Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXI.
COUNTY directory.
Ordinary-W. D. FULL.
Sheriff—M. FULLER.
Clerk—J. H. ADDISON.
Treasurer—L. WJ LBANKS.
Coroner-ALLEN DIXON.
Surveyor—BURGESS SMITH.
County School Commissioner—J.
A, BLAIR.
COURT.
Okdi.wry’s Court — Meets first
Monday in each Month.
Superior Court—M eets first
Mondays in March and September.
CITY DIRECTORY.
Mayor—\V. .1. HAYES.
Recorder— G. T. GOODE,
Justice of Peace—I.. P. COOK.
CHURCH DIRECTORY-
—.1 ■ ■
M EHODI5T w Episcopal „, „ , n
»ou i 11 —Rev. 13. P. Allen, pastor.—
Preaching 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
every every Smwlav Sunday. Sunday-school c 1 , , ,
*• in. every Sunday; J. B. Simmons,
superintendent, frayer service ev-
ery Wednesday evening.
1 rkshvtekian' Chuech— Rev, L.
A. Simpson, pastor.—Preaching at
31:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. on 2d
and 4 f h Sabbaths in each month
timid ay school at 10 a. in. every
h’ltblmih. J. E, Greene, superiutend-
ellt. Praver meeting 7:30 p. ill.
every Wednesday.
Baptist Ciiukcii—R ev. A. E.
Keese, pastor.—Preaching at 11:30
tn.and . 0 8 - 011 1 ^
a. p. m. on 3d and 4th ^ Sun-
days. Sunday*; Sunday-school at 10 a. m.
every W. J. Hayes, super-
mtendent. . , , ry I rayer meeting • at n 8
p. m. eveiy Wednesday.
LODGES.
Masoxic— Meets Friday night
before tlio third Sunday.
1 Knights - of Honor—M T7 eets n first
and third Monday nights.
Koyal Arcanum — Meets second
and fourth Monday nights.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
Dr. JOHN McvJUNKIM.
Office in Drug Store of W. H. & J.
Davis.
Dr. JEFF DAVIS.
Offi ce m . Drug Store of W. H. & J.
Davis.
e Old Reliable
'tW»»M»IM»
Established38years. In Treatsnmioorremai*, of
married or single, improprieties. cases exposure, SKILL
abuses, GUARANTEED. excesses or Board and apartments
furnished when desired, ciuostloa BlanJs
Book free. Call or write.
i® ,****, NEW T0 »
PH-ARMi
3
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lrs
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Jb Rf rc
/,V1Y
Nil
i
THE
0 /SLY PERFECT
SEWIHQ FAMILY MfeRANis^ USE.
an cer
» 1 Voilf (iuesiion Cl'KEO Blank wiihout t’,' u$e
and Book free.
or writ# 1)& H. B. BUTTS,
622 Fines*. St, Louis,
Advertise!
It Will
PAY YOU.
THE TOCCOA NEWS.
<|»gg jfgwS IN GENERAL.
ConflensBfl from Our Most Important
TelecrapMc Airices
And Presented in Pointed and Reada¬
ble Paragraphs.
The Troy City, N. Ypapet mill,
after two months’suspension, resumed
work Thursday.
The Peabody mills, at Newburyport,
Mass., started up Thursday morning
wit}l four hundred hands.
Hon. Hamilton Fish, ex-secretary of
state, died at his country residence at
Garrison, N. Y., Thursday-.
Pittsburg Ishpeming, and Lake Angeline mine,
at AIieh., which has been
working on two-thirds time, has
placed the miners and surface men on
full time again.
The annual meeting of the stock-
holders of the West Point Terminal
Company was held at New York
Thursday. Mr. Lynch, of New York,
was elected chairman. No business
was transacted and the meeting ad¬
journed to October 19th.
