Newspaper Page Text
n. »r the BrW<».
OCTOBER 28. 18S2.
,«iue#ted to announce SxMVKL D.
WK n ..Tcandfdate for Sheriff of Whitfltld
X? ®“> ction fln,t wedneßdity *“,anunry
...mated to announce JESSE C. VAR
"77"candidate for Tax Heceiver at the
jMuaneleclio"-
-m<’UT DAVIS announces himself m acan
diE“rTax Collector in the January elec
tion. _
for city CLERK.
, ib w t>»GNALLi<* presented to
t JTo?.Tof Oaiton- for the office ofCity Clerk,
at the December election*
_ mTffl announces hi nisei t a cimtlklate
« ? Vckrk!’and elicits the support of the
Election in liecemkr.
D. SHOLL announces himself for city clerk, at
tbe December election.
W<| are requested to announce AMOS SOUTH
UKW& of thia county, at the January
election.
Reduction in retail price of School Books, at
Stationery and Hook Store of W. M. Haig A Co.
Call and see for yourself; pnoe low ae they can
S 3 bought anywhere.
Country Merchants and Teachers are iufor
med that W. M. Hath A CO., Dalton, can fur
nish any of tha Standard School Books, now used
in this section, at publishers’ wholesale prices.
Thsyeaunotbe underwild in any market. Send
y , M r orders, or call at store, Hamilton st.
If you want a good Lamp cheap go to Sloan A
■fl alker’s.
TUTT’S PILLS A SUGAR PLUM.
Tutt's Pills are now covered with a vanilla su
gar coating, making them as pleasant to swallow
as a little sugar plum, and rendering them agree
able to the most delicate stomach.
They cure sick headache and bilious nolle.
They give appetite and flesh to the body.
They euro dyspepsia and nourish the system.
They cure fever and ague, eostivencsa, eto.
Sold every where. H cents a box,
••ROUGH ON RATS."
t'loaraont rats, mice, roadies, slice. ants, bed
bug*, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 16c. Drug
gate.
Miss Doliie Lewis, of Dalton, wrr in
the city yesterday, the guest of Miss
Carrie Reed.—Chattanooga Times.
Prof. Miller opened his studio over
Mr. Cannon’s store this week and lias a
fine display of drawings made by his new
system “Art Chug.” He already has
nine pupils and will have 25 or 30 here,
as our people take hold of a thing in
earnest when convinced of its merits.
The pupils are very enthusiastic over
the art.
The Dalton Steam Ginning and milling
Co., lias be»n refitted, and is now run
ning in full blast for the custom trade of
the season. We have employed Mr. Ar
wood, one of the most experienced gin
ners of this section. Either he or Mr.
Miller will be on hand at all times to
take in cotton and corn. Satisfaction
guaranteed. We havechanged our mill
ing <lays to Mondays, Wednesdays and
Fridays.
Art Cralo.
Those desiring lessons in this new
method of crayon drawing can make
engagements now at my studio over Mr.
Ganno’s store. I dont teach in classes.
Each pupil takes lessons alone, or two
together if desired, and all drawing is
done by the pupil at home, so there is
nothing embarrassing in the practice.
I here is no special talent required to
learn Art C'raio. I never had a pupil to
fail, and I have had 400 patrons in five
years teaching. In Griffin I had 52 pu
pils, in Gordon Institute,Barnersville 37,
Cuthbert 21, in Knoxville Tenn. 75, and
* an refer to all who.'heartiiy endorse the
«d. 1 present the system on its own
merits, illustrating it fully before any
fee is required, so no risks are taken by
Any one wishing to investigate it. If
she system is not all I claim for it I ask
»’»one to invest in it. I shall be here
month, u „d not longer, so those in
terested should come in soon. I cordi
*“invite visitors and take pleasure in
Answering al] inquiries.
Otis A. Miller.
A full un( ] complete line of clothing,
at n ? d >len ’ 8 Over ‘ co « t «- Chineilia,
BU4-the best in the market. Also, a
«reat variety of other kinds. Prices ac
llng t 0 at D. R. Loveman’r.
*oHce W f Loca i tecl.uuou,
g j veu that at tho ™-
be intro?? i " f - V 1 ® le K l » J *ture a bill will
With the following captive:
th«roa?l^* H d n tl^ ctto a,ter nnd *raend
apply to thn f t? 18 B,ate 80 far a8 t,iev
«Erize th? ° f Whitfield . «nd so
<on>,niXli Ordinary and Board of
said county to? rOa<lß j' ,d rev<,nu «« of
<*pitar S’ . ? ? a,,d colloct a P er *
poae. nnd P ro ß® r ‘y ‘ax for road pur-
Oct. 21st, 1882 ARLKB E ‘ BroylKß -
an? h “ Ve b ° Ught 8hOe ” all
e d Call ' t ' re * l)e *"S humbug
rvthelL Cn H ,Orr ° nAßon they car-
F»,. M * r * ,n ”
°f earthier r ° breakln K »P the solidity
of the frosr P °" ,n 8 the " Oil t 0 the action
CoD, ing show 00 ’ ” Jubila,,t over the
c'|»n^ n plcker8 > ranking the small
th «ir r JoHenT r ° bbin R th « fie> d «, of
Sn!/ ° wns '
"pring.’ th Rt boo ‘ has «u«ponded until
J y h ' v * r raeetig g4o . c | ock Wwy
rBl gat, ' eri ««nuta; aquir
tortren > n
ir s^'G, K*;! cefu,,, ® Bß >
THE COMET.
