The Toccoa news. (Toccoa, Ga.) 1893-1896, June 02, 1893, Image 1

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VOLUME XXI. COUNTY DIRECTORY. Ordinary-W. D. HILL. Sheriff—M. FULLER. Clerk—i. II. ADDISON. Treasurer—L. WILBANKS. Coroner—ALLEN DIXON. Surveyor—BURGESS SMITH. County School Commissioner—J. A. BLAIR COURT. Ordixvky’s Court —Meets first Monday in each Month. Superior Court—M eets first Mondays in March and September. CITY DIRECTORY. Mayor—W.J. HAYES. Recorder—G. T. GOODE, Justice of Peace—L. P. COOK. CHURCH DIRECTORY. Mkiiodist Episcopal Church, South— Rev. B. P. Allen, pa3tor.— Preaching 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. every Sunday. Sunday-school 10 a. m. every Sunday; J. D. Simmons, superintendent. Prayer service ev¬ ery Wednesday evening. Presbyterian Church —Rev. L. A. Sitr.pson, pastor.—-Preaching at 11:30 a. m. aud 7:30 p. m. on 2d and 4th Sabbaths in each month. 4® I | m- ♦ $s, {0/i/ias.lf±. ^J > a.'tseng > rL <ZficJic.L} ^lotCOit, @it. Our Hotel is the most convenient stopping place for traveler 3 , being i )t more than 100 feet from the Depot. Our rooms are comfortable and »ur table is kept supplied with the best the market affords. Ra tes, §2 pci lay ; regular boarders taken on reasonable terms. I*X P. SIMPSON & GO., --HEADQUARTERS FOR MACH1NER1T % MACHINERY SUPPLIES AND REPAIRS, Peerless Engines, Geiser Saw Mills, Geiser Separators, BRENNAN SHINGLE MACHINES, MCCORMICK REAPERS & MOWERS McCormick TTsiy Rakes, Kentucky Cane Mills, TATliite Sewing Maclaines, E^ste^ Organs. 3333 3SS133IS2 3 63393A&&3* Agents for LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE, HOME OF NEW YORK, CONTINENTAL OF NEW YORK HARTFORDOF HARTFORD. CONN, QUEEN OF AMERICA, INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA. Wo Mo <§: Jo Ho BUSHA -DEALERS IN— MACHINERY AND MACHINERY SUPPLIES. All kinds of Maclnnery repaired quickly and in first-class manner, Parts duplicated. At/enfs for Nagle Engines and EucKeje Mowers* Highest market price paid for Shingles. 8JI» D. W. EDWARDS. General Merchandise (Bright & Isbell’s old stand.) Save money by pricing my goods before purchasing elsewhere. FURNITURE AND OLD STOCK AT COST 0 Come in and look. Prices will persuade you to buy. THE TOCCOA NEWS. Sunday-school at 10 a. m. ever? Sabbath ; W. M. Busha, superintend¬ ent. Praver meeting 7:30 p. m« every Weuncsduy. Baptist Ciiuitcn—Rev. A. E. Keese, pastor.—Preaching at 11:30 a. in.and 8 p. m. on 8d and4thSun- ''T- Sunday-school at 10 a. in. ? ve U Sunda J i intendent. Prayer meeting *at 8 p. m. erety Wednesday. LODGES. Masonic —Meets Friday night before the third Sunday. Knights of Honor—M eets first and third Monday nights. Koyal Arcanum— Meets second and fourth Monday nights. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Dr. JOHN MoJUNKIN. offic0 in I)ru K Store of w - H - * J - Davis. Dr. JEFF DAYIS. Office in Drug Store of W. H. & J. Davis. b. D. GALS, DENTAL >$URC$0N; Office with Dr. J. N. West. TOCCOA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1893. THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH, Notes ot Her Progress and Prosperity Briefly Epitomized And Important Happenings from Hay to Day Tersely Told. The heaviest rainfall in the reeollec- tion of the oldest inhabitant occurred throughout Tennessee, Mississippi, Ar- kansas and Louisiana Saturday night and flooded Sunday. The whole country is" is and incalculable damage be- iug done to planters. A deed of trust for §600,000, given bv the Seaboard Air Line Belt Com- pany to the Mercantile Trust and De- posit Company, of Baltimore, Aid., nasneen has been filer! tiled in in Hip tUe office of u,o the clerk of the superior court at Atlanta, Ga, The date of the deed of trust was April 1st. This deed of trust was given by th railroad to back up §600,- 000 of bonds. a L n Ga., „ special . , of . m Tuesday n snvs- ' Th e 1 | aVa A Bto 5 eB Market has t -v , ectdedly upward trend. a ; durTv T,..,, ad l anCC ? 