Newspaper Page Text
<s& sabt iLoxuui} doUehln i! huts,
1
T. A. HAVRON, Editorj& Pro'r.
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER U, ISS6.
TRENTON - - - GEORGIA
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Wo are authorized to announce !». P. Ma
djora as a ean liilate for re-election to the of
fice of Treasurer.
are authorised to announce the nain
ofREUBEN KILLIAN as a candidate for
'TAX ASSESSOR of Dade at the next ensuin
-January election.
Wa are authorised to nnnornde the name
•of R. E. STOVALL a? a candidate for Tax
'Collector at next ensuing January election
Wo arc authorized to announce TIIOS
TITTLE a candidate for Tax Collector
f nade at next ensuing January election.
WE ark authorized to announce the name
f Clayton Txit ui as a candidate for TAX
SSESSOR, at i.ext January election.
We arc authorized to announce the name
*of Joseph Coleman as a candidate for Tax
Assessor,
WE are authorized to announce the name
of S. 11. TIIVRMAN as a candidate for
Oi.ekk of Superior Court, at next January
■election.
WK ARE authorized tonnnounco JAS. R
ACUEF as a candidate for Clevh of Superior
Court, at the next ensuing January
We are authorized to announce the name of
-J. B. WILLIASIS, as a candidate for Tax
Collector of Dade comity. Election in Jan
uary next.
AT the request of many of iny old and
highly esteemed friends, with the assurance
that no one can feel more grateful for the
favor'nnd trust than mysely, I announce
myself as a candidate for Sheriff for Dado
Connty,at the next ensuing January election
W. A. Byrd,
Says the Atlanta Evening Capitol:
“Dr* Felton’s voice will soon be heatd
dvocUiug the Prison Reform Bill.”
The belled buzzard has taken n[>
quarters in Texas. It is evident that
be is plurality.
Henry Watson will write the Tariff
editorials of Ihe New York Herald.
They will be sent by Telegraph,
In California the recent election was
a dog fall. Each party has elected
about an equal number of civil officers.
It is predicted that the work done
by the legislature will rank with the
best done by similar bodies in the
past.
Mr. Manning, Secretary of the
Treasury, is still in feeble health, and
bis duties aie done by substitute.
ii—
A plan is now being laid out for a
world’s exhibition to be held in
Washington in 181)2, in celebration of
the quadri-centcnial of America’s
die co very.
in making "the statue of liberty
Bartholdi has immortalized his name.
A post office in Dakota lias been nain
after him with appropriate ceremonies.
Mr, Morrison leaves Congressional
life poorer than when he went into it.
Huch has been the result of many of
our most honored pubiic men. Thom
Jefferson died insolvent.
A man was buried in Washington
last week who had shaken hands with
eighteen Presidents. 11 is name was
Nicholas Ca’lan, bom iu 180 S, and
was, private secretary to President
Harrison.
• *I|IW
The Distol with winch Gniteau
shot Garfield is in the keeping of the
civil authorities of the District of
Columbia. All the personal property
found on the assassin’s body at the
time of the arrest was confiscated and
is still retained by the officials.
ft ■*
Pennsylva tia has a constitutional
law prohibiting her legislators from
accepting fiee passes over railroads,
but it is said to be a dead letter.
When the legislature of Georgia pass
es such a law it will be about as
worihieNfc.
f* 4 •
A lull is now befoic the legislature
to change the'’present method of se
lecting Judges and Solicitors Generals
to that of electing them by the peo
pie. The trouble is, that each of
these methods have objections, but the
most serious objections are against the
elective system. Such officers should
be tueu vho hold themselves above a
scramble for an office. *A man who
sit* as a judge between the rights of
his people should he wholly impartial,
bueh can hardly be the case when fie
ho’ds his office rather da a favor ir \fiu
the pc pie
Ex Pro ident Art'll nr i> <e 1 1, and
„o\v the press will be teeming with
file good traits of his character and
incidents in his Hie portraying a file
fraught with the greatest good and
concern for his country. What a piity
that he could not have enjoyed all
this while living. Bui this a queer
world a.i v how.
A wine dealer was arranged be hire
the police coivt in Atlanta last Sat
urday for violating the Prohibition
law. lie was set confident in bis in
nocence andacqnunl and tiic court’s
honesty in giving him justice that he
'neveremployed any counsel, Ibe first
witness introduced gave.such a start
ling revelation that at the dealers re
quest the couit postponed the case tin
til he could secure counsel.
A little craze seems to he agitated
as to the number of persons born in
the White House. Some three or
more such persons have been found,
and each bearing alone the distin
guished honor. Something ot that
nature prospective in the White
House appears to have lead to such an
investigation and comment.
