Newspaper Page Text
i'-r *
Cuthbert Enterprise and Appeal.
BY JAS. W. STANFORD. “Independent in All Things-Neutral in Nothing.”
— — —— ■ . . . — ♦
TERMS $1.00 IN ADVANCE.
VOL. VII. SSS SS CUTHBERT, GA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1887.
NO. 41
~ /
Enterprise & Appeal.
*(JBSCllI!”TIOX 1’KICK :
One copy one year .... ^ 1.00
“ Six month* .... 50
“ Three months ... -*
Mail Knud Mchedale.
DAY r.VHSENGKK. UOIXG WEST.
Arrive 3:10 p * M *
GOING EAST.
Arrive M -
FLORIDA A WEKTEUX I'ASSEXGEU.
GOING WEST.
Arrive' •' :, " ) A * M *
GOING EAST.
Arrive
Slop' at \ nion
11:11 P. M.
Springs. Kufaula.
between Montgom-
Outbbert. Daws.m,
$erv and Smith villc.
Fort Haines train makes close con
nection with the Montgomery A Macon
Passsetigerat ruthbort.
D. P11K\A*>, Agent.
?i
LEADING DRY GOODS HOUSE IN THE CITY.
ATTENTION CLOTHING ENTERS!
The Largest and Finest Stock of Gents’, Youths’ and Boys’ CLOTHING in the City !
AUCTION SALE
DR
WESTMORELAND,
UE.VriXT,
Offers liis services In tlie |>nl>lic in
nil llie liinnelies of Dentistry-—
Work warranted. Office over tlio
Ttmtolflce. Knnms formerly ocen
I tied 1»y Dr. Worsham. He will
speml the first week of each
month in Fort Gaines, comment
ing the first Monday. Rooms at
the. Liilhtfoot House.
mar3l <-t
W. R. THORNTON,
DENTIST
CUTHBERT, GA.
o
kKK :Vf.
West
K. Ke
Sid** P'.hlie Square.
’*s Store. f**1»17-I V
WORTH OF CLOTHING,
Bought under the market value, are now being offered at a reduction of 15 to 25 per cent, from regular price. Call and take
advantage of Extreme Bargains in Clothing.
City Lots
IN TALLAPOOSA, GA.,
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday,
MY
HOUSE
t
NO MORE EYE GLASSES, j
Weak
■ore
Eyes!
kutch E lvs esalve
A Certain. Safe and Effrrtn e Kemnly tor
SORE. WEAK. AND INFLAMED EYES.
Producing Loiig-.Sigh ted ness. and Re
storing t!*e Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear Drops. Granulation. Stye Tu
mors. Red Kves. Matted Kve Lashes.
AND I’HODl’t’INt• (JUD'K MKUKb
AND PKUMANKNTlTiiK.
Also equally efficacious when used in
other maladies, such as l leers, I ever
Sores. Tumors, Salt Rheum. Burns. Piles
or wherever intlamation exists. MITCH-
KLI/S SALYK in:iv he u<ed to advan
tage. Sold by all Druggists at 25 cents.
augiVly
100 Boys’ Suits at $2 00, worth S3 50; 100 l r ouths’ Suits at $3 00, worth $5 50; 100 Mens’ Suits at $4 00, worth $8 00,
A full Line of Gents’ Clothing, in all the latest Cuts and Styles. You are invited to call and inspect our Line of
Clothing, whether you purchase or not.
HARRIS’ POPULAR DRY GOODS HOUSE,
Tfc.e
OCTOBER 24, 25 & 26, 1887.
The Three Days Following the Piedmont Exposition.
Tallapoosa. Ga.. the city of the* Golden River,” is situated in Haralson Coun
ty, on the Georgia Pacific Railroad, midway between the enterprising manufac
turing cities of Atlanta and Anniston. Its elevation is 1,200 feet above sea level,
ami its climate is the most perfect of any section of the United States. It is the
winter climate of Koine and the summer climate of Jerusalem. The purest of wa
ter abounds in inexhaustible quantity, many mineral springs have been discover
ed. with valuable medicinal properties, ami remarkable cures are chronicled daily.