1 1-2 Cents tone t mTfrnmViT! w .A, nn have '• . f -,V1! the barrel Keceiuts^bear Prosnectq n elrlv i eLti bright. mates mates of of a a much much shorter shorter crop ev n than fh last i + ’ Comment b * Tel, „ fill , °f Bertan v* bill Tuesdnv ncrniuRt l 1 th tv, ' l l ’* k directors seeking to hold b la t 7 perB ? nall f. ^sponsible for eration ell! , f, nf*l of 40 per cent teB of tb the * Pohs notes l l1 - given for stock subscriptions, alleges gross mismanagement and negligence, and charges that the bank was insolv- ent two years before it failed, At Milner, Ga., Sunday, the Rev. William Graham,one of the oldest and best known evangelists in the state, and his aged wife Were dashed into eternity Central by the Nancy Hanks, the railroad’s fast train. The old people were walking along the railroad track, returning from church, arm in arm, when the Nancy Hanks, moving at full speed, ran upon them, raising them high in the air and hurled them down a steep embankment to instant death. A Jackson, Miss., special of Friday says: The pardon of Vincent, the Ala- bama defaulting treasurer, lias started a movement to secure the pardon of ex-Treasurer Hemingway, of this state, who was convicted and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary in No- vemher, A 1890. He was short "§15,000. communication in Friday’s Clarion- Ledger declares him to be more wor¬ thy of pardon than Vincent and refers to the fact that while Vincent was sentenced for twenty years, lie only served six and says that Hemingway has now served over half his time. A Vicksburg, Miss., special of Mon¬ day says: There are at least ten thou¬ sand homeless and hungry people in East Carroll, Morehouse, West Car- roll and Madison parishes, La., and the suffering and privations they are undergoing is appalling. With the exception of a few small elevations the whole of the northeastern portion of the state is under water. Forty-four negroes were rescued from a perilots position near Swan Lake, East Carroll parish, Sunday night. They were almost insane from hunger, having been without food four days. A special from Bristol, Tennessee, says: The Big Stone Gap Land Com¬ pany, capatalized at §2,000,000, and with a bond indebtedness of §1,000,- 000, was forced into liquidation Tues¬ day by a suit entered in the United States district court at Abingdon by Philadelphia stockholders in the com¬ pany. The bill filed in the federal court alleges gross mismanagement of the affairs of the company and misap¬ propriation of its funds. By an order issued by Judge Goff, of the the United States district court of West Virginia, Messrs. H. Clint Wood, of Bristol, and J. K. Taggart, of Stone Gap, are ap¬ pointed receivers of the company to wind up the business. WIND ON A FROLIC. It Tackles a Circus Tent With Disas- trons Results. Dispatches received from several towns in Missouri and one point in Kansas report the occurrence Thursday afternoon of a severe windstorm. The storm was accompanied by hail and a downpour of water amounting almost to a cloudburst. No loss of life or se¬ rious injury reported to human life, bnt the telegraph wires are down in the country surrounding the towns that the storm struck. At Sedalia, Mo., the wind attained a trrific velocity. It surged under the tent of Gurgling Brothers’ circus and snapped the poles supporting it like pipestems. The crash buried 2,000 people beneath it. They screamed and struggled and several women faint¬ ed, but all were finally 6afely removed from beneath the canvas. Several re¬ ceived severe bruises. At Brookfield, Mo., the 6torm struck the roundhouse of the Hannibal and St. Jo railroad and it was partially de¬ molished. Some of the engines were badly damaged. A number of work¬ men were in the building, but all es¬ caped injury. !