Newspaper Page Text
She ©U'vdaml SAvntucr,
-
ALEX. CHURCH. Editor
Cleveland, iTjiT i) 1881.
MORMONS.
Tao M ,-m„a nussumaries from Utah
have been p.v ebing in white ( ,Hn,ty
for .n.>, lt a war. They have succeed
eff i„ some thiaeeri converts to
,heir can,. and hum established a
Suudav ■< hooi Their «wk has been
(id m . ;d v t> a sec ion in the eas
lern part of the county on the borders
of ho Chart.. hoo. ■ river. These
mish 'niuries are now abs nt attending
a conureuce in Ha raison county. It is
Ktipposo.i that they will return to their
w.u ii after their conference closes
Ten years ago these missionaries
would have been stoned out of the
country. And yet we are told that the
people are gtowing better! lint strauge
as it may appear Mormouism is increas¬
ing in the Stater-, and so is wickedness
and crime of every character. Such a
state of things is emulated to bring
about war and bloodshed, if the reme¬
dy is not soon applied. 1c is jeopard¬
izing the homes of the American people,
and hostile to a pure Government. It
is evident that Monnonism must be de¬
molished ortho country is ruined; it
« «»
breathe will bo contaminated with the
consequent results of the brutish crimes
of bigamy. It is astonishing that at
this eulighieuod day—when the world
is fillod with tbo written word of God,
that such open and defiant violations of
the Divine law. and degradation of so¬
ciety should bn tolerated for a moment.
But alas, it is too true, that too many
persons yield to their animal passions
to tbo entire banishment of tbo higher
au„ ,„„re ,, W c el™»m» of «,,i, being.
The sooner this thing is arrested the
better for all concerned, Congress has
the power.
CAPTURED.
We have often told you to quit 1 malts
log whiskey; but you wouldn’t. Now
you see yon have lost it. It is always
beat to beed good advice if it does come
from a weak source.
Deputy Marshall, J. B Gaston cap¬
tured six barrels of “mountain dew’’
somewhere in Mossy Creek district a
few nights ago. It is said that tbo
whisky bad been hidden under the
ground; but didn’t you know Jim would
find i? Someday when you are not
thinking about it he’ll pick you up and
carr y t qu off. You can’t hide from him
always. He has an eye like an Eagle,
and pleuty of si nso and bravery to
back it. Our advice to every one is to
have nothing to do with whiskey in any
way If you tinker with it you are cer¬
tain !o be injured in some way.
Our sympathy is very weak toward
tbi -e who willfully, knowingly and do
uiutly violate tho law, And more es¬
pecially whan it has a tendency to in¬
put} tbe morals of the people.
SAD ACCIDENT.
We are f irry lo learn that a Mr. Nix
of Union county had the misfortune to
accidentally shoot himself on last Sat¬
urday Tho facts as learned, are about
tin. o. Air. N. and a neighboring young
man went to tho Blued mountain to
j. uk after some cattle. They became
thirsty and stopped at a cool spring 10
get water Mr. Nix laid his gun down
and drank, and as he arose from the
spring took hold of hia gun by the muz
z'o to pick it up, when the
caught, against a root and caused it to
discharge its contents in the
breast of its owner. Five largo buck
ehot taking effect just in front of tbe
right arm, cutting|the largo leader that
unites the arm to tho breast, four of
which made tl e'r txit near and to tbe
right of tho spinal column, the other
just under tho blade bone. He wasdo
iug well at tho last account. We are
told that tbe wound rimy, (though not
necessarily), prove fatal. The young
man and I D Itiecds have our condo¬
lence.
The whiskey that was captured by
Gaston last, week, belonged, we are
tc!J, to the Coolies, on Mossy Crook.
Instead of. six barrels wo believe it was
only five.
MINING.
I Capt. Trimble has just returned from
Dahlonega, bringing with bun a very
‘ *’ ,n0 screen which bo will apply to hia
j little mill at the Thompson mine.
; It seems that this screen properly ap
i piled will be of great advantage in sav.
I M t{i0 liao ic l,ein K s.» very fine
! none but the finest gold can pessi
bl ? P a83 tbrmj K li it, and when it does
P aM thl0U « h ’ ,be «°PP er P lAtes are 80
1 arran R ed, that so lictle coarse sand or
I - rav *> P :i?6es over ‘hero that they will
ret:iitl neai! J every particle of gold that
touches thoir surface. With this extra
appliance, together with tbo energy ; nd
practical experience of Mr. Trimble, lie
will soon begin to take out the ‘precious'
in good earnest.
1 Wo promised to give a short history
j of the Thompson vein this week, but
have not been able as yet to obtain such
information as wo desired for the pur
poso.
The Turning ol the Tide
Capo Anu Advertiser!
