Newspaper Page Text
THE JACKSON ECONOHIST.
VOL. VIII-
Register, Voters.
The registration books are open at my
office during August court.
I will be at the following places with
the registration books:
Pond Fork, August 20, 8 to 9 a. m.
Talmo, August 20, 10 to 11 a m.
Pendergrass, August 20, 1 to 3 p. m
Randolph's, August 21, 8 to 9 a. m.
Hoschton, Aug. 21, 11 a. m. to l p. m.
House’s C. G. August 21, 2 to 3 p. m.
Winder, August 22, 9to 11 a. m.
Chandler’s C. G. Aug. 22, 1 to 3 p. m.
Johnson’s Mills, Aug. 22, 4 to 5 p. m.
Santa Fe C. G. Aug. 23, 9 to 10 a. m,
Statham, Aug. 23, 11a. m. to 1 p. m
Call McElhannou’s Store, Aug. 23. 3
to 4 p. m.
Claiksboro, August 24, 9t012 a m
Center, August 27, 9 to 11 a m.
Nicholson, August 27, 12 to 2 p. m
Hawks Store. August 27, 3t04 p. m.
Harmony Grove, Ang 28, 8 to 12 a.m
Wilson’s Church, Ang. 28, 2 to 8 p.m.
Maysville, August 28, 4 to 5 p. m.
Diamond Hill. August 29, 7 to 8 a. m.
ConstantineJAugust 29, 10 to 11 a. m
Gilbert’s Store, Aug 29, 12 to 1 p. m
Miller’s C. G. August 29, 2 to 3 p. m
Dr. Morgan’s Office, Aug 29, 4to 5
p, m. A. H. Brock, T. C.
WOULD NOT BUFFER SO AGAIN
FOK FIFIY 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 week I
could harkly work. I 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 tronble. I shall not be
without it in my home hereafter, for 1
should not care to endure the sufferings
of last night again for fifty times its
price.— G. H. Wilson, Liveryman, Bnr
f-ttstown, Washington Cos., Pa. This
his remedy is for sale by Winder
Drug Cos.
Special Notice.
The many relatives of the deceased
who are buried at the Jackson burying
grounds on Jack F. Jackson’s plantation
in Oconee couuty are requested to meet
it the grounds with the different kinds
of tools necessary for cleaning off said
burial ground on Tuesday, August 24,
1900. Many friends.
NO RIGHT TO UGLINESS.
The woman who is lovely in face,
form and temper will always have
friends, but one who would be attrac
tive mnst keep her health. If she is
weak. Bickly and all run down, she will
be nervous and irritable. If she has
oonstipation or kidney tronble, her im
pure blood will cause pimples, blotches,
skin eruptions and a wretched complex
ion. Electric Bitters is the best medi
cine in the world to regulate stomach,
liver and kidneys and to purify the
blood. It gives strong nerves, bright
eyes, smooth, valvety skin, rich com
plexion. It will make a good locking,
charming woman of a run-down invalid
Only 60 cents at Winder Drug Cos.
Q. J. & S. Railroad.
The Sunday trains over the Gaines
ville, Jefferson and Southern railroad
add much to the popularity of this road
under the management of CoL Dunlap.
Ihe reduced rates enable all who wish
to get out on that day the opportunity.
Under the excellent services offered
now by this road any one on its line
can go to Athens or Atlanta via S: A L.
road and back home the same day. Col.
Dunlap has done wonders for the G. J. ■
& S. railroad and is very popular along
its line.
HIS LIFE WAS SAVED.
Mr. J. & Lilly, a prominent citizen
of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonder
ful deliverance from a frightful death.
In telling of it he says: “I was taken
with Typhoid Fever, that ran into
Pneumonia. My lungs became hard
ened. I was so weak I oouldn’t even
sit up in bed. Nothing helped me. I
expected to soon die of Consumption,
when I heard of Dr. King’s New Dis
covery. One bottle gave great relief.
I continued to use it, and now am well
and strong, I can’t say too much in its
praise.” This marvellous medicine is
the surest and quickest cuie in the
world for all Throat and Lung Trouble.
Regular size 60 oents and $1 00. Trial
bottles free at Winder Drug Cos.
Every bottle guaranteed.
WINDER, JACKSON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1900.
Gov. Traylor
At Lawrenceville.
On Tuesday, Ang. 14, the p ople’s
party will aosembie at Lawrenceville to
nominate candidates for Senate, Legis
lature and ocunty officer. Gov. Tray
lor, and perhaps others, will speak. Ev
ery lover of “decent politics” is invited
to be present and take part in the work.
