Newspaper Page Text
Br HOLDER BBOS.
VOL. XIV.
J_ E. MURPHT-,
Leader of Styles and Low Prices,
-*—HAS A LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL STOCK OF
Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoos and Hats,
THAT MUST BE SOLD.
COUNTERS Il,XTJSri>ri3SrC3- OVER WITH BARGAINS. SEE HERE:
DRESS GOODS.
36 inch Henrietta, black and colors, 23£c,
others ask 30c.
36 inch Henrietta, black and colors, 29c,
others ask 40c.
38 inch all wool Henrietta, black and colors,
48c, others ask 65c.
40 inch all wool Henrietta, black, 65c, others
ask 90c.
40 inch all wool Henrietta, black and colors,
75c, others ask sl.
44 inch all wool Henrietta, black, 98 cents,
others ask $1.25.
And a full line of Silk Warp Henriettas and
Novelties in foreign dress goods.
Handsome line of Carpets, Matting and Rugs ; nice lot of Lace Curtains, at half price; also Curtain Poles and
and Fixtures ; Thomson’s Glove-Fitting Corsets ; Umbrellas, a fine assortment; 1,000 yards Ginghams
at 4$ cents ; 600 yards Ginghams at 5 cents ; 600 yards Ginghams at 6f cents. And so on
to finest Ginghams on the market. Ladies' Undervests 10, 16 and 25 cents.
Slioes! Shoes ! Shoes !
Ladies’ Fine Kid Button Shoes at $1.60, $2, $2 50 and $3. These shoes are worth 26 to 33 per cent, more money,
and every pair is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Men’s Fine Laos Shoes
and Congress at $1.50, $2, $2.50, $3 and $4. Unusually nice and good
for the money, and are all guaranteed.
THE DIFFERENCE IS SMALL
Between living well and living poorly. It is all in how you buy. Everything which slights quality is extravagance.
If you want things to eat we have them, and we have good things at cheap prices. No use to list them.
Come and see for yourself that our Grocery Department is complete. Remember, we are
Universal Furnishers of everything for the inner and the outer man.
Make no mistake. Come to headquarters.
J. E. MURPHY,
West Side Public Square, - Gainesville, Georgia.
Messrs. HARRY BELL and DAVE LAY are still with me.
AjNDERSON # MANN
(Successors to HOOD, ANDERSON fy CO.)
DEALERS 11ST
Dry Goods, Ail livery, Clottvng-
SHOES,
GROCERIES, HARDWARE.
A FULL LINE OF SPRjNG GOODS JUST RECEIVED.
Thanking our many patrons for past favors, and hoping to have a liberal portion of their patronage in the
future, we are Respectfully,
cfc IMLAJXHNT,
HARMONY GROVE, : : : : : : : GEORGIA.
JDNO- S. OSLIN 3
G-ainesville, Ga.
MANUFACTURER OF
HARNESS AND SADDLERY
AND WHOLESALE DEALER IN
WHIPS, COLLARS, PADS, LEATHER. HARNESS HARDWARE.
I am the only manufacturer In the State that sella directly to the consumer,
TT\ereby You. tf\e Profit.
I Also GUAHANTKF, My Prices to Mtrclißnt* to Be an Low an Those of Any Factory in tt\e SOUTH.
C. R, STRINGER,
Practical Watchmaker ai Jeweler.
CARRIES A MCE LINK OF
WITCHES, CLOCKS AM) JEWELRY.
—ALSO, A FINE LINE OF—
SPEOX^A-GILES.
Oil Stale Bait BniliiiE, Gainesville, Ga,
CAS I OBTAIN A PATENT ( For .
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
Si CNN iVr CO., who have had nearly fifty years’
experience in the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Talents and how to ob
tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan
ical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Munn A Cos. receive
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public with
out coat to the inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the
largeat circulation of any scientific work in the
world. S3 year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly. $2.50 a year. Single
copies, AS cents. Every number contains beau
tiful plates, in colors, and photographsofnew
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
latest designs and secure contracts. Address
MUNN i CO- Nsw York, 361 Broadway.