Reports were received at Arkansas
City, Thursday, that the troops sta-
tioned in the Cherokee outlet have
driven out the “sooners” bv firing the
g ra8S - It is claimed that many “soon-
er” were burned, only those having
horses escaping. A great deal of in-
dignation is felt in Arkansas City over
the a„, ion ofth.
Cashier M. ,T. Bofferding, of the
Rank of Minneapolis, committed stti-
cide Thursday morning by shooting
himself. It is supposed he took his
life because of sensitiveness over the
recent Phil M. absconding of Paying Teller
bank’s Sclieig with $15,000 of the
money. President Kirby, of
the bank, declares that Bofferding’s
accounts arc perfectly straight.
A cable dispatch of Thursday from
Berlin states that the Rhine has been
proclaimed officially to be infected
cholera, and bathing in it is for-
bidden. All the public baths alone; its
banks have been ordered closed and
the authorities of all the towns in the
R hin ® VftUe X llftve beeu instructed to
atlo , pt stringent to prevent
measures
the use of the river water for domestic
purposes.
A London dispatch of Saturday
says: Among the subjects scheduled
for consideration at the International
Medical Congress called to assemble in
Rome next month, but the postpone-
inent of which to next April has just
been announced, was the cure for con¬
sumption discovered by Dr. Amick, of
the United States, and which is ut-
tracting great attention in England
and continental countries.
A . v New York dispatch of Thursday ,
says: The Commercial Cable com-
panyand the South American Tele- \
® 3 .’ 1 07 f A 1 on a\ r n n ii c i,, tleet ,1 P os of B'd
’
a notice that the Brazilian -i • government
present. Tbie order however will not
interfere with telegrams passing
through Brazil for points beyond * No
exiilanufioTi e xplanation for lor tho the i>rdr>r order is g rrivon ven
A London cable dispatch of Iliurs-
dav flnvfi • Thfl Mnnelipatpr 4 lun< -> 1 cster and nr».l bhei-
•
field .. . Bailway Company has
tice that given no-
on account of the scarcity of
fuel u, caused t u by > the 11 miners’strike munis sinae, tliev un\
nave suspended the services ol ntty-
hve trains. The Midland Railway
Company has taken off fourteen trains
or he Mime reason. Each company
had already curtailed its tram service
m consequence of the coal larnine.
\ head-end um collision uimsiuu between » a iuuk milk
tram on the (. uicago, Pittsburg and
1’oit \ ay lie railroad , and an eastbound n ,
passenger tram on the I aii Ilandle or
Pittsburg, Cincinnati Chicago and
ht. Louis railroad, Thursday, killed
twelve persons and injured as many
more. The baggage and smoking car
of the eastbound passenger train was
ground to pieces and from this most ot
the killed and injured were taken.
A dispatch of Saturday from Arkan-
sas City, Kas., says: The secretary
of the interior is reported to have dis-
covered, too late for the information
to be of practical value, that the ar-
rangemeuts for the grand rush in the
Cherokee strip are without warrant of
law. Commissioner Lomoreaux, the
land officer, admits the pre-emption
laws are repealed and that the entries
should be made under homestead law-
only.
The London Standard in its issue of
Sumlny «». .v,.,Iking joints to
a dissolution of parliament next year.
“if iVhfthiSa'u^iuifoonatitMu-'
cies will have tvr then forgotten his
Irish policT. The second home rule
bill is woise than the tirst. and we
cannot possible have a third. The
paper predicts that under the circum-
stances Mr. Gladstone can never oh-
tain a majority in Great Britain.
A dispatch of a Snndax , from , „ Foit ,
Wayue, Iud., says : hm O Connor,
the train dispatcher whose forgetful-
ll ess caused the wreck on the Fort
NV ayne road, iu which a dozen lives
were lost, has not been seen by any of
lus friends since. A few minutes be¬
fore he left the city he sent a message
to the coroner of Cook county re¬
questing him to release all of the men
held for the accident, as all of them
were entirely innocent, he alone being
to blame.
