Newspaper Page Text
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THE DANIELSVILLirMONITOR:
Berry T. Moseley, Editor.
VOL. XIII.
V/ e Lead - Others Follow.
BROAD ST., ATHENS, GA.—SAME OLD STAND.
Qeautiful Decorated Qhina
and Qrocery
ALL GRADES ND SOLD IN SETS OR SINGLE PIE CES
4 -
Lamps ingieat variety and of all grades. Glassware in all pattern.
Our stock wtfs naver so large, to pretty and so complete. ... f
Knives and Forks, Spoons, Castors, Tinware asd Granite Ironware in
almost endless profusion and at all prices.
Housekeepers can find everything they need at our place.' Prices
wer# never so low and goods so pretty. T
J. H. HUGGINS & SON. >
BROAD STREET - ATHENS, GA.
WHEN YOU WANT BARGAINS OIVE
D. E. GMFfETH,
AT DANIII SVIKLI, GA.\ #
ehanes at your trade. He oarries a,full and complete
line of,
DRY COODS, NOTONS, ETC
.... V ~ * 1
y r '
Which were bought before the ri#e, and lie is giving
Jiis benefit of -his lucky purohaee. In
€2s # eerles
am* ~ V.. aw,.-*
STAPLE GOOD* AND COUNTRY PRODUCE
'"v /
He doss net propose to be undersold. He also carries
full and complete Tines of Hardware, Glassware,' Tinware,
••
Wooden ware, etc.
His priees are as lew as the lewest, and all he asks is
that .you give him a call, see kis goods and hear his prices.
Remember the place
L E. GRIFFITH
danielsville, ga.
Scott‘s
Carbo digestive
Compound.
o
Positively the one ‘Remedy tor
for the treatment of
Nervous Exhaustion
Simple and Aggravated forma of
Dyspepsia '
Palpitation - ot * tne- H^art
Does yonr food sooi aftei <at
ing? Are you easily ccnrused and
•icited? Do yon get up m the
morning tired ana nnretresqed.and
with a bad taste in the mouth.
letheoe a dull, cloudyseuaation
attended by disagreeab[e feelings
in the head and dyes 1
Are you irritable and rratlesg?
Does it distress you to lie oi
your left side.
Have you impaired memory
dimness of vision, depression of
mind and gloomy forebodings.
These symptona mean that you
are suffering from Dyspepsia and
Nervous Exhaustion,
There is no remedy ex
tant that has dons so much for
thiq olass of troubles as
Sell's CarMipfe
v Ctpi
' If your raße has resisted the usual mcth
! ojlscf treatment we are particularly am
! ions to have you give this compound a
i trial,-' •
We guarantee releif In every case and
wil! cheerf all ? refund your money should
the remedy fail to produce the most rati
fying results.
Please remember that the appellation
Patent Medicine does not applj to
Scott’s Oarbo-Disjestive
Cos pound
It is a prescription put up by a leading
physician who lig* made stomach ana
nervous troubles a specailty for years,
We court investigation and earnestly
urge all physiciaus to write us tor the
formula of SCOTT'B C A RBO-DIftEBTIVE
COMPOUND, which we will mail on appli
tion that they may satisfy themselves
of it* harmle s character and excellen
inrtues.
SCOTT’S CARBO-DIGESTTVE
COMPOUND
Is the most remarkable remedy that
science has produced. It has suc
ceeded where other medicines have
failed.
Sold by all druggists everywhere
SI.OO per nottle. Sent to anv ad
dress in America on receipt of price.
Don’t forget that we cheerfully
refund your money if results are
not satisfactory. Order direct if
your druggist does not have it. Ad
dress all orders to
CONCORD CHEMICAL MANU
FACTURING 80.
Topeka, Kate
Devoted to the Madison County.
DANIELSVILLE, GA., FRIfAY. NOV. Ist. 189>.