On the 21st inst. the report for ihe
last fiscal year of the Post Master
General was given to the press. The
report shows the postal machinery of
the United Slates as excoding any
other government ou the globe; the in
creases in number of post offices over
the previous year was 2,862; the ap
pointment of post masters numbered
22,747; the entire expenditures amount
ed to about $51,000,000; end tins reve
nue about $690,000 below the expendi
tures.
A property qualification bill ($250)
extending suffrage to women recently
originated in the House of the Vermont
legislature and passcd’that body, It
was killed in the senate by only six
votes. Such an instance as six men
withholding the light of suffrage from
over a 150,000 people is without par
allel in the history of political affairs.
We have a wonderful system of gov
ernment, any way.
———»<»«— ———
France and (Germany have a chronic
case of growling at each other. They
will bear to each other a hostile spirit
as long as they exist as a nation. The
French people will never rest'. slic'd
till they give Germany a sound thresh
ing and recover their lust territory.
Bur, poor Franco is not in harmony
at home.
We are confident that if whiskey is
an evil of which we cannot get lid
ttie evil it produces is diminished iu
prodotion as the tax is increased.
But taxed as it is, is not its sale and
traffic much harder to suppress? By
taxing it we throw it into the hands
of monopolies and whisky rings, which
naturally fight tlie Prohibition move
ment with more determination and
effectual results. Turn it loose with
nothing but the voting people to talk,
labor, and spend money for its pro
tection, and it will soon dig its own
grave. It is 1 1 .0 whisky monopolies
and money invested in it that is mak
ing each a hard strugle tor its ( whis
ky) life.
War against capital and war against
monopolies are two differnt issues. It
may at times and in instances be diffi
cult to draw the line of distinction.
Every business *ind enterprise--the
farmer, merchant, man—
are all directly interests, and deeplv
so, in repressing monopolies. Fan
dealings, equal rights and privileges,
let every business and entei prise
stand or fall upon its merits, equal
liberties to capital and labor, is tlie
limit of civil authority. But any in
dividual 01 any individuals that seek
to monopolize or secure favor or pro
tection in jtnv enterprise from the
government should be suppressed at
once, if not by legislative authority,
by organized public sentiment. It is
not capital and capitalists we need
tear, but the hvdia-headed monopol
ist that seek to strike its venomous
laugs into the commerce and liberties
of our country. Organize and make
vval- against it and not capital.
Catiso cf fcctirc;!:;;:?.
It n conceded by tiro J' Tic:'!' Pro
'czsk.;: that* imnoverishoJ nerves hi the
muso of neural:-in. When thorn rye.
■re not j r< >3 ei ly f< d. it In ail indit alii.
■ hat thd diqo:ti.YO or-". -:*r > v/J dem*
' Lh . 1 vVi -•jlII *J i.'lL:
sld A 27.3 will unrdy rciitvo indiret
and v'io the dry nr ton is rich
’ I7j}|l >r>* :‘t. Vq - :
iv»phwss will > 1 Don
FA EI.TIERS. AWAIiV
Eforsc swappinff-rWcliff* |
i*m— Rfsli icliois - Tc'iup
erasicc mtTiSaas-s
“Horse swapping at. all hours;
want a good painter to paint this
over my barn door, when 1 get n.v
big barn made.
It is said lint lawyers and hov.se
jockcys are big liars, Hut Imen l be
lieve this is nece.ssaiilv so. Sale
day, last Tuesday, 1 said to Bill Jaco
way: “Let’s go to your barn and see
if I cant swap you this horse for that
mule” Said he, “Go and look at
the mule and tell me how you will
swap. I dont want to tell you any
lies; there is no usc'of my going.”
“Go on, Billie,” said Col. Parris,
“can’t yon talk without lying.” Bill
went, and we swapped, without ly
ing too. I think my conscience is
clear, and 1 hope wc are mutually
tcm[eied. That’s the way ‘'itfeiher
iu” ought to do; you see, .laeoVay and
I joined the same church at the- same
time, but part of the ceremony Ltuig
put off until another day, 1 “ted from
grace,” as some say, that is after re
considering the matter, I concluded
that I was getting in the wrong pew.
1 cant put the sTess on baptism which
some do. 1 think it is iike all o'her
sacraments of the church, and ought
to be observed, if u man belongs to a
chinch. At the same time 1 believe
a person can be a Christian and not be
long to any church, I am betting
my eternal hereafter on it.
I wiofe the above last week; didn’t
finish; will do r-o this morning.
