Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXL
COUNTY DIRECTORY.
Ordinary— W. D. HILL.
Sheriff—M. FULLER.
Clerk—J. II. ADDISON.
Treasurer— L. WILBANKS.
Coroner-ALLEN DIXON.
Surveyor—BURGESS SMITH.
County School Commissioner— J.
A. BLAIR.
COURT.
Oudinvijy’s Court— Meets first
Monday in each Month.
Superior Court— Meets first
Mondays in March and September.
CITY DIRECTORY.
x
Mayor—W. J. HAYES.
Recorder-G. T. GOODE,
Justice of Peace—L. P. COOK,
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
Mkiiodist Episcopal Church,
South— Rev. B. P. Allen, pastor.—
Preaching II a. m. atul 7:30 p. m.
every Sunday. Sunday-school 10
a. tn. every Sunday; J. B. Simmons,
superintendent. Prayer service ev¬
ery Wednesday evening.
Presbyterian Church— Rev. L.
A. Sirr.pson, pastor.—Preaohing at
11:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. on 2d
and 4th Sabbaths in each month.
-wm- d» * I f
((P/i/ia&'le. ■J3 > a.&&e.na,eL Sfiefiat.)
lotCOit, ©it.
I
Our Hotel is the most convenient stopping place for traveler*; being
i >t more than 100 feet from the Depot. Our rooms are comfortable and
uir table is kept supplied with the best the market affords. Rates, $2pei
lay ; regular boarders taken on reasonable terms.
E. P. SIMPSON & OO
HEADQUARTERS FOR
MACH1NERY SUPPLIES AND REPAIRS,
Peerless Engines,
G-eiser Saw Mills, ; *
Oeiser Separators,
BRENNAN SHINGLE MACHINES,
McCORMICK REAPERS &: MOWERS
McCormick Hay Halves,
Kentiacky Cane Mills,
WHiite SewingMackines,
PCs tew Organs.
Agents for LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE,
HOME OF NEW YORK, CONTINENTAL OF NEW YORK
HARTFORDOF HARTFORD. CONN , QUEEN OF AMERICA,
INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA.
— DEALERS IN—
MACHINERY AND MACHINERY SUPPLIES.
All kinds of Machinery repaired quickly and in first-class manner,
Parts duplicated.
Agents for Nagle Engines and l"Buckeye Mowers ,
Highest market price paid for Shingles.
D. W. EDWARDS.
General Merchandise
(Bright & Isbell's old stand.)
Save money by pricing my goods before purchasing elsewhere.
FURNITURE AND OLD STOCK
AT COST.
Come in and look. Prices will persuade you to buy.
THE TOCCOA NEWS.
Han day-school at 10 a. m. every
Sabbath ; W. M. Busha, superintend¬
ent. Praver meeting 7:30 p. m,
every Wednesday.
Baptist Church— Rev. A. E.
Keese, pastor.—Preaching at 11:30
a. in. and 8 p. m. on 3d and 4th Sun¬
days. Sunday-school at 10 a. m.
every Sunday ; W. J. Hayes, super¬
intendent. Prayer meeting at 8
p. m. eveiy Wednesday.
LODGES.
Masonic— Meets Friday night
before the third Sunday.
Knights op Honor —Meets first
and third Monday nights.
Royal Arcanum— Meets second
and fourth Monday nights.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Dr. JOHN McJUNKIN.
Office in Drug Store of W. H. & J.
Davis.
Dr. JEFF DAVIS.
Office in Drug Store of W. II. & J,
Davis.
L- D. gale,
DENTAL SURGEONj
Office with Dr. J. N. West.
TOCCOA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1893.
THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH
Notes oi Her Progress aei Prosperity
Briely Epitomized
And Important Happenings from Day
to Day Tersely Told.
The attorneys of Sutton, the Louis¬
ville forger, will make insanity the issue
on trial.
A fire starting from a stove destroyed
the large plant of the Louisville, Ky.,
cotton works Saturday night. Loss
$100,000.
An order of Gen. Gordon, commander
of camps of confederate veterans, will
notify members that they are invited to
the ceremonies in New Orleans on the
occasion of the removal of Mr. Davis’s
remains on May 31st.