A full ticket, composed of men of integ
rity, veracity, honesty and sobriety will
be put in the field, that good people wil
not be ashamed of.
QUESTION ANSWERED.
Yes, August Flower still has the
largest sale of any medicine in the civ
ilized world, Your mothers’ and grand
mothers’ never thought of using any
thing else for Indigestion or Biliousness.
Doctors were scarce, and they seldom
heard of Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra
tion or Heart failure, etc. They used
August Flower to dean out the system
and stop fermentation of undigested
food, regulate the action of the liver,
stimulate the nervous and organic ac
tion of the system, and that is all they
took when feeling dull and bd with
headaches and other aches. Yon only
need a few doses of Green’s August
Flower, in lignid form, to make you
satisfied there is nothing serious the
matter with you. Sample bottles at
Winder Drug Cos.
Gin, Feed and Condenser
For Sale.
I offer for sale a seventy-saw Pratt
GiD, Feeder and Condenser at a great
bargain. If yon mean business see or
write me at Winder, Gv before some
bther iellow gets it. Outfit operated
last season by G. D. Kenny and is in
good fix. M. D. Irwin,
Winder, Ga.
Fine Farm For Sale.
A Nice Farm for sale 4 miles below
Winder in Chandler’s district, known
as the G. W. Hammond’s place. Well
improved, in good state of cultivation
and good orchard. Reasonable terms
Winder, Ga.
Honey To Loan.
I am now in a position to lend money
>n better terms than ever heard of be
fore. I have an unlimited amount of
money to lend on Ten (10) years time
with the privilege of paying the whole
or an - part of principle at any time
Cali on me at No. 17 Clayton Street,
Athens, Ga and I will be glad to ac
commodate you. C. C. Chandler.
Nice Home For Sale at
Auburn.
A two story nine room modern house,
cellar, garret, closets etc. Fine orch
ards of select fruit 40 acres of select land
—25 acres in cultivation. Call or write
L. F. & T. P. Jackson, Auburn, Ga.
Notice Farm For Sale.
A nice little farm of 75 acres for sale
at a bargain. This farm is five miles
from Winder and three miles from,
Statham, near mill, school and church.
The place has good pastures and splen
did orchard and very conveniently lo
cated in every respect. For further
particulars write or see
T. H Wofford. Winder, Ga.
DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP?
A cheap remedy for coughs and 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 you do? Go
to a warmer and mor6 regular olimate?
Yes, if possiple; if not posible for you,
then in either oase take the ONLY rem
edy that has been introduced in all oiv
ilized countries with success 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,
oanses easy expectoration, gives a good
night’s rest, and cures the patient. Try
one bottle. Beoommended many year*
bv all druggists in the world. Sanaple
bottle at Winder Drug Cos. Winder,
Ga.
HAND OF TOCRICV
Seen in American School Histo
ries—Money Power is.
UNDERMINING FREE
Institutions Using the Schools and
Churches to Teach the Doctrine
that Wealth Rules by Divine
Right—Preaches the Old Text,
“Servants Obey Your Masters.”
“The Eclectic History of the United
States,” is the title of a text-book pub
lished by the American Book Company
in New York, Cincinnati and Chicago.
On page 219, chapter 69 we read as fol
lows:
“It cost four billion dollars to carry
on the war for the Union. This sum is
beyond our power to comprehend. To
meet the expense, the Government is
sued an immense amount of green
backs, or paper money, which was val
uable because the United States pledg
ed itself to give a gold dollar for every
paper one thns issued. ”
The American Book Company is the
biggest of all the text-book concerns in
the country and has placed hundreds
of thousands of these books in the pub
lic and privateischools of the United
States.
The metallic liar who went out of the
way of his narrative to get in the piece
of work for his gold-bug employers, is a
certain Edward S. Ellis, of New Jersey,
a good state, by the way, for the pro
duction of just such a jackall. But
that writer counts zero in this equation,
and needs no further notice. Not so,
however, the state, municipal, county
and district boards of education who
have recommended and introduced the
book. They put it into the schools and
through these channels circulated this
falsehood, which they know to be such,
for a purpose.
THE INNOCENT DECEIVED.
