Newspaper Page Text
fl. A. WKEM 'fl, lililor nixl Proprietor.
■—r,»in.,m» ,* — K avxrjTE;.Meun
SATURDAY, AUGUST 5, 18S2.
All the Georgia Cong ressii ion but two
voted to pass the $19,000,(MJ0 public steal
over the president’)* veto.
The English should bait their F.gyp- 1
tian missiles with a Georgia platform. It
might console, e\en, Arabi Bey.
The extracts in our “I’tiblic opinion'' i
Column indicate the general ripple along |
the [Hilitical line in Georgia. Soharmo
nious like.
-
If every man w ho prefers GarlrvH for
governor of Georgia, does his whole du
ty, he will just be the next governor.
That's tin* long ami short of it.
Tur. Georgia democratic platform
might have added novelty by embody
ing the A pestle's creed. 11 would, then,
have made a good missionary document.
In all the long line of troubles which '
have encompassed many of the citizens
of northern Georgia before United States 1
courts, Lucuis J. Gurlrell was never the i
one to go back upon a poor man because '
he had not the price of a fee.
• Dr. Fklton occupies a stronger posi
tion to-day than he ever did before at
the outset of a canvass, and by the time .
begets through with the lying, yelping
hounds, who have been barking at his
heels for the last few months, he will ,
make the thing very interesting.
The result of the r Lite republican con- i
ventton in Atlanta, this week, was a i
split, apparently on a color line, though
many of the better tempered colored
men sided with the genuine republi
cans, lead by Conley, Longstreet, VV’ikle
and other reputable citizens. We would
advise the party to get together and har
niqjpze on the double acting, breach
loading platform of the late democratic
convention. No hostile people are safe j
without it. It is a gentle panacea for
nil differences.
Tm: colored people of I>eKalb county,
gather, annually around the grave of
Col. R. \. Alston, in a d«*ccoration ami
memorial service, as their call tor the
meeting, last Saturday stated to pub
licly testify to their exalted admiration
of the life ami services of him who was
first, to denounce the working of tin:
lease system, and whose highest object
in life seemed to be the amelioration of
the deplorable condition of the helpless
ami unfortunate.
* A very great pressure has been
brought to bear on Mr. Jones by leading 1
ami influential men, not only in his own i
comity but all over the district, among
them a number from Murray, for him to
make the race this year, feoling as they
say that injustice was done him ami the
voters of Whitfield, whose decided
choice he was. What he will do we do
not know. Should he conclude to enter
the race, it is unnecessary for us to say
that the Citizen will support, him for
the very reasons we have set forth in
this article. — Dalton Citizen.
Last election time, ami the time bo-'
fore, after reading the many choice ex
pressions of Gen. Gartrell’s purity, pa
triotism and ability, so classically and
persistently stated in the columns of the
Dalton Citizen, and the ugly sayings
about Alex Stepbeas, we promised, in
our mind, that some day, if these two
should oppose each other, we would give
way to the teachings of the dear old Cit
izen, ami vote for Gurtrell. The time
has arrived, ami we can only wonder
how it must tear the heart strings of the
editor, over there, to shift his love, as
'twere.
We have no harsh words for Jud
Clemants, ami really, if he were as able
t in the duties of the place into which he I
lias slipped, as he is crafty in local pol
ities, we should not oppose him; but
the grand old seventh district, with its
mines of iron ami coal, and its great for
ests of timber, inviting the manufactur
er, calls for a representative in con
gress, the peer of any man there. W.
H. Felton is that num. It is not enough
to say that because Jud Clemants is de
serving, that he should la* placed where
he is incompetent. We talk plain, but
with no feeling of harshness. We sim
ply utter the truth. No man should be
sent to congress who is not equal to
every emergency possible.
Two Jinny, by Half.
Jud Clements will probably step into
tiie arena before the campaign is over.
Il can be truly said of this young man
that during ttie contest that resulted in
his election, he didn't make enough fuss j
to wake a baby.—Costitulion.
No, nor will he make ‘•enough fuss to
wake a baby” with the colic, if Jie should
remain in Congress thirty years. There
is not a third rate fuss in him, and that ■
is what is the matter with Hannah.— ,
Gainesville Southern.
The cotton crop of Egypt has been
increasing so that 422,171 bales were
whipped from Alexandria, the first hall
of the present year. The war will stop
this product lor a time, most likely, ami
may enhance the demand for, and the
price of, American cotton. The entire
crop of Egypt is about 1,000,1*1*0 bales.
She has also exported 2,000,000 bushels
of wheat in a single year.
