Newspaper Page Text
TOCCOA NEWS
T5. 8 GTT AFFF.R. Proprietor.
JAMES w. HARRIS ... Editor
B. F. BARFTELD,.., Publisher.
TERMS-
One year in advance 11.50
Six months......... 75
rOCCOA CITY GA. MAR. 11. 1887
List of patents granted March 8th
to inventors residing in Georgia, Ala¬
bama and Florida:
Georgia—S. P. Etter, Cedartown,
wire’fence; T. W. Wood, Atlanta,
washing-machine.
Alabama—T. H. Nance, Talladega,
machine for gumming saws; George
Peacock, Selman, car-wheel; Adam
Sehnell, Hartsell’s, plow and cultiva¬
tor.
None in Florida this week.
- mm m mm -
DEATH OF REV. HENRY WARD
BEECHER.
This distinguished minister was
pastor of the Plymouth Congrega¬
tional Church. Brooklyn, for forty
years. Before he entered the ministry,
he was editor of several newspapers.
He also published several books, the
most popular of which was his “Lec¬
tures to Young Men.” For many
years he wielded a great influence
Over his portion of the country, but
since 1874 his reputation has some¬
what declined. The good which he
accomplished in his early years has
probably been balanced by the mis¬
takes of the past ten or twelve. Yet
with all his failings, (and who has
none?) years may elapse before the
the clarion voice of another Beecher
sounds through this land.
He died on the 8th of March sur¬
rounded by his wife and children and
a number friends. By the dead pas¬
tor’s request, there will be no pall
bearers, no black draperies around his
bier, and his family will not wear
mourning. Neither will there be the
habitual crape on the door; but, in¬
stead, a wreath of beautiful flowers.
We are glad that one distinguished
American has died end left his con¬
demnation of much of the pageantry
of fashion, pomp and parade on funer¬
al occasions. Perhaps the simple ity o'
Beecher’s funeral and burial mav
make an impression on the public
mind which may eventually result in
a reform in this matter.
- ' m ■ —--
GENERAL NEWS.
The price of rice has gone up.
The small-pox patients at Newnan
are improving.
Perry, Ga., has a curry-comb facto-
r J*
The Salvation Army is still in At¬
lanta. *
Another row beween Mexicans and
Americans last week. One Mexican
fatally wounded,
Oh the 3rd of March, snow drifts
to the depth of 25 feet were to be
seen in Minnesota.
Mrs. Ruth Harmon, grandmother
of the President’s wife, died at Jack-
son, Mich., on the 6th.
The dwelling of Mr. Josephus
Maxwell, of Elbert, was destroyed by
fire on the 6th inst.
v Dep. Collector Chisolm has resign¬
ed, and L. T. Moses, of Coweta coun¬
ty, has taken his place.
A collection for missions was taken
in the Elberton M. E. Church on the
1st Sunday. Result, $350.
Charles H. Heiser, a consumptive
umbrella mender, of Pittsburg, Pa.,
has fallen heir to $225,(XX).
Since the earthquake in France
and Italy has been heard from, the
number of dead reaches nearly three
thousand.
A lady in Maine is the possessor of
a head of hair which is eight feet and
one inch in length.- She has refused
$2,000 for it.
Delta, \Y ashington Territory, is
appealingforasupply of marriageable
girls. There are* eighty young men
out there wanting wives.
The wife of Senator Beck, of Ken-
tucky, died at Washington City , on
the 6th inst. She was the grand niece
and nearest living descendant of
George W ashington.
Mrs.-John Mitcliell, of eouu-
Dh gave birth to triplets, all girls, a
few days sine©. Mr. Mitchell fainted
. hearing *. the .
on news, but was “up and
about” at last accounts.
•Milton Pish, of Habersham county,
was last week sentencaj to five and
half months in prison, and a Sue of
*100. Guilty of distilling, and
ing in an illicit distillery.
w Mr. J. T n Randall, Pn Brown, r. the , mind .
reader who lectured in Atlanta last
week, made arrangements to lecture
and give exhibitions in the science of
Psychology last Sunday night, at
Macon. The ministers of the city
united in requesting a postponement,
to which Mr. Brown acceded.
■+<
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Washington, D.n., March 7 , 1887.