\t 6-45 o’clock Sundav morning two
freight trains on the Nickel Plate rail-
road crashed into each other, four
miles west of McComb, Ohio. The
result was that two engines were wreck-
ed and forty cars were piled on each
other in a mass of debris. Fiftv cat-
tie lie by the side of the tracks which
are torn up for a distance of 200 vaTds
and all travel G "topped *Tohn IH-
TOCCOA GEORGIA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1893.
'
fireman, 5^»V£iSf J.
N. Upher and Charles
dyta^Lm »«rfw?‘njS!! tr,1D ’ are
SOUTHERN NEWS ITEMS.
The Drift of Her Progress and _ Pros- _
perity Eriefly . Noted.
Happenings of Interest Portrayed in
Pithy Paragraphs.
Dr. J. A. Dunwoocly, Saturday filed
his report on his action as health offl-
cet of Brunswick in the Branham fever
case and also his resignation as health
°ihcer. Dr. Dunwoody exonerates
City Physician Branham from blame
in bringing Surgeon Branham to
Brunswick.
The Yourtree ore mine and the
Russellville coal mines, of Alabama,
which suspended , , about two months
ago ’ "T resUme operations oil full
* lme .‘ About two thousand men will
be given work, ihe companies have
Contracts enough ahead to run the
mines night and day for six months.
J be forecast of the crop returns of
the North Carolina agricultural de-
lament for September shows a de-
P rcolatlon of P r <>spects ot 25 per cent.
lrom AllgU8fc f e I? ort ; Tlu ! 18
GaU8eJ b - v t,ie . recent fearful , cyclone
thftt l ,RS8ed , oVtr the state. Thedam-
ag0 } vas done by severe winds and
"d SEJSS
were greatly damaged.
Savannah Wired Brunswick Satur¬
day that she had raised the quaran¬
tine. BrunsWickians ate grateful that
a sensible sanitary board refused to
heed Dr. Brunner’s advice to keep the
quarantinean. This ended the quaran¬
tine against Brunswick. Surgeon Ma-
gruder ie working faithfully to wind
up the government’s affairs at Bruns¬
wick. When he concludes he will be¬
gin at the Waycross end and will set¬
tle all bills against the government.
The Memphis Commercial's crop
report Arkansas, for published Mississippi, Tennessee and
reduction in the Thursday shows
a cotton crop in the
Memphis district below former limits.
The continued drought is playing
havoc with the cotton plant, and un-
less less it it rains vninn Withm wHIuti a .1 tew He,™ days the
damage the w ill be still greater. In addi-
tion to drought and cold nights
the boll-worms have added in reduc-
mg the yield. Corn will make three-
fourths of an average.
G. W. Dve, one of the wealthiest
planters m northeast Georgia, died,
and has left his fortune to a negro
family ^ who attended him for the last
jeais. T Dye ^v was neter married. . ,
He owned 10,000 acres of land and
raised a quantity of cotton. He had
no L members V f of A hiB family y livino- UEE with
him, and his attendants , * were faithful ,
negroes. To these he left his estate.
His executors are leading men in El-
^ ?TL° oTzr ,.V% n ,]re “ cher -
„ special m . ,
^ ^ ’ ’ ’ sa_\s. .
Governor Iillman lhursday , afternoon,
made reply ^ to the decree of United
gtftteg Jud Simonton, imprison-
in g his constable, a„. nwaun, or ,„ for seizing
a Parrel of whisky at the South Caro-
depot. The governor the^admiT- savs the
decree Y is intended “r to brina bnn., the admin
mtratiou • + of the dispensary law'
luto
disrepute and to liaralyze the state
constables in their efforts to prevent
the impor tation of contraband liquors
i n t 0 the state. He says it is so “il-
Iogica]> prejudiced and tyrannical that
f ee i s constrained against his will
to to criticise criticise it it. ”
A Columbia, S. C., special of Satur-
day says: The phosphate outlook iu
state is blue, consequent upon
the damage done by the recent torna-
( ] G Governor Tillman states that the
phosphate men proposed to the state
that they be allowed to go back to
work at a rovaltv of 50 cents Tier ton
instead of *1, for » term of one o? ?oek vear
withouUimit to the amount
mined. He stated to them that he
was not willing to accede to such an
agreement for it would be unfair to
the state, even if he had a right to
make such a contract.