SAL
— r ‘ r
-Bch*aule in effect March HfHT *9B"
N’thjN’rth South. (South
P.M.jPas*. * Pass *|P. M’
&Ex.L& Ex Stations. Ex. 1M Ex
amlpm 8 a°’ m ‘f"; 45
815 9 tSrvAtlllliLr 920'7 4ft
842 9 48“B’UWn“ 652 7 14
855 9 55“ Tucker “ 5 4(1 tIM
9 081 0 05“ Li!bum “ 4 S'SO 048
9 18 10 14“ Glostet
9 27 10
®BBIO §5 ‘ Daeula - 600 614
948 10'43 “ Auburn “ 452 606
10 00,10 64 “ Winder “ 441 668
10 15 11 08 “StathauD* *’4'fi7 58*
10 22 11 15 “ Bogart. 4 20 5 28'
10 4111 28“ Athens 408 608
10 5811 47 “ Hull “ 848 4em
i l 04 11 56 f “KivF’kß** 8 B<i 4 W
11414 13 07 “ Corner “ Bgf
\i 24 12 18“ Carlton “■ 8.j7
If 56 12 43 “Elberfott** 2 52j 40®
11 55 12 55 ‘ Midd'torr'* 1 226
12 02 1 04 ‘ Heard’ml“ 2 841 88$
12 18 118 “Ua. Falls 44 2IY 82
12 24 1 88!“ Watts “f fO2 81l
12 45 2 00|“Abbeville‘ 147 BOi
1 18 231 “Greenw‘d‘ 109 24T
147 800 “Cr’ssHill 11 -12 41 2 o*fl
200 809
2 15 8 29“ Clinton “ 12 18 1 40l
834 “ .Dover ~12 09 J
4 05 Whitmire,, 11 89 J
426 “Carlisle „II W~ *jj
* 6 00 “ Chester ~ 10 48
547 “Catawba* 1 10 08
6 10 “Waxliaw* 939 |
680 Ai-MonreLv 915 j
P.M.A.M. . Mf .Ml
Trains 88 and 41 run*sol
between Atlanta and Nor fowl
carrying Pullmarusleeper, making!
direct connections at Weldon vyila|
Atlantic Coast Line for Washing
ton and Now York, and all poiJH
North and East. At Norfolk w|fcig
steamers for Washington. Bay Ljjjja
for Aaltimore, Old Dominion
New York.
Trains 84 and 41 solid befcwiraL
Atlanta, and. Columbia, wjgj|
.Aita
Tickets for sale to all points at
the companys office’at any station
on line, or obtained upon
tion. Any other information call
be bad upon application to any of
the undersigned.
T J Anderson, John H W jndbr
GP A. Portmouth, Gen M‘g*
B A Newland, Div Pass Agt.
Atlanta, Ga.
H E Edwards, Agt. Comer, Ga.
Professional.
D AVID W MEADOW,
Attorney at Law.
, D-u.mnl.BVii.LE, Ga
Office on corner, west of Court
House, opposite Masonic Corner.
Will practice in all the courts, All
usincss promptly executed. '
Jno. J. Strickland. „
• Attorney.
Athrns - - Ga
DERRY T. MOSELEY,
Attorney at Law,
Danielsville, Ga.
Office oh corner, west of Court
House, Opposite Masonic corner
Will practice in all the Courts
Business promptly executed.
Geo. C Thomas,
Attorney,
Athens, Ga.
JOHN E. GORDON,
Attorney at Law.
Danielsville, Ga
Will practice wherever desired.
Prompt attention given to nil busi
ness entrusted to hisenre. OfHce
north of court house.
J. I. GRIFFITH.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Danielsville. Ga.
Office South of Court House:
Cal is answered and prescriptions
filled promptly.
