Newspaper Page Text
Panes County Journal.
VOL. 2.
ORGAN!
If you want the best
PIANO or ORGAN for the
Least Money and on the
rrost reasonable terms,
we’ve got ’em,
HAMILTI m
MONARCH ORGANS
on which we offer SPEC
CIALINDUCEM ENTS.
We will be pleaded to haye you exam
ine our goods, or write for Catalogue and
Prices-
CONAWAY'S MUSIC HOUSE.
ATHEN S, <i V
HAVE YOUR BUGGY
, \j\J MBgL REPAIRED
■' .•*'.? .sAY* #?** BY
R- J. DVAR <56 CO-,
Old Buggies and Wagon made good as new. We do .1 kind of
work in Wood and Iron at reasonable priees.
Zrj'h. Cu.-£x£r?dctcr/xcrit& aUaxts ifernrm
Ohm
Cm Pa/cm* rttx to Aar AMgjgl-ggDA
, &frrj'7!W(g- **”****;.
HOMER. GA„, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER, 15 1808.
A CRITICAL TIME.
During The Battle of Santiago.
SICK OB WELL, A RUSH
NIGHT AND DAY.
Tho Packers at tho Hattie of San
tiago de Cuba were all Heroes
Tlieir Herioc Efforts in
Getting Ammunition
and Rations to the
Front Saved the
Day.
P. E. Butler, of pack-ttain No. 3,
writing from Santiago, De Cuba, on
July 23d, says: “We all bail diarrhoea
le more or less violent form, anil when
we londed we had no time to see a
doctor, for it was a case of ruth and
rush nighi and day to keep the troops
supplied with ammunition and rations
but thanks to Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, we
were able to keep at work aud keep
our health; in foct, I sincesely beleive
that at one critical time this medicine
was the indirect ssviour of our army
for if the packers had been unable to
work there would have been no woy
of getting supplies to the front. There
were no roadi that a wagon train could
use. My comrada and myself had
the good iorcnne to lay in a supplv of
his mepicine for eur pack-train be
fere we left Tampa, and I know in
four cases it absolutely saadd liefe.”
The above letter was written to the
manufacturers of this mediciue, the
Chamberlain Medicine Cos., Des
Moines, lowa. For sale by R. T
Thompson, Homer, and Shore &
Lewis, Baldwin.
Why Grant Never Swore.
While sitting with h'm at the
camp fire late one night, after every
one else had gone to bed, I 'said to
him.
“General, it seems singular that
you have gone through all the tum
ble of army service and frontier life,
and have never been provoked into
swearing. I have never heard you
uttee an oath or use an imprecation.’
Well, somehow or other, I never
learned tc swear,” he replied “When
a boy I seemed to have ap aversion
to it, and when I became a man I
saw the folly of it. I have always no
ticed, too, that swearing helps to
rouse a man’s anger; and when a
man flies into a passion, his adver
sary who keep* cool always g e f s khe
better of him' In fact, I could never
see tho use ot swearing I think it is
the case with many people who swear
excessively, tliot it is a mere habit,
and that they do not mean to be pro
fane, but, to say the least, it is a
great waste of lime ” —Michigan
Advocate.
The speech of Father Abraham in
the last number of Poor Richard’s Al
manac published by Benjamin Frank
lin 'n 1757 contains the Wisdom of
many ages aud nations assembled and
formed into one counected'discourse.
When fist published it attracted word
wide attention and was copied in all
of tho newspapers in america and En
gland and translated into many for
eign languages. Would you not
like to read h? Get s copy free of
charge at R. T. Thompson’s Store.
An old bachelor bought a pair of
socks and in the toe of one of them
he found a note which read; “1 am
a young lady of twenty and would
like to correspond with a view to
matrimony” Onr friend wrote to
the address given and in a fe.w days
recived the reply: “I was married 1
three years ago last Christmas.” —
The merchant who sold the socks
did not advertise
I had chronic diarrhoea for twelve,
Three bottles of Chamberlain’s Colic-
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy cured
me. S L. Shaver. Fincastle, Va
Both Mu. Gibbs and Mr. Shaver
'are prominent farmers aDd reside
| near Fincastle, Vi. They procured
tile remedy from Mr. W. E. Casper,
a druegist of that place, who is well
acquainted with them and will vouch
for the truth of their statements. For
sale by R. T. Thompson, Horner, Ga.
and Shore & Lewis, Baldwin.
Everybody should patronize their
home and county paper.
the parting.
Selected.
Mabel, at Inst the tine has come,
When our lives must drift apart:
When by your fond an winning ways
You have broken another heart.
You’ll never know how I’ve loved you,
’Till we meet or.Jfyonder shore,
Where the cares of life and the break
ing ot hearts
Have ceased foievermore.*
Farewell Mabel, friends and homo
We may never meet again,)
For mid strangers I must r.am
Oh! this parting gives me pain.
Cut since fate has thus decreed it,
Go your way, in peace depart,
But remember you have broken
A warm and loving heart.
