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~>STHE NEWS.©*-
Entered at the I’ostoffice as Second
Class Matter.
rilllLISHKI) WKKKI.Y BY
MORGANTON NEWS PUBLISHING
COMPANY AT
MORGANTON, GEORGIA,
Kates of Niil>seri|»tiou.
Terms—In Advance.
One year - Si. 00
Six months - 50
Three months 25
li3F*Couutry produce received in pay¬
ment for subscription at the market price.
Advertising rates reasonable and made
kowu on application to the editor.
All communications intended for the
paper should be addressed to The News,
Morganton, Ga.
No attention whatever will he paid to
communications of any kind when not
accompanied by a responsible name.
A Chattanooga editor recently
said: “Anybody who would leave
East Tennessee to go anywhere but
to heaven ought to be sent to the in¬
sane asylum first.”
An exchange tells how a girl’s taste
differs according to her age: “At
sixteen she wants a dude with tooth
pick shoes and a microscopic mus¬
tache; at twenty a chief justice with
piles of tin; at twenty-five she will
he satisfied with a member of con¬
gress; at thirty, a country doctor or
a preacher will do; at thirty-five,
anything that wears pants.
GEOGIA NORMAL AND IN
DUSTRIAL COLLEGE, a State In
stitution for the education and spec¬
ial traning of Georgia girls, to be
opened at Milledgeville, Ga., on Sep- j
tern her 30, 1801. |
The county of Fannin is entitled I
to three scholarships in this school. |
All girls wishing to become appli¬
cants for these places are requested
to appear at my house ou Saturday |
the 5th of September, 1891 to stand I
the entrance examination. The ex¬
amination will include the Element-
ary English Branches; viz.: Arithme¬
tic, Geography and English Gram¬
mar. No girl under fifteen years of
age will be eligible to a scholarship.
For full information concerning
the , school , i write tor a tv Prospectus to
President J. Harris Chappell, Mil-
ledgeville, Ga.
Adam Davenport,
County School, Commissioner,
Fannin County.
KING JAY GOULD.
John A. Cockerill, the newspaper
correspondent, writes from New
York under date of June 27, telling
of a visit he recently paid M r. J
Gould. In the letter Cockerill says:
‘'Mr. Blaine said to me some months
ago during the strain caused by the
failure of the Baring Bros., that there
was one man in the United States
who had m his power absolutely to
bankrupt and paralyze the entire re¬
public—that man being J. Gould.”
Here is food for reflection. Bad
legislation has created a monetary
congestion. The wealth of the coun¬
try has accumulated in a few hands,
making millionaires at one end of the
line and tramps at the other. One
man has the country completely in
his grip. Harrison is the nominal,
Gould (he real president of the Uni¬
ted States. We have a republic in
name, but a plutocracy in fact.—
Ex.
lie that whoopeth up his own bus¬
iness in the newspapers shall reap a
bountiful harvest in golden sheckles.
He that readeth the advertisements
and profits thereby shall have abun¬
dance of the world’s goods for a lit¬
tle money. He that ehooseth not to
subscribe for his home paper shall
wonder at the intelligence of his
neighbor. He who advertiseth liber¬
al y gets the cream of the trade.
Old fogies get the skim milk and fall
into the soup.—Ex.
The .Monotonies of Life.
Not long ago a prominent mer¬
chant, who committed suicide, left a
note stating that his reason for the
act was that he was tired of doing
the same thing over and over every
day. The monotony of life had be¬
come unendurable to him. It hard,
ly seems a sufficient reason for so
desperate a resort as suicide, yet, if
the truth was known, it is probably
the one reason for many of the sui¬
cides that occur among particular
sorts of people in middle life, and
is the period of life when suicides
are most frequent. After men have
passed the hopefullness ef youth,
and before they have reached the
resignation of age, it is then that ex¬
istence becomes a very dnll thing;
to dress and undress at the same
hour three hundred and sixty-five
times a year. To sit regularly, at
regular hours, at tee same table and
consume the same viands; to go to
the same place of business and han¬
dle the same books, make the same
bargains, perform the same duties,
do always the same thing with little
variation, with little prospect of va¬
riation, till death supervenes and
brings it all to an end, offers not a
bright outlook. But it is reality of
life—to most lives—and the higher
the race rises in civilization, the fur¬
ther the division of labor goes, the
greater becomes the monotony.
Each worker learns to do some one
thing and continues to do it, and
does it over and over year after
year.
True life is prosy and monotonous
enough, but not too much for most
people. The urgent demands of
practical existence to do not leave
much time for romance, but never¬
theless, there are still nooks and cor¬
ners into which the light of fairy
land shines, while few hearts are de-
the light of love, the consola-
of friendship and the stimulat-
influences of duty and devotion
principle. But all can neither be
nor saviors any more than
all ban be monsters of depravity.
of us have to be common-place
Let us be thankful rather
dissatisfied.