Editor Toccoa News : The past
week has been a memorable one at
the National Capital. Seldom indeed
has the general public manifested as
active an interest in the proceedings
of Congress, and seldom, if ever, has
Congress accomplished so much in a
single week. Upon the opening of
the session on Monday but two of the
fourteen general appropriation bills
had been finally disposed of and sev¬
eral of those awaiting action had not
been reported from the eommittees,
and the prospeet of an extra session
was looked upon as beyond the range
of conjecture. Whatever may have
been said against the 40th Congress
as a legislative body, and howevr de¬
serving may have been the censures
which it has received from press or
public during the early days of the
session, it must be admitted that the
spirit of activity displated by Con¬
gress during the last four or five days
of its existence, should be considered
in mitigation of judgment, even by
its most severe critic, as one after
another of the appropriation bills,
and other important measures which
were looked upon as likely to necessi¬
tate the calling of an extra session
vanished. It is true that the country
may not be pleased with the way in
which some of the important measures
have been disposed of, but it is equally
certain that the members of Congress
many of whom have been re-elected,
regard the escape from an extra ses¬
sion with great satisfaction. The
night ssssion9 were attended by great
numbers of people, who crowded the
galleries and blocked the corridors.
As under the provisions of the In-
ter-Stf.te Commerce bill, which goe>
into effect upon the first day of April,
railjoad companies are prohibited
from carrying passengers for less
than their schedule rates, and hence
the public will be deprived of the ad¬
vantages and the railroad companies
the profits heretofore enjoyed in tbe
way of cheap excursions. The com¬
panies appear to have determined to
make the most of the time afforded
them and all, as of one mind, seem
to have determined to give an ex¬
cursion to the National Capital
Hence excursion parties have contin¬
ued to arrive daily, until the city is
tilled with strangers, and the hotel
accommodations have been taxed to
their uttermost limit. It is estimated
that there are at the present time up¬
ward of 2,000 excursionists from the
State of New York in the city, while
the States of Ohio, Pennsylvania and
the New England States are well
represented.
If President Cleveland were de-
termined to make himself as unpopu¬
lar as possible among the property
owners and business men of the Dis¬
trict of Columbia, especially among
members of his own party, he could
in no way have more effectually ac¬
complished his object than by the
course which he has pursued with ref¬
erence to the appointment of a Re¬
corder of Deeds in the District of
Columbia. The opposition to the
nomination of Mr. Trotter, the colored
appointee from Massachusetts, to the
office seems to be even more general
among the Democrats than among the
Republicans. After the Senate’s ac¬
tion in twice rejecting the nomination
of Mathews upon the ground that he
was not a resident of the District, it
was generally believed that in the j
case of Mr. Trotter, against whom
could be urged the same objection,
the Senate would repeat its action.
Tn view of this fact, and of the ad- |
the nomination, sub- j j
verse report upon
mitted to the Senate by the District
;
Committee of the Senate, the confir
mation of toe nominainc
Senate upon the last day of the scs-
8,0,1 may be said to constitute the
«*°st complete . of , the ,
surprise recent
session of Congress. It is said that
the chan S® of ,mnt b ? <he Rft l> ubli-
“ n Senators, was due to the statement
lna,le tbe Senators from Mass.-
chuset,s - that a rejection of the
,natlon " ould re3ult ,n a lo3s *° lhe
party £ J of the entire colored rote of the
State. H.
ANECDOTE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
Ii«:luctHnce in Permitting Men to be Shot
for t.'owarUice—Ills ’’Leg Cases.”
_ In the of ine authe death
earlier years war,
penalties of court-martial had to be sent up to
the president, ns commanrW-iu-ehief, for up-
proval. When Ju igo Holt, the judge advo-
cate general of the army, laid the first case
before the president, he replied, ‘"Well, I will
keep this 7, a few da vs until I have more tints
to read . the testimony.” hat . seemed , quite ..