An Interesting Review, by Prof. Dan’l Kirk
wood, LL. D., Department of Mathemat
ics, Indiana University, for the akgcs
Readers.
Perhaps no comet of the present cen
tury has excited more general interest
than the brilliant stranger now visible
in the morning sky. It was discovered
at Rio Janeiro, S. A., by M. Cruls, Sep
tember 11, and was at first erroneons’y
supposed to be a return of th<* comet of
1812. In the northern hemisphere it
was first seen under very unusual cir
cumstances by Mr. Common, of Ealing,
England, on Sunday, September 1~.
Mr. Common was observing the sun,
and found a bright ccrnet very close to
it and apparently approaching it with
great rapidity. On Monday, September
18, it was seen near the sun by many
observers both in Europe and America.
Its nearest approach to the sun occurred
on Sunday, September 17, when its dis
tance from the surface was only three
hundred thousand miles, ora little more
than one third of the sun’s diameter.
Its velocity when nearest the sun was
three hundred and eighty miles per sec
ond, or twenty times that of the earth
in its orbit. Its path in the heavens
has some resemblance to those of the
great comets of 1843 and 1880, the lat
ter of which was observed only in the
southern hemisphere. This similarity
of orbits has suggeated the hypothesis
that the three bodies are identical; that
the passage through the exterior strata
of the sun’s atmosphere is rapidly shor
tening the period ; that the comet’s ca
reer must soon terminate in a collision
with the sun; and that the beat produc
ed by the impact might be such as to de
stroy all animal life upon the earth.
In regard to this conjecture —for it is
nothing more—it may be remarked that
some comets have been known to break
up into parts. The comet of Biela is a
recent instance, but several others had
been previously recorded. Comets
which approach so closely to the sun as
to pass through the corona or the Solar
atmosphere are more liable to be sepe
rated into parts than others. The com
mencement of such a division has been
noticed in Cruls’ comet, and its complete
disentegration is not improbable, such
seperated fragments would notali move
with the same velocity. They would,
therefore, be slow ly diffused around the
orbit, so that in the possible case of pre
cipitation upon the sun the collision
would be a slow and gradual process —
the impact merely of finely divided me
teoric matter. This may not improba
bly bo the ultimate fate of the comet
now via ble. How long its orbital ca
reer may continue, however, no astron
omer would at present venture to pre
died.
The greatest length of the tai! of Cruls’
comet was about 45 or 50 millions of
miles, or one. half the distance of the
sun from the earth.
Daniel Kirkwood.
Bloomington, Ind., Oct. 19th, 1882.
«• BVCHIPAIBA.”
Quick, complete cure, all annoying Kidney. Bla
dder and Urinary Diseases. sl. Druggists,
Trevlt Hall Wednesday Nov. Ist, 1881.
BTORT OF “ESMERALDA.”
Elbert Rogers, an honest old North
Carolina farmer, lived with his wife
“Lyddy Ann,” and bis daughter “Esme
ralda,” on a poor farm in one of the
Western counties of the State. The
young girl was in love with Dave Hardy,
a noble specimen of a Southern yeoman.
Dave had secretly built him a little
house for Esmeralda, and when the play
opens he is just about telling Esmeral
da’s mother of his love for her daughter
and his prospects in life. Mrs. Rogers,
ashrewd scheming mother, has reluc
tantly given consent to their marriage,
when a Northern speculator appears up
on the scene and proposed to buy the
farm, all the while concealing the fact
that it contains a valuable vein of iron
ore. Rogers, who “runs things general
ly,” is about to dispose of the barren
property at any price, when Dave
Hardy, who has seen the speculator and
his friend view ing the land and exam
ining specimens, suddenly thinks that
they are after the property for its min
eral deposits. He snatches the deed
from Mrs. Rogers, whois about to de
liver it, and exposes the scheme of the
speculator. Mrs. Rogers then makes a
new bargain, whereby the farm makes
them millionaires. Her first act is to
discrad Dave, who would' never do for
the husband ot her rich daughter. Es
meralda clings to Dave, who finally
leaves her so as not to stand in the way
of her education and advancement.
In the second act we find the Rogerses
in Paris, where they have formed the ac
quaintance of a young American painter
and his sisters residing there. The
Rogers family are living in luxury, and
the mother is planning the marriage of
Esmeralda to a French Marquis. The
faithful girl clings fondly to her love for
Dave, who has secretly followed her to
Paris, and is living there in poverty.
He cornea to the studio to sit as a model
and there meets a friend of the specula
tor who tells him that the vein of orc on
the Rogers land suddenly gave out and
turned up on the farm where Dave had
built his little house for Esmeralda,
thus making him a very rich man.
