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The Jackson Herald.
ROBERT S. HOWARD, Editor.
JEFFERSON, GIA.
I RHUI HORNING, April 22, 1881.
Chicago and St. Louis now furnish ncarty
ono-half of the manufactured articles needed
by Texas merchants.
The 17th of May is now announced as the
date when the revised New Testament may
be expected to appear.
The negro exodus to Kansas still continues,
notwithstanding efforts have been made to
stop it. As far as we are concerned, we say
let them go and reap the reward of their own
folly.
Benjamin Disreali, later Lord Heaconsfield ;
author and politician, is dead. He was a
most remarkable man, and for the last decade
has been one of the most prominent charac
ters in European politics.
The widow of the celebrated abolitionist,
John Brown, who was the chief of the Har
per’s Ferry riot, and who was hung for trea
son, is now living in most impoverished cir
cumstances in California. Appeals are being
made throughout the North to raise funds for
Jier relief.
! Gen. Longstreet, now minister to Turkey,
lias been appointed marshal of Georgia in
place of Mr. Fitzsimmons, the present in
cumbent. His appointment has
the Senate, and only awaits confirmation from
that body. It is rumored that this is a feather
for Mr. Speer’s cap.
The Citizens Bank of Atlanta stopped
payment last week. It was another one of
*the State depositories, and held over one
hundred thousand dollars of the State’s
money at the time. It is not known yet how
the affairs will turn out, but it is thought that
the assets will meetthe liabilities if judiciously
managed.
Joe Brown and Ben Hill are both making
D
more reputation by the deadlock in the Senate
than the Senators from any other State in the
L nion. The fact of it is that they are stand
ing square up for the South, and hit back
every time with telling force. Every Georgian
who has read the proceedings in the Senate
for the last three weeks cannot help but be
proud of her representatives in that body.
The United States Senate is still hammer
ing away at nothing. The deadlock con
tinues with no immediate prospects of its
being broken. Both sides propose to stick
out, even if it does take all the summer. Two
plans have been suggested, either of which
will be likely to do the work if adopted. The
first is the intimation that the President will
noquest the Senate to attend to hi 9 nomina
tions. It is said that if the President makes
lAiie request there will be enough Republican
Senators who will vote wPh Democrats to
break the deadlock. The other is embraced
in a. resolution of Senator Blair’s, proposing
that the President call an extra session of
Gongress. It is said that if this is done the
Democrats will not dare to obstruct public
business. It rests with the Republicans as
to how long the fight will be kept up, as the
Democrats are bent and determined to keep
their ground, and we cannot keep from com
mending them in their course. The party
has been accustomed to give way too much
nlrcady, and tbe present stand will be but a
timely showing of a backbone that from con
stant disuse was supposed not to exist.
The Madison Madisonian reports a horrible
affair in that neighborhood as follows : “ The
little child of Porter Wyatt, colored, which
was advertised as being lost, in the Madisonian
several weeks ago, has been found. Her body
was literally eaten up by hogs and buzzards.
Her head was well preserved, showing that
someone had abducted the child, and after
keeping it for some time, fearing that their
villainy would be apprehended, took her to
some secluded spot near a chasm, and there
left the innocent to perish alone, it being only
twd 3’ears old, and consequently too young to
give alarm or make its way home. This is the
only solution that we can make to this mj’ste
rious case. The authorities should rigidly in
vestigate the matter, and if foul play has been
practiced, the villain should be punished.”
The Macon Telegraph says that on Friday
last Mr. W. H. Turner, a brother-in-law of Mr.
Nelms, went down to Butler to get Squire
Bryant, a negro, under sentence of ten years
in the penitentiary. Squire saw that he was
in for a decade of labor, and. rather than
endure it, he took a pocket knife and cut out
both his eyes. He afterwards claimed that
the deed was done by his having run against
some splinters in a wall, but marks of blood
upon his knife and other circumstances dis
prove this and prove the first statement. Mr.
Turner returned without bin inau.
Railroad News.
The Southern railroad world has been
turned upside down and surprised in various
ways in the last three weeks past. The first
surprise was the lease by the Atlanta &
Charlotte road of the Richmond & Danville
road, of Virginia, thus making a continuous
line, under one management, from Richmond
to Atlanta. The next move was a little nearer
home, and effected the Northeastern. The
stock in this road, which heretofore was worth
nothing comparatively, was in demand at
forty-five and fifty cents on the dollar, and it
was rumored that the Georgia road and the
Richmond & Danville wanted to get control
of it. Matters culminated at last in a proposi
tion from the Richmond & Danville people
to the city government of Athens to control
the shares that Athens had in the road. The
Richmond & Danville agreed, on condition
of the transfer of this stock to them, to com
plete the road and give Athens through rates.
