Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, May 17, 1884, Image 1

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VOIL.. 1. HARAISON - BANNER PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. AB. BFLITTS, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1884, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : e () s DN COPY ONO YEBRY;. ..\ .. . poinen . $1.20 Oho oDy St moNthe s . cen ss 09 One copy three months, . R PROFESSIONAL CARDS ; \ PV AN i J O TRENTHAM PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, PorrLar SpriNags, - - Ga,, Offers his services to the neople o Haralson coutity. e is algo pre pared for Dentistry. Canbe found at all times at his brothei’s [A Trentham |residence. A T ) 1’~: ")< 1.“ ; 5 W. P.ROBINSON ATTORNEY=-AT-LAW, BUCOIEANAN - . ............ GA,, Claims Collected, Titles to Land looked after and intruders ejected. Office in Court house. TNk YD W. F. ROBERTSON, PHYSICION & SUBGEGN: BuoHaNaN. o s (.\ Offers his services to the people of Haralson county. Obstetrics and diseases of wonuen and children a speciality, i Pt R e sL L i ] ¥ i N ) ) 7, v W. F. BROWN, | ATTORNEY-AT-LAW; | i ot 1 ZARROTMBGNT L 0 2 Ly o (;i.,; Will practice in Carroll, Haralson | and adjoining Counties, | Colleet!iiit 3 specianltty, j o Y "—r"-- RS RS N “ ':’ :73 i X <0 I T A i \"' ¢‘J¢ I[ l*,w ;\ l)3 | ATTORNEY-AT-LAW } LR BUCHANAN ... . (}\l Will practice in the Rosite Circuit, | and inZCarroll 40d adjoining Coun-1 ties. Also, in the Federal Courts inj Atlanta. Office in the Court louse. ! W. Wi &6. W. MERRFLL, ' G e PRWERR & CARROLLTON, ..............GA. avill attend all the Terms of the Superior Court, for Haialdon] ‘County, or,aiy . where elsé,: where Dbusiness may call them. Equity, and Land Titigation a speciality Y 2 i - Ok o g r M'RP e ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, ! ]’»l'cfié};_q,. Lo b e O Wili racidec e . the Cowts of the' Rome Cireult, cndshy, Carroll and and Douglas Countics L SMITH & RICHARDSON .| O A PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, ' BUCHANAN, « 00 i e .A(L\.,'! e i ,Ii .>:‘_‘ - - ! U.W. PARKERR, l SBREMEN 5"204il oo GA ] Offers Big Services as Physiciah nf‘ unany years experience:. . Cases) treated at his Office dt nfm]a;,raf.vl wcharges; for wash.ore baster. He) keeps Medicine and Lanips for sale. | S ...,v;; . ' i & 3 5 r 3 " S. P. BRWARDS, e APRORNEVC AT AW, w _Blrg‘ilzx.;\i\;i,.. o ane Y L EAY ‘Practices in Havalsown and \(""?"i()in{! ing Countics. 5 . Office in Court House. } _Jy'__-.;,_._wv,_‘A;v,;,._,._”A Te o i 3‘.-5 o . = 1 Jusswomn] 5 TON JO&S " WAGON SCALES, | S Iron Lavers, Bioel Bearings, Brass | Lk e Taré Beam and Beam Box. 1 BicHAMTON S 8 SO ans Goo o) pelisemes o b SRR, o U 1 e .. HARAILSON BANNER. LAW AND ORDER IN THE ROUTH. © - A portion of the Northern press so studicusly and maliciously mis—! represent the South in the matter! of law and order that people are prevented by their fears from cross ing the Ohio river. It istrue that the South has its murders, but take the country State by State and the North bas three to one. It is true that a. negro is railed now and then, but if the same man lived in the North he would proba bly be lynehed instead of whipped. There are more burglars, thieves and bad men -arrested in - Detroit, Cleveland and Bufialo in one day | than in the whole tervitory of Geor= ggiz: ot Alabama. You may spend a month South and not licar a quar !rel ot see adrunken man ; you may i visit a half dozen jails and nat Ilfind an average of two white crimi tndls to cach. The life and proper ity of alaw abiding man are ag safe |in any portion of Georgia or Ala | bama as intheé District of Colum- El’izt, :m;l the