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Toccoa News
TOCCOA, GA. APR. 25 1891.
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The Toccoa News,
Toccoa. Ga. !
Late reports indicate there will be
about half a crop of peaches through- n
out the state this year.
The Alliancemen of New "dork
tnet in convention this week 1 o or¬
ganize a State Alliance atul adopt a
eo»stitution. High tariff, free silver
and a third party are being discussed,
and the result of the convention will
be awited with much interest.
■a * *
The widows of Confederate sol¬
diers in this city and surrounding
Country, should present their claims
to Judge Edge to-day. There seems
to be many more in the stato than
was anticipated by the law; it is now
thought the number will reach 4,000.
* * -*
The exercises of the State Sunday-
school Convention this week are high¬
ly interesting. Mrs. W. H. Craftsi
of New York, who illustrates how to
teach infant classes, was a noted
teacher in a normal school out west
years ago, wh©n her name was Mbs
S. J. Timannis.
* * *
The tobacco sown is coming up finely.
It will need the best cultivation and
care. When it is set out in the field
.it is liable to bo killed by the hot sun
the first forty-eight hours. It may
need a covering of some sort to
shelter it from the hot sun’s rays,such
as pieces of bark, cloth, and leafy
branches of trees. It will be well for
planters to prepare beforehand for
this emergency.
* * -»
President Harrison still continues
his journey, vie wing the wonders and
greatness of our great country. He
is received every whero with ovations;
thousands flock to see him and shake
his hand; mayors of cities and gov¬
ernors of states welcome him with
eloqnent speeches, ar.d his journey
emphasizes the the great fact tfmt we
are one people, loyal to the union,
earnest and united in carrying for¬
ward to its highest destinies this na¬
tion, solving the greatest problems
of human government, civil, political,
commercial and moral.
* * 4
Gea, Benjamin F. Butler was for¬
cibly ejected from the United States
Court, in Boston, Iasi Tuesday. lie
was led out of court by a United
States Marshal, assisted by two depu¬
ties, by order of Judge Carpenter
presiding. As he was leaving the
room, the report says, his eyes filled
with tears, and he exclaimed: “I
yield to force.” This is said to be a
culmination of an old feud between
the distinguished lawyer and the
Judge. On this occasion Judge
Carpenter had forbi dden Butler to
address him on the case of h woman
convicted of perjury in an applica¬
tion for a pension. The lawyer re¬
fused to keep silent and the Judge
sent him out of court.
* * *
A bill is before theNewYork legis¬
lature to pension superanuated
teachers of tho public schools of
New York City. This will be a good
thing for the poor teachers who have
been working for poor pay all their
lives. But if it is good for the teachers
of New York City, it is good
for those of other cities, and
if for the cities, why not for all the
teachers of the state? If teachers
are to be pensioned when they get
old, other classes who labor for th«
state will claim, with justice, they
ought also to be pensioned, and it is
idiL fficult to see where the limits of the
■on business will be. The state
should pay its teachers good wages
whila-yo ung, then they will not need
pensions * "’ )en they get old.
The Repu. bliean League Club met
in Cincinnati > thls * eek ' lt is com *
posed of a congi'omArate bM and mass of fos¬
sil politician^®oevi, indiffer-
ent. Tfaey shake the clammy folds
of the bloody shirt, hold up the
ghastly corpse of the dead force
bill, cheer the liberty-crushing
methods of “Glorious Tom Reecf,
and^ exhibit the poor darkey to pub-
lie gaze to keep alive bitterness and »uu
sectional strife over dead issues. But
thay soon got into a ^jht among
themselves; it quickly developed
that they met not for love of country.
but for the offices the country gives;"
they soon showed their zeal was not
tha people,but for the people's money.
It was a sal thing for the repub-
Tty 1 rib*! country when
honest leaders gave place to bloody
shirt shriakers, money swindlers and
salary grabbers.
