The Jackson economist. (Winder, Ga.) 18??-19??, July 26, 1900, Image 1

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THE JACKSON ECONOHIST. VOL. VIII. ©Running EMPI RE “ ~ ™ It has taper axles like a wagon, making it the lightest draft Drill made, and reducing the draft fully twenty-five per cent, over Drills that have straight axles. Its wheels will never wear in and rub the box with our taper axle, like Drills will when their It has galvanized conductors which telescope on uneven ground, thereby insuring an even distribution of the seed, aud will never clog up like a rubber tube will, and will not rust. It is the only Drill in the world that will sow the same amount of wheat or oats per acre with the same gear in equally the same time without making any change. It is accurate and reliable, because the quantity sown is regulated by gear, there being no From one-half bushel to four bushels, either of wheat, rye, oats or barley, can be sown per From ninety-two pounds to three hundred and seventy pounds of fertilizer can be sown to SOLD THE WORLD OVER the acre. It pays to have an Empire Drill. We would be pleased to have you call and examine our Drills. Sold on liberal terms. DABNEY HARDWARE CO., Winder, Georgia. JEFFERSON. Mies Maggie Center, of Athene, is the guest of Misses Blair on Sycamore St. Mrs. Elizabeth Hinton, of Lumber ton, Miss., is spending awhile with her sister, Mrs. L. Y. Bradbury. Mrs. E. Askew and daughter, Maud, returned home Tuesday from a short visit to the country. Miss Josie Bennett is visiting in ou> town the guest of her brother, Mr. J. C. Bennett. Miss Josie has a host of friends here that are always glad to welcome her. Mrs. Milton Thompson isvisiting her father in Atlanta this week Miss Lula and Mr. Bert Moßee, of Brockton, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. A E. Pittman. Miss Hattie Allen has returned home from an extended visit to relatives in Washington and Athens. Miss Inez Boggs visited friends in town last we^. Miss Florence White left for her home in Maneefiield last Monday, to the re gret of her many friends. Miss Maggie Blair has returned home from an extended visit to relatives in Athens. Miss Crawford Daniel is teaching school at Jarrett’s Academy during Miss Minnie May Randolph’s absence. Mrs. H. A Welb, of Gainesville, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. L G. Allen. Mr. and Mrs. A.E. PittmaH spent last Sunday in Maysville the guest of Mrs. Boyd. Miss Kate Randolph, of Marcus spent Sunday with home folks. Mrs. Galloway and children and Mrs. Seymour visited Mrs. T. W. Jar rett in the country last week. Mr. and Mrs A. M. Flanagan, of Marcns, spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Randolph. Avery good crowd left Monday for Charleston and the Isle of Palms. Protracted services are now in session at the Baptist church conducted by Rev. Eden and some able sermons are being delivered. Mr. W. L. La frier, of Pensacola, Fla., anew jeweler has opened up a shop in the new drug store. Avery enjoyable evening was given the young people on last Friday even ing by Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Pendergrass in honor of their guest Miss Blanch Wheeler of Warrenton. Mefßre W. W. Dickson and J. M. Sto ry positively did go to Brockton last Sunday. The hook-bill club in front of Mr. S. A Johnson store is quite a popular re sort these hot days. Any question will he answered by the club. Mr. Andrew Garner, of near Buford, is visiting Judge L. Y. Bradbury. PREVENTED A TRAGEDY. Timely information given Mrs George hong, or New Straitsville, Ohio, pre vented a dreadful tragedy and saved two lives. A frightful eough had long kspt her awake every night. She had tried many remedies and doctors but steadily grew worse until urged to try Dr. King’s New Discovery. One bottle wholly cared her, and she writes this Marvelous medicine also cnred Mrs. h>°ng of a severe attack of Pneumonia, huch cures are positive proof of the niatchless merit of this grand remedy ‘Or curing all throat, chest and lung troubles. Only 60c and SI.OO. Every hottie guaranteed. Trial bottles free at Winder Drug Cos., _ WINDER, JACKSON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 26,1900. STATHAM. Mr. Jim Crane, of Athens, spent last Monday night in our city. Some of our young folxs attended the “Rice Musicals” at Bogart last Satur day night. All reporta nice treat Our railroad operator desired a few days ago to learn something of a long lost friend, so he telegraphed to the old address, “are you dead.” Shortly af terwards he received this reply, “am still kicking, fat and saucy too” so he is satisfied now. Miss Kemp, of Cuming, has been vis iting her brother, Mr. J. W. Kemp of our town this week. Ask Willie Lanier how he felt last Sunday afternoon when the “old man” overtook him while out driving with his best girl. Seems the old man was afraid there was a runaway marriage on foot, but Willie explained all to his entire satisfaction. Willie you should tell us about it too. Isaac Flanigan failed to show up on Monday as usual, appeared on Tuesday following, 24 hours late. Batter start early next time. Dr. Rylee and Henry Patman, of Bo gart, visited Statham this week Mr. Jim Haynie, of this county, was in our town last Sunday sporting one of our loveliest maidens. Everybody come to Sunday school next Sunday. Mr. Bob Carruth visited his best girl last Sunday night. Dr. O. W. N. Lanier made a business trip