The Mayor and Council have decided to
leave the matter to a vote of the citizens and
decide the matter. It is thought that the
citizens will agree to the transfer, as they are
bitterly opposed to the road going into the
hands of the Georgia road.
If the Richmond & Danville secures the
Northeastern they will push it through to
Knoxville. But the real sensation of the
period was the leasing ofthe Georgia Railroad
by Mr. Wm. M. Wadley and company for
ninety-nine years. Our readers will remember
that there was a rumor of a lease of the
Georgia road by the Central road about a
month ago, but it all came to naught, and the
matter had ceased to be of interest, when the
announcement was made. They give the
stockholders six hundred thousand dollars
per annum as rent, keep up the road, &c. It
is said that this will pay the interest on the
bonds and leave enough to pay a ten per cent,
dividend on the stock each year. It is stated
that the Central, South Carolina and Georgia
roads will now be run in harmony with each
other, and that a combination was necessary
in order to resist the encroachments of other
great corporations. How the matter will
turn out is a problem that only time can
solve.
•
Letter from Mississippi.
McComb City, Miss., April 14th, 1881.
Editor Jackson Herald: —One of the most
popular and brilliant weddings I ever knew
of in Pike county, came ofif at the residence
of Mr. J. J. White, of this place, last Tuesday
evening. A train was engaged from the rail
way company especially to convey invited
guests from the city to Mr. W.’s switch, and
many fair darlings with their gallant heroe9
were on this train, and from the switch—guided
by a huge bonfire as a beacon brightly burn
ing at the top of the hill—walked a few hun
dred yards to the mansion—and a right mer.
ry walk they made of it—where the parlors,
resplendant with burnished ornaments, were
already crowded with assembled guests from
other directions. Promptly at the hour agreed
upon—no pandering to fashionable delays
here—the bride appeared in her effulgent
youth and beauty, and her coronal of limped
wine colored hair—a woman's glory—attend
ed by her captured slave and her maids of
honor. The two bridesmaids were simply
lovelj r , but their beauty paled before that of
the bride, even as stars of higher magnitude
pale before their more magnificent 'luminary
—the moon. The contracting parties were
Mr. J. 11. Hinton and Miss Emmett White ;
their supporters Mr. Tegarden with Miss
Emma White, and Mr. Boyd with Miss Rosa
Williams. Rev. Mr. McAllister officiated
with his usual grace. Immediately after the
ceremony, the guests were shown into the
spacious dining hall. I wish I were equal to
describing this *• Feast of reason and flow of
soul,” but language and space alike forbid
the attempt; to say the board was not more
than abundantly supplied with each and every
delicacy that opulence can secure, would be
lie the just fame the bride’s father has earned
upon previous festal occasions. Suffice it to
say for the feast, that not one guest left the
spread who was not surfeited with both the
dainties and full of praise for the host and
hostess. The banquet hall was garnished
with numerous floral decorations, fabricated
by fairy fingers. Prominent among these
was the quiver filled with Love’s arrows with
which the bride had perforated the heart of
the groom ; and the heart was shown with the
supposed rift in it made by one of her arrows ;
the cord of love wherewith she bound his
heart with a love knot; the crosses he has en
dured, surmounted by the crotvn of her won
love ; the sheet anchor by which she will hold
fast his affections ; the star and crescent — the
first representing her eyes, the latter his
staunch arm, with which he will shield her
from adversity and trials ; the cornucopia of
plenty, earned by the implements of the
groom’s profession —circular suivs ; the bright
and never setting Star of Hope, toward which
they will, together, with clasped hands, wend
their way toward the eternal cross of Christ.
I repeat, these ideas were all allegorically
shadowed forth in flowers. Finally, it is the
fervent wish ofthe writer of these lines that
joy, peace, plenty and the fullest measure of
happiness may be meeted to them—even as
bountiful as the realistic feast set before the
legion of guests who did them honor.
J. Smith Biiown.
The Waynesboro News says that on last
Friday, while Mr. Ed. Carter was riding on
business, lie passed the plantation of Mrs.