In the next, act kind hearted old Mr.
Bogers tries to get the Marquis to give
up his claim to Esmeralda, because «be
is breaking her heart for Dave. The
Frenchman refuses, when Esmeralda
discovers that Dave is in Paris, poor and
hungry. She rejects the Marquis with
scorn.
In the Inst act old Mr. Rogers, who
h;uj always given up to his w ife, makes
n stand and resolves to bring Esmeralda
and Dave together which he does, and
the curtain rings down with the “sun
shining on the little house” where Dave
and Esmeralda go to puss their honey
moon .
Our stock of Cloaks Dolmas is n<m
complete in all the newest design-.
Come and see them, at D. R. Lovemun »-
Tour
THE GREATEST of all GREAT SHOWS
21HFPHiNTi MBPMBB SW
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WIIIjIj IfiXHIBIT; 2vF r &c ID VEIN TTTC3-, JLT
Dalton, Tuesday, November 14th,
22 TRAINED ELEPHANTS,
WlT'h THE
GREAT FQREPAUGH SHOWS
Will Exhibit,After noon and Evening, at
DALTON, Tuesday, NOVEMBER 14tk,
LARGEST IN THE WOlii.lD (ISlh ANNUAL TOUR.)
With two, three, and requires often 1 GREAT RAILWAY TRAINS.
1,200 Men and Horses, 1.000 Wild Beasts, Rareßirds
CAPITAL INVESTED THRi E MILLIONS.
> ; ROPE SWEPT CLEAN OF ITS AMt’SEMEN FEATURES.
Greatest of all the now first time 1 TR( iUPe's S '
FtU’R r X AG'-’KIES COMBINED. 1 lire'- < >RE U Clßt S TROUI ES.
MAM MOTH MUSEUM. <>('LA XIC AQI . RIUM.
ADAM Ft Ri'pALGH, Jr.’s Great UOMIRIX OF TRAINED ELEPHANTS.
ADAM cjrcUS, HIPPO DRAMATIC SPORTS AND
GORGEOUS ORIENTAL SPECTACULAR DISPLAYS. Moro than
equalling in magnitude and cost nearly.
ALL THE SHOWS £A&TH COMBINED
Diilv greater, canvass larger, parade grander, costs more shows more,
an tin m-t perfect, chesteand respCT tabie tt aveling tented exhibition ever or
g ni/-d I >->k al the unpa.all.-ied and asi.mMmd ar ay o. lan,..ns L.reign features :
First and Only Great Herd of 5? Performing Elephants, an the just added
r T * LARGEST & HEAVIEST
BMIjIV A.XV, Elephant k ™‘Exist
jim.ooo wiii it w.
act of Sig. i.i'.’*NA I L iron 1 | .i. I■. pc — Sd.-oii*,
elevited br.. ; dway <><• feet m O ■ y p rc-hensi-/
Irem ll'i', m Mic-ir l>lnod <.u..m . ........ . j
hie- teS.'.e*'.. • v-toCoJ ol
GREATEST Living LADY Rideis in the World ! LOUISA RENZ, from Berlin 1'
LIZZIE DEACON, from London, Behold I See! 100 (Peerless Performers!
Tallest Giants! Smallest Dwarfs! ZOLA blown from a cannon ! AVild men ZolasP
200 Performing and Ring Horses! Hippopotami! Trained Lions! ligers!
Hyenas! BABY Camels! Wonderful SACRED Cattle of PERSIA!
1 Mpre rare animals th.. >i all the Show* in America ! Handsome women ! Fat ladies!
* ’ BIG BABIES! TWO RACE TRACK ARENAS EQUAL to ANY. /
FOUR GREAT CIRCUS RINGS!
Seuib for 20,0C0 In tito Cicuc’Towering Pavilions!
5,000 OPER ACHAIRS ON THE G R AND ST A ND' THREE GREAT BANDS t
PEERLESS, POETIC, PRINCELY, UIl .ND, GORGEOUS FREE STREET’
PARADE,
Eveerv forcn >on of exhibition day, between 9 >0 and 1030, the greatly grand and
Gorgeous CANIVAL f L'REET PARADE, in which is seen the wonderfully grand
and Sublime Pageants,
CLEOPATRA, QOSEM of Egypt!
->
A N I)
LALLA ROOKH, Princess of Delhi!
WITH THE
I Ha n ds omc£t#.o fn 6r? in America!
of camp inectm:; melodists, binging -s the procession moves.
3 Usxinlw of’ 31
And grand, new am! nove 1 pi ■ s-tm ' * ’>'■ ’ on the Htreets.
• eat, gra ■!.-< mm m, y ' . ■ •- Exhibition niter-
' Admiss on. only 50 cmnta; children , )f concerts one
I noon and evening at usmti hours, m « n d excnrsfon train*
bXcomrnencir - t
;■ y ,
I ■' '‘ I s 1.0 <1 ■I ■ • }.> rO pr4eta>•’
ill J • -9