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PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF RELIGION, EDUCA TION, LITER A 7 URE AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE .
VOL. XIX.
Notice.
All trustees who have any of the
church property will please hand
iu ti.eir fees.
C. T. Ivmy.
Farm For Sale.
120 acres in good farming sec
tion, grod pasture, plenty of wa
ter, 8 room house, 4 miles east of
Cumming. Convenient to schools
and churches. For further partic
ulars address J. W. Tidwell, Bu
ford, Ga., or Mrs. L J, Tidwell,
324 Houston St., Atlanta, Ga.
For Sale Or Rent.
A good farm on Chattahoochee
River 10 miles south of Cumming
and 6 miles of Suwanee. containing
155 acres, 10 acres of good bottom
land 60 acres of uperland in culti
vation and balance in pasture and
original forest.
Have a good seven'room house
with all out buildings and one
tenant house, fine orchard, splen
did telephone service.
W.R. Settle.
Suwanee, route 2.
A Narrow Escape
Edgar N. Bayliss, a merchant of Rob
insonville, Del., wrote: “About two
years ago I was thin and sick, and cough
ed all the time and if I did not have con
sumption, it was near to it. I commenc
ed using Foley’s Honey and Tar, and it
ste,ppea my ootigh. and I am now entire
ly well, and nave gained twenty-eight
pounds, all due to the good results from
taking Foley’s Honey and Tar,” For
sale by John Hockenhull.
Appropriate Grace.
At a dinner the other evening
Dr. Charles F. Aked-—familiarly
known as the pastor of Rockefel
ler’s whurch —told the following
story about a daughter of a fellow
minister, says Lesile's Weekly.
“It was the custom of the house
hold to have dinner at nosn on
Sunday and to have a very light
meal at night. One Sunday even
ing little Helen’s father was absent
and her mother said to her. ‘Papa
is away to-night. Puppose you say
grace.’
“Helen was hungry. There was
very little to eat on the table. Cast
ing a sweeping glance over the
board, she tilted back her head and
said solemnly, ‘For pity’s sake!
Amen,’
Health and Beauty Aid,
Cosmetics and lotions will not cleai
your complexion ot pimples and blotches
like Foley’s Orino Laxative, for indiges
tion, stomach and liver trouble and hab
itual constipation. Cleanses the system
and is pleasant to take.
For sale by John Hockenliull.
WANTED: Lady or Gentleman
of fair education to do some home
work for a merchandise supply
house. Salary $15.00 per week.
Address, J. A. Alexander, Morgan
Park, 111.
Foley’s Kidney Pills cure backache,
rheumatism, kidney, bladder and urinary
trouble. Do not risk having Bright’s
disease or diabetes. For sale by John
Hockenliull.
This world is a bad world only for
those who have bad hearts
We never realize bow much we
are capable of doing untill the test,'
comes.
Opening of Cumming Public
School.
The next session of Cumming
Public School will begin at 9 o’clock
Monday morning Sept, 27, 1909.
It is highly important that each
pupil be present the first as well
as each succeeding day. There
will be just 160 days of this school
year and it will take all of this
time for a pupil to complete the
work of one grade. If it is possi
ble for you to do so. even at a sac
rifie. let us have the ch:ldren for
the entire school year. However,
if you cannot spare the children at
the beginning of the term let us
have them at the first possible date
and we will take great pleasure in
giving them the very best advan
tages.
The boarding places are fast be
ing taken, and those who expect to
get board had better make arrange
ments at once.
The public is cordially invited to
be present at the opening.
The opening will be marked by
appropriate exercises.
If you need help in securing
board, or if you wish to see a copy
of our catalogue Address the
Superintendent.
T. P. Tribble
; -ir-
A Hurry Up Call.
Quick! Mr. Druggist—Quick!— A box
of Bucklen’tt Arnica Salve—Here’s a
quarter—For the love of Moses, hurry!
Baby’s burned himself, terribly—John
nie cut his foot with the ax—Mamie’s
scalded—Pa can’t walk from piles—Bil
lie has boils—and my corns ache. She
got it and soon cured all the family. It’s
the greatest healer on earth. Sold by
John Hockenhull.
Notice.
To the officers and Directors of
the Farmers County Fair of For
syth County, you are hereby re
quested to meet me at the Court
House in Cumming, at 2 o’clock
p. m. Saturday Sept, 17th, inst. to
devise plans for said exhibition
which will take place later. Let
every one interested attend.
