Newspaper Page Text
THE HERALD.
Published every Thursday ;tl Jasper. <■!.
I { % 'VV’• It* "%! I \( yjuY .
One Year, . , $1.00.
Six Months, . . 50c.
Rates of Advertising'made known on
application
August 80,1888.
_
Tin: Atlanta Kvunin- Capitol
lias susjKniit,] jiublication,
1 he Fayetteville News clips n
great deal, but fails to give credit. |
Hon. Tyler M. Peeples, of Gwin¬
nett county, is being groomed for
the congressional race two years
hence.
Hon. A. S Clay, of Cobb, is the
coming man of the 7th congres¬
sional district, and we are proud of
him.—Cherokee Advance.
The Mormon movement in Ala
bantu has been drawn to a close by
the disappearance of two propa¬
gandists of that faith. Idle disap-
pearance remedy is the only efflea-
cious one.—Atlanta Constitution.
Good, b’ gosh!
Georgia will elect State officers
and Legislature and vote upon a
proposed constitutional amend-
nrent to increase the number of
Supreme court judges from three
to five on Wednesday, Ooctobei 3.
Congressmen will be elected Tues-
<l.ty, Nov. 6.
Georgia is not particularly anx-
ious for immigrants who settle in
cities. She wants immigrants who
Will bring the soil under the con-
trol of the husbandman, and who
will not only be good citizens, but
who will help to build up the sec-
tion of country tin Which they lo-
cate.—Kx.
All this North Georgia country
is fast becoming famous as a sum¬
mer resort. Boarders are here
now from Florida, Alabama, South
Carolina and Arkansas, and the
number will increase every year as
these resorts become advertised.—
Fannin Co. Gazette.
In the political excitement of the
present year let us not forget that
the development of our country is
of first importance. Make up your
mind to vote for thc man who is
the best qualified and the most
worthy, having always the host in¬
terests of the people at heart, and
then keep cool and do not allow
yourself to be pulled and dragged
about by scheming office seekers.
We cannot afford to lose sight of
the growth of our country for the
sake of party success.
Let all our energy go towards
building up good schools and edu¬
cating our young people in the
ways of economy, industry, truth
and morality. Let its aid every-
thing that will raise the moraI"'ftnd
intellectual standard of our people.
Let us give encouragement to'ev¬
ery enterprise that has for its ob¬
ject the financial elevation of •our
country. Let us lay aside "our
mean prejudices and jealousies and
go t-> work with might and main.
\\ e have one ot the grandest see-
lions ot country in the world it we
could only appreciate the fact. It
is well known that our marble de-
posits are practically inexhaustible,
and that our climate is well-nigh
perfect; our land* ate capable of
producing the most varied crops
and those in great abundance; that
fruits of all kind s, and grapes.
grow here to perfection Only
energy and industry are needed to
make f.eorgia the Empire State o>
the Ui mu, and North. Georgia th k
gaivii it snot of the State.
‘•Nothing never strikes twice in
too me place Neither does a
nude * hey dott’V have t
A i TU ■ \ advertises that she has a
.me, any, well lurmshed bedroom
for a gentleman t\\ elve feet square j
Morbns Kabhattleuft*
Morbus Sabbatticus, or Sunday
sickness, a disease peculiar to
church memhets. The attack
on suddenly ... every ,, Sunday; ,
comes
no symptoms are Mt on
^ Vv - patient sle< ]>s well unci
1 awakes feeling well; eats a hearty
breakfast, but about church time
I ; the attack conics on and continues
tint. 1 services are over for the
morning. Then the patient feels
easy and eats a hearty dinner.
In the afternoon he feeds much
better and is able to take a walk,
t; lk politics and read the Sunday
papers; he eats a hearty supper,
bt,t ab<,ut church ‘ime he has an.
other attack and stays at home.
The peculiar features of this dis-
casc ;irc a s follows; It quite often
attacks members of the church. It
never makes its appearance except
on the Sabbath. It generally at¬
tacks the head of the family. It
always proves fatal in thc end—to
the soul. No remedy is known for
it except earnest prayer. Religion
is the only antidote that will cure.
It is becoming fearfully prevalent,
and is sweeping thousands every
year prematurely to destruction.—
Lx.
