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About Dade County weekly times. (Rising Fawn, Dade County, Ga.) 1884-1888 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1886)
'‘■•fait CTotmtu itfiftceiito Jinxes, | \. HAVRON, Editor & Pro’r. 14—-- — —- FRIDAY. SEPTEMbER 10 ISS6. i f.N'i'ON - * - GEORGIA ANNOUNCEMENTS For Senator Uj are outhorized to snnonnce the name of j JOHN C. CAIN, of Catoosa*County, as lidate for the Sennto, to the 44th Senn ! Diftrict. Election 6th day of October >n a very general Solicitation of my Is I announce myself n candidate for tlc e, to represent this (The 44th) District •"i next Geuoral Assembly of Georgia, ion Ist Wednesday in Oct,* A. T. HACKETT. For Representative. VR ARE anthoriied to announce S. C. .. K, as a candidate for Representative Dade oounty, at the ensuing October ion. WK ARE authorized to announce T. J PKIN, as a candidate for re-election jpresentativ# from Dade county ing October election. > aro authorized to announce G. W. M u ns a candidate for representative from if i at the ensuing October election. County Officers. FJ arc authorized to announce the name RUBEN KILLIAN as a candidate for I 1 ASSESSOR of Dade at the next ensuing tary election. o are authorized to announce TIIOS TLE a candidate for Tax Collector iUdo at next ensuing January election. E ark authorized to announce the name ICAaRD F. TITTLE as a candidate for ASSESSOR, at next January elcotion. ; E ark authorized to announce the name !’. 11. THURMAN as a onndidaie for 1 . kof Superior Court at next January ijtion. » E ARE authorized to announce JAS. R, , JEF ns a candidate for Clerk of Superior rt, at the next ensuing January election | T the request of many of my old and i ily esteemed friends, with the assurance no one can feel inoro grateful for the nr and trust than myscly, lannounco elf ns a candidate for Sheriff for Dado ity,nt the nextensui ig January election W. A. Byrd, ksoTUßri bomb w.-ts burstel in ioago the other day destroying a 41;a 1 station but no life. A scientist lias figured that earth lakes ate caused by electricity—one tery i n tlio clouds and the other in s earth. The wires must havp eked at Charleston when an extra tvy current was passing tlirouh $ ■ Pudiibitionists did not make much )\v as a party at the State election Maine last Saturday. The ticket jv had in the field fell lar short of I sir expectations. The State went —-. HPTtedublican State conventions in v tio have spoken out in their plat— mi* against the Mormon iniquity. ■ bis is not a party question, and Dorn oats should second tlie position. A b-terrwined assault should be ma le all the line. They have simply be ime a nuisance to the Government, l id should not be tolerated any lon er. It is gratifying to note the genejsl ; s ;'spouse to aid the Chaleston sufferers. . fter all it may not be so bad, though le city is in ruins. It lias brought le people of that city to the real mse ot their dependence on the Om j ipotcnt Being, and links every section f f the country in a more common | rotherhood. A Cincinnati man says the world viil coiuo to au end in two years, dottier Shipton said that “the world could come to an end in eighteen hun . tre 1 and eighty one. While in Texas ve haard a minister an 1 evangelist av that there were persons in his au iience who would live to see the fi isi I .y. lie ir.i lertook to prme.it by the dilile, hut os far as substantialiug it .s concerned, he might dad just as ap.\ made the assertion in an uapiali ied manner. t Mint theories have been advanc )l as to the cause of the earthquake, None yet have been entirely satisfac tory. lie one that assigns an ocean ic laud slide as the cause of the earth quake of recent occurrence, we In not think at all tenable, hut believe it was merely advanced to quiet the h ars of tlie people of Charleston. VVf aie much cnclined to the theory (licit t!