<n tv uuij rr rw, ■uuut *
believed to speak the truth, and proba
bly not more tnan one in a thousand of
the teachers who use this book know
the statement to be false. If the gov
ernment pledged itself to pay the green
backs in gold and this pledge gave them
their value, why, then, the teachers
would think, the government ought to
pay in gold; and so they would tell all
inquiries who came to learn wisdom
from their superior intelligence stamped
on the plastic minds of tLe innocent
children, there must have been many a
voter swindled by this clever pieoe of
deviltry—the prostitution of the public
schools into a propaganda for the dis
semination of lies to deoeive and defraud
the adult of his vote and to corrupt the
mind of ohildhood.
Such are the approved business meth
od? of the plutocrats which they have
heretofore observed and which they
continue to practice.
TEACHERS ARE COWED.
The universities and colleges of this
country are, for the most part, support
ed and controlled by the rich, and they
exact in return for tbeir support, that
the youth who resorts there for instruc
tion shall be taught the gospel of plu
tocracy and be made to believe that
the existing industrial system is unal
terably fixed by the laws of nature; or
by the will of the Creator if they prefer
to give the thing a religious twist
This is the great duty of the instructors;
other matters are of small importance*
..• t 1 M
And woe be to that luckless wight of
a professor who so far forgets himself
as to teach as if his soul were his own,
or dares to hint that the Declaration of
Independence or a Bill of Rights may
be understood in any other than a Pick*
wickian sense. He is forthwith dis
charged. and to destray him utterly,
the poisoned slander is given out that
he was dismissed for sufficient cause.
One of these plutos, Standard Oil Rock
efeller owns a mill of this kind at Chi
cago. The noble task of this institu
tion of learning is to teach young men
that the perpetuation of civil and re
ligious liberty depends upon the free
dom of any man to monopolize the
manufacture of cottonseed oil and mix
it with fatty matter boiled down from
the refuse of the slaughter house and
i
sell the product for pure leaf lard.
PLUTOCRACY UNCIVILIZED.
| There are bat few mutinous profes
sors. There is just enough rebellion in
these nurseries cf plutocracy to show
that a spark of manhood still remains;
but the general submission is a sicken
ing example of the ability of the money
power to debauch and degrnde, for its
own purpose and end®, the moral and
intellectual, as well as the physical na
ture of their victims.
The spirit and tendency of plutocracy
ridicules and ignores the old system of
education, which aimed at the full and
rounded developement of all the intel
lectual pow> rs, and to this end insisted
on the study of language, mathematics,
science, history, philosophy and litera
ture. The plutocratic system abolishes
these branohes with a view to reduce
wages by multiplying the number of
competitors for business places by “bus
iness” education. The system of indi
vidual development is declared to be
out of date, impractical and useless; and
young men and women are now dressed
and turned out as machines for type
writing, stenographing, telegraphing,
bookkeeping, and bank olerks.
To further increase the competition
and reduce wages still lower, the de
mand is made that the publ>c schools
shall teach “business." This is called
education, ?snd has almost entirely sup
planted the old method. And it is an
eiucaton in its way; an education which
has produced the jt How journal and the
dime tovel and its equivalent—an ed
ucation which has never heard of Car
lyle and Macaulay, and which, if it has
heard of Hawthorne and Irving, putß
them down as back numbers.
OWNS THE HIRELING CLERGY.
Sad indeed is the sight of plutocracy
laying its brutal halids on onr schools
and colleges to mould them to its will;
more painful yet is the spectacle when
it invades the churches and turns the
machinery of the Gospel to the accom
plishment of its own wicked purposes
Who built those massive piles of
stone with their towering spires, softly
———-
amrpmptw, imu carpets, seamen wnri
dows, and oostly hardwood panels and
ceiling, which you see in oar large cir
iec? They were built by the million
aires as club houses for the delectation
of their families. There is no place
nor pity there for the poor who suffer
from hunger, cold and nakedness in
their tenement houses and kennels; the
suffering poor whose sweat and blood
are squet-Z"d out by the church builders.
There is no recognition there of the
great lesson of the New Testament, the
Brotherhood of man. There is no love
of God there, for “how can a man love
God whom he hath not seen, and not
love his neighbor whom he hath seen?
Is this demagogueism? Then was the
Rabbi of Nz ireth a demagogue, for He
used stranger words.
"MONEY” IS THE PASSWORD.
If you are well dressed, enter the
chnrch and take a seat; good clothes
raise a presumption of money in your
pooket, and yon will be welcomed if
you get there before the collection is
taken up for the missionaries in B<>ri
obolo Gha. If you are not well dressed,
go in, anyhow, and sit down on the
Jim Crow board, just inside the door.
It will pay yon to do this once a year,
to keep in touch with the proceedings.
Never mind the choir and the bonnets;
give yonr head to the sermon.