standard of morality | far higher. There is fiiofe real no ! bler fecling in the South to day for la northérmi inligrdait than e can ‘ find in the West. He is sized up | t'mi what he is, and if he is the man {to tic to, the mhen whd fought him giu war will ight for him in peace. -—M. Quap in Detroit Free Press. | T | A TEXAS STORY , Aii elderly gentleman fiém Wig cansin, wearing a plug biét and a gold headed cane, has lecn pros peeting out in the vieinity of On ion Citel; eight miles fiom Austin. ! Fe met “Pruthful Jecins, of Onion 'L‘l‘L‘(‘k, i local granger, and the fol lowing conversation tsok place: - “The soil 1 vty rich, ind you 'seem to have pleriéy of cal troas. . | should think you might raise hogs here to a great advantage.” The granger shook his hrad and replied : . “Hogs dowell 1n dry weather, hut as sopd agwe have a wet spell they all die oft.” - “You don'’t cav 0. How does the wet weather come {0 uffect them so fatally? Does it give pleu-| ropietimonia?’ | No,sir; I don’t think their lungs ave affécted by the dampness. The hogs die of sleeplegsness.” : “Sleeplessness, insomonia? “Yeg, sir; they perish of insomo nia, caused by the richness and stickingfe of the soil.” “My friend, your conversation is unintelligible to me. Hdw does the alluvial fertility of the soil and the’ humidity of the atmosphere pro duce insotiionia among the swine? “There is a simple explanation for it. You see, thdy lie down when it is mi¢day and a little mud ad heres to the tuft of hair at the end | of their tail¥. The mud continues’ to accumulate until » Jatge ball is formed -wsighing several—l say several pounds—not several hun-. dred-pouaqesstis o “Proceed, if you ‘}hmse. I am yet in the dark as to the cause of sledpl\esgucgss’umongdt.l)e swine, “Why, .don’t you ungerstand that the weight of the mud ball pulls.tha hag’s skin so tight he can’t shut)iféfpygé'.! pnd ae he-can’t go to glecp witheut shutting his eyes, he dics in great agony.” —Tex | as Siftinge, T T Mary. Davis, & white lady, of Stewart county, was murdered one. night while in hed; recently, 2e e 5 A ticgro by the name of Coles man was hung it Coluiibin, S, O logt Friday. : . ik ]{‘(:?l)‘:|°.}"’B\\‘a.il’;:§ 4 nego, was Tecent ly taken from the jail b Winston, N. €., by a mob and fitng, for the murder of a.Mrs. Reed, vhio was a’ bout-gixty years of age. Addiof weighing 400 pounds wis re cently kifled in California, Tt was cirry- 1 ing off & full grofvn shedp when two o attacked ily- and with the assistance of ‘goud rifles suceeeded in killing this king SCaMomil Hobee xOT BUCHANAN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1884, Health Alphabet, As soon as you are up shake bilan ket and shect. Bettor be without shoes than . sit with wet feet. ' Children, healthy, are aetive, not i‘sti]l. b Damp clothes and damp heds will both make youill. Eat slowly and always che ¥ your food well. . Freshen the air inAthe. housc where you dwell, g - _Garments must never be made tight. g A Homes should be made healthy, airy and light. If vou wish to he well, as you do, ['ve no doubt. Just open the windows gefore you Igo out. Keep the room always tidy and clean, ‘ Let no dust on the furhiture ever be secn. Much ig caused by the want of pure air, Now, to open your windows be aver your care Old regs and old rilibish shouid nevar He kept, People should sce that their floors are well swept. Quick niovenients in children are healthy and vight. i Remember the young cann~t thrive without light. See that the cigtern is elear 3o the brim. 3 That your dreds i 3 all tidy and frira, Use your nose to find if there be 2 bad drain. Very ead are the fevers that come in its train. Walk as ninell dé yon can with 'unt getting fatigued, Xerxes could walk full many a feague d : Yotir health 1s wealth, which your wisdom must keep. Zéal will help a good cause; and the good you will reap.