The awakening of the people to the
dangers which beset tbo bitter partizan
strife which was raging with a fearful
intensity at the very moment the
President was shot oy an assassin,
will not fail of producing good
effects upou the body politic. Not that
it. eau be proved that tbe shots fired
sr»».wis 2 BS!&
the fierce political quarrel was the
cause of tbo attack, as it tired the
hearts of that class of persons of whom
Guitoau is a representative, and made
him impatient to become a hero, as be
in his egotism and cowardice interpre¬
ted the word.
Thank God tbo tide is turning! That
attack on the President has brought
men to their sense, and the people will
no longer tolerato a class of men in
office whoso ouly God is self, whoso only
ambition is purely personal. That kind
1 &“o’) bin'll
event, men bavo boon brought to clear
er ideas of duty, and tbo fate of tbe
| Republic, tbe many interests to civiliza
tton, tho hopes that are therein centred,
1 have become tho prominent topics of
conversation, and their importance has
shown tho littleness and insignificance
[ ! the r;‘«iz hopes mship and well-butng when compared ot fifty mill¬ with
ions of people.
It is full time for the turning of the
tide, for it was sweeping us on to an¬
archy and ruin. Lee this event be tho
new starting point for the purification
and turning of tho tide in all that is cor¬
rupt and degrading in our politics.
Let it awaken feelings of purer patriot¬
ism, greater iove for humanity, a sink¬
ing out of sight, forever, of tbo mean
and petty motives which have actuated
many of our public men, and fill them
with purer, higher attributes, which
shall entor into the spirit of the govern¬
ment and diffuse blessings. Wo need
something higher in our politics, iu a
country so favored oy Providence as
this has been, than a mere scramble for
office, something better than one official
arrayed against another, seeking to re*
tar«l the movements of government,
and jeopardizing the peace und pros¬
perity of the nation. 'This time of ro
gret, with our President bearing his
wound heroically, with bis wife and
friends showing a spirit of devotion
worthy of all praise, with tho prayers
of millions beseeching Almighty God to
spare tho life so dear to his country—is
the propitious season for new resolves,
(or higher and nobler aims, for the
turning of the tide which shall bear us
on to the full realization of tho best
Government ever vouchsafed to man.
--------------4*4--— -r-
(letting Rich without Labor,
Have not tbe bondholders who have
had their wealth doubled by the law
got rich without working for it? Has
not the man who held the mortgage
of a farm for one-half its value and
then by a rise in the value of money
taken the whole farm, got rich without
working for it? Has not the hard work
j tiller of the soil who worked for h's
money lost it? Has not the farmer
been robbed by the law that made the
i fundholder r.cli without working for it'
tho *’« masses ‘here not_want front 1873 to and^ww 1875 and boob* dur¬
ing that period did not tho bondholders
get licb without working for itf Who
are getting riob now under the existing
monetary laws of Ute country Not the •
sons and daughters of toil but tho moo
who don't work for it are getting rich.
If tbe public creditor was paid “accord¬
ing to tbe exact performance of the
contract,' tbe bondholder would not be
so rich. A day’s work or a pound of
wool would buy a bigger piece of tho
public debt than now and the farmer
wi uld bo richer. The increased wealth
that has come to the bondholder by
reason of restricting tho coinage of
silver and boarding both gold and silver
is the robbery of the law that falls up
on the mau who works for bin money.
Tho Greenbacker’s idea is Dot to scatter
paper money broadcast over tko land
but that tbe man who works for his
money shall have it and the man who
don't work shall not rob him of it un¬
der the form of law.— Chase's Enquirer.
----_, . -» — ----
Most of the newspapers are teeming
with the sayings and doings of Guiteau,
tbo ass .twin,
“The Household" for August is be¬
fore us, filled as mual with the choicest
reading.
---^.4^.--
Tbo contract for grading the North¬
eastern to Clarksville has been let, and
wo suppose the work is progressing.
We have nothing very special from
the mines in any quarter this week,
only that the operations are moving
along quietly, with bright prospects
ahead.
Tae President has had a partial re¬
lapse but has about recovered from it.
The sudden change caused groat anx¬
iety; but hopes are again buoyant.
A few more such blows as the defeat
of Conk, and Platt will send the Stal¬
warts up “Salt River,,' and the sooner
they come the better.
Eldridgo G. Lapbacn has been elected
United States Senator to fill the vacan¬
cy Roscoe Con kling resigned. Tho de¬
feat of Conkling and Platt ia bound to
weaken Stalwartism a little. So mote
it be.
A plaguo of rats has appeared noar
Dagneux in Erance Innumerable
swarms, which coma from tho direction
of Lyous have invaded many communes
doiug great damage to the crops.
Some farmers have killed from five to
six thousand rats in their fields iu a
single day.
Courier-Journal: The great temper¬
ance petition presented to the Georgia
Legislature the other day was (it 10 fot t
long and contained 30.000 signatures.