At a meeting < >{ thc State J ' ar '
nurs ’ A,hailcc ’ held m Macon ]a st '
wcck - thc folI(!witl « reaolution vvas
offered by A. ‘J’. Pope, of Ogle-
thorpe county, and was unanimous-
ac j opt;C{ j ;
.-whereas thc Bagging Trust
wh}ch is now Peking to so wicked-
]y opprC!W the farmers 0 f the cot-
fon states in the article of bagging
an( j () fner articles of consumption,
.. Rcgolvct]( -fhat the Farmers’
of Georgia, hold their
in thc seed so far as prac-
until the oppression sought
to be put upon them is broken,and
urge all cotton farmers and Alli-
ance nteil of other States, and oth-
er parties thnt are being oppressed
by this combination to unite with
us against these Combinations and
trusts that are so wickedly oppvtfcs-
s ' n ^ uh '
Ueorgin on Wheels.
The Macon Telegraph savs that
Commissioner Glessner has started
for the great West with his well
packed “Georgia car.”
By dint of untiring industry and
the exercise of good judgment, the
commissioner managed to collect
and place in this one car a minature
State fair. It contains a collec¬
tion of the resources and products
of the State which would surprise
HmSt Georgians and which, we are
sure, will make a good impression
wherever an exhibit is made.
The car with its varied contents
wiil be taken to Several great fairs
in Ohio, to two in Indiana, And to
the Michigan State fair.
\yhen Commissioner Glessner
spreads out in proper array till the
treasures he has collected from the
fields and forests at Georgia, he
will make a show that must attract
attention anywhere.
The natural wealth of this State
is not understood Or appreciated
by our own people, much less by
those who have never had an op¬
portunity to visit Georgia, The
travels of the commissioner and
itis car will he watched with inter¬
est by the people of this State. If
the enterprise does not result in
much practical benefit to Georgia
we shall be sadly mistaken.
Apothegms.
The heart of the man is like the
love of the Master.
I.aUghtei and «oilg are the
Heart’s river of !lope.
A smile through tears is the
soul’s rainbow of peace
The amenities of Ido make the
true beauty el living.
Life is n continual routine in
whatever guise it assumes.
Good breeding is like affection,
one cannot have too much of it.
The simple faith of a little child
is the world’s truest homage. i
Dreams are ofttinlels the fulfill- ;
moot of ft prophecy within our-
|
forgiveness Hie | !
The power^ i»t is
B0BBE *ing doctors to get up
Mnn« B e(" pretty much all trust
the Safe. now,
•r than the harsh treatment of
r whieh horribly gripe the pa-
to inv s
V>y mil<I yet effective action will
Sold at so cents a lmttle.
The Minnesota law now requires
seven days notice of an intention
to marry.
Persons who lead a life of exposure are
subject to rheumatism, neuralgia and
lumbago and will find a valuable remedy
iu Dr. J. if. Mel,can's Volcanic Oil Lini¬
ment; it will banish pain and subdue in-
llamution.
Nobody can paint pictures equal
to the artist whose nom de plume
is Jim James.
Physicians prescribe Dr.J.II. McLean’s
Tar Wine Lung Balm; in it they find no
trace of opium or morphia, while its effi¬
cacy in curing all throat or lung diseases
is wonderful.
Don’t the man who commits su¬
icide by hanging himself die of bis
own free will and a cord?
Arc you restless at niglit,and liinrasseil
lty a bad cough? Use Dr. .1. II. McLean's
Tar Wine Lung Halm, it will secure you
a Bound sleep, and effect a prompt and
radical cure.
Bad men excuse their faults;
good men will leave them.
Sick headache, Vviwl on the Stomach,
biliousness, nausea, are promptly and
agreeably banished by Dr. J. II.McLean’s
Little Liver ntul Kidney Fillets. 27c. a
vial,
The School for Scandal has
many pupils.
noblest attribute in the
s character,
Let no day glide into e‘
without catching a glint; iffioe
j ,, Heaven , Sea. c .
s
Despair and happiness a’
| closely linked that each is ri\4*o
the wealth of the other.
Watch Yonr Tongue. j I
It is your tongue; it belongs to i
you, and it is the only one for
which you are responsible. Your
neighbors’ tongues may neid care
also, but that is their bisincss;
this is yours. See that it i! prop¬
erly attended to.
Watch your tongue; it needs
watching. It “is a fire”—watch
it. It is a helm which guides the
vessel; let the helmsman keep
wide awake; it can bless or it can
curse; it can poison or heal; it can
pierce hearts and blight hones; it
can sow discord and separate chief
friends.
Watch your tongue. No one
but you can take care that
tongue. You are its only ruler.
Your neighbors may hate it or fear
it, or wish they could bridle it; but
they cannot do it. You have the
power.
