The Jackson economist. (Winder, Ga.) 18??-19??, July 27, 1899, Image 1

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THE JACKSON ECONOMIST. VOL. VII. golden wedding. nr. and Hrs. W. T. Lowe, of Winterville will Celebrate it. Invitations are out to the go.d*n wed |inj? of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Lowe who Ate at Winterville. The wedding will occur on August 14 at the res deuce of the happy couple. t { is said that only one couple in a thousand lives to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage, and the Lowes deserve congratulations for their long lives of wedded felicity. Mr. Lowe is a brother to Alderman Lowe of this city. The family is prom inent and is well known here.—Athens Banner. The Editor of The Economist ac knowledges rec a ipt of invitation to at tend the golden wedding of this good old couple, our uncle and aunt, aud hopes to be present. r BISMARCK’S IRON NERVE Was the result of his splendid health Indomitable will and tremendous energy are not found where Stomach, Liver, Kideys and Bowels are out of order. If yon want th e qualities and the success they bring, use Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They develop eveiy power of brain and body. Only 26c at Winder Drag. Cos. George Thurmond Dead. The community was saddened Wed nesday by learning of the death of Mr. George Thurmond, who resides near High Shoal®. The deceased was sixty-four years of age and had been sick for about two months. Dr. Smith w: t the phyeician who attended him in his last illness and all that lo\!ng hands could do was done to withstay the ravages of disease, but the hand of death was laid heavily on its victin. Mr. Thurmond was a good citizen and he will be greatly missed - He was a consistent member of Union church. The deceased leaves a wife aud two grown daughters to mourn his loss, and they have the sympathy of the entire community in the sad calamity that has befallen them. —Oconee Enterprise. CUBAN RELIEF cures 1 Suit I VI S C°hc. Neuraigiaund Toothache ■ nwivi v in five minutes. Sour Stomach and Summer Complaints. Prices 25 Cents G. W. DelaPerrlere, Winder, Ga. Deering Ideal Mowers With Rubber and Ball Bearing. Deering Roller Bearingr -2&sftcut, A round of startling victories has marked the path of the Deering Ideal Mower. No g. „s id too heavy or two light; no land is too rough and no surface is too severe for this plucky little hero. Instead of fric* tion bearing it has trolleys and balls; the crank shafts parralel with the ground so that the Self Adjusting Pitman moves steadily back and forth in workman like fashion. The serrated lodger plates hold the grass like the roller of a feed cutter, and nothing can escape or draw in under the sickle. The adjustable drag bar pays the interest on. the investment. The driver of the Ideal Mower can cut as slow as he likes, and is never necessary to back when starting the machine. The use of the roller and ball bearings has eliminated friction, and instead of grinding the beariugs, all the power is used in cutting the grass. Don’t waste your time and money by using old out of date machines, but buy the Deering Roller Bearing Ideal Mower, Send for a catalogue. For sale by Benton-Adair K'dw. Cos. Harmony Grove, = Georgia. WINDER, JACKSON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1899. A Governor’s Failure. W. E Cr" tis tells the follow ing story j in the Chicago “Record” of Gov. Theo. Rosevelt, of New York, which may encourage many a boy who has had a similar experience. A first failure should encourage to greater effort. The story is as follows: “One dav, whi'e he was a si hoolboy, it came his turn to 'speak a piece.’ He was one of the declrimers in the school. His elocution was greatly ad mired by the scholars, and it was equal ly a source of satisfaction to his teacher. On this particu'ar Friday afternoon a number of the town people had come in to witness the exercises and every body was expeoted to do his best. “Young Roosevelt had selected for his declamation and carefully commit ted to memory the well-known poem, 'Marco Bozziris.’ went to the platform made, a stately bow, and com. menced: “ ‘At midnight in his guarded tent The Turk wasdroamiug of the horr When Greece her knee— and there he stuck. He had forgotten the lines. But he started again at the beginning: “ *At midnight in his guarded tent, The Turk was dresining of the hour When Greece her knee— ’ but he could get no further. He coughed, wip r d his lips with his hand kerchief, and blushed painfully. “ 'Whe i Greece her knee— ’ he repeated, and again in deep 'r, “ ‘When G-reece her kuee— ’ but it was hopeless, and he looked over toward his teacher for s/mpathy. Greece her knee pg~in, Theodore,’ suggestel the teachtc, with a wink, ‘and majbe she’ll go.’ “At that the whole school b’rat into laughter, and the future Governor of New York fled mortified from the stage." STORY OF A SLAVE. To be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of disease is the worst form of slavery. George D. Williams, of Mauche-ter, Alich. tells how such a slave was made tree. He says: “My wife L.a b.eu 90 helpless for £ve yer a that she could not turn over in bed alone. A'ter using two bottles of Ele tric Bitter.