The News-herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1898-1965, June 14, 1900, Image 1

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p bltj a afiSeaeSyaSaKoe mmkhtescm e'mjmsivmjr News-Herad |iss Constitution, 1 12 lyEontliS—sl.2s. THE (iffINNETT HERALD, ) THK I.AWKk'ncEvTllK NEWS, , C0DS0li(llt8(l Jill, 1, 1898. EitablUhed in 1893. 7 f9oo Drops] CASIO RIA -j 1 2 AVegetable PreparationforAs similatmg the Food andßegula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of INtANIS/‘CHIIUKEM Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Rest .Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. /tap, arUUIk-SAMVLPtTCHtH hanplan Seal- , si lx.Senna * RockeUe ScUt - I Anixe Seed *" ftpfiemunt - . , Hi CartxjhatrSoeta * j MrmSeeJ “ leumfyr^re t rM. rvf J Aperfecl Remedy for Constip ation. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW* YORK. Alb months ol(l Jj DoStS-jjCtNTS EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. BUILDING MATERIAL. DOORS—INSIDE AND OUTSIDE. SASH, SIDE -LIGHTS, BLINDS. MANTLES, ■ FLOORING, CEILING, BASE BOARDS, CORNER BOARDS, DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMING, MOULDINGS, LATHS, SHINGLES, LOCKS,HINGES, WINDOW WEIGHTS, ETC. All material complete for building a house. Atlanta prices duplicated and freight saved. J. A. AMBROSE & CO. Lawrenceville, Ga. SEASON 1900.4- MEN’S SUITS 7 50,10 00, 12 00 15 00, IS, 20, and $25. BOY’S SUITS ALU PRICES. If you do not visit Atlanta often, send us your order by mail. We make a specialty of mail orders, and guarantee satisfaction in every instance. Your money back if you wish it. Eiseman Bros. nmonnfl ) Atlanta. 15-17 Whitehallitm-t 15-17 Whitehall Street. STORtS » Baitimori'!Mu’.W.Gorman sir. Our Only Store in Atlanta. COME THIS WAY! Hereafter we will have a full line of choice Family Groceries, also fresh Bread, Fancy Crackers, Candies, etc. Goods delivered anywhere in the city. Prompt Attention Given All Orders. We want barter of all kinds. Vose & Pentecost. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the I \ Signature //J Jr ’ f # t\ $ In nj’’ se VA For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITT. When you come to the city, call on us; we will make your visit both pleasant and profitable. Our selec tion of Spring Clothing, Ilats and Furnishings lor men and boys this season excels anything that has ever been attempted in Atlanta. Our Childrens’ Department is brim full of novelties; there is nothing that Boys wear that cannot be found here; if we haven t it in stock, we make it upon short notice. THE NEWS-HERALD. Educational # Department, Address of County School Commissioner- The following address was de livered by J. A. Bagwell, county school commissioner, before the Teachers’ Institute, now in ses sion here: Ladies and Gentlemen of the Gwinnett County Teachers’ Asso ciation : As this is the first time that I have ever appeared before you as your county school commissioner, it seems to me that it is opportune that I should express to you my ideas and convictions about the educational work that you as teach ers and I as your commissionei should do during my term of of fice. By virtue of my position, I am placed at the bead of the educa tional intexest in this county, and by virtue of your position, you are placed at the head of the same in your community. And, whatever is done in advancing the cause of education in this county, all the educational reformation that is made, if made at all, must be made by us. The teachers are the leaders in j every educational movement, and j there are no others that are desir- j ous or are willing to taise the teachers’ places. The educating of the children must be done in the main by the teachers. The parents have control of them at night,when they are asleep, but they are in the care of the teachers in the day time, when they think and act. The ministers, from their pul pits, talk to the children once a month, or maybe once a w r eek, but the teacher talks to them nearly all the time of most of the days. The teacher comes into personal contact with the children. He laughs when they laugh; weeps at their calamities, enjoys their press ures, and shares their sorrows. He teaches them how to think, judge and act; and the progress that the next generation will make in lit erature, science art, government and religion, depends, in a great degree, on the training that the children are receiving at the hands of the teachers. It is said, and I do not deny it, that the ministry is the highest calling on earth ; but, if a teacher performs his duty