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■•««.»«*« -
BY ALliX- CHURCH.
Sht ©cvdawl SVtedta.
Publishtul Every Saturday Morning.
Office—[n the Masonic Building, South sido
Public Square, Up Stairs, Clevel and, Oa.
____
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy, one year, - ild’O
One copy, sir motitlip, - *0
One copy, three uioniljs, - * - M
ADVERTISING RATES :
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h»r ttit«*b auhst)<<ucut insertion. of
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insertions marked ihi them, v/ilJ be published
until forbid, and charged {Accordingly.
Contracts made tor three, six, or twelve
months on liberal term.?.
Vioeal Notices Id cents per Une.
HI very nfliuuiunication for publication in
the Ain'iiimsER must bear the name of theau
ihor, o-.»t necessarily for publication, hut as gu¬
aranty of good faith. We willuotbo responsible
tor the opinions of correspondents; and.no
communication, will be admitted into its <M)1
uins, haviflg for its end the defamation of
private eharactoi, or in any other v.ay scur¬
rilous in its import,.
Correspondence upon subjects of general
importance solicited—though it nius' be brief
and to the point.
All communications, business letters, and
money remittances must he addressed to
ALIA'. CHURCH,
Publisher.
nmx ^/ssasmaaegt gsceacaa
feral
PLAN OF CLEVELAND CIRCUIT.
First Sunday, Eleven o’clock, Zion Church.
seven o’clock at night. Quilluin’s CbSpe);
.ficooud Sunday. Eleven o’clock, Mossy Creek;
Afternoon, d:dtt. O'KoUy’s Chapel: Friday
before the Third Sunday. Eleven o’clock,
Hlue 111 lye: Saturday before the Third
S In iuy. Eleveu'd clock. fttt. Pleasant.
■f .iird S jtiday. K'eveti o’ulook, .VtoPlousant ;
Afietnuun-. Lomlnulle.: Saturday W
I'nre the Fourth Sunday, lllcvou o'clock,
Ch ittaboochei.
I'trtirtn Sunday, 'Eleven o’clock and sbveu at
lii-fat, Cleveland.
Rev. IV. 0. IliTi.nn,Pastor.
'
magistrates?’ col:uts. j
Mount Yonuh—Sill Dlst.,—Third Fridays— i
W. F. Soars, N. I’., O. C. Blalock, J. 1’. ■,
Mossy Creek.,. 12.0 Oist,,...Third,-Saturday...
Wiiiittik Kur-eraun, N. P...J. M. Dorsey, J. I’
Niwaocbee...42r Dist.,,.. Kis.it Saturday...
... .if. lie rtoii. .1. t J ,c Is. 1’ ■
Siioiil Creek,,.Sfi'I Dist.... Fourth Saturday-
]i. C. Hunt. N i’.. J. W. lJla«kw*U’. P
Blue Crock,..711 DUt.....Second Saturday...
A. II. llendersori, X. if. -I. If. Freeman, J. 1*.
..Fourth Saturday...K t
Tesv»toe...S:58 ,Ti. Jf ., '
M. Castleberry, jS'. I’. Au-urHis AilisoD, J• I’. j
Town Creek'.,.Slid DisV, ..Third Saturday... 1
W. B. Hawkins. N. !> . .1. E. M-Af<■«. r P.
THE MALLS.
Cleveland to Uainsville,lUaily, except Sun¬
day. Daily, Suu- 1
Cleveland to Blaireville, except
.'lay. D-aklon-ega,Il’ii-weckly
0leve'a.nd to
Cleveland to Jiay.-vllic Tri-wetkly.
Cleveland to Belton oucc a week.
Cleveland ko Te.-n itce. once a week.
HDWAUIl STEPHENS. 1’. M.
h i i ......._ ----------------------- ;-— it.rs.
gwfeiomil 4m\$.
\Y. Jv' WILLIAMS,
AHWOliXEY AI LA IF,
C I.K.VMA X D. (xEnltl i 1 A.
