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tee xcccoa HEWS.
TOOCOA CITY, GA« : : : : : NOV 10 1S89.
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION.
One year in advance $ 1.00
•six months........ O
Three months....... to
Subscriptionc paid in A Jvance.
Sen 1 Money Order, Postal Note - or
Ho. ft. Address,
Tiik Toccoa News,
Toccoa, Ga
Clayton Edition
W. II. HOGUES, IE DITOP.
Rain, it looks like.
J. U. Dotson has relapsed in ty¬
phoid fever; his condition is said to
be critical.
J. C. Cannon is somewhat on
the mend. IJe seems to be cheerful,
and bis malady has developed into s
case of inflamatory rheumatism; while
it is an extremely painful disease, it is
not a generally fatal one. It is a very
slow one in wearing out.
John Marsengili has had a custom-
er for his apples. The customerwant-
ed to sample them, and John thought
he smolt a mice; so ho first took his
bible and made his customer take an
iron clad oath to never divulge where
he got them, an I not to mako any re¬
marks about them, John gave him
some beautiful red ones that looked
as if they had been kissed by the fair¬
ies, but, oh heavens, they were bot¬
tles of concentrated vinegar done up
in one apple peel. It is useless to say
that the customer lnd not time to
say anything, but it required the uni¬
ted exertions of John'and his family
to get the fellows face in shape after
lie had bitten one.
VV. S. Paris has gone to Pine
Mountain on a collecting expedition.
If the creditors happen to have any
female Jacks, on hand, they had bet¬
ter hide thorn or Shea will certainly
bring them to town.
John Marsengili says that ho has
had better luck than he expected, for
he has got his crib near enough done
to put this years crop in it.
The Farmers Alliance in Rabun
county is booming.
The people of Georgia are the most
good natured people in the world.
They have paid over $100,000 for one
of the most ordinary farces that, has
ever been put upon the stage. They
are also generous to a fault,for they
have paid that sum for the purpose of
getting a few charters for bank and
railroads. At least that is about all
that can bo learned of the doings of
the legislature for the last 4 months,
with the exception that they did levy
the State Tax and retarded all useful
legislation by their contemptous stick¬
ling at trifles. They spent time and
money enough out of the people’s
pockets to have gone a great way to¬
wards paying the State Road’s gang’s
claim for betterments, with the result
of coining to a halt,adjourning with a
deadlock between House and Senate,
and leaving with absolutely nothing
done. We hereby make the predic¬
tion that but few, if any of the pres¬
ent members will be re-elected in
1800. The sovereign voters of the
the State of Georgia passed resolu¬
tions in every county, from the moun¬
tains to the seashore endorsing the
Olive bill and through it tho consti
tion, and the present incumbents,or a
majority of them ignored them in
toto. We sometimes wondered who
was represented by the Legislature,
but it is no longer a mystery, for the
people who elected it, have certainly
been ignored on every question when
they became interested on one side
and monopolv on the other.
Tallulah Falls is moving right a-
head in the matter of improvements.
It is a live town, peopled !>v a live
class of citizens. We predict a brill¬
iant future for it.
NOTICE
To Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA. ) All "persons having ile-
) v mantis against the Estate
Rabun county, of Thomas Carter, dee’d.
late of said county, are hereby notified toren
dor Mountain in their Scenes, demands Towns to the‘undersigned Ga.. accord¬ at
ing to law; and ail county indebted said
persons to
Estate are requested to make immediate pay¬
ment - This 1 t-h day of Nov. 1SS9.
W. J". CARTER.
Admr. Thos. Carter deed.
GtNovl 6,23,30,Nov 7,14,21.
T TT5T?7 £ W £\i JJ! V U£bwii*
Elizabeth M. D. T’carscn,
tfniJSmr Inor Court, Serb
It apiiearing t° the court by the return of
the bheriff m the above stated case that the
defendant in this case does not reside in said
county, and it further appearing it that he does
not reside in this state, is therefore
ed bv the court that service be perfeoted on
ihe defendant by the publication ofthis order
once a month for four months before the next
term of this court in the Toccoa News, a
newspaper pub lulled in Habersham
^ ... V.