A special of Sunday from Jackson¬
ville, Texas, says: W. II. Bagley, bank¬
er, has failed. Liabilities, $40,000; as-
sets been considerably les3. His property has
transferred to the Island City Sav¬
creditor. ings bank, of Galveston, his principal r
Governor Turney, of Tennessee, has
appointed Colonel William H.- Carroll to
be coal oil inspector at Memphis. This
is the best paying inspec’orship in the
state, being worth about $10,000 per an-
num. Colonel Carroll ischaiiman of the
democratic executive committee and man¬
aged the last campaign.
The city stables at the dumping
grounds, containing 149 mules belonging
to the Atlanta, Ga., sanitary department,
were burned to the ground Saturday
night with 139 of the mules they shel¬
tered. The mules destroyed by the fire
were very v«luabic. Many of them cost
the city as much as $175 each. The fire
was of incendiary origin.
Dr. W. D. Mayo, a director in the de¬
funct Commercial National bank, of
Nashville, made a partial assignment of
assets Saturday valued at $63,000 to se-
cure indebted ness of $35,000 due the
Commercial National bank and others.
Of this $14,000 was due the bank. Mr.
^eorge The assignment H. Beasley, Jr., is the assignee.
was not unexpected.
Governor Turney, of Tennessee, ap-
pointed the following penitentiary com¬
missioners Thursday: R. J. Morgan, of
Memphis; M. L. D. K. Young, of Clinton, and
will McDowell, of Winchester. They
lands proceed to purchase coal and farming
to build a new penitentiary and
stockade, pected. for which $600,< 00 will be ex¬
Their salary is $3,000 per an¬
num.
A Louisville, Ivy., dispatch of Satur¬
day says; The Adams Express Company
has made another scoop on one of its
rivals. It will take charge of the express
business of the M. N. I. aod B. and the
Kentucky the Midland railroads in place of
United States Express Company,
which was forced to give up the roads in
consequence of the loss last January of
the Queen and Crescent system.
The investigation of the looting of the
Gate City bank, at Atlanta, by the grand
jury is proceeding by slow and regular
stages. A large number of witnesses
have been examined and it is said that
some ered, interesting but facts have been discov¬
ed. The what they are cannot be learn¬
secrecy which is thrown around
the grand jury room and what transpires
therein is deep and ponderous.
A Nashville, Tenn., special of Friday
says: The report that there will be fur¬
ther trouble with the Coal Creek miners
about May l-t, is not generally credited
here. If there is trouble, however, it
will not be dallied with. Under the act
of the recent legislature the adjutant gen¬
eral now gives bis attention exclusively
to the National Guard, the reorganization
of which is provided for. The legisla¬
ture appropriated $45,000 for the mainte¬
nance of the guard the next two years.
A New Orleans special of Friday says:
The board of directors of the new cottOE
exchange cial have issued notice that a spe¬
meeting of the exchange will b«
held to discuss an important change in ths
form of future delivery contracts, a clause
beiDg introduced in the present contract
and reading: “It is distinctly understood
ed agreed that no cotton shall be tender¬
nor received of a less market value that
good ordinary, white, and the receivei
shall have the right to refuse all sandy,
dusty, red, or gin cut cotton.”
A Nashville dispatch says: There
have been no developments in the Com¬
mercial bank affair, and it now seems
that nothing will be known until the
trial. A legis ative committee will com¬
plete the investigation of the comptroller
and treasurer’s books, and ex Treasurer
House, od Friday, appeared before it and
mittee very urgently requested that the com¬
$1,000,000 fully investigate the rumor that
in bonds had been hypothe¬
cated in New York. He even offered tp
piy the expenses of the committee to
New York if necessary. Mr. House does
not believe the bonds have been hypoth¬
ecated. The committee has not yet de¬
cided about visi ir.g New York, but will
probably go.
SINKING GROUND.
A Remarkable Phenomenon on a Farm
Near Florence, Ala.
A remarkable Phenomenon oecured
Friday on the parish farm near Florence,
Ala. The Phenomenon is an immense
hole fifty feet across the top and of inde¬
terminable depth. The hole was found
by Mr. T. W. Bedding who leases the
farm. It is located in a field that has
been in cultivation for years and at a place
were the earth was apparently solid.
The sinking occurcd in the night during
a heavy storm. It is thought that the
bole leads to a ▼ st subterranean cavern
and it will be explored as soon as it is
determined that no more earth is to sink.
Latest Hews from Hawaii.
