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BY A. CHURCH
VOL. H
“ >cd Fvcr; - URartiajf Iffornlus;.
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.oblige Yours Truly,
Alex. Ciiuhch, Publisher.
Rev. W, H. McAfee, Dahlonoga, Ga.
J W. Mefks, Blairsville, Ga.
C. H. Kytlh, Mossy Creek, White Go.
Rev. J. C, Bell, Tesenteo Dist., White
Co.
Guss Lyon, Burton, Rabun County,
Ga.
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v^r^swrrF^rTfiK^ra^<vaieag'jat3»iamtrri»: • hi--.• fc*L***«**.«Wi
®Ml ^irrefonu fv'
W
MAGISTRATES’ COURTS.
Mount Yonah—SHI Dist.,—Third Fridays—
Jus. 11. Heaves, J. P. G. 15. Jarrard N. P.
Mossy Creek... (20 Dist.,...Third Saturday...
,D. M. Davidson, N. P., J.il. Brow-tow J. P.
Nacooebee...l27 Dist.,...First Saturday...
Fames McClure, N. P. J. R. Lumsden, J. P .
Shoal Creek...S02 Dist.....Fourth Saturday—
il. C. Hunt, N P., J. W. Blackwell, J. 1>.
Biuo Creek...721 Dist,,...Second Saturday...
Win. Black, N. P- G. W. MoCoilum, J. P.
STescntee...55S Dist.....Fourth Saturday...E.
T. B. Ledford N. p, II. A. Allison J. P.
Town Creek...836 Dist.,...Third Saturday...
J. A .Cantrell. N. P., 11. It. Helton T V.
THE MAILS.
Cleveland to Gainsville, Daily, except Sun¬
day.
Cleveland to Blaireville, Daily, except Sail¬
'd aj.
Cleveland io Dahlonega, Tri-weekly
Cleveland to Haysvillo Tri-weekly.
Cleveland toBeltun once a week.
, Cleveland to Tesnatee. once a week.
EDWARD L. STEPHENS, P. M.
giotessma!
W. K. WILLIAMS,
ATTOBNL Y A T LA W,
Cleveland, Georgia.
.Jan. 10th I SSI.
J. J. KIMSEY,
A’ TTORNEY Office, Basement AT LAW. Masonic Cleveland Hall. Ga.
Jan. 10t'a 1S81. wi’y.ly.
M. G. BOYD,
A TTORNEY and COUNSELOR AT LAW
-
Dahlonega Georgia.
Mill paetiee in tho Superior Courts of
Vyeite, Hall, Dawson, Habersham Lumpkin,
ami tho Supreme Court of the State,
Jan. 10th ISS1. wkl’y tj.
FRANK L HARALSON.
4 TTORNEY AT LAW,
Atlanta Georgia.
,, ill practice in all the Counties ombraeing
(Vestertf an ' Blue Riiigc Circuits. Also
re Federal Supreme Courts.of the State.
II business entrusted to my ears will re
'e prompt attention.
Janl. 01th 188 wl’y. Iy.
gig gam 2w £®wi@
OUR OWN SEC'E‘XON-JYE LABOR Ffi ITS ADVA.‘§L7§C"JECT~Ci‘.
CLEVELANI), (LL, SATURDzfl MORNING, ()CT‘OR??? 13’s.} £351.?! 1-
Iffilt in tbc wimly liuht-himse tower
The lamps aro liurniug free,
Each • roiling with good-will and power
It's message o'er the sen.
Whore ships are .-ailing out of a.ght.
Hidden iu storm and cloud and night.
On (ha white wares that, soothe and dash,
A ruddy gleam is shod;
Above the lighted windows flash
A'lornaie gold and red.
Save where one sad and blinded glass
l'orbids tho happy fight to pass.
1
The hungry sea entreats the light,
The struggling light 13 fain,
But obdurate and black as night
Rise.-; the darkened pane.
Casting a shadow long and black
Alt ng iho weltering ocean track,
A’:, who shall say what drowning eyes
Yearn for that absent ray;
What unseen fleets anil argosies,
Plowing tho doubtful way,
Seek t hrough the night and gropo and strain
Forguidaneo Irom that darkened pane?