*ev are caused by some internal disrupt jo i ol the organism ut tics p ..4- ul ouio. Politics in no State in the Union are creating an interest as wide atnl exciting as in Tennessee. Bob and Alf Taylor are canvassing the State together. Bob's speech is found in many of the leading papers of the South, and it makes every true Deni ocrat’s heart well with enthusiasm to read it. <m m m Judos Maulden, of Atlanta, was brought before the road commission ers, and lined $17.50 as a road defaul ter. Failing to pay the fine, a war rant was issued for his arrest ami im prisonment for thirty days Ilis attor liys released him under a habeas corpus writ, basing the writ on the ground that a road defaulter could not he fin ed then, in default of not paying the fine, he imprisoned, The case will he w itched 2 Gov # McDaniel has honght the glove in Walton county where he was born, lie is having a residence fitted up as his future home. He will re sume the practiec of law as soon as his term ot office expires. The Gov ernor’s mansion has never been filled by a man with a purer and clearer record than Governor McDaniel. Cutting threatens to go on the ros trum and tell the American people how brutal the Mexicans are, should be met with by a decided denunciation by public opinion and press. Our disposition towards our weaker, sirter republic should be of the most chaiita hie nature. We dout want to get the American blood boiling on the account of such a bragart ami imagi nary wrong. Ours is to be a peace and order loving people. The trial of Dr, S. A. Richmond, the wellknown patent medicine adver tiser, for killing Cob Stroug, of the St. Joseph (Mo) Herald, resulted in his acquittal It was shown by evidence that Dr. Richmond believed be was a victim ot conspirators, and that friends iu bis profession had told his family fc? was insane months before and should have been placed in an rsylum. Tho jury brought in a virdict that he was in sane at the time ot the killing of Col. Strong and is insane now. Bulgaria is a small State lying on the borders of Russia and comprising a part of Turkey. For many years Russia has covetad that section ot country, and now it looks as it she was going to take steps to secure it. Eng land will make herself interested in tho matter; then there is France, Germany and Austria that may want to tske a hand in the business Bulgaria, though small, may lead to large con sequences. Poor Turkey! will not be able to help herself without the as sistance of the other powers; hut it will lie nothing more than what she deserves. Russia will next need her encroaching spirits checked. llodmi Mnvsjiaper Eii lei’pi’isc Nothing bettor illustrates the pro gress of modern invention and the changed condition of journalism than the feats daily performed ho some ol onr big dailies. The Charleston e iftli quake, although it broke all the of communication, was piscribed fully in the leading journals of the country upon the second morning of the oc currence. 011 the third day many ol the journals published cuts represent ing the mins, most of them crude, to be sure, but all wonderful when the shortness ot the time interevening and the difficulties ot transmission ure re membered. The boston Herald recently aceom plisliel something more remarkable even than the work done for Charles ton. It sent »! special artist to New York harbor, who made a photograph of the patches Galatea and Mayflower as they began their contest, and deliv erod it tin* same day in Boston, 250 miles away, in time to be copied and prepared for publication. The Her ald contained this photographic rep resentation next morning, and in a few hours the paper was hack in New Yord and tor sale. The herald states with pardonable pride: “Wo believe that m> one will dispute the assertion that this the most signal instance ot enterprise in ’lie picture-producing line that has ever been known in the history of joiAi.ial.s.ii, either little OI abroad. THE DAISY lIiiAEV Close by the gleaming water’s oiige, In the sultry fluon of n glorious day, Under the scented hawthorn hedge, When the winds comes over browning hay, A hoy With » foce that is bright and fair; A girl with a tangle of golden hair- They are making