*• Christie Murray, roe r.ngiist novelist, turns on his critics m a br.ei note to a London paper to demonstrate that truth charge is stranger that tuan episode fiction.^ L f a reviewer s an in one of Im novels was - wholly incredible,’ Mr. Murray says: 1 got that story or. tke spot ana had full proof of its ac- curacy. In fact, l built tbe novel on that genuine bit of history which yom reviewer thinks incredible:” ^.secretary foster fails. His Different Enterprises Placed In the Sheriff’s Hands. A special frorp. Fostoria, O., says: The business world was astonished Friday morning bv the news that ex- Becretary of tbe Treasury Foster had failed and had turned his financial in¬ terests, in an embarrassed condition, over to an assignee. The liabilities are given out by Mr. Foster as being $$00)000, and the assets are about the same-. At an early hour Friday morning the bank of Foster & Co. was closed on attachments. The presence of the sheriff was the first intimation that tiiefe Was something wrong, and it soon leaked out that an assignment-had bee * made ’ The deposits of the bank ft * th f ° f lts ast statement, were fbout idly and §175,000; soon n the The streets news Were spread filled rap- itft . v H ebpe, H x aftei » ¥ i leafmng the .r extent , of J the calamity. The argument of Secretary Foster was B1 S nal for the assignment of a number of concerns in which he was interested. The brass and iron works Was L otte df the ddiicefus that dSSigiied. ess ides Mr. Foster, Mr. Portz was one G f the onwners of this concern, The liabilities and assets of his com- pany are included with the personal statement of the ex-secretory, The ^Vlalbottfg calcified and cfodkefjr ftfid window glass companies, three con- ce rns that have been backed by Mr. Foster, also failed. The loS9 to b ^iness men who were a 1 epositors . + m ’’oBter & Co, § s bank 1 b one the deplorable features of the crash, but it is confidently believed that none of them Will suffer to an ei- tent fhat will cause them to assign. The loss to Fostoria is a great one, and one that will require considerable time to recover from, but great as it is, the regret on that account no way lessens the regret and sympathy ex- pressed for the ex-secretary. It is conceded that his beeS generosity and pub- lie spirit have the indirect cause of his financial downfall, as he was ever ready to lend a helping hand. The assignment of Davis & Foster, the wholesale grocery company, will probably be the direct cause of the failure of a number of grocery con- cerns throughout the country. It is said that the firm has §125,000 unpaid accounts and notes due it; The failure is due to the fact that <Joraer ^ Ir ‘ Foster for has the been three a ver assigned Y heav Y en ' wm- U lass houses and the brass and * ron wor ^ 8 > endorsements for these companies aggregating over §300,000. The stringency of the money market caused the banks to request payment of the notes, which precipitated the ^ al ^ ure ‘ THE NEWS IN NEW YORK. A New York dispatch says: The Foster Banking Company, of Fostoria, O., which assigned Friday morning, according to the last issue of the bank¬ ers’ almanac, has a capital of only §40,- 000, a surplus of §20,000 and an undi¬ vided profit of §9,000. In Bradstreets Foster & Co. are put down as having a capital of from §500,000 to §1,000,- 000, but their credit is only rated by that agency as second class. CHANGE OF VENUE. The Central Receivership Case to be Settled at Savannah. Saturday ended the hearing of the Central Railroad cases in Atlanta. The three days’ session was of unusual interest. There were gathered togeth¬ er more legal brains under one court