Wisconsin has 40,000 more foreign
than she has white native adults. Even
Massachusetts has halt as many foreign
male adults, as she has native. New
i nrk has s.'J(>,2!*S foreign born to s *>2,!*ot
/aitiye born citizens.
r .>. 11 • KCEXJ. .a*.’ 1 - Wj
THE SEN V! <>t I I !’>N.
The semitorhil <pte tion in this di -
triel has reaclssl a point whete it is em
im-ntly politic lor the Alto.* to express
a prel'erence. If we had Ixien manipula
ting the canvass, in the interest of the ,
people, and our political creed, w e should I
I not have varied the decisive happenings ,
| of the past week.
We shall have no sharp invective, no ■
I cutting irony, no stinging sarcasm for
| either of the candidates. In the sweet
, vernacular of the Georgia cracker, they
l are our’n ;
When we* una Hicel you'rm in b.iti Ic array.
You’ll* ’gainst wc’iiik, do politic* can sa .
Trimmier thrust the convention in its
face, because he doubted the honesty rd
its purpose; Carter delied it because it
| attempted to crush him in a spirit of
, Irossism; ami Joni's ignores its decrees
because it has played him false.
In this, is not the honesty ami w iadom
of the Argus endorsed
Doom it not print in letters of fire, the
consistent democracy of that grand old
! man eloquent, with a record as pure ami
• spotless as virgin beauty, who, Moses •
like, (iod sent from the bosoms of tin*
people to lead them through the ihad
l ow y wilderness in the hour of trouble? '
Aye; more than this; yea, ten thou
sand times more ; (and the sentiment |
j comes up in a stream of prolusion from
a heart without guile;) the Citizen,!
image of the beautiful ami pure, of our 1
own creation—our first born- ami its i
I good editor, he under w horn, our first tu
; forage in the art preservative lapsed into .
the advanced stages of political art, come ;
| w ith a trill of ecstacy like unto t he songs
■ of David, in w hich breath . the consola
i lion of well done, thou good and faithful ;
I --the infaiibility of the democratic con
' venlion is a myth, a cheat ami a snare.
; Our heatt throbs with meleim al pillsi
tion —father, son ami oii-spi ing reunited.
The return of the prodigal son fades into
common pkicedness.
Thus, in the serene placidity of good
will, we are only called upon, (ami we
feel that we are called upon,) to take
I sides in the senatorial contest- to ex
press a choice between the three excel
lent. gentlemen, who come before the
people, anil say, ‘Thy will be done.”
We are for T. R. Jones, Esq., of this
county, lie is a good man; we believe
a pure man ; a young man in the fresh
vigor of manhood, sincere, open, able,
unambitious, yet with a high sense of
honor and a capacity to appreciate the
life before him; to fully realize the im
portance of carefully carving his way so
as to bear the scrutiny of future criti
cism. We believe he will do us honor;
we believe lie w ill be prompted by a stud
ied desire to faithfully represent our peo
j pie without partisan bias, and an intent
1 lor universal good. We do not presume
j to lead, but. thus tire we moved.
We might say as much of Colquitt
Carter, cheerfully ami truthfully ; but
we are a bit warped by a closer tie of cit
izenship. How we dislike !<> oppose
him; but we must admit that wo believe
Jones is better suited for the place.
SEN A TOK HI 1.1,.
The last days of Senator 11 ill will be re
membered to his undying credit and
glory, when much of the political and
legal career that made him famous has
become a tradition. To conquer power
ful antagonists in the forum displayed
the highest intellectual ability, but the
mightiest enemy remained to subdue —
himself. We are all creatures of pride
and find it hard to vanquish the rebel
lious human part of us. In health and
strength and youth and success, we may
not feid and acknowledge the necessity
of humble reliance upon the supernatural
and the blessing of th > Omnipotent.
Somebody has said that “the Devil has
' no such robust ally as a strong pulse,”
j meaning that when our physical man
| hood is in superb condition we arc apt
’ to drift away from the guidance of I’rov
, ideuce and rely upon our own frail devi
i ces. We do net. say that Mr. Hill was
| so circumstanced, any more than the
' majority ot men; but it is certain that
. tribulation of the most horrible charac
ter, instead of coming to him as a demon
of despair, arrive , according to his own
confession, as the bearer of light and the
promise of eternal reward. A year ago
it was published that a certain physi
cian, anticipating Mr. Hill’s present ex
tremity, advised him to take a weapon
and slay himself. We have heard other
■ persons emphatically declare that rath
er than endure the torture the great sen
ator experiences, they would not hesi-
| tate al self-slaughter. Thank God, “the
big lien Hili,” as his noble daughter ad
. miringly and lovingly used to call him,
' was too sublime in the faith of Christ to
! listen to these whisperings of evil coun
sel! He has borne his excruciating
l pai •*. like a hero. Ho has exalted in
sufli ing the life God gave him. He has
endured with Christian martyrdom ajid
j resignation the dispensations ol heaven.