THE COTTON CROP.
Report of the Department of Agricul-
tore for September.
%
cliue from the August condition of the
J agatasf 80%
^ jonth
the lowest September condi-
**on since 1881, which Blood at 70
The condition in September .1892,
For the same month m the
ye«s 1891 and 1892 it was 82. , and
So-N respectively.
,Jbe ». 3 > state C«ob», average,. ,«; are: South Virginia, Caro-
lma, 63; Georgia, 7 < ; Florida, 85;
Alabama, 78; Mississippi, 78; Louisi-
anfl> 81 . Xt-xas, 63; Arkansas, 80;
Tennessee, 67.
The hurricane of August 28th caus-
niueh damage to the crop in the
states of North Carolina, South Caro¬
lina and Georgia, and in a less degree
in tbe gtjkte Q f Florida,
Blount’s Successor.
A Washington special of Tuesday
says; Ex-Congressman Willis, of Ken¬
tucky, has been appointed as the suc-
ceasor to Mr. Blount as minister to
Hawaii. Mr. Blount himself mdiea-
ted his successor. Mr. Willis is also
a personal friend of Secretary Carlisle,
an d he is regarded as a man of unus¬
^ ability, serving three terms in con-
g*ess, representing the Lonisville dis-
trict. While in congress he was chair-
uian of the committee on rivers and
harbors, and on the committee on «d*
and lab©?.
RICHMOND & DANVILLE rTr.
Samuel Spencer, F. W. Htlidekoper
and Ruben Foster, Receivers.
Atlanta & Charlotte Air-Line Division
Condensed Schedule of Passenger Trains in
Effect Aug. 13,189?.
northbound. : no. 38 . noT^. No. 12.
Eastern Time. | Daily. Daily. Daily.
lt Atlanta( Chamblee....................' e.t.)' ioopm 645pm 950am
10 28am
Noreross...... 7 x.3 pm 10o9am
Duluth....... ........j 10 50 am
Buwanee...... 1 ........ 11 01 am
Buford....... ........ ........i 11 13 am
Flowery Branch ... 1 ... j........ H 26 am
Gainesville... 2 22 pm 8 29 pirn 114(3 am
Bel Lula......... ton........ ........ .......!........ ! 8 40 pm j 12 1214 12 pm
Cornelia...... pm
................ 12 39 pm
Mt. Airy...... ........ 9 05pm 1 02 pm
Toccoa........ ........ 9 27pm 1 88 pm
Westminster.. ................ 2 21 pm
Seneca....... ........i015pm a 37 pm
Central....... 3 05 pm
Easleys....... .......11 07 pm 3 32 pm
Greenville. ... 5 23 pm 11 28 pm 4 05 pm
Greers....... 4 31 pm
Wellford..... 4 47 pm
Spartanburg... Clifton....... 6 12 pm 12 22 am 5 06 pm
5 22 pm
Gaftnej’s..... Cowpens...... 5 26 pm
12 59 am 5 50 pm
Blacksburg ... 7 00 pm 113 am 6 07 pm
Grover........ 6 18 pni
King’s Mo’nt’u 6 35 pm
Gastonia...... ....... 153 am 7 00 pm
Lowell....... ............... 7 12 pm
Bellemont .............. 7 22 pm
Ar Charlotte..... 8 14 p m 2 3 0 am 7 45 pm
.SOUTHWARD. No. 37, No. 11. No. 35,
Daily. Daily. Daily.