roof than ever before in Georgia. Justice Jackson has set June 26th as the day, and Savannah as the place to settle the question in dispute. The most sensational incident of the pro¬ ceedings was Justice Jackson’s state¬ ment as to the duties of a receiver. In plainest language he gave notice that the court would tolerate no receiv¬ er who in any way attempted to fur¬ ther the plans of any party, clique, combination or reorganization com¬ mittee. The court, he said, would most posth'ely not sanction the help of any receiver or officer of the court to further the schemes of any reorgan¬ ization committee. The status of the case which will be heard in Savannah is about as follows: The question of the validity of the endorsements or guarantees made by the Central on the bonds of its auxili¬ ary roads will be determined. The question of a final decree in the suit of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Com¬ pany for the foreclosure of the tripar¬ tite mortgages will also probably be passed on, and it would seem that un¬ less some arrangement is made either by the receiver or by some of the other parties at interest by which the tripar¬ tite bonds and the floating debt can be carried upon favorable terms, that a decree of sale will be rendered. An¬ other important point in this connec¬ tion is the suggestion of the court that in the event Messrs. Alexander Brown <fc Co., or any other parties, shall pre¬ sent a receiver with sufficient financial backing the court would hear their application for another receiver. The hearing in Atlanta was of a pre¬ liminary character. Little pleading and evidence were introduced. Justice Jackson called upon the lawyers to aid the court to co-operate in arriving at a speedy and just determination of the eases. In this he evidenced a desire to save the property, which, in many cases, is held by people in very reduced -La- _ uau stances._ Ax old eighteenth Catholic burving-ground century tombstone Con- in the at cord, Mass., proves that the best in- tended epitaphs mav with the lapse ol tirae tabe on aQ i ron j ca i significance, j bc s t one stands awry, is fast crumblina century’! aad sbows the discoloration of a exposure and neglect, but It st ll bears j n i e gi b i e characters this now incongru- OU3 inscription: “This stone is erected. by its durability to perpetuate the memory and by its color to signify th« moral character of Miss Abagaiu Dudley.’ TELEGRAPHIC GLEANINGS. The News ot the World OffidenSed Into Pithy and Pointed Paragraphs. IttteWStifif and Instructive to All Classes of Reader^; Decoration Day was fittingly ob- fcefVed in all tbe large cities of ttie iiiiibli. Mrs, Mary Nevins Blaine and I)f; W. T. Bull were married at New York, Tuesday. L* ; J ’Hamburg, ,, t ti f D >«1 Jenk ns n jCath Gefnlanv, ts b J cable one from cholera in that cit Sunday. A suburban budu nan train tram ran ran into into a a passen- passen get Haiti oil the T«>*aa Pacific road at . .. kilS Monday niirLt Two liersons ™ were coTinu and dislegardinu^ ten iuiured The coming tram rain disregarding orders orders. Comptroller Echols stated Monday that there were indications that the Chemical National bank, of Chicago, and the Capital National bank, of In- dianapolis, Ind., would resume bttsi* ness.' Advices of Monday from London stated that during the" fearful cyclone which lirts been raging in the bay of Benfal the ship Germaiiia was lost and sixty-four people lost their lives with the ship. ville, Pa88enger New train No. 36 on the Louis- Indianapolis Albany and Chicago, left Monday morning, wfts wrecked near Broad Ripple, sev-- etl wiieB nolth of tbe cit *. Engineer George E. Plant Was killed and It¬ n Williams was inillfed ^ it is +h on obt ° x fatal lv ‘' „ Decoration day opened at W ashing- \ 0I1> Tuesday, with