Newspaper Page Text
By HOLDEB BBOS.
VOL. XIV.
CKRi-A-lSriD
CLEARANCE SALE!
j. 18. iy/rcn=?,~F 3 TT^v j
Leader of Styles aryd Low Prices.
There are a great many things in my stock which must be sold, at my
price if I can, at your price if 1 must.
COST WILL NOT BE CONSIDEBED! THEY MUST GO!
lam not going to sell everything at and below cost. Many things are
staple the year around, and will be sold, as always heretofore,
at a reasonable living profit, but there are many things—
new things, fresh things, beautiful things, which go
out with the season, and I mean what I say,
I Offer Them at ar\d Below Cost!
I will soon need the room for Fall Stock—you need the goods
now. Your price takes them.
J. B. MURPHY,
West Side public Square , - Gainesville, Georgia.
Messrs. HARRY BELL and DAVE LAY are still with me.
crisro- s. osLusr,
Gainesville, Ga v
MANUFACTURER OF
HARNESS AND SADDLERY
AND WHOLESALE DEALER IN
WHIPS, COLLARS, PADS, LEATHER. HARNESS HARDWARE.
I am the only manufacturer In the State that sells directly to the consumer,
Thereby You. tf\e NT Profit.
I Also aUA.KVa.NTKK My Prices to Merchant, to Be as Low as Those of Any Factory in tli® SOUTH.
Railrod Schedules.
LOCAL SCHEDULES
-OF THE—
Gainesville, Jefferson and Southern Ruilroad Cos.,
APRIL 22, 1894.
Thla Coapuf reserves the right to vary from these Schedules without notice to the public.
NORTH BOUND. BETWEEN SOCIAL CIRCLE SOU 1 H BOUND.
Rood Downward. GAINESVILLE. Read Upward.
M M SI c| || 6* 84 80
STATIONS. *
S? ss
Dally Dally Dally g* Dally Dally Dally
r. M. P. M. A. M. P. M.
1* 15 685 OLv .Social Circle..... Ar. 58[ 11 85 451
19 34 544 5 Gresham 47 11 03 358
19 53 6 06j lo Monroe 48j 10 40 340
115 62a 16. Campton 36 10 15 31 9
138 641 90 Bethlehem 381 955 ( 308
3<M 700 86 winder ST I 3S B 4Q
395 715 99 Mulberry 83 917 280
959 734 34 Hoschton IS 855 800
A g 4339 03 49 Bellmont. 10 880
130 459 811 45 Candler T 80810 80 751
900 590 146 59 Ar GalneSTllle Lv. 0 74010 00 795
A. M.P. M. P. Mj A M. A. M. P. M.,
No. 84 will wait Indefinitely at Bellont for No. 87.
No. 98 will run to Winder regardless of Ns. 64: and to Gainesville regardless of No 86.
No. 89 will run to Social Circle regardless of No. 83.
No. 84 will run to Winder regardless of No. 83.
No. 8t will run to GalneSTllle regardless of No. 84.
JEFFERSON BRANCH.
NORTH BOUND. BETWEEN JEFFERSON SOUTH BOUND.
Read Downward. AND BELLMONT. Read Upward.
87 88 l| te 98
STATIONS. r|
Dally Dally §§ j§l [Dally Dally
0 Lt Jefferson Ar. 13 P g^o A i^
1* 53 75* 7 Pendergrass 7 f3O 11 07
f’Sa.*® .Bellmont. Lt.| 0 | jp. B M?|A.°M?j !
No. 85 will run to GalneSTllle regardless of No. 84.
No. 88 will run to Jefferson regardless of No. 87.
JOE W. WHITE, A. G. JACKSON,
Traveling Passenger Agent, General Passenger Agent,
ATJ QITSTA, OA-
Queen of the Mountains.
POSTER SPRINGS,
So universally and so favorably known for years as Queen of the Mountains, opens June
90th, under tame management (Its owner) as heretofore, with same unsurpassed table fare and
low rates. Board by month $1 per day, by week $1.50 per day, less than week $9 per day.