Rich mines of Iron. Manganese. Gold, silver and other minerals surround the city,
and the finest Marble Quarry in the South. The iron ore is of the Bessemer class
use*l extensively for steel making by the direct process, and is pronounced by all
experts as the largest vein of this class of valuable ore in the .Southern Bates.
TIIEUITY PLAT, comprising 2.UU0acres, has licen largely surveyed and
Iteuutifiillv laid out in boulevard, avenues, streets, parks, lakes, etc., the land
scape work to he finished by Prof. Joseph Forsythe Johnson, the talented land
scape engincey of New York, the engineer of the grounds of the Piedmont Expo
sition ground in Atlanta, and many public parks.
ACIM'IC KAILROAp already crosses the city.
SPRING VALE SEMINARY.
Spring Vale, Ga.
a Sl’lfOOI, nf Hiifli stamhiril fur Hoy:
and Girls. Location healthy and
attractive. Mater cold and pure. Build-
TRIED
nr tub
CRUCIBLE.
Almost before the
could realize
unpleasant episode marred ® UC8 ^ S
happened Stemliardt rushed for
able
Grounds
ing large and comfort,
amnlc and beautiful.
Tuition—$2 00, $2 and $5 00 per
Month.
Bo\ki>— In the best Families, at from
|5 00 to $7 no per Month.
Daily mail, excellent Church facilities,
moral "surroundings equal to the best.
w*- For further information, apply
to \V. B. IIINTON.
soplG-ct Principal.
ENGINES
FOR
GINNING.
Most economical and durable. Cheap- j
ost in the market, oualitv considered, j
The € Vlebrn f h1 Pa rq «il»a b* Nisi w
9lill«an«l Engine and 8|an-
dard ImpIratirnfK Generally.
Bend for catalogue.
A. B. FARQUII \R.
Pennsvlvauia Agricultural Works.
jy21-2iu York, Pa.
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Alx>ut twenty years ago I discovered a little
sore on my cheoh, nml the doctors pronounced
It cancer. I have tried a number cf physicians,
but without receiving any permanent l-cneflt.
Among the number were one or two specialists.
The medicine they applied was like fire to the
sore, causing Intense pain. I saw a statement
In the papers telling what R. R. S. had clone for
others similarly amicted. I procured some at
once. Before I had used the second bottle tho
neighbors could notice that my cancer was
healing up. Sly general health had been bad
for two or three rears—I had a hacking cough
and spit blood continually. I had a severe
pain In my breast. After taking six bottles of
S. S. S. my cough left mo and I grew stouter
than 1 had been for several years. Sly cancer
has healed overall but a llttlo spot about tho
size of a half dime, end It is rapidly disappear
ing. 1 would advise every one with cancer to
give S. S. R. a fair trial.
Sins. NANCY J. McCONATTGIIEY,
Ashe Grove, Tippecanoe Co., Ind.
Feb. 1C, 1SS6.
'Hii> lli-iili-groom A roil* d.
An
tin* Hebrew wtibling i-elebrated
o.i Sunday evening. The bride
was Ida I. Bucket, daughter of
Lewis Bucket, of No. C13
ton avenue, and lire bridegroom
,, .. , ..... She was carried
was Herman Scheyer, a wealth} I
merchant of Montreal. The j
bride’s Iriends engaged Vienna
ball, at Fifty eight street and
Lexington avenue. It is a pri
vale ball, used almost exclusively
by Hebrews. Its proprietor is L
H. Steiuhardt. Six o'clock was
the lime sei, but guests con’.in
ued to arrive for about an hour
after that. At 0:45 Mr. Stein
hardl's attention was attracted
by a young woman who was walk •
ing tip stairs. He stopped her'
and said:
astonished
what had
Swift’s Specific Id entirely vegetable, and
seems to cure cancers by forcing out the Impu
rities from tho blood. Treatise on Blood and
Skin Diseases mailed free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Dlt-WVKU 3. ATLANTA, tSA.
lOU
Headquarter
PIANOS AND ORGANS!
1 Can Sell You an
ORGAN OR PIANO
Clieapeu
TI1AS
ANY HOUSE WITHIN 500
MILES OF THIS POINT.
When you want any Instrument, confer with me in
regard to price before buying, and I will save you mon
ey-
I also sell Piano and Organ Stools separate.