That tongue has already got you
into trouble; it may do it again; it
is “set on fire of hell.” It. burns
up peace, blessing, deputation,
hope. It causes sad days, weary
nights, tearful eyeS and heavy
hearts. “If a man will love life
and see good days let him refrain
his tongue from evil, and his lips
to speak no guile.”
The tongue is the glory of man.
It distinguishes him front the
brutes. It was bought with blood
by the son of God. He claims it
as his. It should speak his praises:
misemployed, it may degrade your¬
self and those around you. You
are charged to attend to it.—“Ex.
A Little Love.
I am minded to write a few
lines on the little courtesies of life
tlmt some of us who are Rusbands
and wives seem to have forgotten,
or purposely set aside, since the
days of our honeymoon. We clung
to them tenaciously enough before
—yes, we gloried in them. I know
I used to tip my hat in the most
graceful and courteous manner to
my Wite when I chanced to meet
her on the street before we were
married. Sometimes, I confess it
with shame, I don’t do it no\V. I
used, in those “politer” days, to
think that she could Hot, under
any circumstances, go up stairs
without a good deal of my amt for
support, alul now—well, sometimes
1 bull oil ahead of her, and she
says reprovingly; “Here, sir, you
are a gallant husband, to let me go
up stairs unassisted.” Then I al¬
ways g<i back and do my duty in
this respect. Wives cliilg longer
than husbands to all the gentle,
gracious little courtesies that were
never forgotten in the halcyon
lays of their courtship; but they,
too, forget at times some of the
little things that made them so
charming ill thc eyes of Toni or
John Or Will. The lack of these
little courtesies and kindnesses has
much to do with the lack Of har¬
mony and happiness in litany
homes.- -Good Housekeeping,
Bays of Mirth.
The right to pay taxes lias nev¬
er been denied woman.
A bar at which you can keep
perfectly sober—thu cvov,’-bar.
A man doesn’t get even even
when he has married two times.
before arithmetic was invented
people multiplied Oil the face of
;he eat'th.
Fuitny, isn't it, that after a man
has once given his wdril he should
try sd hard to keep it,
A woman s motto; There's ai-
ways room at the butt Ora--for
postscript or two.
Lx H-sffre to h.iigb l eaf,.or. ^tOng
wet, living ;tt ilatilp loesiliaes, are laVora-!
hie. t" the Oo'airaetiplt of disease* of the
ki<bx>v* and bUkhleh As J preventative.
and trouble. for tile Use ctu-e that Of valuable all kidney remedy. and Dr. h'or .!■ j j
H. McLean’s Liver and Kiilite\ Batitv | i
s>.ua u-t u»*th»
WEBSTER’S
UNABRIDGED
With or without latent Index.
(fWEBSrtp, A
Wo .wm 1 LIBRARY
%-crwitteJa. IN
ITSELF
Tour Attention is invited to the fact that in pur¬
chasing the latest issue of thia Work, you get
A Dictionary
1 containing 3000 more Kurils and nearly 1000 mora
Illustrations than any other American Dictionary.
A Gazetteer of the World
containing over 25,000 Titles, other with their information, pronunci¬
ation and a vast amount or
(recently added,) and
A Biographical Dictionary
giving pronunciation of names and brief facte
concerning nearly 10,(NX) Noted Persons 1 also
various tablet giving valuable information.
All in One Book.
Webster's Unabridged Superintendents Dictionary of is Schools recommend- In 36 1
•d by the State Presidents
States, and by loading College of the
United State* and Canada. It Is Standard Art-,
tliortty with the United rMhtihg States Supreme Court, It
and in the OoVefhtnent Office; has
been selected in eYory case tVhero Stale Purchases
have been made for Schools, and is the Diction-
ary opon which nearly all the school hooka are
Get the Latest and Best.
It Is an Invaluable bompkmoii in wtrery Sehnol,
and at every Fireside. Specimen pages and
testimonial] sent prepaid on application.
Published by C. * C. IpHngQsId, MERR1AM A Mass,, CO., U, Si At
VVlirn nature falters and requires help,
recruit her enfeebled energies with I)r.
J. H. McLean’s Strengthening Cordial
and lilnod Purifier. SI.00 per bottle.
Caress is the Hew fival town to
Kissimmee.
Children will freely take 1)1'. J. II. Mc¬
Lean's Tar Wine Lultg Halit); Unlike oth¬
er cough syrups, it contains lto opium,
and will soothe and heal any disease of
the throat or lungs quicker than any oth¬
er remedy.
A railway ticket man is thc
.
modern road agent.