•vt,iaaa* powi v
M n nrr j3a|i mo* swavoß coi amo npv y,
nnaja.ru scur
fit olmpu'w sui
line v, rrfi. hso /<no wo • ,i un noi m
‘uxuri jo** luxoiAt
WHY HOOD’lt Imms
Hood's Sarsaparilla is the beet,
meet reliable and accomplishes the
reateetcores. HOOD'S CURE#
Wibs of^fiiterf^t
•■J|j|jbite is having tlju finish**
the high bailiff of the
n the "furniture lino at
- Jp>SW>Btsvn.i.E Furniture Cos.
BBoldyou the goods when you
money and must havf
BtH lights have opened tip early
Mfear, Several prominent geu-
M|&n. eugne*ed in a tLst-i-miff one
pL Brooks of the live firm of
jipksi& Power, of Comer, was up
e*s Wednesday. He reports
mcvilgurishing,
:"fe; p
nie n note or aoct.
mf" tells us that that things are
gluing squally in Grove Hill.
All you backsliders indebted to
me that I have carried over from
time to time. lam going to give
you trouble this fall sure, if you
don’t pay mo.'
L E Greene.
Don't buy big talk and
a cheap instrument,but do
the sensible thing and buy
Pianos, Organs, sewing
Machines, etc., at
Conaway’s Music House,
Athens.
Mr. Crawford Little of Franklin
county, was he is this week, Mr.
Little is on# of Franklin’s belt
farrtiers, land reports crops in
Franklin good. '
Knnlni a Member of Parliament.
In the first place, tho initial cost
of obtaining a seat in the house of
commons is always great. Candi
dates are obliged, by the corrupt
practices act of 1883 (which has Ax
il a maximum scale of eloctioneer
/ fig expenses, varying in anjount no-
Jlrding to tho extent and character
Sythe constituency) to furnish a re-.
prn of their expenses, and, accord-1
Jng to n blue book on the subject—
issued in connection with the gen
eral oleotiouof 1892—it appears that
close on a million of money was
Spent by tlpa 1,307 candidates who
fought for seats in (bo house of
commons in that electoral campaign.
The average expenses of the 670
successful candidates were about
£7OO each. But that dons not, as a
rule, represent a third of the finan
cial cost of the honor and dignity of
the office of member of parliament.
Before tho contest takes place tho
constituency has to bo “nursed”
with tho view of obtaining tbo good
will and support of the electors.
“Nursing” is a very-expensive proc
ess. Many a man has spent from
£I,OOO to £5,000 a year for two or
even fivo years before tho goneral
elect in tho constituency ho as
pires to represent. A newspaper has
often been run by a prospective can
didate at a tremendous loss, osten
sibly for the laudable object of sup
plying tho electors with news, but
realign to keep prominently Ixiforo
them the virtues of tho man who is
wooing their suffrages, and the
grandeur and magnificeuco of the
political principles he support*.—
Chambers’ JouinaL
TATTLING.
-■ *’r 1
There is nothing ivo.v !‘
thaii falsehood, Ar. an 1 ** Icr ;
ipte’ligeneo run at., J -fh,. t• orl
day iu tho oi thy ajiunr:
that we have great,-r li-u attu.i
us than Ananias. Han it It -< f
It is to be fea>ed tliat Dm grave [
charged is too well 'founded, T’n-1
yy*.a love of gain and a t .
<trry a point have led mpny t w u-J
ttering falsehood to Die tS-oundiref j
and injury of their lVllow men
l|oy, a wound from the to ague is'
worse than a wotind freon tie
9wru, The latter will heal. Tld‘
l'wor4s, of. ,a tal*.***<- ‘atv ns
wojipffs. The tale bearer is'a sO*t‘
in .
out', so where t-nnreisno tale b ivivr
strife ‘‘StrrWy Sf'4r
pent will lute withouteiwhanuueut
and a babbler is no better” One
of oaf maxims is that the fill's
tongeeia long enoughs to .cut )i a
throat. In old- times Ihte smut
pests were found engaged in the
same pernicious conduct; Puui j
sayes “they are idle, wandering
•abotitTrem’heuse to house, tatllers
and busy bodies, 'spaaking
which limy ought not.” Now such
should be discournged by turning
a deuf car to their tales. If i. one
will dance they will not pipe. . He j
who complacently listens to lying!
nmulhs talking to the injury olj
others is a partaker of his tins.