Ah, Light Divino, so full, so free!
Ah, world that lies in night!
Ah, guiding radinnee, shine through mo
Brightly and still more bright,
Nor over be thy rays in vain
Because I am a “darkened pane,”
IIOw Mines arc Worked.
‘T wish you would tell mo about the
way men get gold and silver out of a
mine, my dear,’ said a lady in East
Laramie, the other evening, to her hus
band, and he peeled off his coat and sat
down in three chairs for the evening.
■Well, v. hat kind ot a mine do you
wish to hear about—gold or silver,
quartz or placer, deposit or refined
lead ?'
Well, all of them, briefly. I want to
know whether th*ay scrape off the gold
from the under side of the ground, and
wash the di:t off in tho creek, or how
it is-done*
‘Ws il, they don’t scrape off tho under
' Ttrereymi
'
are in error. In placer mining theyjhave
to collect the dust and pan it out with
ujjgold pan.’ gold do
‘ON they have to use a pan,
they? That must be what makes min¬
ing so expensive. Does tho pau have
to bo solid gold?"
‘No, it isn’t made of gold: it is sim¬
ply to pan gold, hence the name. In
quartz mining the prospector finds first
tho float and tracing it to tbe head he
begins to dig for tho purpose of ascer«
taming how extensive it is, and what it
will assay.’
‘Ob, that is it. I thought they first
bored into tbe ground with a pay streak
until thev found the shaft, and then
they drifted ior the the assesment, _ aQ d
when they found that they just put a
uast in the lndieat.onsandsaited dump. ^
Now, it, seems that you don’t do that
way. You follow up the micacious salt
till you strike the bias fold. Then yon
see if you can find a color that matches
with the copper stained trilooites that
you can prospect, and you
‘No, I must stop tire you there: you are
getting a little off vein You prob¬
ably have the right idea, but you are
using conns that are not correct. After
they get tho wall of the rock on tho
dump, and pinch out the night shift,
they salt the tract and blast tho vorti¬
cal chilblain. Then they drift for tho
blossom rock, baled hay, and poverty.
till they strike the varicose vein. After
uiat is a short J°b to put on the blast
finds snw sample the stockholders.
Where the bituminous duplex
the .brocaded porphyryjand scollops the
gouge v. mi cioss-eyed sairemgs and
bicai bonate of bi)hou3 colic, interlaced
with moire antique wads of gray cops
per and free milling erysipelas. It is
not always tbe case, however, for indi¬
rectly or inversely perhaps more, or
sometimes less, as the case may
and still we might or might not, anil
also besides, if not always, as already
described, perhaps, however, neverthe¬
less: but, yet, I wouldn’t bo positive of
anything which might be doubtful
and went to bed. If husbands would
always explain these things to their
wives, how much pleasanter oar homes
would bo.
j
The financial problem: An exchange
prints “rules to discover spurious bank
notes.’ But we don't want to discover
Dank note3 of that description. It is
the genuine kind we are looking for, and
rules of discove. ing several thousand of
those would be very acceptable.
There are those now living who will
see the Chinese language written in the
same characters of our own language.
The work is already begun and the
missionaries will push k to success.
“If I had a boy to brine up l wouldn't
bring him up too softly,' began Brother
Gardner as Samuel Sbiu finally quit pok
in^tho lire. “Ebery day of tfly life I
meet men who were biung tip a >ft!y.
As boys doy were kissed an’ petted an
Slutted win sweet er • • ::nd cru.d otter,
A - young men dey had nullin' to .do but
spend money, dress like monkeys, loaf
on de streets an’ look down on honest
labor. As men doy am a failure.
pie who dotin'hate'em an’avoid C m feci
to pity ’em, an da'.', j :st as bad. When
I see a man whom ebery body
i rsalizo dat ho was bring up on de
goody-goody plan as a rub*him boy.
“If I had a boy I’d agin de
world, I’d pat responsibility, on
shoulders. If he got sugar he’d am it.