J. W. STANFORD.
PARSONS
_ .1 wn itWill wAcitival*
,ills were * wnnderiw discovery in f onn ation around eaoi bo: is worth ten times
trfEEEET rmdoutaboutthem, and you will always be thankful. One pill
So others like them in the world. Will positively
'relieve all manner of disease.
the... '
adooe. Parsons’
Fills contain
mo thine harmful,
are easy to take,
and cause no in
convenience. One
box will do
veloos* power of’Spills, they would wdkUM
frCO.^23 Custom Honss Su. Boston, llasx
PILLS
. .si. «nn _;in. tn ft box if they
blood and euro
chronic ill health
than $5 worth of
ary ether reme
dy yet discov
ered. If peopla
could be made to
realize the mar-
miles to get a box if they could not be had
_ _ . . Cnwr. tao it-
the ia&trmauonu very • »
Make New Rich Blood!
‘•Madam, the ladies’ dressing
room is not up there. It is in this
direction.”
She turned and went to the
room without a word. Steiuhardt
noticed that siie was apparently
not more than twenty, handsome
and stylishly dressed. He says
that she had “light hair, very
long. It was ‘banged’ over ber
j forehead and banging down over
her shoulders. ’ Her eyebrows j
and eyes were dark. She bail!
the tresses of a blonde and tile 1
complexion ol a brunette. This
incongruity, however, did not at-
tract the hall keeper's special at-
! tention. In the dressing room
j she mingled with the other ladies
I until it was time to go down
1 stairs. In a company of two or
i the hundred she easily managed
j to remain unmolested. When
everything was ready the guests
! filed down into the hall- She
I alone remained behind. Stein
I hardt again went to her some
what perplexed.
“Miss,” said lie, “the company
have all gone to the wedding.
Woul 1 you not like to walk down
stairs to join them?,'
shn replied. “Pray ex
cusc me front going down stairs
I do not wish to go down, because
I did not have time to dress as I
desired. 1 have just come from
Montreal.”
The excuse seemed plausible,
and lie turned away and went to
watch the proceedings. Rabbi
Kaufmann Kohler, of Belli El
Synagogue, at No. 817 Lexington
avenue, officiated. After the cer
emony congratulations were ex
changed, and Herman Scbeyer
was in the act of kissing his
bride, when an uninvited guest
entered. The unknown young
woman of the yellow locks forced
her way through the crowd sur
rounding Mr. and Mrs. Scheyer.
But she uttered no congratula
tions. She raised her right hand,
as if taking an oath, and said in
deliberate accents: “I pronounce
that man to be my betrayer. Ho
has ruined me for life.”
ward and clapped bis hand over
the woman’s mouth. Then he
L^xino.. I I*' 8 *rm around her waist to
Irag her out, and she fainted.
to the dressing
j room. When she revived she
[said to Steiuhardt: “I am from
j Montreal. That man has ruined
me. He has my child and I want
it. My name is Miss Cohen, ami
I am a Jewess.”
With that she put her hand to
her head, and removing a flaxen
w ig, revealed her own raven blai k
hair.
“Where are you staying?” ask
ed llie hall keeper.
“At tile Bradford hotel, in
Eleventh street between Broad
way and University place.
When Sleinhardl led her to the
door, he found a carriage await
ing her. She entered it and drove
away.
Meanwhile Scheyer was being
called upon lo explain. “I don’t
know the woman. I never saw
her in my life before, and I be
lieve she is crazy,” said he. Then
the merry making was resumed.
A Tribune reporter who called
at the Bradford bouse last night
was told by the clerk that no
such person ns Miss Cohen, of
Montreal, had registered there.
He admitted, however, that she
might have been thcie for a part
of the day. It is not probable
that the woman gave Steiuhardt a
wrong address, for the Bradford
is a hotel not generally known,
and uot likely lo be by a stranger
unless actually visited, and she
was prostrated, excited and in a
condition when one is not likely
to speak anything but the truth.
Presumably she drove to the
Grand Central station and took a
train for home.