New hack line contractor, with new hacks and news teams, leaving depot, Gainesville, Ga., on
arrival of morning train from Atlanta every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, going through In
seven hours. Fare $9, trunks 81 per hundred pounds, valises 25 cents.
Altitude I/**? feet above sea level; 2,000 feet above Atlanta; lACO feet above Marietta and
Gainesville; I,9oofeet above Mt. Airy. Clarksville and Tallulah Falls; 1,000 feet above Lookout
Mountain and Asbvllle—affording the greatest change of climate possible South. Chalybeate
water the strangest in Georgia.
Baths, billiards and ten pins free. Music for dancing every evening. Dally mall. Phys
ician always in attendance. Reference confidently made to all visitors of tbe past ten years.
For further information, address
HENRY p. farrow,
Porter Springs, Lumpkin Cos., Ga
The Jackson Herald.
Professional Cards
GEORGE C. THOMAS,
ATTOBNBT,
Cor. Broad and Thomas Sts. Athens, Ga.
W. E. BUGG,
Dentist,
Winder, Ga.
Will be In Jefferson on the first Monday In each
month, and remain until the 7th.
Dr. JOHN P. KESLEK,
Physician and Scrgeon,
Jefferson, Ga.
Solicits the patronage of the public generally,
and can be found at office formerly occupied by
Dr. S. J. smith, over N. N. Pendergrass k Co.’s
store, or at hla rooms at the Bailey House,
when not attending professional calls.
E. MORGAN, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Offers his professional services to the people of
Dry Pond and surrounding country. Calls an
swered promptly. Surgery a specialty.
W. H. QUAKTERMAN,
Attorney-at-Law and Dealer In Real Estate,
Jug Tavern (Winder), Ga
All business receives my prompt attention.
Thomas J. Shackelford. | Frank C. Shackelford
SHACKELFORD 3 SHACKELFORD,
Attorneys at Law,
Athens, Ga.
Office over J. S. King 3 Cos.
W. W. STARK,
Attorney at Law,
Harmony Grove, Ga.
J. A. B. MAHAFFBY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Jefferson, Ga.
W. I. PIKE,
Attorney at Law,
Jefferson, Ga.
Practices In all the courts of the Western cir
cuit, and elsewhere by special contract.
G. W. BROWN,
Attorney at Law,
MaysvUle, Ga.
Will do a general practloe. Collecting a spe
cialty.
W. P. DeLAPERRIBRE,
Physician, Surgeon £ Druggist,
Hoschton, Ga.
JOHN J. STRICKLAND,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
No. 11 Clayton Street. Athens, Qa.
C. A. RYDER,
Dentist,
Gainesville, Ga.
Office corner Spring and Sycamore streets.
All kinds of dental wort done at liberal prices
Crown and bridge wort a specialty.
B. C. ARMISTEAD,
Attorney at Law,
Jefferson, Ga.
WIU practice in all the courts of the Western
circuit.
T. W. KCBITIDERSOISr,
DENTIST.
All work guaranteed. Crown and bridge wort
q QttP> over Dtxee’l 4ru store
DETOTED TO JACKSON COUNTY AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY.
JEFFERSON, JACKSON COUNTY, GA„ FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1894.
20,000 20,000
Thousand Dollars’
WORTH OF
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 Fake, 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 Get Bargains.
Corqe Early ar\d Don’t Wait Ur\til the Last Day.
Shoes will be sold, at factory cost. Country merchants u 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
York Cosi. Fans at 2c, 5c and 10c. Our Dress Goods will be sold at prices to astonish the buyer.
COME AT ONCE AND SEE WHAT WE ARE OFFERING-
Th.e Grandest Removal Sale
THAT HAS EVER TAKER’ PLACE IR RORTHEAST GEORGIA.
PORTER, PITCHFORD & CO.,
East Side Pablie Square, : ; : : Gainesville, Georgia.
Wm. Brown, Jr. R. I. Mealor. J. W. Brown.
mmein works,
OPENED UP
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT.
Office and Shops Near Air-Line Depot.
