Newspaper Page Text
THR GWINNETT HERALD, )
THE LA"vk'kNCEVILLK NEWS, i C0DS0li(l<lt6(l JdD. 1, 1898.
;'.ntal>llHhed in 1803. )
gZx GOOD
tigPHEALTH
| by the Quart.
Every bottle you take of Johnston’■
M Sarsaparilla means better health,
BP_ and every bottle contains a full
quart. It makes better blood—purer
blood. For thirty years this famous
\ W remedy has been creating and mala»
tainlng good health.
gJL Johnston’s
j Sarsaparilla
builds up the system, tones the
f|p vjKjggl nerves, and strengthens the musclee
more promptly and effeotually than
any other remedy known. The pallor of the
oheek disappears, energy takes the plaoe of
languor, and the rich color of health flows to
the cheeks. Unequalled for all disorders of the
stomach and liver, and for all weakening com
plaints of men, women and children.
MS mowktra. Mm, SI.OO |«f Mil piri WtU*.
MICHIGAN DRUG CO.. - Detroit, Hlch.
For sale by A. M. Winn & Son
W. R. DEXTER,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR,
Lawrenceville, - - Ga.
M. A. Born Job. Woodward.
BORN & WOODWARD,
Physicians and Surgeons,
Lawrenceville, Ga.
ffi‘so in Cain building. Calls answered
day or night.
DR. J. H. CONWAY,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Will attend all calls.
Office: Lawrenceville Hotel.
J. A. PERRY, .
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Lawrenceville, : : Ga.
Ofltce over G. W. A A. P. Cain’aStori.
All business entrusted to my care will re*
ceivc prompt attention.
OSCVRBRO N, JNO. R. COOPER.
Law !*encevilu». Ga. Macon. Ga.
BROWN & COOPER,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
Criminal Law A Specialty.
Office up stairs in the old Winn drugstore.
DR. A. M. WINN,
LAWRENCEVILLE, GA.
Attends calls day or night.
oTa. nix,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Office in Cain Building.
Lawrenceville, Ga.
iiipractice In all the courts, Careful at
tention ta all legal business. Sep 98-1 v
JOHN M. JACOBS,
DENTIST,
Lawrenceville, - - Ga.
Office over G. W. A A. P. Cain’s store.
V. G. HOPKINS,
DENTAL SURGEON,
Office over Winn’s old drug store.
Office hours—Ba. m. to 5 p. m.
LAWRENCEVILLE, GA.
J. B. HOPKINS,
DENTIST,
Norcross, - - - - Ga.
DR. B. V. WILSON,
PHYSICIAN AND SUREEON,
Dacula, - - Ga.
; All- alls promptly attended to. Office at J.
. iiton’s residence.
S. L. HINTON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Dacula, - Ga.
Office near the depot. Chronic diseases a spo
ci.iltv: l’O years experience. The patronage of
the public solicited.
DR. O. B. TUCKER,
Physician and surgeon,
Suwanee, : : Ga.
All calls promptly attended to.
W. T. HINTON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Dacula, - Ga.
Located at the late Dr. S. H. Freeman old
stand, and any of his former customers will
find me ready to serve them.
Chronio Diseases a Specialty.
All calls promptly attended to, day or night
CLARK BANKS,
THE OLD RET.IABLE BARBER,
Can be found at his old stand, on Pike street
First-class work. Satisfaction gnarranteed.
■ T. F. BOZEMAN,
TONSORIAL ARTIST.
Lawreueeviile, Ga.
Near Lawreueeviile Hotel.
Strict attention, courteous
treatment. He solicits your pat
ronage.
NOTICE !
COME A RUNiSIN’
to the Picture Gallery on Perry
street, at Lawreueeviile, Ga , for
* Photographs, Copies, Etc. *
Satisfaction guaranteed at the
following prices:
6 Minnetts, in., 50c.
12 “ “ “ SI.OO
100 “ “ 5-°°
3 Carte DeVisites for 50c
6 “ “ “ 75 c
12 *• “ “ 1.25
3 Cabinets “ 1.00
6 “ “ 1.50
12 “ “ 2.50
Groups same as single work.
Respectfully,
J. B. DAVIS.
•"‘•©ftlf- »■*
MINUTE
COUGH CURE
cures quicklv. That is what it was
made for. Prompt, safe, sure, quick
relief, quick cure. Pleasant to take.
Children like it and adults like It.
Mothers buy it for their children.
Prepared by E. C. DeWitt & Co, makers o!
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the famous
Uttleniila
THE NEWS-HERALD.
FOR NINETY DAYS
I will cut my entire stock of goods down to
Rock Bottom Prices.