®, she is wonderfully im proved and able to do her own work.” This supreme remedy for female dis eases quickly cures m-rvousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, headache, back ache, fainting and d’zzy spel s. This miracle working medicine is a godsend to weak, sickly, run down people. Ev ery bottle guaranteed. Only 50 cents Sold by Winder Drug Cos., He Was His Own Grand father. William Harmon, a resident of Titus ville, Pa., committed suicide a few days ago under the melancholy conviction that he was his own g.-andfather. Here is the singular letter that he left: “I married a widow who had a grown up daughter. My father visited our house very often, fell iu love with my step laughter aud married her. So my father became my son in law and my step daughter my mother, because she way my father’s wife. Some time af terward my wife had a son. He was my father’s brother in law, and my uuc’e, for he was the brother of my step mother. My father’s wife—that is my step daughter—also had a son. He was of coarse, my brother, and iu the mean time my grandchild, for he was the son of my daughter. My wife was my grandmother, because she wr my mother’s mother. 1 was my wife’s hrs baud and gra idchild at the same time. And as the husband of a persou’s grand mother is his grandfather, I was my own grandfather.”—Exchange. FREE OF CHARGE Any adult suffering from a cold set tled on the breast, bronchitis, throat, or lung troubles of any nature, who will call at Winder Drug Cos, Winder, Ga., will be presented with a sample bottle of Boschee’s German Syrup, free of charge. Only one bottle given to one person, and none to children without order from par ents. No throat or lung remedy ever had such a sale as Boschee’s German Syrup in all parts of the civilized world. Twenty years ago millions of bottles were given away, aud your druggists will tell you its cuccess was marvelous. It is really the only Throat aud Lung Remedy gen erally endorsed by physicians. One 75 cent bottle will care or prove its value. Sold by dealers iu all civiliz-d coun tries. Mrs. Mary Tom Ma; tin and son, Guy are in Watkinsville visiting her sisters, the Misses Durham. Mrs. Mrrtiu has been in New York for the past four months and when she leaves here she will go into business in Atlanta.—Oco nee Enterprise. AN EPIDENIC OF DIARRHOEA. Mr. A. Sanders, writing from Cocoa nut Grove, Fla., says there has been quite an epidemic of diarrhoea there. He had a severe attack and was cured by four doses of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera aud Diarrhoea Remdy. He says he also recommended it to others and they say it is the best medicine they ever use! For sale by Winder Drug Cos. FOR SALE—or will trade a $25.00 schol' -ship in Atlanta Business College, and about 200 Copies of a splend and 318 page book, for any kind of building ma terial. This is a snap for some hustler. Copy of book sent prepaid for 25 C9ii s in stamp?. Address, M. F. Harmon, Atlanta, Ga. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve Cures Piles. Scalds, Burns. Hoschton High School* Will be re-opened m the fall un der the management of Messrs. John W. Glenn and 8, P. Orr who were formerly coworkers at Jeffer son Georgia. Students can here be prepared for the Junior class in any course of our best colleges, or they may take full courses in Agriculture, Busiuess or Science, Board will be furnished in good families at the very moderate rates of from $6.00 to $9.00 per month. Time of opening will be duly announced. s. P. ORR, JOHN W. GLENN. | One Minute Cough Cure, cures. That is what it was made for Young Hen Should Re member. That it takes more than muscle to make a man. That bigness is rot greatness. That it requires plnok to be patient. That selfiishness is the most unmanly thing in the world. That consideration for mother aud sister does more to ma'k a gentleman than the kind of necktie he wears. That piety is not piggishness. That the only whole man is a holy man. That to follow the crowd is a conferr ion of weakness. That the street corners are a poor college. That one real friend ie worth a score of mere acquaintances. That to be afraid to be one’s noblest solf is greatest cowardice. That it is never too soon to begin to make a man of one’s self. That what is pat into the brain to day will be taken out of it ten years hence. That the only manliness worth possess ing is showuinthe life of the son of man. —Selected. He “Wilted.” An exchange prints the following marriage ce emony, which waß said by a Tennessee Squ?