“There is one mors river—
Just one more river;
There is one more river to cross,
And that is Prohibition.”
yes, there is one just one more river
10 cross; but they are trying to get
us back from the one we have already
crossed, but we ain’t going back; we
are going on and cross the other by
and by.
Didn’t wo have a rousing good time
last night at the restriction mass meet
ing, Wern’t those songs enthusias
tic and those speeches timely* and
those little girls and larger ones too, of
course, pretty; didn't they sing just
lovely. 'Yonder what sort ot a turn
out the anti-vestrietionists will have;
don’t guess their wives, daughters,
and sweethearts will be there. I’d
be ashamed it I had been thinking of
voting against restriction, and turn
right around and holler tor test fic
tion as loud as I could. I’m like
Prof. Pennington it', his talk, 1 have
dear relatives who are on the anti
side, and L have nothing agaivist any
of them, but as the Professor said
about the bed bugs. “I dislike the
way they make their living.” How
ever 1 will transform this a little and
say, “I dislike the way they squander
; their living.
George Hughes passed by awhile
ago with a of whisky in his
saioN|ieir won’t a re
striction voter in Sligo. I know he
is mistaken* Geoige is a good iellow;
brave and true as steel; lost one- of
bis legs in battle, and we honor him
for all that, but he is a little®off his
“enzip ” Now, 1 hope he may get
right. Can’t that choir from the
Dade Nonna] school come down to
Morganville? p ’em and
make big speeches, too. g
yours, Farxkr.
Near Morganvw
[The Sligo mail train was delayed
on tlie account of wheat sowing, hence
the lateness of this communica
tion.—Ed ]
A Care for Love.
Take one gram of sense; half a
grain of pat ience; one dra clime of un
derstanding; one ounce of disdain; a
pound of resolution and a handful of
dislike. Mix them together, fold
them np in the limbec ot year brain
for twenty tour hours; strain it clear
from tho dross of melancholy; stop is
down with the cork ot sound jsdg.
raent and let stand Nine days in the
water of cold affection. This rightly
made is the most, effective cure in the
world. You may obtain it in the
house of Understanding, on Content
street, going up the bill of selfdenial 1
country of Forgetfulness, in the state
of Peace; and if this is not an effectu
al cure take a small piece of assafoeti
da and put it in-your pocket , nicely
wrapped up, and ever time you think
ot her put it to your nasal organ and
let it remain there until yon begin to
think of cold beef or soap factories
If right])- carried out according to di
rections we guarantee a speedy epic
PATENTS procured for Inventor?. A
new book containing information how to oh.
tain Patents, Tiade-tnurks, Laboln. Copy
rights and£Cavents wifi bo sent to any one
upon application, free of cos!.
Address JAMES J. SIIEEIIY.
No. 1112 Fourth streets, N. IV.,
Washington, L>, C.
Fourteen years’ experknea and constant
practice in the prosecution of patent causes
before the U. si. Patent Office.
SOMETHING WORTH LOOKING APTER.
DRY GOODS, MILLINERY, AND
SEWING MACHINES.
A Full stock in every department
and cheaper than anybody.
Sewing Machines from 83.00 up. Jeans
from 10c up. Canton Flannel from 5c up.
Bleached domestic yard wide 5c up. Calico
3c up. Calico by the bundle. llemnants
of all kinds. Cheap all wool Flannel 20c up.
Ladies & childrens Hats at 10c up to 810.00.
Cloaks at half price. Jerseys 40c up.
Corsets 20c and up. Ladies hoes 5c and up.
Mens half hoes 5c and up. Dress goods clear
down. All kinds Ladies and Gents under
wear below cost.
From today untill Jan. Ist 188 - you can
buy goods cheaper at the Balloon than any
other place in the South.
H. H. Souder Chattanooga
NORMAL INSI IT UT E -c
Advantages.
* _
It is iocmte*l at Trenton, I>.\i>e County, Ga., on the A. G. S. R. R.,
18 iuilos south of Clutttanooga Trenton is healthy and lias good
water. The buihling has been furnished with enough [lat
ent desks to seat one hundred and cighiy students.
Growth of School.
The prosperity of the school
. has been wonderful■ It was or
ganized Jan. 12 . 188 J, and daring
this session has enrolled\ one hundred
and seventy-fire stu dents■ Pee pie who vis
it the school see the earnest ness irith alii eh* the
teachers worh, go aunty doing all in their power
to help build it urn Oar school has won success by
deserving it. li e have no place for drones nor idlers
Our Method of Teaching
* y *
Meets the demand of the times. Our course of study is thorough and
will bear inspection. Visions are welcomed at any time and both
students and teachers are delighted to see them come.
Patronage.
■fc . V?