—Progress. MISTAKE IN PRINTING ! The wonder is; 17t that mistakes | oceur in newspapers but tiiat th(g\'! occur so seldom. When the h\ll‘l‘)', in which a daily jéurnal i gotten up is taken into account, it seems ' aston shing that a daily paper should not be full of blunders every issue. A vage coniains hundreds upon thousands of lead pieces, and if any one of them is misplaced or| turned up gide down, eterybody no f tices it il the paper.—Rome Couri- ‘ er., | e A L t! THE FITTLE THINGS OF LIF! It is often ensier to mwake great! sacrifices thau little ones,to right some great wrong than to prevent’ a multitude of small ones. 1t is easi, er to do bittle for & grand idea than to give np a prejudice; to ¢stablish a man’s viglt to citizenship than to respeet in .f:.i‘i‘ullcl: hic right to dress as he pleasts, Yet it ds. the little things of life that contribute most largely to its fxctdnd worry or to its peace aind gladriess ; and he who possesses the true spirit of coneilia tion knows that no right is too small to be respected, no. kindness too trifling to be rendered, no part of life too insignificent i< com mand congideration. : “Where were you lust sSunday, Robbig?” deked the toacher of one the briglitest scholors iy frer Sun day school elass. “My mother kept me home” “Now, Bobbie, do yufi know where little boys go when they play trvant from Sun day " #chool?”! “Yes ma’am.” “Where?”? ""lv”*]"x'c‘,yfi'lgo_,fi_’.s"]'\.i.ng 1P ehe claimed the boy, letting the Wwhole | foline family out of the paper enve lope—Yenkers Statesman, ; ‘Everybody hag ene mouth and two enrs: This ehows why fwice as mueh 3s heard as said. Avd most peopld have but one iose, Whieh shows !th‘;i't j}i.) one “nose” whether moye than i,i’l alf o ‘ears, said is | INTENSIVE FsRMING. éb‘.’l"'l‘\" BUSIELS O CORKN PER . ACRE, ~ I plant double rows beeause | canuot get stalks enough onan. a | ere by any other plan and still have ventilation. ! Lay off,rows six feet apart subsoiling ll".l('h row, and putin compost pretty hea [ vy, say 500 pounds per acre. [ Bed on this, subroiling cach fuerow. Lay rows 18 inches apart on either side 1 of the compost furcow and put 150 pounds per acre of good standard guano or phos phate just as for cotton, and drop corn from 18 (o 20 inches apart in each row wnd cover lightly. i 1 When the corn is well up run one furs Hrow with a very long narrow plow HE tween the rows and follow with hoes, This completes fivst working, Ten diyy later run the sume plow in the same farrow again, and runa com mon 3!y inch scooter arcund on the oth er side of the cornand follow with hoes. This completes gecond working, Ten days later run‘around outside the ldn‘,l].‘lu rows with a larger plow, throw \ ing freshi eaith tothe corn; and in this | furrow put five hundred pounds o com i post per acre and plow out middle with L serape or gwiep and follow with hoes. j’[‘hi.\' completes third working. Ten days jlater, take a large zhovel plow avd run & furrow in the middle of the wide rows and put 150 (hs per aere of cuanoin this furfow with broad scrapes (20 shallow as not to cut many roots)uui l til you get as near the ¢con as you wish. This comnplettis the fonith plowing, and ! Lavs the crop by with a #light rise in the middl® of tlie wide row, and a slight de pression towards each row. Now let us see what we have dones The corn hils beeit enltivated with 14 fur ! rows tisix feet rows, ar d three oz four | hoeihgg: eail vory light, but very essen i tial. £ inl, 25 the cost, we hivve cnltiva ted much