Jackson herald. (Jefferson, Jackson County, Ga.) 1881-current, May 20, 1881, Image 2

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We reserve the right to demand cash in advance, both for subscriptions and advertising, when wc see fit. The Jackson Herald. ROBERT S. HOWARD, Editor. JEFFERSON, FKID4V SO. ISKI. NEWS IN GENERAL. Russian soldiers are taught a trade, and allowed, when off duty, to earn money by it. A fasting girl in England has stopped fast ing on being threatened with a lunatic asylum. The suits against the Bonanza firm at Sap Francisco, involving §35,000,000, have been compromised. During a storm at Cincinnati a man was blown off the roof of a house sixty feet, but was uninjured. J. Iv. Emmet, the actor, having broken his engagement in Liverpool, has been placed in a lunatic asylum. A Minneapolis thief stole the pans dis played in front of a tin shop and sold them to the proprietor inside. A hundred and one persons died of star vation in the metropolitan district of London last year. That is about twenty in a million. When the Southern Baptist Convention was held at Columbus, Miss., the Jewish synagogue was given up on Sunday to a Christian clergy man to preaoh in. Two Carolina telegraph operators quarrelled by wire, exchanged challenges in the same way, and met half way between Columbia and Charlotte to fight with fists. George Brine, known as King of the Vagrants, who boasted that he had been in every jail and workhouse in England, died lately at a workhouse after ten years residence. He had never been convicted of felony or larceny. A little boy fell through an open scuttle into the room below, at Belleplain, Wis. The fall would not have hurt him much if he had not alighted in a tub of water; and the water would not have killed him if it had not been boiling hot. The proprietor of a Philadelphia hotel has called down the wrath of actresses upon his bead by discriminating against them. He has issued an order that they shall receive no male guests in their rooms, though that privilege is not denied to other women. Lord Beaconsfield did not place on the statute books a single measure of relief to the laboring classes. The most useful act which he introduced was that by which electoral disputes are tried by a Judge of the Supreme Court, instead of hv a committee of the Legislature. The British steamship Punjab recently, while on her way to Bussorah, was closely followed for about twenty four hours by a large whale, said to have been about eight}’ feet long. It was fired at with Snider bullets, but they did not seem to make much impression upon the sea monster. The effect on some people of the prophecy falsely ascribed to Mother Shiplon, that the world will come to an end in 1881, was illus trated the other day in Indiana, where the sudden appearance of a strange cloud, ac companied by a roaring wind, threw several villages into a panic. A negro lives on the plantation of G. M. Ray, near Fayetteville, N. C., who has re mained with bis old master since the war. lie has never asked for money, has never missed a day's work, has never left home, has never associated with his own race, and has never been known to do a dishonest or wrong act- Two Chattanooga policemen arrested a man for drunkenness, and when he attempted to run away, fired at him five times, with fatal cfTect. The officers were surprised by the intimation, conveyed by a Coroner's jury’s charge of murder in the first degree, that they had no right to kill an escaping prisoner. A law was passed in California prohibiting women from working as waiters at night in concert saloons ; but the Supreme Court has decided it unconstitutional, on the ground that the concert saloon business irfthat State is not illegal, and that immorality, not in conflict with positive law, is not sufficient cause for such interference. President Ilnraszthv of the California State Board of Viticultural Commissioners reports that the present value of vineyards in the State is about $35,000,000, the income from which amounted last year to $3,500,000. lie is of the opinion that within three years the vineyards will be yielding to their owners $5,000,000 a year, or ten per cent, on $50,- 000,000 valuation. Senator Brown on the Robertson Case. Senator Brown’s judgment is proverbially sound and sure, but even his clear mind might make a mistake in