Due consideration oi its claims,
advantages, and merits alone is asked.
V\ e ask a comparison ol our work—our rates of
tuition and board—our advantages in locality, build
ing, health and community with any school of similar grape
and purpose. The tact that it has gained all the home patronage is
sufficient evidence of its popularity at home, wher* 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 plain for young
men and young
lad.ies.
Tin: Dailc Normal is nol a sfrtarlan sthiiOi: nor dors ii dfpcibl lipGn any
Rdviis? wholy on hiwtic and foreign patronage
fur support. Perlert lreedom of tliouglit is allowed to all.
The Teachers.
* *
On account of the growth ;>t the school, wo have been forced to
cm ploy the fifth teacher for next Term They aie all young, active, and
intensely practical.
' Expenses per Term of Five Months.
PRIMARY SCHOOL - -- -- -- $7 50
INTERMEDIATE -------- i> 50
ACADEMIC - -- -- -- -- 17 go
MUSIC ON PIANO (with use oi instrument) - - _ 1750
“ “ ORGAN “ “ “ 17 50
NCIDENTAL FEE _______ 75
TUITION FEFS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE
Leing compelled to pay teachers and other expenses from tuition Ices,
forces us to manure our fiuuii f *c*s on business principles*
A remittal will be made to those absent on account of sickness j ro
tracted over two weeks.
No extia charge will be made for ocal Music, Penmanship or Rook
keeping.
lue cost of text-hooks is comparatively' small. It will vary from two
to six dollars per term. The hooks me kept, on sale in Trenton.
Students of the County will receive benefit of public money.
Board.
■'h *
au tehalf of tbe interest of our school, the following friends and pat
ions have agreed to hoard students during the
scholastic year :
R. F. Pack, W. IT. , Tacoway, Da Lumpkin, T. P Jacoway, J. B
Williams, Mns. Stiukohb, Du. Morris, T. Robert
son, jM ms. Hen Pace a
and others.
~ —— ——
Board Can be Had From Eight to Ten Dollars per Month.
Students Should be Present on Day of O r«
- ■ •
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS
E. B* Finals §t#a,
Irc Si I n, - - Georgia
LEGAL NOTICES.
Sukkdt Salk— Will be sold before the
court house door in t ho town of .Trenton on
thK first Tuesday in December next vithin
the legal hoars of sale to the highest bidder
for cash The following property to wit
Lot of land No. 145 in the 11th district and
4th section of Dado County, Georgia. Said
land levied upou, to satisfy a J usticc Court u.
ka, rendered in 898'h dist G.M.,Cubb county
Georgia, in favor of John Roberts vs. W. W
Simpson Levy made by Jacob Green, 1/ C
and turned over to me tuis Nov 4lh 1886.
J, H Brock Sheriff.
GEORGIA —Dap* County
To the voters of said conntv —By virtue of
an order fram the court ot Ordinary of said
county. There will bean election held at
each voting precinct in said coun'y on Friday
Dee 3rd 1886 upon the question of tho Re
striction of the Sale of spiritous vinous and
malt liquors in said county as provided far
by an act of the general assembly of said
state approved the 26 day of Febuary 1875.
Given under my band and official signa
ture this 30 day of Ootober 1886.
1 J, A. Bennett, Ordinary.
Administrator’s kale.
Agreeable to an order o. c the Court ofOrdi
nary of Dade county, Georgia, will bo sold it
public auction at the court house door of raid
comity, on the first Tuesday in
next, within tho legal hours of sale, the fol
lowing propi r.ty, to wit; Lot of land no. 248
Lot no. 217 and the the North half of lot of
land no 256 all in the ll'th Dist. and Ith Sec
tion Dado county Goorgia containing two
bundle 1 and forty five (2451 acres, more or
less. Sold as the property of Ucnjatnino
Block late of said county, deceased. Terms
One thousand dollars cash, bullencc on twelve
montus time with notes and approved secu
rity. This Itli day of November ISSB.
Leon Con tally, Executor.
GEORGIA iiahe County. >
To all to Whom it may concern:—
John Payne has n due form applied to tha
under ;ignecl for permanent letters of admin
istration mi the estate of Larkin l’ayno, Into
.... deceased, and i will pas* up
on : • . application' bn the first, Monday in
December, 1886. ...
Given minor my hand and official signa
ture. This 27th day of September,lSßß.
J, A.Tknxmt, Ordinary.
Administrator's Sale.