“The whisky trust”—getting a
drink put on the slate.
It is said that there fife 12,000
Smiths in Philadelphia.
One of the torcherft of ft cam¬
paign is the night parade.
Sl»e**iff*‘’H Nales.
(iniuiui.i, Pk'kkxs CovN'TY!
Will lie sold, 011 the first Tuesday in in
September next, at the court house
said county, within the legal hours of
sale, to the highest hidden for cash, the
following' property, to wit;
Ten acres, more ov less, of lot of land
number 17. ill the l.'ith district and 2nd
section of Pickens county, tut,, condition¬
al lilies :in follows! (’otlliileiielng at a post
on the east Side of the Hull Ground road,
leading front .hi.'-qie)' to Unit r • round, ami
.71 l-S rods north front the original thence smith
line of fitiiil lot. alul running east
along a conditional line between what is
known as tile (’tthnihglnUti property Pick¬ and
the property formerly owned hv T.
ett, a distance of three hundred riiul for¬
ty six yards, thence north olie hundred
and forty yards, thence west three hun¬
dred and forty-six yltrtls, thence south
one hundred ami forty yards to the com¬
mencing epriler. the aiittte being the
prehiities wholeon S. A. Dili-noll how re¬
sides, amt Well improved. Maid hind lev¬
ied on as the property of S. A. Darnell to
satisfy five executions issued froth the
Justice's court of 1098 District, (>. M..
.said county, in favor rtf J. W. Henderson
& Soil against said 8. A. Darnell and L.
J. Darnell, Property pointed oUt by de¬
fendant, s. A. Darnell. LeVy titarte and
returned liy \V. -M. King, L. <\
Also at the rtahie time and place Will he
sold 40 tu-res, more or less, of lot of land
number 171, in the 5th district and 2nd
section of said county, in the south-west
corner Or said lot. Levied on as the prop¬
erty of Thomas f. Champion by virtue of
and to satisfy a mortgage ti f.t issued
from the Superior court of said county
in favor of A. W. Davis vs, said Thomas
('. Champion, Joltx E, JiUlXsoN,
August, 1 st, iSSS. Sheriff.
Dr« Moffett’s TEETHiNA (Teething Powders)
Allay* Irritation. Aids Digestion, KcRnlaWs tho
B.nvelr, Stri I'Rthoiis the Child, makes Teething
haw ant Cost* only 25 Oen*s. Teeth ir,a cures
Eruptions and Sores, fend m.thimr Kjnals It for
the summer troubles of Children of any age. II
igsaft and sure. Try it and you will never_ be
without TEETHIN A as lohs as there are cUltP
n o tu the House. Ask Tour Druggist.
For sale by Dahxki.i. W Hk iiakhs.
Jasper, Ga.
WANTED!!!
Hrtiahlr anti ni«tlvu nren to travel for
dll established house during the sulillhei 1
nn(1 ^ t , 0| . u ,. ity y r „ hl ,,. ad .
vaui^jd monthly for to lie pay right expenses, bif'd \
fifreitf cfmilce I State
business experience, and to save
cards. r”femhces! Never liiiacl itwlittion^aid about sending staff!p
for reply. Address l,v»
lL uieiononff, v«
For Neat
JOB WORK
GO TO THK
IIEUA1.D OiUce.
-O---
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Letter Heads,
Envelope,
Dlilltk .... Aotfs, .1 , ,, ( OHl't SillltlllOliSCS,
list ICC
*
-—-etc., trie,, etc.* ——
All work (littte promptly and neatly,
book-keeping, short-HAND, TELEGRAPHY, PENMANSHIP, Eto.
'mm,
Who desires to better his of her condition in life, should write for the c * tal ° fl | u l°L
400 THIRD STREET, tOmsVIULfc* K*L
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The Official Organ of Pieki'tifc County. IhiinclUso Advertising Mfctllhitt,
and wkle-awnke journal, devoted to the'upl tabling nhd
A live, progressive
thvloptrteut rtf oui- Mountain Country,
—Published at the fcffiall price Of^- 1
One Dollar a Year.
,limpet In live ami growing town, situated netu the far-fnnu d
a
Marble Beds!
NUlTnUWlcd by the most beautiful «ml picttuesqtie scenery, Tim climate
mild ivud health,v. the Water i« cool and sparkling, and the soil is v< r> , ei'fiUi.
While iitdepcndcfii ill iis Views oh polilicul matters, THE HRR
ALP is intended to be a Newspaper, and net a Political Machine
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The
JASPER, uv