a daisy chain. U nder the trees in the autumn time, Throwing the leaves from their languid feet, Where the long sprays of the ivy climb Over th -ir heads in the woods retreat, A youth with a brow that is brave and fair. A maid with brown leaves in her golden hair; They are binding a daisy chain. Under a poarch of a building gray, A mellow and languid cadence floats, Oct on the air of a soft June day, A dreamy organ’s wandering notes, a man with a happy and stately air, a bride with gay flowers in her wavy hair; They have fastened the daisy schain. Under the elms in a churchyard dim, a inornd is covered with purest snow, And the winds are piping a funeral hymn, as over the storied stones they go -- A lonely woman vitb stiver hair Stands mute, for her all is reposing there; It is broken—the daisy cha in Cause Ol Earthquakes. [By Charles a. Dana. “We must remember that we are dwelling upon the surface of a little extinguished sun, which ages upon ages ago became covered with a rock crust through the gradual loss of tem perature. hut which stills retains in its interior a remnant of the pristine heat that is slowly leaking out. Ev ery school-hoy understands that when a heated body cools it shrinks m size. The earth does the same, and as the interior mass thus slowly contracts the hardened crust settles upon it hut the crust cannot settle without break ing. Far back in gelogical time, when the cooling prosess was much more rapid thsn it is now, and ihe settling of the crust broke and con trite ted it with tremendous power, and the edges and sides of ihe cracked strata of rock were thrust into the mountain chain. Now, when tho cooling is very slow, and the consequent contraction comparatively slight, mountains are n > longeß created by til e stress tq on the settling crust, but slow, almost imperceptible, changes of level in differnet paitsoftlie earth’s surface result from it. So slowly, in fact, does the interior of the earth con tract at present that the settling of the crust is accomplished for the most part without the knowledge of its inhabitants, yet it does contract, and the careful observations of earth tre mors, which have been conducted of late years, show that if a complete recoid of the motions of the earthe’s ernst could be obtainwlicu wouV be shown to be slightly trombling in some parts of its extent most of the time. There are certain regions where the earth’s crust yeilds to this internal strain mote teadily than else where. Those regions arc usually in the neigh boorhood of aincieut cracks or faults 111 the rocky shell ot the planet. The Atlantic edge of onr continent has never, in historic* times at least, been the scene or great and disastrous eartnqm kes, and yet its geological structure is such that disturbances of this kind could hardly fail to visit it. The fact is that many earthquakes do occur iu this countiy, but they are usually so slight that little or no no ice is taken of them. In the Charles on earthquake it may be that portion of the rocky crust concerned in the disturbance, having presented an un usual resistance to the strain of in ternal contraction, finally yielded with a proportionately violent result. 111 that case we may expect that after tin* present convulsion has subsided a long time will elapse before anothe v severe eaithquake occurs in the same legion, and such is generally the his tory of disastrous earthquakes.” Hack fruit! (Iharleston. [From the Conslitutiur. Mr. Tom Egiestoii, the insurance man, sat over a rice bird and a cup o' code'* at Durand’s rest muni la.