Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, April 12, 1884, Image 1

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YOL. 1, PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. | fl:‘.——::':_'.‘::f;"_::“_ e ik e A.B. FITTS, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SATURDAY, APRIL, 12 1884. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION gl A Dne copy one’ yoar,. 7r .10 81,85 One ediy six mbnths, - ............ b'i! Dnecopy three months,. ... ..........40 PROFESSIONAL CARDS : . | T IANTIET A W J C TRENTHAM 4 PHYSICIAN & SURGEOY, = ‘PoPriar SPRINGS, " = - GA., Offérs his services to the veople of Haralson county. e is also pre pared for Dentistry. Canbe found st all tintes at his brother’s [A. ¥ rentham residence. - 3y AT ) W. P.ROBINSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BUCIHANAN 0 0 GAG Claims Collected, Titles to Tand looked after and intruders ejected. ©ffice in Court Louse. V. F. ROBERTSON, PHYSI(ION & SUBGEON, Bechang -~ . o 0 G Offers his services to the people of Haralson gounty Obstetrics and diseases of women and children a gpeciality. n > R NS W. F. BROWN, ATTQRNEY-AT-LAW, QARROLLTGN,. e s Will practice in Carroll, Haralson and adjoining Counties. - Pollection a spaciality. 3 N ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BUCHANAN .. .. ..........GA, Will practice in the Rome Circuit, and inCarroll and adjoining Coun ties. Also, in the Federal Courts in Atlanta. Office in the Court house. W.W. & G. W. MERRELL, . LAWYERS, OARROLLTON, .. .7 .. GA, will attend all the Terms of the Buperiqr Court, for Haralson {founty, or any where else, where business may call them. Equity gnd Land Litigation g speciality . A ARFCDDTIVID ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BUCHANAN, - vonvoivocarhing. A Wil] Practice in the Courts of the Rome Circuit, and in Carroll and and Douglas Counties. SMITH & RICHARDSON, PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, BUCHANAN, Lo sl G LY RAr ATR R, By L GA, Offers hig Services as Physician of many years experience, Cascs treated at his Qffice at moderate charges, for cash or barter. He keeps Medicine and Lamps for sale. b)s g e S 2 X . S. P. EDWARDS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, - @rmmmx,.. L MPractices in Haralgon and adjain ing Counties, Office in Court House, b TP SMITE DR.F. R SMITII, Buchanan, - . Ga. * =DEALER IN— Drugs, Paints, Oils, Glags, Sta~ 5 ..+ tiopary &c.- el Dirag StoxeSouth of Court house. T iy W > , " & b TRy Bt 4 ¥ % ;{;-oit a . ’ : !OT e 5 g ;!-e 5 } v ,ivA'. ' s iy M b §.oob.&< b " P - [ v { 45, ¢ v . { 4 B 7 A 3 g o & g : . i - 2 o ¥ Y ;5 o y . o ¢ " b R ¥ i)X’3Aw & 2 o 2 BN i s & T AN o 3 s ‘ Ry _ L @ A . LAN W d 4 e v ¥ ) xR VS 5 : . ’; " ANINNOCENT MAN HANGED. T Four years ago two negroes were arrested in Hall county, Ga,, charg: ed with assaulting a white woman. They were tried ahd found guilty. One was hanged the other sent to to the chain gang for life, *SBince then enough evidence hag been found to satisfy the community. where the erime was eommitted that the convicted negroes wereo in nocent. As the negro in the chain: gang was a citizen of Jackson county, the residents of that coun- | ty placed :i emselves betfore - the, last grand jury, and after an in vestigation they decided to request the grand jury of Hall county to: ask the Governor for the negro’s pardon. There is of course no doubt but that e will be freed. , The Jackson ecounty authorities are also believed to be in possess ion of the eriminal who has been living all these years within a few miles of the scene of the erime and the execution. The publicity of the present discovery has cpused great excitement, espedially ginong the negroes, and there is little doubt that lynching will follow - if the cijizers learn