0 E 0 K 8 nq sMs rag.h.,
i )
■DbeSq^SrTonn RabixCocnty, true extract from the min
li§! lvabuu Coumy
W. H. Hishxs, Clerk S.
A.
TEN THOUS 4ND DOLLARS. TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS.
*
OVER §10,000 WORTH OF GOODS AT PRICES TO SUIT EVERYBODY, AT
IVECALLISTEfl AND fiSIIVEIVIOKTS3 3
Oui Many Customers teii/jy to the above and say to us that tee have the ZATGZlSl SIOCJF in loccoa Our trade is good, but mitt
months ojfier . we for the next two
This SUPERIOR INDUCEMENTS to Reduce Our LARGE STOCK.
Stock embraces too many articles to mention all of them, but will name o:iiy a lew:
»S'<nple Dr\ Goods Men’s and Bov’s Clothing Furniture of all Kinds Tabes Old Hickory end White Hickory Clocks
Fine Dress Goods Boots Shoes mid II ts Bed Steads Ch One and Two Horse
Fancy Notions Bureaus Safes wagons Crock or v
Millinery Goods Woven llS Cooking and Heating Stoves U lasswrro
i/attresses Wire B< d Hp-Ings Hardware.
ih make a Specialty of HEAVY GROCERIES kick cd Shut, JtUal, Supm, Bofte and Salt.
\\ e want to say to our Customers ar.d Friends that we have SPARED NO PAINS in the j urchase of this large stock, and feed that will find it
this, hut the all important is that believe wc sure you to your interest to buy of ns. We have many reasons for savin"
one wc we have bought our entire stock at such low prices tiiat we can sell you goods cheaper than you can buy them elsewhere.
We would have the trade remember that we manufacture FURNITURE of ALL K1 NDS, and that we ship Bedsteads hr The Thousands all the
SELL A I.L COMPETITION. V, sell over country. And this is of course one of the lines that \ o can UNDER-
e can you Bed Steads from £1.25 up. We also manufacture coffins and can SAVE YOU 50 PER CENT. ON THEM as do not belong
we to
THE COFFIN TRUST.
So we are headquarters for anything in the Furniture line, Come and see us before you buy your goods and we will save you money. Respectfully,
MCALLISTER & SIMMONS,
TOCCOA, CA.
GRASS! GRASS!
I write from Columbus, Ohio, as a
member of the Georg a farmer’s ex-
eursion. It is my purpose to give
the readers of The Southern Culti-
vator the benefit, ns 1 understand it,
of some of the helpful information
gathered thus far on our tour of in-
vestigation through the West.
Mr. Thorn, the Director of the Ohio
Experiment Station, tells me that he
remembers (and I take him to be a
gentleman not more than fifty), when
the lands of Ohio were badly run
down, under constant cultivation of
wheat and corn, very much heiraag-
inc 3 , as are the lands of Georgia and
the South, under the constant culti¬
vation of cotton. These lands have
been largely reclaimed by sowing to
clover and the grasses; at the same
lime they have produced large and
profitable tarm crops iu grass and
hay.
It i, astonishing to see how lotto
tne hillv lands of this State are wash-
ed, and how well tbosml, in such an
uneven section, is preserved. This
is done bv putting the slopes and lull
sides to grass, and leaving the low
and level lands for the usual farm
crops that need to be cultivated. The
yield from such crops furnishes more
profits than one. First, this method
retrains and, indeed, recovers atld
improves the soil, and, in this way,
increases the value of the land. Secs
oud, as before said, it gives a good
tnnrkot crop from lands otherwise
useless. There are thousauds of
acres gone to wash in Georgia and
many of the Southern States that
mightbe made productive by putting
them to Bermuda grass and subse-
qucntly to clover, if the sou has been
sufficiently recovered. The third, and
possibly tlie best benefit, is the ioi-
pulse given to stock raising. This
will give the South large benefits in
milk, butter, cheese, mutton, wool,
beef and pork.