a matter relating to New York politics. lie lias concluded to support Conkling in his fight with the administration over the New York collectorship. lie says he sees no reason why any democratic sena !or should go out of his way to support the administration in view of the Malione scheme, but he omits to say why any such senator should support Conkling, who was never known to utter a kindly word for the South, or in fact for anybody or any section that was not ready to do his bidding. But Senator Brown bases his acticn on the alleged fact that the confirmation of Mr. Robertson would crush Mr. Conkling, and that with Conkling crushed the democracy would have to fac e an united republican party'. This is the real point in the case; and if Senator Brown is right in this respect, some of the best judges of New York politics are in error. The latter do not believe, in the first place, that the head of the stalwarts, the master of the party machinery', the real and actual “ boss” of New York, can be crushed so easily'. They hold that, if he is defeated in the case now before the senate, his bitterness and zeal against his enemies i.i his own party will be redoubled, and that the feeling and the present division will be deepened, thus bringing, in | one way or another, disaster to the republican party. Conkling certainly is not a man who has been in the habit of yielding an inch of ground under defeat, and unless his whole career is reversed, he will endeavor to give the Garfield-Blaine party, after Robertson’s confirmation, as much trouble as he ever gave their predecessors in power. lie certainly could not be crushed before 1884. He rules New York to-day, and he attained this pre eminence chiefly in the very four y r ears in which he ha 1 no federal patronage to dis tribute. But suppose Robertson is rejected—what then? Is it no very likely that Conkling, who is imperious, will dictate terms of settlement to Garfield, who is disposed to be conciliatory, for the common good of the two ? Would in that event the president be as apt to fight to the bitter end as Conkling would if he is defeated ? It seems to us not. Conkling needs the legislature that is to be elected in November, 1884, for his senatorial term ex pires in the following March ; and if his pride and passion are gratified by the defeat of Robertson, it is at least possible that in the hour of his victory he will come to an under standing with the administration, and that the democrats will then have to face a combina tion more formidable that any that could be built up on crushed stalwarts. Mr. Conkling can be very generous when lie has his own way, but no man ever found him so in defeat. At this distance we may not see matters as clearly as they appear in Washington, although that city' is generally'considered the last place in which to ascertain the truth of politics ; and we share the common confidence of the people of Georgia in Senator Brown’s judgment; but in the matter of the Robertson nomination we are inclined to think that Mr. Hill’s action is the wiser, and that the out come to which Governor Brown so confidently appeals, will sustain our senior senator. Georgia is paired on the subject, and perhaps this diversity of opinion in our senatorial representatives is a fair illustration of the perplexity that attends the subject when viewed from a democratic standpoint.—At lanta Constitution. The Cotton-Tie Complaint. Secretary Windom has officially informed the half-dozen manufacturers of iron tics for cotton bales that he cannot alter the tariff law, and the judicial decision and department rulings under it, to accommodate them. The tariff law fixes the duty on imported hoop iron at cents a pound, and on manufacturers of iron ht 35 per cent, ad valorem. When the law was passed, the prices of all kinds of iron fabrics were high, and remained so for over ten years, and the 35 per cent, ad valorem duty was as much protection as the home manufacturers thought they needed. But the fall in prices of iron ties proportionally re duced this duty and allowed English ties to come in ; and the home manufacturers, con sidering this a hardship, appealed to the Treasury Department to change to duty from 35 per cent, ad valorem to 1* cents a pound, claiming that cotton ties were nothing but hoop-iron and, therefore, subject to hoop-iron duty. But