The Kansas City Times in its issue of
Sunday prints a special dispatch from
their correspondent in Honolulu, Hawaii,
via San Francisco, under date of April
9th, In which he says: “The royalists
profess to be in possession of facts rela¬
tive to the future actions of Mr. Blount,
in which the commissioner, in the name
of the United States, will reinstate the
deposed queen to the throne.”
Advertise now, it will pay you.
STORM IN THEJfORTHWEST.
Iowa, Illinois) Nebraska and Missouri
A Chicago special o! Wednesday says:
Tuesday night-a the etbtrn tffougkt. sUch
haYoc With telegraph wires that it is
almost impossible to obtain particulars of
the damage done in the west, Whete the
fuctiOQ sftems to have been general
and W despread in the states of Iowa, Il¬
linois, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri,
Probably the greaest damage was done
in Iowa, although the reports from Ne-
braska indicate that when full particu-
lira are received that state will lead in
the loss of ptope.tv and human life,
Along the line of the Chicago, Milwaukee
and St. Paul railroad, in Iowa and Ne-
braeka, the storm cut a wide swath.
The town cf Akron, in the former
state, is wrecked, and Westfield, a few
miles distant, badly demoralized. Meagre
reports from localities in the Interior
show that th-3 devastation is widespread,
a though its full extent will not be
Known for several days, owing to the
lack of telegraphic facilities and the
diring washing out, of the country roads, ren-
communication difficult and in
many cases impossible, Continuing along
the railroad in Nebraska, the storm swept
np farm buildings, fences and bridges
and finally swooped down on the town
of Page, which it wrecked.
LATEST NEWS.
A special of Wednesday afternoon from
Kansas City, Mo., says: As communica*
ion gradually becomes opened up with
the small towns and hamlets through
Kansas and Missouii which Were cyclone
swept Tuesday, and the news always
makmg additions to the list of lives and
property is received, the real extent of
the storm becomes known. It is impos¬
sible to get the names of the victims,
nowever, and in most instances the ac¬
counts of destruction wrought are in¬
complete. Even in some places where
communication has been restored,
news is not available, The stricken
citizens are engaged with the important
duty of dead, caring for the injured, the care
of the and putting together what
was once their happy homes. Fifteen
people are known to have been killed;
thirty or forty were injured, while num¬
berless houses, as well as smaller proper¬
ty, were destroyed. Much stock was
also killed.
A MISSISSIPPI TOWN IN RUINS.
A Vicksburg, Miss., special says:
Conductor Thomas, of the Yazoo and
Mississippi Valley railroad, wired the
following Wednesday Robinsonville, night: ‘*The en¬
tire town of Coahoma
about county, was swept away by a cyclone
4:30 o’clock this evening. All the
stores are in flames. Several negroes
and perhaps some white men are buried
in the ruins. The depot was completely
destroyed and the night operator’s wife
killed. A colored child was also killed.
Only two houses are left standing.”
ETOnM IN TENNESSEE.
Jackson, Tenn., was struck by a cy¬
clone about five o’clock Wednesday after¬
noon and a dozen buildings were wreck¬
ed. There was no loss of life, though a
number of persons were slightly injured.
Everything in the path of the
storm was leveled. The domage in the
rural districts cannot be learned.
CASUALITIES IN MISSOURI.
A special of Thursday from nights St. Louis,
Mo., says: Though two and a
day have passed since the cyclone tore
its way through Missouri, from south¬
west to northwest, the repons of dam¬
age .-and loss of life are still coming in.
The towns which suffered most are com¬
paratively small and nearly all located iu
the northwestern part of the state on a
strip lying to the southeast of Kansas
City. A summary of the casualizes
shows the following result, the list of
dead and injured corrected to the best
possible extent:
At Higginsville, Mo., eight persons will
were killed outright and three mere
probably die and twenty-five wounded.
At Hawkins Bank eight people were
killed and thirty one seriously injured;
at Lexington injured five were killed and killed three
fatally ; at Stanbury, four
and one fatally hurt; at Steelville, seveD
killed. In addition there is a long list
of t: ose who were more or less hurt, and
whose injuries will not prove fatal. As
if this horrible roll was Dot enough, the
storm left little to the survivors to be¬
gin life again everything with. Houses, barns,
stock and was swept before
the storm’s fury. A. Hawkins Bank the
scene was most horrible. When the re¬
lief reached there not a soul in the place
had had a morsel to eat for twenty-four
hours, as provisions, cook stove?, etc.,
were all blown away. Farmers from the
surrounding country came nobly to their
assistance, and many are now being
cared for in the immediate vicinity of the
bank.