If he got time for loafin’ it would be
only arter his work was done; If he
was ugly or obstinate I’d tan it outer
him instead of buyiu’ him off. If you
want to make a soifish man, humor de
whims of a boy. if you want to make a
coward forbid Tour boy to defend his
rights. I teach ray boy dat all boys had
rights and dat while he had no business
to trample on de rights of order him boy s, no
boy had de privilege of fakin' by de
uose. Las’night an old roan libia up
my way was turned out doors by his
j boy- lie has boon tryin’ do goody*
£ oou y P* an oa d.it youth far do las
' twent > y He ar3 didn't > and dia am him do legitimate
result. want to work
lease work is hard. Ho didn't want
dress P■ a j n * ur ^ ear P 00 !’* 0 <vou ' d
look down on him. De boy am to day
a loafer, neither grateful for what has
tnn done in de pas' nor carin’lor
happens in the fuoher. inn y’ars ago
he was ened ober run arter an’ bought
oil, an’ his mudder iibed to see him a
loafer an’ his faddor has fouu’ him a
ingrate.
Wash for Fruit Trees.
by l. d. snook.
The object in applying a wash to trees
is not so much to remove tho rough and
scaly outer bark as to destroy tho para
sitic plants and iusectswhich adhere to
the surface of the bark and sap tho vi.
tality of the tree by a cou3taut drain
upon the circulating current.
One form of wash is made by adding
one pound of whale-oil soap to three gal¬
lons of warm water stirrings well and
applying with a stiff broom or brush.
The trunk should be rubbed thoroughly
and hard to remove as tnuchi&s possible
of loose bark so that tho liquid may reach
every f part of tbe surface. Another good
v , ash 8a weak lya lrom wood ashes. A
was [} j 3 m ade by adding two quarts
of soft water to one gallon of common
soft soap. Place these in a vessel over
the fire and when warm the soap and
water are readily combined by stirring
and should be applied in the same mau
mer as the whale oil application.
The best results are obtained by wash¬
ing tho tree about throe ti nos during the
season, applying the first iu March or
April, the second in Juno and the last
iu August. The insects as well as moss
will be effectually removed, leaving the
bark in a fine healthy condition. Should
be impracticable to apply more than one
wash let it be done just after tho heavy
spring rains. If it could remain on
nearly ono w e ok before being removed
t jj 0 ra j a the result would be more
f avor abl©
Some remove the coarse, loose bark
f rotQ | a j-g 0 trees with a hoe oven a gar
, 1 den trowel before applying the wash as
less of the liquid is required and it
more readily applied and goes right
tho root .—South and .West,
Mutilated Coins.
-
Tho Secretary of tho Treasury
clearly defined the status of ho mutilated
coius. Ho says that thorn ia provi
the right to sell it as old gold and silver.
Among the melters may bo included
the United States, for auy citizen may
deposit bulliou at the assay office and
receive its vaiso when this is determin
ed. Between mutilated coin and
mouey there is Jistinc.iou: for the wear
of metalic currency is overlooked by
the Government as long as there is
enough of the inscription left, to verify
the denomination. Mutilation, howev
er‘is willful and not accidental, aud tho
As loss must of be sustained si.ver coin by is the intrinsical-1 holder, j
none our
ly worth its value the moral Is that every
one should refuse—as ho has legally
the right to do—any coin that has been
cliped, punched or drilleu. j
{:91}. PER YEAR
: ^ ia:, v predvi.or s nave '
-
__ ’ Ci -ofie ;
' -
; lt ;i ’’ s i*U
i > ‘ 1 nvs: ' ( ' * f r
How.mi Crust;', i •f Motv York toffs h is
predict'; urn upon the Bible. His Sunday
I even it , expos! tie •n of tho Book of Uaveiu
1 ion avo ;; t rractii g peculiar interest, and
i(he con. rresration s v. ho listen to theta
are induced by tho knowledge that l)r.
Crosby is one of tho best Greff: scholars
and Bib ical nts now living, to
i place much confidence in his imerpre
j 1,1 ,l o1 vor > deep mysteries
>1° ' 8 bow pK'i'. g an exposition ot the
! I' art Bovclation which le.a.es to *>»
| tbo dir present his ago but of tho two world. periods Accor- o!
I ff T v,ow pro
P ,je(j y reuiaia to bo lull’ b‘d tue hr'
I extending from the completion o. tin
present period in 1 >!>0, alums'; ; . )i *
and constituting the millennial age, an--.
the second extending from 2290 to tho
year d.000, at which time Dr. Crosby
believer- the end of the world will come.
