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HARALSONxxBANNER.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF HARALSON COUNTY.
SI.OO PER ANNUM.
THE BucHANAN PuBLISHING COMPANY
FROPRIETORS.
JOHN H. HARALSON,
Editor and Business Manager.
Entered at the Post-office at Bachanan,
Georgia, as second-class mail matter,
Buchanan, Georgia, Aug. 30, 1889,
| ————— . T ———— S T Y e —
2 SPECIAL /
& NOTICE!
The present owners of the Ban
~er did not buy the old accounts
due the paper at time of purchase,
Al accounts due the BANNER, either
on subscription or advertising, up
to March Ist, 1889, are to be pai(]i
to M. J. Head. The present own
ers have nothing to do with the
collection of anything back of
March Ist, 1889, and no one is au
thorized to collect any subseription
to the Baxner beyond March Ist,
1889, except the present manage
ment.
Cartersville has organized two
fire companies. |
Four wife murderers were
swung into eternity last Friday
in New York,
The Cartersville Express is a
new, bright and able paper. It
is quite an addition to Georgia
journalism,
There was a big railroad disas
ter near Knoxville, Tenn., last
Friday, in which a large number
were killed and wounded.
The train carrying Barnums
ghow was wrecked in New York
last week. Twenty-four ring
horses were killed, and other ani
mals sustained serious injuries.—
The loss is estimated at §40,000.
The great Etowah property
near Cartersville has been bought
by a Philadelphia syndijcate for
$175,000. The company propese
to utilize it to the best advantage,
and Cartersville is loaking for a
boom.
Great reforms in morals cannot
be forced upen a people. They
must be educated up to them, and
when they are sustained and up
held by a healthy public sen
timent, it is but little trouble to
enforce them.
Sam Jones' tabernacla meeting
will begin at Cartersvilie on Sept,
7th and continne nine days.—
Bishop Gallaway, of Mississippi,
Bishop Joyce, of Cincinnati, and
Drs. Barnett, Morrison, and Haw
thorne, of Atlanta, besides many
other noted divines, will assist in
the meeting. It will be one of
the grandest meefings ever held
in Georgia.
A Penusyivania editor answers
a correspondent who propounded
the querry, “Did you cver see a
bald-headed woman?’’ in the
following strain; “No we never
did. Nor did we ever see a wo
man waltzing around town in her
shirt sleeves, with a cigar be
tween her teeth. We never saw a
woman go fishing with a bottle in
her hip poeket, sit araund on the
damp ground all day, and go
home ‘boozed’ in the evining.—
Neither have we seen a woman
yank off her eoat, spit on her
hands, and swear she conld whip
any man in town, All the fore
going ‘privileges’ are reserved for
men,
'. w&?‘fi%fi&'&?"mfiwm end
HlouowNs IRON DITTERS,
R S R
That Will Tell!
Yes, By All Means Let Us Make a
Showing to the World---Now
Is the Best Time.
Come! |
Take a hand!
Be up and doing!
Yes, come to Buchanan next
Tuesday, September 3rd. It is
very important that you should
come and take a hand in this pro
gressive move of the county, It
will do you good; it will do your‘
neighbor good; it will benefit your
county, and will do the outside!
world good.
Haralson county has applied for
space in the Piedmont Exposition
at Atlanta, and will make a dis»
play of her wonderful resources to
the outside world.
Then let ns come together next
Tuesday and take the proper steps
to make such a digplay as will not
only reflect credit upon our people
and county, but also upon our em
pire state and the entire south.—
We can do it, and it is the duty of
every citizen to do all in his pow
er to accomplish this grand pur
p()fle,
Then will you not come ont next
Tuesday and do your duty to
yourself and yonr county?
We have before expressed the
hope that Haralson county would
get up a county fair, and such an’
enterprise would doubtless be
worth thousands to the county,—
But we honestly believe a worthy
display of our products and re
sources in the Piedmont Exposi
tion would be worth more to the
county than a county fair.