OALUK T. BUSBY,I I.lbel for Divorce. In
N vs . *- Jackson Superior Court,
JOHN Y. BUSBY. J February Term, ISM.
To the Defendant, John Y. Bushy:
You are hereby required, in person or by at
torney, to be and appear at the next superior
court, to be held in and for the county of Jack
son. on the first Monday In August, 1894, then
and there to answer the plaintiff In “
lor a total divorce, as In default of such appear
ance said court will pioceed thereon as to jus-
U “S?Ss?fglumo,. t ,. e J U d t .N.E.nu ; u M .
Judge of said court.
This 23d day of March, 1894. „ . .
Published by order of His Honor, N. L. Hutch
las, Judge, granted at the February term, 18*4,
or Jackson superior oourt^
The Jackson Herald.
jI2. HATHAWAY & GO
(Regular Graduates.)
Are the leadin" and most successful specialists ani
will give you help.
suits have follow
\ ed our treatment.
Many years of
varied and succegs-
,) ful experience
V ■Jt'-, { In the use or cura-
V S'S Vsfef tlvc methods that
V-:5 we alone own and
• teipa are'lufferlng
' a errors of
• "'Mglgl'fCTSyouth and excess
s|pi|BjfX|i — TT v jS&gggx&i ' r who are nervous
i * ii S and Impotent,
ly, PlitjJSsi.Y 1 e kcorn of their
• 1 contempt of their
v - panlons, leads us
; to Kuaranteo to all patients, tf they can possibly
i be restored, our own exclusive treatment
! will afford a cure.
WOMEN! Don’t you want to get cured of that
weakness with a treatment that you can use at
home without instruments? Our wonderful treat
ment has cared others. Why not you? Try It
CATARKH, and diseases of the Skin, Blood,
Heart, Liver and Kidneys.
SYPHILIS-The most rapid, safe and effective
remedy. A complete Cure Guaranteed,
BKIN hISKASKH of all kinds cared where
many others have failed.
rVXATrRAI. DISCHARGES promptly
cared in a few days. Quick, sure and safe. This
Includes Gleet and Gonorhoea.
TRUTH AND FACTS.
We have cared cases of Chronic Diseases that
have failed to get cured at the hands of other special
ists and medical Institutes.
iiimM REMEMBER that there Is hope
for You. Consult no other, as you may waste valuable
time. Obtain oar treatment at once.
Beware of free and cheap treatments. We give
the best and most scientific treatment at moderate
prlcss—as low as can be done for safe and aklllful
treatment. FREE consultation at the office or
i by mall. Thorough examination and careful dlag
! nosls. A home treatment can be given In a majority
| of cases. Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men;
j No. 2 for Women; No. 3for Skin Diseases. All corre
i spondence answered promptly. Business strictly con
: fidential. Entire treatment sent free from observa
tlon. Refer to our patients, banks and business men
Address or call on
| DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
NR 14 lsU Brssl IMS), AUMts,
CLOTHING.
Full line, and perfect in Quality, Style, Fit,
Finish, and at the Lowest Prices.
DOMESTICS.
1,600 yards 4 4 Bleaching, shoit length, at
6fc, regular 10c goods.
2,000 yards Domestic Checks at sc, cheap
at 6a
3,000 yards Athens Checks at 64c, cheap
at 7£a
Jeans at 20 cents, worth 30 cents ; Jeans at
25 cents, worth 33 cents, and so on to
best Jeans made, at 40 cents.
Land, for Sale.
I r-v a ACRES of fine land for sale near Wal
lU4r nut church, In Randolph’s district,
Jackson county. About 65 or 70 acres In a high
state of cultivation. A beautiful location for a
store, being at a public place (Randolph’s court
ground) on the Gainesville and Hurricane Shoals
road, surrounded be good neighbors, with a
good church and school within one-half mile of
said place. For terms and particulars, see me
on the premises or address me at Pendergrass,
ua. B. A. HARRIS.
GUARANTEED
REMEDY.