There are few eminent Biblical soh uars
who venture to announce Scriptural
authority for a specific date as to the end
of the world and therefore Dr. Crpsi.y’a
predictions will attract; very general
attention. It is consoling also as it
gives us a few thousand years breath¬
ing time.
Tannage on the risinl.
Taimago has said many good things,
but few more appiieab'o to any existing
j J erii Another than the practical following. of this
* use great
| National calamity is that it has disgus
lc q | !1()ro i| i;ia over people with this free
| j UMi ofilireuruns. Oa tho frontier or if it
j 3 your business as an officer of tho law
j lw to nmUo uiuko the tuo law law to vO make mau o the too arrest at rest of oi a a
desperado, you h id bettor He armed but
it is high time that all respectable citi
zeas snap in two their sword canes and
uulead their deadly weautns. If move
in respectable society iu Brooklyn or
New Yoi'tf or Washington or London
you have of any
that) the two God gave yon—-two u .m •••;
fists—and they are easily loaded. If yon
feel the need of having a pistol in your
pocket you aro a miserable coward. If
you are afraid to go down the street un¬
armed you had better get your grand¬
mother with her knitting-noodle to go
with you. A pistol is tho meanest and
most infernal weapon ever invented. It
is the weapon of a sneak. I would as
soon carry a toad in my vest pocket.’
After the Criminals.
Soutncrn Banner.
On Saturday last some gentlemen of
Oconee county, one or two of them
law officers and one two from this coun¬
ty, got information that they could find
at certain house, two notorious negroes
who are much wanted. They went in
a body and surrounded the place, but by
some misunderstanding a part of the
crowd failed to gat close enough and
stayed off iu tho bushes. Due of the
negroes got out of an up stair’s window
and came down a tree. Ho was seon
and chased by ono or two until he was
caught. The other negro however, got
out some way without bo rig seen and
slipped off no one knew bow or which
way ho went- He was especially wan¬
ted, being the notorious Abe Gluts, alias
Jackson, whom tho Bauuor mentioned
recently as charged with several crimes
The negro caugUt is Bob Rood. He is
iu custody here
About Mau.
Man that is married to woman is of
many days and full of trouble. In the
morning he draweth his salary, and in
I | tho evening behold it is all gone. It is
|one a tale that is told; it vauishoth and uo
knoweth whither it guoth. Ho
J riseth up clothed in the chilly garments
of night and seaketh tho somnolent
| icky paregoric bowels wherewith of Ins infant to soothe the ooL lie
; posterity,
| Ho spendeth his shekels in the purchase
of lino Iinous to cover tho bosom of bis
: family, yet ho himself is seen in tho
gates of tho city with one suspender,
Yea, ho is altogether wretched,
-...... - ■ —
An eye to business: Gus Da Smith
wont into a cigar store ou Austin
avenue and purchased a cigar for a
nickel. Du iightiug it ho to occasion
to put about half a box of matches ia his
vest pocket. “Look hero,’ said tho | ,
tobacconist, next time you just bring
your matches along aud i’ll give you a
cigar.
There aro no Irishmen in Iho Mormon
rank.
|C"n"‘l'KqC'l'"I'VIJ*‘~v
g a 1,, ‘_
Iv leaning foiwaut on
or to < no w ith the
i on a levin wait the he u
bad tii3te, bat very denim •
I ii cramps sbe much, nr
i uigar.s, ml, n tpt.
| ibe chest, and in
- t ; t!;0!t
(tj u , , u . .
| an< j H1
j ; l} , lr su , t ,. ,
, - p,.
; Q y
head r ui-Ki (
anv ' ‘ 1 ds IS I -Shit c
! ^\ ‘ , V O ..i-il
r . , . ..
,
: , v ..... f his ruscui i ■ system
•ranged, and the more o ruful ho ip •.»