the name of the real culprit. The erime was an ex ceedingly brutal one, the vietim making a desperate fight with his assailants. She was finally left for dead in & small patch of woods. The unfortunate negro who was hanged died protesting his inno cence, but the circumstantial evi dence against him was 8o strong that his story was diseredited The negro now in'the chain gang has always protested his inno cence. i i The Sense of Honor in Boys. « There is .a great confusiom .in. boys’ notions ¢f honor. Youshould not go {6 your teacher with tales of fyour schoolmates, but when questioned by those in authority over you, paients . guardians or lffeachers, it is your duty to tell who |did mischief or broke a rule, no matter what result to yourself or \how unpopular you becoms. Boys have a false honor which hides mean and skulking actions in each other, which ought to be ridiculsd out of them The most cowardly injuries among boys go unchoked, and the weaker are abused and bul liedin a way every decent boy should resent, because this fulse notion of comradeship 1 ads them to keep silent the guilty. Teachers and parents ought to put down this ignoraut, petty “sense of hon or” for something more intelligent and uprightr.—When you know a wrong, and ‘keep silent about it when asked, you become a partner in the wrong, and are responsible for the origival meanness. It isa pity that boys and grown people do not carry the same strictness of principle they ghow in screening bullies and frands into points of genuine honor and courage.— Wide Awake. : Husband And Wife. No relations in life involve more numerous and important respon gibilities than those which are con gtituted by nature between hus hand and wife. If well fitted. fraught with happiness to the parents as blessings to their children and fam ily ; if disvegardful, fruitful of dis cord and the deepest anguish. Pas sing by all that pertains to their other relations, and also all which involves their personal reciprocal relations. and also all that involves their personal rociprocal duties, consider their-intetcourse in one aspect only. Taeach is alloted pe culiar cares and trials, and it is the privilege and duty of both to recip rocate kind offices. The husband comes home burdered with oppress ive cares of business, and the wife ‘mects him at the. threshold with the story of her little perplexities andfdomestic trials. The' one, per | haps, comes for relief at home; the BUCI}IA.NA;_._:N_, A_,;L}EURGIA‘X SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1884, tuin ; hath are dimp{i&iné. Why? Rocause cach comes'to gifiud Ryln pathy, ; Honee, thoy azedmade the moans of adding to.eaele others caros, even wiicke love d@wanting to perforin o bhetier semice. Lot each cnti‘er"l"fitfi“,t' ”" : Hnts of Both will be mingled andeneutral ized, “Beay ye ono MOERETs |- dens, and. so- fulfil tHe law of Christ.” Wagh is rehmegév asßU ming flie burden of the othicr. Bkey Were All Poor Boys. St Wil ion, e i The following facts should cn courage every young man strug gling under discouragements and poverEs iy s E John Adams second President, was the son of a farmer' of very moderate méang. The only start he had a good edugation. : ~ Andrew Jackson was born in 2 log hut in N. €., and #as faigéd in’ the pine woods., for which ‘is fa-’ Mous. J. K. Polk spent the'earlier years of his life helping to dig & living out of a farm in N. C. e was af terwards a elerk in a coungry store. Mliard Filmore ‘rvgus:t;m?)son of a N.Y. tarmer, and his hotise was a very humble one. He learned the busir ess of a clothier. - “Abraham Lincoln was the son of a very poor Kentucky farmer, and lived in a log cabin‘i’mtil he was 21 years cf age. : Andrew Johnson was appren ticed to a tailor at.the age of ten vears by his widowed mother. e was not able to'go to schooland pick ed up all the education heever got. | Gen. Grant lived the life of o common house on the banks of the Ohio river until he was 17 years of age. : “ _James A. Gil;ffig;lglh}l’j{:%wbg\gil‘il} a lgg cabin. Fle worket on a farm from the time he was strong LW‘ nough to use carpenter tools, when he learnod the trade. He afterwards worked on the canal.