This is one season that I have been unusually
fortunate in buying. I have bought very early at
prices and in such quantities that enable me to
sell you goods cheaper than I can now buy them.
I have the best stock of
Clothing and Shoes
ever offered to the people of Gwinnett County. I
make a specialty of these lines. I buy them right.
Also carry a large stock of
Dry Goods, NOtiOns,
Hats, Groceries, Hardware, Tinware, Glassware,
Crockery. Also have a big stock of Overcoats,
Ladies’ Cloaks, Trunks, Valices, etc. In fact, the
best stock of General Merchandise of any store in
the county. As 1 have already said, I know I have
bargains to offer the people of Gwinnett County,
hence this circular. Give me a call, and if I don’t
prove what I say, don’t buy.
Respectfully,
James H. McGee.
October 10, 1 900.
CLDBBING t RATES
News-Herald and Home and Farm SI.OO
“ Weekly Constitntion 1.25
“ Semi-Weeely Journal 1.25
" Thrice-a-Week World 1.50
“ Journal and Constitution 1.75
If you wish to secure any of
the above papers along with the
News-Herald for one year, send
the News-Herald the money and
your papers will be forwarded at
once.
Great droves of deer are now
going South from Colorado, some
times twenty thousand animals in
one herd. They sometimes block
railroads for two hours. In the
summer they have been scattered
over the table-lands of Routt and
Rio Blanco counties. As wiuter
approaches ttey go several hun
dred miles.
GOOD NEWS FOR OUR READ
ERS
Who have scrofula taints in
their blood, and who has not?
Scrofula in all its forms is cured
by Hood’s Sarsaparilla which
thoroughly purifies the blood.
This disease, which frequently ap
pears in children,iejto be dreaded.
It is most likely to affect the
glands of the ueck, which become
enlarged, eruptions appear on the
head and face, and the eyes are
frequeuttly affected. Upon its
first apperance, perhaps in slight
eruptions or pimples, scrofula
should be entirley eradicated from
the system by a thorough course of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla to prevent all
the painful and and sickening
conseqnences of running scrofula
sores which drain the system, sap
the strength and make existence
I utterly wretched.
Mr. Bryan on Destiny.
‘‘lt may be that we have run
our race; it may he that we have
reached a turning point in our
career. It may be that destiny—
destiny that is never known till it
is past—it may bo that destiny
has determined that this nation
like so many other nations in the
past, is to prove again the old
truth that the wages of sin is
death.
It may be that it is destiny for
this nation to show once more
that when the dollar becomes
greater than the man the gov
erment must decline. It may be
that love of money has so taken
possession of the American people
that they are willing to sell their
birthright for a mess of pottage.
That may be destiny. No one has
a right to declare what destiny is.
That may be our destiny; but
what is mir duty? Lincoln says
that it is our duty to do right. ”
The success of Chamber
lain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy ii the treatment of bowel
complaintfc'JF made 14 standard
over the g" V P“ rt of tlle civil ‘
ized world. 1 by Bagwell
Drug Co.
LAWRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18. 1900.
RED HOT FROM THE GUN
Was the ball that hit G. B.
Steadman of Newark, Mich., in the
Civil War. It caused horrible Ul
cers that no treatment helped for
20 years. Then Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve cured him. Cures Cuts,
Bruises, Burns, Boils, Felons,
Corns, Skin Eruptions. Best Pile
cure on earth. 25cts. a box. Cure
guaranteed. Sold by A. M. Winn
& Son, Druggist.
The Law and the Prophets.
Grocer J. H. Chambers, of New
Orleans, in a letter competing for
the New York World’s prize for
the best life story illustrating how
to save money, throws in with bis
experience a few percepts. He
says:
“To save money on a small in
come, begin by marrying the girl
you love and that loves you.
“Be so honest and industrious
that your employers cannot do
without you.
“Spend all your spare moments
in the society of your wife and
family.
“Do not go anywhere that you
would be ashamed to take your
wife.
“Make your home so attractive
that your children will hate to be
away.
“Study the wants of your wife
and family.
“These are all the laws and the
prophets on the question of how
to be healthy, wealthy and happy,
though married.”
During the winter of 1897 Mr.
James Reed, a leading citizen
and merchant of Clay, Clay Co.,
W. Va., struck his leg against a
cake of ice in such a manner as to
bruise it severely. It became very
much swollen and pained him so
badly that he could not walk
without the aid of crutches. He
was treated by Physicians, also
used several kinds of liniment
and two and a half gallons of
whiskey in bathing it but nothing
gave any relief until he began
using Chamberlain’s Pain Balm.