as a Christian, the good that will follow him will be as great as that of the minister. It is true that the profession is not reverenced as much as that of the ministry, but when a person decides to become a teacher, he should enter the profession with the same spirit that the minister undertakes his calling. Teaching is missionary, it means to help others. Page says that the first question that any teacher should ask himself is, “Of what manner of spirit am lot ?” And, iu my judgment, any community is bet ter off with a teacher who can sat isfactorily answer this question, but whose attaiuments entitle him to a third grade liceus6, than with a first grade teacher whose only purpose in teaching is the money. Another need iu advancing the cause of education is professional; teachers —teachers who are de- j voting their lives to the profession of teaching, just like the doctor or the lawyer sticks to his profession. These kind of teachers are the ones that love to teach ; they are the ones that teach for the good that they can do. Their minds and hearts are in their work. There are teachers who teach school solely for the money, with which they may be able to enter some other avocation, or accom plish some particular undertaking. There are boys who teach school to get money with which to be come doctors, lawyers or minis ters. There are girls who teach for pecuniary gain. And, even when they are actually engaged in teaching in the echoed room, their minds are not upon their work. They are thinking about how they are going to accomplish their un dertakings in other fields of la bor. This kind of teaching is all right for young men or young ladies, and 1 appreciate their efforts in try ing to make their own money. If there are any teachers in Gwinnett county that are of this kind, let them think that there is nothing personal in what lam saying. It is this: The children of this county deserve the best teachers; ! and it is lietter for any communi i ty to employ a teacher who is giv j ing his life to his work, whose mind and soul are wrapped iu the cause of teaching, rather than to ' employ a teacher who would pro j fer to do something else, and is LA WRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 14. 1900. teaching only because he can’t se cure a good job in some other business. There is a great deal of work to be done in this county. There are too many school houses and too many poor schools. We want few er school houses and better schools. Let the school houses be located far enough apart so that two teachers will be required to teach during the winter and summer months, and that there will be enough children to require one teacher at least seven months. This kind of location has already been done in other counties .that are taking the lead in education. It oflght to be done in our county. Our children are just as deserving as the children anywhere, and ev ery one of them ought to be with in the reach of a good school. The poor people cannot move to town to educate their children; and, those that are able to leave their farm and go to town to send their children to school, would do a great deal better, and would be of greater blessiug to their communi ty and county by establishing a good school, so that their children and their neighbors’ children could get education at home. A good school in a community means the increase in the price of land, advancement of society, the ad vancement of the church, and an Who, seeking a new home, would like to go into a community where there are neither schools nor churches ? In conclusion, I desire to say that it will take time to satisfac torily locate the schools, and«reach the desired end in attaining an ideal public school system inGwin nett county, and I appeal to you teachers to give yourselves to your profession more completely than you have ever done before, study as you have never studied, that you may be fully equipped for your work, and in performing the weighty responsibilities that are resting upon you, God being your director, your efforts will be crowned with glorious success. QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, August Flower still has the largest sale of any medicine in the civilized world. Your mothers and grandmothers never thought of using anything else for Indiges tion or Billiousneas. Doctors were scarce, and they seldsm heard of Appendecitis, Nervous Prostration or Heart Failure, etc. They used August Flower to clean out the system and stop fermentation of undigested food, regulate the ac tion of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic action of the system, and that is all they took 1 when feeling dull and bad with headaches and other aches. You only need a few doses of Green’s August Flower, in liquid form, to ; make you satisfied there is noth ing serious the matter with you. Sample bottles at Bagwell Drug Store. Lawrenceville, R. O. Med lock, Norcross, Smith & Harris, Suwanee. Four miners were entombed for twelve days in the Matsuyasu col liery iu Japau lately. They did without food ail the time, and for most of the time without light, and were none the worse when dug out. A POWDER MILL EXPLOSION Removes everything in sight; so do drastic mineral pills, but both are mighty dangerous. Don’t dy namite the delicate machiuery of your body with calomel, croton oil or aloes pills, when Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which are gentle as a summer breeze, do the work perfectly. Cures Headache, Con stipation. Only 25c at A. M. Winn & Son’s drug store. Imitation maple syrup is made by reducing ordinary sugar to a syrup and boiling hickory chips in it. It is said that the hickory im parts a flavor that easily deceives people who are not maple experts. When you say your blood is im pure and appetite poor you are ad mitting your need of Hood’s Sasa parilla. Begin taking it at once. State ok Ohio, City ok Toledo, 1 Lucas Courty. ) Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the Hrm of F. J. Cheney <fc Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,County and State afore said, and that said firm will pay the 1 sum of ONE IIUNDKED DOLLARS j for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use ot Hall’s Caiahkh Cuke. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Bth day of Decem ber, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, j seal j Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Fills are the best. Do YOU TAKE YOUK COUNTY PA | PER ? Death of J. J. Cleveland Sunday morning news reached Greenville (if the death of J. J. [Cleveland at his home in Grove t wnship There was a general expression of sorrow by a’l citizens of Greenville, for the reason that Judge Cleveland was known and honored by the people of this city because of his many nol le traits of character, his splendid courage as a soldier, his religions honesty and integrity, his love for the right, and his quiet, generous charity. His apparent rough man ner of speech was always tinged and tempered by a humorous twinkle of tie eye and a warm, friendly grasp of the hand which attracted and drew to him the friendship of all who came in con tact with him. The following tribute by his life long friend and Confederate com rade, Gen. S. S. Crittenden, tells the story of his noble life: Died, at his residence, seven miles below the city of Greenville, at 8 o’clock on the morning of the 27th of May, A D. 1900, J. J. Cleveland, in the 64th year of his age. Again has the golden cord been brokeu, and another of the land marks of Greenville, and a noble specimen of the old time Carolina gentleman has passed away. Judge Cleveland, as we all knew him, was a son of R. M. and Har riett Cleveland (nee Neal), and was born at Lawrenceville, Ga. On the death of his mother he was brought to Greenville, an in fant of two years, and was reared by his grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Cleveland ; so that his whole life was spent in the village and town of Greenville, ! and at the beautiful home and I farm where he died. He ever eschewed public posi | tion, but sought and enjoyed to the fullest extent the privacy of his home and family. There was no more ardent and successful farmer iu our county. Throughout his life, as a busi ness man with large interests, he was ever guided by the strictest rules of integrity and honor. Those who knew him best, and notably the large tenantry upon his different farms, loved and honored him most. As a patriot and Confederate soldier no one of the hosts which j have already “crossed over the j river” has left a brighter record ! behind him At the very begin ning of the war he left a home of affluence and volunteered as a private iu Co. F, Davis Guards, Hampton legion. At the first battle of Manassas he received a federal bullet in his breast, and was afterwards engaged in no less than thirty battles and skirmish es with the enemy, being promo ted to the first lieutenancy of his company. Thus has he left a precious lega cy of a high character, noble coarage, integrity and patriotism to the devoted wife and seven children who survive him, and to the relatives and friends who mourn his death. In 