< S' ■ vi' a straight or upright position
i again . the be,’ :r.
j l "
|
T.; rocket I’istol
A Detroit exclmnc c *Th. p’>tf»l
is a nr. bine uo igned (or tho purpose
of killing, so.d is Iho most efficient
weapon at > >rt range fur that pc:pose
kuowu ■ jan. It is too riangcruus for
| a pla Giia , unless far buutiug, and of
to ton range for vnr. It b useful
only lor murder and he who carries ono
has what Tyndall would call the ‘power
and pot. noy’ of murder in his bm choa
pocket if not in his heart. The laws
of this State unh-rtunately do not pro.
vide adequate means of pu islmeac
for carrying deadly weapons concealed.
j ! This ■ - provide something for. which tbeLci ktturo
1 s!luald But when the pla¬
tol-canier takes his • • weapon out of his
pocket and makes tho threatening do.
moostraLions with it, except when iu
’danger of groat bo dly harm.' and in
a-.dl dt-lease. ti:u coarts jegard < ..
it as such.
RlLtiliiA f .j Sr (A f ;
a L ti ii G
ta
1 rca M AND DEAST.
>.' h., For more than a third of a ©entn nr tho 1
r {'•(! *; . Scjin Kssinn yr UiSmont lias neeil'
Uiiov." to mil lion ? nil over tint world i.s
A „ 11 ... • .y safe reliance for the relief of S3
f,;’and ico pain. L i-» a rneWirinugN j
ft Uni' • jn For tuhl pmise—(he lie«t of l( Iff .
L £» every loan of external pain
r - t ho jjv
'* ''iff’GPfilS H
r
M L if' lr A:
JjJi .Tnstiiu.’r T Liu 'T’K’ui is v. i:bout nn equal.
3 :jj| ? file 51 very iJeivY. l»one—maklnr iv* -Fj h um* tlie muceic nt*ra- j*^
■ e
■■j* J> Miue. ••nee of Iis \>n.n v; ‘0!^ isiitl ujion iniiunmistiou ilu.Mmi j .<^3h iia-xus-^ :ie«l
i i;-‘ i> m! e s '!•<*." i «;» iia* tiii.aU} v. omkT- M 3
•!i bi!. Ti:e Aie,\iuu.n
r L ?:? % ,j /y t£h rq
e - mmmm -
1 _ it
Ni. t is 1 h 8onK.!)0<1y fn BE
u i t] u \ u: \ bcGise. v liny scal^i. !'• ini. s nuwriOi •;«
* v .> uu i },{ >»• n
■ ■- fgi'.hidi fic i.i.u’yr,' re
P>, SI Off (»!* 11 *. r-’f Oi' OA P:
•*;J: •’•‘V : %l by Hie hi aUt:.., power of Uii3
0 kl f-i w ' F\ Ln- 53 I U\ !■■ |
LcBB^ ii A La. ti
jtj
1 v\ bit 1 ; u tiilr cures nueh ui'.menis ofms
| a: tlu- lie 1AK V ; .LSit us jj?<
Kfl Rjjohi It: v < ft is\: ■ :■ * ■ i: t , ;• i v a 11. y ;»*r.c, i *
■
■D|i at. ti ? * * k it I, k? A A? is Cs H a E4 ti j
*K»i! 1*0 ls< 41 e ts m |
f lo I'totO H.ii.ufcnes-r;, : U Hiitbtai:**. Oltilj |
•». t i i. !. t,
C •; 1 ,■ ... I( !-*Mi C
•iiiHipei! ever? form of extendi Gi»-ffl
** »«* »5s without ICOIK.
■A > - tho IIEBTB I RGATIOK R t v.ITS
!|l G I'oumltir, N; all*. TI.iriH'>is Swbui), M id' Aolnts, |t
Foot Sore*, Hoof Di.--- [
CfCoHoiV ISo-.t, Hot, ocmv Worm, Scab,
S|e> Sit; rlirs, Wind
HjOld iJs. Spavhi, Tli; ush, iip<m|pj
SoriM-, Poll Lvil. Film »iiu',eiilf'J
HL, gjjto si.e bight ami every other
which the orc-upbuts of *5ietoj
A( Stable The llfiicaa >• it ScoeU Vuid are X.li»lin«nt liable. Lj t !
always Miixtxng disappoints;
cares ami never ' «I
[ and it is, positively,
THE BEST
OF ALL
M lioil FRIT U i
m HAN 0E BEAST.
„ April 16th, 1881.