beautiful weather. ^ & an fl f f n 0 *ming y at *i o1 !? the Ih^l’^ various 0 ^ Grand 10118 Ar- l,e * keadqflatters, and at noon the pro* ^ were rammeB under at full f headway. ^fent An cemeteries incident °* the day was the decoration of the g^ a v^« Generals Rufus Ingalls^ and Belknap bv Major W. C. Dox- ^ Bury, an ex-confederate, A New York dispatch says: It is stated officially that outside of the Memphis and Charleston and Mobile nil d Birmingham, the security holders’ reception of the Richmond Terminal plan is more satisfactory at the pres¬ ent time than the reorganizers had ex¬ pected it to be and the indications are ample now that the Terminal plan will be successful, as it stands without modification except, possibly in these particulars. The National bank at Fargo, N. D. f and the First National of Lakota, N. I)., were closed Monday on orders is¬ sued by Mr. Eckels, comptroller of the currency. Both of these banks were organized by E, Ashley Mears, who was also the organizer of other nation¬ al banks and of many state banks and other institutions. His plan, says the comptroller, appears to have been to make loans to the various institutions subscribing to the stock of the two national banks in some cases exceeded the amounts in which some cases ex¬ ceeded the amount of the stock sub¬ scribed to by them. At Chicago, Monday, Judge Stein issued a temporary injunction re¬ straining the exi>osition directory from closing the world’s fair on Sundays, The decision was made in accordance with the prayer of a bill filed some weeks ago by Charles W. Clingman, of Chicago, in behalf of himself, as a stockholder in the exposition company, and as a citizen. The proceedings were in the state court and were en¬ tirely distinct from the more recent case in the federal courts to which the United States government is a party. Judge Stein held that congress had made no law compelling Sunday clos¬ ing. A CIRCUS TRAIN DEMOLISHED. Six Men Killed Outright and a Number of Animals Get Loose. Tuesday morning a special train on the Tyrone and Clearfield, Pa., rail¬ road, composed of Main’s circus cars, got beyond the control of train-men and came down the mountain with fearful rapidity. At Vail station the train was wrecked and the animals, men and broken cars were piled up together. Six men were killed out¬ right, twelve or fourteen others badly wounded, some of them fatally. The cicus is a complete wreck. Several lions and tigers made their escape and only after the greatest exertion were they recaptured, and then not until one of the tigers had killed several domestic animals in the neighborhood. It will take several days to get the property together. The wreck is one of the worst that has occured on this division and the worst in the number of lives lost. BROADWAY CABLE CARS. Six Have Been Started and tbe Horses Will be Given a Rest. A New York dispatch says: Cabl_ cars have at last come into the proces¬ sion on Broadway, and though they are running slowly and cautiously, they have come to stay. Pair by pair the horses will disappear as soon as the cables run smoothly, and before many months it will be possible to en¬ joy something like rapid transit, with freedom from blockades. The first regular cable cars of the Metropolitan Traction Company were started Mon¬ day afternoon and the event was hon¬ ored by the presence in the cars of many prominent people. The start was made from Central park about 3 o’clock, and six cars made the trip to Bowling Green and return without a hitch. ____ Advert!