Shaftings,Pul leys, Pipes & Fittings.
Valves and Cocks,
STEM! GAUGES, WATER GLASSES, |FON & BRASS CASTINGS
STAMP MILLS MADE TO ORDER.
Repairing of all kinds of Machinery a specialty. Correspondence solicited.
Agents lor James Leffel & Co.’s Boilers and Engines.
aXsBUYTHE^K.
lIOHT
the Test is theSpest.
Send TEH cent* to 28 Union Sq. t H. V.,
for our prlxe game, Blind Luck, and
win a Mew Home Sewing Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Cos.
** lo a** FOR SALE BY ‘Hum.Tiv
J. B. TOOMER, Ag’t, Athens, Ga.
• * w remedies that do not in-* • •
iure the health or interfere with one • buaineea or
erasure It builda up and improve* the general
health, ciears the skin and beautifies the complexion.
It, & I. r. SITBEt, ■’VICKEI'I TILATIA, ClifiASß, IU.
!&|)
Rootbeer
makes the home circle complete. This
great Temperance Drink gives pleas
ure and health to every member of toe
family. A 25c. package makes 5 gal
lo'va. Be sure and get the genuine.
Sold everywhere. Made only by
The Chas. E. Hires Cos., Philada.
9m4 c tmp ter bwntlfal Plctnrt Cnl>jndJßock^
IkcMATSJRADL MARks^v
W COPYRIGHTS.^
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT ? For a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
Mt'NN Ac CO., who have bad nearly fifty years’
experience in the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In
formation concerning Patents and how to oh.
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 cost to the inventor. This splendid paper.
Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the
largest circulation of any scientific work In the
world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building BdiUommontfaly, *£i© a year. Stngla
copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau
hoSiea!^itk
beqapwat.
rnmkTAKE
the
SI.OO MI ■ J3|
One cent a dose.
This GrxatCouqh
where all others fail. Coughs, Croup. Bora
Throat, Hoaraeneaa, whooping Cough and
Asthma. For Consumption it naa no rival:
has cured thousands, and will CUR* you if
taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guar
antee. For a Lame Back or Chest, use
BHILOH’S BELLADONNA PLASTERJBc.
nHILOHVVCATARRH
g^BBBa^REMEDY.
Have you Catarrh? This remedy is ruaraa.
teed to cure you. Prioe,6octs. Injector free.
Sold by all Druggists.
iO&TH&WAY&CQ
(Regular Graduates.)
Are the leading and most successful specialists and
vlll give you help.
we alone own and
are nervous
to guarantee to all patients. If they can possibly
be restored, our own exclusive treatment
will afford a core.
WOMESI Don’t yon want to get cured of that
weakness with a treatment that you can use at
borne without Instruments? Our wonderful treat
ment has cured others. Why not you? Try It.
CATARRH, and diseases of the Skin, Blood,
Bean, Liver and Kidneys.
S"YPHILIB—The most rapid, safe and effective
remedy. A complete Cure Guaranteed.
SKIN DISEASES of all kinds eured where
many others have failed.
UNNATURAL DISCHARGES promptly
cured In a few days. Quick, sure and safe. This
Includes Gleet and Gonorboea.
TRUTH AND FACTS.
We have eared cases of Chronic Diseases that
have failed to get cured at the hands of other special
ists and medical Institutes.
that there Is hope
for Ton. Consult no other, as you may waste valuable
time. Obtain our treatment at once.
Deware of free and cheap treatments. We give
the best and most scientific treatment at moderate
prices—as low as can be done for safe and skillful
treatment. FREE consultation at the office ot
by mall. Thorough examination and careful diag
noslg. A home treatment can he given In a majority
of cases. Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men;
No. 2 for Women: No. 3 for Skin Diseases. All corre
spondence answered promptly. Business strictly con
Odentlal. Entire treatment sent free from observa
tlon. Befer to our patients, banks and business men
Addreu or call on
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
wSI-S South Broad Street, Atlanta, #*
[Written tor The Jackson Herald.h
The Normal Tide.