It was greeted with applause.
----------—«<SE> *■— -
Happiness is a roadside (lower grow¬
ing on the highways of usefulness;
plucked it shall wither in thy hand;
passed by it is fragrance to thy spirit.
Trample the thyme boueach thy feet; be
useful bo happy.
Tho throe groat civilizers the dollar
the locomotive and the telegraph should
be made tile intelligent sonants and
not the greedy and brutal masters of
people,—it’. T. Allis.
Iu Washington a conference has been
bold at tbe Interior Department with a
view to arriving at. some conclusion as
to Little Chief and his band of North¬
ern Cbovenes. Secretaries Kirkwood
and Lincoln, General Sherman and
Little Chief were present, It was do
t-ided that a delegation of Missouri
River Indians, including Spotted Tail,
Red Cloud, Stnuding Bear and others,
should be invited to Washington early ir.
September to discuss various vexed
questions with the authorities there.
The Northern Choyanes are very much
dissatisfied with their present location
in tlie Indian country, and want to go
j north to the Missouri River country.
'They would prater to locate, at Fort
Keoh, b it there is no Indian reservation
there—A’. Y. Observer. -
The Power oT the Press.
In no way is the power of the press
more surely shown than in the univer-.
sal knowledge that has in less than a
year been diffused throughout fifty
millions of people of tho wonderful cur¬
ative properties of that splendid reme¬
dy Kidney-Wort. And the people from
the Atlantic to the Pacific have shown
their intelligence and their knowlege
of what is in the papers by already
making Kidney-Wort their household
remedy for all diseases of the kidneys
liver and bowels.— Herald.
VASSATI COLKEGE.
POUQHKEP3IE, N. Y.
TOR T5IK LIBERAL EDUCATION OF
W0TKY.
Examinations for entrau'-e, Sept., 11th. Cata¬
logues sent on application DEAN, to Registrar.
W. L.
ALL’S Positive euro for Corns will
cure Warts, Bunions, Sore and
Inflamed joints. For sale at the Adver¬
tiser Office.
P 17 \ mrpV’O 111 ORGANS IS useful stops,
7Y Uj sets roods only 885. Pi
••M£*$?idSaS83^n<»s$l25 up. , 1 'SEfIUus.
Catalog. FitKis. Addess BEATTY, Washing¬
ton, N ..I.
This Mystery Explained.
QQAfx SjtjKJT) P ;itenc narB ° of an
invaluable remedy for re¬
moving from tho human system pin and
stomach wo; ms. It is the prescription
«f a celebrated physician, and saved
tbo life of the child" it was dispensed
for. It has since been the means of
saving the lires of thousands of chil¬
dren by its timely use. It is put up in
the form of powders, ready for use, and
children taka it readily, as it is a pleas¬
ant medicine. Sold by dealers in med¬
icine at 25 cents.
KentatoSty Military Isistitti.tr-,
At FARMDALE P. 0., FRANKLIN CO., KY., Six miles from Frankfort, has tbo most
healthful and beautiful location in the;State. A full and aide College Faculty, and expenses a*
moderate as any first-class college. Thirty-seventh year begins Sept. 6th. For Catalogue-,
etc., address as above
COL- R. D. ALLE.V Superintendent,
WE MUST EDUCATE!
THE
Cleveland High School
FS Now in Fcsdon, which oponod July 11th. to continuo fivo months. Tuition, $1.00 por
-L schollar, per month, and each to receive their pio ruta of the public fund. A liberal
patrouage is solicited, 0. W. SCR0GGS, l‘rin.
THE OKLY
unormnn asr-jmat^tam^r^ -------...... —------
Ih EITHER uqni) OR DRV FORM bl
That Act-af tiiesaiac time on
I®®, TZEBQWZZS ,j
AfFD tee Eimm.
mi Y. A R E W & S § C K •? m
{become Iicnntse ire allow these great organs poiro/iorl wgg
\ cloaqcd or torpid, and
| humors are therefore forced into the Mood jigSjij
that should be cupelled n it argil;/.
m
WILL SURELY CURE m
Ikidney diseases,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
| PII.RS, CONSTIPATION, URINARY EJ fc|
DISEASES, FEXIAI.K WEAKNESSES, ft
\by AND NERVOUS DISORDERS, /jj
causing free action of these organs
1 restoring their power to throw off disease. |wj
Why suffer Ilitions pains and aches! y d
I Why tormented with Riles, Constipation! jiff!
j Why frightened over disordered headaches! Kidneys! Fji U
Why endure nervous or sick
j I Use KYDNEY-WORTancI rejoice in health | ?
