Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XVI.
Person* not receivin'? the
will please notify us immediately.
The carpenters and joiners in Sa
vannah are demanding nine hours for
a days work.
Hawes was tried for the murder of
lii« daughter only. Now John ,, ,
Julie tN vlv are to be tried for the
murder of his wife Mrs. Emma Hawes
and the other daughter Irene.
****
Thi: Georgia Fish commissioner re-
ports that the progress in fish culture
is satisfactory, an 1 the protective
law’s have been observed. Shad are
now in all the rivers of the state.
****
Nink companies of Artillery are to
he stationed at the Atlanta barracks,
with a large corps of officers, and a
regimental band. The government
will expend about Slob,000 in build-
ing and equijiping tlu* bai tacks.
*** •
Mr, Jay Gould bought 40,000
shares of the Richmond & Danville
lVrminal at an av.vage coat of 28;
it has advanced to 35. Iloftr pleasant
it must he to go into Wall street of a
morning,and noth a wink or nod,scoop
tn a quarter or rn.ll.on ot dollars.
****
1 he Georgia {southern railroad
that , a will ... when , completed , , from o
.
run
Maeon to u Falatka, rn b la., projioses to .
extend a branch i from - some point • , on
its line to Thomasville, Ga., j.rovitled
that city will give $25,000, and 4 acres
of land fur depot grounds.
* * * -*
Gen. B. F. Butler charges Admi¬
ral Porter with sailing away with his
vessel below New Orleans and run¬
ning out to sea, fearing tlie Confed¬
erate ram Louisiana and leaving But¬
ler's “poor soldiers unprotected toiler
tender mercies.'’ Porter denies the
charge; Butler reiterates it and says
he will prove it was true. Now let
us see how the hero of Drewry’s
Bluff, will prove that Admiral Porter
was a coward.
A National Patriotic club has been
organized in New York, and named
the George Washington Club, “Every
man, woman and child who sub-
scribes to the doctrine of patriotism,
tuny become members.” We
it’ there is a man, woman or child who
does not subscribe to the doctrine of
patriotism; or lias the patriotic sen¬
timent in New York become so weak
and sickly that it requires a club to
bolster it up?
****
Griffin is to be congratulated
securing the Expermental Agricul-
tuml Station. A beautiful farm com-
prising 123 acres costing $15,000,with
$4,000 in money, is donated by the
citizens of that enterprising town.
Tlie farm is situated one and one half
miles from the court house; it in-
eludes several varieties of soil, has a-
bundance of good spring water, is un-
dor Inch stateof cultivation, and
railroads run in full view of the beau-
tuul home.
Hereafter the Mayor and Council
of Jac sonvtlle Fla., will not be elec¬
ted by the people, but appointed by
the governor of the state. The bill
passed the senate by a vote of nine¬
teen against t ight: This is undoubt-
idly a mistake. Although democrats
for the present will fill the ofli.e, the
measure is not democratic. The next
governor may be a republican who
will appoint republicans to rule tlie
city a©d the object aimed at by the
law will not be reached.
H. W. Grady is ubiquitous. One
day wy bear of him making a speech
in Tennessee, tn Texas, or in some
Georgia town; the next day he turns
up in Atlanta urging some important
enterprise for that lively village. We
had scarcely finished reading his. cen-
tennial tuldrcK in Xetv York when
mc , uar i i.s\oitt m , . ,
a . a.iu ai. urei
meeting ? m Atlanta:—“I move Mr.
p ^ si k nt « Wel] when ho mow
something is put in motion. In thi
case it is a Chamber of Commerce In
vestment companv. The capital is to
0t)0- it K to be u ° I *o aid in
establishing a multitude of manufae-
industries . - • that tt,
turing m ^ citv. No one
enterprise is to receive aid to exceed
twentv iter cent of its invested eapi-
tal. The News looks upon such an
organisation as possessing great pos-
sibilitie® for advancing the material
P nrosneritv ‘ of a eitv
* '
The E-— * • - ____vAS-
■
Toccoa News.