-t night ,’I h ave just returned from Charles ton” he said. “Bad times down there?” asked a Constitution reporter. “Yes, mighty bad. But when you first sec it things duiit look as had as you’ d think, hut when you drive around and see the top story of a house knocked .id", < r the en l knock ed. out or a side gone so that you can look in and see the furniture you’ll come to the conclusion that it is pret ty bad. Why, you can see frame houses knockek clear off of theit fou dation and twisted 111 all shapes.” “Where did you stop?” “At the Charleston lintel* 1 liarl a room on the second floor, hut 1 didn’t sleep much. The first night I was there a poire of plastering fell f-oin the ceiling, and 1 thought I was dead, You ought to have seen me get <*ut.” "fin down to cancel policies?” “No I went down to adjust a loss, and 1 did it right along. Apo a fellow’s house was burned directly alter the first shock. He was chit - ing liis wif e nut in his arms ulien a , brick fell on her and killed inr. The poor leltow is ueurly tra^y. _ .... I 1 4 jo* C . ■ A n /it\> t n l;.■a h s • :: D VI) Pi • INSTITUTL The Next Term Begins TEESI> A\, AE«IJ ST 8O 1 Si. ‘ * And Ends EKal) AY , DEE EM2* EiZ 24th., 1886. Advantages. * _ * It is located at Trenton, Dade County, (la., on the A. G. S. R. R # , 18 miles south of Chattanooga Trenton is healthy and has good water. The building has been furnished with enough pat ent desks to seat one hundred and eighty students. Growth of School. * . * The prosperity of the school has been wonderful■ It was or ganized Jan. 12, lSSl). and daring thi s session has enrolled one hundred and seventy-fire students■ Becple who vis it the school see the ear nest ness with which the teachers work,go away doing all in their power ™to help build it aw Oar school has won success by deserving it. B e have no place for drones nor idlers Our Method of Teaching * * V Mtetsftlie demand ot the times. Our course of study is thorough and will bear inspection. Visitors are welcomed at any lime and both students and teachers aro delighted to see them come. Patronage. * * Due consideration of its claims, advantages, and merits alone is asked. We ask a compaiison of our work—our rates of tuition and boaid—oar advantages iu locality, build ing, health and community with any school of similar grade and purpose. The tact that it has trained all the home patronage is sufficient evidence of its popularity at home, wliei" it is best known. We do- not expect support unless we merit it ; therefore, we desire every one to see our school and judge for himself, whether it is the proper place for young men and young ladies. ;Thc Dade Normal is nol a scelarian school; nor does it depend upon any particular denomination. Relying tvlioly on home and foreign patronage for support Perfect freedom of thought is allowed to ali. • f The Teachers. n - * * J (li account of the growth :>f the school, we have been forced to employ the fifth teacher lor next Term Tlmy aie all young, active, and intensely practical. ♦ J Expenses per Term of Five Months. PRIMARY SCHOOL - -- -- -- $7 50 INTERMEDIATE - -- -- -- - 12 50 ACADEMIC --------- 17 50 MUSIC ON PIANO (with use oi instrument) - _ _ 17 50 “ “ ORGAN « “ “ 17 50 INCIDENTAL FEE _______ 75 TUITION FEES MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE Being compelled to pav teachers and other expenses from tuition fees, forces us to manage our finances on business principles. A remittal will bo made to those absent on account ol sickness pro tracted over two weeks. No extia charge will be made for Vocal Music, Penmanship or Book keeping, The cost c,f text-books is comparatively small. It will vary from two to six dollars per term. The books aie kept on sale in Trenton. Students of the County will receive benefit, of public money. Board. A * * 1 * Iu behalf of the interest of onr school, the following friends and pat -1 rous have agreed to hoard students during the O O scholastic year: B. F. Face, W. U. .Tacoway, Dr Lumpkin, J. P Jacoway, J. B. Williams, Mrs. Stringer, Dr. Morris, T. Robert son, Mrs. Site Pace and others. _____ « Board Can be Had From Eight to Ten Dollars per Month. Students Should be Present on Day of O ng ! EOF FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS E. B. TtuaiirtgiQn, Iri*u 1O n, - - ■ Cm aor &i a Automatic Sewing Machine Co. \ 72 West 23d St., New York, N. Y. refunded. But what is more remarkahlo stijl, we never know a woman willing to do h< r own family Hewing on a shuttle machine alter having tried our new