P. D. Brown, Pres.
Was a Hen.
Little Harry with his sister and
brothers was being taught natuaal
history by the governess through
the instrumentality of a game. The
game was called • Barnyard.” One
child was a duck, another a turkey,
and a third a calf, and so on—a
noisy delightful game.
But little Harry remained, in all
the tumult, as still as death. Far
off in a corner he crouched, silent
and alone. The govhrness, spying
him, approached, saying, indig
nantly: ‘‘Come. Harry, and play
with us.”
“Hush,” answered Harry, -‘l’m
laying an egg/’
Go With A liusb-
Tlie demand for that wonderful Stom
ach, Liver and Kidney cure, Dr. King’s
New Life Pills—is astounding. ,
. . . . say they never saw
the like, It’s because they never fail to
cure Sour Stomach, Constipation, Indi
gestion, Biliousness, Jaundice. Sick
Headache, Chills and Malasia, Only 25c,
For sale by John Hockenliull,
CUMMING, GA. SEPTEMBER 17 1909.
A Stirring Story.
A number of years ago a man,
called Jim Burwick, who had long
been a very wicked young fellow,
was truly converted. Since then
he has been zealously engaged in
evangelistic work, and the results
have been very large. Here is a
stirring story by him :
“On Saturday evening, because
of being snow-bound, a dozen com
mercial traders were unloaded at
the hotel where I was stopping.
During the evening I got into
conversation with one of a group
of six of them who were sitting
about the stove. He was a keen,
intelligent fellow, and after I had
talked with him for a time about
the salvation of bis soul, he came
at me with a shining proposition
about a yard log. something to this
effect. Said he, Igo and get an
expert phrenologist to examine my
head, and by its shape and bumps
he will tell me if I am inclined to
steal or lie. or do other wicked
things. Now, how can I help do
ing those things if God has made
me that way?
During the five minutes that he
took in putting and explaining his
question, the eyes of these other
traveling men upon us, I set pray
ing, deep down in my heart: ‘Now
Lord, fix me 1 You tell me in Mat
hew* that you’ll fix me. (But when
they deliver you up, take no thought
how or what ye shall speak, for it
shall be given in that same hoar
what ye shall speak ; for it is not
ye that speak, but the Spirit of
your Father which speaketh in
you—Matt. 10:19,20] I don’*
know where this man is going to
land, and so you’ll have to fix me.
if I show him the light- I remem
ber saying to him, after he was
done : “My dear fellow, I read
the Bible from Genesis to Revela
tion , and not one word do I read
about a bump ; but God sys that
you have a wicked, deceitful heart,
and because of this He wants to
give you anew one. Then as I
raised to my feet, I began to cry,
and after a time, when I come to,’
if you’ll let me use that term, he
had me by the hand, and was cry
ing and saying. ‘I want to be a
Christian, too, for I’ve got a good
Christian mother back home!’
In my meeting, the next day, he
was one of the happiest men that I
ever saw.”
Is not that indeed a stirring
story? And how well adopted
Jim Burwick is to get a right grip
on hardened sinners ! He has been
in the depths of depravity, and he
fully believes that if God could save
him, He can save the very worst
of sinners.
C. H. Wetherbe.
Dr. Abernetliy, the great English phy
sician, said. “Watch your kidneys.
When they are affected, life iin dan
ger/’ Foley’s Kidney liemedy makes
healthy kidneys, corrects urinary irre
gularities, and tones up the whole sys
tem, For sale by John Hockenliull.
Berlin is getting to be the ten
derloin of horse, and sirloin of dog
market of thj world.
A DIAMOND STORY.
The Way a Russian Princsss Dispesss
of Hsr Jawals.
A few years ago Ludwig Nissen,
a well known w-holesale dealer of
the Maiden lane district, was in the
office of a diamond merchant in
London when a stranger came in
and offered an unusually beautiful
stone for sale. The Englishman
did not care to buy. But Nissen
thought he saw a bargain. But he
was not willing to buy until he
learned who owned the stone and
where it had come from. The man
said he represented a friend, a wo
man, who did not care to have her
name disclosed. The American was
firm. If he could not learn the
owner’s name he would not buy.
The stranger said he would see the
woman and talk the matter over
with her.