AMD PIEDMONT INDUSTRIAL ; 0 .r D L,,
DEMOREST.
A NEW CITY IN HABERSHAM.
oyj? AND ONF HALF MILL-
ION DOLLARS
TO BE INVESTED ** *******
___
it A T UiM T VI Y7"T7 V iD/ltol T>(i2I r JL P\ r
J_ •
-
That great trunk line railroad, the
Richmond & Danville, extending
with i s connections in almost an air
line, from Washington, D. C. to New
Orleans,passes through a country
tined to be among the richest in the
world.
On Wednesday, the editor of the
News took a seat in one of the
gant coaches that run on this road,
and soon was flying westward,through
iock\ cuts, past green fields and leafy
woods, past Currahee’s rugged peak,
past lovely Mt. Airy, and suddenly
halted at the attractive little city of
Comclu Ifcr-, changing cars to the
lilue Ridge & Atlantic road, and in a
few minutes the gentlcmardy conduc
stopped the train, let the writer de-
bark and poumng to a road, sa.d: “I
think that road takes vou to the
*
house.
rn. 1 he road iiii led through , wood,across i
a
a stream, , where is an old mill, and ,
water , e fall; ,, then ,, up a i hill n the i top
on
of which is a large mansion, lately
the residence of Dr. H. Rossi^nol.
On our way we were met by Mr. J.
A. Reynolds,so widely known as be¬
ing an accurate and experienced sur¬
veyor, who is employed by the com -
puny to
SURVEY OUt THE GROUNDS,
stake out the lots, streets and parks,
and make a map Of the future city of
Demorest.
At the residence we were kindly
received and entertained by Mr.
Frank. J, Sibley, the gentlemanly
Secretary, who gave full information
of the plans of the company,and drove
us in his carriage over the extensive
grounds.
A few months ago, a number of
jc O ,attracted by tlm unequal-
n '•—< , and the many attractions
of H aber chain cou v, so extensive!\ '
advertiged itl
TEN THOUSAND PAMPHLETS
published by the editor of the News,
formed a joint stock company under
the style and name of 1 he Demorest
Home, Mining and Improvement Co.
The charter authorizes the com pa i v
to ,ssue *0 shares of stock at £2 >
“ share,making a capita! of£l,500,0:)
riie officers of the company are, Mr.
R- M. Davenport, President, Mr. F.
• Sibley, Secretary, both of Chicago,
Ill*, and Mr. M. V. B. Bennett, At
torney, of Columbus, Kansas. They
have purchased about 4,000 acres of
land extending about 2 h miles along
both sides of the railroad. The sur-
face is dbe -sifled by little hills, gen-
tie slopes, level plateaus, winding
' allies, through which run creeks and
streams, abounding in cascades and
ter . bubble here
a s springs up
am mre.a itt e ake sparkles in the
sun-beams, the whole mrms a charm
mg .anuscape ot varied and pictur-
esque beauty.
At the foot of the lake is a line wa-
ter power of 25 or 30 feet fall, and
from there down Haro, crook, to tho
boque river, there are numerous
shoals making * sufficient water
to drive a large number of mills and
factories. The power at the Kvlv Mill
is sufficient to drive the machinery of
the largest factories in the world e«rv
day in •
the year
The company offers inducements to
capitalists to' establish factories for
cotton and woolen goods, and for all
kinds o7 products made of wood.
Mr. Reynolds is laying off business
b !®f ks ’. resldonce lo,s several
-
sites, grounds for
university *>. LCUCU “.'
Sibley , . is confident that there is ah
bed of valuable iron ore; the
VCin exten ‘ ls miles across the
COml>an ' S This with a-
” un ° ance w »°d for charcoal gives
am P ,e material for furnaces, foundries
a id machine shops. 1
Many people . m the north are anv-
lo come f° n,h to 1,v «> a » d •JouU-
‘ ess ma “. v lnth<! south utav be glad to
"ail themselves of the
Mr ’ Lou,le ™ llk - of ^sw
has already bought a lot. is putting
tp the first building, which is to be
TOCCOA, GA. SATURDAY, MAY 1889
store for general merchandis >. S°v-
eral experienced educators, Air.