I'&tent AUTOMATIC. Even Shoo Manufacturers find it best suited to their work—its elastic seams are more durable. Truly-Automatic Sewing Machines are fast super seding shutilo machines, and it is no uso to deny it. Truth is mighty' and docs prevail. Siiuttio Machines have Been their best days. Send for circular. Correspondence solicited. IIOTCHKIIV CARRIAGE WORKS., We manufacture Open and Top Bug gies, consisting of the Side Spring, End Spring, Brewster, Timken and Edward Storm Spring. Also various styles of Two-Soated Car riages, Wagons, Cutters and Sloighs. OUR No. 9 WAGON. Libsral discount to the trade. Send for Catalogue and Prices before buying. HOTCHXIN CARRIAGE WORKS, SYRACUSE, W. Y. LEGAL NOTICES. GEORGI A—Dsdk County. Whenras, Joseph Kelly Exaeutor of Richard Kelly, deceased, represents to Iho Court in his potion duly filed and entered on Record .thul he lias fully executed his trust: Tliir is, the:efore lo cite all persons concern “d, heirs and creditnas, to show cense, if any they can, why said Executor sqould not he lioui liis Executorship and je ce ve letters of disraissien on the fist Mon day in Octobor 188 6. his July sth 1886. J. A. Bknnktt Ordinrry. GEORGIA Duo: County. Whereas F- M. Patrick administrator of exas Nuunally, represents to the court in his petetion, du)y filed ar.d entered on record, that he has fnl[y administered Texas Nun nallv’s estate This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show cau-e, if any they can why said, adinin isrrator should nor bo discharged from his administration and receive letters oj dismis sion od the first Monday in October. 1886. J. A. Bknnktt Ordinary. GEORGIA nadk County. Application will tie made to Iho Court Jof Ordinary Of nade County Ga., on the first Mouday in September next for leave to sell all tho lands belonging to Iho estate of J . M. Townsend deceased for the benefi t-of hc ; rs and creditors of said deceased, his 2 day of Aug 1886. Win. J. Ci gle, A dinin' vtrn tor. GEORGIA— Dadr C< stv Whereas, M. A n. Talma, nd\i. on tl o estate of E. W. Forosiei, laie of tiio State of Texas, daeeasad, in hi.- petit ion duly filed and entered on jieotd tha• he lias fu'iy admit,- istered E W. Forester’s estate. This is thejeforc to cite all persons conrc.uif d, I,t its and creditors to show cause, if any they' can, why said admin, ili a tor should not be di.-eiiarg ed, from his said administration, and receire letters of disminssiou, on the first Monday in November next, his Aug‘st, 2ue, 1886. J. A. Bennett, Ordinary. ■ ■■ »■■ ,r BIII*o*ntl*s; Sick RnMm In Four hour*. \3) One t*oso relieves Neuralgia. They cure and prevent Chilis Fever, Sour Stomach ** Bad Brsath. Clear tho Skin, Tons tho Nerves, and glva Life Vigor to tho system. J>o»e i ONE BEAN. Try them once and you will never be without them. Price, 25 cents per bottie. Sold by Druggists »nd Medicine Dealers generally. Sent on receipt of p-ice in stamps, postpaid, to any address, J. T. SMITH * CO., Ma >ufae.fiir-i-» en>t SMe Pronj.. ST. LOUIS. MO. Pnrkor.C- itt.Uomlngton.atevcns. Tlullard.Ttallard, Winchester Smith A- Wesson, lthiea, Whituev. Kennedy Smith, and all other American <>| r.iiKush rlnc (inns, Rißesand Revolvers. All k.nds nf A m M.unition Harrtn*tnn A Richardson, it e ' s,, ; v - hards. and other fine II immerle,.- Ginn, from $n to SBO. Also a fine Sein?.i ndintf niflea and Shot Gnna. Si,ff e *?l Tackle an<l flnn makers 1 >; pr >'.' nw prices. Send stamp for large il.ustratcU (Jwtalugnc. Mentlvu this j Hp..f. PLEASE jVXJODItE 3g mt Bon,‘EEr,"p|ll of all Sizes. Wrifp for Circular and toll us vliat you want. It. PAYNE SON'S, Diavier 1003, till lira, K. Y. Or our New York Office. Eastern Afjcnts, lliu,, i L-ahkeA: Co.. Bo*ton Mas*. Our Valent.,dY, rI. U JJoilor will “ cinder of l>urni?,„'t!u .i. S. Wo invito Bpecial at tention to our New Patent Automatic Ten sion Machine, making precisely the earn® stitch as tho Wilcox (t Gibbs, end yet, if not pr forrod to the Wilcox & Gibb 1 Automatic Ten sion Machine, can bo returned any tim- with in 30 days and money