PREACH SUBMISSION.
If yon are up in the fifties, and went
to chnrch in the south in ante bellum
days, yon will remember to have heard
sermons preached to the negroes from
the text, ■ ‘Servants, obey your masters:”
yon will also call to mind assurances
from the sacred desk that slavery was a
divine institution and that God would
take care of his own. Yon #ill hear
identicall the same speech today in your
fashionable city churches, with the
vorble change of "laboring men” for
slavery. Yon will be told that poverty
is a divine institution; and a text mali
ciously torn out from its connection,
and perverted in its meaning, will be
quoted to piove it: "The poor ye have
always with yon.” This is the golden
text of the hireling priests. Another
popular text in these temples of Mam
mon is that one admonishing subservi
ency to “the powers that be.” These
divine hypccrites will inform yon that
the Creator has divided mankind inte
two great olanses—the one to enjoy with
out labor, and <he other to labor with
out ei joymeut, and that this division
will forever exist. You will be further
instructed that cheerful and obedient
submission tc th.s ordinance is the prims
duty of a Christian and the surest mark
of genuine piety; while to murmur or
rebel against it, is to lift up your
sacriligions arm against your
Maker. All of which is very
nioe if jou are on top, but rather
hard if you happen to be the under dog
iu the contest. For this interpretation
of scripture some of the big spell-binders
get a fee of ten thousand dollars a year,
and sometimes . even more. They do
not study the literature of the people’s
party, and not many of them will vote
for Barker and Donnelly. These and
their penny whistle imitators through
out the land are embraced in the numer
ous maledictions pronounced against
false priests by the Master himself.
They are a generation of viperp, hypo
crites; they turn the truth into a lie;
they pervert justice, sell the poor; they
take bribes; and, with a treachery and
Satanic wickedness not parallel.d iu
in record or tradition, they have made
the cross itself the signal and the stan
dard of the selfsame Mammon which
Jesas died to destroy.
Thus i is, the money power of the
country seeks to control the coming
generation by means of the two prime
factors in its civilization—the church
aud the school. Shall it suoceed?—South
ern Mercury.
A CARD OF THANKS.
I wish to say that I feel under lasting
obligations for what Chambirlain's
Cough Remedy has done for onr family.
We have used it in so many oases of
coughs, lung troubles and whooping
cough, aud it has always given the mo t
perft ct satisfaction, we feel greatly in
debted to the manufacturers of this
remedy and wish them to please accept
our hearty thanks.—-Respectfully, Mhs.
S. Doty, Dos Moines, lowa. For sale
by Winder Drug Cos.
.PVLaLu.^. ...
The People’s Psrtv Senatorial Cos
vention of the 2?th district is called to
meet in Monroe at 10 o’clock, August
14, 1900, to nominate a candidate for
State Senator, to represent the above
distriot in the next general assemb'y.
J. T. Laboon, Chairman.
COLD STEEL OR DEATH.
"There is but one small chance to save
your life and that is through an opera
tion,” was the awful prospect set before
Mrs. L B. Hunt, of Lime Ridge, Wis.
by her doctor after vainly trying to cure
her of a frightful case of stomich trou
ble and yellow jaundice. He din’t ounnt
on the marvellous power of Electric Bit
ters to cure Stomach and Liver troubles,
but she heard of it. took seven bottles,
was wholly cured, avoided surgeon’s
knife, now weighs more and feels bet
ter than ever. It’s positively guaran
teed to cure Stomach, Liver and Kidney
troubles and never disappoints. Price
60 cents at Winder Drug Cos.
Ice Cream Supper.
The Ladies Aid Sooiety of the Christ
ian church will give an ice cream sup
per in the yards surrounding the church
on Friday evening, August 10th—the
proceeds to go towards buying new
song books for the ohurch. They re
spectfully invite every one out that
evening to assist them in this laudable
undertaking.
A NIGHT OF TERBOa.
“Awful anxiety was felt for the wid
ow of the brave General Burham of
Machias. Mo., when the doctors said
■he oould not live till morning writes
Mrs 8. H Lincoln, who attended her
that fearful night. ‘All thought she
must soon die from Pneumonia, bat
she begged for Dr. King’s New Diswr
ery, saying it had more than once saved
her ife, and had cured her of Consump
tion After three small doses she slept
easily all night, and its further use com
pletely cured her.” This marvelous
medicine is guaranteed to cure all
Throat, Chest and Lung Diseases. Only
60 oents and SI.OO. Trial bottle free at
Winder Drug Cos.
NO 30.