—Ex. HE WAS MAD. ’ A street conversation by two citi zens : Jones? “Yes sir.” [ am insul ted, sir. My blood boils when ! think of It. Smith. ‘But in what way? yowknow my name was on the jury list week before last? “Yes. ‘Well, I went there and was put on the jury at once.’ ‘Nothing remarkable abont that.” ‘Yes, but you forget ; not a single lawyer on cither side obigeted to me. Could anything be more insulting? ‘What ! Not objecting to you? ‘Of ¢ourse. They must have taken me for a natural-born numpskull, or they wouldn’t have been go wil ling. OUTOF A DEER’S MAW. Mr. H. B.Houson, of this place, showed us a mad stone which he said he took out of a deer’s maw 35 years ago. It is a peculiar looking little brown stone, and from what My, H. says, has peculiar gualities He says it will cure’a snake bitein 5 minutes. It will cure a mad dog bhite he has a fortune in his pocket, and the Campbell andCoweta folks need him and his stone. : Had A GoodEifect, There is a good story told of the Stevens pottery neighborhood. When the gyclone passed through there in 1875 there wag na church in the neighborhood. Home of the people thought | that it was sent ag a judgment for their evil deeds They immedi. ately started a subscription and built one, and now there aro none more pious than the people of that vieinity. - . The tollowing, taken from a leading exchange, contains more truth than poétry : Ask some men for an advertisement or locals, and | they dont believe in adverting—a ' paper is never read. Let the same nmn"be:ed;n%*kiseing his neigh hor’s wife, or trying to hold up a "building some dark night and if the printing office isin the g;mv(»tbi » Boagoqe s s ¢ of 17 storv building he will climb to it vo bog the cditorto keep.quict. don’t publigh it in vour paper, g HERE ANE THERE, I Tywe mail stages were robbed in | northwest Texasa few days ago. Prof. Ryval’s school ut Jackson ville, Ala., numbeis ' two hundred. students. : ¥ ? i ~ United States Senators ave flock ing to Florida, G The citizens ogj Gadsden, Ala. . - o ) y $ are digging eyelone pits. X A cow was ‘rccently kilked by a. falling hail-stone, near Sparta, Ga. Campbei county, Ga., is to have a new jail. : Five handsome brick builaings have just been completed at Juck-‘~l sonville, Ala. 1 -Mr. Gi W. Vinson had 36 neph aws, in the late war. Al were killed but three. At Thomson the grand jury has found 22 bills for wviolation of the prohibition law \ A little negro boy- recently shot 1 and instantdy kiiled a little negro: girl at Eufaula , Ala. They quar rreled about some {ruit, when the boyg scttled it with a gun. A seven-year-old boy, while play-. ing around an engine a few days a zo at Talladega, Ala., pulled it o ver on him, driving an inch and a quarter iron pin through his thigh. and also breakiae Lis collar bone. A steam boat was burned on the Chattahoochee river, neagh Colum bus, on the 3d, inst. 14 er 15 per sons were burned and drowned, and many otheys seriously injured, Over 300 bales of cotton were hurn ed, besides much other property lost. The Georgia State Baptist Con vention will convene in Atlanta on April 23d, and continue in session four days. g e : Thomas Smith, of Ocongg coun ty, was shot in the leg during the war. Lately the wound has reopen ed and the leg will have to be am putated to save his life. 1 Tt is rumored that the girl who murdered her child at the glade in Oglethorpe county a few davs ago, last year