Bliley says, are planning fur s uni-
versity, embracing the ordinary col-
j e e courses, and a wide range of e-
lective and technical studi s;they ox
* KX>,000. Of the success ^ < f this f part
of the enterprise with tint stnu.l sum
the writer has grave do ah s;
the less it is a Rood beginning, to
wl,,ch , • , a(ldUlo,ial ,, . \ fu,1 , 3s , , n
' "* a 7 ad-
ded from tune to time, enabling the
institution to rank among the best in
our country. Mr. Sibley is enthusi-
astie and sanwuine of the success of
his great enterpri/e. i he f 0 j.
lowing he considers as prominent
among the many elements of success,
The mild and healthy climate will at-
tract many; the large amount of wa-
ter power,*the timber within a radius
of oO miles, the abundant mineral,
all invite capital, and facto es give
employment and furnish homes to
multitudes of people. Then,the u<m.
cultural advantages; th , . rowi g o
[not and .e<etai les v 11 attract
10a(iy immigrants. So, with fruit
growing, with large factories, with
miny iaiastrKe> wilh „ |# ad .
vant ot an i ntolli t eoa , ma ;
nity, with the desire , . of . many,and ,
ne-
. of , ...
cessiry some liVmg P. m . a mild
, healthy .. .... climate, a lie . thinks , sufh- „
are
• . -
cient assurances that a Demorest will ...
be from tho start ah attractive,
prosperous and growing city.
T h e writer is deli ghte d
with the attractive natural beauties
of the place, admires tlie broad and
far reaching plans of the com pan v,
and is profoundly impressed with the
great industrial possibilities as sug¬
gested lit the eharcter of the soil, and
the extent of the water power,and lie
trusts this is blit one of the many
terprises td develop the resources of
this interesting region for which he is
laboring and writing.
---
FLORIDA.
T 1 > rooably , , . there is no state much
so
talked about and ye*’ „ so i little ii known
outside its permanent citizens as
p , j or j t j a Two classes of persons have
misrepresented its charactei istics;
those who greatly dislike the state,
and those who intensely love it; the
former exa urn rate its defects and
drawbacks t t 1 t er give, in glowing
descriptions, too high coloring to its
advantages and attractions; so Flori¬
da suffers from both classes, and it is
doubtful which of the two is the
; g reater enemy to the state. One class
wou p] have us believe that the
ig e ; t | ler sterile sand or malarial
SW amps;that the climate for 9 months
in tbe year is oppressively hot and
the atl n OSp | ie r 0 is freighted with
death dealing vapors; that people are
i tortured with inusquitoes and fleas,
and in constant terror of venomous
j serpent8j and t}ie co , t of oralUTe
j eroyes is too great to be
while these exagerated statements
srea t’y mislead, "they have the ap-
pearance of truth, because Florida
has some poor soil, many swamps
and malarial marshes; there are nine
warm months, mosquitoes, some rep-
tiles,and occasionally there are orange
groves so badly managed they do
no t pay. The News will lay before
i t8 readers a series of articles that
wlU sUovv Florida in its true s0
ca „ |, ave so , ne into l|i„ ent know
, ledge 9 of f that ,, . most t interesting f J? state; k
‘F* "‘t'f ’* “"f ’ *“8*"'™* ^
rl0r nearly 8'? doubled nt “fL‘ fts n0Sn,U population f as u in <»• the
**“ *«***> ‘. b » “ J “ ble v,1b# of itS
P~l*>«T k " moreased many tunes;
“ b “ bu,lt “««'? 2 * U00 ralles of rail
way, and many of the best business
men of thls coul,tr ? al,d Et,ro l’° ««
investing millions of dollars in indus-
. , .