RUINS AT YPSILANTI.
Ypsilanti, According Mich., to dispatches of Thursday,
is in a lamentable
condition and business is suspended
owing to the havee caused by Wednes-
day night’s rainstorm. Almost all the
principal block — stores, the opera house,
postoffice, hotel and several dwellings-
were either demolished or badly dam-
sged. Houses were lifted from their
f< undations, buildings were unroofed and
walls tumbled into the street, a mass of
ruins. So far as known, not a life will
be lost as a result of the storm. Roughly
estimated, the total loss is between
$100,000 and $150,000.
A Memphis, Tenn special of Thurs-
day says: It 19 hardly possible to exag- fire
gerate the havoc made by the cyclone
at Robinsonviile Wednesdav. There are
par?9 of two houses and a water tank
s'ill standing, and everything elBe was
razed; to the ground, and most of it
burned. The number of killed, so far as
can be ascertained by a census of the
bodies found, is seventeen, one white
and sixteen colored, and about ten in-
jured—two so seriously that they are ex-
pected to die. The wounded who have
not been sent to Memphis, Tunica or
Lake Cormorant, are quartered in the
two houses still standing. The property
loss will reach $100,000.
Grover*® Sentiment.
A New York special of Friday says:
President Cleveland has written "the fol¬
lowing sentiment for the press club sou¬
venir: “The people must be educated,
for the people rule. Gp.oyer Cleve¬
land.” Fac similes of this sentiment
and signature will be published.
u EXTENSIVE STRIKE.
_ _ __„
Of tll8 UlllOll PSClfiC &0 Ofll
““ A ]) iilUHj i]t\M |{}p lllu LlliC. lino
Workmen Claim that the Company
Have Violated Their Contract.
A special from Omaha, Nebraska, says: blew
When the Union Pac fic whistles
Monday 600 employes of the shops in
this city quietly gathered Up their tools,
overalls and dinner buckets together and
left the employ of the Union Pacific in
Vindication of what they believe to be
an inherent principle of right—the right
to in a Voice as to d who should be employed
the several partinects of the shops,
and the time wLen such employment
should take place. As the several era-
ployo mingled in the swarm of workers
going to their dinners there was little or
no demonstration exc pt now and then
*ome over-zealous striker would let out a
yell. The carpenters, painters, car re-
pairers and car inspectors went to their
several lodging noonday houses or remained in eat-
ing tkiir meals the shops,
showing little or no concern in what was
being iron. done by their comrade workers in
Of course the action of the strikers
was discussed in all its bearing, but the
more Conservative men in the shops
counseled moderation and the Counsels
were universally members respected Federation by those who of
are not of the
Machinery Constructors, or in other
words, those men working eight hours.
During that the morning there was contemplated little indi¬
cation a walkout was
and the morning seemed like aaj other
morning’s work, except that walking
delegates were among the trades from interest, af¬
urging them to stay away work
ter leaving work at the noon hour.
Meetings were held during the day in the
different shops and some objection was
made to walking out by the molders,
but the at the noon hour nearly all the men
in trades affected walked out.
At 1 o’clock work about the yards
was resumed in the other departments as
if nothing hnd occurred, but the iron de¬
partments were deserted. The strike in¬
augurated affects about 2,500 men on the
system and only interests the workers of
iron or those men who are working eight
hours instead of nine as they alleged they
were promised affected in January. the strike The towns ad¬
to fce most by in
dition to Omaha are Denver, Cheyenne,
Salt Lake, Rawlins, Armstrong, Poca¬
tello, Evipston, Larmie, LaGrande and
Shoshone.
, AT OTHER CITIES.
At Salt Lake, Utah, fifty machinists,
boiler makers and blacksmiths, out of a
force of 200 employed, went out at noon.
Half of the strikers are non-union men,
and it is c’aimcd that they will return.
A Kansas City, Mo., special says:
Monday morning it was estimated that
the strike would involve 3,000 men,
strung out half way across the continent,
from Omaha to Portland, Ore. There
are large forces at Cheyenne, A Rawlins,
Salt Lake and Ogdon. somewhat
similar transcontinental strike, but
hardly of such mammoth proportions,
has been in progress on the Santa Fe sys¬
tem for nearly a week.
