n r '. ' y -r V i,. ; I - U.ii
- -.
cnee of opinion among the thoughtful
people of Georgia.
A Seeou .1 'SJcsic-M.
A few days ago the ferryman ai
Neal’s ferry on the Chattahoochee rivet
while putting some passengers over in
his flat, discovered a box floating down
the river. As soon as the box wasdis
covered, and after the flat-hail landed
its passengers, the ferryman seized a
batteau and made way to the box,
which he soon overhauled. On reaeh
ing out his hand to grasp it lie was as
tounded to find that it contained a
sweet little babe, which raisi d its head
and smiled at its rescuer. It was a
white child, well dressed, with plenty
of good clothing besides. Some old
people who live in the neighborhood
havetaken the little Moses to raise.—
Augusta News.
fiie SMaDC* JJImS (lie HipciiM'.
‘•Fourteen dollars for a little lunch for
two!” exclaimed a prosperous looking
customer to the proprietor of a restau
rant. “Why, what llie devil do you
take me for?”
‘•I know it’s a little steep,” said the
steak stretcher, “but you’re the only
soul that’s been in to-clav, and my rem
falls due to-morrow.”
“I’m blamed if 1 don’t really admire
a man with a nerve like yours, and I’ll
pay (lie swindle,” and with an amused
smile the blooded stranger tossed the
hash pirate a $50 note, flipped a doi
lar out of the change to the waiter and
walked out.
‘‘What a pity we can only have one
chance at a man like that,” murmured
the dyspepsia dispenser, regretfully.
But, when the next day the rent collec
tor threw out the note as a counterfeit
his despair was such that it was all
four waiters and the cook could do to
prevent his swallowing a bottle of his
own alleged wi io, and thus putting an
end to himself.
A PKESMCTtO.Y,
The Sait Lake Tribune predicts that
within one year’s time the people who
for years in Utah have waited in si
lence, their lips being sealed by fear,
and faith, and pride, will begin toteil
their stories, and that what they will
relate will have everything of pathos
and of sorrow within it. It will be a
revelation which will make the men of
this nation wonder tha; they were in
different so long, while here, within
the domain of this republic hearts
were breaking by tens of thousands,
and human sacrifices were ns plentv. if
not as conspicuous, as those which, in
history, give to the Aztec temple of
Uudzuop-rtitli ^ sinister »• memory,
$1.50 A YEAR
The truth is that a few men have held
iOO.O()f)*subjeets under bondage; tlu v
have gathered to themselves all the net
profits of their earning; they have
kept them in ignorance; they have
made a mockery of home, and brand
'd with disgr!U'e’„defe useless women
and innocent children. To do this
'hey have invoked perdition in the life
to come upon all who disobeyed, and
made this life so uncomfortable fo"
them that perdition has been looked
for ward to as a olace of comparative
rest.
Two H orn- v Work.
There lives near in;, two ladies, who
since the wan. startedjto fanning with
me old blind horse. Mow they own a
good plantation well slocked, all paid
for, and have eighteen or twenty bales
of cotton on band. They managed for
themselves, one attending to the farm
while the other managed the house
hold nff’irs; and yet men will whittle'
t e go, ds boxes and discuss hard times.
—Gree„ esboro 11 erald.
Permit no Substitution.
Insist upon obtaining Floreston Col
ogne. It is pre-eminently superior fra- iu
permanence and rich delicacy of
grance. 4-15 lm.
Farmers’ Wives.
It is an evident fact that fa rulers’
•vive.s are afflicted with many diseases
wliioh are the result ot overwork.
L'iiey are constantly on one ceaseless
routine of toil from daylight at morn
ing until late at night. No change, no
relaxation, no rest! Farmers should
note this f; et, and be forewarned before
it is too late. It is astonishing what
in amount of Iadov the wives of farro
ws nerfonn. Many of them get up
.ml have breakfast readv before ther*
msbands are outof bed'. Then it is
work. work, work until near mtdnwh:
t .heir minds during the time beingcou-'
4 autly occupied with their duties, and
with thinking of how the food is to bo
implied, l when the washing and iron
: n ; s to be done, when time can be
spared to scrub the floor, how the
children are to be clothed and kept ti
j j i r , and innumerable mention, other all things of.irh: not h
necessary to oivalf
UlU . , -j,. K ifltd ii"lw'lf *
the strongest women in the land. In
no ease is it safe to be continuously
thinking upon any; one tiling, and in
eases whee the brain bus been vveak
•ned by too great a strain upon i',
thereby pro!uring insanity, epilepsy,
vertigo, debility, hysterics, and female multitude weakness,
general a of
other diseases, the remedy is Rest and
>i few bottles of Dr. S. A. Richmond –
Go's. Samaritan Nervine, It acts di
rectly upon llie nervous centres and
invigorates and strengthens the whole
system. Many ladies have Refrained
from using Samaritan Nervine on ac
count of an existing prejudice a-gfiinsC
advertised medicines. Let us ask a
question : Are you prejudiced against
sewing machines because you have
seen them advertised, or can you doubt
the ingenuity and skill required iu
their invention '< Again, would yoff
refuse to insure your house because
die company advertised that it hast
paid millions of dollars in losses and
vet had a capital of several millions
left? Do such advertisements shake
your confi leiice, and credit create prejudice?
riien why refuse to the testimo
ny of those who have found Samaritan
Nervine tube all that is claimed for it
iu overcoming those ailments peculiar
to your sex ? The following statement
speaks for itself:
Fairfield, Lenawee Co., Mich.. 1
Richmond—Dear April Sir: 25,1881. This is
Dr. to
certify that my wife had fits tor tliirtv
five years. They would hist her for
about one hour and sometimes longer.
1 happened to hear of your medioitie,
and sent for some of it. She had no
more fits after she took the first dose.
She is now permanently cured, and her
health is a great deal better I linn it has
been for twenty years or more. You
are entirely at liberty louse ner pic
ture and this testimonial in any man
ner which. you please, and may sign
my name to it. We owe you this much
at least for what you have done for
her. Yours trulv,
IIENKY CLARK.
Have You Ever
Known any person to be seriously iD
without a weak stomach or inactive
liver or kidneys? And when these
organs are in good condition do you
not find the possessor enjoying good
health ? Parker’s Ginger Tonic regu
lates these important organs, makes
the blood rich and pure, and strength
ens every part of the system. See oi li
er column. 4-15-1n .
Mrs, James thinks that if Jesse had been
let alone be would have become an honor'tot
ins country. This confirms the general sus
picion that tiie Republicans were about to
nominate him for some important office.
The Patent Office has issued patents
on 531 different styles of spring-beds
and yet the number of men who come
in at midnight and pull off their boots
w tli the screen is ou the increase.
The pay of the German soldier bus
! 5een r “ i ^ d ‘°?^r ,its Tad' *",<! he
oumff joint in Ids ambition to Iwuro a
i military gait.