tr d e ter )r be *
It is quite coma on to call Florida
lhe tai i > uf e America,but \ ; i . this *i • is • a mis- •
-
take; Italy is m to or less hilly and
mountaneous, while Florida w com-
paratively level. Italy is swept by
co ‘u winds from mountains covered
' vitb snow, and its climate is subject
to extreme and sudden variations: *
trhile Ftonda >s nearly surrounded by
the Golf stream from wkose inflnence
it receives asalubrionseliinateandan
equable te ro peratare;“Iulr is
ed in summer by burning soroecos,
while Florida has frequent and re~
fresbing showers;’’ moreover Florida
lies near y a thousand miles South
Italy. Florida is a boot-shaped pe-
ninsula, the top of the boot is Cape
Sable, and the solo presses against
Georgia and Alabama. It is about
450 miles long from the most northern
, «?!»»« . , ¥r ,
eat width is 14 a miles, while in us nar-
rowest part it is only 38 miles across.
1 ts.coast line is 1,200 miles,or
to the distance from t lie mouth of
the St. Johns river . all ,, along , up the ,
Atlantic Coast to Boston, Mass. Its
area i 5 58,640 square miles, or
s ' ze of Georgia. It has numerous
or coral islands, one chain of
them extending from Hiseavne Hay
in a curve 200 miles in length to the
dry Fortugas. Key West, a city of
20,000 people is built on one these
Keys. These coraline islands made
by ‘little issects, produce pine apples,
banannas, cocoanuts, d<:tes an.d other
tropical fruits. Along the coast there
are no less than 25 harbors, some of
them amoiur the finest in the world.
the one at the mouth of the St. Johns
river, called the Port of St. Jol.ns, is
25 miles in length,extending from the
har to Jacksonville; large vessels can
frol „ there to Palatka, 75 miles
farthe the head ot j „ ater , 1>vi .
£rat:on, . where . there . . excellent ,,
is an
harbor; Y the harbor at 1 ampa 1 extends
inland . , , 40 miles; and , the , Ta Pen-
port 1 at
sacola admits vessels of more than , 20
feet draught; the harbor at Dry Tor-
tugiis has, at low tide, 42 feet of wa¬
ter through the channel, and 30 feet
at the anchorage. Besides these large
harbors, there are numerous small
bays, sounds and inlets.
Florida has 19 navagible rivers with
a total inland navigation of 3,000
miles. The most noted of these is
the St. Johns which risesin the south
t.-rn part of the state and flows
nearly north a distance in a straight
duo of about ISO miles', but its course
is so winding, that a vessel following
in its channel travels nearly 400
miles. Another noted river is the Su-
wanuee, celebrated in tint beautiful
song ° whose sweet music is . echoed
round the world'.
Are bri-ihcu <!■ >vv u from overwork or household
cate* Brown’s iron Bitters
rebuild- the -.ystem, aids digestion, removes ex¬
cess of bile, eiid cures malaria. Get the genuine
Fat h itci than Ike harsh treat,-
meut o!’ medicines which horribly
■gripe the patient and dcstrov
coating <> r the stomach. J>r. J. If
* cLean’s Chills and Fever Cure, by
mild yet etfbctive action will cure.
Sold at oUccnts a bottle.
Toccoa, Ga., April 27th, 1889.
Dear N M's. l\ebeen peiainbu-
1 at ing and fermenting around these
rnountain \ aits pretty various of re¬
cent date, and I just tell you, things
are pretty numeious, and in some
places a little more so. It is astonish¬
ing to see the poor cattle leaning up
against a green sappling trying to
si.ed v\ithout losing tlie hide she’s
been in winter quarters with so long,
and which looks so doubtful as to
whether it can “sink or swim, survive
or perish,” but in my scrutinizing ob-
serration, it looks powerful like it
woul 1 ne but a mighty small job to
perish. They j-st-couldn’t low with-
out turning their tails towards the
wind and letting the thing whistle it-
self through their horns, an J it was a
taxon their column to do that.
t lieUev e 1 have thrown the
fattest calf I saw through the smallest
crack of . a garden , fence , more or less, ,
and 1 d “"' t k "°"'. * h « “ l ®“”
cr “ ck * h » »“«* «»'»
«»»« t ‘ )ro “« h ; ‘ he *>*<« a
large depend too much on the moun-
,ainS t0 ° ,eed their «*«'•• « nd the t
give ’em too many to feed.