J. J. KIMSEV,
A TTORNEY AT LAW. Cleveland Qn.
f\ OEice, roum No. -1, Baseiuent Court
Louso. Jah HHli 1SS0. wlgy.ly
M. G. BOYD,
A TTORXF.Y 1 and COUNSELOR AX’ LAW
Cleveland Oeorgiti.
Will paetice in-U:e Superior Courts of
White, Hull, Dawson, Habersham Lumpkin,
and the Supreme Court of the State.
Jam. 10th 1880. wkl’y ly.
FRANK 1/ HMIArLSOH.~
TT0RNEY AT LAW,
Atlanta Georgia.
jyiUprneticn in all the Oniinties (unbracing
bo Aestern au Biue Rhlgc Circuits. Also
O le Federal Supreire Cntir s of the State.
AH business entrusted to my cure wifi re
^ ci re prompt nfttutiou.
Jftn. oith lAfaO wl’r. Ir.
Among agents and families, the great, de¬
mand now is for the light running Combina
nation Sewing Machine, because it has stood
the test, and is better made, with more im¬
provements, will last longer, and is lower in
price, (only $2fl.) than other machines, and
having attained a merited popularity among
the people for reiisCility, it. is welcomed
wherever it makes its apt earanoe. It is built
for strength and cor,slant hard work, has in
terchangaWe working (parts, manufactured of
fine polished steel, and will run for years
without repairs; is shaple to learn, easy to
manage, understood perfectly in an hour, and
always ready in a iroorent to do erery descrip¬
tion of heavy or line (family work at less.cost,
more easily, smoothly anti faster, and with less
]p.bnr than any other machine at any price,
•ever did or can ilo. Tnoke-s qfaiiters, rulilers.
hemtUors binders. Ac., Iree rvi-h each machine.
No advance payments. J;achines shipped to
any R. R. station for examination before pay¬
ment of bill. Agents make money rapidly,
supplying the great hemaud for this the
Cheapest Ma-bine in tho world. Territory
free. For illustrated catalogue of prices,
specimens of stitcc, Ac., address, office of the
Crmbinaiion Sowing Xa-Mne,,T7’7 ;33roadway.
New Y’orb, N. Y.
OUR OWN SECTION—WK FOR ITS ADVANCEMENT.
CLEVELAND, GA„ SATURDAY id (MINING, NOVEMBER 13,
Poetrx
^ tars and Flowers.
IIY O. W. ICOLMES.
When Eve had led her lord away,
And Gain had killed Ms brother,
The stars arid flowers, the poets say,
Agreed with one another,
To cheat the cunning tempter's art,
And teach the race its duty,
By keeping on its wicked heart
Their eyes of light and beauty.
A million sleepless lids they say,
Will be at least a warning;
And so frko ftower-e would watch by day,
The star-u from eve to morning.
On .Fill and prairie, field and la^n,
Their-dewy eyesitipturoing,
The flovv>ers still watch from reddening dawn
Till we-stcri: skies are burning.
Adas ! each hour of daylight tells
A tale of shame so crushing,
T at some turn white as sea-bleached
shells,
j-Und -some are always blushing.
But .when *te patient Star, look dawn -
•On all their light discovers,
The traitors smile, the murderer’s frown,
The lip3 of lying 'lovers;
They try to shut their saddening eyes,
And in the vain endeavor
We see them tw aiding in the skies,
And so they wick forever.
Ton Much Prosperity,
Little Rock (Ark.) Gazette.
‘liar’s no uso talkin’ houtdo
said old Anderson. ‘A old rime
can't stand ot'osperity. W’hon pros
parity comes in -e-r do house, df)
wife miscalculates the distance
coin bred and Sunday clothes,'
has gone wrong with Anderson
a bystander. It ai"’t old age by itself,
1 can tell ver Some raity
fack-e b«‘) C awled inter my life ob
I dezen't like ter go arymii’ pnadin’
'fectiona, but ef ter zires.it ! can
you do .pirns.' ‘Go ahead.’ T
a good ’oman. 'She was do
wovfeentet 'oman l eber eeed.
get up at all times ob night and
woikLuif fetch wntf. She didn't
ter gp.UT.-lwjffch. AU«be wantad
plemy ob work.