Lv. Charlotte...... 9 35 am 12 00 n’n 1125 pm
Bellemont..... ........ 12 27 pm
Lowell. ........ 12 37 pm
Gastonia....... .... .... 12 50pm 12 02 am
King’s Mount’ll ........ 1 19 pm
Grover......... ........ 1 37 pm
Blacksburg.... 10 48 am 1 47 pm 12 44 am
Gaffney....... ....... 2 07 pm 12 59 am
Cowpens ...... ........ 2 35 pm
Clifton........ ........ 2 3Spm
Spartanburg... 11 37 am 3 00 pm 1 85 am
Wellford........ ........ 3 20 pm
Greers......... ........ 3 36 pm
Greenville...... 12 28 pm 4 05 pm 2 28 am
Easleys,........ ........ 4 35 pm 2 48 am
Central........ ........ 5 40 pm
Seneca......... ........ 5 45 pm 3 40 am
Westminster.... ....... 6 03 pm
Toccoa ........ ........ 6 36 pm 4 26 am
Mt. Airy....... ........ 7 20 pm
Cornelia....... ........ 7 25 pm :
Bollton........ ........ 7 50 pm
Lula.......... ........ 7 52 pm 5 13 am
Gainesville..... 3 33 pm 8 20,pm 5 34 am
Flowery Buford Branoh ........ 8 40 pm
........ ........ 8 54 pm
Suwanee....... ........ 9 07 pm 6A
Duluth ........ ........ 9 20 pm
Noreross ...... ........ 9 3C pm
Cliatnblee...... ........ 9 4 2pm
Ar. Atlanta (E. T.) 4 55 pmJlO 15 pm 7 10 am
Additional ...... trams Nob. 17 and 18—Cornelia „
accommodation, Atlanta daily except Sunday, leaves
•> 35 p m, arrives Cornelia 8 40 p m.
Returning leaves Cornelia 6 15 a m, arrives At-
lu, ^ a 9 1? a «
leave Cornelia 8 00 a m, airive Atlanta 10 5t>
a m.
Between Lula and At liens--Nos 11 and 9 daily,
leave Lula 8 50 p ra and 1215 p m, arrive Atii-
fens 10 20 p m and 2 00 p m. Returning leave
Athen9 > Nob v™ a ? d ,!'“ dail >’> andl ° 15
a m, arrive Lula 7 Id p m and II 55 am.
Between Toccoa and Elberton—Nos. 63 and 9
daily, except Sunday, leave Toccoa 7 00 am
and 1 40p m, arrive Elberton 10 65 a m and
420 p m. Returning, No. 62 and 12 daily, except
- and aa day f leave Toocoa Elberton 115 p m and 7 30 a ra,
arrive 5 80 p m and 10 25 a m.
Pullman Gar Service: Nos. 35 and 36
moad aud^ Danville East Mail, Pullman Sleeper
nn
New York and New Orleans, and between New
York and Augusta, also between Washington
ami Memphis, via Atlanta and Birmingham,
™>™ting with Sleeper for and from Columbus
y, i)8 . n an ,j 12 —Pullman Sleeping Car be-
be tween ween-G Richmond, eetuboro Danville and Greensboro and
and Portsmouth via Atian
n< ' a,ld DjnTdle B - E -
lor derailed information as to local end
tin oagh time tables, rates and Pullman sleeping
dreSH car reservations, confer with local agents or ad-
W. A. TURK, S. H. HARDWICK,
Gen’l Pass. Ag’f. Ass’t. Genl. Pass. Ag’t.
Washington, D. 0. Atlanta, Ga.
J. A- DODSON, Superintendent. Atlanta, Ga.
W. H. GREEN, SOL. HAAS,
Gen’l -Manager. Traffic Manager,
Washington, D. C. Wastiington, D C.
T3HU3 OLD DOCTOR’S
W LADIES’ FAVORITE.
always remabm and perfectly safe. The *>.m,
an i -otasinrie bad result,
(SSSSS ■"•■ttDUBim.re.«.«•«»«. S3 St.Ua!..*,.