*# a#w, it will paf yoa, Facts About Asbestos. Asbestos, which has come to be large¬ ly uti’ized by electrical engineers. Is one df the n1o*t interesting substances beds eni- o( jflo+td ih the art*. Many new this mstfcriifi are being discovered, but, except from the Canadian and Italian beds, the specimens scctired are practi¬ cally useless for manufacture. Large quantities of floss and powdered asbeeto^ life Obtained from the district of the Su-a Valiev, Fiedrrtoilt,- Italy, aud miles in the long, see- in ond district, about thirty the Aosta Valley, the deposit 9 are A third said to be practically inexhaustible, district, which Vftltcllina, is still more important, which centres Nt the rente to passes Milan ttnd Como to Colico. The Canadian deposits aft! In the Black Lax# district, between Quebec and Sherbrook. The asbestos bearing rock is Usually in some kind of a green serpentine, and working it is first crushed in special ma¬ chines so as not (O destroy carded the fibre. and The long fibre is shaken, spun, much like cotton and Wool, into yarns, tapes and cloths. Ia the rubber depaftrflent it is proofed and made into sheeting, tapes and rings for steam and other joints, or into doth and millboard. A special kind of packing for high cloth, pres¬ sure cylinders, known as metallic is made by weaving together brass wire and asbestos, and is used in many tilariue engines.- |New York Telegram. Richmond & Danville R. R. Co. F. W. Iluldekoper and ttrnben Foliar Receiver*. Change of 8cWtlule between Charlotte an# Atlanta, May 14,1893. - ~ 35 j lT 37 17 STATION.- 5 . Ex. Da’ly Da’ly Da’ly Sun — Lv vhttrlotte,11 Eastern T.m-. p. m. p. m. a. 9 m. 35 A. M. 00 1 00 Dodo . •.. • 1 10 BellenjOnt 1 U6 Lowell., 1 ;t;< tja ttrn a........... 11 31 14*5 Bessemer City. •••• 2 00 King’s MoUfitWn.-.- 211 Grov ............... if/ 2 28 Blacksburg........ 12 1 H7 10 48 Gaffney’s.......... 12 35 Thicketty . .. ..... 3 08 Oowpena........... 3 20 Clifton............. 3 23 MOttftt, Zton........ Spartanburg, ...... 1 12 CC 11 37 8_part->rtbUfg Hit Fo'rtSst......... Jii..* CC CO WellfOrd it , i W Duncan’s ^ Greer’s............. Taylor’s............ Greenville.......... 2 08 12 28 Cro swell.......... Easley’s............ Liberty............. Ar Central............ 2 56| 45 Lv C-ntral............ 3 0.»i 60 Calhoun........... 58 Keowee Seneca... 3 2‘. Rehland 2fi Westminster;, ..... Harbins ,........... M-<d son.......ini 6 55 Folsom............. 7 02 Toecoa............. 4 13 712 Ar AyerwvlJle......... Mount Airy,,...... 7 29 7 45 Lv Mount Airy,,,,,,,, 8 05 Cornelia........... Mis Be Longview.......... 8 8 20 3S Luis................ ton,............. 40 5 05 8 White Sulphur.... 8 56 New Hoi and...... Ode Gaitie.vl l’s........... le ......... 5 25 »li| ? M . A F owtry Branch... 9 20 Buford............. 9 411 Suwannee.......... 9 63 Duluth............ 10 04 Norcr^as........... 10 15 Cbambli e.......... 10 25 i Goodwin's......... Belt Junction..... Peachtree.......... Atl’uta, E’-t'nT’m 7 00 11 00 4 55 Ar Atlanta, City T’m 6 00| 10 00! 3 55 A. M. P. M. p. if.(A, M. 30 12 38 18 STATIONS. Fx. L)’ily D’ily D’ily Sun Ar Eastern T.me. C P. M. P. M. Charlotte........... 3 30 I 05 Lodo............... Be lemont......... 1 Lowell............. 7 G.*eton a........... 2 52 6 Bessemer King’s Mountain.. City..... 6 6 Grover............. 8 K G Blacksburg iffney's 2 10 6 8 6 48 .. 1 5C 5 C Tli ckttty.. 5 8 C’owpens........ Clifton.......... 5 n i 5 5 Mount Zion..... Spartinburs Spartanburg .. . 1 19 4 57 6 00 Jn 4 52 Fair F’orest..... 4 40 Wellford....... 4 33 Duncan’s....... 4 26 Gro«-r’s.......... 4 151 I Taylor’s......... 4 02 Greenville...... 12 22 3 45 5 08 Crosswel'........ Ens'ey’d........ 3 at! Liberty 3 22 Lv Central ......... 3 10 12 35 2 55 Ar Central 11 30 2 a5 C ilhoun 2 20 Keowee............ ..... . Sened.............. .....I 2 21'. Richland.......... 11 09 I 2 10! Westmins'cr...... 2 02 Hirbint............ 1 52 Midison............ 1 39 Folsom............ 1 29 Tcccoa.............. 1 21 10 20 1 10 Aversville........ .....