It has been, well said that the tale
bearer aud the tale hearer should
both be hanged—one by tl;o
tongue and the Other by the ear.
Yes and they should be bft hang
ing, asen the gibbet. A good man
will not take up a reproach against
his neighbor and a manly man will
condemn it. Suck people, like
lepers, should not bo allowed to
roam at will. In some parts of
India the convicted of tattling is
taken to a public place and iu the
presence of multitudes his mouth
is sewed up. If a similar penal y
wore inflicted on sneh offender*,
here what silence would reign. A
woman confessed to a
jdie was a acaudal
her to asAtterthem
By and by he told hyr to gathei
the* up .She said it was impossible,
Then he told her it woaid be more
difficult to gather up
and destroy the evil reports she
had oirculaied about others. The
evil werd spoken is gone and can’t*
be overtaken. A.lie wilt run ten
miles while truth is putting on her
boots. See to it then every one
speak the truth to,hia neighbor and
that meedlesome, busy bodies bo
frowned down in every part of our
land.
baby bones
are soft, so soft they scarce
can be called bones in the
earlier years; gradually
they harden, and furnish
the frame which supports
the growing body. The
hardening comes from what
chemists term “ the min
eral substances.”
When these are absent we
have “ Rickets”—a lack of
bone-tissue, which allows
itself in delayed teething,
Firofuse head-sweats, and
ater, if not arrested, mal
formations and deformities.
Such a baby needs lime
for its weak bones and cod
liver oil for its fat-starved
body. Scott’s Emtilsion
of cod-liver oil, with liy
pophosphites, wilL give* its
little body the needed fat
in the easiest form.
SO cent* ami SI.OO
SCOTT & BOWNE
Chemists - * New York
NOTICE TO TEACHERS.
In the •-'‘'•'■'■r nj/iminTTTrri to
be bold la4hi/ffiT?T>iay next, the
questions on Theory and Practice
will be taken entirely from Payne’s
edition of “Page ou Teaching.’
I will try to have a supply oil
l aud la the Teach r’s Library by
Saturday Nov. 2nd. Teachers will
please call to borrow them on Sat
urdays as I may not be at home at
any other time.
B X White, CSC.
• J Veuralifm ?>>#
tadthoM troßblo* with n*rv<wiin<i* ladH
Ml ewi or overwork will b ri)v4 by Ukflg
Mroum’n iron iWtfwe, ruanh*
l;dd P, McGowan, B i>. Manager
A If-ICI. IN VIOLIN3.
who Vizor •lusletan, Da, L'ouuoiuwar Oili
tho fonubv-ukcr. .
■ t Ho was uvklontly a mnsiciuD, and
curried a vi**Ur in u black siksnv
bag TLa B .w. ry pawnbroker,
he saw him emcr. said to hinweif,
“Af boro's a oi'a play.,
force;; to plod .m lße only tiling that
fives him a h.tlikoud, poor thougß*
it l);.'.’ 1
“Let iue havo i’2 QU on this,
please,” said tke mnu
dsw. tba’ violin on#
of itscovoriug. “I justonougb *
tu tide uMi over u day ujr, so, until t 1
iv'mitnv'ce, Culel* I knew I
.jcul.l rrMvajp it i wvuld
o*‘Cyr tfOtstlit out iit my keiul?, ior
woi talnaUa i.'Si'riiiuow't M '
■ Tho handed’but til#
vHun.v. M’Munivi that
.tin* loan wfe Tiuiali. As ho ww
oittg out ;hv ishth turm'd.t?tc| and
said: “By the way, i wish you
j woaid not put lilts Uohni§jjjltfc with
f j lot . i odds nnd Vilid*. ll Ao Val
•■ ‘ 1 : . i if..- an, i- wifh.. tie
i;iJr , 1 ill surely to iu*a day
fo." ' >
A levy days Inter kn elderly pym (
eutne in und askcyl to scosoiod opera
;'hn:s;r, As liw waiS It < king over t>*|
.dook *iia ey-i lighted on tho tiol'lfc,
on ;!iu wtsll.