l‘d . go ter enurch , . regn , ar ano , do ,
pray • IVIII in. When Uo'eii I'd I . go . 1,1 fu borne una my mu
woukl have biletl caboago for me to eat,
an Td oaf era, too. Be.beral weeks
a young buck nigger of a preacher
to do'aaborbo--d. (to preached
well. He could make do
wbeder t a wanted to or not. All dis
a t tg thing in faber ob a culled
er,ret- know. Well, l 'vUedder
er roun’ ter my house. .My wife
kinder backward-liko, an’ wbetnl
juced her tor do preacher -oho
her face on her apron au’ run out
clop word. Sbo wuz powerful
an at dc rable. f felt ashamed ob
’oman. Putty soon, boweber, sho
her talk, au' fore tie preacher lef'
got so well ’qnainted wif him dat
sisti d o.n his coinin’ ague Ha did
agin , od agin. .Finally my wife
ter stop etioppin’ wood. She wanted
new 11 rest>—une ob -de.-e beali
ped vireases. We wuz pretty prosper¬
ous an’ eould stari’ hit After a
she wanted a carpet for do Ilo'. 1
see no rest tj 11 i, got hit. Do
cum ebery day.---I soon seed dat
business ob wbitewasbin' was too
perous, lur my house ’tracted de
er like otto of deee heah candle
Ilyin’ roun’ de light. Wal,
tnornin' tny wife tuq awav wid
preacher. Ida tuck<up de carpet,
even stole de stove, Dey stole
kuives an’ forks an’.eberything
duuld get dar ban’s on. I
an cotched up wid ’em. l)a
hit me wid a chunk, an tny wife flung
rock at me: deml turned back,
‘I don't want noitnoah wimmin
preachers. Ez long ez a culled
chops wood and fetches water
all right, but when she flungs down
wood and pours out de water, den
out Dat’s what makes me say what
do, dat a old time nigger can't
prosperity,’
‘If you were to go to Heaven,
Anderson, and find tbo preacher
what would you do V
The old man studied awhile and
marked, -I doart know-notbin’ ’bout
place, it dey am -stricter dar dan in
Aikatsaw, I'd gib hirn a dilfober
h ad wid my harp, dat would make de
city ob do new Jerusaletn-soua' like
was a fire alarm.'
A Leap Year Privilege.—S he
her band upon his arm, and gazed
in his face, aud smiled a smile full
the brim of witchery and grace;
girls have all been teasing me justaw
fully,' she said, ‘and . very day
asking me when are we going to wed.
1 tell them (bey are cruel but it seems
they won’t refrain—pray, dear, what
shall 1 answer.them when they ask me
agaiD?’
A Mother's boy
‘Is there any vacant place in this
bank which 5 could fill f ’ was the m
quiry of a boy, as with a glowing cheek
he stood before the President.
‘■There is none,” was the reply.
“Wore-you told that yon might obtain
a situation here i Who racorsmended
you?’’ 1 he
“No one recommended me,” was
reply. •“’I only thought 1 would see. ’
- There was a straightforwardness in
the manner, an hone pv-g e t r r rainauon
in the eoantenanee of the lad which
pleased the man in buauiess, and indue
ed him to continue the conversation.
He said, “You must bare friends who
•could aid you in a situation- have you
! advised with them? ’ ** i
The quick flash of the underlying deep blue eyes j
was quenched in the musingly wave J
of sadness, as be said, half
•My mother said it was useless to try
without friends;’ then recollecting him
self, he apologized for the interrupti mj
and was about to withdraw, when the !
gentleman detained him by asking why ;
he did nod stay at school another year
or two, and then enter into business
j life.’ >
! *r pave no time ’ was the instant re
mly, ‘but I study at home, and keep up !
'
with . . the . . other . , boys . .
“Then you have a place already’
said his interrogator,. ‘Why did you
leave it?’
•I have Dot left it,’ answered the boy,
quietly.