It is put up in Dry Yenetnblo Form, in tin KJ
I I cans one package of which makes six oimrts u: FJ j
medicine. Also in Liquid Form, very Concern if
j treted, for those that cannot readily prepare it. If \t
J tJTXt acts with equal efficiency in either term, s&j
GET IT OF YOUR DRUGGIST. I RICE, $1.00 FJ
WELLS, RICHARDSON’ & Co., Prop’s,
I (Will send the dry post-paid.) BEBUXGTOX, TT.
Bedford
Alhim and Iron
Springs Mass $
Adapted in chronic diarbcea, constipation
and Scrofula.—ily. Latham, JM. L>., I’rePt
Virginia Medical Society.
Suecesstully used iu Dyspepsia, Cluouic
Diarbcea and Scrofula.—i’rui. S. Jackson,
University Pennsylvania.
Efficient in antenna; excellent appetizer and
blood purifier.—lb Fisher, M. D., Ga.
Valuable in nervous prostration, indiges
tion and chlorosis.—G. E. Mut.evvs, M. ill.,
N- C.
A. tine tonio and alterative, very valuable in
diseases peculiar to females, chronic fever and
ague, bronchitis and disuses of the digestive
organs.—). F . ltoughten, M. D-, Ala.
Very beneficial iu strengthening ami im¬
proving a reduced system.—Uev John IV.
iieekivith, Dishop of On.
Invaluable as a nervous tonic.— lien. I. C.
Fowler, Tcnu.
Recommended as a prophylactic in Malarial
districts-D. It. Fairex, M. D., N. 0.
Restores debilitated systems to health.-T. C.
Mercer, M. D., lud.
••Used with great benefit in Malarial Fever
and Diphtheria.’’-^. F. Dupon, M. i>., tin.
Prince of mineral tonics.-Franc is U ilium,
M, D., N.C.
Of great curative virtue.-Tiros. F. Rumbold,
M. D., St Louis.
Benetiicial in uterine derangements and
malarious enodi'iotis.-G. M. Vail,M. D.,Ohio.
Rest remedy over used in diseases of the
throat.-P. A. Sifferd, M. D., X. C.
Tonio, alterative, diuretic: one of natures
greatest remedies.-Medical Association ot
Lynchburg, Virginia.
Adapted in certain affections of the kidneys
and bladder; dyspepsia, lupus, chlorosis,
scrofulous ami cutaneous aitections.-Rev. J.
J . Moorman, M. D., Va.
Relieves heaiaofce, promptly-both sick and
nervous.-Uev, E. 0. Dodson, Va.
Sample supply sent free to any physician
desiring to test. Pamphlets sent free. Anal¬
ysis with each package. Water as it comes
from the Springs $4 per case off) galons in
gtass-$2.6 ( * for 5 galons, for 10 galons, $7
for 20 galon i in casks. Mass jO cents and
$1; $2.l>0 and !?i for half doz. Pills, pure
sugar coated,25e. 50e and $1 package $1.25,
$2-50, and $6 half doz. Sent post paid any¬
where This Mass aud Pills contains in re¬
duced spaeo all tho curative powers of the
water, and is convenient, palatable and solu¬
ble.
Springs open for visitors Juno 1st. F.oard
$35 per mouth. Speeiaisates to families and
parties. Carriages meet visitors at Forest
and Lawyer’s depot, each four miles from
Springs, upon advice of arrival. Address
A. 31. DAVIES, Pres of the Company.
75 Main St , Lynchburg, Va.
For sale in Cleveland, Ga., fay OAKES &
HENDERSON.
Juno li ISSL 6ms.
OPIUM Asul MOBPIlUVEIIabit
cured in 10 toMdays.Ten years es¬
tablished; jono cured. \V • ite stat¬
ing case. Du. Maksh, Quincy, ilich.
V UN NO IIS Plti’l DUTlOiHS
For this Month's Weather, prepared expressly
for STODDART’S REVIEW.
Sample copy mailed for 3c. Stamp.
J 3J. SrobDART, Pub., N. Y. Phil., or Chicago
ecss TO FARMER3
and THRESHERIVSEN.
If you want to bnv Threshers ,
Clover Hallers, Horse Powers or
Engines (either Portable or tawing Trac¬
tion, to use for threshing,
or for general purposes), buy the
"Starved Rooster” goods. "The
Pest is and the Illustrated Cheapest." Pamphlets, For Pricp
U’ List
Taylob 1 free) Comcast, " TiU! to Mansfield, - rh< ‘ a-tma* O.
THU
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THIS (YEAR.
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in the World.
| Send for Sample Copy — Free.
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ALEX. CHURCH, Publisher.
JL | U T ALL’S etfie. cured Tetter a Tetter and Ring tvornr wife/s Spe
on my
head that had troubled her a number of
years- I have used this remedy in ray
practise with eminent success." Dr. G.
H. Forrester, Lake City, Fia.
Blanks ol al kinds for sale at this offico