The normal tide has struck the State,
And lo! the teachers, old and young,
Intend to change the children’s fate
By methods new, which they've begun.
“Now, what’s the use,” some teachers say,
“Of all this ‘hlghfelutlng’ tide ?
I’ll go my own—my even way,”
And lo! they soon are pushed aside.
I wish my comrades, one and all,
Could come In touch with such a tide,
As we receive, both great and small,
When good Professor Bond’s our guide.
Oh! how he prances round and round,
With arms a-ktmbo, face a-flush.
And scrapes the dust from off the ground,
And gives us every one a push,
To help us out the treadmill way
Of going round and round again;
To help us out the "cabin” way,
And lively methods to begin.
O, come, I say, my comrades dear!
A lively move upon us get;
And we will loud applauses hear,
And we’ll succeed—why, yes, “you bet t”
J. W. PBICUTT.
Jefferson, Ga , June 29th, 1894.
THE DYING EDITOR.
An Unknown Contributor Tells of His
Woes in Blank Verse.
The owner of a paper lay dying in
his lair, and the dew of death had
gathered on his brow so calm and
fair, but a printer knelt beside him as
his lifeblood ebbed away and asked
the dying editor if he had a word to
say. The doomed man murmured
softly, as he grabbed the printer’s fist:
“Well, at last the struggle’s over,
and I never will be missed. Take a
message and token to that city man
of mine—that all his worn out chest
nuts he had better put in brine.
There’s his joke about the weather,
which he used this many years, and
the gag about the fellow who is al
ways hunting beers, and the item he’B
so fond of on the man who peddles
books, and the chestnut based on p< o
ple who go fishing in the brooks. Just
to save the paper’s credit and to cast
no slurs on mine, 1 would ask him as
a favor to put such gags in brine,
and the lies he’s fond of telling of the
street cars and the tacks, and the one
about some dandy who will never pay
for clothes, and the one on women
cleaning house—it’s weary, heaven
knows !
“Ob, I know I’ll slumber happy
in my grave beneath the vine if the
man who does the city work
will put those jokes in brine. Tell
the man who tends to business not to
weep when lam dead, but to buy
himself a club and hit the first man
on the head who comes in with strings
of items and requests them printed
free when the regular rates are
oheaper than they really ought to be.
Tell the foreman when he makes up
not to turn a rule for me, but to
simply print an item saying that my
soul is free, for I want no eulogistio
taffy of that kind in mine, and I think
such hoary chestnuts should be
pickled well in brine.
“Have that gay and fresh reporter
I engaged the other day put a stop
to saying ‘Selah!’ also ‘We have
come to stay!’ And if he should say
‘Ye local’ you must trample in his
gore, for you know I’d ne’er allow
it in the happy days of yore. And
the man who comes to tell you how
to run the paper well should be
greeted with a pewter chestnut bell.
And you'll print the paper promptly,
be the weather full of storms, ano
the foreman must be careful whir
he is making up the forms that the
beauty of the pap. r may through all
ages 6hine, and not be like its neigh
bors, only fit to put in brine*.”—Yen
owine’s Milwaukee News.
Proper Site for a House.
The site of a house should receive
the careful attention of the tenant,
purchaser, or one proposing to build.
A god site may mean life and happi
ness, and a bad one disease, suffering
and death.
1. It should be dry; avoid, as you
would death, a damp location. In a
town or city, carefully ascertain
whether or not it is on “made ground.”
Avoid it Avoid ground underlaid
with clay, for it will always be damp
2. Elevated on a hillside or genii*
knoll, never in a hollow. The hillsid*
is warmer and drier than the hollow
3. Not close to a swamp, slow river,
mill-dam, or land which is overflowed
a portion of the year, nor in such a
place that the prevailing winds wil
bring to the house pestilence from a
mill-dam, etc.
4. In as good a neighborhood at
possible, away from factories, saloons,
etc., and near schools and churches.
5. In a village or town built on as
large a lot as possible, thus securing
air and sunlight. Build back from
the street, thus avoiding the dust of
the dry season and the curious gaze
of every passer. Secure a yard in
which trees and plants will furnish
both exercise and health.