J. T. CARTER,
n’ M AfU\ 1 w 1 n 1,1 -g • repairing,
W AGO N-M A KIN G
A ;j ,,f M a ,ksmidi wi.rk Ciikg
________________
WPILES CD
Y 622 Pine Street. DR. H. 15. st.L BUTTS, oms. mo.
JyJfg ^ J HGTltsf,
UsIIinef .Rfl fakd .lUG,
WRIOKT-S HADD.
■r^A.7r POLKS ^
Rodnced 15 toSS pound*permonih. No
Sirring, w inconvenience, to baa refu'.t!, non*u*eous
Iriiat. Trcatm-ntpertect’y herm. ss and s‘r. y c .nii-
Send. Que«tionB! nk and Book iree. Cjltcr*rn:e. Sio.
DB. H. B. BUTTS, SS3 Ttae btiset, fct. Bom*
WINSHIP MACHINE CO m 9
ATLA2^TA, GFu&..
Cotton Gins and Colton Presses.
lb Steel Up-Packing, Screws, 4 inches Down-Packing, and 5 inches Self-Packing. in diameter.
i •Cv Wit, OUR COTTON GIN WITH NEW PATENT
REVOLVING CARD,
fr^ Straightens the Fi ire and Improves the Sample
so that it commands the Highest Market Price.
ALL THE LATEST □CP&0VEMEHT8-
Q1NS FURNISHED WITH REVOLVING
HEADS .
TOCCOA BUSINESS DIRECTORY
W11.I, SCOOTS,
i Eat rtoar.
I Shop over Drug Store.
BUPMS^gsCUBED!
j 25 Tears* Experience In treating all vart-
ties of Rupture enables us to guarantee a
positive cure. Question Blank and Book
troe. Call or write.
\T)LTA-MEDICO APPLIANCE CO.,
322 Pin© Street, ST. LOUIS, MO.
: - * — • —
I T. S. DAVIS.
i
1 SAW MILL, GRIST MILL
j
! SHINGLE MILL AND
!
; VARIETY WORKS.
! ;
ALLIANCE JOINT STOCK COMPANY.
Dht G-oodsj GRocERiaa,
FARM IMPLEMENTS.
R. A. NAVES, Uxxxm
J-. W. HITT,
MEAT MARKET.
Rock House Near Depot.
E. L. GOODE.
(Successor (to W. J. Hayes.)
Groceries, dry Goods, notions,
Clothmg. tiioes 2nd Hats-
Dp. Dash’s Belts & flpplianees
Aa electro-ealvanie medicated. battery »m*
botiiea into
Belts, Suspensories, Abd Spl*
a ual Appliances, Vests, om-
Inal Supporters, Office Caps,
Drawers,
Insoles, etc.
Cures Ttbemnatlsrn, Liver and of Kidney Youth,
Complaints, Manhood, Dyspepsia, Nervousness, Errors Sexual Weak¬
Dost
ness, and all Troubles in Male or J emale,
Question Blank and Book free. Call or
write.
Volta*Rrledica Appliance LOUIS, Co., MO.
823 Pine Street, • ST.
F\C. DAVIS,
iPracticing FTiysicism,
lETIiEK. GrJL.
DR. DODD’S C ure fog
OLSC IN HORSES.
GUARANTEED.
Every owner of a hor»e ehoulii keep
fp it on hand. It ma v iave the life ot a
valuable animal. One package will
'V cure eight to ten eases. Price 51.05.
Sent by mail or express. Our Ac¬
count Book, which coutaina hint* to
etabie keepers, mailed free.
B. BENJAMIN &Co.. 822 Pine St,
ST. Louie, MO.
NETHERLAND& BLACKMER,
MILLINERY,
Call and see us if you want bargains.
