Newspaper Page Text
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ALEX. CHURCH Eiutor
Cleveland, Georgia, Frb. 12, (SHI
The Ga'flsviih' South fon nays that
the North O/toygian is soon to he moved
io (LiiiicviUe.
Georgy Smith, and OaHn-niie Miller
were oxi cut,qd at. Williamsport, on the
morning of ttie :i i instant.
Wit are glad to notice that Hon. Em¬
ory Speer gi it orally canIn Ida von* in the
right direction, on till mounts nl vital
interest to the country.
A bill has been p-t scaled toihe House
by the Ways and means coiumiteo, to
■repeal the stamp tax on exports of to
naeco.
Ships, Sieamhoats and Railroads
liuoughcut the almifit entire world,
.have iMdl'ciod greatly onacconut of cold
weather ami storms, during the present
winter.
The Lagrange Reporter comes t,o us
this week looking as clean and as uant
as a now pin. Wo have not scon scop
py of it for about a month, until this
week. It looks almost like it had a
new dress.
The Maeon Tkleokapu and Messn
eng hr continues to gome to hand, full
of the latest and .rpest important pews
from all parts of the .country, and the
best of it all is, that when you get it
you can rely upon its statements.
It is saidthatcorn whiskey can scarce-,
ly be found in Union county. The cit¬
izens of Union have learned that it Is,
wrong to distill their corn. Would it
not be a good thing if the people of
evory county in the State would loam
the same important lesson.
We publish this week a part of ,Hon.
Jneeph E. Brown’s speech on the fudjan
.question, or rather the (Question as to
whether or not the Indian is a person,
which will no doubt, he read with much
interest. Wo will publish the remain¬
der of the speech next week. Mr.
Drown is certainly ono of the best rea
eoners in the United States Senate. He
makes his arguments so plain that all
who hears or reads can understand.
READ THIS!
We clip the following timely inform*
tion Irom the Athens Banner:
A newspaper subscriber who refusos
to receive from nis postmaster a paper
on which there remains a portjow of
the subscription prosecutojn. unpaid, tenders him¬
self liable to It lips re¬
cently been decided that such an act
on the part of subscribers is priiua facie
evideco of intefltto defrand.jthe newspa¬
per publisher. It would he yyell for
dishonestly inclined persons to pasto
this on their demijohn, where they will
be apt to see it several times a day.
NEW BIOGRAPHICAL DICTION¬
ARY.
An excellent feature of the Now Edi
tion of WeltRter’s Unabridged Diction¬
ary, just issued, is tho Now Riographi
cd Dictionary, in which are given the
names of nearly ten thousand noted
person of ancient and modern tint's,
a brief statement of tl>o dates of their
birth and death, their nationality, pro
fession, ect. This is designed for pur
poses of ready reference, to answer the,
questions which often arise as to when
and where certain persons lived, and tho
character of their achi-.vomeuts. It
rnn’ains many names of persons who
are still living, and the pronunciation
of each name is given.
Ail Old Hoc tar's Advice.
It was this; "Trust in God and keep
your bow els open '' For this purpose
many a> old do<t r has advised the
habitually c stive to take Kidney Wort
-for no otl e remedy go »ftVctually
nveieoiiiHS this condition, and that
without th > distri ss and griping which
other medicines cause. It is a radical
cure for niles. Dnnt fail to use it —
Translated from the New Yorker ZeRung.
J. N. B ck, of Toledo Ohio, says:—
My father, before wearing the • Only
Lung l’ad, ’ could not sleep nights on
account of his violent coughing, Binco
wearing it he has slept soundly oiery
pigbt — See Adv.
Marrying for Love.
The mitu who marries for love has
generally the vital temperament—is independent,
combati.vo, sagacious and
and takes a ge«gr.al yie>v o.f everything.
A life of indolence and stagnation has
no charms, for one whose hopes are
high, he hikes to ho in thickest of the
Effh r '. giping blows and taking them:
watching lor the turn tff events with
coolness and foresight; pleased at his
own indopetidonco and struggles; eager
to show the world what ho can ; chieve
and the conns rouses all the strength
and manliness of his nature. Ho wins
the respect of his fellows by his own
worth. Heofteu brings home pleasant
surprises for his wifo and children. You
may recognize him in trains loaded
with parcels, which he good-naturedly
carries ,in perfect unconcern of what
others think—-a new bonnet, music
books; a set of furs fur his wife; while
in another parcel, the wheels of a cart,
a Jack-in-the-box, a a oil or skipping
rope intrude through the paper and
suggest the nursery. He never forgets
the dear ones at home; the humanizing
influence of that darling red cheeked
lit tie fellow who calls him father brings
a glow of rapture of the purest pleasure
oarth holds; for a man who has never
felt a tiny hand clasp his, will always
lack something—he will bo less human,
leas blessed tbau others. This is the
noble, the houest, -the only form of life
that imparts real contentment and joy,
that will make a deathbed glorious,
and love see peace through ils tears.