-e a short time ago: “Wilt thou take her for thy pard; for better or for worse; to hold, to fondly guard till hauled off in a hearse? Wilt thou let her have her way, consr't her many wishes; make the fire every day aud help her wash the dishes? Wilt thou comfort aud support her father and mother, Ac it Jemima and Uncle John, three sisters and a brother?” Aud his face grew pale and blank; it was too late to jilt; as through the flior he sank he said; “1 wilt”—Nashvil’e American. In a negro school the other day the teacher asked the class what bulldozing meant. The faces before him became absolutely blank; no one dared guess the meaning of such a strange word. The teacher had hardly expected the correct definition, nevertheless felt that with a little coaching soma little fellow might strike it right. “You see it every day,” said he, “every daj of your life.” An expression of intelligence passed over the face of a jet black little boy. “Why, Sam Davis knows,” remarked the instructor. “Tell me, Sam, what does bulldozing meam?” “It means— it meaus,” he hesitated and looked out the window as if to refresh his memory —“dat dere word means a gen’leman cow sleepin’ aside a haystack, sah. Dat’s whot it means?”—Ex. IS IT RIGHT FOR AN EDITOR TO RECOMMEND PATENT MEDICINEB? From Sylvan Valley News, Brevr.-d, N. C. It may be a question whether th- ed! tor of a newspaper has the right iO pub licly recommend any of the vario - " pro prietary medicines which fl "and the mar ket, yet as a preventive of suffering we feel it a duty to say a good word for Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy. We have known and used this medicine in oar Family for twenty years and have always found it reliable. In many cases a dose of this remedy would save hours of suffering while a physician is awaited. We do not believe in depending implicitly on any medicine for a cure, but we do be lieve that if a bottle of chamberlain’s Diarrhoea Remedy were kept on hand and administered at the inception of an attack much suffering might be avoided aud in very many cases the presence of a physician would not bo required. At least this has been our experience dur iug the past twenty years. Sold by Win der Drug Cos. 1 1 117 1 lAn intelligent kilts Wanted Kr.ssv: ( J every commu nity to the new Southern lit erary weekly, the Saturday Review No capital required and a steady income is assured any active worker. Free sample copies aud terms on application Address, Publishers Saturday Review, Atlanta, Ga. DR. BANKS AGAIN. Read the Endorsement of an Excellent Man and Minister. W indtr, Ga. July 20, ’9L This certifies that my wife has Lee* afflicted for a period of eighteen years, at times in bed for three or fonr mouths. I decided to employ D.\ Edward Banta of Bowman, Ga., to treat her aud de sire to say that her relief has beeai wonderful During her afflictions sue had been treated by more than one dozen physician*, with, ouly teuaporrry relief. My w .‘e boldly asserts nowthai she feels better than since her marriage a period of eighteen yea 's. Dr Banks hat t-lso treated me. aud I am frauk to say that I have been wonderfully relieved.. I cheerfully recommend Dr. Banks tt r.ll afflicted people. Give him a trial and see for yourself. Very truly J. C. Patrick, Minister. Read what Others Say, Winder, Ga., July 15th. 18911. This certifies that after being afflicted for a period of more than three yeart and having been treated by five physi cians and besides two specialists of At lanta. I decided to take treatment front DR. EDWARD BANKS, of Bowman, C j. I desire to say that I began feeling bet ter immediately after I began his treat ment. I have now been taking treat ment for almost twenty six days, and have greatly improved under the treat ment, and believe that I will be entiie„ ly restored to health through the in strumentality of DR. BANKS. Afflicted people, I cheerfully recommend DRj BANK3. Give him a trial and be re stored to health. Very Truly. W. J. Rjss. Endorsement of Mr. R. E. Shepard, Son of Mr. Robt. A. Shepard. fndia, Walton County Ga., July 14, ’9S This certifies that I have been in fee ble health more or less for a period of six years. I have been treated by sev eral physicians and only obtained teiar porury relief. I decided to take treat* meat from DR. EDWARD BANKS, of Bowman. Georgia. After taking treatment from DR. BANKS for the short period of three weeks, I am re joiced to say that I am in better health already and feel better than I have is six years. My troubles wer a of a chroa ic charactir and am happy to say that I have been MIRACULOUSLY relieved through the instrumentality of Dr. Banks. Afflicted, I earnestly ask you to give Dr. Banks a trial. Very truly your?, R. E. Shepakd. Gainesville, Jefferson $ Southern Gailroai Eas'etn Standard Time. Taking effect 6:50 A. M„ July 9, 1899. SOu-H BOUND. No. 83. No. 81. Lv. Gainesville 710a. m. 10 55 a. m. Lv. Belmont 740a. m. 11 25 a. m. “ Hoschton 810a. m. 165 p. m. “ Winaer 845 a. in. 800 p. ul Monroe 935a. m. 350 p. m. Ar Social Circle 10 15 a. m. 4 30 p. in. NORTH BOUND. No. 83. No. 8U Lv. Sociu Circle J 2 00 a. 5 50 p. n>. “ Monroe 12 40 a. in. 6”5p. m. *• Winder 250 p. m. 715 p. . “ Hoschton 322 p. m. 748 p. nt. " Belmont 4Oi p. in. 815 p. m. Ar. Gainesville 435 p. m. 845 p. m. Jefferson Branch. NORTH BOUND. No. 87. No. 89. Lv. Jefferson 650 a m. 12 35 a. m. Lv. Pendergrass 715a. m. 100 p. m. Ar. Be’raont 7 40 a. id. 1 25 p. m fcOUi'H BOUND. No. 88. No. 90. Lv. Belmont 815 p. nr. 11 25 a m Lv. Pendergrass 833 p. w. 11 43 a. m. Ar. Jeffersoa 900 p. in. 12 10 a. nu SL C. DUNLAP. Receiver. NO. 29.