* * *
The New York Sun ot last Tues-
day has this to say
“Iv v doubtful it an. other
of the Sun newspaper ever recorded
such a list of crimes nt violence as
has just stained these pleasant days
of April. Murder is added to
in tre day’s record, and suicide,
the grip was weather." aHts^irrht^hanirs on 'in
the summer To the Sweden
H st frcm the city and suburbs, other
cities . contribute, and the result is a
catalogue that burdens the columns
of the newspapers,”
Now suppose the newspapers
would omit to “burden their columns
with the catalogue,” does the Sun
suppose the world would be any the
worse for being kept in ignorance of
the crimes? Do newspapers add to
the happiness, increase the intelli¬
gence, the refinement of the nation
by spreading before the peoole each
day catalogues of dreadful murders
and suicides?
* % *
A report is travelling around that
a petition is being circulated asking
the legislature to repeal the law for¬
bidding the sale of intoxicating
liquors in Habersham county. The
News has made inquiries of a large
number of people, all of whom af¬
firm that they have never seen such a
petition, and the great majority of
our best citizens are emphatically op¬
posed to any change in the law.
* * *
It is earnestly hoped that such a
petition will not be circulated. Hab¬
ersham under prohibition, is prosper¬
ing; peace, harmony and good feel¬
ing prevail among our people.
Drunkeness and the evils resulting,
are very much less than is possible
under any license system. Let us go
forward, not backward. If there is
too much drunkeness let the present
law be strictly enforced.
Any of our citizens before signing
such a petition should think not twice
nor thrice merely, but shou'd think
very earnestly and deeply, and con¬
sider the effoct of placing their sig¬
nature to such a paper.
* * *
By doing so you will aid in break¬
ing the peaceful and happy relations
that now obtain throughout the
country.
You will aid in stirring up str’fe
bitterness, contentions, ill-feelings
and animosities among friends and
neight ors.
You will aid in opening the flood
gates for the admission of evils and
crimes of the worst and most debas¬
ing character. t
You will aid in degrading good
men and bringing to poverty, shame,
and deep distress beautiful women
and innocent children.
You will aid in ruining noble boys,
the pride and hope of fond parents,
sisters and sweethearts. Dear friends,
if anybody asks you to sign such a
paper, just giv« him an emphatic
“No!”
CLARKSVILLE.
We have a great many visitors
from various parts of the county in
Clarksville nearly every day. Sol¬
diers widows and their witnesses &c.
Judge Edge is kept pretty busy mak-
out the papers for them.
E. P. Simpson of Toccoa was in
Clarksville to-day on business. Palm
is always full of business.
IFe are glad to learn that there is
plenty of fruit left in and around
Clarksville with the exception of a
few orchards thrt were on very low
land.
Rev. L. A. Simpson preached a
very interesting and convincing ser¬
mon Sunday night; among other
things he discussed the evil effects of
strong and intoxicating drinke, and
t! e results that follow their use. Me
said that he had been informed that
a petition was being circulated in
some parts ©f our county for the pur¬
pose of asking the legislature to
amend the prohibition act of Haber¬
sham county, so as to allow another
vote to be taken upon the question of
barro ms or no barrooms. He ap-
pealed to the churches of e»'ery de¬
nomination aud Christians evei t where
to be on the watch and to fight, work
and pray for the preservation of our
prohibition law, and save our children
from shame, disgrace and hell. We
hope and trust that his excellent ser¬
mon may have the desired effect.
Our friend and townsman, Dr. Jas.
^y es t, h as returned from Philadelphia
^h^re be has been attending medical
co |i e gr, and where he graduated a
f ew ^ a yg a ae; we wish Jim success in
^i s chosen profession,
Correspondent.