May you never have a sorrow
That will carve furrows on your
blow
As'does this cloud of darkness
That is hanging o’er me now.
But may your life bo happy,
And if you ever wed,
May God shower Bis choicest bless
ings
On your fair and loving bead.
If you ever think of me, love,
If you e’er remember this,
Do not think of this sad parting
But remember former bliss.
And may ne’er forgt,
Some hours we have spent
Which leave because they did not
last,
A lingering regret.
—Exchange
It is not a liniment, nor a salve.
Contains no grease, o” ammonia. A
pleasant stainless liquid. A rationaf
scientific chemical compound. Dr
Ticheuor’s Antiseptic stands pre em
inently superior to any remedy offer
ed to the public for healing Wounds
Burns and injuries. Used intetnally
it is a fine thing for colic and bowe
loubles.
Gladstone’s Will.
“On no account shall a laudtory in
scription be placed ever me.”
These words in the will of William
Ewart Gladstone are expressive of the
simple, unostentatious nature of the
roan. He had .’ a beastv dislike of ful
someness; he hated gush.
Mr. Gladstone cared very little of
praise whileliving, anpas he approach"
ed the end of his life laudation aud
eulogy, probably became very cheap in
his eyes. It is hard to imagine an
epitaph which would be worthy of in
scription on the tomb of such a man.
Ilis name, the date of bis birth and
death are all that aro necessary and
all that th,e best taste would dictate.
In a corner of Westminster abbey
the mortal remains of one whose
words havi charmed and aruused
more people, perhabs, than any man
who has lived in this century, and yet.
there are only two words on the slab
tliot covers his grave. They are
Charles Dickens.
Robert C. Winthrop, who for a long
time was chairman of the Washington
Monument commission, had a hard
fight to prevent tho engraving of ela
borate inscriptions on that nobel shaft’
He contended that it should be left
untuched by the hand of the eulogist
and not even the name of Washington
should be placed upon it. All the
world would know for all times to
come to whom the monument was
erf-cod and all the world would knew
would know what Washington did and
why the people of his country reared
in iiis honor the tallest monument on
earth. Fortunanely, Mr. Winthrop pre
vailed. It would be a pitty to have
the Washington monument desecra
ted by ban last, and nowhere is bad
tast mo-e frequently displayed than
in epitaphs and memorial inscriptions.
Mr. Gladstone proved his good
sense as well as his modesty when he
provided that no laudatory insefiption
should be placed over him.
Tetter, Salt-JRlieiun and Eczema.
The intense itehing and smarting
ncident to these diseases, is instantly
allayed by applying Chamberlain’s
Eye and Skin Ointment' Many very
bad cases have been permanently
cured by it- It Is equally efficient
for itching piles and a favorite reme
dy for sore nipples, chapped hands
hilblalns, frost bites and chronic
sore eyes. 35 cts, per box.
Don’t forget to give us a call when
vou conic to town.
Heat and Diet.
Northern soldiers at the ssuthern
camps complain of heat, although,
even in the dog days, the Jnights in
Florida are delightfully cool—much
pleasanter than in the Middle Ssntes
of this union l Europe sweeters
when the thermometer is not abo e
80 degrees, what we call warm weath
er. Now in this warm spell, as we
would call it, the death rate in Paris
is the heaviest since the evil daps of
the seige. So many soldiers have
been prostrated bv the heat that the
heads of the Grench army think of
postponing the remainder of the ma
noeuvres. The New York Press tel’s
us that on “tho east nde of London
there is among the masses, who eat
too freely of stale meat anc fish when
they can get it, the greatest suffering
Every big full blooded London po
liceman who succumbed to t L e heat
was wearing a Heavy undershirt, a
waistcoat, the heavy long coat of his
uniform, and an unventilatee helmet
weigeing nearly two pounds. A
French cavalryman’s braas helmet
glistens finely in the sunlight’ and the
caps of the French idfantryman are
certainly more natty than the plain
brown campaign bat of our own in
fantry; but both make sunstroke
easy. Heavy busbies and brass hel
mnls are survivals of the time when
officer and private must look stiff and
uncomfortable—seldiery, our fathers
called it— no matter if they dropped
dead in their tracks.”
We sent our soldiers to Cuba in
midsummer, clad as if they were cam
paigning in a winter zone, and their
rasioDS were not aday'ed wholly to
the tropics, No wonder they got
sick, wheu thus clad and fed, yielding
to the necessity also of drinking im
pure water and eatiug green or un
wholesome fruit. Yet the marines
stationed in Cuba, near Santiago,
have just returned 450 strong, in
excellent health, all of them because
they were commanded bv a mail of
sense and discipline. A book on
“Duelling” ends, we understand,
with this sentdnee: “The reader well
observe that, in llie numerous affairs
of honor I have recorded, no man
lost lus life who did not have a fool
for a second.’. We do not know how
this is, but it seems that the marines,
who retunned hale and hearty, while
so many thousands of saidiers com-
ing f-om the same locality were sick
almost unto death, had a wise com
mander and no fool - Is the moral
conclusive? —Ex.