It is so purely unselfish, so tenderly
true, it satisfies the highest instincts
it stimulates men to the host deeds they
are capable of. By studying how to
bye, wo roust know how to die/ and the
finest life Is that which ministers to
others’needs and incroases the joys of
those dependent on us, whom we love,
and who look to us for support, solace
and light, even as the earth is revivified
by the sun: for feeling is life, the pulsa¬
tion of delicious sympathy, the spring
lu a desert, the maun* front the
skiee.
Rnergy the True Murk of Genius,
Randolph Waldo Emerson, In one of
his lectures, describes with the clear
swoep of a painter the vital necessity of
energy and labor to even the most gif¬
ted. la the present day of steam and
punctuality, the lazy man, no matter
how extraordinary his acquirements,
must always fall behind iu tlio race of
human life. He says:
‘Genius unexerted is no more genius
than a bushel of acorn* is a forest of
oaks. 'J’liere may be epics in mep’s
brains, just as there are oaks in acprns,
but the true and the hook must come
out before we can measure them. We
very naturally recall hero that class of
grumblers and wishers who spend time
in longing to be higher than they are,
while they should be employed in ad¬
vancing themselves. These bitterly
moralizp upon the injustice of society.
‘Do they want a change f Let them
chango—who prevents it f if you are
as high as your faculties will permit
y ou to rise in the scale of society, why
should you complain of men t It is
God that arranged the law of prece¬
dence. Implead hiip or b» silent. If
you have capacity /or higher station,
take it—what hinders you T How many
men would love to go to sleep and wake
up IJ-othscnHds or Astorsf
‘flow many men would fain go to hod
dunces and wake op Salomons ? Yon
reap what you have sown. Those who
sow duuco seed, vice” seed, laziness
seed, usually got a crop. They that
sow wind reap a whirkwind. A man of
mare ‘c; pacity undeveloped,’ is only an
organized day dream with a skin on it.
A llint and a genius that will not strike
tiro are no better than wet junk-wood.
Wo have scripture for it, that *A living
dog is bettor tltau a dead lion.’ If you
would be seen, shine:
•At the present day, eminent p-,si-.
(,ion in any profession is the result of
hard, unwearied labor. Men can no
mnger tly at one dash into eminent eu# po¬
sition; they have got to hammer it
by. steady and rugged blows- The
world is no longer clay, but rattier iron
in hands of its workers.’
Picture Frames.
Very serviceable and pretty picture
fratues can be made out of pasteboard:
For cabinet photographs, cut four strips,
two six inches aud two eight inches
long, J.ap them across tho comers, in
the name way as the rustic frames
are joined, pieces and punch a hole through f.isten
the two so that you can
them wifh a button, you qan ftnd four of
a kind handsome enough in tho button
box on the shelf' Cut stool are the
best, but any kind wjll do. Strips of
paper ou the baek will hold thy picture
in Its p ace.
These frames are pretty, made of
black card board or covered with b)ack
silk. /Little gilt stars, or strips of gjjt
paper down the center, have a pleasant
effect on the black. You can cut tittle
pieces of paper to represent gilt buttons
if yqu do not happen to have any ip
the bouse, if you can, embroider a
narrow rise on strips, with a cluster of
leaves er (lowers at the corners. Almost
any combination of materials and styles
is effective for these frames, and they
are an agreeable change from the per¬
forated ru.awu card uu.u so .U long ,u„ s used. u «m. Glove and
handkerchief box"s, and, ifl fact,
' of any kind, all lie iu this line of
ufacture.
TELKGKAPlIIt WISPATEIIKS.
2j.bg #n«l Messenger,
Was* ( jt g tojt , February 3 —The
board oi trustees of the Peabody fond
were in session to day at the Riggs
House. ...... Miss Sears, daughter of the
| al0 gunpral agent, submitted an in
f, ir) ii:il report of the work of herfaihor
during the past year, which evidenced
gr,inlying progress in tho cause of ed¬
ucation throughout the South.
Secretary Evarts. Chief Justice Waite
Judge Manning judge. Jackson and
liidtop W’kippto, tho committee ap¬
pointed to report as to the future policy
of tho work under the fund, reported a
r'solution directing the general agent
to expend as far as possible the reven¬
ues m tho education of teachers for
Southern schools, but giving authority
to the general agent and executive C"ua
mition to expend a aunt nut exceeding
two thirds of tho iucorne for dettituto
eiioois
'I'lte election of a successor to the late
general agent resulted in the selection
of Rev. J. L. M. Currry, ofilchmourl
V’a. There were twenty applicants for
the position
Tho treasurer s annual report shows
an available income for tirecoming year
of over tjkil ),U()(i).