The empire of Russia is seriously
Rl,
PROFIT:; IN TOBACCO. -
Mr. H. E. Harmon, editor of The
Southern Tobacco Journal, ITirston ,
N. C , has had exceptional oppnrln-
for studying the advantages of
the tobacco crop over cotton, or any
->«•« crop .h»t tbrlr« in the -nn.i,
that he ii Wlv
vinced tobacco will grow just as
all over the nppe "1 part of rn outh Car-
olina and Geergi - as an where in
North Carolina or Virginia. He savs
l * c ' rta ' n the culture of the
weC(1 in ,hi * fct ^ e vvi,! P rove * 1
ing to the farmers, and for their en-
couragement lie gives the
results of experiments made in eight
counties in South Carolina where to-
bacco is being grown successfully:
F. M. Rogers raised 25 000 pounds
of leaf on 20 acres, and the entire
crop will sell for $ 6,000 or over.
P. fPhipf le planted 10 ac r es, an d
grew l,o 00 pounds per acre, Sold
his entire crop for over $ 2^0 per acre
and this is his first year’s experience.
D. M. Smoot, of Darlington
planted .5 acres and realized $185 per
acre for his crop. His yield was'1,240
pounds per acre.
S. I>. S^ssoms averaged 1,260
pounds per acre on his whole crop and
sold for $185 per acre.
F. M. Rogers, Jr. grew 35,000
pounds on 25 acres, the estimated
value of which is $6,500, or $260 per
ncre.The cost of this crop was $2,150
all told.
M. S. Haynes worth sold the lowest
grade of his crop this year for 12 cts.
around. In his first crop year before
last he averaged 1,C60 pounds per
acre, and sold at an everage of 17|
cents net. His tobacco cost him 7|
cents all told.
J. T. Rogers made an aierage this
year of 1,200 pounds per acre on 20
acres.
D. M. Smoot makes a statement
'.bathe has made a net profit of $125
per acre on the entire crop.
II. T. Harllee on his first year’s
crop of 15 acres made a net profit of
$750.
It will be seen from” he above that
tobacco-growing in South Carolina is
no longer an experiment, but a cer^
tainty, and it is confidently predicted
that in a few years the tobacco indus¬
try will spread over that entire section
and become the most remunerative of
the farmers’ crops.
The growers of North Carolina are
anxious to hear frosi Georgia, and
will do what they can to assist the
farmers in this important work. To¬
bacco growing is little more than an
experiment here, as 3 ’et, but if the in¬
terests in iy -- f wane we arc
convinced that it will yet become a
great Georgia industry which will en¬
rich the farmers and the state—Con¬
stitution.
Mrs. Laura Hart, Beaufort S. C.
writes: “A loathsome form of blood
poison was killing me. My appe¬
tite was lost, ray bones ached} and
parts of my flesh seemed as if it would
co rae off my bones. A friend brought
me a bottle of B B B . The sores be¬
gan healing at onee, and when I had
taken two bottles I surprised my
friends at ray rapid recovery.”
HOW TODRINK A FARPfl.
‘ Bob” Burdette gives this simp’©
receipt:
‘ My homeless friend with the
chronic nose, while you are stirring
up the sugar in a ten cent glass of
gin,! t me give you a fact to wash
down with it. You may say you
have longed for years for the free, in¬
dependent life of the farmer,but have
nev?r been able to get enough money
together to buy a farm. But this is
just where you are mistaken. For sev¬
eral years you have been drinking a
good improved farm at the rate of a
hundred square feet at a gulp. Ii
doubt this statement figure it out for
yourself. An acre of land contains
43,560 square feet. Estimating for
convenience the land at $43.56 per
acre you will see that it brings the
lands to just one mill per square foot
one cent for ten square feet. Now
pour down the fiery dose and imag¬
ine you are swallowing a strawberry
patch. Call in five of your friends
and have them help you gulp down
that 500-foot garden. Get on a pro¬
longed spree some day and see how
long it requires to swallow a pasture
large enough to feed a cow, Put
down that glass of gin, there is dirt
in it —100 feet of good rich dirt,worth
$43.56 per acre.”