reasonable. A hen the judge explained tho
next case Mr. Lincoln said, “I must put this
by until f can settle in my mind whether this
soldier can belter serve the country dead than
living.” To the third he answered. “The
general commanding tl.c l.rigadc U to ho here
in a few day,: l will wait and tail: the mat-
tei ovei with him. I inully theie was a vjv
flagrant case of a soldier who, m the crisis of
a battle, demoralized his regiment by las
cowardice, throwing down las gun arid hiding
behind a friendly stump. The court-martial
found that he had neither father nor mother
dving, nor wife nor child; that he was unfit
to wear tho loyal uniform, and that he
was a tbief who stole continually from his
comrades. “Here,” said Judge Ilolt, “is
a ense which comes exactly within your
requirements. He does not deny his guilt;
ho will I letter serve his country dead
than living, he has no relations to mourn for
him, and he is not lit to be in the ranks of
patriots.” Mr. Lincoln’s refuge of excuse was
all swept away. Judge Holt expected bo
would write “approved” on the paper; but
the president, running his long fingers
through his hair, as he so often did when in
anxious thought, replied: “Well, after all,
judge, I think I must put this with my leg
cases.” Log cases!” said Judgo Ilolt, with a
frown at t his supposed levity of tho president
in a case of life or death; “wliut do you mean
by ‘leg cases,’ sir?” “Why, why,” replied Mr,
Lincoln, “do you seetho.se papers crowded
into those pigeon holes? They are the cases
that you call by that long title, ‘Cowardice
in the face of the enemy;’ but 1 call them, for
short, my ‘leg cases.’ But I put it to you,
judge, and leavo it for you to decide for
yourself: if Almighty God gives a man aeow-
ardly pair of legs, how r can he help tbeir run¬
ning away with him?”—Hon. Schuyler Col¬
fax in Rice’s Reminiscences of Abraham Lin¬
coln.
Sydney Smith’s Letter to Lucy Austin.
“Lucy, Lucy, my dear child, don't tear
your frock; tearing frocks is not of itself a
proof of genius. But write as your mother
writes,act as your mother acts; be frank, loyal,
affectionate, simple, honest and then integrity
or laceration of frock is of simple import. And
Lucy, dear child, mind your arithmetic. You
know in the first sum of yours I ever saw
there was a mistake. You had carried two
(as a cab is licensed to do), and you ought,
dear Lucy, to have carried but one. Is this a
trifle? What would life be without arith¬
metic but a scene of horrors? You art going
to Boulogne, the city of debts, peopled by
men who have never understood arithmetic.
Bv the time you return I shall probably have
received my first paralytic stroke, and shall
have lost all recollection of you. Therefore,
I now give you my parting advice—don’t
marry anybody who has not a tolerable un¬
derstanding and a thousand a year. And
God bless you, dear child!”
He Was Not Grievous.
Freni a city in the Mexican state of Jalisco
we have received tbe following request:
“Editor Argonaut: Dear Sir—If you have
not any inconvenient, I will request you send
me one exemplar of your accredited news-
paper. If his lecture is affability to me, I
will tell 3 0a. and then you can send me a sub¬
scription. Please excuse me if I am grievous.
Your most respectfully,---.”
The gentleman is not at all grievous. We
have forwarded a copy, mid trust that tbo
lecture of The Argonaut will prove affability
to him.—San Francisco Argonaut.
A Case for the Doctors.
Jacob Hulshizer, a brakemau on tho New
Jersey _ Central railroad, while coupling cars
at Easton, Pa., was caught between the
bumpers. When released he was uncon-
scious. and his body began swelling so rap-
Idly that his shirt band had to be cut to pre-
vent him from choking. The swelling con-
tinued «-„ti, b is b«.y ^p.eMy f.lied
clothing, burstm 0 his shirt and trousers in
several places. His head was soon swoolen to
twice its natural size, and blood poured in
streams from his mouth, ears and nose. A
doctor who was called said tho swelling was
caused by the bursting of blood vessels in
Hulshizer’s lungs, which forced air into all
the tissues of his body. The skin has the ap-
pearanee of a blown up bladder, and if pressed
the air beneath is forced away, and return*
with a loud snap c when the pressure * is re-
mwo j
jVO , H ’6 n TUB rs* rr 77 27MB! -r #
_ To subscriber, , to . old ,, sub-
any new or any
scriber who will pay all indebtedness, we will
make the following
Unparalleted OJfor:
No. 1.— Toccoa News ..... . .. $1.50
No. 2.—The American Agricu iu arst
(English or German), 1887....... ..... 1.50
No. 3.—The A. A. New Poultry Book,
for everybody. 256 pages. 100 Illus¬
trations. Most complete work ever pub¬
lished.................................. 1.00
No. 4.—Engravings, “Homes of our
Farmer Presidents.” 11x18, issued dur¬
ing 1887. Each worth.................. 1.00
No. 5.—The same issued during 1886,
forwarded post-paid, in a tube prepared
fer the purpose. Each worth.......... 1.00
No. 6 .—Articles describing the Engrav
ings of the “Homes of our Farmer Pres¬
idents,” written expressly for this pur-
pose by James Parton, Donald G Mitch-
ell (Ik Marvel), printed on tinted paper.