Tlrere “ * P t,werful « ooJ sta " d
timber all over these diggins, but
anc bogs and calves
can’t ell nb treesandeat the bark and
suck the sap like a pecker-wood;
least I can’t, and I‘wouldn’t like to
, fall, n if •« t I could. i,
I’m s uprised at some things,and at
some things I amt. Ihey ought to
sow a very large acreage of stock-
law up in these parts, and kill out a-
bout half the wandering bantam
tie, ’ and turn the crops * out where
U.ej coulj get fresh air and sunshine,
then jou’J see a revival of antebel-
lout Jays, like it was before the war,
so when yon droveto a feilow’a house,
ho wouldn’t say: “Well, stranger,
these are hard times, and mr family’s
not well, and I’ve little
{for stock; fact is, everything’s
let you stay, if yen, can up
fare; but its hard about
and corn.” “Well,” says I, “I’ve
^ filn( ,-, bit
afd j n , rue9s j ca „ „ ut „ , th it t
*, *
. . T
,
‘
, a ' 1 , ln 1T ” e e
* ’
that . didvou? .,,, After ,
saw one wasn t, V,
re{lectino . avvhi , e hJg
countenance on V the 1 around ’ like ' ho *
1<U ^ -* . ns t a 1/Zir /. ' 1,1 t j 10 s P r,l • h?’
1L " a s .’ v Jo<e\, >e ie\ e you re
-
a b° l,t r, ghL and I reckon } ou can
" <> ° j ^ ^ U1Ce ’ lS ^ A
“1 i guess it is, . n says f, “I formed
one several years ago, with my wife,
an d ,fc ]ms D ove “ a eighty good
. bold dow domes
t ‘ 1 ’ a man n to
parapbanelia on scouring day s.And
1 imve no suc ' n thoughts as visiting
«« Sundays without company. Some-
1,ow when tlie ^' r,t f 8 ° cw b,l,t J r
moves me, it STKtKES all .1,0 balance, 1
an,i 11 Iooks like a banJ of em! K ra " ts
started for the “far west” when we
do start. I guess its a good thing
—I reckon.”
“Come in,—yes, come in; you’ve
had some experience in this world,
and you’ve been right along where
I’ve been. Betty says it hurts her
back to draw water, and strains her
ankles to scrub, and gives her the
toothache to get her feet wet, and 1
alius have to help her, and leave tlie
crap a standin’.”
“You must have a powerful big
pond to tote water from, then,or else
your well must be a reg’lar artesian,
to get her feet wet surely; it looks to
me that your children would get
drownded where tncre’s so much wa¬
ter.”
“Well, Bet’s powerful careless—
bring your stock in at the bars.”
If he took tn my insinuations he
didn’t show it only that way—changed
on to the crops.
The crops, generally, are in good
condition. Farmers are working hard,
struck a blue streak of econony, got
more corn than usual planted,and the
wheat and oats are looking very
promising—with a few exceptions.
Much of tho corn has been worked
over, and some cotton about ready to
off.”
There are as fine farming lands tn
this up country asl have seen any wher,
and that is saying a good deal—for
; the land. The farmers are taking
speci . a [M i„ aaa d prid with their
f arins a ud next year’s outlook is very
encoura gi„g indeed—without an ac-
cident or some other disease.