Bucklen s arnica I alve.— h
best salve in tne world tor cuts
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum
fever sores, tetter, chapped hands
chilblains, corns and ail skin erupt
ions and positively cures piles, or no
1
pa\ ,, required. r It . is guaranteed . i to .
give perfect satisfaction or maney re™
funded. Price 25 cents per box. For
sale by W* H. & J. Davi?.
_ __
_
liiere was a $1,000,000 blaze on
Abingdon square, New York, last
1 h irsdav
11ASTAXOLLEE.
Dr, W. L. Mcliath has returned
from New York snd will probably
locate at Avalon,
Ye writer visitedRookCreck church
Sunday .and found them carrying on
» flomi,Inn, Sabbath Fchnol Why
cannot EtnUnollee do likewise.
T. Ii. Hayes is very low with fever,
but vv *“ hope lie may c oon recover.
Sheriff McCarter, assisted by Wiley
Thomas passed through here Satur-
^Th a jail bird by the name ot
Reeder who is wanted here ''or
»»g- n ° ' v ™ ,n ' V s * lhhlla -
The revenue Officers caught some ,
fellows with a whisky wagon near
here Saturday night from Rabun co .
and scared a lot ot other men ncail.v
0llt °f their boots. Let it alone boys
and von shun unexpected fright and
trouble.
Ilonry Smith and wife have gon
back together and are now enjoying
their second honeymoon.
S. N.Canip is done planting cotton.
rs. Sarah Burgess is visiting rela*.
^ives here.
Sam Bmliseal was up from Lavo-
nia Sunday to see his best girl.
Who is the fellow that goes every
Saturday night to see his girl, stays
ail night and goes to church and back
with the boys.
IT ATI Ell SCAIIEM.
A fuct worth knowing is that
blood diseases which all o her medi¬
cines fail to cure yield slowly but
surely toThc blood cleansing proper¬
ties ofP FP [Prickly Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium 1
---— — mmm ___
Tw« Ive inches of hail fell near
Yankton, S. D. Great damage was
done.
Many letters are received by the
P P P Co. from patients saying that
that they had used such and such a
blood purifier and sarsaparillas, men¬
tioning their names and stating that
they did not get well until P P P wa 9
tried. These letters we started to
publish, when the various manufactu¬
rers wrote us fearful letters, and wc
discontinued same, but P P P is tri¬
umphant on every occasion, and has
made a host of friends in cures of
Syphilis. Rheumatism,Scrofula,Blood
Poison, Dyspepsia, Malaria and Fe¬
male Complaints.
The Indians at Pine Ridge are still
unrestful, and further trouble, are
feared.
People wonder when they find how
rapidly health is restored by taking
1’ P P. The reason is simple, as it
a powerful combination of the roots
and herbs of the home woods.
13y the will of the late P, T. Bar-
nnm , Charles II, Seely, a grandson
of the Greatest Showman, rec«ives a
two-thirds interest in the show.
Both houses of the JFipconsin Leg¬
islature have put themselves on rec¬
ord as favoring the election of Uni¬
ted States Senators by popular vote.
Jacob Mendock,an eccentric farmer
of Oakland Pa. sewed $10,000 in an
old overcoat. A tramp got it.
7 he net profits of the Jfethodist
book concern last year were $140,000.
It is a practice of the Navajo Indi-
dians to stretch a lariet of horsehair
about their tents at night, such a bar¬
rier proving entirely effective to keep
out snakes, tarantulas and centi-.
pedes.”
EMPIRE CO-OPERATIVE
ASSOCIATION.
(Incorporated under the Laws of the
State of New York.)
You are invited to Mem¬
bership .
THE OBJECT.