0-00X53 B7CXOV5T COST I
H. E. HOPKINS,
*
¥IRIG 06 ELE Aim
■ With all bad con«oquenca», atranguary, Jess of ■■
energy, nervou* *xcitem«:-t, nervoui debility,
unnatural dieeharges. lost manhood, despondency, unfit-
ness to mtirry, wasting away of the organs, certainly and
rapidly cured by eafo and easy method*. Cures positively
guaranteed. Question Blank and Book free. Call or writ*.
DR. WARD INSTITUTE.
120 N. Ninth $».. ST. LOUIS. M0.
HAYES & RAMSAY,
LIVERY, SALE ASD FEED STABLE.
(J<j)< 4 >(i Rea^ti-
at)le
A N Y LA P Y ean get a valuable secTet that I
822 P1VK STREXT, ST. BOUIS, ItTO.
ysj. _ H. , & „ J. T DAVIS- _ x , TTrS
Drags, Meilolties.
Oils,
Books ° and Stationery, ^
GIYPHILISa^™W
t»tfulpr»ct.ct. Treatmant confidentU’.. Curt*
by mail or »t office. T«rxa»lo». Qu^tion Blank tnd
Book free. Chti or writ*. DR. WARD INSTITUTE,
120 N. 9th SL.St.LOUiS.M0.
aswsu A* ♦ A 9
((Ph/iaaiLU. jCPa-9.* rngrL G&eficdt.')
©otcoit, ©a.
it#. I mm, fcwwwww#*
Our Hotel :• the most convenient stopping place for travelers, being
iot more than 100 feet from the Depot. Our rooms are comfortable acd
atr table is kept supplied with the best the market affords. Rates, $2 pei
lay ; regular boarders taker, on reasonable terms.
R. P. SIMPSON & OCX*
HEADQUARTERS FOR
I 11 R Y 1
MACHINERY SUPPLIES AND REPAIRS,
Peerless Elngin.es,
O-eiser Saw MMlls,
Oeiser Separators,
3RENNAN SHINGLE MACHINES,
MCCORMICK REAPERS MOWERS
{TcCormiclc Hay Raises,
Kentucky Cane PHLills,
"OT'frite Sewing Maclaines,
EJstey Organs-
sail aman & Kiimsi,
Agents for LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE,
HOME OF NEW YORK, CONTINENTAL OF NEW YORK
3ARTFORDOF HARTFORD. CONN, QUEEN OF AMERICA,
INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA.
Wo Mo a Jo Ho HUSH A 9
-DEALERS IN—
MACHINERY AND MACHINERY SUPPLIES.
All kinds of Machinery repaired quickly and in first-class manner,
Parti duplicated.
divents for Nagle _E?igj?ies and iBucfceye Mowers .
Agent For Pratt Grins.
Highest market price paid for Shingles.
HI!*
V I Have Moved *
t Into the store recently occupied by L. B.
NOWELL, having bought his stock of <?
v D Goods. As I have on hand a big lot of
-
0 General Merchandise I have determined
to
vD Keep 'Tilings Moving
•D By pricing goods at panic figures. You
need the goods, I need the money, so come :
along and let’s trade. ..........
Get a. Move on Yourself,
fa Or you will lose some bargains. I mean :
k business..............................
I ID . W. EDWARDS. 2
L. B. Nowell’s Old Stand, TOCCOA, GA.
VAN WINKLE GIN and MACHINERY CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
MANUFACTURERS:
Cotton Seed Oil
Mill Machinery,
Complete.
Fertilizer
Machinery
Complete.
Cypress Tanks
The best rrstsm for elavating cotton and distributing same direct to gins.
Many gold medals have been awarded to us. Write for catalogue,
and for what you want. We can^ave you money.
VAK WIKICLE GIX and MACHIXKRY COMPANY,
130,4m ATLANTA, GA.
Advertise Nov/
It will Pay.
NUMBER 35
.
%
Wind Mills,
Pumps, Etc.
Cotton Gins,Feed¬
ers, Conden¬
sers and
Presses.