Atlanta is a big place, easy of
access, and there will be thous
ands of people to attend the expo
sition from all parts of the United
States. -
The south is just now attracting
the admiration of the world, and
Georgia’s resources are fast com
ing to the front. Northern and
eastern capital are seeking invest
ments in the south. And many
who are now enduring the hard
ships of the rigid climate of the
north are desirous of settling in
our sunny land,
The Piedmont Exposition will
afford the outside world an excel
lent opportunity for investigating
our resources, and they will take
advantage of the opportunity.—
There is no doubt about this.
Then let Haralson county make
a proper showing of her advan
tages and wonderful resources.—
Rich in lands, minerals, woods,
water power, and unsurpassed,
not to say unequaled, in climate
and healthfulness.
Haralgon county has made
rapid strides in progress and de
velopment within the -past few
years, but the good work is only
begun, Who can predijct what
will be accomplished in the next
decade, Our resources are great,
our possibilities are grand, and
we are already demanding much
attention from those abroad.
If Haralson is the best county
in the state, as we all claim it is,
and there is abundant proof to
show it, why not establish it in
the minds of all? Counties with
not one half our advantages have
forged ahead and won reputation
and honors that should be ours.—
They did it by the persistent and
co-operative efforts of their citi
zens and not by the superiority of
their soil or the qualities of their
ores. 3
It is a fact known by all well
informed men that money in
abundance from the north and
foreign countries is seeking in
vestment in the south. If we
wish to catch our share of it we
must make some effort in that di
rection. We cannot hope for it if
we sit idly by, content to watch
the doings of other people.
The Piedmont exposition offers
3300 to any county that will be
represented with an exhibit. So
we are sure of S3OO, but there are
many other handsome premiums
which we might easily procure if
the proper steps are taken.
But should we fail to take pny
premium whatever, the display
would still be worth thousands of
dollars to the pounty,
There is much more that might
be said on this subject, but we
have not the space.
Come out to the meeting at
Buchanan next Tuesday and tell
your neighbor to come.
HOW’R THIS! ‘
We offer One Hundred Dollars
reward for any case of Catarrh
that cannot be cured by taking
Hall’s Catarrh Cure. ‘
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props.,
Toledo, O. |
We, the undersigned, - have
known F. J. Cheney for the last
15 years, and believe him perfect
ly honorable in all business trans
actions, and finauncially able to
carry out any obligations made
by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo, O.
WarniNg, Kixvaxn & Marviy,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O,
E. H. Van Hogrsex, Cashier, Tole
do National Bank, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucus surfaces of the
system. Testimonials sent free,
Price 78c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists.
“Farming,’’ says Col. Northen,
“is just as much a business as
banking or merchandise. To be
guccessful, it must be managed
upon the same strict business
principles. I will go further and
!say-——any farmer in Georgia who
%improves his land, manages his
crops intelligently as to selection,
cultivation and sale, controls his
ila,bor as labor is controlled in a
%successfu] business house, or upon
a railroad that declares regularly
lgood dividends on its stock,
lguards economicly and judicious
ly his expenses and properly in
vests his income, will make money
farming, in gpite of the unjust
burdens our people are bearing
under trusts and hurtful national
legislation. Take the methods of
an average Georgia farm and meas
ure them by any known rules of
system, discipline and economy,
and you will be gmazed that we
ever expect good results, Study
discipline, study management,
study system and economy, and
apply industriously, the means
for practical deyelopment, attain
to the high possibjlities of your
business, and you will be better
that you have suffered and the
world will be glad that you have
lived.” .
Is Consumption Incurable.
Read the following: Mur. C, H.
Morrig, Newark, Ark., says:
“Was down with Abscess of
Lungs, and friends and physi
cians pronounced me an Incurable
Consumptive. Began taking Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Con
sumption, am now on my third
bottle, and able to oversee the
work on my farm, It isthe finest
medicine ever made..”’