Captain Gunner, of the Fifty
ninth street police station, kiudly
offered lo investigate the strange
story last night for a Tribune re
porter, ami ii is from bis inqui
ries that the facts as stated are
given. Steiuhardt is |>ositive
that Miss Cullen carried no pistol
or other weapon, but yesterday he
received information that two
years ago, in Montreal, she shot
twice at Scheyer. but missed him
botli limes. Scheyer and his
bride, to whom he was married
after about a year's acquaintance
and three months’ engagement,
will sail for Europe to-morrow.—
Xeic York Tribune.
women address their wives with
diminutives, if not with nick
names fit only for small women or
little girls. “Daisy,” “Birdie,”
and “Baby,” appear to be the pet
names most favored by the hus
bands of mammoth women. In
this haven of conjugal rest, for
Saratoga is distinctively for mar
ried couples and has less con
veniences and attractions for lov
ers than any place in America,
one gets a deep knowledge of the
w >ys of wedded folk. This mat
ter of nicknames for wives is one
oftlie most interesting studies.
To pursue this branch of learning
it is necessary to sit for an hour
or two on an afternoon, while the
music is playing in the inner gar
den either of tile United Stales
Hotel or of the Grand Union. AH
tlie rest of the married couples
will do fur tlie student. They
will talk unguardedly in Ids hear
ing, and he will soon be able to
classify the couples and the pel
names, for certain names go wilii
certain sorts of couples as infalli
bly as pie goes with supper in
Xew England.
dressing their comrades as “Pet.”
One plump little wife is gradual
ly becoming known to everybody
inoDeuflbc hotels as “Sugar.”
the nickname the husband calls
out assiduously and loudly all day-
in the parlors and on the prome
nades. The temptation for others
to call her Sugar is growing pain
ful. She is not the only feminine
confection, for, at the Slates, there
is a dimpled brunette, who an
swers to her husband ss “Sweety
and yesterday a prim looking
wife, somewhat the shape of a
hoard, was addressed as “Sweet
ness” before all the crowd at the
spriug in Congress Park. It may
be an oversight, hut there dues
not seem to be a "darling” in
town. A ruddy-faced, corpulant
man of 40, who looks as if he was
born and brought up in the Stock
Exchange, always addresses liis
I wife as “Precious,” and in the
same hotel a husband, who ap-
|iears tn hail from the West, re
plies to his wife with “Yes, pig-
Last Saturday his partner, J. X.
Baker, of Leslie county, arrived,
and, after the two had conferred
together, they proceeded to the
Adams Express office and receiv
ed a package shipped from Al
bany, N. Y., lo the address of ISa
ker, on which there were $400
charges, whicli amount they paid
tlie agent.
The very swell and exquisite
young married men, who dress
vainly and seek to give the im
pression that they belong to the
F. 0. D. C , dance at Dclmonico’s
and know all the fellows who
have yachts, call their wives with
monosyllables, such as Puss,
Chris, lien, Fan, Loo, Tot. There
seems to be only one married ex
ception Id the list. You often
bear one of these wives called
“Popsy.” There are two Popsles
at the Slates, and there is one at
the Union. Oddly enough the
fathers of these same fellows, men
so well kept that you can’t say
The Odd Names In Which the Idlers
at SaraU^l Address Their Wires.
When a lounger on the veranda
of one of the big hotels at this
ptace hears a man say, “Hurry
up, little one,” or “Come along
birdie,” he may be sure that it
is a husband addressing his wife
and that she is enormously fat.
Apparently all husbands of lat
whether they are 45 or 65, are
fond of drawing out the full names
of their helpmeets, as for instance,
"Come lieah, Francese,” or “Sow,
my deali Eleanor, you must have
a wrap.” Equally fixed is the
rule that thin and sieklv women,
dyspeptics, neuralgics, and the
like, are addressed by their liege
lords, as wife, madame, or Mrs.
Thompson, Mrs. Brown, or what
ever. The invalid husbands, and
all the prim and precise ones as
well, address their belter halves
as “my dear.” This, by the way,
is the established custom with
the Hebrews, though they usually
arc heard to pronounce the words
“mine teer.” The clergymen seem
to have united upon the word
"mother” as a title for their wives,
and the men who are so common
here, and who seem to be wrapped
up in an only girl or boy, call
their wives “ma.”