The machinists aud boilermakers of
the Union Pacific shops at Cheyenne,
Wyo., walked out at 11:30 a. m. The
order came from the men at Omaha.
The striking men held a meeting at 2
o’clock. A warrant was sworn out for
the arrest of Superintendent O. Herron.
The superintendent drew a revolver on
John Tighe, who rang the signal bell for
the strike.
At La Junta, Cal., the non-union shop
men brought from Denver several days
ago to take the places of the Santa Fe
strikers Monday moruing joined the
strikers.
FREIGHT TRAIN'S ABANDONED.
Advices from Wichita, Kan., state
that all freight trains on the Newton
aDd Purcell division of the Wichita and
Western have been abandoned for the
lack of engineers, and there are twelve
dead engines at Newton, seventeen at
Arkantas City aod nineteen at Purcell,
and the road has not the means of mak¬
ing the repai.s necessary to put them in
service. '
DESTROYED BY EARTHQUAKES.
The City of Zaute in Ruins and Many
People Lose Their Lives.
Advices fn m Athens, Greece, are to
the effect that the island of Zinte, one of
the principal Onian islands, was visited
by a most destructive earthquake Monday
morniDg, ° resulting in great loss of life
and n property L In February and March i
last the tsland sustained a vast amount of
damage by seismic disturbances, and a
large number of lives were lost. This
last shock appears to have been the most
violent in the city of Zinte, the greater
part of which was destroyed. The peo-
pie are nanjc-stricken, and the autbori-
ties helpless The streets are impossa-
ble, being filled with masses of stone and
timber, the wreckage of houses which
were throw'n down by the earthquake.
Thus far the bodies of twenty persona
killed .by the failing walls have been re-
moved from the debris, and it is feared
maDy more of the dead are still in the
ruins. The number hundreds of persons injured
runs up into The greater
portion of the inhabitants have lied to
the plains back of the city, where they
wander about in a distracted manner, be-
wailing the loss of their homes and prop-
erty. Advices from the interior show
the whole island devastated. Many vil-
lages were destroyed, and it is thought
the loss of life is very great.
Snow in New York and Ohio. ..
A New York special of Saturday says:
Snow has been falling fast in the middle
section of the state since midnight. At
Rochester the snow was heavy and a
strong wind prevailed, Another dis-
patch from Cleveland, O., says: A
heavy and blinding snow storm has pre¬
vailed throughout northwestern Ohio
since early Friday evening.
REFLECTED GLORT.
Teacher—What is a hero ?
Tommy—The man who marries a he-
•oine.
BEHRING SEA MATTERS
Discussed by the Court of Arbitration.
The American Side Presented.
A Paris cable dispatch sass: Upon the
resumption of the sitting of the Behring
sea court of at titration Thursday Mr.
James C. Carter continued the presenta¬
tion of the American side of the case
commenced Wednesday. He read let¬
ters bearing upon the question at issue,
sent by Mr. Blaine when secretary of
state to Sir Julian Poncefote, the British
minister at Washington, and commented
upon them.
At this point Senator John L. Morgan,
one of the arbitrators on the part of the
United approved States, inquired whether Canada
had the draft of a convention
before Lord Salisbury had made his sug¬
gestion relative to a ten-mile limit. Tbis
question was left to a discussion, in
which Mr. Carter, Sir Charles Russell,
of Counsel for Great Britain; Sir John
Thompson, of Canada, one of the arbi¬
trators, and Senator Morgan took part.
Dazey Did it All.
A Nashville special of Sunday says:
J. P. Dobbins, of the defunct firm of
Dobbins & Dazey, states that the report
is in error that he has at any time stated
that he exonerated his partner, George
A. Dazev, of the blame of wrecking the
firm. Mr. D izey, he claims, has stated
to Mr. Dobbins and to others that he
alone is responsible for the firm's losses.
The Cash Transferred.
I he last of the cash in the Gate Oily
national bank, at Atlanta, Ge., was
transferred Saturday to the Atlanta reached Na¬
tional—the total amount haviug
about $315,000. Bank Examiner Stone
is of the opinion that in a week or ten
days something definite will be known as
to tne manner of the bank’s liquidation.