Tbe umbMsigncl will expose tn sale
Indore the court boti.se door, at Tron
t.oi, in Dade county, Georgia on tho first
Tuesday in December next between the le
gal hours of sale, that tractor parcel of land
known as the former family residence of the
late James A. Nisbet, deceased, called Clo
verdale Farm, containing two hundred acres
more or less, being and parts of lots numbers
ore hundred (10(1 )*>intl one hundred and onu
(101), on which stands the lirec stone two
stniy -mansion, having some eight looms,
hard finished within, and n largo hsin and
other buildings; near which place runs Look
out creek and also, the railroad from Chat
tanooga to Birmingham: being about eleven
miles from Trcriton and two and one half
from Rising Fawn.
ALSO, at the same time and place, parts
of lots numbers one hundred and three (103)
and one hundred (100), adjoining or near the
former place, and known ns the John M.
Nisbet place, containing two hundred (260)
acres more or less, on which stands a four
room dcwlling and out house.
ALSO lots numbers ninety five (95) and
ninety-eight (98) and fractional lots numbers
ninety-six (66) and ninety -ueven \ 9.1, con
taining three hundred and seventy five 375
acres more or less.
All aid lands lie in the eighteenth [lß]
district and foitrrh[4] section of said Dado
county and the three several above deseriaed
t.uiets or parcels of land will be sold sepa
rately or togather ns may be determined and
announced on the day of sale when the
number of acres will he more specificity stat
ed if deemed necessary.
Sai l sale .to he made under an order of
the Court of Ordinary of Bibb county Geor
gia and to carry out the provisions of the
will of .James A Nisbet, deceased who died
while residing in said iiibb county.
The above places have good orchards and
gardens and include rich well timbered lands
ai d improved farms. The whole comprises
one ol tne m«st desirable place for residenc
es farms and vinyards in upper Georgia.
Terms of sale cash. Luther /.. Rosser, Ad
j miuistrator with will annox
| ad of James A. Nisbet, dec’d.
Atlanta Ga. Oct. I 1886.
I than On® Hundred
■ 3 Thousand application* for patonta i*
Sj £3 Ej tTnit®d Mate* ami Foreign ooaa
jw eJJ tries, th® puhlinhor« of the Scientlfl#
American continue to act as solieitotg
K fiU&tf a for patoiit.'S oaroats. trade-marks, eopf*
nnMPtrte ni rights, otc.. for th<? United Staten. *b4
*Lo obtain patent* in Canada. l'ngland, ¥ ranee,
Germany, and all other countries Their eipefi
ence is unequaled and their faoilitio* are ans«t
passed.
Drawings and ‘-peri flcr.t ions prepared and ft I*4
in tlio l’ntent Otlico on short notice. Terms ♦erg
roaH.m.tblf*. No rhr.rgo for examination of :aodtW
or drawing* Advice by mail free
Patent* obtained through M unn A 00. are not log®
intho M
the larrost cirouhit. m ami is the must influential
nowflpap. r of Its kind miblithod in the world.
The advantages of such a notice every patent#®
Understand*.
nfuetraied newspape#
is \ i.bli-diod Wl'wuitLV at s3.&oayeftr. and 1®
adi lirt.-d to l«o ti.r .« i devoted to Bcienesu
mociir.uioH, in?, ntions, tmgiceoriag works, an®
other department u of industrial projrresH. pub*
lie ■ s sr. • sy <vi utry. it con Vitas the names 0®
all A.kt vjtoc.-j rr.d title of every invention patent#®
each w •k. Try it four months for one dollft*r
Sold by all nowerionlora.
If yea have an invention to patent writes#
Munn <fc Co., pub!inhere of Sciontilio
|tl Broadway, Now York
Handbook about patents mailed free*
■tyHikHU JL
w:-h n pf 1
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_ ji
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prevent Chills Fever. Sour Stomach *-
Creslh. CJea.- the Skin, Tone* the Nerves, and 3J*
Lite 1 r* Vigor to !ho system. l>o?«: ONE BEAJ'
Try them'onco end yon will never St! without the*.
Prica, ?5 mints per bottle Sold by nwugfjfsts ase
Medicine Coalers ijenaral'y. Sent on raceipl **
pr ! co in stamps, postpaid, to nnv address, ,
J. F. smith A co., ,
Manufacturers ami Sole Press.. ST. LOUIS.
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R yr English Ftnetinn., Itlfl»*nn<l ItoTnlvrre.
q l.imWnf Ammunition. <t lUch* r “.j
i * "It, (irw.ier, Wesley, Richards. aU'l <■!.»». jj
g UammorlesH Guns, from STS to *W. AI»o •fT
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4J Ntii, Fistiing Turkie hint <«*m hi*
k 1 1 '.Ator'trtN all Rl very low price#. S#nd
SH largo illustrated Catalogne. Aiotitlon iUl> es*"*