it seems that the iron cotton ties> though made of hoop-iron, have a patent fastening, are made for tying cotton bales exclusively, and are, therefore, a special manufacture of iron; and the Treasury Department long ago ruled that these ties are subject to a duty of 35 per cent. only. As this ruling is based on a judicial interpreta tion of the law and has governed the practice of the department for twelve years, the pres ent Secretary declines to reverse it for the benefit of a few manufacturers. The differ ence between the duty as now levied and the duty claimed by the manufacturers, computed on the amount of ties consumed in the coun try, would he about $600,000. What the home manufacturers in Pennsylvania and Ohio are contending for is the privilege of exacting this amount of money*from the cot ton planters of the South—as if the cotton planters had no rights whatever in the matter. —Savannah Neics. LUMBER! LUMBER!! Parties desiring to build or improve their farms and houses can he supplied with a first-class article of lumber, in any size, shape and style, at lowest prices, by calling on J. It. Lanier, five miles from Jefferson, near the Academy bridge. The Chief of the Star Wail Bonanza. When, about the time of the October elec tion in Indiana. Mr. S. W. Dorsey’ was posing before the country as a President maker, his stalwart service to the Republican party and to General Garfield won for him distinguish- O cd praise, lie figured as a sort of Hercules who had come in at the eleventh hour to put his shoulder to the wheel of the machine and lift it out of the mire upon the solid ground. The oracular promises of victory that were proclaimed in his various telegrams from the front were rather startling to many, who took them for so much brag, but they turned out to be true, and it was realized that Dorsey meant business from the start, and knew all along what he was about. After all was over an admiring and grateful public was informed that the ex-Senator from Arkansas wanted no office as a reward for his great and suc cessful services. The magnitude of his private interests was declared, upon his own authority', to debar him from taking any place whatever in the civil list. lie was un derstood to bo so well fixed, in fact, that not even a Cabinet position had any’ temptations for him. There were whispers of colossal mining speculations in which he had grown rich, and of future ventures in the same lino in which he was to wax still richer. Like the North Carolina carpet-bagger, Tourgee, of the “ Fool’s Errand,” the results of whose “ literary labors” are said, by' him self, to bo “ worth several times the salary of any office,” Mr. Dorsey' has been giving out that his participation in politics is of a purely patriotic and personally disinterested character. Unfortunately, however, for Mr. Dorsey’s claim to permanent popular ap plause, it turns out that he is pretty nearly a9 selfish in his politics as the rest. It ap pears that he is not wholly' guiltless of making money' out of the paternal government, and a good deal of it, and in ways, too, that might be considered by strict and captious moralists somewhat illicit. The “ mines” that the thrifty Dorsey has been working, or some of them, at least, are found to be bonanzas con nected with the transportation of the mails in the wildernesses of the great West. It looks, in fact, as if he were one of the worst of the star route crowd. What further development of good men gone wrong may’ be in store by the time this business is turned inside out, no one perhaps can tell; but after the exposure of the stainless Dorsey the country may prepare for almost anything.— Savannah News. Letter from Burke County. Waynesboro’, Ga., May 16, 1881. Editor Herald: —We sometimes think we are the most unlucky person on earth, but everybody thinks the same of themselves, and so it goes. I will give y r ou one instance, how ever, of my bad luck, if there is any such thing as that commodity, and I am a strong believer in the doctrine, that is sufficient evi dence to my mind that some are luckier than others. I had been traveling in Burke coun ty' for several days and feeling very badly, for one can feel no other way' here after warm weather begins. I concluded on last Friday to ride over to Waynesboro’ and rest for a few days. Well, 1 saddled my horse after