New Orleans, Februaay <S — An ex
plosion occurred at I l-tli) o'clock last
night in front of a portion of E. C.
Rainier At Go's paper and printing ware¬
house, at■9;/ and On Champ street blow¬
ing fragments of the windows entirely
across the street and setting fire to the
building. The extension was apparently
the work of inexperienced burglars.
The safe and vault doore were blown
open. The concussion was so great
that if completely wrecked three front
windows on the second Ifoor and open¬
ed all the doors of the builiiiog-vShat
,taring t(i,a glass and splintering the
wood-work. A number of windows
across the street was broken. The
place wae at first thought to he on fire
hut no damage resulted from it. The
alarm created by the explosion proba¬
bly prevented the burglars from getting
anything.
Pensacola, Fob. 7—The heaviest
gale known for years has been blowing
for twenty-four hours. Several ves¬
sels have cast their morulogs aud foul¬
ed each other in tho harbor. One large
bark broke tbrought three wharves and
js now ashore dying singles of distress,
ft is impossible to obtain the particu¬
lars until the storm lolls. The llavau
steamship ) Admiral did not sail last
night but will awaiTTatref weather.
New Orleans, February 7.—jCrev
asces in the new and old canal leveos
have occurred submerging nearly all
that portion of the city west of Broad
street between the two canals and all
that poitiop west of Johnson street and
north of the old basin; also from the
new basin to Carrolton west of Magno¬
lia street. The water at all poiuts is
still rising. The shell road from New
Lake End to tho Half Way House is
two feet under water. Police report
that over three hundred fences were
blown down iu the city yesterday by
tho stofm, The roof of the north end
of Dryad.es market was blown off and
carried several feet in the air by the
wind. Morgan’s wharf at the foot of
Esplanade street was severely damaged
preventing the ferry from running.
The roof of the wing in which the office
of the State superintendent of educa¬
tion arid the commissioner of immigra¬
tion are located, blew oft in the storm
and the records received a wottiug.
Algiers suft'ored terribly. Nearly every
feuce in the town was blown down,
together with several smoke stacks,
and the roof of a houso in process of er¬
ection on Vedette street was blown to
pieces The signal offj.ee reports threa
teuing weather, with brisk oasferly
winds, which will have the effect of for¬
cing more water into the city from the
Lake and Gulf.
The water in the rear of the city is
rising and spreading rapidly. Tho indi
cations are that by Tuesday noon all
that portion of the city west of Clai¬
borne street, and from Carroltou to
Elysiau Fiolda street, will be subtner
god.
Washington, February 8.— The
House co-umilteo on Indian affairs
agreed to-day to report favorably to
the House of Representatives Mr. Per¬
sons’ (Georgia) bill, appropriating $27,
000 to pay to the State of Georgia mon¬
ey advancod by her for the defense of
her frontier against the Indians, and
not heretofore reported.
At a meeting of the House cemmittee
on military affairs to day, Representa¬
tive Johnson, of Virginia, made a favor¬
able report, which was adopted by the
committee, on the bill authorizing a
settlement between the United States
and tho State of South Carolina, reliev¬
ing the State from pecuniary responsi
hlffty for certain amis loaned to color
| e ‘* militia, aud lost or destroyed by
1 ^ return of
w fi lc h Iho State bad given bonds.
Mrs Wm. Tippett, Owasco, N. Y. t
\ says:-! Kidney have Fad worn an about improved three Excel
Bi °r
an( l have received great relief hum it
for pain iu th t e back.— oee Adv.
l.J.X .
PERRY Dili f
VEGETABLE
PAIN KILLER
A PURELY VEGETABLE REMEDY
ton internal ano external use,
Jg a rare core for nil the diseases for which it Is recommends^,
#iid is always PERFECTLY SAFE in tho hands
of even the roost inexperienced persons.
I* Is a sure and quick remedy for COUGHS, SORB
THROAT, CHILLS, and similar troubles; affords Instant
relief in the most malignant forms of DIPHTHERIA, and
is the best known remedy for Rheumatism and Neuralgl*.
The Oldest, Best, and Most Widely Known
Family Med icin e In th e World.
It has been used with such wonderful success in all
parts of the world for CRAMPS, CHOLERA, DIAKRHCEA,
DYSENTERY, and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS that it 29
considered an unfailing cure for these diseases.
Has stood the test of Forty Years’ Constant
Use In all Countries and Climates.