Homer Godbce, in Burke count}', and dis
covered the top of a negro house on fire. lie
sprang from his horse and bursting open the
door found tw'o negro children locked up in
the house. By the utmost exertion, and the
destruction of his clothes and boots, Mr.
Carter succeeded in saving the house. The
children would have inevitably been burned
to death had Mr, Carter hot happened along.
The Gainesville and Jug Tavern Narrow-
Gauge.
The following information we clip from the
Atlanta Constitution of the ‘2oth instant:
“Wc received a call yesterday from Mr.
D. R. L;\le, who is visiting Atlanta in the
interest of the projected narrow gauge road
I from Gainesville to Jug Tavern. 'This road
when completed will open up to the trade of
; Atlanta an entirely new section, the business
of which has heretofore drifted in the direc
! tion of Athens. It will require twenty thou
sand dollars to build that portion ofthe road
in which Mr. Lyle is interested. A portion
[of this has already been subscribed, and it is
! the desire of the company to secure a modest
! subscription from those in Atlanta who are
i interested in extending the trade ofthe city.
I We commend the enterprise which Mr. Lyle
represents to the attention of our business
men. It is a part and parcel of that net-woik
of railway development which is to add to the
commercial greatness of Atlanta.”
31cti> ilifocctisements.
Jackwou County.
Whereas, the road commissioners, appointed for
the purpose of reviewing -and reporting upon the
public utility of establishing as one of the public
roads of said county the road commencing near
Pleasant Hill school-house, on the Gainesville and
Homer road, and running the traveled way over
the lands of W. S. Crisler and J. 0. Browning.,,
and intersecting at the forks of the Gainesville anq,
Gillsville roads, outlie Hall county line; also, the
road commencing at the Jefferson and Monroe
road, near Hancock’s bridge, on the Mulberry
river, and being the traveled way by I. T. Austin’s,
the Holliday mill place and intersecting with the
Athens and Lawrenceville road near James Thur
mond’s. .Said commissioners having reported said
roads of public utility, an order will he granted,
finally establishing said roads as public roads, on
Monday, the 23d day of May, 18S1, if no good
cause to the contrary is shown on or by that day.
Given under my official signature, this April
20th, 1881. H. W. BELL, Ord’y.
DC A TT ORGANS, \7 .Stops
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Jackson Comity.
Z W. HOOD, | Jackson Court of Ordi-
Propounder of the last | nary, April term, 1881.
will and testament of | Application for probate
Steven Wilson, dcc’d, [-of will in solemn form
vs. | and for Letters of Ad-
Heirs at law of said | ministration with the
deceased. J will annexed.
It appearing to the Court that one of the heirs
at law in the above stated case resides without
the State, to-wit: Andrew Harris; it is, there
fore,
Ordered, That service or notice of the above
application be perfected upon said Andrew Har
ris by publication of this order once week for
three weeks in the Jackson Herald, a newspa
per published in said count}' of Jackson, prior to
the hearing thereof on the first Monday in May,
1881.
April 4th, 1881. 11. W. BELL, Ord’y.
A true extract from the minutes of the Court
of Ordinary of Jackson county. Georgia.
' 11. W. BELL,
apl 15 Ex-Officio Clerk Court Ordinary.
Notice to Contractors:
W ILL be let, to the lowest bidder, before the
Court House door in Jefferson, on Wednes
day. the 18th day of May, 1881, the contract for
building the bridge across the Mulberry river, at
the place known as the Lyle bridge, under the
following specifications, to-wit: Said bridge Cos
be built on a level with west bank of the river,
with two spans—one a queen post truss fifty feet,
the other common span length to suit length of
balance of bridge ; one arch, to be built in river
upon a crib, length of same to suit heighth of arch
and eight feet wide, with middle sill at the bottom,
and of timbers 10x12 inches, notched into each
other so as not to leave more than two inches
space between, and pinned with two-inch pins at
each corner and filled up with rock ; arch or
trestle to be set upon said crib and fastened by
banding over end of mud sill with three-inch bar
iron, bolted into three logs of crib ; two main rods
of iron, 1£ inches in diameter, to extend from
through middle sill in bottom of crib up through
mud sill, cap sill and one sleeper, and securely
fastened with tap and washer; two other arches
to be built in the same manner and let into the
ground at least six feet and filled in on with rock
and dirt at each embankment. All sleepers to be
10x12 or Bxl2 inches, and to lap three feet over
cap sills; uprights to trestle or arch to be 10x12
inches, tenented and morticed half through cap
sills and pinned ; cap sills 10x12 inches, 15 feet
long ; mud sills 12x14 inches, length to suit highth
of arch; flooring 2x12 inches, 14 feet long; ban
isters made of 3x4 scantling; uprights placed 8
feet apart, morticed through the floor and keyed
on under side and braced on outside; floor to be
spiked down with 40-penny spikes, two in each
end of plank, and right and left in intermediate
sleepers. Sleepers in old bridge down the river
allowed to be used in crib and all flooring that is
sound and suitable. All timbers to be good heart,
and if hewn to be well and smoothly done. Bond,
with two good securities, required m a sum double
the amount of the bid, conditioned for a faithful
complyance of the contract, immediately after the
letting. The work to be paid for when completed
in accordance with the specifications, and to be
completed in fifty days from the time of letting.