The purpose of this Association is
to wholesale supply goods at First Cost or
prices to its members. We
act conceivable as a Purchasing Bureau for any
kind or class of goods re¬
quired by members. VYe do this
without adding one single cent cf
profit, (as our accounts aud the origi¬
nal bills will show), our profits being
derived exclusively from member¬
ship fees.
To become a member jou simply
pay a fee, in return you receive at)
once a certificate of membership and
a copy of our Premium Volume with
th. mammoth Illustrate,! Catalogue.
FRANCIS HOFMEISTER,
Agent, Mt. Airy, Ga.
For Bibles or any other books pub-
lished anywhere in the world call on
t. A Ator10,
* '
herehy Georgia, given n, Habersham county.—Notice . XT is
d^yof to all concerned that on the-
shum Ap ii lsso, a J Nichols late of Haner-
t o. dec'd, lias departed this life intestate,and
no person appl ed for administration on
the said A J Nichols and that in terms of the
law, adrainistra ion will oe vested in theCIerk
ol the Superior Court, or some other fit and
proper person on the first Monday in May 1891
apjwintme'nt ^Given^nder mv hand"and oP
A4.1l,ls.^MA s>f nature this March 31 1891.
U E EDGE, Ordinary.
Snider Among the Farmers.
We dropped out among the farm¬
ers in the latitude bordering on the
groat cotton belt. IT© found them
very busy preparing their land and
planting crops, (low unfort unite
the great, craze has them so b!in led
that they verily believe that cotton is
the only monied crop they can mi*'*
If f e fin i one striou* drawback amon
ihe farmers, it is one great ca**V 3 o
much of the depression among them:
the depression borders strongly on
Uireshhold ot oppression,-nd the
neatly < quids that of It-
huH. Xmety per oont ot those farm-
#
q>g own no Ian ” they rro tenant
farmers, having to j ay enormous
vents.
Lira*, three is a great outlay fo:
fertilizers. One twentieth of till tin
crop goes to the ginner. Then tlu
bagging and tic money comes off, and
before the tenant farmer can claim
any ns los own after the cotton is sold,
i e has to count out the third or fourtl
dollars as rent for the land.
A few however we find prosperous;
among those are they who have not
joined in bending the suppliant knee
to the great goddess, cotton; lhe\
make their grain at borne, raise then
own meat: and there is no outlay for
stock to run the farm. \Ye find a gen¬
eral cry for more mone\;—the price
of produce is not founded on the law
of supply and demand, but on a lack
of sufficient money in circulation a-
mong the people. The argument,
holds good when looked at from the
present financial stringency.
Another drawback is, those farm¬
ing are trying to cultivate too
land. The seeds must be planted be¬
fore the land is sufficiently prepared :
hence the cultivation is poor. All
things considered, too few men nwi
nil the land, and too little attention
is given by them to the tenant farmer
who is often looked upon as a men
slave to the land -monopoly, and yet
the tenant farmer pays more tax in
projioition to what,'he has to the sup¬
port of the government, than the new
England bondholders or the land mo¬
nopolists. But such is life: when tin-
rich rule Hie poor are oppressed.
Joe Snideii.
HIS WEAK SPOT.
One evening four or five drummers
and agents who had been w.^rkin;,
Quincy, Ill., says the Chicago News,
to no purpose-were discussing their
ill luck in the office of the hotel,whei
one observed:
an old shad down here *n
a hardware store who makes me tired
This is about the fifteenth time 1 ’vt
tried for an order, and it’s no go.”
“Old chap with a big nosoon hi in?’’
queried one of . the others,
“Yes.”
“Ordered mo out doors, confound
him.”
“And he told me,” said a third,
“that ho never bought of an agent,
trusted a stranger, or got caught on
any man’s game.”
“That’s old Blank to a dot,” put in
(he landlord. “He’s as sharp as he is
Considerable more w«as said in the
same strain, but by and by a man
who had registered from Chicago put
in:
“Boys, it’s all in understanding
human nature. Bet you $50 even ui
that I can get $10 out cf him in fif
teen tninutes, and that without value
received or signing my name to a
paper.”