‘Yes, but you wish to Havo it. \V hat:
is the,ruatterr .._ I
Dor an instant the child hesitated;! _
then ho replied with half reluctant I
.frankness,‘I must do more for my mu
t b er |
Brave words; talisman f ’
c success
anywhere, every where. They sank into ;
the heart of the listener, and -recalled .
the forgotten past. Grasping the haml
of tbo astonished boy, be said, with ;
a quivering voice,- ‘My good bov, what 1
is* your name ? You shall fill the first!
vacancy that occurs in the bank, jf;
in the meantime vou need a friend, come
tome. But give" mo your confidence.
Why do-you wish to do ^ . >ro for tour
"
motDorf*
Tears filled tbo boy's ■..A.hc re
plied, ‘My father is 'dead, and my sis
i'uuia iters aud ami brothers uiuiucia <u o (iea«i, utxiu, and aim ILV m?
motber an d , are ieft to help 1 each oth
or, but sbo is not strong, ttnd . I - want to
take caro of her. It will please her,
that you l ave been so kind, anti I aui
so much obliged to you.’
So saying the boy left, little dream
ing that his own nobleness of .character
had been as a bright glance of suoebine
to tho busy world ho had so train blingly
eutered.
-— —------
Eating Lemoii-i. !
--
A good deal has boon said through
tho papers lately about the healthful- !
ness of lemons. The latest will advice as j j
to how t » ure them so they do tho
most good runs as follows: Most people :
know the benefit of lemonade before
breakfast, but few know how it is-umre i
than doubled by taking another at night 1
also. The way to get the better of a i
bilicus system without blue pills or j
quinine is to take the juice of one, two •
or tiireo lemons, as tho appetite craves, :
in as much ice water as makes it pleas
ant to drink, without sugar, before go- !
ing to bed. in the morning, cut rising, !
or at least half an hour before break j
fast, take the one lemon in a goblet of
water. That will clear the system of
humors and bites, with mild efficacy.
without any of the weakening effects
of calomel or Congress water. iPeople
should not imitate the stomach by eat¬
ing the lemons clear; the powerful acid
juice, which is almost corrosive, infalli
bly produces inflammation after awhile;
but properly diluted that L& do s not 1
so
burn or dr.w the threat, it does its full j
work without harm, and when the
stomach is clear of food, lias abundant
opportunity to work on the system thor |
oughiy. (
A young lady who wrote to a Western I
editor to know if young women ceased
to be belles upon marriage, wa# inform¬
ed that if they retained their clappers,
they didn’t.
— ~ * ” ~~ :
A noted divine once said: ‘No ^ man ;
i with a heart, in him could refuse the :
kisss of a child.’ No! that is true, i
j and more especially so if the child is J
I some sixteen summers old aui wears j
dresses. j
Young said irate father I |
man, an
j want you to u tderntarid that, my house
j j dissecting is not a hospital, table ami neither ain’t is this sofa a
you no army
surgeou, nor my daughter a corpse,
went.
S,t. Loots, November d>,—A snow
storm has been prevailing here since
last night, but it melca as fast as it
falls.
TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES.
Memphis. November 4
phis st-amer Robert Mitchell, en rouce
from Cail() for Naw Orleans, which left
here yesterday morning, struck a bids
den ebeCruction while making a cross¬
ing at 'Pox Island, six miles below
Memphis, and sank. (Her cargo consis
ing of 75G tons of grain and bread
stuffs and 625 bales of cotton, all con¬
signed to New Orleans merchants. She
lies straight in nine feet ef water, and
all of tiie freight in the hold will be
loot. The freight on deck was only
slightly damaged. The boat was in¬
sured for $S5,000 in Cincinnati offices.
Both pilots were at tho wheel when tho
boat sank.
£ faxkfoht, _November „ , 4.—During , _ .
Lie Repuolican jollifioation last night a
difficulty occurred between Hon. VV. H.
Sneed and Jorry Lee. Lee drew a pis
v, hen uJLcer Conway interfered, and
Lee’s pistol went off in liis hand, the
ball taking effect in the lower part of
Conway's bowels, inflicting what iis
thought will be a fatal wound. A few
minutes after a young white man named
1; Geo. rank Whittaker Lgbert shot for a hollowing negro boy for named G
ir¬
field, the ball taking effect in the left
uirlft sido. just inof KaImip below fho the hnerf heart. It ! f io is thought t linnrrh r
he cannot recover.