Talk about fruit! Everything that
blooms has got a berry on it, and
twins at that. AppL’S and peaches
are runn ing a race, and both are like-
ly* to win the purse, Plutnbs are
booming, and it wont be long before
th(J chilJren and a „ rea t many young
fo]ks will be in the san10 f ix , and par-
egoric, camphor, turpentine and blis*
ter , wiU be in st e a dy demand, and l
dor f t t ldni< anybody oimht to -‘corner”
on surh thoHrsatsuch a time—I don’t
sure ^ f or J bav0 passed thrcuMi the
. lb ordea ] mvself, Y ^.il.L^rU* and I reckon 1
,
...
'
& n ^ tVirdlv • evv .
^
” P “j “ V 'J j t ,i- L-'L know o ,'jl how
am t going to . try. v 1 ve written very
hastil n a broken . if you C an use
this hr anything else than the “waste
basket ” please do so, and save
feel,nos and the paper too. If I ever
wri , e afam I will give sketches of
my trip.' and the cond.tion of things,
1Jul l teU one t hi„g_this is a
powerful drv countv-sure, and that’s
a J „ ood si)?n ; But its hard ou some
f ka , () have , Q j
With many good wishes and powerful bad
yen,
I’d windup this letter ti!! I write you egen.
Youu Telescope.
ran tut*, isloou, ~~~
Biliousness, W-eiikncsa, Malariu, Iiuligtstioa r.iul
tuke
BKIUV.V'S JTJON IHTTF.nS.
It cures q mckly. 1 or i r ,l! " cealer* in
tacd.ciue. Oct tlie pennitu*.
_
here are many accident- and di s-
cases which affect Slock and
- , .
UrmW "AY A'.’-k" .
qujc kl v te.n rlien Ov tw use .,r Dr. J.
|{. McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liuiracnt.
-------— —---------
tr roa« imm_ aeitra
• <ot " e u‘i;I?’,5Si , '.frt.tZt.T'l ! :v'‘
Utrtl. Solo
V*
RED UILL HAPPENINGS
.
‘JZCT*
Mr. Payne of the firm of F.
l>ry & Co, was here last week
upsetting machines.
A. N. King,of Carnesville was
Sunday shaking hands with h:s many
r ’
. .
luterRf ' ln -T ■“ U,K A
school , at Allen under
s tlie supervis-
ion of Rev. J. P. f.edbetter, who is a
ver J enthusiastic worker in the
school cause.
There was a social gathering at the
residece of f. A. Mclioy on the ’light
" t ’ 0 . 1 1 j 1 "^’ . . s00u ‘ e ^
ly, of course, for the hospitality
tended them was such as Mr. Mi Hw
and his estimable lady only could ex-
tend, all the young people express
themselves as desirous of enjoying
Second Quarteclv meetino- for
^| 10 Oarnosvill^ c.*roiiii was held at
Allerds church on Saturday and Sun-
day last, there was a good turnout of
^ ”hich dinneYal ^ Idiuh^ seYd tlJnn Lnd
then . ^
with Quarterly Conference was held ,
satisfactory results. Sunday
there was an immense crowd that lisi-
end with . intense . interest to a power-
ful sermon by Mr. Baxter. Local.
Sick headache, ■— 1 ■ ■ — ------------ —
wind on the stoum
ach, biliomness, nausea are agreea¬
bly banished by Dr. J. 1! McLean’s
Little Liver and Kidney Fillets. 25c.
a vial.
Linin'.
Ketaing fi. tonic, or ehiluien should take that vant building
BROWS'S up, IKON mrrr.us.
tion, It Is triid ploawint H:liouvie«s. to take, All cures Malaria, lora keep Indiges¬ it.
(tea
GRGWJNG GEORGIA.
A PARTIAL LIST OF IMPROVEMENTS
AND NEW ENTERPRISES IX GEORGIA
From the Manufacturers’ Record
\vd glean the fol’owing:
Albany—Fertilizer Fertilizer Works &c.--
The Albany Co. will put in
as soon as possible new acid
complete, phosphate rock mill
w orks,newenginesandboilers,shart-
ing, &c.\ also mill for grinding
bone.