His money was covered instantly,
and next morning he took one of the
crowd down to the store, introduced
himself, and said:
“Mr. Blank, the governor of the
state gave me your name as a promi¬
nent resident of the neighborhood.
Our house is publishing county histo¬
ries of Illinois. Ev.-ry subscriber at
$25 ha? a full-paged portrait and two
pages of reading matter. I shall take
only five in this citv, and you bail g
the most prominent resident I have
called upon you first.”
“Well, sir, in just twelve minutes
he had old Blank’s order for a book,
and $10 paid down as a guarantee
that he would taka it. He had hit
him in his weak spot, and our money
fon into his pocket with a thud which
couU 1,6 h4,ar<i cle “ at ' r03s ,he ,, . l,otd .
office.”
OFFICE Bmmwm'm M|msk
c
v
andSTORE. fixtures
theTERRY M'F G. CO.
NASHVILLE TEN N
WANTKD.—To contract for Five
Hundred Cord Tan Bark.
Toccoa Tanning Co.
T. W. Dennington has been alone
in the piano and ororan business since
the middle of January last, give h'm
a . CdlJ ii '
XisKitokBLooD
DISEASES.
The Best Household Meaioiue.
Onee or twice each year the eyo-
temneeda purging of the isapuri
ties which clojEf the blood. Froa
childhood to old a*©, no
meets all oases with the sanau ces>
tainty of good results as
BOTANIC M-00n PAUL
W. C. McGatihav, Webb City, Ait., writes,
“ B. B. H. has done rae Hood more rrifier goed * a? l nd fer Ices d.
money tfcn tt any other pi ge evtr is;?
I ews P, A. the e Shephard, comfort of Ncrfcik, rav life to.it.” Vs„ Amjt •it
in,
writes: “I depend on B. E. lor tl e r\qeiii-j|
______
of my health. I have had it in my
nearly two years, aad in all that tiaca I :ivc i «t i; j
to have a doctor.”
~<2rt$£Z* *
YOU ATE IN A DAD FIX
Bit will if .
w<> cure \on you w;.i
pay us. Our m ssege i. to tbtAV e .*•:
Nervous and Debi! t”t«d, w! o, *>\
Evil //abits or Li ter Indiscrcd > s
have trifled a^nv ,■ eir vigor of R .L .
mind and lunnhoo !, and who s :'!er
all eeject.> which h ad to pr ;ll *-
tur<‘ D c ’v, U-m^umpHiii: or ins..i!i\
if lids moans ' on, send, for s«rd r :!i
> i n i *»f i^ilV, written by
greatest Spcci.dist of the Jay,
s n% (su:\!u I) »>v :\A Dr,
ker's Medical and Surgical Ins
153 ortij S ce Street, Nas ville,
en
\
’^fnx !««arJL ^
oKimmum«««»■*.
Ma. A. K. TIawkks.—D ear Sir: 1 h« |»i;.ti-
ei:ojncpipses /on fiuinslieri me son e time
s in e, «iv» excellent sat-st ntioii. 1 Iiat e
tested them by use, and mu-1 say they bumih-
equaled in clearness and brilituu'j’by any I
h.ivecyer worn,. Respectfully, B. G
I ohs flieex,
G.'.v. of State of Georgia.
*n».»
r.exinaton. Va. Jan 17, 1890.—N!Y. A. K. .
Hawke • Bear Sir—Wi en 1 require the use of
jflasses I wear vour Pantis opic crvstalized
le s< s.in respect to brilliancy and clearness sJ
visn n,tney arc snr-enor io unv glasses i !ia-.«
ever us. d. Resj>eetfully, ?»i-r.,
Ex-Gcvernor ’*
Charleston, W. Va. J: n. 13. 1 : !D—T'e r Sir:
I have t« siwl your cry^taliA-il lenses, adjust¬
ed for me some weeks ago,and W. am very liiueti
pleased with them. Governor E. West Wii-wi, Virt-in'a.