Full and complete specifications can be seen at
this office. apll ll. W. BELL, Ord'y.
.IsK-ksoii Coiinly.
Whereas, upon application to me, in terms of
the law. by om-lifth of the qualified voters of the
255th District, G. SI., of said county, asking for
an election to be called in said District, that the
question of the restriction of the sale of intoxicat
ing liquors in said District may be submitted to
the voters thereof—
Tt is hereby ordered that an election be held in
said District, at the usual place of holding elec
tions in the same, on Saturday, the 7th day of
May, 1881; that those voting at said elections who
favor restriction shall have written or printed
on their bollots the words, For Restriction,”
and those who oppose shall have written or printed
on their ballots the words, “ Against Restriction,”
and that the managers of said election shall keep
duplicate list of voters and talley sheets, certify
and sign the same, one of which shall be tiled
with the Clerk of the Superior Court of said county
and the other forwarded without delay to his Ex
cellency the Governor. 11. W. BELL, Ord’y.
April 6th, 18S1.
Administrator's Sale.
BY virtue of an order from the Court of Ordi
nary of Gwinnett county, Georgia, will be
sold before the Court House door in the town of
Lawrenceville, on the Ist Tuesday in May. 1881,
the following described tract or parcel of land
situated in Jackson county, Georgia, and belong
ing to the estate of Jessee Osborn, deceased, to
wit:
One hundred acres of land, more or less, adjoin
ing the line between Jackson and Gwinnett coun
ties on the west, the lands of I. N. McMilian. on
the east, Martha Benson, on the north, and on
the south by the road leading from Lawrenceville
to Jellerson, and being the place whereon Mr.
Shellnut now resides.
Also, nine acres of land, more or less, lying in
Gwinnett county, on the south side by the Jeffer
son road, adjoining lands of Mr. Pentecost on the
west, W. P. Thurmond on the south, and the
Jackson county line on the east.
Sold for the purpose of distribution among the
heirs of said Osborn, and to carry out his last
will. 110BT. 11. BRADFORD,
„ - Adm’r de bonis non.
ifis!
CURCM
AN OLD SAYING
TELLS US THAT NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS!!
VERY TRUE; BUT WIIAT MADE THE
STTGOESS?
Men shake their heads now-a-days, and say the big stores are eating up the little ones. But wlr t
made the big stores big? They were all “ little ones” once. Ten years ago we occupied wil t
would be called at present a very small store. To-day we devote
TEN TIMES AS MUCH SPACE
to business as we did in 1871. What has caused this
Enormous G-rowth. ?
Certainly not possession of any secrets of business; certainly not advertising, though that has con
tributed its share ; certainly not our location. There is only one explanation :
Tireless Industry and Pleasing the Public .
Pleasing the public means having just what the people want at the
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.
This policy is the one we have pursued, for the last ten years. The attractions which we offer in
the assortment, in the quality, and, above all, in the prices of our goods are such that no lady can
resist going to
COHENS’
For Latest Novelties in
Dress Goods, Dress Trimmings, New Carpets, New Shoes,
LARGEST AND CHEAPEST STOCK OF
'AVWLY. AVWKSY.H, WMS WWD 'fOWY.LS
Ever shown in Athens.
Ladies’ Tics, Scarfs, Jabots, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Ladies’ and Childrens’ Hose, Parasols, Um
brellas and Fans in all the newest and most elegant styles and designs.
■TOTfcLite Goods.