1869 he married Florence, daughter of the late F. E. Mc- Kenzie, and to them were born twelve children. His surviving brothers are our well known citi zens, William C. and Vannoy Cleveland. Farewell, my old time friend. , May your sleep be sweet, and may | the turf lie lightly upon your noble breast. Your high qualities of head and heart shall ever be held in sacred remembrance by your old friends and comrades, until they too “rest !in the shade” upon the other side. C. The funeral occurred at the Mauhen burying ground yesterday afternoon at 8 o’clock. Here are buried his five children, and he was laid beside them with all the loving tenderness of a host of friends, relatives and acquaintan ces. The floral tributes v.ure many, bearing unspeakable testimony of the love, honor and esteem in which he was held by those among he had lived —Greenville (S. C.) Daily News. A CARD OF THANKS. I wish to sav that I feel under lasting obligations for what Cham berlain’s Cough Remedy has done for our family. We have used it in so mauy cases of coughs, lung troubles and wh oping cough, and it has always given the most per fect satisfaction, we feel greatly indebted to the manufacturers of this remedy and wish them to please accept our hearty thanks. Respectfully, Mrs. S DoTy, Des Moines, lowa. For sale by Bag i well Drug Co. All Eoys Should Learn To run. To swim . To carve. To be neat. To make a fire. To be punctual. To do an errand. To cut kindlings. To sing if they can. To help their mother. To hang up their hats. To respect their teacher. To hold their Leads erect. To sew on their own buttons. To read aloud when requested. To w ipe their boots on the mat. To cultivate a cheerful temper. To speak pleasantly to an old person. To put every garment m its proper place. To remove their hats upon en tering a house. To laugh. A good laugh is bet ter than medicine. To help, and not tease boys smaller than themselves. To attend strictly to your own business. A very important point. To be as kind and helpful to their sisters as to other hoys’ sis ters. To take pride in having their mother and sisters for their bast friends. To close the door quietly, es pecially when there is a sick per son in the houso. To tell a story. A well-told sto ry is as welcome as a sunbeam in a sick room. To stop croaking. If you can not see any good in this world keep the had to yourself. Lo keep your troubles to your self. The world is too busy to ca-re for your ills and sorrows. To treat their mother as politely as if she were a strange lady, who did not spend her life in their sor- vice. To take their mother or father into their confidence, and, above all, never to lie about anything they have done, Not to take the easiest chair in the room and forget to offer it to their mother when she comes in to sit down. To greet your friends with a smile. They carry too many frowns in their own hearts to bo bothered with any of yours. When their play is over for the day, to wash their faces and hands, brush th«ir hair und spend the evening iu the house. HIS LIFE WAS SAVED. Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonderful deliverance from a frightful death. In telling of it he says: “I was taken with Ty phoid Fever, that ran into Pneu mrnia. My lungs became hard ened. I was so weak I couldn’t evpn sit up in bed. Nothing help ed me, I expected to soon die of Consumption, when I heard of Dr. King’s New Discovery. One bot tle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well and Btrong, I can’t say too much in its praise.” This marvellous medi cine is the surest and quickest cure in the world for all Throat and Lung Trouble. Regular sizos 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottles free at A. M. Winn & Son’s Drug Store; every bottle guaranteed. Dalton Argus: Honey is selliug cheaper over iu Pickens county than it was ever known to sell be fore. An old man over there married a Miss Honey, the other day, who weighed 180 pounds— -180 pounds of honey for $1.50, (the marriage fee) or five-sixth of * cent a pound. Last fall I sprained my left hip while handling some heavy boxes. The doctor I called on said at first it was a slight strain und would soon be well, but it grew worse and the doctor then said I had rheumatism. It continued to grow worse and 1 could hardly get around to work. I went to a drug store and the druggist recommend ed me to try Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. J tried it and one-half of a 50-cent bottle cured me entirely. 