Naskvixl November -Robert
Ransom fatally stabbed bis wife, Ellon
Ransom, at his homo on the Granny
White turnpike iust south of tho cor -
poration limits yesterday. It was the
result of a quarrel. Ransom was ar->
rested. The woman is reported to be
dead.
„ Memphis, November ... i —The Mom
Dhi$ anf ^ Arkansas packet, Ouchita
LeUc, struck a snag this morning at 1
clock, five miles above Austin, Mla¬
Bissippi, ami sank within tea mmutes.
^‘ ,0 a good list for of freight, cotton,
arid cotton seed, this city. After
striking the snag an attempt was made
to run her on a sand bar, but she sank
fi <:,ore it-could bo accomplished. 1 ho
boilt wa * V:t!u ‘ ;d f ^°<" 00 - Sil » Ue3
wiu ' in ^ ^ ltcbo ' 1 . wbk;h
tank yesteiday alternooii. No lives
w,!n! 1( >*k '• : • dunoihr, tha’ ti..« boat
" lil be a A bt, 8" ;
^ 10 - was washed tv/ei boarvi. a ho
is at the wreck, saving
,1, t
HOW DRY IT WAG.
An honest old farmer from the ‘Coun¬
try gave his recollection of the kot^poll
as follows:
if was so dry we couldn't spare wa
ter to put in our whiskey. The grass
so dry that every timo the wind
blew it, flew around like so much ashes.
There wasn’t a tear shod ar, a funeral
for a month. Tho son dried up all the
cattle, and burned off the hair till
looked like Mexican dogs; aud the sheep
looked like poodle puppies-they shrank
up so We; had to soak all our bogs to
make them hold swill, and if any cattle
died in the morning they wcul 1 be dried
beef at dark. The woods dried up so
that the larmers chopped seasoned um¬
her all through August, there ain’t a
match through all the country—in fact,
no wedding since tho widow Glen mar
vied old Baker,three months ago. What
few grass—hoppers are left are all skin
and legs,and l dtdn.t hoar a tea—kittle
sing for six weeks, we cat our potatoes
baked, they being all ready, and wo
Could’c spare waterito boil them. All
the red-haired girls wove afraid to stir
out of the house in daylight.; and I tell
the truth, t was afeard the old fellow
with the cloven foot had moved out of
his old home, and settled down with us
for life. Why. we bad to haul waier all
summer to keep the ferry boat running,
and—say, it’s petting dry; let’a take
smilin', all around.’
-----------—
A LITTLE ADVICE.
— ; —
I want to give you three or four
rules.
One is, always to look at the person
you speak to. When you are address
ed, look straight at thb person, who
speaks to you. Do not forget this.
Another is, speak your words plain -
!y. Do not mutter er mumble If
words arc worth saying they are worth
pronouncing distinctly.and,clearly.
Another is do nor say disagreeable
things. If you have nothing pleasant
to say. keep siient.
A fourth iis—and ob! children re
member it all your lives—think three
times before you speak once:
Have you something to do that you
find hard and would prefer not to do?
Then listen. Do the hard thing first
aud get it over with If you have done
wrong, go and confess it. If your les¬
is tough master it. If the garden
is to be weeded, weed it first aDd play
afterward. Do the thing you don’t
like to do first, and then with a clear
do the rest.— Ex. ‘
' "flik‘ham
Bill Arp off-rs the following yi to ;T
vice to gitls v, !i>, v n-onipiuto co:nii)!f.
ting ;oa rim no . “ -.V»ineu ar -■ a b**a*>
better than m«u if they have
chance. Taet are ci-*‘:tt.“d o-‘t.«-:t-. Tin*?