Jesse Middlewart, Decatur,
Ohio, says: “Had it not been for
Dr. King’s New Discovery for
Consumption I would have died of
Lung 'l‘g-oubles. Was given up
by doctors. Am now in best of
health.”” Try it. Sample bottles
free at Neill & Co’s Drugstore,
FROM TALLAPOOSA.
Epiror Baxyer: Having no news from
this part of the country that would
interest any one, I thought of writing
upon a different subject this week. Pro
vided you will give space in your valu
able paper, I will write a few items of
what I believe men think to be the duty
of women. Dear young man, when yon
fall in love, don’t expect the objeet of
your passion to be perfect, We have
Bible authority for saying that there is no
such thing as perfection. Why then ex
pect it of a young girl who has been
spoiled by her parents, laced to death by
her dressmaker, crammed full of Latin
varbs by her teaghers, and hurried into
premature dyspepsia by the coufeetion
ers. If you marry her, you have got to
learn not to expeet hey to live for you
alone. There will probably be lots of
things that she will take pleasure in be
sides lovemaking by the light of the
moon.
Don’t expect her always to be good
natared. Don’t expect her always to
wear a smile, It is not in human nature
to do it. A woman may be affectionate,
and goad, and true, and yet when the
bread declines to rise, and the chimney
smokes, and the clothes line breaks and
lets the family linen down into the mud,
and the baby tips over the tea pot and
sealds himself, and the salaried kitchen
lady wants a day off, she would be little
less than an angel if she didn’t feel as if
she should like to—well, never mind; we
haven’t all been there and don’t just
know how it is. Don’t expect your wife
to do the work that belongs to yon.—
Shut bureau drawers you pull out, You
haven’t any idea how tiresome it is to
shut three bureau drawers six times a
day for three hundred and sixty-five
days in a year—-and on through a mar
ried lifetime of fifty. An able bodied
man, who pays a poll tax, and has an
opinion on the tariff, ought to be able to
close the bureau drawers he opens with
out depending on his wife, Don’t expect
her to extinguish the lights, fasten the
door, put the cat down cellar, wind up
the clocks, see to the water pipes on cold
nights, warm up your to-morrow’s ¢lean
shirt, hang up all your old coats and
hats, and pick up and assort all the
canes, umhrellas and novels which you
have used during the week. There is no
earthly reason why a man cannot hang
up an overcoat just as well as fling it
over the back of a chair, and then tear
the house down next morning searching
for it. Is there? If sowhatisit? Don’t
expect your wife will want to stay at
!home always. Because once she cared
for nothing else but you and your soci
‘ety, do not think that that sort of thing
sis going to be lasting. You have prob
‘ably read of it in novels written by men
1 and women who never had any domestic
life themselves, and who like painting
1 the world according to their ideas,
Don’t expect that your wife will always
be ready for company to dinner. If you
want to show Smith or Brown what a
famous earthly paradise your home is,
you had hetter tell your wife about it
two or thyee days before hand, and give
her a chance to see that the bread is
fresh and the pie crust flakey on the
oceasion of your friend’s visit. 1f ever
you had been a women yourself, you
would understand just how it is, The
numberless books on good housekeeping
tell us that a good house wife is always
prepaved for eompany, but there never
was a greater mistake, We do not care
how well ordered a house is, there will
come seasons when every thing is out of
joint. When the bread is dry, the pies
eaten up, the cake just out, and the ma
chinery domestic at sixes and sevens gen
erally; and no woman can always foresee
and avoid these distressing epochs, 80
again we say to the young man about to
‘marry, do not look for angels in your
wives, for there are none in this lower
world, and it there were, youn do not whnt
them. MARGRIE.
Unfortunates who are seeking
their health are many. They
should remember that the very
best advertisernent of a remedy is
the true testimony from people
who have used it. Write so the
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for
their “Book of Wonders.”” It is
filled with convineing testimoni
als from hundreds who have used
B. B. B, No other remedy has
grown so rapidly in public favor.