to Atlanta this weex. Statham will need a school teacher next term. Place is vacant so far. We have had regular cotton weather lately, hot days and nights, but now we need rain. [Our depot agent boards at one place and yon just can’t keep him away from another. Why is this “Sou”? you are loving that pretty girl 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 Manchester, Mich, tells how suck a slave was made free. He says: “My wife has been so helpless for five years that she could not tnrn over in bed alone. After nsing two bottles of Elec trio Bitters, she is wonderfully im proved and able to do her own work. ” This supreme remedy for female die eases quickly cures nervousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, headache, back ache, fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godsend to weak, siekly, ran down people. Ev ery bottle guaranteed. Only 60 centss Sold by Winder Drug Cos., Jurors October City Court 1 Henry C Doster 13 Wm J Kinney 2 John L Catlett 14 Alex S Hamilton 8 Jonh E J Lord 15 John G Durham 4 Wm C Smith 16 Jno W Alexander 5 June H Jackson 17 Zaceriah E Ivey 6 Judson Jackson 18 Jesse M Sims 7 James H Wright 10 Frank Roberts 8 Doctor S Nicholdson 20 Jno A Strange 9 Steven G Kinney 21 Alex A Turk 10 Samuel L Marler 22 Henry Edgar 11 Henry C Quattlebaum 23 Thos A Henry 12 Chas T Barber 24 Chas B Moore. CARL. The farmers are ueeding rain in this section. Mr. George Adams and wife of, Hoschton, were in Carl Sunday visiting their son, Mr. S. L. Adams. The little daughter of Mr and Mrs. J. R. Mahaffey, past away yesterday after an illness of two weeks. Col. J. A. Perry and wife, of Law renceville, have been visiting in our town for a few days. Miss Lillie Joe Smith, of Atlanta, is in Carl this week. Messrs. W. T. Smith, of Buford and L. F. McDonald, of Lawrenceville, spoke to the people of Bensmith’s dis trict at Carl last Saturday. They are both candidates for the senate, bat oae of them is sure to get beat The old soldiers met at Carl Saturday and made arrangements to attend the Carnival at Lawrenceville on July 24, 25 and V 6. The Populists of Bensmith’s district are requested to meet at Carl on next Saturday the 28eh at 3 o’clock p. m. Come and let us get organized and stick together. On next Friday 27th there will be a free barbecue at CarL Come everybody and bring a few cakes and pies with yon to eat with the beef and mutton. We congratulate Jackson county for putting ont such a grand and noble set of candi'dates. We want Gwinnett to go to work and do the same, and we ask every Pcpulist to stay out of the demo cratic primary and not get tied hand and foot. DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP? A cheap remedy for coughs aHd colds is all right, but you want something that will relieve and cure the more se vere and dangerous results of throat and lung troubles. What shall yon do? Go to a warmer and more regular climate? Yes, if possiple; if not posible for you, then in either case take the ONLY rem edy that has been introduced in all civ ilized countries with sncoess for severe throat and lungs troubles, Boschee’s German Syrup.” It not only heals and stimulates tne tissues to destroy the germ disease, but allays inflammation, causes easy expectoration, gives a good night’s rest, and cures the patient. Try one bottle. Recommended many years by all druggists in the world. Sample bottle at Winder Drug Cos. Winder, Ga. Fine Farm For Sale. A Nioe Farm for sale 4 miles below Winder in Chandler’s distriot, known as the G. W. Hammond’s plaoe. Well improved, in good state of cultivation and good orchard. Reasonable terms G E. Nickelson, Winder, Ga. BISMARCK’S IRON NERVE Was the resalt of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are not found where Stomach, Liver, Kideys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, use Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They develop every power of brain and body. Only 25c at Winder Draft. Cos., Words of Wisdom. Albany, June 25.—Speaking tonight at the 88th convocation of the Univer sity of Ihe State of New York, Regent St. Clair McKelway, editor of the Brook lyn Eagle, said: “Sometimes the repnblio seems to be going on the road of suffrage to social ism an to the leveling reached through blood in France. At other times it seems to te going to the control of the masses by classes. “If our republic is to survive we must return to its intendment. To that teach ers can contribute much by teaching and more by example. They should show that a country can be honorably lost or saved by what calls on manhood, but that a bad cause lifted upon or a good one beaten down by money shames the state’s annals, saps youth’s honor and weakens respeot of age. “Let us educate the ignorant poor and humanize the ignorant rich. A nation which abolished slavery oan abolish the sale of law. In America ail reforms are possible, all wrongs reparable, and all difficulties surmountable.” Good men all over the land are look ing into the fucure with horror. They, see a reign of terror looming up on the one hand, or a condition of national rot tenness and debasement on the other, worse than the great French revolution of Danton and Robespierre. The one hope of our country is the People’s paty. ALL MEN SHOULD COME FORWARD AND HELP IT.