Other nicknames resist classi
fication thus far, though perhaps
the key to all can be found by
diligent application. There is n*>
end to the Dollies and the ‘'my
loves,” while one hears a miscel
lancous lot of passages by ad-
eon,” “AH right, pigeon,” and so
on. As it happens, there is some
thing about the wife’s appearance
or manner, or perhaps it is her
shape, that renders this oddest
of nicknames peculiarly appropri
ate. The young fellows who are
attending their time in pulling the
down on their upper lips are food
of pointing out “Sugar” to all
their acquaintances, and in anoth
er week they will doubtless add
"Pigeon” to their stock of fun.—
A’ew York Sun.
A Woman’s Discovery.
“Another wonderful discovery
has been made and that too by a
lady in this county. Disease
fastened its clutches upon her and
for seven years she withstood its
severest tests, hut her vital organs
were undermined and death seem
ed imminent. For three months
she coughed incessantly and could
not sleep. She bought of us a
bottle of Dr. King's New DTscov-
ery for Consumption and was so
much relieved on taking first dose
that site slept all uiglit and with
one bottle lias been ■niraculoualy
cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther
Lutz.” Thus writes W. C. Ham
rick & Co., of Shelby, N. C.—Get
a free trial bottle at J. \V. Stax
fobd’s Drug Store.
riuiuMiKCu FAmii: ua
giving a frontage f»r factory sites of nearly three miles, ami the survey of the
I'linttanoopi. Home and Columbus, now building under contract, to lie completed
in eleven months; and the Carrollton and Decatur extension of tlie Central Itail-
road of ‘ * * -* ' ' * ' ’ *
Ueorgia system run directly through the city. These roads completed the
coming vear yiveTallajwsisa direct communication with the great rivers, the gulf
and the’ Atlantic fer water transportation and superior railroad connections
with ail the leading manufacturing cities of the South, the lakes and great cen
tral points of the West. North ami East.
Tti.1.41*00*1 HAM KVKRV ABTATFAGR for a large manu
facturing and residence citv. Its elevation, 1.200 feet above sea level, insures a
healthy climate and a perfect system of drainage is secured by u natural fall of
from 50 to loo feet to the mile in all directions.
It is in tlie heart of the richest mineral region of tlie South, and will naturally
be the central manufacturing and shipping, point for mineral, agricultural and
timber products within a radius of twenty-five miles.
Located sixty-three miles front Atlanta, lot) miles from Birmingham, and forty
utiles from Anniston, with no large manufacturing city intervening, it must, as a
natural eonsetiuenee. rapidlv grow in im ports nee.
Til A.A FOlk I'KAI
I, I: Si Si 'I'll A A FOIIt »- K A KM A4aO its population was fifty-nine. To
day, with no stimulus Imt its agricultural and timber interests (minerals not until
recently thought of), it has increased to 1.000 population, and supports three ho
tels, three churches, a male anil female seminary, and thirty-five business houses.
New resiliences and business blocks arc rapidly bring erected, and contracts giveo
for many more, while new arrivals add to its [suilllatioii daily.
DVIA THOU It EMM and some
VKGO’l'lATIOAM ARK AI.RKAI
of them completed for the location in Tallapoosa of a 4100,000 Blast Furnace,
commodious summer hotel; a large planing, lath and shingle mill; a tannery; a
furniture factory; a cotton mill, and many minor industries, in addition to eight
sawmills, two brick manufactories, one wood-turning shop, one shingle aud lath
mill, and several grist istiis and cotton gins already in ojieratlon.
A 111(111 MV VlMCATK has recently purchased the famous “Holland Mines.”
comprising P.Noo acres, two miles from town, and have many men at work erect
ing a plant that will employ from 100 to 250 men in gold mining.
The Mobile syndicate, the Cincinnati syndicate, the Birmingham syndicate, thw
Chicago syndicate and the Hast Alabama (sold Mining and Dredging Company
have iilso'ntade extensive purchases in mineral lands adjacent to the city.
Kir’— —
Suckers Always Bite. '
An old swindling dodge, long
since familiar to suckers in more
advanced localities, has just pene
trated the wilds of Perry and Les
lie counties, Kentucky. Ten days
ago Basil Cornett, of Perry coun
ty, went to London, Ky., register
ed at the Lovelace Hotel, ami af
ter several days quietly loitering
around town, he. with the most
confidential air, informed certain
persons that he was waiting fur
his partner, who had gone to New
York on business, and in the
meantime be telegraphed or wrote
to a bauk in Stanford, where be
bad a deposit, requesting that
they send him $400 in c^h.