These are the main benefits from
grass culture. Its full and best de
velopcments mean unmeasured mon¬
ey for the Cotton States. The Ohio
State Fair furnishes a fine demon-
station of the practical results of this
system < f farming in the magnificent
specimens of all kinds of stock now
on exhibition in well-arranged stalls,
Jersey, Durham, Shorthorn , Holstein,
rolled Angus and Aberdeen cattle,
weighing, some of them, nearly three
thousand pounds; others giving ten
to twelve gallons of milk. All kinds
of the best breeds of improved sheep,
horses and hogs are here on exhibi-
tion, showing the splendid results of
successful grain and grass farming.
man)’ of these animaiB . are feu almost
exclusively on and
If I could gather all the Cotton
*■
Stales into one ear and was asked to
tell into it the shortest route to re-
demi>tion and wealth, I should say
“grass, stock and barnyard manure.
W. J. Northen, in Southern Culti¬
vator.
The quality of the l»lood depends
much upon good or bad digestion
and assimilation to make the blood
rich io l.ro and strength Riving coo-
stiluents, use Dr. J. <1.
Strengthening Cordial and Blood
Purifier it will nourish the properties
of the blood from which the elements
«^>f vitality are drawn. $1.00 per hot-
'
_____-
IP a* I me I 4 i 69X2 1
**«AWWV** VV Y Y
--
The New , York . Illustrated News . will 9°
maileil,senirelv wrapped, o any address
the United States or Canada for 3 months
the receipt of one do’lar. Liberal discounts
to agents, postmasters and clulis.
lZ,t l abOV
<Ut ,»^
252 Broadway, New \ ork city,
John L Sullivan, the Terror of Fakes and
Hippodrome?, is the Sporting Etlifor.
TURNERVILLE.
Our people all seem to be happy
ar.d contented; corn is cheap, flour,
meat, dry goods, groceries.— every¬
thing ischeappnoney plenty ;no man’s
f ariJ ) j s under mortgage for guano or
supplies. Why not be happy and
contented for the few days we have
to stay here? Soon we will all be
(rone to that bourne from whence no
traveb rever returned.Soon our hous s
w jj[ |j e occupied by some one else;
our f,mns cultivated by sttan S ers;our
names forgotten; our good deeds and
bad deeds not known' by tb ......h-
come after us. It is a sad thought to
think of, yet it is true;iu a few years,
said Job, “I shall go hence from
whence I shall not return.”
Wo >Y e see tho ttie legislature I ewLdatnre* lvi«s has ad- act
J journed and will take water at Sa-
vannah Tuesday, next for
I guess they go there to buy salt
«“ “P the d “ P~^“» ‘ 'f
have en S a S ed the attention of the
American people just now; and one
great problem that seoms to stir the
poople is the negro proilem. Weill
think the most important question
about the negro is to find out who is
the negro; for there are so many half
negroes and half white man that it is
hard to toll who is who. Go into the
cities, sit down and count black ne-
groes and m ilatoes, and you get one
hundred half white to one black. The
real blood African is almost extinct.
]\Jy plan to solve the n g o problem
j s to raa k e every white man who is
the father of a tnuliDo, take tie
child, oat with it, sleep with it, clothe
an <] feed it, educate it and publish
his narae t0 a et her with the name
anc j mother and fatliei ;
tUen thereal African negre will solve
I,j s own problem; and in ease we j
fcave tQ colon , ze the u we will
know whora to send o£f;for if this mix
ing up of races goes on for the next
one hundred years to come, there will
be only few real black negroes tQ
Colonize. But who is to blame for
all tins; Is it the Democrats or lie- „
publicans? lsittliepoor roan or the
rich man? Is it highly educated and
intelligent men, or, as the oil man
said, . . “unlarnt” ,, , ,,, A- ,
an man. \\ e, as
mer f fiiln people,are drifting to a pret-
ty port indeed; but I kn >w it is tin-
popular to say so. It reminds me < {
the man who. said; “If a Bepnbh-
cans steals, tell it, but if a Democrat
steals, say nothing about it,” but let
’em roll, I can stand it if the rest of
i ou can, But don’t you think it looks
rathes sneabish in a white settlement?