| 12 56 Mount A ! ry....... .....I 12 42 Mount Airy....... C rnelia............ .... 12 39 .......... Longview.......... Belton............ ....' 12 28 .......... Lula............... 12 14 .......... White 9 32 12 12 .......... New Holland...... Sulphur-... I 12 00 .......... Gainesville........ Odel.V............. 9 u ii - 46 2 13 !!!!!! F Buford............ owery Branch... '.!!!!!■ii'ae ”!! '.!!!!! ...... 11 oil 13 .......... Fu wan nee...... ...... i n .......... Duluth............. ...... 10 50 .......... No-cross........... ...... 10 39 .......... Doraville......... *. ...... 10 51 .......... ( hamblee.......... ......10 28 .......... Goodwin's......... ...... 10 22 .......... Bo t Junction...... ...... 10 10 ............ !’• achtree........ '7 i2 .!.!!! At anta.E’st’nT’m 30 9 50 45 Lv Atlanta, City I’m 6 30 8 50 11 45 ...... P. M . a. M. A. U. P. M. Between Toe-* a and Elberton—Nos. 63 and 9. dal y except Sunlay, leave Tocor* 7:45 a. m. anfi 1:15 p. m.; arrive at Elberton 11:36 a. m. and 3.55 p. m. .Returning Xo a . 62 and 12, daily except Su-day, leave Elberton 3:00 p . m. and • '-30 a. m„ and arrive at Toecoa 7:00 p. m. and 10.25 a. m. B lw<n Lula a>.<l Atlanta.—So. 15, Sunday only, leave* Lola 8:09 a. m., and arrives Atlanta 9:50 a. m. No. 17, daily except Bunday. leaves Lu a 6:00 a. m„ and arrives Atlanta 7:50 a. m. Beturning i>o. 16, Sunday only, eaves Atlanta 2 50 p. m., and arrives Lula 6:30 p. rn. No. 18, dailv ex epi Bunday, leaves Atlanta 4:35 p. m., a-’d arrives Lula 8:20 p. m. W. H. Gr»v.n, W. A. Turk. General M<nsgsr, G n’l. Pass. Agent, Wa? hington, D. C. Wsshinaton, D. C. J. A. Dod80.v. S. H. Hardwick, Soperintendent, Artant Aas’t. Gen’l. Pass. Agt., >, Ga. Atlanta, Ga LEWIS DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW TOCCOA CITY, 8A., Will practice in the counties of Haber sham and Rabun of the Northwester* Circuit, and Fraakbn and Banks of tht Western Circuit. Prompt attention wil’ be given to all busines* entrusted^ him. Th* collection ot debt* will haw «$>*♦ ial atUvtioa, NUMBER 21. TOCCOA BUSINESS DIRECTORY. WILL SCOTT, Barter. 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. Milira JOINT STOCK COMPANT, Dry Goods, Groceries, FARM IMPLEMENTS. R. A. NAVES, Manaokh. ]R. vJ. W. HITT, JUF&JL'T MARKET. Basement T. C. Wright’s store. E. L. GOODE, (Successor to W. J. Hayes.) Orogejriks, dry goods, notions, Clothing, l hoes and Hats- W. H. & J. DAVIS. Drugs, Medicines, Faint3, Oils, Books and Stationery. (3. W. NOWDLL, DEALER IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, AND FURNITURE. NETHERLAND & BLACKMER, 3k . MILLINERY, Call and see us if you want bargains. Qooua belov/ Cost I H- E. HOPKINS, GENERAL * MERCHANDISE. HAYES & RAMSAY, LIYEBY, SALK AND FEKD STABLE. Re&£(i>£i- &Lle Mtg. M. J. H-Gftter, Milliner and Dress Maker, WRIGHT’S HALL. J. T. CARTEL BtACK,SMITHING, . REPAIRING, WAGON-MAKING. All kinds of blacksmi'.li work Cheap. NORTH GEORGIA Agricultural College J AT DAHLONEOA. A branch of the State University Spring Term begin* Firtt Monday in Feb¬ ruary. Fail Term begin* Firtt Monday in September. Bert school in the *outb, for students with United means, The military training is thorough, being under a U. S. Army officer, detailed by tbe Secretary of War. BOTH SEXES HAVE EQUAL. ADVAN¬ TAGES. Bind n a are prepared and licensed to teach In tbe public school* by act of the legislature. Lectures, cn Agriculture and the Sciences by distinguished educators and scholars. Bor health the climate is unsurpassed. Altitude £237 feet. Board • Id P«r month and upwards. M.ssing at lower rates. y-.t. aen&tor and K.prcscn‘atlvc of tbe state is entitled and requvs’ed to i-ppoint one pupil hii distric- or county, without paying ■utisieaiatinB fee, daring Lis term. mtr.Ut ot tnforacati n. address Score* |aty or Iww wi y. lnsr J of Trastese.