SUFFERING FEMALES DESIRING A
QUICK,
Guaranteed, Cheap Cure,
CALL ON ME,
EVIE MAHAFFEY,
JFFEERSON, : : : : GEORGIA
ha!r R balsam
jJB nir.tia and beautifies the hail.
fcerA?!r N ever''Vil B to ii estore Gray
iSBiL- Hair to it* Youthful Color.
Cure. .calp diiease. gt^habfidUng.
Ce Parker’s Ginger Tonic. It cure, the wor.t Cough,
Weak Lungi. Debility, Indigtrtion, Pain, Take in time. 50eta
Notice of Dissolution.
The Arm of M. W. Park * Cos la this day dis
solved by mutual consent, M. W. Park suc
ceeding to tne business and all the property,
effects and credits of the arm and assuming the
Arm's liabilities.
HMahton, Ga, May am, law.
DEVOTED TO JACKSON COUNTY AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY.
JEFFERSON, JACKSON COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1894.
20,000 20,000
V...
Thousand Dollars’
WORTH OP
Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Etc.,
WILL BE SOLD AT
Actual New York. Cost!
%
We will discontinue business between now and Nov. 31st, in Gainesville .
We are determined to sell every dollar’s worth of goods we have on
hand at New York Cost. This is no Fahe, but every word
the truth . There isn’t a single piece of goods in our
house but what is new and stylish .
—THIS WILL BE THE—
Chance of Your Life to Set Bargains.
Corqe Early aqd Don’t Wait Until tt\e Last Day.
Shoes will be sold at factory cost. Country merchants, or merchants who
are not accustomed to going to the Eastern markets, should not let
this opportunity pass in buying .
Shoes at Factory Cost.
Oxford Ties at Factory Cost.
Shirts at Actual Cost.
Will say in regard to our Shirt and Underwear Department that it couldn’t be more complete. Matting at New
Vork Cost. Fans at 2c, 5c and 10a Our Dress Goods will be sold at prices to astonish the buyer.
COME AT ONCE AND SEE WHAT WE ARE OFFERING.
The Grandest Removal Sale
THAT HAS EVER TAKEN PLACE IN NORTHEAST GEORGIA.
PORTER, PITCHFORD & CO.,
East Side Public Square, : : : : Gainesville, Georgia.
F. L. PENDERGRASS. L. M. DADISMAN. J. T. STOVALL.
F. L. PENDERGRASS & CO.’S
BUYER HAS JUST RETURNED FROM THE
MSfIRN MARKETS,
*4
WHERE HE PURCHASED AN ELEGANT LINE OF
Dress Goods ai\d Notions,
At the Lowest Prices Ever Known in This Section of the State .
Scriven’s Patent Elastic Seam Drawers!
JUST XE THING EOE. BACHELORS.
UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS.
Bring down that Umbrella frame that you think so much of, and we will reooter it while you wait.
DRESS GOODS.
Chatties, from sc. up.
Tacoma Zephyrs.
Scotch Zephyrs.
Mandorin Stripes.
Tillo Stripes.
Mechlin Stripes.
Dotted Swiss.
Foulards.
Cotton and Wool Satteens.
Cream Albatros.
Wool and Silk Henriettas.
Trimming Silk.
Wash Silk.
Prints.
Outings.
Worsteds.
Cream and Pink Crepons.
Irish Lawn.
Organdies.
WHITE GOODS.
Mull de Paris.
India Linon.
Egyptian Dimity.
Victoria Lawn.
Figured Apronette.
India Dimity.
LACES.
Irish Point.
Point Venise.
Point d ’ Irlande.
< hnental.
Torchon.
Valencines.
GLOVES.
Lisle Thread.
Taffeta.
Lace Mits.
Black Mits.
Cream Mits.
Colored Mits.
Undressed Kids.
Dressed Kids.
SHOES.
Ladies' Oxford Ties.
NOTIONS.
Plain and Figured Netting.
Turkish Tidies , 15c up.
Nice line of Cassimeres.
Dress Linings and Trimmings.
Turkey Red Damask, from 25c. up.
White Damask, from 25c. up.
Turkey Red and Damask Doilies.
Negligee Shirts, ready for the laundry.