1 would like to know how you would
separate the thing; . if they do colo-
ni/.e, some cue will get left.
George Peg WOOD.
TOCCOA VALLEY.
John and James Griggs and Alex
Edge visited relatives at Clarksville
Saturday „ . jot
and Sunuay.
W. B. Haddock contemplates tho
erection of a commodious tenant
house which will be quite an improve
, nfinr to his farm
olJ , nHtheP Earth hasreeeireJ her
gorgeous color bath,and now it is pass
ing away, f soon to be replaces! bv the
co ors G f Winter;yet the writer
nothaJ the opportlini;y of
tasting all the wedding cake that he
hoped ,, by this , . time. It T • is the .
i J opinion 1
the .
°f writer that all or us boys w.io
9P „ 1011 01,1 t } )A COIU n n |,l s,,OMlu «br>nl<1 filo nie in ,n '
5
•> Junctions, so they can have some
*
chance with . the girls. .
Courting must
be like a continued store, the longer
it runs .he more interesting it
would that some Gf the boys would
give their experience in the business
long distance up them; not far above
acorns and a bug well preserved, al¬
though they had evidently been seal-
ed up in the wo id for many years, as
there was much sound timber all
around. Taey counted 120 rings in
t! e sound wood.
John Aired his worked into boards
a pine tree that do fejt up measured
3 fe0t 2 incW diameter . ,, , nade
* i i • 0 mclu ,
* r «. -3
lue ‘ J.
Habersham GEORGIA, ) To all whom it may
ministrator of county \ Ray concern: Win. Ray, ad-
Annie deceased, lias in due
form applied to the undersigned for leave to
sell the lands belonging to the estate of said
deceased, the and said application will he heard
on first Monday in December next. This
November the4th. 1889.
B. E. EDGE, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, ) By virtue of an order
sgranted bv the Court of
13-9 within the legal hours <-f sale at tl.eCourt
i!umireda«Ss^f ' lLHS £hThuul-
SK^DiS" ^ing the Z&'jS
Watkins and Ransom Simmons, the other
^ ‘ '/. v°‘'
a
A i imstra or of Thus Mealor.
AdminisYrDrs Sale.
Agreeably of Haoersham to an order of the court of Ordi-
narv county,will he sold at
Tuesday' iA p^EnbGr'muGG'withln the°leg”!
Lot No (5) in block Xo(3l) t flirty one; tro.it-
rmnmigTaJ-k^oT'e hTudmi ( 10 (T) fu?] t if P'S-
ins? Ou house, well ti eomfortaV.y Sul'
ishudaud nr-
the^residenceofT'. e hveEM andMaryLCobb
, - A U;0
® / said county adi. ii.i t above city,
h! oS tY",",?.""' g e tv ib-
fhon" ,,WI ’ ?!’ i^hed
m Lot No (4) r imr u
Block No thirty o-ie (21) fronting Fifty (50)
feet on South Railroad s rent and riuirting
back One hundrec (100) feet, to an a’iey, ac¬
cording comfortable to map and sni vel' hv Moreno. A
front part one used story house business with an “L,” the
once as a ot store
room. A good piece of property.
ALSO
/ |ne certain house and lot in Toccoa city,
" a sai 1 county, known and distinguished
the plan of said'town hi
as Lot No (2) in Block
No (31) thirty one, fronting Fifty (50) feet on
South Railroad street and running back One
Ldaitllkd .arve/'by’ MoreuS 1 BoumlSf <m
ished contains four rooms. It is one of the
most convenient lots for a small family in
Toccoa city—and nearest the business part of
town.