RICHMOND & DANVILLE R. R.
F. W. HuideUoper and Reuben Foster.
Receivers.
Atlanta A Charlotte Air-Line Division.
Condensed Schedule of Passenger Trains in
Effect November 20,1892.
NORTHBOUND. No. 38. No. 10. No. 12.
Eastern Time. Daily. Daily. Daily.
Lv Atlanta (E.T.) 12 45 pm 920 pm 8 05 am
Ch.mblee .... ........ 9 52 pm 8 40 «m
Norcrosa...... ........ 10 03 pm 8 53 am
Duluth....... ........10 13 pm 9 04 am
Suwanee...... ........ 1023 pm 9 15 am
Buford....... ........ 10 87 pm 9 28 am
Flowery Gainesville Branch ........10 51 pm 9 42 am
... 2 13 pm 11 10 pm 10 03 am
Bel.’ton........ Lula......... ........1138 2 32pmjll 86 pm 10 10 30 27 am
pm am
Cornelia...... ........ 12 05 am 10 51 am
Mt. Airy...... ........ 12 09 am 10 55 am
Toccoa........ ........ 12 37 am 11 19 am
Westminster.. 117 am 11 56 am
Seneca....... 1 36 am 12 15 pm
Central....... 210 am 1 20 pm
Easleys....... 2 42 am 1 55 pm
Greenville. ... 5 08pm 3 07 am 2 26 pm
Greers....... 3 35 am 8 00 pm
Well ford..... 3 50 am 3 20 pm
partauburg... C OOpm 4 09 um 3 48 pm
Clifton....... 4 26 am 4 08 pm
Cowpens...... 4 30 am 4 11 pm
Gaffneys...... Blacksburg 4 52 am 4 42 pm
... 6 48 pm 5 09 am 5 03 pm
Grover........ ....... 518 am 5 15 pm
Kind’s Mo’nt’n ....... 5 64 am 5 85 pm
Gastonia...... ....... 57 am 6 05 pm
Lowell....... ....... 6 08 am 6 20 pm
Bellemont.... ....... 617 am 6 32 pm
Ar Charlotte..... 8 05 pm 6 40 am 7 00 pm
SOUTHWARD. No. 37. No. 11. No. 9.
Daily. Daily. Daily.
Lv. Charlotte...... 9 35 am 1 OOpm 11 20 pm
Belli-mont..... 1 25 pm 1* 42 pm
Lowell......... 1 33 pm! H 12 51 02 pm
Gastonia....... 1 46 pm am
King’s Mount’n 2 11 pm 12 28 am
Grover......... 2 28 pm 12 44 am
Blacksburg 10 48 am 2 37 pm 12 64 am
.... 2 55 111 am
Gaffney....... 3 pm 1 36
Cowpens...... .... .. .. 20pm 1 39 am
Clifton........ ... 3 23 pm am
Spartanburg ... il37am 3 38 pm 1 2 56 18 am
Wellford........ ........ 4 00 pm am
Greers......... 4 15 pm 2 35 am
Greenville...... 12 28 pm 4 42 pm 3 07 am
Easleys......... 5 14 pm 3 35 am
........ 4 10
Central........ ”...... 6 05 pm am
Seneca......... 6 30 pm 4 38 am
’ 4 £8
Westminster.... .. 6 48 pm am
Toccoa........ 7 28pm 5 40 am
Mt. Airy....... ........ 8 00 pm 6 15am
Cornelia....... ........ 8 03 pm 6 18am
Bellton........ 8 26 pm 6 41 am
........ 43
Lula.......... 3 15 pm 8 28 pm 6 am
Gainesville..... 3 33 pm 8 53 pm 7 07 am
Flowery Branch ........ 9 12 pm 7 28 am
Buford........ 9 24 pm 7 38 am
....... 52
Suwanee....... ........ 9c8pm 8 7 CSam am
Duluth........ ........ 9 50 pm
Norcross...... ........ 10 03 pm 8 14 am
Chamblee...... ........10 19 pm 8 25 am
Ar. Atlanta 4 11 OOpm 900 am
Additional trams Nob. 17 and 18—Lula ac¬
commodation, daily except Sunday, leaves At¬
lanta 5 35 p m, arrives Lula 8 20 p m. Return¬
ing, leaves Lula 6 00 am, arrives Atlanta 8 50
am. Athens—No. 11 and 9 daily,
Between Lula and
{ eave Lula 8 30 pm and 10 35 a m, arrive
ens 10 15 p m and 12 20 p m. Returning leave
Athens, Nos. 10 and 12 daily, 6 30pm an u
am ai rive Lula 815 p m ana 9 50 a m.