This brought almost a complete
cure in a week’s time and he be
lieves that had be not used this
remedy his leg would have had to
be amputated. Pain Balm is
unequaled for sprains, bruises and
rheumatism.—Fry sale by.Bagwell
Drug Co.
Tha Land o’ tha Sky.
(Written in Battery Park, Ash
ville, N. C.)
Mountains that climb to tho blue l
bend on high—
Li dies where tho stars see them
selves in the sky;
Violet valleys of beauty and love,
Where earth seems so close to the
heaven above
You cau h«ar the faint echoes of
seraphim-feet
And the musical beat
Of the hearts of tho angels—the
songs they repeat
In their cadences sweet!
11.
A wild world of mountains that
drift into dreams;
The ripple of rills aud the dashing
of stream*
That siug to the sea! And the
beams and the gleams
That, lure you to gardens of beau
tiful dreamß!
Of beautiful dreams that have
lifted your soul
To the thunder’s high roll!
Where you slip from life’s care,
and its curse and control.
With the joy in your soul.
111.
God orowned with old glory these
mountains; He planted
The sky-reaching hills in these
valleys enchanted;
These streams in the hollows by
mystery haunted—
These oaks that still wave their
green banners undaunted,
And dare the storm’s thunder!... .
aud peaus of praise
Mountains—rivers, still raise
To the heavens above them, while
rose-scented ways
Wreathe the beautiful days!
IV.
0, laud of all beauty—loved Land
of the Sky,
Where Love breathes “Good mor
ning,” and never “goodby 1"
Where song on each wild wind in
melody roves
And times the bright steps of the
gods of the groves 1
The rose of the morning is white
on thy breast;
Thou art crowned thou art blest
From the seas to the east ana the
seas to the west •
With the rose-wreath of rest!
F. L. Stanton,
in Atlanta Constitution.
Rich Han's Life.
Many thousands of persons no
doubt have wished that they were
John D. Rockefeller. He is the
richest man in the United States
and one of the richest in the
world, and they have envied him
bis supposed good fortune in the
possession of wealth sufficient to
gratify almost any wish he might
entertain. But Mr. Rockefeller is
rather than to be pitied than en
vied. He is. indeed, poor in com
parison with the man who earns
only a fair living, eats three
square meals a day and sleeps
soundly for eight hourß at a time
out of the twenty-four. For
while wealth can buy many things
it cannot buy that which Mr.
Rockefeller lacks aud which he
would most dearly like to have —
health.
For some time this fabulously
rich man has been the slave of a
tyrannical stomach. He is the
victim of chronic and probably
incurable indigestion, and must
be constantly attended by his
physician. With imported chefs
to load his table with all the del
icacies of all the markets, he can
eat only fresh milk and crackers,
and that in small quantities.
With the choicest vintages of the
world at his command he cannot
driuk anything save fresh steril
ized milk and a little water. And
he may not have his water cold—
it must be lukewarm. He has
stables fuil < f the finest horses,
yet each dav be must walk a cer
tain distance. He numbers his
hired men by the thou-nnds, yet
like the humblest of them he
must work with hoe, rake or other
implement in garden or field a
certain length of time every day
that is fair. The doctor orders
it, aud Mr. Rockefeller has become
a very tractable patient in the
bands of his medical man. He
has had experience enough with
iudigestiou and insomnia to make
him obey implicitly the orders
giveD him in this line. It is prob
ably safe to say that Mr. Rocke
feller would be willing to give a
considerable slice of his fortune
to be able to eat and sleep like
many of the $lO-per-week men in
his employ.
OABTORIA.
Bur> th« _/f The Kind You Haw Always Bought
Don’t Expcc. too Much
There never was but one perfect l
pair and they slipped down the
| bants of paradise together. Wo
occasionally find a man who snys
he never sins. We know he lies
when he says it. Wo have had fi
nancial dealings with two or throe
perfect men, and they cheated us.
Do not therefore, look for an lm
mulculatc husband, for you will
not find him. While you are
thinking he is perfi ct he will some
day while in a hurry meet an en
gagement, find a shirt button off,
and your delusion coucerufng him
will break, or he will find that
one of his children has been sharp
ening a slate pencil with his razor.
We have been much among men,
aud understand the whole. On a
clear morning, when they are well
dressed, and the road is dean,they
look admirably; but none of thorn
enjoy having a passing vehicle
splash mud on their newly black
ened boots. None of them look
placid when some one treads on
their corns. If you want to find
out that no man is perfect, just
marry him. But I think that the
two Bexes, laying all sentimental
ism aside, are about equal. If
you secure for life the companion
ship of some one about as good ns
yourself, you are to be congratu
lated. Get married, but with
your eyes wide open. Remember
the old proverb: “You have a
knot tied with your tongue you
cannot untie with your teeth.”—
Exchange.