ALSO
Lin°tlS /Tne certain store bouse and lot in Toccoa
1 ^'“ sS !L ' l <?])
and running i^SrS^lntRS^ti back One hundred (100)
veno^VhGstorefiouEe feet to
f^d ^very on^auf lDt is'Hftyfju' Wldeanl
* desrrabie busiiiess stand
ALSO
half <>ftown lot known and distinguished in
the plan of said town as lot No (1 1 one in
Block No (66) sixty six, the said southern half
containing ‘Sloth-
ers; one and seven eights acres
more or less, the place whereon John L Cobb
now resides. There is situated on this lot a
very comfortable th ee room cottage oil one
ofthe nio-t j ubliv sfre.-ts lead i.g into town.
AL-O
/'Ane certain track or parcel of 1 ml on the
V/ boundary line of the town of rotcoa city
known and distmquished in the plan of said
town as block No (64) sixtv four according to
a good orchard of select fruit t-recs ami a small
vineyard, and a carp pond. A very de-si rah e
t 11 of the above described pro per tv sold :>s
Cl1 xY-jhe ‘ P^^y. c 5 a ’ °4/' la d.’COOkR f h f( ( J c b t b ’J)J 1 c {f f d
’ l.
Administrator of Mai-y L Cobb, decease.
NOTICE.
The petition of fifteen or more freeholders
in Currahee Militia Disrriet No. 402 G. M. in
Habersham eoun 4 y, being filed in my office
for the benefit of the provisions of Sections
1419.1430: 1451.1452.1453 and 1454 of the code
of 1882 of Georgia. Notice is hereby given
that after the publication of this notice for 20
days in the Toccoa News and at the election
’SI’&J&JSLr
zr ' ■■ ■ mni " — i - r -1 r " 1
no Zvni a3ay J S lHJi
ll *ifi!! ( * er/ort » enext 30
pTAUtni rffjr rnL NATIVES. H & TllfWfl
Tetow ive give a list (J some of our Jaw Treak-
e/’S .*
CALICOS worth 7c: Ur 5c
All wool JEANS “ 33)J « 25
Old Reliable Athens CHECKS $
4;
All Wool Filled Double Width Cashmeres “ 20 “ ii
.i
lie also have a full line of 'Bools, Shoes, Hal ?
and Caps. li e make a specialtj' of fine FZ Gi
and StoVCS.
Ve sell FURN1DCRF ON 2HE
Give us a trial and be convinced.
10 OFF AMD AZZ
All parties indebted to me will do welt to
and settle at once as I will positively not wait tom/
er than Oct. Si si. IK C. FT 1KA7FZS.
I have MOVCd the HUM A IN/) till OF Ml
SI OOF OF GOODS to IK 6 . J2fd/V<zrds . Store
ere I Will SC/i them
REGARDLESS OF COST,
BOOTS,SUOBS,HALTS CA PS arid CZOl/f ZVG
ai e all going at
AST0NISH1NLY LOW PRICES.
Come and see me. G. If. EDWARDS.
^| HiGrH S^HOOI
Fall T3;*m f this Inshtutioa op3nsAug.l2,1889,
And eontinuos for 10 consecutive months,with a short recess at Christmas*
rUITLON PER MONTH.
r..vN<;uA(;i:s....... 00
lilt; II M ATM KM AT ICS V 50
(
Common English. r s «> 00
i
J NT HUM Kill ATE . . . . , * * 1 50
....
PuryjA i;y......... .... 1 00
. Instruction tho rough and p ract cal. ’
Gf'ml Board can lie obtained at resonabh; rates, i or further in-
famation address
JV. A. Fessenden, iPrincipal r m
•
_
“ST E S 6 J 5 IS S'* sZ,
mm Perkins Wind Mill,
V
-- Buy the BEST and Save Money.