”L,it uio see thnit inatruaionf, 4?
yito Ikiis\ *’ Mtl. lie looked i
ii cr!t icii Uy, tt'ml tken. n"ncli|)bt*d
t riii'isshiu Uvcrsprt ul Ma f.iw.
“Ju*t whut 1 hnvu been wvkiii'<
for years !’ ’ .ho 'x< lai,ut-d, ■ lAnklti ?
an fitti mpt to t en. oeil Ids il;;.iitttg
asm “Von fir, iam t. rntiiH
oau of the virtuosi, fts the t ' flap
pers lovo to term us chi felh-WB, . f
no.'d tl.i* violin in n y (-i.liuotk>u,
und i'll nivo you fid fur ii.' ' Mine
Unclo only shook ii a LVad.
‘•AYoU, l II muLo il
“It i m.f for sale,” rcjillod tho
pawnbroker. f ,Wj
“Sav fii’i thou." By lliistirnetbii-
Qnwiibro2;cr was dcoplv ialoiesti and.
lib t xpl.diiv'd how t'se violin came
into li’i* possession.
V “If you 'll drop iu again in a day
tjrjro I'll prolatbly liava rceii tho
teMpAnml y,etbr.p* via Lo*hlo
ffcdflsb t
hlnst. “As you will haveiomo twm
blo in tho janitor, ITJ i tleo my off< r
to tin oven SIW. I must bavo thnk
violia;” i A
As sotni us bo was ROtjfMhe pawn
broker imrriotl th*>
muskiinti. The man
ly furnished room, 4<|
grout poverty.
"Wliatl Hell my dear Tioiiii'f” bo
exclaimed indignantly. “No l n
thousand times no. I’d rather sturve
first.”.
“Lock licro, ray raun," said tlie
pawnbroker; "I know jut bow you
feol about if, lmt of tor nil i.’s me re
lya quest ion of sentiment. A cheap
er instrument will do .von in yoor
business. I’ll givo you < ; 'o for tbn*
violin.”
Tho man hesitated a long while.
Tears caino into liis eyes and bis
long, paly fingers trembled as be
told the story of liis struggle with
poverty, but bo took tho money.
A week pa wed and tho wealthy
connoisseur bail not put in an np.
pearanee. Mine LYolo began to grow
nervous. He tub tho vk>Un down
from tbo nail aisrt carried it uptown
to show to an ox par r.
‘‘l can’t give you llio exact mar
ket value of it," said the violin
sharp, after a busty glance. *• Yotjj
see, I don’t handle this quality of
goods, but viol in.i of this kind are
worth about sl3 rt dozen. "—New
York World. ,
l ' ”* k • -V*VV- I
PS Rico of Conur, came up Wed
tiesday.
Whan you sell your ration don’t
forget that the printer I as to live,
and that we are ready o givq you a
receipt.
Bring us your cluck ms, eggs,
and butter—we will nay you n fan
cy price. J. T. Baker & Cos.
Comer, Ga:
This is my will; I lejparl'oinv
wife all that tn* t>
leave toh|£—May my children
njw>-dwfut# from (he law . f du- ,
and may they at wavs preserve for
their mother the tender less that
she merits! That is the full text
of the last will mud testament of
M Paatuer. There’s much in
little,
I am not particular about c\t*.
ping TiiacLiMAX, but I do want lo
cup every man r use or ciiai.o-s
thut has bought or does buy r
Chattanooga chilled Plow lr ®
me.
0 I h. E. Gr*one.
The “Old Hickory Wagon” iof
sale by A P Deariug.-AtUns, Ga.*
cheaper than ever before.
17