MEMORIAL CARDS jESSr.*!
___ led. Suitable
prices on quantities. Please mention this paper. Address
MEMORIAL PUBLISHING CO., Real Estate Board Wd g .,n.Icago.
SOT^^S^HE?. chiding by Harrigan and Hart. Tony Pastor, J.K.Emmet,
songs sung Billy Rice and others. Price 5 copies for $1
NY. J. Scanlan, 25c. or
postpaid. Address JAMESII. PARKER, 51) Dcurborn St., Chicago,
An Attractive ALMANAC
Combined POCKET
and MEMORANDUM BOOK
advertising BROWN’S IRON BITTERS
tiie best Tonic, given away at Drug and
iL general stores. Apply at once.
A
^Ai'Cv
♦.
Commercial College ro Sffi,8S!SSSK
Cheapest & Best Business College in the World.
HlfhMt Honor and Gold Medal over Book-keeping all other Colleges, at
W orld’ll Exposition, for System of and
General Bu«1rcm Education. 10,000 Graduate* In
IvasIncM. 1O00 Student* annually. 18 Teachers employ¬
ed. Coat of Fall Bualneaa Coarse, including Tuition. Sta¬
tionery, ing and and Telegraphy Board, about speeialtiea. $00. Short-Hand. No Vacation. Type.Writ¬ Enter
now.
Graduates successful. This eltv Jft- is beautiful and healthful.
For circulars address Wilbur Smith, Lexington, Ky.
Mention this paper .
|yvjUftWs> . J^eW fAVPRTy^
uD
FINEST'^ THE The
WOODWORK AfUC-HMEMfS
NEW HOME 5 C WIN G MACHINE ft ORANGE - MASS
SSffSL
ST. LOUIS.MO. Q|QQEQ3E<3 OALLAS.TEX.
Many Pei „ons Household
Are broken down from overwork or
eares Brown’s Iron Bitters
rebuilds t he system, aids digestion, removes licnuin. ex-
cess of bile, a ind cures malaria. Get the
0mmm
u.u.iuua <:• ., Mox (480 l»ortla«d,MftU«
CONSUMPTION CURED.
An old physician, retired from
practice, having had placed in his
hands by an East India missionary
the formula of a simple vegetable
remedy for the speedy and perma¬
nent cure of Consumption, Bron¬
chitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all
throat and Lung Affections, also a
postive and radical cure for Nervous
Debility and all Nervons Complaints,
after having tested its wonderful
curative powers in thousands of
cases, has felt it his duty to make it
known to his suffering fellows.
Actuated by this motive and a desire
to relieve human suffering, I will
send free of charge, to all who may
desire it, this recipe, in German
French or English, with full direc¬
tions for preparing and using. Sent
by mail by addressing with stamp,
naming this paper. W. A. Noyes,
820 Powers’ Block, Rochester, N. Y.
NOTICE.
All persons are warned not to
trespass on my lands in any way and
espeeialy will I prosecute all persons
who paster my lands and pass
through and leave the fences down
under penalty of the law.
L. B. Crawford.
mm\
*- J _: ...4 1 jISgYED
is . .a I '. Li O
AS »
CIGARETTES
C : - ?■
r Jh\ f irrefc. G
( 'fk\ s 4 §§
X'atur's own Remedy for Acute or
Chronic Catarrh.
Send for full particulars.
ADDRESS
LIPPMAN BROS.
AGENTS
SAVANNAH, GA.
5?A’T;’FACTUKEI) BY
PI2J3 NEEDLE CIGAR CO*
FREEHOLD, N. J
Soffit
u
A pamphlet of information and ab¬
stract of the Jaws, showing Caveats, How Trader! toy
\ S^vMarks, Obtain Patents, Copyrights, free ./&|
sent
Address MUNN & co.
^s.361 Broadway,
New York. ^
THE BELL ODOMETER!
Automatic, Neat, Reliable and Indispen¬
sable to all who drive.
The Odome¬
ter register is designed
t to rec¬
ords, and an¬
nounce distan¬
ces travelled by
buggies wheeled and
other
vehicles, At-
tached to the
axle, it is op¬
erated by a
steel pin driven
into ----- the hub,
full as shown instructions, in the engraving. cards, Price, complete, $5.00, with
record etc,, express
prepaid. Third Address CHICAGO, Monarch Mfg. ILL. Co.. 3, 138
Avenue,
LUMBER! LUMBER!!
We have our sawmill located near
Sweet Gum now and are prepared to
furnish all kinds of lumber for build¬
ing purposes on short notice. Send
for our prices on material before
placing your order.
Respectfully,
Patterson & Ownbey,
Sweet Gum, Ga.
$ 3000 iH$a f briefly either
*• «. AA.I.KN. box «... Augusta, Mala.,’
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