There are venomous fishes whose
spines inflict dangerous wounds, much
like the stings of snakes.
The people quickly recognize merit
and this is the reason the sales of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla are continually
increasing. Hood's is “on top.”
Tbbmb: 81.00 a The.
Quarrel of a Needle and Pin.
A pin and a needle, says a clever
writer to an exchange, being neigh
bors in a work basket and both being
idle folks began to quarrel, as idle
folks are apt to do.
“I should like to know,” said the
pin, “what are you good for and how
you expect to get through the world
without a head ?”
“What is the use of your head,”
replied the needle, rather sharply,
“if you have no eye ?"
“What is the use of an eye,” said
the pin, “if there is always something
in it t"
4 ‘l’m more active and can go
through more work than you can, 'J
replied the needle.
“Yes, but you will not live long, be
cause you have always a stitch in the
side,” said the pin.
“You area poor, crooked creature,”
said the needle.
“And you are so proud that you
can’t bend without breaking your
back.”
“I’ll pull your head off if you insult
me again.”
“I'll pull your eye out if you touoh
me. Kemember, your life hangs on a
single thread,” said the pin.
While they were thus conversing a
little girl entered, and undertaking to
sew she very soon broke off the needle
at the eye. She then tied the thread
around the neck of the pin and at
tempted to sew with it, but pulled
the head off and threw it into the dirt
by the side of the broken needle.
“Yes, we have nothing to fight
about now,” said the pin. “It seems
misfortune has brought us to our
senses.”
“A pity we had not come to them
sooner,” said the needle. “How
much we resemble human beings,
who quarrel about their blessings till
they lose them and never find out
they are brothers till they lie down in
the dust together, as we do.”
Scientific and Industrial.
Male mosquitoes do not bite.
Bees fly from eighteen to twenty
miles an hour.
Soap is one of the best sterilizers
of impure water.
Gold leaf 1-250,000 of an inch thiok
was rolled in Elwood City, Ind., re
cently.
A long, strong thumb always indi
cates great will power and force of
character.
On the highways of Great Britain
more than 8,000 steam engines are in
use for transport servioes. A traction
engine, on good roads, can draw a
moderate sized train of wagons sixty
miles a day.
It is reported that a vein of sylvan
ite ore, from two to four inches
thick, has been struck in one of the
mines at Cripple Creek, Col, whioh
will run $160,000 to the ton. Syl
vanite is native tellurium with a large
proportion of gold and silver.
By a simple rule, the length of the
day and night, any time of the year,
may be ascertained by simply doub
ling the time of the sun’s rising,
whioh will give the length of the
night, and doubling the time of set
ting will give the length of the day.
Bathing is often answerable for
aural disease when ducking the head
is practiced. The ear is intolerant of
oold water, and, in addition to this,
the stimulating properties of sea
water render it irritating to the ear,
and liable to set up inflammation.
An automatic apparatus for indicat
ing to passengers in railway cars the
name of the next station has been
adopted on the underground railway
in London. As each station is passed
a card bearing the name of the next
station drops into place in a glass
covered frame and an electric bell
rings to call attention to the change.
The attempts to secure an alloy of
aluminum and platinum have at last
been successful. The alioy is of a
handsome yellow color, not unlike
gold alloy with five per cent, of silver,
and is suitable for protecting steel
articles from rust It contains only
a very small proportion of platinum,
and, therefore, will not be expensive.
Who the Strangers Are.
A green goods man recently flooded
lowa and Indiana with his circulars.
His instructions to intending custom
ers read as follows:
“When you oome to New York
wear a silk hat and a sack coat, so
that I shall be able to recognize you
anywhere in town.”
A number of men dressed in this re
markable combination were seen in
New York last week. They were all
here in answer to the circular, it is
said.
Iq former years when a man had on
a silk hat and a pea jacket New York
ers knew at once that he was from
Chicago. But the Windy City pro
gresses as the years roll on. They
don’t dress like that any more out
there.—Nsw York Herald.
NO. 27.