Shortly after this little bitsi
ness transaction Cornett took a
friend aside ami wlns|iered into
his ear that they hail been beaten,
whereupon he unbosomed himself
of the entire scheme. He told
how they had been induced, like
the traditional little fish, to gulp
into their unsophisticated mouths
a bearded hook on which was
fixed a dainty allurement. Tlie
tale runs tliusly: They had re
ceived front Albany, N. Y., a cir
cular, in which a “party by the
name of Smith,” or some other
simple cognomen, had offered that
for $700 of any good circulating
medium the said party would
furnish $10,000 of “stuff” which
would pass any where; and as an
inducement the said party pro
posed that if they should have
any doubt or misgiving on the
subject they were invited to come
East and receive tit* stuff in per
son; and accordingly Mr. Baker
proceeded to Albany, where lie
touml the proper street and num
her, and was soon engaged in
negotiations by which he was to
realize $10,000 with the small out
lay of only $700. He said the
party showed him a ti unk full of
the prettiest money lie ever saw,
ami explained to him how the
thing worked, and that the money
was duplicates of regular treasu
ry notes, printed at the Treasury
Department, and that they would
never be detected until presented
at the department for redemption.
A trade for $10,000 worth was
soon made, and the amount was
packed into a box and banded to
Baker, who paid $300 in rash, with
the understanding that $400 more
should lie paid wheu the box was
duly received through the express
office. Baker was to carry the
l>ox to the office iu |tcrson and
press it, as a matter of caution
against detection. As an evi
dence of good faith, the party
look a $20 hill from the lot and
handed it to Baker, and advised
him to puichase his railroad tick
et with it. He says the bill was
taken by tlie agent without a mur
mur, and lie proceeded borne in
the proud knowledge that he had
struck it rich.
When he and his companion
opened the box, which he had
seen packed and had in person
expressed, it conlaiced • good
hard brick, such as used in build
ing. The two greeaies consulted
a lawyer and a suit was Hied, and
the $400 attached iu the hands of
. the Express Company.
HKAI.KMTATKlSTHKCrri' HAMAIMAVI KU tMPEB
(,’K.Vr ill value in the last00 days and residence and building sites are selling
rapidlv. private sales of city lots during the last month aggregating (50.000. Lots
that sold for (300 thirty days ago are held at (500 and (S00 now. Capitalists, In
vestors and settlers are arriving.by every train, and hundreds of building and bus-
inew* sites arebeiner taken at private sale.
*T4M’K NOWNKIsLING AT 92,50 PKR Nil A St EL The Telia-
iucorjiorated with
pooMi Laud, Minin# ami Manufacturing Company Is regularly incoriiorated wi
capital stock of $2,000,000. 400,000 shares of $5.00each fully paid and cannot
increased or assessed. This stock was first offered Aug. 1st. 1**7 at >1.00 f>crsha
pcr*h»r*f
and ir>,um» shares were taken immediately. The price was then advanced to>1.25
per siiare ami 25.00(1 shares were taken in ten days. It is now selling rapidly at
*2.50 per share, with only 25,000 shares offered and that for improvement of tho
company’s real est.nte onlv. It will goto par immediately after the auction sole.
This fact evidences the faith capitalists have in the future of Tallapoosa.
SJMdJSCT Y0U® I4DTS N©W,
Lots 50x150 ft. are now selling on the best streets and avenues at from >300 tar
>5o0. according to location, and will he sold at these prices prior to the auction
sale. It is an absolute certainty that they will bring much larger prices at thw
sale. Hundreds of letters are received from people in every section of the United
States, notifying us that they will he here at the sale to purchase. If you wiah to
avoid the crowd and make choice selections, don’t fail to come or sena to us prior
to the sale and select your lot.
TEEMS OP SALE:
One-fourth cash ; balance in one, two and three years, with interest at 8 percent.!
Liberal reductions made on last payments to those who will build a house cutting
fXKJ on lot within twelve months.