It Is RECOMMENDED by Physicians, Missionaries,
Ministers, Managers of Plantations, Work-Shops, aud
Factories, Nurses in Hospitals— in short by Everybody,
Everywhere, who has ever given it a trial.
IT IS WITHOUT A RIVAL AS A LINIMENT.
It should always be used for Pain in the Back and Side,
and brings speedy and permanent relief in all cases of Bruise*,
I Outs, Sprains, Severe Burns, Scalds, etc. if. It will annually
fuuilly can safely lie without
I goyo many times its cost in doctors’ Mils, and its price brings it
witfiiu tho reach of all. It ia sold at $65*;., 50c., and $1 pot
—— — bottle, and can be obtained from all druggists.
PERRY DAVIS & SON, Providence, R. I.
Proprietors.
Eebrnary 23th, 1830.
FINE CARRIAGES AND ROAD WAGONS
-Of
UNIFORM EXCELLENCE.
Idgtit t Stylialv } Warr«*xto<i X
SAVE your SONET, write for Catalogue and PRICE LIST to
ef AIM U>« SOLS celebrated Manufacturers Borax,* The Boston Buckboard Co.,
* • a___
Buouboaho „ .. ^ ,
er .
HURRAY WAGON. NEW HAVEN, CONN.
ItM OrfwnO Ml ra tree. ^irOummr tetee no KM or rcwetvtbatttt vhafm/r. 4
MARCHAL & SMITH ORCAN CO.,
By Betiding art Aetermiand'thtt diroot from tmmorj to purchaser, ab*»Uxaire oar aoJi tW.< beautiful Organ,^7(Mucbos |J |J
e BYtcy cua aa opportunity ^troo^^'6^:r to teat thU muguiftceat Org«n, We
■teyasvsMSc ai wUh
Order p-t Onto. Dopoaitlhe money with jour bank or a ay responsible merchant, to be paid to
M if Organ is satisfactory, or to be returned to you if. Organ is roturned ions.
o«r.i. the Only House In America <»“• */•« « 6-*c<o«c Organ, t ..ao/Bwh,
having scription. Stib-Btus, Coupler, Ceissts and Grand Organ ,/or 860. Order direct or send for full de¬
MABCUAJL Sl 8MIT1I, S We*4 Eleventh Stmt, How Yerk, X. Y.
NEW PREMIUM CORN SHELLER.
ONLY -
- MADE.
pan on?«f^r? Ut TWQ IMPORTANT ADVANTAGES.
FIRST. ils<
thine to
euu arm uuu vnu tho vi ~ into another, . —
’Ok\ shelled into ono vessel, and cnience, th« body of farmers ear plant only
i which is an immense com as many
^EvmFMTOitw aits°this Stroller for shelling com for pool
¥ Over on Inv I'anii. becomo the
Onr PREMIUM CORN SHR1LER is destined to
“ 9 Agricultural Implements, Ask rot
-ar m - - it- x.y
Cures by ABSORPTION (Nature’s way
ALL Til MING BREATHING 1(0AT DISEASES DISEASES, TROl'BIES,
It DRIVES INTO the system ettratireagfints
and heating medieines.
It DRAWS FROM tho diseased parts the
poKSons that cuuse death.
Thousands testify to its virties
Y«ti CA1K BE RELIEVED AID Cl'RED
Don’t despairjuntil you have tried this Sensi¬
ble, Easily Applied and HADICAhLV
EFFECTUAL Remedy.
Sold by druggists, or sent by mail on receipt
of Pmcg $2.00, by
Send for T»sti- The “Only'’ Lung Pad Co
menials and onr
bpek, “Three Year.’ WILLIMS BLOCK,
Millions a
Sent Free. DETROIT Mieb.
At WHOLESALE IN ATLANTA, Ga.,
LAMAR. RANKIN Sc LAMAR,
\Yholsale Druggists,.
Cure I Back Ache
nd all diseases of the Kidney?, Bladder uul
Urinary Organs by wearing the
Improved Excelsior Kidney Pa<\
Iti? a marvel oi healing and rf.kief
Simple, Sensible, Direct, Painless
Powerful.
It CURES where nil else fails. A REVEL \
TION and REVOLUTION in Medicine. Ab¬
sorption or direct application, as oeposert t.-.
unsatisfactory internal medicines. Send for
our treitise on Kidnoy troubles, sent freo. Sol f
by druggists, or sent by mail, on receipt < f
price, S2. A wrens
This i? the The “Only” Lung Pad C o
Original and
Genuine Kinney WILLIAMS BLOCK,
l’ad. Ask for it
and take no other. DETROIT, Mich
At WHOLESALE IN ATLANTA, Ga.
LAMAR, RANKIN Sc LAMAR,
i Wholesale Druggists.