Bang Curlers and Hair Waivers.
Double Kneed Hose for Children and Misses.
Summer Corsets.
Ladies' Silk and Leather Betts ,
Gents' Leather Betts.
Pans, from a sc. Japanese up to an all Silk
at $1.50.
Ladies' Undervests, from 10c. up.
Hair Pins by the wheelbarrow load.
Satteen and Moire Ribbon , all the latest
shades. We have not space to enumerate
all the different kinds of goods that we
carry. Come and see.
A Great Day in Jackson.
Old Jackson county doesn’t believe
General E;ans should step down.
At least she acts as though she
doesn't feel that way.
A majority of 639 of her true and
tried Democrats say they are not yet
willing to drop the old .veteran and
help Billy and his henchmen out of
the quagmire into which their dam
nable frauds have placed them.
We have always counted old Jack
son for Evans, but never by more
than 300 mojority. Since Atkinson
has been running ahead and calling
on Evans to stop and help him many
of the men who control have had the
gall to claim Jackson.
Talk of unterrified Democracy—
you will find it in Jackson county.
There is not a better set of Democrats
in the State. In them you will find
the very ideal of partisanship, that
quality which makes a man keep
healthy and stalwart in the faith.
When you hear it said of a Jackson
county man that he is a Democrat you
are to understand that he is a Dem
ocrat in the fullest meaning of the
term, and that he is as far from Pop
ulism as the distance between the
planets.
Jackson is a glorious old county—
one of the very best in Georgia in all
respects. She has some of the best
farming lands, some of the best farm
er?, the cleverest and best dressed
citizens, the handsomest women and
prettiest girls.—Gainesville Eagle.
What Mother Left.
When mother died she left some
things here and they have made us
rich.
Let me tell you, dear reader, what
they were. She left her crutch here ;
for seven years it helped her walk,
but they don’t have crutches in heaven.
Think that out.
She could not see very well, and
hence, wore glasses—but she left
them here. No use for eye-helpers
there. No dim visions in heaven.
Think of it
She left her Bible here. It was her
chart and compass on the sea of life.
It brought her safe home to God.
She has no need of it now. We little
think of love letters when the lover
is near by.
She left her property here. It
would have made a poor showing
there in the King's palace in the city
of gold. What earthly use of carrying
aught to heaven when homes are fur
nished free ?
But, best of all, she left us the
example of piety and prayer. I pre
fer it to a clean million.
What will you take with you, and
what leave here ?
A Little.
Accept it, and make it the motto
of your life. A little moderation is
wealth and fortune; a condition that
promises the most peaceful life, free
from anxiety for the future, doubt
less requiring daily duties, but per
mitting many innocent enjoyments.
A little moderation in our desires,
contentment with what we possess,
making the most of it, and repressing
all vain dreams of a more brilliant po
sition, a more extended reputation, a
more famous name. A little—the af
fection of a heart devoted to duty,
and kindling joy in the family circle
composed of kindred to love, friends
to cheer, poor to succor, hearts to
strengthen, sufferings to alleviate. A
little—a taste for all that is beautiful;
books, works of art, music, not mak
ing us idly dream of fame, but simply
providing enjoyment for the mind, all
the more keen as the daily toil renders
the occasions rare.
Six Things a Boy Ought to Know.
That a quiet voice, courtesy and
kind acts are as essential to the part
in the world of a gentleman as a gen
tlewoman.
That roughness, blustering and
even foolhardiness are not manliness.
The most firm and courageous men
have usually been the most gentle.
That musculai strength is not
health.
That a brain crammed only with
facts is not necessrrily a wise one.
That the labor impossible to the
boy of fourteen will be easy to the
man of twenty.
The best capital for a boy is not
money, but love of work, simple
tastes, and a heart loyal to his friends
and his God.
Saves the Babies.
Mr. J. T. McAllister, of Rome, Ga.,
says: “Last June, Germetuer saved
our baby, Paul, carried him safely
through an extremely bad case of dys
entery and teething, and from a mere
skeleton of skin and bones it hag made
him a great big solid chunk of thirty
or thirty-five pounds.”