The next day he came back and
took Mr. Nissen to the woman’s
home. She lived in a handsome
apartment in one of the most fash
ionable quarters of the city. It
turned out that she was a Russian
princess who, with her husband
and her daughter, had been driven
from Russia for having taken part
in a nihilist movement. Of all
their large property they had saved
only their jewels. She opened a
little safe and showed the Ameri
can one of the finest collections of
diamonds he had ever seen. They
were worth $200,000 or $300,000.
“We sell them a few at a time,”
she explained, “just enough of
them each year to give us a living.
Perhaps you will wonder why we
don’t sell them all and live on the
interest of the money? But my
husband has the gambler’s spirit.
The money would not last a year.
So we part from them piecemeal.
I estimate that there are enough of
them to keep us twenty years, and
I don’t expect to live longer than
that.”
One of those diamonds forms the
centerpiece of one of the most val
uable necklaces in New York. A
few others are sent to this country
every year. In the “diamond horse
shoe” at the opera there is never a
night when there are not some of
the jewels of the exiled princess on
view.—New York Tribune.
Time, Not Space.
Mrs. Frink was a trusting soul
and rarely questioned the opinions
of others about matters concerning
which they were supposed to be in
formed. One day she came home
with anew pair of shoes under her
arm. “Got them at Bride’s,” she
explained, “and they’re the best I
ever bought you.”
“What is so very good about
them ?” inquired her son, for whom
the shoes were intended.
“Why, the salesman said that you
could walk farther in them than in
any others without getting tired,
and I said that you couldn’t walk
very far just now on account of
your knee, you know’, and he said
that he meant farther for the same
distance. So I bought them, and
here they are. Save the string,
please.”
She did not notice the smile on
her son’s face as he undid the pack
age. and he v r as spared the trouble
of explaining. Youth’s Compan
ion. ________
■■ ■
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the safe,
sure, easy, gentle little liver pills. The
orignal Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is
DeWitt’s. The name is plaiuly stamped
on every box. It is good for cuts, burns,
bruises, sores, boils and sunburn— Out it
is especially good for Pdes. Sold by i
John Hockenhull,
Route 7.
Hot dry and dusty.
Mr Obie Holbrook and sister,
Miss Flossie visited Mr Oliver
Sewell and family, near Cuba Sat
urday night.
Mr Cliff Webb and family, of
Roswell, visited Mr Henry Webb
and family Sunday.
Don’t forget the all day singing
at Pine Grove next Sunday.
Several from here attended the
singing at Mr Homer Holbrook’
Sunday p. m
Miss Naomi Dinsmore and sister
were the guests of Misses Ruth and
Celia Boling Sunday.
Mraud Mrs Afeberry Montgom
ery. of Cumming, and Mr and Mrs
H J Paco, of route 8, were the
guests of Mr J S Hansard and fam
ily Sunday.
Mr Lewis Holbrook and family,
of Itley, visited Mr M L Holbrook
and family Sunday night,
A Reader.
Ducktown.
Well after a two weeks absence,
I come again.
Protracted meeting closed at
New Harmony Sunday week with
14 additions to the church, and the
church greatly revived, we can
truly say the Lord has beefl in our
midst.
On Sunday afternoon Sept, the
sth, Mr Lesley Tinsley and Miss
Dollie Price were united in mar
riage, Rev. Andrew Henderson
performing the ceremony. We
wish the couple a long and happy
life.
has returned
home after a week’s visit to her
grand-parents Mr and Mrs J L
Brady. .
Mrs Taylor and daughter Miss
Della, of Pickens. Cos. have been
visiting relatives and friends in
this part recently.
Fodder pulling Beems to be the
order of the day.
Mr and Mrs J W Lummus and
son Grauy visited the formets moth
er Mrs Chariy Lummus Sunday.
Mr and Mrs J L Brady visited
their daughter Mrs J M Martin and
family Sunday.
Mr and Mrs Wiley Barrett visi
ted Mr B II Henderson and fami
ly Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Tune Wallace and Mrs Bell
Smallwood visited Mrs Oliva Hughes
Sunday.
I don’t think the boys are up
with their check playing yet.
Mr Martin visited his daughter
Mrs J R Lummus Sunday.
Several from here attended the
singing at Frre Home and report
ed a real nice time.
Well I guess I had better skiddoo.
Wishing the Georgian and its
many readers much success.
Opel
One of the charming things about
Labor Day is that practically no
body labors,
NO- 37