Companion ^Portraits .
No 7.—A magnificent portrait of Gen-
eral Grant from his last sitting. Grand
Cabinet size, 18 b\' 24 inches, and en^
graved at large expense, espec ally for
subscribers to this combnation, and sup-
plied to no other person*. Pric-....... 1.00
No. 8 .—A sttyerb steel plate engrav¬
ing of General Logan, 12 by 16 inches
in size, from a pbotopfi-nph by Brady,
t-le^ntly mounted on heavy, hi^ldy-
fi:ii lied Taper, suitable for framing or
for thi; wnter _ abk> PrIce 1.00
We will furnish all the above, post- ?
paid, for. 225
Send six cents to 751 Broadway New York
for mailing you specimen copy of the Ameri-
can Asrimlturist, English or German,
««» Proofs of the Ensravhigs, and sixs imcn
HABERSHAM'S
S71 EE ZEE'S
FOK APRIL 1887.
VIJILL V\ be so’d, o\i the first Tuesday in
April next, before at Clarkesville, hou.-edoor, Haber¬
sham county. G«i„ die court
wi b ]<] h n the leg 1 the hours following of .a’e, to the highest
( er for eosii. property, to w>t:
One. town lot in Toccoa City known as lot
number two in block number two fro ti g 0:1
Oak street one hundred feet and running
back one hundr d feet. Levied on by vir ue
of. ) V and B to sa isfy three S ’as; one in favor of
" l>avid*°n. one in fa Tor of r l emm ng
Son, . and one in f-tvorl. A. Flemming vs.
u W . Jones: and a’so at th • sum * time ami
place, her twentv-five one lot in in ToccoaCity block k? ©was o. mitn-
iium er twen v-fi e
in the survey of said town, being the plate
where n Bill Gil 1 rd now lives, to satisfy 'wo
? far one of in favor f Wyly A room, and tho 11
or «
A ii. of ,»id '! <m„ty a U
p fas ro j^,qy Levy pointed out by defendant in said fi
. made by A. C Dooley, L. C., and
fi fas turned ov« r to me by him.
Printer's fee $6.87.
sold Also, the at the same t m- and p a-c, will be
north eastern half of lo: ol land mini
ber loriy 111 the eleventh !/is‘r-ct of Hi her-
sham county (on’ain’ng o e hundred
twenty the five acres, more or le s bound d on
north east bv lands o! Calvin now end
otln-rs; by nor'h by ’and- <><r c T Wilbanks, and
we t lands of T fi Roberts Lev ed on as
the property of T' o- Whi w rtb to satisfy a
fi fa from the justice < o rl f 917th dis riet G
M., of sa d county, Thos Gosnell vs Thomas
Whitworth. Levy made ar.d returned by a
constable, March 3, 18s7.
Also, at the same t ine and place, wdl be
the fo lowing property, to wit: El-ven
and one half a< res of lot land munner o e
hundred a" d for y two in the eleventh district
of said county, together w th the l ouse situ¬
ated upon the same and being the land j ur
chased by W A Jones o! J 1 Black; also, ten
acri s ad o n ng the above de s ciibed ph-ce of
land. a !, d being the land pure' ased by Wood
and Alien of the Porter i\ a u ac uri g compa¬
ny. and a 1 const'tutii’g the home defendant nl: ce of W
A A Jones, Jones a"d the p’ai e w efeon W
the now resides, said land !• v ed on as
property of W A Jones to satisfy a Mort¬
gage fi fii issued from the superior court of
said county in favor of Dowdell Bro against
w A Jones. Propartv ponted out in said fi fa
and written notice given defendant in terms
of the law.
Also at the same time and p’ace, will be
sold the following property, to wit: One brick
store house and lot in the town of Clarkesville
now occupied the by Frank of L Asbury, Levied
on as property c P O’cal'aghan to sat s-
fy a fi fa in favor* of^W J Rusk vs D J & v P
O’oallaghan issued from the justice court of
the 409th district G M of said county, said fi fa
owned and controlled by John w Ilatnes and
property given pointed out in by John w Hames' and
notice tenant possession this March
3rd, 1887. THOMAS J. GASTLEY.
Sheriff.
HABERSHAM SHFR/ C FS SALES
FOR TAXf S.