He calmly awaits the summons of the
■ Lord of tilery, and, thus patient and
■ long enduring, will round out a glorious
j death, which opens the gates of God to
I final preservance. When the incidents
t of his w orldly combats are forgotten, his
dying days and their supreme testimony
to the goodness of the Almighty in the
direst affliction will remain as the most
precious bequests of this wonderful
Georgian. How many unfortunates
have thought to escape pain by shorten- ■
ing thtir lives violently! How sub
lime is the lesson Benjamin 11. Hill '
te.-ui.ai the sensual world tha»he n< vet
wa* sc appt as when it. st ,n <■>.. > .
and tbr.t this ineffable bliss has come, in
h'.s d-i'ke.-t hour, neesmse, surrounded ■
with those he loved, his hand reached
out time ami clasped the palm of the Re
deemer wiio has promise)! to iefresh ali
, who are heavy -laden and to conduct the
! wanderer who returs to Him to the gar- ■
j riens that fade nut —to the temples of
peace ami joy perpetual. With the
| haml of Christ clasped in his; with all
human passions purged away; with
sins expiated u the fire of anguish;
with the confidence of a child and the
courage of a true man, Senator Hill J
wanders down the vale of time ami
trustfully approaches the everlasting
sea. —Augusta Chronicle.
PUBLIC SENTIMENT.
i Ifccklessly Expressed l>y Various Obscrvora of I
NllllglltV 'l'
I ,
't our Uncle Lucius is still in the field.
He has made some recruits this week.—
Valdosta Times.
We are for Senator Brown—ami that
is all, we understand, that can be right-
I fully demanded of us as a patriotic citizen
of this plantation.—Sam Small.
Gen. Gartrell announces himself as an
independent candidate for governor.
; We doubt not that he will have a con
siderable following.—Cartersville Amer
l ican.
i Gen. Gartrell is a clever gentleman,
a man of great brain power, ami until he
made hi.' recent independent shoot for
Governor we were lor him for that office;
, Dalton Citizen.
Stephens is the father of imlependent
i an in (ieorgia. 11 is actions have caused
more trouble than the actions of any
: other man in the state. To honor him
j is to honor the enemy of democracy.—
Dalton Citizen, formerly.
Let’s all tote our own skillet here
after ami whip tho independents at
their own game. That is just about as
sensible as fighting the devil with lire.—
< iritliu Sun.
The nomination of Stephens for gov
ernor and of Dr. Baker, independent,
I for state senator in the Bartow district,
■ may be considered as official emlorse
ments of Dr. Felton. They completely
disarm Jud Clements in his contest,
against Felton ami leave him to be the
victim of the taunts and ridicule of tiie
merciless parson. This is harmony
with a vengeance.-- Evening Ilerahl.
Our opposition to Mr. Stephens lias
ceased. He has been chosen by a ma
jority of the democratic party of Georgia
to bear its standard for, tiie next two
years, ami we bow to its expressed will,
believing that, two years hence, the fac
tion which placeil him there ami which
; is rapidly gaining the bitter contempt of
■ a large and respectable wing of the par-
! ly, will be powerless to continue the
great auction sale of Georgia offices.—
I Worth Star.
I I
, | Air. Stephens has repeatedly refused to
j bow to the caucus dictations of the party
to which I e professes to belong. Can
| he now expect that other people shall do
I w hat ho has refused to do ? The majori
i ty rule was adopted, Bacon was forced
Ito retire (with the old ami honored
! usage of the party) and the miserable
■ farce was accomplished. The party has
compromised with its enemies,slaughter-
I ed its principles and gone to the dogs—
on general principles.—Valdosta Times.
The miserable plat lotm is beneath
criticism. After repeated promises that
it would speak in language that would
forever draw the line between Mr. Ste
phens and the elements wjth which he
i had but recently been coquetting, a
| committee upon which there does not
' appear the name of a single man of the
: opposition formulates a lot of stale plati
| tudes about Jefferson and Madison.—
Macon Telegraph di Messenger.
Dr. Felton opened the campaign in the
seventh district last Tuesday at Carters
ville, in a three hours’ speech. He
showed, or at least, claimed to show,
that there was no issue Between him
and Mr. Stephens. Dr. Eelton is one of
| the best men in the independent party,
I ami it the organized ol the Seventh don’t
I use almost superhuman elforts the inde
pendents will send him to congress with
potent rallying cry of “Stephens ami
! Felton.” Dr. Felton gives his unquali
; tied support to Mr. Stephens.—Griffin
Sun.
