JACKSON COUNTY, TN - NEWSPAPERS - Transit News June 4, 1885 http://files.usgwarchives.net/tn/jackson/news/tn06041885.txt ==================================================================== USGENWEB NOTICE: All documents placed in the USGenWeb Archives remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, these documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. They may be used by non-commercial entities so long as all notices and submitter information is included. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to other sites, requires permission from the contributors PRIOR to uploading to the other sites. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Susie Culwell ==================================================================== (Information below is typed as is. The information is NOT to be SOLD! Transcribed by Susie Culwell from Roll #101 Gainesboro Jackson County Sentinel, Date: 1873 to 1902, from the Tennessee State Library and Archives). ***************************************** Tinsley, Gailbreath & Co. ercieved new goods this week. Mr. J J Goodpasture and wife are at Gipson's Hotel. Frank Cooper and wife returned from Nashville this week. New Goods! Just recieved by Quarles & Stafford. The Str. Benton McMillin went down yesterday. Hon. Geo. H. Morgan and wife visited friends at Celina this week. Commercial Fertilizer for sale by Quarles & Stafford. George Kir, of Butler's Landing, was in town this week. Mrs. Bell Buckingham, of Gallatin, is visting her parents at Gainesboro. F M Irwin, Photograper, who has been at Gainesboro for several months left for Sparta this week. Prof. W D G Carnes has a 'little bit of a girl' at his house - just three days old. Several hundred men were engaged last Saturday in rafting logs on Roaring River. ******************** Arrivals at the Hawes' House: Frank Fleming, O R(H?)eekin, W T Williams, ---- Dugger, Fillmore Roddy, Jo. Rutland, L N Wakefield, Nashville; H C Hampton, Gallatin, E. F Tinsley; T W Jackson, St Louis; F R Pain, G T Tinsley, Hartsville; L B Hill, Speacer. ****************** Mrs. Mary Jaquess, wife of Isaac D. Jaquess, died on the 2nd Inst. Besides a large number of friends and relatives, she leaves a husband and three little girls, the youngest only two weeks old. ************************************** Nathan M Cox, county Supt. is now supplied with Registers and all the blanks necessary for contracting with teachers, which the Directors of the Districts who have not been supplied can get by calling at his office in Gainesboro. He will hold teachers examination at Gainesboro on Saturday of each week. All teachers who have not procured certificates should be awake. **************************************** John H. Stafford's little boy is a 'great big fellow' and is named Grover Cleveland. The population of Whitleyville is increasing - W. H Quarles has a boy. Mrs. Martha Jackson of Gallatin is at her father's, Geo. M. Puttie's at Gainesboro. W. Y Hart and family, of Nashville, came up on the Ewald this morning to visit their many friends and relatives at Gainesboro. ? S. Dudney and Miss Clara ?? went to Cookeville yesterday to attend the closing exercises of Prof. Leargin's school ((( microfilm is bad at this spot))) Ben Franklin, saw mill man, of upper Flynn's creek returned from Nashville last week. If anything was to be learned from observation in the mills of Nashville, Ben is the man to learn it. Paper water-buckets 'for sale by Quarles & Stafford.' Tomatoes are being used by a Florida man to make vinegar. ************************** A bill recently passed by the California Assembly gives to any young man under twenty six years of age, who learns a trade by serving an apprenticeship for three years, and is a moral young man, $250 out of the State treasury. - Southern Trade Gazette. ********************************