— Representative. L D. WOULD NOT SUFFER SO AGAIN FOR FIFTY TIMES ITS PRICE. I awoke last night with severe pains in my stomach. I never felt so badly in all my life. When I came down to work this morning I felt so weak I could harkly work. 1 went to Miller & McCurdy’s drug store and they recom mended Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It worked like magic and one dose fixed me alright. It certainly is the finest thing I ever used for stomach trouble. I shall not be without it in my home hereafter, for I should not care to endure the sufferings of last night again for fifty times its price.— G. H. Wilson, Liveryman, Bar gettstown, Washington Cos., Pa. This This remedy is for sale by Winder Drug Cos. Capital i* inert, a material. A saw log, a stone, a brick, a machine is capi tal. They have no rights. Think of the rights of a brick! As members of society, men have rights, one equal to another. If men have equal rights, then none of them may haTe or do things thst will injure other men equally free. It is absurd to talk about the rights of capital. As men, capita lists have rights, but have none as cap italists. They only have rights as men. If men are eqnal one may not have power to oppress another, or monopolize his bread, his labor or his opportunities to apply his energy in the production of wealth. To talk of the rights of capi talists is to affirm the rights of kings, nobles and aristocracy as such. Iu America we have been taught better than to bow to nobility, and we onght to know better than to bow to capita lists, which is the same thing under an other name.—Appeal To Reason. The Century’s Reality. The one reality of the nineteenth cen tury is the scramble for wealth. Poli tic'l, literature, Mjieuoe, religion, art, are, apart from money-getting, mere lifeless wraiths. The mere economic machinery enslaves ns today in a man ner in which has never before done through history. The abso’ute despo tism of economic interests aud economic processes, reduces life itself to an im possibility for some, to an absurdity for all —E Belfort Bax. QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, August Flower still has the largest sale ot any medicine in the civ ilized world, Your mothers’ and grand mothers’ never thotwbt of using any thing else for Indigestion or Biliousness- Doctors were scarce, and they seldom heard of Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra tion or Heart failure, eto. They used August Flower to clean out the system aud stop fermentation of undigested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic no tion of the system, aud that is all they took when feeling dnll and bd with, headaches aud other aches. You only need a few doses of Green’s August Flower, in liguid form, to make yon satisfied there is nothing serious the* matter with you. Sample bottles at Winder Drug Cos. While Populists advocate the issu ance of money for the building of pub lic works and for loans to the people, they do not favor free coinage of paper, as some plutocrats say to ridicule the proposition of more money. Populists believe that money is dear ot cheap according to whether it is plenty or scarce. They believe it should be suf ficiently plentiful to enable the peeople to get out of debt and into independ ent circumstances. They have advo cated for years that the amount of money should not be less than fifty dollars per oapita To bring the mon ey volume up to S6O per capita there would have to be issued about two bill - ion dollars of greenbacks. To get the new issue of money in circulation Pop ulists propose various ways, such as the building of railways, the construc tion of good wagon roads, and loans to the people at two per cent. They always, recognized the fact that the volume of money oontrols its value, other things being equal. They fully appreciate the fact that, the purchasing power of the dollar depends on the number of dol lars m existence aud they know that if the number of dollars were increased to say a thousand dollars per capita, the purchasing power of the dollar would be next to nothing. This would be so whether the increase was froir printing money on paper or stamping money on silver and gold. Populists claim that there is not enough money now to do justice to the people. They assert that money should be cheaper and therefore plentier than it is now. Tt-ey have all along recognized the fact that the vol ume of money should be carefully limit ed.—Missouri World. IT SAVED HIS LEG. P. A. Dauforth, of LaGrange, Ga., suffered intensely for six months with a frightful running sora on his leg, but writes that Buoklen’s Arnica Salye wholly cured it in ten days For Ulcers, Wounds, Burns, Boils, Pain or Pilea it’s the best salve in the world. Cure guaranteed. Only 26. Bold by Winder Drug Cos. Letters of Acceptance. The National Chairman, Jo. A. Park er, LouisyiUe, Ky., by order of the Ex ecutive Committee has had printed a numder of 16-page pamphlets, contain ing the Letters of Aooeptance of the nominees, Barker and Donnelly, a bio graphical sketoh aud flue cut of Mr. Barker, the preamble of the Omaha platform and a oorrect copy of the Cin cinnati platform. This is a most ex cellent campaign document and should be widely circulated. These pamphleta will be sent by in any quantity for one cent a copy, or by express for SB.OO per thousand. Orders should be ad dressed to Jo." A. Parker, Chairman Populist Notional Committee, Louis ville, Ky. The One Day Cold Cure. Kermott's Chocolates Laxative Quinine for cold in the head and sore throat. Children taka them like candy. NO 28.