Between Toccoa and Elberton-Nos. G3 and 9
dai j v> except Sunday, leave Toccoa 7 45a m
and'll 25 a m, arrive" Elberton ll 35 a m and
220 p m. Returning, No. 62 and 12daily, excep
^*7 ,^twcSToOp m a£dl025 a m. Atlan-
Nos. 9 and 10 Pullman sleeper between
ta and New York. Southwest-
Nos. 37 and . ’8 Washington and
^oSh'^nman New
^ ew York and New Orleans and bei ween
y or [ { al!d Augusta, also between Washington
and Memphis, via Atlanta and Birmingham,
nniting ^^dSnd between A VicSbmg. 4 tlant » ^ ® 88^»nnecti 7^k
No.
at gp ar t an bnrg with Pullman Sleeper for
Asheville. Buffet_ Sleeper
Nos- 11 and 12—Pullman
’“t'mfn^per
to an d f r0 in Portsmouth and Norfolk,
p or detailed information as to local and
through timetables, rates and Pullman sleeping
car reservations, confer with local agents or
A TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK.
Gen’l Pass. Ag’r. Ass’t. G nl. Pasa. Ag’t.
Waohington, D. C. Atlanta, G*.
w "• A « D Y, ruruv’ Supermt ^Q < ji j nt H ^l^ ntl ’ a ‘
7, - Traffic Manager.
Waahington, D. O. Washington. D. 0.
LEWIS DAVIS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
TOCCOA CITY, GA.,
Will practice in the oouatiae of Haber
chain and Rabun of the Northwester*
Circuit, and Franklin and Bank* of tht
Western Circuit. Prompt attention wil’
be given to all business entrustedft© him.
The collection of debts will have spea
ial attention.
NUMBER 15.
TOCCOA BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
WILL SCOTT,
Barker.
Shop over Drug Store.
RICHMOND BRYANT,
HARNESS, SADDLES,
BRIDLES, etc.
Cheap for Cash.
T. S. DAVIS,
SAW MILL, GRIST MILL,
SHINGLE MILL AND
VARIETY WORKS.
ALLIANCE JOINT STOCK COMPANY,
Dry G-ooids, Groceries,
FARM IMPLEMENTS.
R. A. NAY’ES, Maxaskh.
R. jr. W. HI'T'T,
MEAT M-SJETLCST.
Basement T, C. Wright’s store.
E. L. GOODE,
(Successor to W. J. Hayes.)
0R0GERIES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS,
Clothing, Shoes and Hats-
W. H. & J. DAVIS.
IDr-uge, Med.icin.es, Painta,
Oils,
Books and Stationery.
O. W. NOWELL,
DEALER IN
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
AND FURNITURE.
NETHERLAND & BLACKMER,.
MILLINERY
Call and see us if you want bargains.
G-ooios below Cost I
H. E. HOPKINS,
GENERAL *
HAYES & RAMSAY,
LIYKRY, SALE AND FEED STABLE.
R&te£.
M t$. M. J.
Milline? and Dress Maker,
Y/RIOHT’3 hall.
J. T. CARTER,
BLAGKSM1THIKC, • REPAIRING,
WAGON-MAKING.
All kinds of blacksmith work Cheap.
NORTH GEORGIA
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Spring Term begin* First Monday in Feb¬
ruary. Fall Term begins First
Monday in September.
Best school in the south, for students with
limited means, The military training is
thorough, being under a U. S. Army office',
by the Secretary of War.
both sbxbs have equal advan¬
tages.
Btsden’s are prepared and licensed to teach
{a the public schools, by act of the legislature.
Leeturea, on Agriculture and the Sciences
by dielinguished educators aud scholars.
far health the climate is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2837 feet.
Board t '.O per month and upwards. Massing
ai fewer rates.
b., 1 , senator and representative of the state
is entitled and requested to appoint one pupil
tom his district or county, * it tout paying
BUkirioelafeoo fee, during hii term.
fM aaSefeg or miornaatfen, addles* 9ecre-
feiy er Treasurer, Eeard of Trustees.