tfed one to the hogs and had previously dispatched two oth ers in the same way. A tramp negro while stealing a ride on the down freight Wednes day, went to sleep and fell betiwveen the cars at the 19 mile nost of tne Gieorgia ryilroad. The train ran o ver him killing him instantly. Ot the Goorgia delegation, Megsrs Blount, Candler, Clements, Ham mond, Hardeman, Nicholls, Reese and Turner voted againgt the bill to extend the bongded period for whis key, and we do not find in the year bill. , A I’hil;ul(‘iphia judge refused to license a female lawyer, but a Cham bershurg, Pa., court has atoned for the want of gallantry by swearing in a female Deputy Sheriff. She is the daughter of the sheriff and is about 23 years old. A jealous husband slapped a man’s face in . Providence street car because the man’s eyes had been staring at his wife’s face. The car stopped a block further on and a little girl entercd and led the man away. He was totally blind. The poor women havéto bear all the blame for the storm pits now being dug. The man says “I did n-t want to have 1t dug, but my wife insisted upon it and I did it just to gratify her.”” Of course. Tha'new state to be made from Washington and a part of Idaho Territories will be called “Tacoma’ | the name now borne by a great mmx%m%&e region and by a Coliforiia is said to bedhe only state in which the distillation of salt from sen water is carried on to any great extent. The production has risen frm:n‘ 44,000 bushels in 1860, to upward of 830,000 hushels inlßß3 - : ceL Keep vour mouth shut, Nearly all your gocial troublos’come from talking too much. Over half the sore throats come from breathing through the mouthi, ‘dnd wnoring can only take place when you sleep with your 11}01"(t1’1"q}m'1, ? When gpring flowers are in the South, snow is in the North, oot in the Fast,a blizzard raging in Minnegota immigration agents a broad should have printed on their, cards, “A large and varied assort ment of elimate constantly on hapd,, . : We heard the other day of a gen tleman whe had ‘prepared him a storm pit in this county and used it on last Tuesday night: It was ‘carfully dark and. stormy night, and our friend calling up his fam’> ly commanded them te flee to the pit for safetys o was the first to reach it ands throwing “back the; door, fell inte the cooling embrace of four feet water. The rest of she family veturned to their beds. A storm vitis a good thing of its kind, though it may have to be run in connection with a pump in wet weather. Itis rumored that our, our friecnd needed a bath anyway and no damage wag done.—Spartai [shmaelite, , ictis L e T L TOATTPIN U DA S T A DA Coodiit ioloy NS jEW By 1 AL L".*-.é.’.!.:,é i'_,iéj}..: .{.2 gn&l U;l R o Koy Tg PR ik g aFn ey aRs e UFSRENGWEE S QLS AR & i iy recent prin¥iee it pow combines TR DI o Tazuda ATAGIA Gu THe f, ee e e eel ] Ditvmrior HemgouersiAla Tus 44 - Ruwar How “Woshvilie, Tenn., Twxy B 8 EOUTHEIN FaPvens HONTNLY, S B RN Ee AN e N RE L RN I, R § @ veuneh, Gajeni Holtos the peirone of WA thena with 1% oorn T4RGE L 6 of 8. 5 oribers, The Treas and_peoplo all 1os: B, Iy toihs preat merits for_Agriculturists, “’i?"i" sud £5 2 medinm {or controlling Boutly W ¢ 2 trsds, gy SAMPLE s oo 1M Fl o) SR COPIES S eyt A e - S HREE{ TEa il oo S PR . A fi*‘%‘t“‘&{"?fi’?};} S S ARG e s e H '“;’;‘i}r AYA fif‘«“&;fi‘.’