\17ILL \ V iti darkesvi be sold before le the jhe con first t Tuesriay * o sc door in
on
satisfy April, 1887, fi the follow issued ng i rop rty 0 to wit: t
tux -as by D Tor er, tax
collector of said county part of 1 nd Et num¬
ber one hundred and six y nine in the tent
district, containing one hundred a d t venty
five ac es, more or ess, the s: me be ng the
sou h half of said lot. b- vie 1 on as the prop¬
er y of Bird Taylor. Also, one h n e mid
lot in the town of T c oa City, in sai
county, known as k>t number one in block
No. forty eight, according to map made by
Moreno, fronts one hundred feet on Tugalo
street, and runs back tw » hundred and thirty
feet to Savannah street; sad house and b.t
now occupied by T B Rainer. Notice given
to tenant in possesion : s retpiired bylaw.
Levied on as the property of M rs M A Me Cue,
J W Harris, agent. Also four hundred ad
eighty Broad River; acres of bounded Headlight land, on Mid lc
east bv JnoUadkins;
*<•-« b > J'« Cash ...d l;«Ie mand; north b
lands of Ben Brown. Levied on as the pr p-
ertyofj H Southerland.
Also, on part of jot of lot number s-venty
four in he tenth district, fully described m ll
Hppd need irom from Ricli men rd ru Jones j ones to to YYvlv Jons. Join-s
Property the pointed bv Wylv defenda t, and levied on
as prop Ttv of Jones.
Also’ on eleven a id a ha f acr s more or
les ; , of part t lot one llU dr d : n f rt two,
in the eleventh d strict of s.tirl loun ui! y, where-
on tbe defendant Wm A Jo„e eddes
and leviedon as hi- pr per '•, so, one 1 lit•.
interest in seven and or,e for. th a res of land
undvidedand lying m. t e es si eo t e
road from Toccoa to Cl i k svi U •; bou de l ‘ y
lands of Mavy Smith and o he s. Leviedon
lie property < f J ' f I aylor, exeent r of J
L Dooley, dec-as d and p m ted out by s id
containing i two hundred a d fif y acr
or eps p ev ed on a- t e pr pertv f D
O’Ca lagh n Als *, one hi d undivi ed, in-
terest in t' e G o e- hous n the t wn of c
C arkesville as 4 lie property of C B McM 1 a •
L :^? arkesy SO i rne , l e and ones ! K bouse house, n the town of
f ^ or_ now ooev:-
if' 1 on °. n tlie propertv Z\ of Airs F N^F ' aUa
, , * ?
if ,['■'}" }' ■ ' \ X ,ree _
£ 0 . . "°P an11 wo h: n ‘
area and fifty acres. Level on as the . ; r*p
erty of D J O'Cal aghsm to satis r y a t x ti fa
issue(1 h v Ezekiel Fu’ler, tax collector, fi fa and
.
transferred oWPFurr. '
A1 o, one th rd u:»t!i\”ded interest in the Grove
hou-e and lot in the town of choke vil e.
whereon defendant re ides. Levied on as the
property of R E McMil'an to -atisfy a tax fi
fa iss ed by D c P. r>r, t. x collector, < f a : d
eleven county lor l’S-'-G. Also, part of lot m mher
in the tenth < istrict c •ntaining ti tv
iicres, mo e or less, kno n as P ince land . nd
levied on as the propert David Gea ee ite.
A1 ihe fo egoi ig tax fi fas having been
lev ed by Balitts and tumed over to m**, and
o ing for taxes due tlie State and county for
1886. March 3. 1887.
TIIOS. J GASTLEY, Sheaiff.
TOCCOA \
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refer (in proof of their “COMPOUND OXYGEN” being taken
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to the following-named well- the system, and the'
known persons who have tried Nerve-Ganglia—“Nervous nourished and Centres**—arc'
their Treatment: Horn William made more active. Thus*
D. Kelley, Memh-r of C >-«gress f Phila.: ^ the Fountain Head of all^btivity,
Rev. Victor L. Conrad, h nor Lutheran \ both mental and phT jkisre-'
Observer, Phila.; Rev. Chas. W. Cushing, stored to a state 0;
Lockport, N. Y.: Hon. W: ham Penn Nixon. FA- and the nervous system,-
Q-iene:no,K.an.. itor Inter-Ocean. & Chicago, thousands IH.: of other- Jy-dge in H. every P. part Vrooman, of the world. TO \ the muscles organs, and all the act
“COMPOUND OXYGEN—‘ITS MODE OF ApTION ' more ‘^4 kind hr
AND RESULTS” is the title of a book of two hundred pages, f fll I ^
published by Drs. Starkey and Palen. which giv« to all inquirers
full informatior»-as to this remarkaMe curative agent and a record of surprising
cures in a wide range of chronic cases—many of them after being abandoned to the by Other physicians. ... I*
will be mailed free to any address on application
Drs. STARKEY & PALEN, 1527-1529 Arch St, Phila., Pa,
Pcibmont 2 W) ir-tine go*,.