1 now recommend it to all my friends. —F. A. Babcock, Erie, Pa. It is for sale by Bagwell Drug Co. It is interesting to note that not so long ago, in County Donegal, Ireland, the market price for knit ting a pair of sozks used to be one penny, and women worked cheer fully for that sum. THE HEALTH PROBLEM Is much simpler than is sometimes supposed. Health depends chiefly upon perfect digestion and pure blood, and the probh.ni is solved very readily by Hood’s Sarsaparil la. You may keep well by taking it promptly tor any stomach or blood disorder. Its cures of scrof ula, salt rheum, catarrh, dyspep sia, rheumatism and other diseases are numbered by the thousands. The favorite family cathartic is Hood’s Pills. ROYAL K Makes the food more delicious and wholesome hqvai baking powoen co., sew vow*. Will Graham, of Rome, and son of Mr. Martin Graham, started for Canada Saturday to join the Canadian mounted police. Every man belonging to it has to he six feet high. Young Graham is over six feet His father came from Canada years ago and is engaged in the cotton business in Rome. He is about six and a half feet high, and is a splendid specimen of physical manhood. This police force guards the frontier nearly up to Alaska. Some of them come from the best families in Canada and England. Graham's idea is to benefit his health. He enlisted for five years. NO RIGHT TO UGLINESS. The woman who is lovely in face, form and temper will always | have friends, but one who would : be attractive must keep her health. | If she is weak, sicklj and all run ! down, she will be nervous and ir ritable. If she has constipation or kidney trouble, here impure blood will cause pimples, blotches, skin eruptions and a wretched complexion. Electric Bitters is the best medicine in the world to regulate stomach, liver and kid neys and to purify the blood. It gives strong nerves, bright eyes, smooth, velvety skin, rich com plexion. It will make a good-look ing, charming woman of a run down invalid. Only 50 cents at A. M. Winn& Son’s Drug Store. Pres. C. 11. Jordan, of the Geor gia State Cotton Planters’ Associ ation. makes this statement: “The movement to organize the cotton planters of this state and other southern states is daily growing in interest and extent. While the organization is hut a little over a week old, the machinery for rap idly pushing the various organiza tions in the counties of this state is getting in shape, and favorable results may be expected in many sections within the next few weeks.” Would Not Suffer so Aoain fob Fifty Times its Price. I awoke lost night with severe pains in my stomach. I never felt so badly in all my life. When I came down to work this morning 1 felt so weak I could hardly work. I went to Miller & McCurdy’s drug store and they recommended Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It worked like magic, and one dose fixed me all right. It certainly is the finest thing I ever used for stomach trouble. 1 shall not be without it in my home hereafter, for I should not care to enduro the sufferings of last night again for fifty times its price.—G. H. Wilson, Livery man, Burgettstowu, Washington Co., Pa. This remedy is for sale by Bagwell Drug Co. Judge George F. Gober, of the Blue Ridge circuit, says that if he can get two or three peach crops like the one that is promised him this year, he will in a few years have all the money that he wants. Ho has one thousand acres in peach orchards, and upon them he has one hundred thousand trees. About two-thirds of this number of will bear fruit this year. The surplus of his peach crop he proposes making into brandy. STREET INCIDENT. “My dear sir,” exclaimed Law yer Bartholomew Livingston,meet ing the Rev. Dr. Archibald Wind ham on the village street, “What does this mean ? I thought you were laid up with all sorts of bad diseases 1” “And so I was,” replied the rev erened gentleman, “I had an at tack of indigestion, and from that time on my whole system has been in a disordered condition until I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which lias put me on my feet and cured ull my stomach troubles.” “I don’t doubt it,” said the law yer. “This same medicine cured my wife of rheumatism and my little girl of scrofula. When they say it’s the best medicine money can buy, they only tell the truth.” “Yes, yes, so they do,” replied the minister, and the two pass'd on. Monroe will held an election on July 8 to decide on the question of issuing SIO,OOO in bonds for a public school building. VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS Are grand, but Skin Eruptions rob life of joy. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cures them; also Old, Run ning and Fever Sores, Ulcers,Boils, Felons, Corue, Warts, Cuts,Bruises Burns, Scalds, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Best Pile cure on earth Drives out Pains Aches. Only 25 cts. a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by A. M. Winn <fc Sou, Druggists, News-Herald j -Journal, vvkkkly, Only $1.25. VOL. VII. NO 34 •*.T> » • *■» N. .*• GRAND GIFT DISTRIBUTION. A Forty-Cant Sugar Shell Free te Every Married Lady. . Editor News-Herald —Wo be lieve that the moat effective adver tising we can do is to get samples of our goods into the homes of tho people. Therefore, we are sending an elegant sterling silver-plated sugar-shell, sucli as we sell regi -| larlv at 40c each, to every marriec ’ lady in the United States who writes for it. There is nothing to pay. The gift is absolute. You will confer a favor upon your lady readers by making this announce ment in your paper. Eaoh lady will send her name only, as this is too valuable a gift to send to per sons who don’t ask for it them selves. We give choice of any of our 40c designs, and will send il lustrations from which selection may be mado QUAKER VALLEY Me’o CO. Morgan andHarrisonStfl., Chicago. Hon. Henry M. Stanley of Dub lin, who withdrew from the race for State Senator some time ago, for the purpose of letting some one from the country districts run for the honor, and no candidate from the country having anuouuc ed, he has re-entered field, and will make the fight for the nomination on July 14. His op ponent is Col. Ira S. Chappell, a fellow-townsman and first cousin. Beware of Ointments for Ca tarrh that Contain Mercury As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely de range the whole system when en tering it through the mucous sur faces. Such articles should nev er be used except on prescriptions from r putable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive freiii them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney vj Co., Toledo, 0., contains no ,a<- cury, and is taken inteEJ , act ing directly upon the and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Curse be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in To ledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney ifc Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Drug gists, price 75c per bottle. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. The demand for oatmeal through out England is iucrflasiug every; year, and the quantity used among the millions of London will soon,, exceed in ratio the consumption, in “Ault Reekie” itself. DOES IT FAY TO BUY CIIEaP?} A cheap remedy for coughs and colds is all right, but you wanti something'that will relieve and, cure the more severe and danger-’ ous results ot throat and lung troubles. What shall you do? Go to a warmer and more regular cli mate? Yes, if possible. If not possible for you, then in either case take the only remedy that has been introduced iu all civilized countries with success in seven throat and lung troubles, “Bos-' chest’s German Syrup.” It not only heals and stimulates the tie sues to destroy the germ disease but allays inflamation, causes easi expectoration, gives a good night’ll rest, and cures the patient. Tri one bottle. Recommended mauj years by all druggists in the world' Sample bottles at Bagwell’s Dru) Store, Lawrenceville; Smith am Harris, Suwanee: R. 0. Medlock Norcross. , Arkansas, Texas and California, vi Southern Railway. Before deciding on a trip to Ai kansas, Texas, Arizona, Califor tiia, or any point West or South west, call on or address any Agen of the Southern Railway. Choice of routes via Birining ham, Shreveport, New Orleans e Memphis. Best and most direct line t Washington, Few York, Chattf nooga, Louisville, Cincinnati, an Florida points. Rates, Time Cards, Maps an*; Illustrated Literature cheerful! furnished upon application to A.A.Vkrnoy, Pass. Ag’t. C. C. Johnson, Trav. Pass. Ag’ Brooks Morgan, Dist. Pass.Ag’ Office, Kimball House Cornel Atlanta, Ga. K. C. M. & B. PAST TRAIN. The Kansas City Limited. Tli modern equipped fast train, wii reclining chair car, (seats fre and Palace Buffett Drawing-roo Sleeping-car, leaves Birmiughu daily via the Kansas City, Mei phis & Birmingham Railroad 12:10 uoou. Connects at Memph with trains for Arkansas and Te as At Nichols for points in Tex and Northwestern Arkansas; as at Kansas Cicy Union Depot wu fast trains for Colorado, Californ, and all the west uud northwest. J. E. Lockwood, G. P. A., Ka sas City. C. W. Strain, T. P. ! : Memphis, Teun. Chas. Jones, P. A., Birmingham, Ala.