dinner, the thermometer about 100, and had made five miles of my journey', when I came to a little creek and beheld very’ large tur tle. Having eaten nothing scarcely for two days, and being very fond of turtle, I thought maybe luck had so arranged for me to have this turtle to carry to Waynesboro’ to enjoy for break r -ast. So. being accustomed to alight from ray horse and leave him standing un hitched till my bidding, I did so this lime, and proceeded to the capturing of my prey'. But luck, cruel luck ! when just in the act of killing my' turtle, he popped his mouth and gave a loud blow, which frightened my horse, and he gave a blow and started back the way I had come, with all the speed possible, and left me and the turtle all alone. Leaving my turtle feeling nearer dead than a’.ive, I started in quick persuit after my horse. The dwell ings here, you know, are from four to five miles apart, with settlements of negroes about every mile or two. The farther I walked the madder I got and worse I felt. Finally com ing to some negroes, I asked them if they had seen a loose horse pass. They replied that they had. “ Well, why in the d—l didn’t you stop it ?” “ Well, boss, we tried to stop him, but I tell y’ou, sah, lie was just a fly’en.” I had to walk the whole five miles, and found him looking ns if he had done nothing wrong. My experience in this kind of luck is that it is very trying to one’s religious principles, and I trust that I may never again pass through the same ordeal. I spent several weeks in Jefferson county, and found the people very hospitable. There are some beautiful farms in this county, and but for the aimost entire failure of the corn crop last year, they would be in a prosperous condition. They plant a great deal of corn in this section—much more than one would think ; but, being altogether upland, when a dry year the yield is quite small. Louisville, the county seat of Jefferson, is a nice town of seven or eight hundred inhabi tants, and, as all know, was the capital of Georgia at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Burke county, in ante bell inn days, was one of the wealthy counties of the State. The lands are very productive and easily cultiva ted, and the amount of cotton made here is enormous. It is a very unhealthy county though, filled with innumerable ponds, most of which dry up in the summer. Our fellow townsman, Mr. Ilarvy Johnson, has two broth ers in this county—one located in Waynes boro’, who is very popular, both personally and as a physician ; the other, Dr. L. D. John son, who has retired from practice, and is one of the very large and successful planters of this section. This is a beautiful section of Georgia, but it has not the charms of our mountain region, and one longs all the while to see the hills, drink the cool water and breath the pure air of our up-country, if raised there, and whether appropriate or not, the sentiment often comes to my mind “ Where'er I roam, whatever lands I see. My heart, untrammelled, fondly turns to thee.” Respectfully, A. G. L. “ I DonTwaTt* thaT Stuff,” Is what a lady of Boston said to her husband when lie brought home some medicine to cure her of sick headache and neuralgia which had made her miserable for fourteen years. At the first attack thereafter, it was administered to her with such good results, that she con tinued its use until cured, and made so enthusiastic in Its praise, that she induced twenty-two of the best families in her circle to adopt it as their regular family medicine. That “ stuff’ is llop Bitters.— Standard. SI.OO Per Day. Wanted, 50 hands, to'work on the Gaines ville & Jefferson Railroad, at ONE DOLLAR per da}’. Apply to Blackstock & Sons. Notice! To Teachers of Pole Schools in Jaclson Comity, Office County School, Commissioner. \ Jefferson, Jackson Cos., Ga., May 17, 1881. J EXAMINATION of Teachers will be on the following days only: Whites, 4th and 25th of June. Colored, 11th of June and 2d of July. Exercises begin punctually' at 9 o'clock A. M., in the Court House. The Board of Education will meet for the em ployment of Teachers on the following days only: Whites, 9th of July. Colored, 23d of July. Call to order for business punctually at 9 o’clock A. M., in the Court House. By order of the Board of Education. G. J. N. WILSON, may 20-3 t Sec'y and ex officio C. S. C. pEi^ZE? Tarrant’s