All eyf a Fitted and the fit guaranteed at
drug s' ore of
W- H- a j. DAVIS-.
mmm
A pamphlet of Information aadab-.^ j
gtract Obtain of the Patents, laws, showing Caveats, Him Trailo/^tS toAfif
s.
K Marks, Address Copyrights, MUNN A sent OO. irce./M jj i
1^,361 New Broadway,
Terk.
ill. & D. ifiCMP’Y.
-o-
[ATLANTA $ VHARLOTS DIF/
Time Table in effect Nov. 2nd 1889.
Noirf.'ianux!) j 'io. 33 So. 10 No. 12
Easier.i time D »ly I Daily | Daily
r^«ainr(ET|Tn^.ri7 “ Giiamhlee ----- 8 loan :
i u S 43am i
“ Norcro-s 7 44pm %a:n j
buiuiij 3
“ 7 .57pm 9 C’$am
Buford' ^ 8 O-pru S 17ani 1
»• 8 22pm £- 3 hi-4!
S Stisiiu 9 45am
'2 tOpm S a4pm lu95an)j
“ Tula 1 oopiii « 23p-a 1§ 32;«m
“ F.e'ilt»,n 9 2U,>:n 10 > 5am
“C’omslia 9 52i)>n 11 eOani
>• 9 fitipm 11 05 m in
“Westiiilanter 10 25p:fl 11 r. 4 :i n
10 07p;n 12 Upn;
“ Sens’ea 11 Zoptn 12 36pm
“ Ceiitr: 1 3,05p 12 1. 1 5
a ■pm a n
“ Ka:-ie,>3 12 :.9um S4pm
“ Grrenvilla 3 50pm 1 (Ham
“ Greers I 30: ilpm
“ \V (* ford 1 46am m 5opm
‘‘Si .y? «7pm
“ Clifton artanburcf '4 4‘!; ru 2 1 lam **
CovYp. 2 SBiun ys
“ ns 2 a-larn c*
“ Gaffnevs | Ita
3 ooam ibpta
“ “ Blutkslmrjr Grovers 3 20a :n *+
“Kings 3 3-‘;un -d* 44pm
Mo an tain 3 52a ri io e'-'pm
“ Gastonia 4 ltfam *o 26pm
“ Low t il c 3tpm
“ Be'lemont n kO
Ar Charlotte c ec
Sour-ra.iuxo No.
Daily |
Lv Charlotte 11 40pm 1 60pm ] o9;. m
“ Bellemont 2 14 pm CM/FOIcMmm-.
“ Lnweli 2 24 pm 48:1111
1 Gastonia 2 : 6pm 4G;ini
‘KintrsMounta’n ySOOpiu
•* Grover :3 17pm
“ Blacksburg Gsiftneys 3 27pm
• >i 43pm
* O ' v l't»3 4 16pm
“ ci iti w s : 50am 4 ispm
“ Sparta . vrg 1 4 32pm
“ W.-.l f .rd 5 03pm
" Greers 5 20pm
“ Greenville 2 43pm 5 ofipm A.
•* Central Elis’°ys .3 30am 6 7 06pm 16pm
“
“ Seneca 7 39pm
“ Westminster 7 57pm o:
“ Toccoa 5 40pm s ‘. 6 ; m
Mt Airy 9 20pm
‘ Cornelia 9 26pm To
4 lielton 9 56pm
41 Lula 5 29am 10 01 pm &
t 4- Gainesvilla 5 50am 10 ‘2Hpia & 15s!m
• ’ 4 Buford Flowery B 10 oQp.n r3
10 O.ipm
“ Suwannee 11 IRpin
“ Utilmh 11 29(*?n 1 ** f^jtim •
44 Norcross 11 43pm 10 10:t rn !
’* Chain idee Jl! 56{)in 1622am |
Ar Atlanta 7 Scam 12 2riam II OOmn !