eheaper than the usual plan re quires. W 2 ltave invegted about ten dol fars per acte in fertilizing, and foi teen dollars in wobk; thud Firest inanuritie; 500 Ibs, compost $2,50 Second manurmg, 150 Ibs. guano 2,50 Third waidring, 200 183 conm¥post, 2,50 Fourth manuring, 150 Ibs cuao; 2,50 Total manurite s 10,00 Labor in distributing ifgnere, 1,00 Labor in hocing 75 Lahor i pidwing, '_’.T.'»Jl Total cost of labor per acie »l,lu:] Tota’ cost per acre, SOO What return do we get for this heavy [ investment of $14,00 per] :m‘rl';’———n;nrv,! ! perhapsy than tha land was Worth, With | ' three dry sumiiiers, seven, nfe and (~]r-] ven weeks’ drocght respectively, the ' writor gathidcd Letween 40 and 50 bush elsof good licavy corn per acrei—J. B. Hoesxicvrr, of. Cowetd, in the Griffin Sun. | Gien:. Forrest was onece np}u‘n:u'h—{ ’ed:l;y an Avkansaw man, who ask-] ed, Gencral, when do you reckin' ’wc'ro going to get somethidg. toj eat?” “Fatl” exclaimed the Gener-| al; “did you jein the atmy mervely: o get something to enth “\\'all.}»i that’s about the size of It.” “Here,” | ‘Cnlling am officer, “give this man domething to eat "and then have| him shot.” The officer tdetstood the joke, and_replied *“All right General.” The Arkansaw nian, ex kibited no alarm. Bile me ‘2 ham, Capitain, stew Up a couple o’ chick ens, bake _f\“.'u or tavee hdccakes: fotch a galion o’ so of butter-milx. 4ind load yer guns With sich in | ducerie iis, the mf‘u'i. what wouldn’t be willin’ to die s a blame fool !” A hearty nieal was preparved for the soldier but he stili lives.-Arkansaw Traveller, i : Near Dalton, recently, while a ne gro boy washandling a gun, it went off, killing William Staftord instant. Ty- geme think it an aceid ent, SOme | not. The negro is in jail. A T : “No,” gaid schoollioy, “there hasn’t lof us Loysbeen licked this term. “We kind of stood in 61 the mat ter, you see and always caleulate to have two or three mice round our desk somewhere; and the minute Lth¢ school-ma'an goes to lick a feol fow somebody lets one of thent looge, and then ghe gets, upon her desk and gathers up her gkirgs and ' squiéals, and by the time the mouse ig killed and tnings is quieted down the hoy she was goirg to | lick has becawe b hero, protecting her €rom the furichs beast and she hasn't the heart 10 lay o hand on 'i Pwoe Ways, Fred and Joe aré boys of the same age. Both have their way to make in the world—This is the way Joe does. When work is before hiw he waits as long as he can—he hates to touch it Then he does not half do it. He is almost sure to ston bes tore it is done. Ie does not care if fault is found. He says, I can't helpat,” or, “1 don’t care, : ¢ Fred’s way is not the sawe. e goes straight to his work, and does it as scon as he can and gs weh as he can. He never slights work for play, though he ovesplay as well s as Joe dos. If he does not know how to do a picee ol work well he asks some one who does know, end then he takes care to remember.-- He zays, “1 never want to be asham ed of my work.” * Which boy, do you think will make a man to be trusted.—Ex change, l On a Bull’s i'orns. | e ‘ Cppartowy, iy, May 7.—On Monday morning at his residence; ten miles south east of this place, Mr. E: l).‘ Hichtower wis att cted by a Jersdy bull and tossed gome 8 feet in the dir and falling struck on his head, sustaining seveie and per haps fatal injuries. Had it not been for a tenant who was n-at by and who ran to his assistance; Mr. . would in all prob ability have beéen killed on the spot. When a man says his “wifs is worth her weignt ti gdld,”” lif she weighs 120 poundsshie i# worth jnst even $30,000. No i i 3 not such an extravagant expression There are niillions of hamcg; eten the humble cottages, where thé wife aund mother s valtied ueh more highly than her weight in gold: | Bella asks: “Wiat 18 the best things to feed a parrét en?’ Ifthe parrét Belonged to us we would feed it on Parig green of avsnic.—- Hi A complaining Chicagoan, in his suit for divoice, declares that his wife has made evervthing hot for him in his married lif¢ except his tea and coffec. | Gov. Cleveland, of Nel YVork, is| }w\'crvly ceisuted for commuting ‘the death sentence of Mrs. Faight, of Syracuse. Her hair was said to nave grown gray duing her con- ‘ finement 1% jail. Altet being| consigned to her ecil in the peni tentiary, Mrs. ‘Haight quictly I'o»fJ moved a wig, diseloing a jhead of | rich brown hair. j A romantic New Yérker and lxisl bride will make their bridal trip this summer in a canoe. The mm(;e‘ is to e ade on purpose for thel trip, and will be nickle-platedfin its | appointments, with lmn(l-puimwi$ paddie attd 8 &ail of ®ilk. They will go up the Hudgon to lake Chaplain and down the Connceti-! cut. ’ g A Texas man went into a news-| paper office one day lagt week t“‘i make the editor tale it Hack, until when beeame to himself fonr lavs | afterwiids he said the Ta<t thing he remembered the editor was - guing the question witn an old ;<zx-‘ bres He says it’s all hosh abott'the!! peit being ‘mightier than the sword. ‘ 1 we owed a newspapcr man for giving us tie ficivs of our own sec tion and flic outside wosld general lv tor 52 ‘weeks for $2, and found obt that We were too I)(‘_s.’,‘“-'! gent or too mean to pay him for it, we would go out into some se cluded swanmyp in the siiddle of th | forest, sit down apew a wet log and hate ourselves to death, and no dott the world would thavk vs for. it. : : “If there'ls anything 1 Tove, ili‘SJ roast goose,” remarked Fepdeison, as he passed up his plats for a see ond helping. “Tt dves vob credit,” says Fogg : ‘there’s nothing'so Heau-: tiful as affection - ameng members of afamily.” . « My ma got I'eligidfi“i‘§i"ét”fi‘ig‘h‘t:’;.3 said enc little girl, boastiully to ‘another. “Then wiivhe she’ll pay niy pa for the grocerics “she got,” ‘was the reply “of the ‘daughter of okt S T e -~ N " THE - BUCEHANATN 6 | Ko j | \ YEOANT L - ACADEMY. ‘i1%1,'(,‘1L\'.‘\N.‘.............‘..‘ GA; o '.I‘UITION: i - Primmary Departmient.. .. .. g 7 X | Intermediate Department .. 2.9 ; Academic Department. ... . 2.8 ~ High School Department 8.0 Methods of instruction, & aina’ ’ progressive,thorough and praetica The location is unsurpassed so healthfulness of climate, purity o “aiv and water. First Session il begin dan., 4th, 1884, 4 ; ABRAHAM G. UPSIIL i . | Prisciya | : ’ ‘ : Bring vour Clocks, Watches - Jewelry to J. HESTERI .Y at BUCHARAN, tw # a and have them ¥yepaired i the Dbest of stile. Al work wvirranited A 1 TLT b M) DANIEL & C 8 TALLAPODBA . . GA —Dealts fi= Drugs, Paints, Oils, Glass, B and Stationary. Givethem 1 cu s R e sA e A il .. . - ~,,_Nh'_.' -"’ s T 1 ')."‘1:" ryyvy & DR. F. R bL\II FH: Buchanan, = Ga: —DEALER IN& : Drugs, Paints, Oils, Glass, St 7_'% : : tionary &e. ! Drugstaie South of Cowrt bosa ¢ .‘;:HA IF YOU ARE Going : ; -, gLt 0 Viss o I e i , it oty e NORTHWEST, vy OR>- : SOUTE Wite - BESURE Your Ti(*li'ct,s Read via the : .@8 ST. T.R'Y, The Mackenzie Route, Tho Firsf-eliss and Binigiants’ ‘ 2 .’ ” ; 14. FAVORITE! Albét"_t "fi’réhh, W.I. Rogé'fi Pas. .\Q‘ynh ; ' “Pas. Aaen.t:;. Atlanta, Ga. | '(Cfiattms)oga% _ W.L.DANLEY, © © i Géfll?.s“& Tkt, Agént, oe e Maaalle; Te %t LXRL - Bybrs W. H. BEALL, | PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. - ‘BREMEN, el R, | Will practice for.the peapleof Ha lalson and adjoining ‘counties, :: reasonable prices ffive h&mm eali