Seltzer Aperient May properly be called the “ Hercules” of medi cine, for it cleanses Nature’s augcan stables, and allows the recuperative powers of the system to do the work of restoration to health. No medi cine cures ; Nature alone cures. This Aperient opens the proper avenues, the functions are per mitted to resume their work, and the patient gets well. SOLI) BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Tiiis WILLIAMS EVAPORATOR For the Preservation of all kinds of Fruits and Vegetables. Manufactured by S. E. A: .1. .VI. SIROIT, Vlimuy, Incoming- I’o., fi*a. Send for circu lar. Ask your grocer for the Williams Evapora ted Fruit. Q.GOKGIA, JsK'kson County. Whereas, James Greer applies to me for Letters of Administration dc bonis non, with the will an nexed, of Winney Williamson, late of saul coun ty, deceased— This is to cite all concerned, kindred and cred itors, to show cause, if any, at the regular term of the Court of Ordinary of said county, on the tirst Monday in June, ISSI, why said letters should not be granted the applicant. Given under my official signature, this May 4th, 1881. ' 11. W. BELL, Ord’y. RFATTY ,?i OHfiAXS, 17 Stops O ill o set Golden Tongue reeds only SBS. Address Daniel F. Beatty, Wash ington, N. J. MAKE HOME BEAUTIFUL. Steel Engravings. Choice subjects. Lowest prices. Send for Catalogue and price list. Agents Wanted. Address J. C. McCURDY & CO., Philadelphia, Pa. ■S* A Ski] BSK3BOT I For Paw-Milto. Ef si Sy|3 H fl Foundries, aiul Eg 11 1] H If* I Machine Shops. P M y M I For circulars, address rur" .TV" " j THE TANITECO. anil > Stroudsburg, GRINDING MACHINES I Monroe Co.,Pa. fSOLD MEDAL AWARDED V the Author. Anew and Rroat Med icaj Work.warrantod the best and >9 cheapest, indispensable to every jil man.entitled “the Science of Life ga or.Self-Freservation bound in j-y' finest French muslin, embossed, I full Kilt,3oopp.contains beautiful steel engravings, 125 prescrip tions, price only $1.26 sent by f/fliiH mail; illustrated sample, 6 cents; mcW send now.Addrees Peabody Mod- FAinm (PirVtjrT r ical Institute or I>r. W. H. PAR JUIUW 1111 uJjJjl . KliK, No. 4 Bulfinchst. Boston. MALT BITTERS. ridVrniciilcd Slall, Elops t'aliMiya *il Iron. No medicine like it for the Blood, Brain. Nerves and Lungs. New life for functions weakened by disease, debility and dissipation. Positive cure for Liver. Kidney and Urinary diffi culties. Comfort and strength for Delicate Fe males and Nursing Mothers. Purest and best medicine called “ Bitters.” Sold everywhere. MALT BITTERS CO., Boston, Mass. HAVE YOU EVER KNOWN Any person to be seriously ill without a weak stomach or inactive liver or kidneys? And when these organs are in good condition do you not find their possessor enjoying good health? Parker'** 44i5*>er Tonic* always regulates these impor tant organs, and never fails to make the blood rich and pure, and to strengthen every part of the sys tem. It has cured hundreds of despairing invalids. Ask your neighbor about it. HOP BITTERS, cure all diseases of the Stomach. Bowels, Blood, Liver, Kidney and Urinary Organs, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, and especially Female Complaints. Ask your druggist for Hop Bitters and try them before you sleep. Take no other. Send foa circular. HOP BITTERS MANUFACTURING CO., Rochester, N. Y., and Toronto, Ont. EORGIA, Jackson County. Whereas, the estate of Columbus Long, col’d, late of said county, deceased, is likely to be with out a representative and to continue so, no one applying for Letters of Administration on said deceased's estate— Administration de bonis non will be vested in J. L. \Y illiamson, Clerk of the Superior Court of said county, or some other lit and proper person, on the first Monday in June, ISBI, unless some valid objection is made to said appointment. Given under mv official signature, this May 4th, ISSI, * 11. W. BELL, Ord’y. AN OLD SAYING TELLS US THAT NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS!! VERY TRUE; BUT WHAT MADE THE STJOOESS? Men shake their heads now-a-days, and say the big stores are eating up the little ones. But wlnt made the big stores big? They were all “little ones” once. Ten years ago we occupied what would be called at present a very small store. To-day' wc 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 wc 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 IYfiLV VIVWNSVvS, VSTO TO'WVLS Ever shown in Athens. Ladies’ Tics, Scarfs. .Jabots. Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Ladies’ and Childrens’ llosc, Parasols, Um brellas and Fans in all the newest and most elegant styles and designs. Wliite 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 sec all the Latest Spring Fashions, are requested to call, as we have the FINEST STOCK wc have ever shown. OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT Is complete for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children. CLOTHING FOR THE MILLION AT COHENS’, For Men, Y'ouths and Boys. GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS, SOLE AGENTS for the “KING OF SHIRTS.” Every Shirt GUARANTEED. Price, SI.OO. Grents’ Underwear, In all qualities. Gents’ Gloves, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Cravats. Scarfs, in all the latest Styles. Our stock in every department is complete, and our goods are fresh and of the best qualities, (me us a call before purchasing elsewhere, and we will he sure to save you money'. M. G. & J. COHEN. HENRY HUMAN’S PONTD FORK. STORE. ' (o) 0 r |MIERE is no use going to Atlanta, Athens, Gainesville, Jefferson, or any' other largo city or JL town, to get what you want on your farm or in your house, as I keep a full line of I)RY 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, HOES, RAKES, FORKS, Etc. -£!LIX of These G-oods Will he sold cheap for cash, or on time to prompt paying customers, and none others. I shall, i addition to the above, keep a full line of the BEST OF CORN WHISKY and other spirits for medicinal purposes. Come and examine mv goods and prices before making your purchases. The highest market price alwavs paid for CO'i- TON and other FARM PRODUCTS. HENRY HUMAN, a pl 15 Pond Fork, Jackson county', Georgia. MEAL! LEATHER! SHOES! I AM now prepared to keep constantly on hand and for sale, at my Mill, the very best CORN MEAL. Custom grinding promptly attended to, and 48 lbs. of meal GUARANTEED for every 5G lbs. good corn. Upper, Harness and Sole Leath er, Kips, Calf and Goat Skins, and a nice lot of Womens Goat Skin Shoes for sale. Mills, one fourth of a mile east of Jeflerson. on the Danicls villc road. may G F. S. SMITII. Coffins! Coffins! I WILL keep on hand, in Jefferson, a full sup ply of COFFINS —AND— BURIAL CASES of all sizes, and at prices to suit the times. Every effort will be made to serve parties promptly and satisfactorily. Respectfully, apl 29 W. A. WORSIIAM. LANDREIW MjpiflM jogve and Pnoes. The Oldest and most extensive Seed Gr otters in the United States DAVID LAN DItET 11 & 60N8.PHiL4DA.Jfc "RIiIPAY agents '' “ -A 3 * WANTED. A\ E AY ANT 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 IvIOISTE 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. SUBSCRIBE FOR “THE JACKSON HERALD.” Outfit furnished free,-with full instruc v tions for conducting the most profitable business that anyone can engage in. The busi ness is so easy to learn, and our instructions are so simple and plain, that any r one can make great profits from the very start. No one can fail who is willing to work. Women are as successful as men. Boys and girls can earn largssums. Many have made at the business over one hundred dol lars in a single week. Nothing like it ever known before. All who engage are surprised at the case ( and rapidity with which they arc able to make money. Nou can engage in this business during your spare time at great profit. You do not have to invest capita! in it. We take all the risk. 1 hose who need ready money, should write to us at once. All furnished free. Address True & Cos., Augusta, Maine. v7w TskiffT DEALER IN FINE WATCHES JEWELRY, Cloclis, Solid Silver and Plated Ware. j The DiamoM Spectacles and Eye-Glasses. Fine watches adjusted to heat and cold, and re paired in the best manner. Ilair Jewelry', and all other kinds, made tp order and neatly re paired. Sign of the “Red Watch,” BROAD STREET .. ATHENS, GA. April Ist, 1881. TEETHINA. (TEETHING POWDERS.) v FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS MAK£S 1 ri.-:j-i.U nrr.ni at re 1 <-?f* :H ARLES J.MQrrETTMD*^ Cures Cholera Infantum. Allays Irritation aut makes Teething easy. Removes and prevents Wrms. Thousands of Children nitty he saved WN cry year by using these Potzdvr* For sale at DR. PENDERGRASS’ Drugstore.