Mrs. Katherine L. Hillyer, writing
from Jonesboro, Ga., says: “I really
believe that Royal Germetuer saved
the life of my baby boy, several months
ago, when he was suffering with chol
era infantum.” $1 j 6 for $5.
Tbbmss 81.00 A Yjbaf.
FACTS ANE FANCIES.
The worst troubles we have aro
those that never happen.
Be careful of your manners; they
indicate your breeding.
Mail is distributed in 68,403 post
offices in the United States.
About all the use some people’s
heads are is to put their hats on.
The walls of Babylon were 340 feet
high and 100 feet thick at the base.
Worth recently made for a Persian
belle a gown which cost the wearer
$30,000.
A miser grows rich by seeming
poor; an extravagant man grows poor
by seeming rich.
Native laborers in Palestine work
for 15 cents a day and pay all their
own expenses.
Australia is said to have more
churches in proportion to population
than any other country.
No man has so many faults as his
enemies declare, nor so many virtues
as his admirers claim.
There is at present a colored pris
oner in the Alabama mines who speaks
twelve different languages.
One of the sages says: “Don’t go
to law unless you have nothing to lose ;
lawyers’ houses are built on fools’
heads.”
Christianity does not propose to
make a man better than his neighbor,
but it proposes to make him better
than himself.
One ought to carry his religion into
everything that he does, just as he
carries any other part of himself—
unconsciously.
Roman law allowed divorce for three
causes; the Scriptural reason, designs
on a husband's life, and the possession
of a false key.
These six—the peevish, the nig
gard, the suspicious, the dissatisfied,
the passionate, and those who live on
others’ means—are forever unhappy.
In North Carolina there are 33,280,-
000 acres of land, about 12,000,000
of which are in cultivation. Of this
number 1,600,000 acres are in cotton.
Marriage is a contract, but it differs
from all others in that it is the only
contract that minors can make which
in a court of law will be held good.
A scientist says: No one need have
any fear of a male wasp. He has no
sting. The trouble is that a fellow
isn’t positive as to its sex until after
he has been interviewed.
It is so much easier to raise your
hand at a revival meeting, to signify
that you are a Christian, than it is to
lift the same hand to do a good deed
after the meeting is over.
Some of the early kings of England
and France, when they were traveling,
were attended by coiners, who sup
plied them with money as it was
needed, fresh from portable mints.
Duty is a power that rises with us
in the morning and goes to rest with
us at night. It is co-extensive with
the action of our intelligence. It is
the shadow that cleaves to us, go
where we will.
Sir James Stephen knew the value
of a short and explicit will. His is
as follows: “This is my last will. I
give all my property to my wife,
whom I appoint my sole executrix.”
The oldest engine is claimed to be
in operation in a Savannah rioe mill.
It was built in 1815 by James Watt,
of Lancashire, England, and was
brought to this country in the same
year.
Near Brenham, Texas, lives a man
who has only one eye, the strange
feature of his case being the fact that
the place where the other eye should
be is a blank, and has been so from
birth.
Within the last month, lowa, Ken
tucky and Ohio have granted full suf
frage to woman, making twenty-three
States in which women can vote on
equal termß with men in all elections
pertaining to school management.
During a call that little four-year
old Mary was making with her
mother, a slice of cake was given to
her. “Now, what are you going to
say to the lady ?’ asked the mother*
“Is you dot any more?” said little
Mary, demurely.
The Oxford University press has
issued the most diminutive Bible in
existence. It is finely printed on Ox
ford Indian paper, and its minute di
mensions are only three and three
fourth inches in length, two and one
eighths of an inch in thickness.
Several of the Senators in Congress
take daily naps on the lounges in the
cloak rooms, and it frequently hap
pens in the middle of the afternoon
that the lounges are all occupied by
sleeping statesmen, some of whom
snore sc loud that the doors have to
be closed to keep the rumble from
becoming Audible in the galleries.
Pimples, boils and other humors
of the blood are liable to break out in
the warm weather. Prevent it by tak
ing Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
NO. 25.