itegin the world b<»ti* r m th -ir fin. >
Little girls don'' > m •nod rlv.-i uu
rocks at b ids „.-,d h min • slier; stmt :
at tiro chickens and ru'ium-g the (wh**s
ail over the lot and . ! in;' rho dogs ost
the barn cats an 1 bro-ikin •; up pigeons'
nests and ,id that. I e un-r suv a buy
that didn’t Want to sin I 1 I gun and
kill somi-thing It's a wonder to mo
that G eso kind, tee ier l.o.r «1 gal
will have anyth! ig t. T> wi h Viu, but
‘it stsetlt like thev will, aid I reckon il’t
all right; but if L M as ;i young m irn in’
woman I would bo migiity particular
about mating with a feller round town
who belonged to half a dozen soe'e ies
of ono sort or another and was out tiv
eiy fckrhf.
“If l wanted a man all to myself I
would take me to tho country where
there ain’t no.clubs or M taouic lodges
or Odd Bellows, or Knights of i lenor or
Pythias, or Scyila or Clarybdia, or tiro
companies or brass bands, or tnardigras
or patu de .foie gras. 1 d force him to
love mo whothoi ho wanted to or no^
for there wouldn’t ho anything to dis¬
tract his attention. But then, if a girl
wants'to liy round and b« every body’s
gal, and have ad sorts of a time, why
then aim'd better marry m town. It’s
all a question of having one good man
to love • mi, or a doaeti-silly ones ui ad-*
miro. But as I ain't a woman, .1 sup
pusu it’s none of my business.”
bill Arp on Noirspaptii's,
Year papers arc a great comfort to
me: in every number I find something
to pm,da way in my rmnd and memory;
something that J did urn know before
aud that will bo of service to me in
time to eome. If a mau can road ho
can et a good education by taking a
gtpaper; be can keep up wiih tho
w• -, and make himself an entertain¬
ing ivember in society ; ho can talk
upon ai.uoct any subject. Book-learn
ius '•« $j( good thing, nor £ !<n •
until i Ail •■v,:.*/ '.giYaYv- Y-.f
never reads a, news, a re :i he pa
for a fool in his neighborhood. mm
.papers are tint much in appearand f*
urn 1 never took one that didn’t pay
mo some way ti'ore than I paid for it.
Quo time an old friend started a paper
a way down in southwest Georgia and
sent it to me, and I sabsciioed just to
encourage him, aud after awhiio it
published a notice that an administra¬
tor 1 a 1 .at order to sell several Iocs of
laud at public outcry, and one of the
lots was in my own county. So I in*
quired about the lot, aud wrote down
to my .friend to at end the sale, and
run ;t up to fifty dollar-e He did so,
and bought the lot for me ar, thirty
dollars, and I so d it to man it adjoined.,
for a hundred dollars, and so 1 made
sixty-eight dollars cmar by taking that
paper. My father told me that whoa
ho was a young man he saw a notice tu
newspaper that a school teacher was
warded .in a distant cotnty, and lie
went down there and got the situation,
and a little girl was soft to him, and
she grew up mighty pretty and sweet,
an ! tie fell in love with her. Now, if
he bad not token that paper, what do
vou reckon would have li -cono) of mo ?
Would’t L De, some other fellow, or may¬
be out, at all?
HERCULES SUPPORTING CORSET.
sswsaisn
THE LATEST AM) MOST IMH10TT.D ABDOMINAL CORSET.
(Patented N'oy.i*}, 1*678-)
y~o. sotted ............................ $ 2.00
Xo. X, Woven, Spoon Steel ............. 2.7<S
It sup^rts the altdomen naturally. It cannot stretch. It
gives relief to invalids, and is a perfect-fitting Coaset in every
respect. l or saie by all first-class dealers m the 17 . S.
Samples sent on receipt of price, by
LEWIS SCHIELE ft CO.
Sole manufacturers,
New-York.
May 1st. 1SS0
a week in your own town. T rms nni $5
•Sow ol ,tlit free. Audresn H. IJxllett & Co.,
Po'-'L. d Maine.
A GENTS WANTED for the best and faetest
- . seliiup( pictorial Books and Bibles. Brices
reduced od per cent. Nxtioxal Peeusiuho
C o , Philadelphia, Pa.
_
Blank notes lot sale at tbis office.