Americas—Electric-light
The Amerieus Gas Light Co. nave
creased capital stock from £40,000
£00,000 and changed name to the A-
merieus Light and Power
They will add an electric light
Work Americas--Sewerage System.--
will soon be commenced on
the sewerage system previously men¬
tioned, and for which £35,000of
have been issued. The Mayor can
give Americas—Railroad—The particulars.
cas Investment Co., has increased
capital from £350,000 to £500,000
facilitate the extension of the Atlan¬
ta & Florida railroad to Cordele, and
the Savannah, Americas &
ery to Savannah and Montgomery.
Ainericus—Electric Railroad.—The
been Amerieus organized Street with Railway Co.,
John B.
president; U. B. Ilarrold, vice-presi¬
dent, and W. E. Murphey
to build an electric railroad 8
long. The capital stock of the com¬
pany is £50,000.
Amerieus— Jno. B. Felder, Henry
R. Johnson and G. S. Schofield
organized the Lee ton Park & Land
Co. to deal i:t real estate.
stock is £100,000.
Atlanta—Gas Works—The
States Gas Light Co., of
has purchased the plant of the
ta Gas Co. and will enlarge same
additional mains.
Atlanta—Brick Works-W. D.Pal-
W. D. Lease have with J. D.
Collins, \V. IL and S. II. Venable,
incorporated with paid in the Collins Brick Co.,
t'ne manufacture a capital of £25,000 for
of bricks. The com-
pany will establish works with a daily
capacity of 90,000 bricks.
Atlanta--Cotton Mill,
Fulton County Spinning Co., lately
mentioned £2a0 000 as'increasing capital stock
to . and i as purchasing i • .1 the
plant of Lisas, May & Co., mid
naanu.acture flour bags,have changed
their u-une to the Jui ton Lag & Cot
ton Mills, and will increase capacity
fro n 12,000 spindles and 4-jO lnoinn
to 30*000 spindles and 1,000. They
will enlarge their bleaehery also
contemplate build building dye
Will a large number of
for employees. The
are reported to e ^t in all about
Atlanta—Cotton Mill.— The IL
pOSltlOIl CottOJl 5lii..S Will ■• x
addition to their mills.
Atlanta—.Stove i ;- j
^oold idge t.ne i>axt
Manuracturt ■
f i'ove .on«»i<ier1n>r !
Atlanta-6., a? ivtorv.-L.
Duff, of Chicago, will probably 0 r-
ganize a .u ck company w ith a
U “ ' ! ", s url a s “ a P, lact ."C ’
., . .
f. l 't 1 ’ °f % ’ ”
remplbrting'S a •• L “■
f ..
NO.
f actur jng cotton m ; n „ 1HC hinerv.
_ T ho city is nego a ino- with tie Edi
son G Fle-tric Co Co. fur for theYrertinn the erection of n
h,» Buford—Mining.—Silver discovered ore ha.
en ci> the nronertv of
\.m. J. \\ orlev & (_o.
Carrollton- foundry, &c. J. II.
c trot)( *JJ , n * f Lvords ]'a i :11 j t
fouudr’v w ml r .,.
|M ’ u and P “P
.
8.
Carrollton—Cotton Mill.-The com*
, \\ >anv represented by Mr. Lanier,
est Point, previously reported as
organizing to build a cotton mill, will
^ tim,,IieItce wotk ' vltljm 1
Carrollton — Plain in <? Mill ‘ and Gin
_ \ pi u i, ^ ani f a j n w jjj p e
built by Brook & Aycock, of Whites-
ourg.
Cartersville— Mineral I.ands—Tho
Dade Coal & Iron Co., has purchased
the Ward iron and manganese prdp-
er:v. >
Cartersville —Mining, &c.—Jos. E.
Brown, of Atlanta, Jacob W. Seaver
ami others have incorporated the
Georgia Mining, Manufacturing and
Investment Co
Coment — Cement Works—Geo. H.