In localities where its extraordi
nary merits have become known
it outsells all other remedies. It
cleanses, renews and purifies the
blood. It creates a healthy appe
tite and a healthy digestion. Du
ty demands that you give it a
triall i 3;E i : 6"301
e RS N i 3 v
Peculiar
Many peculiar points make lood's Sars
saparilla superior to all other medicines.
Peculiar in combination, proportion,
and preparation of ingredients,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla possesses ,\\o
the full curative value of tho ‘\
best known remedies o of
the vegetable king- Q dom.
Peculiar in its 90 strength
and economy - ( Hood's Sar
saparilla is g‘b the only medi
cine of which can truly
besaid, 749 & “One Hundred Doses
One 6 Dollar.” Medicines in
00 larger and smaller bottles
Q require larger doses, and donot
produce as good results as Hood’s.
Peculiar in its medicinal merits,
Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures hith
erto unknown, and has won for itself
the title of ““The greatest blood x
purifier ever discovered.” 0\
Peculiarinits “good name g at
home,” —there 1§ now \& more
of Hood’s Sarsaparilla sold in
Lowell, where ‘o it is made,
than of all ‘ other blood
purifiers. 00/ Peculiar in its
phenome- \\ nal record of sales
abroad, oo no other preparation
has Q ever attained such popu-
Q larity in so short a time,
and retained its popularity
\g and confidence among all classes
of people so steadfastly.
Do not be induced to buy other preparations,
but be sure to get the Peculiar Medicine,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, sl;sixforss, Preparedonly
by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Masa,
100 Doses One Dollar
FAVORITE SINGER !
Warranted for Five Years. N
LOW ARM e T
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OUR FAVORITE SINCER
Drop Leaf, Fancy Cover, Large Drawers, Niche! Rings,
Tucker, Ruffler, Binder, Four Widths of Hemmers
Bent on trial. Delivered in your home free of
freight charges. Buy only of Manufacturers,
Bave Canvassers’ Commissions. Get New Ma
chines. Address for Circulars and Testimonials,
Co-Operative Sewing Machine Company,
269 §. 11th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
N P RCTSHNG? SA T MEREPECR IO NCS: % G SIS SO G
We have a remedy that will CURE CATARRH,
BRONCHITIS and ASTHMA, Our faith is so
strong that we will send treatment on trlai,
jend for Treatise and full particulars. Address,
she Hall Chemical Co., 3860 Fairmount Av,, Phila,, Pa
_—g—-m-!“.*
:; o Falling Sicknss
& CAN be CURED.
) We will SEND FREE by
mail a large TRIAL BOTTLE ;
also, a treatise on Epilepsy. DON'T
SUFFER ANY LONGER! &ivc Post Of:
fice, State and County, and Age plainly,
Address, THE HALL CHEMICAL CO.,
| 3860 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, Fa.
Thedyspeptic, the debilitated, wheths
er from excess of work of mind or
body, drink or exposure in
‘ &
Malarial Regions,
will find Tutt’s Pills the most genlal
restorative ever offered the suffering
invalid.
9 ;
Try Them Fairly.
A vigorous body, ‘anre blood, strom
nerves and a eheerfulmind will resu.lg
SOLD EVERYWHERE,
ARFORCESTER'S
‘j“‘}‘x ')'/" .‘4 &
g@ DICTIONARY
% The highest authority known as to the
use of the English language.”
ol f?tzl\f R TR
\\Abadiy, N A - SRR
| or withont Donlson M Index.
~ The Standard of the Leading
Publishers, Magazines, ad News
parers.
& 48 =
he Dictionary of the Scholar for Spelling,
Pronunciation, and Accuracy In
Definition. _______
Bend for large Circular to the Publishers,
J. B. LIPPINCOTT GOMP‘HY'
L PHILADELPHIA, i ;