WHAT OTHERS HAVE DOME.
slirflicM. Ala.. soW (300.000 worth of city lots iu a cotton field, three years “ago,
in three days. These same lots are worth (l.OOO.OUO now. Biraiiogbam, Ala.,
i sold (500,1100 worth in two days. They are worth (5.1X10.000 now. Anniston, Ala.,
i sold (21X1,000 worth in one day. They aro worth (2,000,000 n«w. Decatur, Flor
ence, Bessemer. I 'lmttiinoogii. Tclladcgn, and many others, followed in the wake,
and x,,T OSH SIXOI.E ixstanck has been known where property bought at or before
tlie first auction sale in any of these new towns or cities of this rich ^mineral belt,
‘ ’ ’ value afterward. It
Beginning where the
; who “ti
in which Tallapoosa is located, has ever decreased in
H\s ixv.ibi sbly INCREASED, and treniel.dously. ill value,
“boom” begins you are on the “ground floor.” Only those
two to see how it will turn out,” arc disappointed.
“wait a year or
S'Pegial Rates On All Railroads.
Arrangements are now being perfected for reduced rates oa mil railroads to those
wishing to attend the sale, aud new additions are being made to the batab la town
t0 An t oldfasidoned barbecue and other refreshments will he furnished frwt to all
in Lithia Springs Park eaeli day.
Come and enjoy the beautiful scenery, climate and water of tlie elty for a tmf. if
you dont purchase. .... , . *
m- |.',; r particulars of Railroad 4 ares and trains, sec small bills. Hpeeta! train*
wiUhe run on tlie fieorgia Pacific Railway, and special Pullman cars dirwet from
.New York to Tallajoosa.
REMEMBER THE DATES!
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, Oct, 24,25 & 26r
Send for Plat of City, Prospectus of Company. Etc.
Tallapoosa Land, Mining and Hannftetirinf Company,
Tallapoosa, Georgia.
WTiatthePress of GeorgiaSay Afcout
From Atlanta Evening Capitol
T;iIIa|>oosa is destined to be the “Den
ver” or “Deadwood” of the eastern part
of the Union. Many a mushroom town
of the western plains has -prung up and
developed into u metro|>olis without even
a small fraction of the many natural ad
vantages of this superb town, situated as
it is, right here on the Atlantic slope,
within the immediate neighborhood ami
under the influences of some of the most
progressive cities of the United States.
the great variety and abundance of min-'
erals around it! its commanding geo*
graphical position, its line climate ami
charming scenes. Tallapoosa's future
will imt disappoint those who go there
for investment or residence.
From A uyunla Chronicle*
They have a climate unsurpassed.—*
t trom ew
From Atlanta Constitution.
Tallapoosa is a magic city, where it
stands to-day with over l.OdO inhabitants
with sulistahtial and elegant structures,
with a hig and growing trade, with brill
iant prospects for the future. Where
this young town stands, four years ago
tlie primeval forest had notliecn disturb
ed. not one of the giant pines or oaks
had been* felled to build a house for man.
Standing in the Irnsv Tallapoosa of to-day
it is almost impossible realize this.
All around Tnlla|*oosa have been dis
covered such mineral deposits and such
rare facilities for their development as to
make it a certainty that Tallapoosa must
become a great manufacturing centre in
the near future.
From Atlanta Evening Journal.
?ince the discovery of iron ore at Tal
lapoosa. people have brought samples
into the agricultural department at the
capitol herein such quantity am! varie
ty that Prof. Mcfutchen Is amazed at
the mineral wealth of that region. With
Springs of pure water gush oat
rv hillside, more than 1.209 feet Mbate
sea level; good railroad facilities, which,
in the near future. Will greatly increase
fertile valleys and hills on every aider
and beneath their fret exhaust!***
stores rrf mineral wealth. We sOff tn
these things the. foundation of o great
citv. and wc believe at no distant day
Talhqtoosa will be erne of the most im
portant points on the mop of Georgia.
From Macon Telegraph.
it mineral
. along the
V IVmem,
and an*
The basis upon which the future of
Tallapoosa rests h* fts Tost mineral
wealth by which it is surrounded.
It is directly in the great mineral
range extending id this State,
counties of Fanmin. Gilmer,
Lumpkin, Haralson. Carroll.
ing in the rich gold fields of Arbocooehetf
in Alabama.
If the mnn oiWs, rm further
ment and analysis, still prove to bo Bes
semer. then this company is otto of tot
richest mining companies in the world,
ff they do not they are still possessors of
a mining property, rightly
worth millions.
.
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