Mr Stephens must have been errone
ously quoted when i* was stated that he
; said “ail errors should be corrected
j within, and not without, the party.”
At any rate he refused to let that dec
laration become one of the resolves in
the platform of the party. Dr. Felton,
Willingham and Law she were potent
I enough to scare him from that position.
I —Atlanta Herald.
We accept the ticket put out by the re
; cent state convention but in doing so de-
■ sire to express a contempt for the plat
form or “resolutions” of the convention,
upon which the candidates are placed
j before the people. We are justified in
, using strong language. It is bosh. It
was evidently composed by mushroom I
politicians. It advocates no line of prin
ciple. It is conspicuous in nothing else
in so much as in its avoidance of those
matters of interest ami importance just
before the people. An independent, a
coalitionist, or a democrat can alike sub
scribe to its terms. It means nothing
It is n .* that platfortn-repudiafing indc
pen lent- upon which the Constitution
promb, .! ; ■ . .R. ~.. tt ,m
.. ■. '•
Felton ami Speer c.ui stand on it an<i ,
wnee war against the organize)! democ
racy ; in fm l , these worthies could have
framed a platform more in accord with
their record, and in futherance of their
[silitical rebellion. No matter of stateor
federal interest is even touched upon
state road lease, taxes, convict system,
slate )!■•:/., imlepembmtism, fe-leral af
fairs, wa re all of too little importance for
the consideration of the convention.
Sparta Ishmaelite.
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WHITFIELD SHERIFF’S SALES.
' TTriLL BE SOLD BEFORE THE COUItT-
* V Lou door in thecity of Dalion, on the lirst,
'l'm day in Sy ti mber, is'2, between the legal
lion 1 <>f J . t lie folio wing property, to-wit:
, The north iialf of city lot ntmilier lifi, amt tho
south half of city lot nv.inber 132, on tile west
■ si,|o of north Spencer street, in the city of Dal
ton, Whitiieid county, Georgia; sail! two lots
It ■. fifty t.et on said street and running
| back 13." feet. Property in possession of ilelen
ilant in fi fa, and levie I on by virtue of a Whit- |
> field c.,ve:y superior court It fa. <ihas 1‘ Gordon,
executor <>i J H Gordbu, deo’od, vs L N Tms
-1 leyf. e $3.50.
A Iso. at t'"‘ same, time and place, lots of land
numbers 12, I", and il in the 12th disti ict ami 3d
■ neetion of Whitflebl county, and mnni»T 311, in
tiie 11th di. trict an I 3d section of said county, as
tlie pr >i*Tt\ of Henry Brooker: levied on by
virtue of superior < ■ nti 't it ia oi said county, I>a w
son A Walker, I>. . rer. vs said Brooker. Levy
m.oie by Ralph Ellison, former deputy sheriff,
amt returned to me.—fee A2.30.
| August 5, 1882. FREI). COX, Sheriff.
uaSWrc
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TUTT’S |
PI ll|
symptomsofaH
TORPID LIVEIfI
Loss of Appetite. Bowels costive.
the Head, with a dull sensation
back part. Pain under the B “ C W
blade, fullness after eating, with 9 "■
clination to exertion of body
Irritability of temper. Low sp ,rlt ’'M
a feeling of having neglected s°ffl e W
Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering
Heart, Dots before the eyes, Yello’.W
Headache gene-ally over the
Restlessness, wiJu fitful dream 8 ’
colored Urine, and
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such cases, one dose effects such n "W
of feeling as to astonish the s''”*’
They Increase the Appetite, an" '
body to Take on Flmh. thus th” ■
nniiruh«L and by their Tonic id'* B
Digestive Organs, Regular S'■
duced. Price 25 cents. 35 U iinie’B
tutts hairdl
Oray Hair or Wjtiakkrs changed t-’ 11 ■
Hi.ack by n single application of this ■
parts a natural color, acta Instantaneiw
by Druggists, or sent by express on ru M
OFFICE, 35 Hl BRAY ST., M
(»r. TtTTS BINTtL ot Vslsshbi?
Cteftol Kccrlpto will be -.lied FKJ*
W'» 7-" P" '®
■p l' ’rm--,., k ,/upou
<1 J "W 1 ; 8 ’ ■
ft v i > A ' IM
Till; * 1 sniZveg
’laiai
1 ■" 1 ft, 1 '
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