Waring, ‘ manufacturer of cement,and
F> n W aring having incorporated
tho Howard Hydraulic *
as Cement
Co., with a capital stock of £5,000.
Cordele —Barrel Factory.—The
Palmer Manufacturing Co.of Charles
ton, S. C., have purchased a site and
will erect a branch factory at once to
employ more than 30 hands.
Cordele—Well D. C. Fitch, of
Hawkinsville, lifts contracted to sink
an artesian well.
templated Cordele—Plaining Mill.;—It is con
Lumber Co., to organize the Cordele
to build a plaining mill.
dry-klhl, &C.
ported Cordele—Railroad, that &c—It is re¬
tracks of timbered a syndicate owning large
lands between
Cordele and Brunswick will shortly
build a railroad between the places
na ned to develop tho land.
Clarksville—Iron Ore Lands, &c.
—J. 1). Reynolds of Cornelia is sur¬
veying a tract of 3,000 acres of iron
ore lands for Messrs. Sibley and Qa-
venport,Northern capitalists,who,it is
a l, wmt 20,000 acres to develop
and contemplate starting a town, &c
—Southern Empire.
Neuralylc I’crsons
Amt those troubled with nervousness resultm?
trorn care or overwork will be relieved by taking
. Hr own's Iron Hitters. Genuine
has trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper.
Persons who lead a life of expose
ure, are subject to rheumatism, neu¬
ralgia and and lumbago will find
a valuable reme ly in Dr. J. IL Mc¬
Lean’s Volcanic Oil Liniment; it will
banish pain and subdue imflamation
SMILES^
“The dearest and sweetest object
in all the world,” said the young hus¬
band fondly, “I hold in these arms.”
‘ Isn’t he a darling? ’ assented the
young wife, with a gleam of pride in
her eyes. ‘‘And to think they wanted
us to put him in a kennel at Battery
1) for tlie mob to look at! Please don’t
embrace us so hard. Alfred, Fid»
doesn’t like to be treate 1 roughly.” —
Chicago Tribune.
“Father." asked Rollo lo iking up
from his Su . lav school paper, ‘are
all tlie idols petrified?”
‘No,” replied his father, for it was
he; ‘why do you ask such a silly ques¬
tion?”
“Because,” said Rollo, “this inor.i-
ing the choir sang a missionary hymn,
and one verse said, “T ie lieathern, in
his blindness, bows down to woo ten
stone.”
“My son,” said Mr. Holliday kind¬
ly, “don’t try to formulate your creed
from what you think the cSioir seams
to say, or you will get th; religions
R‘‘s wort l into such an inexplida-
Sl,? . *49 read like a coil 1 i !ii->tor\ oi
Anyplace in words of one sylablc/ —
" I ? can Burg-m onca ende 1 an am-
«»atcd sermon wuh-; And so Jonah
was ° l n t!,e ^rhale« Kelly, where,
cav > dear brethren, f , ^ we will leave nun
u tU meet a in next . Sabhatb . *
Mrs. Clfurch To Mrs. Jfeetinjrhoaac
Id j dsowanttogo t(J the w|li , t
c j td) to n i„| t ^ b , : t \i j s Lent., you
j iUOW) aJld we liave to give up the
tli ngs we mo.t like to do, and do the
things we dislike; and so I conebt Dd
pj run in and spend the cveniug with
ou —Lowell Courier.
The Boots Will :5c Saved. —Acini
to manager t<» ta are.y
you don’t la* ana
wi
. DO. Just
! ot; ft a ex-*
tu both yoiit
be saved.
for them.—
- “ ^.u-
- -
. s- . • -a
*> •“f" 'V -
“ ' 1 .^^ lecture, but we nave a sjrei
r L *“
tal) „„ wl , at 8Uo
and hi a Ion,; hunt >le career wo
: liavc found Jiat what she gets toolay
, »„ r a ,.^. ir