? ) LS %2‘% el ;%'?v,gé ©BT AGRRI ol S b A 3 ha RSI eel Ce ee R Foga SRR e L 3 Tuy Sovtneay CrrmivaTor is devoted to the Agricnitieal and Industrial interests of the South—and every number goes out ireighted | with information vital to the sneoess 'of those | whose interests it rubserves, Ttis oneof the i oid#al and most ;_m;ml;xr Joyrnals in the Union, | and lorSOUTHERY AGRICULTURISTS, for | wiwotn it has labered for nalfa century, has - supsTion, : The followinz are some pt the leeding fee ‘les of thisgreat journal . THOUGETS FOR T MONTH Wniueble, Practionl Suggsstions to the Farmer {3r Each Month iv the Year, Pubiic Roadas Ditebing aud Terracing; Tha Omuga Grove; Legal Departmont; betters foo o Biold, Trom every State i the Mo o, giving resulwot tests of our best planters uu uadecs of praciical benefit Lo the ‘urwer ingniry Departinent, in which are pro pottuded and auswered ¢ureations -eovering almost eterrihing of interes: on the farm. ‘The Patrouws of Hlusbandry, evervthing of, vaiug perminivg to the order: topics of the times; Tuchion d-psstment, attractive to the tadize; the opiary - horse notes; live stoek doe tor hog choelgea: Jersey herd s fruit culture; <onthern 1K enlure; evience and art. the intaily girele} eniidren’s departinent: house hold topics: tRE CULTIVATOR £oOk LOOK, etc Tha Intapsive Srstens of Tarming, by Mz Davip [vonsos, coveriug the eniire gya: tem of southern Agriculture, i 3 now heing publihicd in Trm Cririvarown, io acries ol twelve wonth'y numabers. Pack numbeis can be furnished. | JAS, P, HARRISHDN & €OO, State: Polnless.. Putasbers, Engravers, sr.gi Blank Book Manufaciurers, P. . Diawer & ATLANTA, GA. ] % . T ourarey CULTIVATOR Cno Yesr. ano ‘ Margaret Emily Powell, ) Libel for Di vorce in Har- Vi, alson Superior Court January Robert C. Powell, ) Term, 1884. It flp%)euring to the Court by the re turn of the Sherifl’ that the defendant does not reside in this colnty, and it further appearing that he doesnot refie in this State, and it appearing that the plaintiff doeg reside in this county and State, it is, on motion of the courcil, or dered: That said defendant appear and answer at the next term of this Court, else that case be considercd in default, and the plaintiff allowed to Yrocee(_l,' And be it further ordered: That this Rule be publlshed in the Haralson Ban ner once a month for four months uext preceding July Term of this Court. G J. BRANHAM, . L Jiß . CR@ _ Tcertify that’the above is a true copy of thie minutes of the court. S TR e D RUTOHBSON. Bring your Clomks, \Vfit{t o Jewelry to e J. FESTERLY, 8 BUCHANAN, - -. = s GASE Pl "" and have them «1‘@;&&1&‘2 in thy best of style. . All work warrgsted e e A P T BUCHAAN..:. ... ... ik .t(i o . MUIEION v Primagy . department. g - Intermediate Pepartmont, . 2.06 = Aeademic Department., .. /2.5 & High School ]).c}}&(tnlent,.fl;g;i Methods of ingtyuction, origina: progressive,therough and prqct-ie:,\.g. The location is. unsurpassed fogs = healthfulness of climate, p_uxW“ e air and water., First Session mgfiq begin Jan., 4th, 1884, - ' ‘&%; ABRAHAM G.UPSHUR, = oe. T R : Irl4vD fg;, W. W, FITTS ;7~l)_zg:,§,u:n in— y*, L V 7 sl ~:1. 3 “jz Drugs, Paints, Oilg, (}}m,fi%@% and Stationary, e : : 0 CARROLLTON. ......GEORGHA, - WOORE & GROCE, BUURE g BUCHANAN, ... o gy ol S Will do adl varicties of Buggy & wagon repairing ; Tron and wo@‘?-j work; cheap, Special attenfi%fi given to - Horse-shoelng.« "1 @ M A NI D N MDANIEL&CO TALLAPOOSA, ~ GA, & —Dealers in— Drugs, Paints, Oils, Glass, Book!i;;fi and Stationary. Give thewa & .w.ll,@;‘ e "_""'—:_—"“Q’_‘“'m’——‘f*_"‘:",v KEEP s CLEAN FaCE. e If you want yourihair cut in "‘; style or the best shave you evep had, just go and call on o Joe¢ LAgSETTER, 3 Buchanan, Ga, - SIS & IARRIR ARI il & ALy BUCHANAN, Gl —Dealers in— - ¢ Whiskeys, Wines, Tobaceo and €& gars. Call at their. Bar, on Cedase town streete e A % ="A IF YOU ARE - ¥ Going = . o ~aal WEST, 3 N S T Y TN e i NORTHWESH» - - 3 ,T"i'z?';w L ORE o a SOUTEWHST, Your Tickets Read viathe & N.C&ST. T.ury. -3 The Mackenzie Route, = & The thsf'-class‘.andEmigfnms‘; ‘» i e Albert Wrenn, - W, I _‘f' Atlanta, Ga, Chattanooga Peim, e e Bes R SRE S Al kinds of blanks forsale at 4 3 Oifitba: - m i th,]”s Ofl?"% abE RS S e LY ? 5 7 n’. ‘r:\gf