On the 10th of December, 1897.
Rev.S.A. Douahoe, pastor M. E.
Church, South, Ft. IMasant, W.
Va., contracted a severe cold
which was atteudedjfrom the begin
ing by violent coughing. He
savs: “After resorting to a num
ber of eo-callod ‘specifics,’ usually
kept in the house, to no purpose, I
purchased a bottle of Chamber
lain’s Caugh Remedy, which acteil
like a charm. I most cheerfully
recommend it to the public.” For
sale by Bagwell Drug Co.
Young Alfred Gwynue Vander
bilt, whose father left him fifty
million dollars, haß entered the
service of the New York Central
road, aud will endeavor to work
his way up, step by step, until he
is in a position to direct the af
fairs of the great system.
“Mamma," said little Johnnie
at the breakfast table the other
morning, “this is awful old butter,
isn’t it 7”
“Why do you think it is old,
dear?” usked bis mother.
“'Cause,” replied Johnnie, I
just gouud a gray hair in it,”
BRAVE MEN FALL
Victims to stomach, liver and
kidney troubles as well as women,
and all feel the results in loss of
appetite, poisons in the blood,
backache, nervousness, headache
aud tired, listless, run-down feel
ing. But there’s no need to feel
like that. Listen to J. W. Gard
ner, Idaville, lud. He says:
“Electric Bitters are just the thing
for a man when he is all run down
and don’t care whether he lives or
dies It did more to give me new
strength and good appetite than
anything I could take. I can now
eat anything and have a new lease
on life.” Only 60 cents, at A. M.
Winn & Son’s Drug Ltore. Every
bottle guaranteed.
Credulous people, like musical
instruments, are easily played
upon
The one st.ep from the sublime
to the ridiculous is usually a short
one.
Ants are the most industrious
creatures. We have all seen aunts
who were perfect busybodies.
A RECORD IN BLOOD.
The record of Hood’s Sar
saparilla is literally written in the
blood of millions of people to
whom it has given good health.
It is all the time curing diseases
of the stomach, nerves, kidneys
and blood, and it is doing good
every day to thousands who are
taking it for poor appetite, tired
feeling and general debility. It is
the best medicine money can buy.
Hood’s Pills are non-irritating.
Price 25 cents.
In the past year, according to
authority, Harvard. Yale, Co
lumbia, Priuceton, Pennsylvania
and Cornell Universities expended
$804,248 on athletics. —Ex.
ROYAIA
F ABSOt rEXY PtUL
Makes the food more delicious and wholesome
WOvAt BAXIHO POWDER CO., SEW VOWX.
They Kwa No Girlhood,
In China there is nothing of the
sweet girlhood which is enjoyed in
this country —in fact, one rarely
sees girls in China, says the Lon
don Daily Mail.
They marry so young that they
appear to spring fr*>m girlhood to
maturity without any intermediate
stage of gii hood. There is no
blushing “fifteen” or “sweet six
teen,” no flirtations, no balls, no
picnics, no billetßdoux. Tin* child
has not ceased to play with her
doll before eho has a baby to
handle
Tho only joy of a woman’s life
is in dressing h»r hair. This is
done with an elaborate, artistic
science curious to see. Their hair
ig invariably black and very long.
It is drawn tightly from the face
and stiffened with gum It is
then piled up in noils and wings
aud loops that stand alone with
out the aid of pads, roulets, pugs
or hair pins.
Thtre are no spinsters in China,
except the nuns who dedicate their
virginity to Buddha. These ladies
shave their heads like priests, and
thus deprive themselves of the
only Chinese sign of gender—the
hair dressed a la teapot.
THIS IS WHAT THEY SAY.
Thos who take Hood’s Sarsaparilla
tor scrofula, eczema, eruptious,
catarrh, rheumatism or dyspepsia,
say it cures promptly and per
manently, even after all other
preparations fail. You may take
this medicine with the utmost con
fidence that it will do you good.
What it haß done for others you
■live reason to believe it will do
for you.
Constipation is cured by Hood’s
Pills. 25c
Bridegroom Wasn't There.
In Lippincott’s Magazine is giv
en an account of Chloe, a young
negro house servant in an Atlanta
family, of a wedding she had at
te tided.