A
It Inis been in constant use for 10 years, with a r 'e-
,..... & , ... ord equaled by none. We give each purchaser a WARRANTY as fol¬
lows: We warrant the Terkins Wind Mill, sold ibis duv, to outlast and
do better work than any other mukeand not blowdown, unless In- tow¬
1 er goes with it, and against any wind that does disable buildingsi i t jo vi
^Hcinity. \V‘c manufacture both Damping and Geared Mills,
and carry a full line
of Wind Mill Supples. AGENTS WANTED. Send for Catalogues, Lircu-
dress,
Terkins If ind MU & Ax Co •y
MISHAWAKA, INDIANA.
^N EWSP A PERS FRgE.S K E ;■ O 5 f%
. o: __ 5->. szst. jests *
y-€»UL»* oWR ' T : ) , 5 i n 0>. G
and address and those of 5 10 of - X-v.-' .r V. j .-KJl
to
vour f r i e nds or neighbors, 3 ’ on a postal t ■vi- .a rvt
- i
card, or otherwise, and a copv of the
SAVANNAH WEEK I A' NEWS dard of excelli-noe vrhi-h
idor.
will be sent to each address free. <.v■ F-- t .vevy and Jir-provoment that inven-
r.-u.- , meacyeext protiaco.
THE AVKLY \WS !
Is BUSINESS andFAMI LYnew 1 17AE-
a
p 1 a p l er f or COUNTRY READER'S. AZ 2 I ft 5 A.' HA2 iT&D
It is the largest weekly published in ; E-.y
theS.M.th-10 large 13 f.jtg V t r, .-.T- /: rep.
pages, ft is ;v -
,,.tondidly gotten up and carefully =° ( 2T7IS
edited. If you have never seen :l E2T.CZ !
'<» - "»> I,. ^ 3 -
>»“ ki jOgJ Eth-
nounce it to be the biggest and best '
—
newspaper you ever read. Tliofee couJitv excellent of Organs are celebrated vr-.riew for vol-
Address Of Siae, combmatioil.r.f tone, Llcdl quick respctuse, beautyinllnlsb.
perfect construction, making them the rr.e e
THE WEEKLY NEWS. B-ttractivo. homes, ornamental and desirable ore.ins for
schools, churches, lodges, societies, ote.
ESTA3LIgH23 ftITPITTArXOA, _
- i?;E©UAJLE» FACURTISS,
SltlLLEO WOBa2IE7J,
BEST EATFJtrAL.
COMBINE!-*, ItlKE THIS
Till POPULAR ORSAB
r> D&w O ~jf* SPWIJlff FIAITOS, STOOLB, S0GKS.
I ' "y/
If W YtSvVll Catalogues on application, Feme.
OV X. Cl. , J.OX yfliwAUJ RMT •jJll.*— 8 RF ^ BRG&H Ut. .ui OP
COa,G(Z, pHlCACO- ILL.
PieSmontAir-Line Route.
R. & D. R. CMP’Y.
O-
Condensed Schedule
IN EFFECT APK1L 14,1S89.
o
Tra ns run by 75th Meridian Time—one hoc.
faster than 90th Meridian time.
-o-
GOING
XOIlTil HOUND,
Leave Atlanta
i i Gainesville, Athens
Lula,
Cornelia
Toccoa
Seneca
*4 Greenville
arrive Spartanburg
1 ea\e Spaitunourg
arrive “ Hendersonville, Asheville
“ not Springs
».ca\e V. Spartanburg Gastonia
Charlotte
“ Salisbury
Greensboro
arrive Durham
arrive arrive Goldsooro Raleigh
Leave (five s’ oro
arrive i>*hvil’ej
•: Hicnmund
•* 1 .yuc.'murg
** ‘ Isariottcsville
Dalriiit tVi'.r-hington
“ re
NT i'Liladeiphia Yoik
w
__
go .\g u;oi n it
sat rrr BovNnn. _daily.
No. 50 j No. 52.