SOUR STOMACH CURE
A long time I was a great sufferer
from Liver and Stomach troubles. I
had a dull pain in my left side under
my heart. At times my side became
Swollen and the pain acute. My
stomach was always sour and I wo lid
vomit every time I eaf. My bowels
were very irregular, causing me pain
and distress. I tried many things with
out and benefit. I read ot your med
icine and concluded to try it, and am
glad that I did. I felt better after the
first dose. I continued to take Ra
mon’s Liver Pills & Tome Pellets un
til I w r as entirely cured. — 11. W. Pen
land, Otto, Macon Co-, N. C.
CASTOR! A
For Infants and Children.
Tte Kin! Ym Mtie Always Bought
sSiTtmoof
J,W. HEAD
Has opened up a N< w Shop at Riley’
Mill and is well prepared to Repair
and Paint your Buggies, Wagons and
Bicycles. Horse shoeing a specialty
all work guaranteed.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain, free, whether au Invention la
probably patentable. Communications strictly
confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents
In America. We hn*e a Washington office.
Patents taken through Munn & Cos. reoetTV
special notice iu the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of
any scientific Journal, weekly, termss3.oo a year,
$1.50 six months. Speotmen copies and Hanq
pooa. on Patents sent free. Address
IWUNN A CO.,
801 Broudwar. Kvw York.
AVegetable Preparationfor As
- theToodandßegula
ting she Stemochs and Bowels of
■ iwo- 1
Promotes Digeaffcn, Cheerful
ness aaWlMtContalns neither
Opium,M!pMne nor Mineral.
Not Nab©tm.
KnveefOklVrSntVELPircnEa
Seed “
JlxM? m * J
j{ocft*£& Soils -*
Anise Settl * I
ikppemdlU - /
In Carbvne&Sola) * I
ftfom Jccd ~
ftonf. and Sugar .
hatiijy/vesi Flenvn /
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and LOSS *F SLEEP.
lac Simile Signature ot
EXACT COPT OF WRAPPEB.
Coming SoOn! I
Fall stn<l Wijter Stock oi
Of f Goods, iiiiry Etc
MR. MURPHEYIS NOW IN NEW YORK, WHERE
lIE HAS SPENT THE PAST TWO WEELS, SELECT
ING OUR STOCK FOR THE FALL AND WINTER
TRADE, CONSISTING OF DRY GOODS, MILLIN
ERY, NOTIONS, GENTS FURNISHING GOODS,
CLOTHING, SHOES HATS, ETC-, WHICH WILL
ARRIVE IN A FEW DAYS, AND WHEN OPENED
UP WILL EE ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE, MOS
ELABORATE AND BEST SELECTED LINE OF
GOODS EVER DISPLAYED IN THIS, SECTION,
Millinery.
This department will be in charge
of tho same experienced ladies who
were with us the past season. They
are now in New York, where they
have spent the past few weeks, stud
ying the styles and selecting the s.ock
for the coming season. The ladies j
Gainesville may expect something ex
traordinary in this department,
FULL LINE OF lIUTTERICK’S PATTE ■Ns ALWAYS IN STOCK;
.J. E. MURPHKY 00.,
Uean l{uil<liug- )
Corner Main and Washinton streets,
gAIWESVILLE, CA.
g" —■■■■■ . ■ ■ ■ w
NORTHEASTERN R* R. OF GEORGIA
BETWEEN ATHENS AND LULA
TIME TABLE No 2. To Take Effect OcU jlB. 1897.
SOUTHBOUND NORTHBOUND *
"l3 n 9 ” U It*
Daily Daily Daiiy SOUTHEASTER:?; RAILROAD STATIOSti. Dally Daily I>
Ext>u ■
A. M. F.M. A M Lv Ar A.M. r.M.A.M
580 815 11 05 W Lula ■ R 10W) 9D M
600 83 a 11 22 Gillsvilld < >O3 743 M
625 840 11 30 Jlaysvllle 10 18 7 M
725 9 o*2 11 52 ...4.0.t0,.. Harmony tiror® I*o3 713 0•#
jSO 917 12 07 Nicholson 948 658 fitf
305 925 12 15 ... Center -•• 40 650 4
li, K, REAVES, State.Agent R. W. SIZER, Auditor.
NO. 28.
SISTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
I Bears the i
Signature y/IJI
° f W
a ijv In
h§* Use
\f For Over
Thirty Years
CUSTOM
THE CENTAL)ft COMPANY. NtW YOUW Cft*.
Great
BARGAINS IN REMNANTS.
To make room for new goods Wq
have [thrown every :hoit lenght in
o> r store on center J ounters t close
out. This includes black and colored
Wool Dress Goodr, Sateens, Percales
Ginghams, Calico, etc. Some destra
ble Waist and Shirt ’ gtlis m t'i#
lot. Theyy roust be se'.d and will go
•at little nice hau b.ti; their actual
value.