Piques, Lawns, Linens, Cambrics, Mulls, Swisscs in a larger variety at LOWER PRICES than
any house in the city. Ladies who want BARGAINS, New and Stylish Dress Goods,
New and Stylish Gloves, Parasols, Fans, to see all the Latest Spring
Fashions, are requested to call, as we have the FINEST
STOCK we ever shown.
OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT
Is complete for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children.
CLOTHING FOR THE MILLION AT COHENS’,
For Men, Youths and Boys.
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS,
SOLE AGENTS for the “KING OF SHIRTS.” Every Shirt GUARANTEED. Price, SI.OO.
Gents’ XTnderwear,
In all qualities. Gents’ Gloves, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Cravats, Scarfs, jn all the latest Styl#s.
Our stock in every department is complete, and our goods are fresh and of the best qualities. Give
us a call before purchasing elsewhere, and we will be sure to save you money.
_ M. G. & J. COHEN.
HENRY HUMAN’S
POND PORK STORE.
SPHERE is no use going to Atlanta, Athens, Gainesville. Jefferson, or any other largo city or
X town, to get what you want on your farm or in your house, as I keep a full line of DRY
GOODS, CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, YANKEE NOTIONS, CROCKERY, GLASS
AND WOODEN WARE,
GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS,
SUGAR, COFFEE, TEAS, RICE, PEPPER, and all kinds of Spices. A full stock of
Bacon, Flour, Meal, Syrup and Molasses.
Also, all kinds of FARM TOOLS, PLOWS, IIOES, RAKES, FORKS, Etc.
All of These G-oods
Will be sold cheap for cash, or on time to prompt paying customers, and none others. I shall in
addition to the above, keep a full line of
4 '*
the BEST OF CORN WHISKY and other spirits for medicinal purposes. Come and examine my
goods and prices before making your purchases. The highest market price always paid for COT
TON and other FARM PRODUCTS.
HENRY HUMAN,
a pl 15 Pond Fork, Jackson county, Georgia.
CHINA
DEUPREE BLOCK, ------ Athens, Ga.
For Tlie spring Trade!
MERCHANTS and housekeepers arc invited to inspect the splended stock which is offered at
prices that cannot be surpassed in Atlanta or Augusta. %
China, Crockery, Glassware, Damps,
CUTLERY, PLATED WARE, WHIPS,
Tin, Wooden and Willow Wares.
Jobbing price list figured to the lowest notch—saving freights and danger of breakage.
Se P l 17 Broad Steet, Athens, Ga
RTfiP iY agents
i,AU 1 XV ,L. WANTED.
AN E WANT A LIMITED number of active, ener
getic canvassers to engage in a pleasant and prof
itable business. Good men will find this a rare
chance
TO MAKE iVTOIsriEY.
Such will please answer this advertisement by
letter, enclosing stamp for reply, stating what
business they have been engaged in. None but
those who mean business need apply.
Address FINLEY, HARVEY & CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
C* ftf Outfit sent free to those who wish to cn
gage * n the most pleasant and profitable
business known. Everything new. Capital not
required. We will furnish you everything. $lO
a day and upwards is easily made without staying
away from home over night. No risk whatever.
Many now workers wanted at once. Many are
making fortunes at the business. Ladies make as
much as men, and young boys and girls make
great nay. No one who is willing to work fails
to make more money every day than can be made
in a week at any ordinary employment. Those
who engage at once will find a short road to for
tune. Address H. IIaIIETT & Cos., Portland.
Maine.
MANHOOD
HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED!
Just published, anew edition of DR. CULY BU
NN ELL’S Celebrated Essay on the radical cure of
Spermatorrhoea or Seminal Weakness Invol
untary Seminal Losses, Impotency, Mental and
Physical Incapacity, Impediments to Marriage,
etc.; also, Consumption, Epilepsy and Fits,
induced by self-indulgence or sexual extravagance,
&c.
j The celebrated author, in this admirabl.e Essay,
iclearly demonstrates, from a thirty years* suc
cessful practice, that the alarming consequences
:of self-abuse may be radically cured ; pointing
out a mode of cure at once simple, certain, and
: effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no
matter what his condition may be, may cure him
self cheaply, privately, and radically.
JgyThis Lecture should be in the hands of every
youth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad
dress, post-paid, on receipt of six cents or two
postage stamps.
Address the Publishers,
THE CULVER WELL MEDfCAL 00 ,
11 Ann St., New York, N. Y. ; P. 0. Box, 458 C.