Additional train< Nos 40 and 41—Lula
commodation. daily except Sunday,
turning Atlanta 5 leaves p rn; Lula6 arrives 16a Eiila 8 12 fi m. Ke-
mi ; arrives Atlanta
8.50 am.
Between Toccoa and EU erton—No. 1 daily
except Sunday, and No. Sriaiiy. le ive Toccoa
11 30 a rn aud 3 15 p nr: ari: vfe P.!l:ortaii 3 20o
ru and 7 15 a nr. Returning. N»>., 4 and 2
daily, except Sunday, leara Elherton 1 30pm
$500 'hYd'SC*
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f..r mean!*.. eurr i-n -uK:
l-«ro but Kr.-I v» r ..1 tui. hl*
one worker from each •lieuir't rroimlr. I
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BV "$Ui* ^ - 1 . -w ! ii i»., «i-s> t
Georgia,t:t*!>ln*ni 1,. voui*ty.T*> .»k aria-in all worn
ma cun pro: !'. C Htrninr
.lie estate of itarv I., Colilideet-aseri *} 1
♦i iesa ,, 1 ■ t .„ the first M< ivla in X :
next At mv ifi.-e in » 'ark \li>. saitl
(rive-i *»• «"l<*r e-v * nil n • ni<- al 1 11
tlsis Ft . 5 2 m11891. B. E EDGE, C rd n.
4P £%C Bleed KNIGHT’S Cure. .
***itssi A slantUrd 1 i-.s-bold remedy
in succc aslcl usoir.oic ti.;.n pi years. Aposi-
iive ntre lor Dyspepsia. Scrofula. Nervoijs
Lo **
and fr
Unscualco xos Pr.CDaoiKo A C;*ah CaKp;axieti
“ p i: ‘
One Month s Tresitiient for $1.00
pie I.argepackage, p.ickacc 51.W; free halt reccij s : ze, 91 c< ents. Snm-
s nt cn t ef X c star.' P %
I EIGHT BOTANICAL CO., 268Brcsatny, *.?,
A rtUab A'jrnt ixtnird in th.i locality. J
. „ . , „ ,
p^fnJ^^rkrce. 1 have Jonrd T for fit' chronicdyspeps’v. : s' t he* only ’ p^sitiv-i
curs ever Il'L’yn,
J. Crofoot, 7J Yr.n 5:cfc>n Ave., b. V.
Captain McCormick, of the Hayes Arctic Ex¬
pedition, writes: "I advise you t> keep your
medicine ci.cst \vi d splendid supplied with Knight s
Blood Cure. It is a remedy ior Set
blood and stoma* h dis-irders."
New York. Jan. Captain ISM. S. J. Me Cqrmick.
15.
Kn: Pvtsnical Ballston. Sr a. N. Y.. Fnu 2 . ItTI.
; t Co., 252 Broadway. N. Y.
Gi nticna n I am pleased to inform you '
1 ic-so wIm.'-i ii may concern that, having per-
£•« b.id-cas : -”y £’i-d A BIixkI thoroughly tried your remedy in
satisktetury :. • - i do poisoning not hesitate with resuits most
ii. in ali of disordered to recommend
cases N. blood.
K. Brk.cs, [Scientist }
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H Bill
LIPPMAN BROS., Proprietors,
Cr gglsU. Usoman’s Block, SAVANNAH. 6 A.
" 1 8 I! a 0 ai
m j
ill H iIII fi #| tiaSS3i®
■& MHf
% fa n issfcssaa in Uab d
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STMfR ,z\ mm
bwisariiidSal
and
131 &£/ ‘Szs k @T y
f on
liffl PL
is
TME
a ^ jra ?* Pei ssa* 1
as H iq WM » [/a WiS
Q #***& a
For Sale
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