Leave 44 New i’hiadelpbia York 12 15 md'tj 4- 3o p ju
7 2o a in C - . 57
Baltimore ft 45 1 ^ 5o 44
Wash iiigloti 11 24 44 o
Churlotlcuvil’c 3 4<i p 111 Li < o:i lr.
Leave Lynchburg Richmond 5 4o CIt o7 “•
3 <>o 44 to 3<> “
‘ Danville 8 4o 4 oc t5 4
Arrive Greeuslioro 10 27 “ -- 42 “ ,
Letsvt. Golilsboio 2 90 i> in +4 oo Mi S-tSSSa
Leave *' balcigli 4 50 p in *
Dm li.un 5 52 pm 02 a
Leave Grcea-boro 5 52 •* 50 a
*' Si.lisiiiirv -10 37 pin] 11 23 a
r (1 aiiotte 2 15 * 1 CO
: (htidoma 2 48 '* 1
42 •'
Arrive S] artaiibnrg 4 50 44 ] 3 57 •*
T .cuvfc liotSp.niij j 0 0
“ Ashvsile ; a :r.
Ucnder.-OM I 8 50 iu
Arrive ville 9 20 ‘
Fpartanbi rg II 50 “
i.e;ite “ .Spartaisburg Gnaeiivillu * 3 42 p ir.
*’ Seneca ^ 4 4s -
4 Toccoa G 27 44
‘
“ Gornclia 7 24 44
Ar Lula ^ 8 oo P
~ ii 8 22
it p m qo 25 "
^ U a m j 10 S 51 44 “
40
•»
No 41. Daily except Sunday,leav es a Han te¬
5.29 p m; at rives I.twa 8.12 )> in.
Ni 40, leaves Lula daily except Sunday,6,15
a m; airive- Atlanta 8,50.
Nos 5o a ad 51 connect atCoriielia for Tall i:
lab Falls daily.
* Daily 4Daily except Sunday
Till Im an Car Service.
On trains 50 and 51 Dulnian Bulled
Sleeper Orleans lietween Atlanta and New York, New
and Washington via Danville.
XXT On trams 52 and 53 Pullman Buffet
Sleeper Aiken Montgomery to Washington and
via Danville.
and J?-//" On trains 52and 58 between Richmond
Greensboro and Goldsboro.
t toall Trough jioinis. tickets on sale at principal sta-
'ons For rates and information
apply to any agent of the Company, or to
J 4 S. L. TAY■ OR- Gen. Pass. Agf.
Washington. D. G.
GC.L HAAS. T. M
' s m 1 *, ’iftj ■ in m •'V W •\i
a3Aii Beware of so-called Liver Rega-
lalors, B.-ilms, etc. All are Irnita- N
tioasof this Origrinal Medicine, put on ’
tire market long after it was established,
and sold on its reputation. Take this
v.uth you and demand the original, which
has tve autograph and picture of Dr. M.
A. Simmons on the front, and these words
on top of each bottle and package: “ Trade
Mark Registered, consisting of Name,
Picturs-znd Autograph, Nov. ii, 1843.”
'W< B
Has for 47 years cared Iisdiosstiox, H
Bii.ious?v 3 £ss, Costiveness,Dyspepsia, E
Sick Headache, Loss op Appetite, E
Sour Sio>i.\cfi,.Lcw Spirits, f out L
Breath, Dr. Colic, Etc. |
Memphis, J. It. Graves, Euitor or Trn Baptist,
of Tenn.,says: Liver Mcctcme, I received a pack-
age vour and nave used
half of it. It works like a charm, I want
no better Liver Regulator, and certainly
L no more of Zcilin's mixture.
C. F. SimmonsMcdtcine Co.jPi dor's,
^ bt. Louts, Mo.
Ef-
Black smithing
WAGON 11A Ci !>’<;
AN IJ
Gene,at Repairing
PAltTFR Tocroa Ga.
DULY.
No. 51 No. 53.
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