The next day her mistress said
to her:
"Well, Chloe, how did the wed
ding go off ?” ’
“Oh, la, missy, it was de grand
est w'pddiu’ I ebbersawl It was
jess lublyl Oh, yo’ jess ought to
ob seeii do flowahs uv’ de splendid
weddin’ suppah an’ de bride—oh,
de bride I She had on de longest
trail, an’ a white veil all ovah her,
an’ a wreath ob flowahs, an’, oh,
it was jess de mos’ oNgant. wed
diu’l”
“How did the bridegroom look?”
An expression of infinite disgust
came into the fa«o of Chloe as she
said, scornfully:
“La, missy, dat good-for-noth
in’ uo-count niggah tiebhah come
anighl”
MILLIONS GIVEN AWAY.
It is certainly gratifying to the
public to know of one concern in
the land who are not afraid to be
generous to the needy aud suffer
ing. The proprietors of Dr. Kiug’s
New Ciscovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds, have given
away over ten million trial bottles
of this great medicine; aud have
the satisfaction of knowing it has
absolutely cured thousands of
hopeless cases. Asthma, Bron
chitis, Hoarseness and all diseases
of Throat, Chest and Lungs are
surely cured by it. Call on A. M
Winn & Son’s Druggist, and get a
free trial bottß. Regular size 50c.
and sl. Every bottle guaranteed
or price refundod.
Joseph Jefferson has given
SI,OOO to the Galveston relief fund.
He attended school in Galveston
when a mere boy.—Ex.
The undertaker isn’t accused of
being in league with the dye man.
TO THOSE WHO TRAVEL.
The Nashville, Chattanooga &
St. Louis Ry., and Western and At
lantic Rv. is the shortest, quicket
aud best route to all poiuts North,
West, aud North-West. Three
through trains daily. For cheap
est rates, time tables, maps, aud
other information write to
J. L. Edmondson, S-E. P. A.
Box 22. Atlanta, Ga.
VOL. VII. NO 52
ISomot.h'nj About Gusd-Eyaa.
Every now nnd then,as we journey
through this vale from the cradle
to the grave, it is necessary to say
good-bye. Generally it is said
in sadness aud with a sigh. We
wring the hand of the departing
friend, the sorrowful tears are
shed, and the bell rings and the
train goes around the curve.
This is the good-bye that sticks in
the throat like a large three cor
nered lump, and persistently
refuses to be swallowed. After
this kind of a farewell, we go
home feeling tiiat something has
gone out of our life. We are like
the man who puts his foot out for
another step at the top of the
dark stairway and finds that it
isn’t there.
Then there is the farewell that
is said with the hilarious chuckle
of joy. Wo sav it to the bill
collector whom we have with us
always. We say it to bore, the
spring poet, to the man who hums
the exchanges, aud to the writer
who iuvariably refers to the bear
as bruin.
The sweetest good-bye is that of
the girl at her father’s front gate
when only you and the girl and
the twinkling stars are present.
To some of us it is only a memory,
this kind of a farewell, but is a
memory that will remain fresh
and green long after we have pass
ed the callow age.
The saddest good-bye is the
one that is said by the side of an
open grave.—Ex.
SIOO Reward, SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at
least one dreaded disease that
science has been able to cure in all
its stages and that is Cattarrh .
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only
positive cure now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires u
constitutional treatment. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood
nnd mucous surface of the system,
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the
patient strength by building up the
constitution aud assisting nature
in doing its work. The propietors
have so much faith in its curative
powers, that they offer one Hun
ilredDollars for any case that fails
to pure. Send for list of testi
monials. Address
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 76/.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Collage Va Matrimony.
I asked a young Dalton girl, the
other day:
“Why are you not off at col
lege? I would have thought you
would have been sure to go off this
fall?”
“No indeed!” she replied.
“Catch me going to school any
more. I have been going to school
it seems to me, for a century or
so, and it has been nothing on
earth bur study, study, study.
I’m not going to study any more.
I am going to marry and settle
down. It’s Dot school, but mat
rimony I have on the brain just
now.”
Such is sweet 16 in this A. D.
1900! —Dalton Argus.
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 Billiousness. Doctors were
scarce, and they seldsm heard of
Appendecitis, Nervous Prostration
or Heart Failure, etc. They used
August Flower to oleau out the
system aud stop fermentation of
undigested food, regulate the ac
tion of the liver, stimulate the
nervous and organic action of the
system, aud that is all they took
when feeling dull and bad with
headaches aud other aches. You
only ueed a few doses of Green’s
August Flower, iu liquid form, to
make you satisfied there is noth
ing serious the matter with you.
Sample bottles at Bagwell Drug
Store. Lawreueeviile, R. O. Med
lock, Norcross, Smith & Hair -i.
Suwanee.