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N'- \
Wmm as !0Q
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•w-j- -»■•- -y-fir
R. & JD. R. COMP’Y
Conde7ised Schdule
IN EFFECT DEC. 19 1886.
O
Trains faster run by than 75th Merid an Time—one honr *
90th Meridian time.
GOING NOITTH.
KOUTII BOUND, DtILT.
No. 51 Mo. 58.
Leave Atlanta -r P m I 8 40 a m
Arrive Gainesville, “ 10 38 “
•* Lula, 9 “ 11 00 “
«4 Tocroa 10 “ 12 01 pm
Seneca 11 “ 12 56 ‘
Easley a ui ! ) 2 10 “
fi < ireenville 1 : o 3*> •«
S{iartunbuig Gaffney 3 2 3 -13 *•
4 30 “
Gastonia 4 G 41 “
44 Charlotte r 6 25 “
Statesville Salisbury r 8 01 “
Arrive j!2 40 p m
4* AshvHle 6 55 “
44 Hot Raleigh Springs 1 I i*G 9 39 “
Goldsboro 1 m 50 a m
44 “ 111 20 “
Danville 8 a m ! 9 47 p in
44 Owns boro 10 “ ill 28 “
<« R!c!imond 3 pm 6 40 a nx
Charlottesville Lynchburg 3 I t 4 2 CO
4 10 “
44 Baltimore Washington 8 8 30 “
44 11 i 4 10 03 p m
• 4 Philadelphia 3 a ni 12 35 “
4 * New York 6 3 20 “
Daily Except Sunday.
-o
GO iX G SOUTH
SOUTH BOUJfOD. DAILY.
No. 50 | No. 5f.
Leave New Yoi k 12 15 nt J~ p m
“ Bhiade’phia 3 50 a nr T.
Baltimore 0 50 “ i to s
* 4 Washington Charlottesville 9 00 “ 11 :
it 1 45 p ni w :
14 44 Lynchburg Richmond 4 1 05 30 “ “ 1 z* ic a m
Danville 7 05 • I oc
Greensboro 9W “
Leave Goldsboro 11 50 S vf •fl-s m
44 Raleigh 4 35 c * m
Arrive Hot Springs 8 20 S
• 4 Ash vine 11 00 i
. 4 Statesville 5 09 5
Leave Salisbury 11 00 - 11
Leave Charlotte 12 45 a m 1 p m
“ Gastonia 1 30 : 1 44
44 Gaffneys 2 42 : xceeai^Mifi 44
44 Spartanburg Greenville 3 36 p ni • 44 4
44 4 52 a tu
Easley 5 20 44
Seneca G 22 44
44 Toccoa 7 26 “ 14
Lula 8 36 “ r 44
Gainesville 9 36 “ o»
Arrive Atlanta 11 40 “
'Daily except Sunday.
'Pullman Car £e?
On trains 50 and 51 Tillman Bunett
Sleeper between Atlanta and New Yoik, New
Orleans and Wasliington via Danville.
(ju trains 52 and 53 Pullman Buffet
Sb-eper, Montgomery to Wasliington and
Aiken via DanviJe.
On trains 52 and 53 between Richmond
and Greensboro and Goldsboro.
tions £gT to Trough all points. tickets For on rates sale and at principal information sta
apply to any agent of the Company, or to
J 4 S. L. TAY OR-Gen. Pass. Agt.
Washington. D. C.
S 0 .L HAAS T. M.
ADVERTISERS
can learn the exact cost
of any proposed line of
advertising in American
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
IQ Spruce St., New York.
Send lOets. for lOO-Page Pamphlet.
»]|^»]ean III live at home, and make m< re
If If I money at Work for us. than it at y
■ ill§ thing else in the word. Capital m t
needed; ycu ase started free. Both
I V v sexes, all ages. Any one can do the
work. Large earnings sure from first start.
Costly outfit and terms fro -. Bette addr no elay. id
Cost you nothing to s-*nd us your s a
find out, if you are wise you will do so at
once. H. Hai.le+t, & Co, Portland, Mains.